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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1973-11-04 - Orange Coast Pilot• • • SIJNDAY - • ...... vo.1 •.• 6.6 •• N_0. __ 3_09_._8_S_EC_TI_O_N_S_ •• ".6•P·A·G-Es-. ............. o.RA·N·G•EiijiiiO~U-NTY •. ··~C·A·L-tFd,..·R·N·I~.· ...... · ·.s.~.·N·D·A~Y,·N·O·V·E·M-BE·R·4···1-7·3 ·· ........... rw~ENT;:.:.:,;Y·~Fl~VE;.,:.C~ENT~s..,~ • • ;Ill \ Tapes Heating Review Doze11s Hurt Nixon to Meet" .. With Lawyers - As Vehicle Hits Pillar From Wire Services KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. -President Nixon, seemingly braced to "tough it DUt" against demands for his resignation, Saturday' summoned two of h I s Watergate lawyers from Washington to · disCuss their court strategy in the con- trovtnY ·over two non-existent Whi~e House tapes. Attorneys Leonard Gannent and J. Papers Call On Pr.esident·· ' To Step Down T'ae Alsoriated Press 'l1le N.., York nmes called on Presi· dmt Nl•on Saturday to resign, saying ti wu "the one last great aervtce that Mr. Nam can r.ow perfonn for his ' COWlltf." .. J \,fto J--.Nm also aid Nl>oo .;. ~-i.~fll!Ri!p, Genld 11. Ford I --~oM•'lliol"dH ~~"Uhlclaelll, ...... _ i a' l&notloo should be liven to his impuc:lment. II • And lbe Denver Poot allO called foe Nlml's resignation. 11le TimOs, in·an edltorial-Jn·U. Sunday- editim, said the "visible diaintegraUoo" of Ni>Cll's moral and politlcol authority "leada us to the reluctant conclusion that Mr. Nixon would be perlocmlng lib ultimate aervice to the American ~ -and to blmself -by reoign. ~ -~ver Post said in its Sunday !)Clltiooa that Nixon should r.slgn and !f be -. bnpeadlment ~ ~ be started. '!be Pool, Which supported Nixon In the last electioo, .said "il Nixon chooses to realgn alter a qualllled successor la iD office, lt would be easier for tho. cdiatry and better for him In the ~ boOk:s.'' ' -. Fred Bll2hardt arrived Ul)lll1llOllllOed on a commercial plane flight to .meet with olher members of Nixon's staff and possibly the President. Deputy White Hous,e Press Secretary Gerald L. Warren said Nixon, who spoke by telephone with Buzhardt earlier in the day, asked them to come. They were expected to see the President to- day. ' Buzhardt is Nixod's pripcipal represen- tative ..at U.S. District Court bearings before Orief Judge John J. Sirica over tape recordings · of the. President's Waterpt.related conversations, l\\'O of which the Whlte House says do not . exist. Warren said Buzhardt and Garment- WUe called. to Key .Biscayne to "review proceeding> !>efore Judge Sirica and to discuss how they are developing the information before the court." The pro- ceedings reswne this week. · PRESIDENT NIXON VACATIONS AS IMPEACHMENT, RESIGNATION TALK GROWS Booting With B•i.. Robozo, left, and Roi..rt Abpl1nalp; center, Jn K•y Biscayne Pr~idential assistant Stephen V. Bull, a key witness in the case, also 'vas at the Florida \\'hite House after a day of testimony al lhe Washington hearing oo the tapes. Bull is to return . to lhe witneu sland Tuesday, when I · h R ll M ked °1 ~~H=m~esman said Nixon mpeac . a ' y ar Environmental had not met or talked with Bull since · l: ~:: ~~e..=. B~~:: -B. F · .t. >-; B t ·-1"1 'F-, Issues Color ·· ·~~~~·.... . y an1are., u t10 uss . awre Sel!t. ,. 'Iha! ~ .of I"'! • -~ ~ • 'Spoo' .·a1' 'lTotes '-w.-..1e· •....alloos could not bo . · • f 1 located. n11i was one monlh before By CANDACE PEARSON 'Ille Cllllllll!lltoe orpn!..t tile rally · tlie-Wlilte Houae said publicly thal the , ot"' .. ,. Pllifliiil-. with the. ecH[>OD90rillg American Civil· About the Only time'.moot people bear cori•-ilbns· were oot recorded. . '!be festive air at lbe rally· ht Richard Liberties Unloa (ACLU). -water or sanitary districts ls when. The lat<sl furor arose wben the White the House ·told-the court-'1ha~of-the~M-t!i!Q!L ]'ark In Yer"" Lind!,..J!!e Durlnl tile !our-llour event, petitions Y set tbelr monthly service tills. ni)le eonversattoas were not recorded. President's birthplace, Satilrday belied _. Cimilitiil. asiang-ror resfgllation -Bunbi> year, .. -.IL abig the Qie was a telephone eonversation its purpose : Impeachment. or~ of President Nixoo. Orange Coast ore bearing a tot atJwt between the President and then.cam-About 200 to 300 people, a<:<ording Qne petition called for support of an them. Ali but one · of the 14 Orange palgn dlredor John N. Mitchell on June to sponsors, li!tened to speakers . and impeachment · re90tutl~ introduced in Coast special districts en Tuesday's 20, 1972 -tbelr first known talk about music, picnicked, rested on . the · grass Coogress by Rep. Jerome Waldie ([). ballot are being hrtly eontested. the Watergate break·ln, The White House or stood in soup lines run by the Parent· Antioch). A second will be sent to the Iii many of the districts, it wilt be said the Mitchell call came in on an Teachers Association (Pl'A} from ACL1:1 in. lPI Angeles and then on to a mat.di bEtween avid environmentalists unbugged phone ht Nixm's livhtg Richard M. N!XOD Elementary sdlool. Southern California legislators. wbo cloo't like overdevelopnesit and long· quarters. · The PI'A showed up with tw-eens of Brea .police., who kept watch on the time .incumbents who almost never face 1be seccnd was a meeting in NiJ:on's chicken noo<l1e and tomato soup to make raDy, differed on the crowd estimates. · a cballenge at electim. ti.me: 1 office oo April 15, !!1'13, with sm....flred money to ·buy audio-visual equipment An, officer said about 100 persons·s)lowed . In-some · districts, tile c<nnpetillon is White House counsel Jotm W. Dean 111,_ for the Yorba Linda school. up . for what both sides agreed ·was being waged by 1llO!le who don't like who says 'Nl1on implicated himself then Almost everyone else was there to a quiet demonstration. the fact that big companies are abJe ln the Watergate oover-up. The White "show the man you like him • . . out No counter-pickets arrived. to control district voting that is based House says an untended reconler ran of office," the theme of flyers put out 1be Yorba Linda Chamber 01 Com-oo lailil oWllershlp o(valuatloo. ·out rt tape belori lbe Nixon·Dean by the Orange Coonty Committee to merce, which built the park a few blocks Ali but three ol lt.e """ial disirict meeting. Impeach Nixon (OOCIN). from where the President was born, elections deal with water and sanitary reluctantly gave pennission for the use districts. The ·three include Fountain Fnm Win: Services SACRAMENTO -A do!ll>le deck bus J>8;CKed with 46 persons on a "g~bler's sp°ecial'' weekend trip ID Reno, Nev., slammed into a concrete freeway bridge pillar Saturday night( killing at least 20 and injuring dozens. · California Highway Patrol U. Robert Parks said the bus hit a metal guant rail and "plowed dead center" into the overpass pillar, slicing the vehicle in two about one-third of its length. ·The impact of the crash scattered the bus's blue and green seats· over an area as big · as a football field. Two of the victitns were hurled 60 feet into another pillar. Both were killed lnstanily. '"Ibis is as serious as I've ever ~." said Parks, a 21.year patrol veteran. Three hours after the .!l p.m. crash, .~bout 30 workmen with gas torches and hacksaws tried to free the last of the injured tt-apped in the mangled wr~ge. • 'The Greyboud · bus, en route from San Francism on a charter basis which allows weekend gatilblen a big discount, was "totally demolisbe<t," said Patrol Sgt. D. W. Miller., r )'arl\I said all of the -en were °'"*.and ' appareolll. be~~ crpnblallm on a -OUUng from RJ•ft•OJd, Calif. • ~ lllfd ·.., eqia;olloa add be givet> !or the bus iioWJng ·Jnto the j>illar. He said no otitaf vehicles were ln"'1ved. He decllned to estimate Jts speed a1 the time of the .crash, but did say "she was moving right alol')g to ~ that --of 'dlllllilg.-:'' ~ -- Jesse Booker, 52, of Richmond, Calif., said he was sitting near tb.-1'eal' of the bllS with bis girl friend, Dorethea Thomas, 28, when the accident occurred. '1My girlfrieiid.Was just staftffig fO go to sleep on my shoulder, and the ne•t thing I heard was a barn " lie said. ''I don't remember much ' after that except that we were seated in the rear of the buS and my girlfrlend w~s thrown to the front. · "I was dazed; but when I came to I realized I had to get out in. a hurry'. I could smell gasoline fumes , and I was thinking fire. ~la10111ers .fteady to Dig I:it of the park, citing "constitutional rights" Valley's school board election, Hun- of the sponsors. tington Beach's charter election and an But chamber president Robert Hol· uncontested but controversial Capistrano lingsead called the e vent "cheap ~~.and Recrealion Department grandstanding" by noo-Yorta Linda '·The ra;,. for .aeata m the Sooth Cout ''J'eople were screaming .everywhere. "The doors were jammed, and I went to a window that bad been knocked out by the impact. I helped four women out of the bus."· Booker, a sell~loyed sa-ap dealer, said he suffered i:ut hands and Miss Thomas sustained minor scratches. -Lifeguards Forecast Boom Year Along Co~t By WllJ.IAM SCHREIBER Of .. Din, '"" ... ,, U food prices get you down, grab the old garden pitchfork, roll up your pants and head for the clam beds on an Orange Coast beach. '!be ooly cash investment Is ft for a liceme. Weguan!sat Newport-Beadt'Blld·Hun- lln&ton Beach are predicting a boom JW' for clams with Ille first major low tide coodition due on lbe coast Nov. 10 and_ ll. "We've already had people out at low tides bringing them ·in but I thinlr: Sunday Special I .____,_________. the bell ts li!ll to eome," aid Newport . Beach Lif<guard Lt. Logan Lockabey. Lockabe)I aald the .best Orange Coast clllnmhti la found on the stranda at Newport Beach and Huntington Beach where the extreme low tides leave broad, puddl..,..,ad flall behind. M••ive aap! bar bulldupo bet-• !Ith .51n1i and 1he Newpon Pier - the '""' few yean ltave made that stmdt of sand , perhaps the best lot ciammhti in the area, Lockabey said. "Buf reolly anywhere where' lbe tide -out and leaves a ~t area behind ii IOOd for cl4ntmln8·" he added. Tbe utreme low tides, a<:<ording . to the almanec, are due juol after 3 p.m. on Nov. 10 and It and because this la a ftokend clammen probably wilt tum out In droves. The target ol atm0tt all ctammen ts the niuglHhelted Pismo clam, named alter a central eatlrornla beach where the aupply Is 111011 abundant. LockllbeY (lleti a.AMMJN(l, 'Piie A%) I • ' { -i _.. '•,.. WHIN TIDE GOES OUT, CLAMMIRS Wll • • .. , J' • residents. . County Waler Dlllrtcl and the Sooth "'!be selection or this particular park Lqma Saallary1Dblr!ct serving South for the meeting is a publicity · stunt," La8una aild•cOastal'Lagtina Niguel pivin- Holljngsead ·said, 5tating .wllat the QCCIN ises to be oo\e of the ·tiottesl. metnbers themSelves admitted. Jie said . Four Orange ·County Environmental the chamber disapproves . of what he Coalition· members ·have mounted 8 called the ACLU'& u-1 ...... _ a..1;.,.,. tactics." "'"' ...,. cliallenge based .on lhe eontenilon that Bruce l>t?rflinger of the c::MXlN saw the illcumbents aren't aware that the it differently. He said Saturday night area'!! rapid growth is causing pollution that everyone at the rally "seemed .tO problems Of a major nature; be enjoying:.themsetves.". Lorell ;Long and Am Ol(istoph . .are ~ers llicl\1!"11, ~Ni Rlpoton, ntno;ig'.for .... is ·OI)· ti>/· .water bolid Southern Calilot1lll" A<;l.\l ,e•ecutjve llt!iliQ\11~ n.imas· Brooks and dl..ctor; Keith lloryuJ), a law •professor P. N'cinnan Anderson. . . . from Cal State, Fullei1on; Peter Rem· · Ms. I.Ong, 'Dr. Joo Helser and Barbara me!,. e><ecullve secretary of .the ·.'Onutie H~ a.re· trying to unseat Ancltr!on. O>unty , AFL-CI\), :"!'d Stanley Shinn' llanilci Edwards and Oiarles PeUy or bauin. heed . of . the defense . fund !oc the siaiiiacy board but tbe race ls more Danie! EllslJerg of . Pentagon Papers corrlfila. fame. · · , Anether· sanitary board cl)allenger, · 'lbere -.,ere no lnddenta and no arrests.-119w_ard Hop~, is working with "They did lbeir thing," a police officer E<!War<ls and Anderson to unseat Petty !Rim-~. . 4ver ~·the ~ issue of possible merger of -lbe two <IUtricts. They •may, do lt again. Oerllinger aid Hoi>ki!is urges the merger oo the basis a meeting of the ·OCCIN ·will .take place of findings ht a reeent study and because this week to deteclllloe ·whe!l .·and :~ • • a second rally ·will take t>)ace. (ste WATER, ~·.Al) . ' . -,..... _ .......... ~ ........ ,· ·~.···· ··~1~ .. ... ,1., .... _ >Jtt"'~ ···~··· ''t~·1BAS?..1ui!Jque ldeo for. 111isliigL i)'thphon1. ltlids Is told, •with Strike Closes Washington Post WASIIlNGTON (UPI) T h e Washington Post canceled its Saturday and Sunday editions · because of a work stoppage by 500 tllloo printers angered by the · firing of a membel' during con- lract negotiations. The s h u t d o w n threatened to last several days. Management and union negotiators met Saturday evening in an effort to md the shutdown in time to publish a trimmed-down Sunday edition, but the 13lks broke off shorUy after 8 p.m. Neither side would comment on the progress of the negotiations. The stoppage, sparked by the dismissal of printer Mike Padella far-alleged "neglect of duty" Ft"iday, came more than a month a£ter the Columbia Typographical Union's contract with the paper expired. ' GOLD..uNnm' OOLi> t:., i'1iii11t1deolll goid, color of lbe top• la_yer of lumps ol ~ .., the; rOv., .Oa\ covere,i .... wOrtll ~ \ll<Nsands of pictures. by Dally Pilot.staffers Jo Olson "' Y-s.mc. 11 Mlnw• 1tt ihd 1PilriC:k'"O'.tDohoell on Page B4. ' ,,_ ~ •: =-. U.::. 14 ' ao11an ,'-one. of m!l11...it flndll that- ' ' ' ' furnish the HunUqton llarboui home of Dr. t"rank Gorhain." See story by stall writer Hilary Kaye on Page Bl. ! SPORTS $OOllES -Or.nee Co a 11 .QJllece blliled to ,,1>4 tie with •lllttac Santa Ana O>Uece and' Saddleblck trim- med boll Sc»tlldale;Arl<., IMl, Jn junior <Olllep ,footboll aotlon-satunla)r niibt.- See peg• Cl for detaUs. · Qt AID lSR.U!L? -· Dr. Paul t~...,. 01.1• o,-.. c...ry • ..,~ A#. electrical engineering professor. ~i.c..,i._ !'; .~ ..... · ·~~ a\, UCI, a lllldent of'°Mtdeast affairs, c ..... ...,. 111• It•• •• · 1n mll!ttlcms 11adtom1Uc11 support ol Israel 09• lf9tlcn "' 1"'11 Cl<J ,. l•twlel '''" Ai. AJ ~ 11 .. 111 by the United Slates. His arguments •Mt1111-1 111, 111 Tl'll¥'fl · ., ~•1 be led --A7 ,., ... ,...,.n; A7 w"""" M "" CIJT Oil • 1116"' · • f'll'lllln CJ WllllnMll Cl l.EVOLUl'ION BY TV -Column!~ ..... .,... '""'' ., .,..._ .. ~ .. S. · I. Hlyikawa has some thoughts on. ''"' Wfwattr M 1f!Ml1t1 ll:ttt1r«fl ~ , .. _ _,_,,....,...... " ~ e.ffects of the "boob tube " on modem aoclety, And h~ 51.)'S ib no wonder ~ DAILY .'!L4lT SICTIOfltl -,, l .._ African countties-Mve blimed <C."Ol·· c..., tMltn ,_.... .....,, or television. s.. Pago A7. TV .... , " . I - • "• • ' • • A 2 D.\ILY PILOT S11ndf1, Novtmbtt 4, 1973 • Coast Roundup· I ,, it \Vas an accidental death. Palmer had aid his off.duty pistol went oU one mem!Jlc al 1llM CleubY'• apart· menl as he wu putting It baok in ill holster. Palmer', however, remains • . A NEWPORT BEACll MAN BEING CHASED by federal dMlg agonb ao- cidftltally fell oil the !(Ip of Dana Point early In the \\'C<'k and ,died. fl.r<!t Angell, 25. suffered fatal ~ead injwies in th-e 100.foot drop to the rocky beach -and succumbed Thursday l~ 8an Clemente General Hospital. .,. TIIE CITY OF MGUNA BEACH is counting its considerable artistic blessings -SOl]Je $153,909 of them in dollars paid by the Laguna Beach Festival of Aris and Pageant of the Masters r.r le~ of the city-owned exhibition and IrVine Bowl grounds. -The city receives 2.5 percent of the festival's gross receipts. Moot of the mooey will be used to pay off ac- quJsition costs involved with the Main Beach Park in downtown Laguna. Other funds, though, will go to aid city. cultural events and the general budget. .,. IT WAS A CASE OF TIIREE TRICKS and you're out for a Laguna Beach Halloween party that police said got a little out of hand. A crowd estimated at between 150 and 200 juvcnlles and young adults pelted Laguna Beadl police officers With eggs and beer bottles, one bottle strik~ ':: Ft'Olll Pflfle l ~tLAMMING. •• ' said 99 percent of the clams on the brange Coast are of that variety. , But Lockabey warns there are some ws to obey while clamming. _ Anyone over 16 years old needs a · Valid fiShing license, which can be ob- • jained in bait and tackle shops or : Erting good stores. Resident licenses · : $4, noo-residftlts pay $15 and a : al, lo-day non-reslderit ticket costs · ~~ing e<[llipment rriust also include "i measuring implement -Lockabey :A.id a small · nletal guage is be9t - : ~ check lhe size or each clam. The • tegal mi.niinwn size is four and one :balf inches In di8'meter. :..:,: "If it's too small. it has to go back, but don't just fling it out into the water," Lockabey said. "It has to be forced back into the sand." Lockabey a1so warned that there is a llk:lam_lim.it per person per day. "Every year there are s om e characters who try to get away With bags and bags fUli of them." he said. "But we'll be looking for them." Penalties start at $3.l for each clam over the legal limit or under the lega l size. according to the California Depart- _ment of Fish and Game. Lockabey said . the tools are simJ>!e. It 1Bkes a hand digging ti>ol like 1a rake, fork or shovel to find the clams and pull them up and . a bucket to put them in. Only spears 1and gaff-hooks -are_ iJJegal to_u~ jp ~lamrning. It is also legal Jo dive for clatns outside the tidal flats. But Lockabey said preserve areas like the ones off Corona del Mar and ne>rth Doheny Beach are orr limits to clammers. ing an officer on the head. Pol~ •• ., SllSJl'lllled !nm the police cltpartment had been called to the north Laguna until the d..,.nl!lelll compieleo · ill residence twice aM the third time own Internal lnvtsligaUoo a n d started to break up the ~rty Officers clttennfnes ii M ehould remain 00 ~ · the force or be dfll;harged for said no arrests were ma~e because negligence. - or th e size of the cro"·d. • V' ;-' AT LEAST ON TllE SUIU'ACE, IRVINE RA !liC H WATER SOME OF TIIE "DEEP TllROAT" DISTRICT DIRECTORS bowed to the controveny in Huntington Beach wishes of bou.sewives wtto clalril land· subsided last week. On Tuesday. owner voting policies discriminated Trustees of the Huntington Beach Union High SchOo1 District announced against them. A by.Jaws enacted by they would not fire Jack Roper, the the district Thursday wlll allow district supertptaident, whose head husbands to share their "votes" on Tuesday with their wives. In the bad earlier appeared to be on the JRWD electiog., landowners are king. cbopplng block. Instead. Roper made One vote is granted each parcel of a public apology for the showing of property according to the ~ssessed the sex ftlm at a district conference, valuation of the land. \Vives became an activity that caused the furor. -But some segments of the community angered when the assignment of votes indicated lat er it may not all be v.1ere mailed to men. A three-day I 1 suffragette protest produced results, over as they hinted at possib e recal and mwo promises to pursue further actions against some trustees and change" ln district election systems complained that Roper bad been let • · off too easily. some have termed as "arohai~. '' .,. HUNTINGTON BEACH POLICE OFFICER RON PALMER has been cleared of ,aey potential criminal dlarges in the shooting death ol his girlfriend Mary Cleasby, earlier this month. The district attorney's office investigated the shooting. and declared .,. A ''PEACEMAKER" WllL AP· PARENTI;Y BE HIRED by H111- tingtoo Beach to expedite construclioo m the city's $2.9 miilioo central ·library, now a . hall year behind scbedul<. Work on tbe library has boggled doM1 because of 'disputes 3fld persooallty coolllcts between city of- .. The best spots to hunt for clams Scout·O·Rama Skills are the tidal pools left behind by the receding water. Lockabey said to just wade in and start poling into the sand looking for something solid . "But we urge people to watch out because eveey year we get a few who run a rake or pitchfork into their feet ," be said. State Recreation department officials : said there are few good clamming areas · in south Orange County. Many of the · beaches are too steep or rocky for • good clam buildup. . They said some clams have been found • in the rocky sand of the San Onofre , surfing beaches but the quantity, "isn't enormous," according to one official ' As for cooking up the catch, Lockabe)' . said, l't.here are about as many diffennt ways as there are people who eat them." : He prefers a personal chowder recipe, : using clams that have been steamed . ·first. then cleaned and removed from · the shells . SUNDAY DAILY PILOT Tiit Ol'lilltl CO.tt DAILY PILOT, with Wtlfth b combtlllld fhe N-·Print, b PUDtllllled trr the Or1n0t Cotst ~Wlll'!GI COlnPlnY. S.S.- r1t1 eclltlotls 1r1 pl,llllltlMd, Mondty """""' Frld1y, for-COlll Mtw, NfWJll!rt llldt, ~ Hun11,.1on Bt&dl/FOf.111111" V•!lty,• Ll'gUl'll a..ci.. 1n1ln1/h0dlett1ck and $In ci-11/ Sen J111n C.plslr-. A !lllOll NO!ollal ~llkln b p1,1bll1hecl S1tll!'d1)'S 111d 5\IM:tyt, The Pflnclpel pvblllhirit pl111t J1 11 "° Wnl 81y S1rtel, Co.It Mtsl, Ctltfor"lt, tH-. " • . Rob1rt N. W11J Prtsld1nl ilnd P11blllJ'lrr J1cli: R, Curl1y Vi(I Pfti;ldtnl Ind Genertl Mlnqw Tho"'l•I IC•t"il Editor Tholl'l•t A •. M11rphi11• M1~11l119 EfUor Cherie• H. Looi Rich•tcl P. N•ll At1llll11t MtMtlf!t Edlfdr1 Afe11-J, Dir•i11 Sundl'I' !ditot. Offlc" ' "°''' MIPl »II Wt.S ••r Strfff 'N~ &Hch1-JW H~ klf'"9rd U1guri1 hKll1 m Forat • .....,. Hufllln0'!9n '8dlt 17'11J l•d'I BouleY•rd &If! Cltmlflft: •s Norttl El C.mlM RMI Ttl.,.._ 17141 HMm Cl_.... M•ettl .. 642·1671 ,,_ c:-mi1 A,_. S..111"' L ..... IMdl 4fJ ... 42t ''"' H«1ll Ortitlet c ... r Ct,..ns JllW Sff.IJJO COPY r!V"'I, 1l f2. Ort!IOt.. C..111 'Wlltftfne c°"""~'' "'' -• t10rlli, 1riu.1r1n.... edii.t,.I rMllff tr llllwrtliMllnll' .....in ""''I' 0. t~ Wlrhlu'I '91C'-1 ,.,. ''""""" ot ttO"J"ritM ...... . ~ ci.u -t"' .... .t c.-. MM. : '(l!lfWnle. •·tlllttp9'tlWI DI' Un1W 11-"tl.. ~ .. ''"'"""'"/ "" ,,..11 U.tS tl'llfttl!Wt mllllarr •tttln•ll«" n.u "'°"tlll'f. • . . Three members of the Boy Scout TrOQp 186_llf Costa Mesa -Mike B!acliman, David Simken and Howard Stewart -are seen with their troops' display of the 12 skill awards necessary in scouting. The exhi· _ bit won the Costa Mesa Mayor's Trophy Saturday at the annl!al Scout· O·Rama at Anaheim Convention Center. Close to 100,000 persons - parents, scouts, brothers and sisters -toured through tlle varied ex· hibits during the day. "- Irvine Co. Farmers Ready for Fuel Pinch Diesel fuel shortages plaguing other portions of califorrria and ·hamperq fall harvests were anticipated by Orange County's biggest single farm operation that of the Irvine O>mpony. Fred Keller, assistant general manager of the agricultural divis ion of the Irvine Company said Friday the firm has had a fuel "conservation program in effect foc several months. HAs a result of this program we have kept records allowing us to project future needs," Keller said. "Based on our understanding of the availability of fuels in the future, we are not expecting a problem." Keller noted, however, that if shortages of gasoline or dlesel fuel ate felt elsewhere in Orange County cutbacks in ~upply will similarly affect the Irvine operations. .. California's new state en erg Y coordinator's office Friday received calls suggesting tho shortage of dlesel fuel "is bringing California agriculture to a standstill." Almoot immediately alter fonner state (ll!OlogiJI Wes Bnmer wu n a m e d . coordinator '11lursday, the -agency's six phone lines lit up Will> lwndreds of farmers reporting 4Jiey have run out or fuel fU' their ·traclml and rnany others predicting d>ey will run dry by ' next week. "I liavt 200 requests for f\Jel from farmers right in front ol me,'' said Gordon Larkin. "They all need l\lel ..,w, and U they don't get it immedlately their crops .are going to rot in the fields." "Wi th lhe food shortages and prices being what Ibey are, ll's a damn olwne the-h!rvesters are comlnc to a tia.Jt," he t>id. " ' Bruer. Lorkln and other stat< ollldalJ blame the shortag .. on the -DWI- " datory fuel allocatim program, instituted Thursday by tile federal government. Lt. Gov. FA1 Reinecke, head of the state energy planning council, lll1!"d PreSdent Nixon ~o declare a one-month moratorium on the program, saying in a telegram: · · "The social and economic fabric of California is being severely impacted became the mechanics for implementing the progrnm are not yet operatlooal. Rather lhan resolving an em<rgency, It ·ts cn:ating a disaster of mounting proportions." Larkin, wf» also serves as state ad- miniNator of disaster relief, said the pinch oo fuel was being felt strongly throughout tile Sacramento and San Joa· quln Valleys and Iii roastal farfiilhg areas. . "One man told me he has 200,000 sacks of rice sitting in his field but lacks the fuel to go out and pick lhem up." he said. "If it rains on them., they'll ei:plode." Tusti,n Pharmacy RohDed-Saturday A black-haired man armed wtth a doubl.,.barreled shotJun robbed a 'l\isUn ~ of nar<otlCll and $400 late Saiw'day night, Orange Coonty Sherif!'• olflcers saitf. . 0epuu.. said the suspect, described as abClut 3~ yeara old, five feet, nine inches tali and 150 pound> With a multadte and p\te, WU ftUl II tarte. 'l'.lle 1m1e1L lllllhecl'· et .. tbo .Parfl · PJl,zl Pharmacy at Walnu! Sireet and Newport Boulevard toot place about 9 p.m., ol· fl'"'1 said. r .. • I • Compacy Joo an lmmodiate public Newport lloadt was up before the takeover. Aecording to a pllll that regional coastal COl1IO)lsslor last !lciills and ~emperaii>tntat llbrar) ardtltect Dion N<utra. Moodax nigh(/ ~talked to architect M .El~1 a former clnsmnite ,' hao now been agreed oo by all sides, week: Bui ofter Versailt.o attomey · .Ille .public wt!Lha~e.10 yeai:a ii:,~ ~~ ~ush me~ la 11 Y ~ the details o1 l"l"dlase fl'Olli the -up the votea In his liivor, !!Vino Om)pany. • • he beill the commLHloo to the pmch • ' .,. -and aneil for an fndefinile · ton• MA Yqa DONALD A. MelNNll flAlll dn! ...... Senm votes WO)ll!d have bee!I .. No..,.rt s.id.. shollld lDIUlte ooeded tar ~ "' tho 44Hol.1 atudles ID find ways of limiting public bll4!top project. • Neutra's at USC and a mao .wtllini lo $tell in .... get the llbr~ -~ moY!ng. They will call him ... arcbitectural eonstnaction ooordb:aMor- bul hit euenUal role is lo oettle dJliNles belweeo the city and Neulra. If it works, the library should be finished In a year. Jf it doetlill't, the city ..... may fire. Neutra, a prospect neither side really wants. accetS to its 6.1 miles of ·ocean ;-' • ' beaches. O>mplainlng that slate THE BUU.OOZING OF A FOl\EST • beaches can close up when their park· of eucalyptus trees to makOLJl'l'l" .,. TilE MYTlllCAL " G fl E AT ing loll-become full, Mclnlllk"!id for 111lndll&lrial.ieveloprne!ll11l:Q111<>....-'--I Newporl'lleech ough\ to have the right . Mesa has ao el11'llP'I reoillo!!ts ol• to close off access to some of ils the Ocean View Park tract ~t llley beaches when 100,000 or more people want to seoeclo from the city. P<!ltk>os crowd onlD them. !law exactly to limit •re beiljg carried door-l<><!OOt ,••!ting access, he said, would require can-for deannex~fQn ·from Costa Me;A sid.,..ble study. and annexatton to Newport ~· • ...., . 'lllO homeowners blame die O>ota . ORANGE COUNTY DESERVES to Mesa City Council f'"'·tbe defolJalion · 'PUMPKIN in the Owli'e Brown COIJl· ic strip goes out Halloween night With gifts for children. C..ta Mesa's F.ddie C«iover was a lot lilte that Wednesday. He· went out trick-or~ treating .an~ a fashion, but asked small-change contributions to donate for recreational benefits of FairVieW State J-lospital's retarded patients . Ed· die, 13, collected $40.67 in two hours' work. "Mom," he told Mrs. Betty Conover, "just think if 10 kids went out what we could have dooe." have its ov.n C?astal eommlssion, program because couocllmen aprroved -Flitil Distri<t &iperv;sor -Ronald theJnduslrial project dmtle ille pro- caspers dectared last week. <Jaspera. lest of residents. .,. THE BIGGEST STEP YET toward pabUc acqullltfoo ol Upper Newport Bay was taken 'When · the Board of Supervisors agreed to go along with plans calling fer takeover of the Back Bay by tibe California llepamn<llt of F'im and Game. Wllb support.from tile oupervisors, otate officials can now begin negotiations wilh tile Irvine a member of the South Coast Regional ~ Zone Conservation O>mmission, Mlic!t TilE AIRLINE INDUSTRY IS includes Orange and Los An8eles llEGINNING • to feel the pinch of counties, said the workload-is too the energy shortage. This includes great for one 12•member panel, He Orange O>wrty Airport, where the sent a letter to .fue state coastal Newport Beach-based Air Califomia commission asking for an inunedjate line announced an 8 percent flight split. Other commis.sioners said 'he cutback to comply wi!h federal fuel financial and organizatimal problems allocatlOn regulation. That means tllo ol Cl>e plan woold be so eoonnous eliminatim of lwu roundlrip flights it is unreasonable. to San Diego and one to San Fran· V" cisco. There will be no reduction THE SECOND PHASE OF THE of flights by Hughes Airwe9t, the VERSAILLES oo tile BI u 11 s other major carrier operating ool of aparlrnalt-<O!ldominium project in Orange County Ai'l'Ori. .Connally Gets Subpoena Over " Milk Inquiry " POW. Trade Due .- Trapped Egypt Units ' Try Breakout·--Israel W ASllJNGTON (UPI) -Former Treasury Secretary John B. Connally has been l!Ubpoenaed by Senate in- vestlgaton aeeking the poesibility ol a link between daJry industry cmtrlbulioos for President Nixon's re-election· .and two administntton actims favorable to tile industry, h was dlsclcoed Saturday. Samuel Dash, ·dtief oounsel for tile Senate Watergate C.Ommittee, said Con- nally •nd his successor et Treasury, George P. Shultz. were asked.to appear before staff investigators ''possibly some time next week," although they have not been summoned to testify at public_ bearings. "This is part ol. our ongoing in- vestigation" fl campaign financing, Dash --A portion of the milk procttcers• $42'7,500 coolributiQnS in 1971 went to Democrats for N'uton, the Im campaign group that Connally beaded 'after he re$lined !nm the cabinet. While lloule memos and 1aWIUits have indicated that es much as $2 · million in donations was promised. The dairy industry cmtribulions began in March, 1971, the same week the administration ordered an btcrease in milk price supports that. resulted in. an estimated ~ million boost in in- dustry profits aod higher rices for con- sumers. No mooey. was contributed in 1972, when the contriputions became a matter of ~ic controversy. Sliullz -"3icf'Friday the price suppo.U.· were increased over the unanimous feamunendation agaiMt su& a move by the Council ot Eoooomic Advisers, the Office ol Management and Budget and tbe Trea5ury ' and Agriculture departments. ·· United Press latemadoaal Units of the trawed Egyptian 3rd Army tried Saturday to smash oot of the ·Israeli st'ranglehold on the ·smai Desert, but the altaclls :-one lasting three blurs -wererepulsed by infantry, artillery and mortar barrages, Israel reported. Egypt denied the Israeli report but complained to United Nations observers Saturday that Israel had violated the cease-fire four times in the past 24 blurs, an Egyptian military apokesman said. The Egyptian spokesman sold Israel Standard Oil Hikes Gas Price SAN FRANCISOO (AP) -'!be price of a gallon ci gas at Standard Oil stations-went up-by nine-tentm rl. a cent Saturday, the C001pany said. A spokesman for Standard Oil QI. of California said the increase was design- ed to meet higher operating coots, as permilted by Ille Cost of Living Council. A gallon of regular gas now coets 42.6 cents,· mleaded -43:7 cents and premlum 45.8 cents. 'Ibe firm also made 1 ~, cect per gallon increases in its prices for dlesel and heating fuel. • Du,ONT $01 • H1·l0WS • SOllOS ·ONLY •NYLON $HAG • TOME ON TONE • Hl·LOWS • $CUl,TUIES • ,.lUSH SHAG • Ttt COlOI, SHAGS was attempting to ere.ate a pretext to break the cease-ffre and 1 a on c tt widescale military operatioos. .. ·The batUeiield m0ves came during intense diplomatic negotjatiUJS In the United Stales and the llliddle East aimed at resolving the four-week-Old crisis. ""1e United States appeared lo be actiJW as the middleman between Arab and Israeli diplomats in Wash!ngton. Diplomatic sources in Cyprus said the Israelis and Egyptians would e.tttwwe prismers of war "possibly within the next 24 hoUrs." The Israeli military coounand said Saturday that IBraell and Egyptian officers met on the west bank of the Suez Canal to diseu&S ~ ISStle. State Department -hid! I ( Secretary ol State-Heory A.'l ' WU•lhutlliog ·between separate <neellnp ' • With lmleU Premier Mrs.' Golda Mar and F.gyptian Foreign M!nfstor Imnall Fahrni to break the deadlock onr the ce~fire lines along 1be Suez Canal and the release of prisoners. State Department sources said Mrs. Meir would e ;1 te n11· tier-,;,u In Washington one more day. She was expected to leave to Tel Aviv late Satur~ day, but put off ber trip until today, the sources said. Stale Department spokesman Robert McCloskey said Kissinger met With Mrs. Meir from 10 p.m. Friday until after midnight, and he met With Fahrni and again with Mrs. Meir late Saturday. Sources said Kissinger's a:llUnuiog diplomatic effort was "intensive." . • COMMEltCIAl "NYlON • TWEEOS PER SQ. YARD Values to $6.9'i ~- ONLY PER SQ. YARD Fi~; Quality Podding & labor AvoilablQ-All Work Fully Guaranteed LAYAWAYS AVAILAill ALL MA.IOR CRIDIT CARDI ACCll'Tl,D . TUMS ~ AVAllA91~ IQCl MIKE, . 124L 17th ST. ,_, N1w,..,.I COSTA MUA ·~·4330 _,11-11-.11_,r.w.s ... ~ fhw-•• '"· ... . '""' ,, .. CARPET WAREHOUSE UNIC flNANCINO .J .. , -. Sunday, No't'tMber 4, 1973 DAILY PILOT A 3 Poll Finds lnCreasing on -SAN>'RANCJSCO (AP) =F0rty-three percent o( the California voters surveyed are inclined to vote 'no' Tuesday on Prop. 1, Gov. Ropald Reagan's tax llmitatioo initiative, the califomia Poll .said Saturday . 25 i>ercenl. "Over-all vote tendencies are sharply t divided along party lines, and by other factors ," Field said . ''flomeowners, older persons and selI- classified conservatives are much more favorably Inclined toward the measure and they are the most likely persons to get out and vote." • '• •I " Prop. ~. '. '" 23 percent of the renters said thty favored Prop. I. \vhile 48 percent oPPoffd It. : Twenty-nine perctnl of North e (D California voters favored Prop. I , com~ pared with 3$ percent of Southern Calllomia voters; 42 percent in the north were opposed. compared with 39 percent in the south, the survey showed. LEGAL COMMUNITY HONORS WILLIAM 0 . DOUGLAS' SUPREME COURT TENU RE ''No one should interpret this as an indication that · the 'nos' will have it on Nov. 6, however. because there are many factors to be considered." cau- tioned polJ.ster A1ervin O. Field in a special 1.034-person survey for the Los Angeles Times. Fifty-three percent of the Republicans surveyed favored frgp. Ii compared with 17 percent of the Democrats, Uie Poll sho wed. Twenty-two percent of the Republicans surveyed said they were opf>O:sed, compared with 52 percent of rt.he Democrats, the poll said. The poll showed 44 perecnt of. thole classifying ttiemselves as conservativtfi favored the measure. compared with 24 percent of the middle-of-the-road or liberal voters. About 3 perciot of the conservatives \Vere opposed . .eomparect \Vilh 48 percent of the liberals, Field said. Chitf J ustic e Warren Burger, left, ind Former Ch lt f Justice Earl W1rr1n Con9r1tul1tt Oougl11, Ctnte.i '· Energy Crisis May Cha~ge The Nation Justice Douglas Hailed . As 'Genius of Law' Tiie A11oclated Prns t.lounting problems with energy sup- plies have led to calls for dramatic changes, in the American life-style: In Mia-ffii Beach Saturday, Federal Highways Adininistrator N o r b e r t TiemaM said his office would reccm· mend an increased excise tax OC1 gasoline, reduced speed limits oo all federal highways and a coupon rationing plan for gas "!imilar to that u5e;.d during Ylorld War II. The Nixon administration said it wa s coosidering such measures as extending Daylight Savings Time all year round , a rtductloo"1t£ operating hours by non- essential 'industries. suspension of anfoi.- pollutioo controls ,and other. emergency procedures to meet whatever fuel crisis develQP6. "The arisis is much worse than all of us anticipated a week ago," said Sen. Henry M. Jackson (0-Washl, chairman o( the Senate Interior Com- mittee. He said Arab oil cutbacks have amounted to a Joss of 3.3 million barrels of oil a day, not 1 .. 2 million barrels as originaJly thought. • And Canada, the main foi'eign !OUl'ce <I. U.S. oil, announced Friday it was increasing the tax on its crude oil expor~ from 40 cents a barrel to $L90 a barrel. The foreign squeeze has pushed pl'ices UP. on available suppl!~ of gasoline and heating oil. And several states are taking steps to anticipate what they reel could be a serious shortage this winter. .. '.!'be price ol some _brands ol gasoline .. ent up again last we<k, oendhic the price ot premium gas soaring to the 50 cent per gallon mark in such areas as New York and San Francisco. Casino Owner Ends His Fourth Marriage RENO. Nev. (AP) -casino operator William Harrah, 62, has been granted a divorce here from former model Rox- ana Darlene Carlsoo, 33. 'Ibey were manied Oct . 15, 1972. at Lake Tahoe. It was his fourth marriage and her seoxid. llarrah filed for tl'le divorce in April and it was-granted Friday. ~eople Newport Beach came up with more "solutions '• to the problem Of jet noise from Orange County Airport last week. Councilman ~lllan DostaJ. speaking to a citizens committee thal's supposed to be preparing s~lficalions for an environmental imp°act report on the airport. sug- gested the runways be re-built so they point in a more \\•esterly direc- tion. "Yes," Dostal oonceded in an interview later. "ttl<lt wouJd aim them a little bit at CO.Sta Mesa City Hall." . "' Anyone who thinks the Navy is nol happy to be accepting females , can think again. "As far as the Nl'/Y'S concene:I, it's a higbwatu mark, a mil.Stone," judged Capl. Howard N. Kay, commander ol the Newport, R.I., Navy Base's orftcer training center;-where the lint coed officer candidate class in U.S. Navy history graduated last weet. -~ Ile!'" Co111tllu, who bu jusl made her flrtt record, , also made a comment on the state of the art: "There are too ..,many songs today 10,v in moral content. lt makes 111e sad lo think this is what the people "'ant to hear." ' """ . ' ' The United States gOt a reassuring burst from the ladl' who wears lhe crown across the ocean. Pledged Qtteea Ellzabelli in a ~ during the ceremonial opening Of Parllamenl, "My rovenunent will conUnue to at· lach hlih Importance lo our relation- ship with !he United Siales of Ameri- ca." "' - \VASHINGTON (AP ) -Supreme Court J.ustice William O. Douglas was celebrated Saturday as a "genius of the law" Who has given a new dimension to the First Amendment. Former Supreme Court Ju,stice , Abe rort.as said colleagues -as different as lhe late Justices John Harlan and Hugo Black applied the · tenn genius to Douglas, who last Monday became the individual to sit longest on thi high court -34 years, 196 days. Prof. Thotn3.s Emerson of Yale, speak- ing with others · at a convocation to mark Douglas' tenure said the 'TS-year- .o.ld justice had rec6gnized as few others Mve that the First Amendment contains elements beyond the traditional view that it provides a market place or ideas and a necessary element of democracy. Emerson said Douglas has underst~d that the First Amendment also provides and protects an opportunity for in- dividuals to reach !heir full personal Potential. In response at a dinner held in his honor, Douglas indicated that if he has disciples it is not of his doing. "I have never been much of a pros- • 2 Hurl as Truck . Runs off Freeway Two men wtte .lftjured'Saturday morn- ing when the pickup truck in which ·they were 'drivinJ plilnged off i/, San Diego 'Freeway overpaSs \o ·the bottom of Aliso Creek. The 4 a.m. accident near La Paz Road in Mission Viejo took pl.ace when the-driver, George l\.iurray, 23, of Camp Pendleton Marine Base. apparently fell asleep at the wheel, California Highway Patrol officers rePorted. Murray and his passenger, Raymond Farouarp, 20, also of Camp Pendleton , \t•ere taken to Mission Community Hospital. Murray was later transferred to -the hospital at Camp Pendleton. Farouarp, in more serious condition, remaUieCf at-Mission Hospital, where he was operated on late Saturday night. Quotes ROY BYRNES a recent nooproductive meeting over tfie isSue lasbed out at the county road depertmept. "The e-0unty," he ~ed. ''b;, trying to tum us into ·!M P\0"11 city lo the dump." With thaf1 the council agreed to withdraw l!lnd<inement .ol the use or Prima Oes'echa eanxoa in the inland hills. .,. ' "A View ol thi opportunities !hat modern women race came from Barbara McClme White_. the first one with an ambas$11dorial-rank in the U.S. delegation to the United Nations. She observed. "Moot of my classmates at college opted for the, family......Now eyes , are being opened, and poople realize that a talented and motivated woman can do both." / A malor dbpule belween COUTiiY ofllclals and ~n Juan Capistrano cooncllm'" over which road should be used to a new dump bu rpurred . ~ vitriolic oommenti iD the mission community,. Mayor R o r ' .. Byrnes. bitterly relaUng events at "' A conservative senator summed up Presldenl Nixon's latest predicament. the While' Hau<e announc=ent !bat two o! the phantom tapes do not -exist: :'As ol tbls moment, f3esldcnl elytizer, tor my faith is that the only soul a man must save is his own," Douglas said in prepared remarks. Douglas advised other judges to follow his practice and travel abroad. Overseas, judges are usually at the bottom of the totem pole . . . they are usually subservient mouthpieces for the cabal in pawer. That spectacle gives an American judge a new perspective ," Douglas said. . The event was attended by past and present members of the court and drew 250 spectators ' for a discussion of Douglas' career. Buckley Expects Big Watergate Development WICHITA (AP! -Sen. B.a r f y Goldwater. R·Arlz .. and co I um n is t \Yilliam Buckley Jr., said Saturday they expect a startling develcpment in the Witergate artair in the hext few days. They indicated they expect the development will come Crom U.S. District Court Judge John J. Sirica 's investigation into the mis.sing 'Ybite House tapes. . Neither Buckley nor . G o I it~ it er elabocated. · The 1964 Republican nominee for presi- . dent and Buckley talked to a_ television nen crew that found them having coffee together at the Wichita airport. ·Goldwater said he was vacationing. B..ckley had stayed in Wichita overnight after an address on Friday at Kansas State UrUvers.ity. • In his speech. Buckley said it was probable that Nixon would resign and "it wouldli.'t surprise me if this comes in the weeks or months immediately ahead .... " ··1 ttJnk il will prob a b·I y happen "'hen, in response to opinion Polls shov;- ing a continuing fading popularity, he is approached by a delegation of men he respects ·who ask him as an act of deference to the public to step asi~e ." Nixon bas the clear burden of satis- fying the American people that he bas been speaking the truth. II he fails, then we are faced ~'th a palitical crisis of the'1!10st pro undly disturbing proportions." Tha was Conservative Sen. James L. Bbckley, William F.'s brother. of New York speaking. Ghost humorist and cartoonist John Corcoran of Laguna Beach was asked what advice he had for budding freelance cartoonists. "Go t o plumbers' school or to barbers' col- lege. Get in touch with the syndicate and get yourself a steady job." he replied. "' AU-year schools have become a hot controversy in the Fountain Valley School District, so ·to cool the issue a bit, district officials are developing a policy to outline how a school community determines Whether a campus will switch to all year status. One clause in the policy says each famUy will have Of!e vote during an election, r8tber than each parent. "This was done so the single-parent families have an equal vote," Assis- 1an1'Superintendent Jaek Mihnk'en ex- ,pl&ined. ''ll will also help the ty,·o- parent family that ~Can't reach a decision. The two varying v&es will not • cancel each other out at the polls.'' He failed, however, to explain which member ol the dividod family casts the official vote. "' p~. John Isaacs or the Scripps rnst11ute or.oc .. nography was trying ,to convince lhe ,South Coast Regi~I Zonf\ Conservation Commission that stricter standards for temperature and ammoola and oxygen content in ocean discharges aren't needed. "The sea ls starved for these basic nutrients.'' Isaacs said last week. Commissioner Judy Rosener, 0 r NeW})Ort<-Beach. wasn't convinced. "t can't even swim ih t~ water where I live." $e complained. "I don't know the technlcal \\'Ord for It. but it's sure there. You 're aU saying it's uot . tl\ere. You'rt saying thcf !chemicals) are Innocent." Field's latest poll showed an in- creasingly negative attitude compared with a survey taken Oct. 27-:lO showing 37 percent were leaning toward a no vote. The number of voters tending to f{l.vor Prop. 1 dropped rrom 33 percent to 32 percent and the number of undecided electors dropped from 30 percent to Boston Plan e Crash Kills 3 Crewmen BOSTON (UPl ) -A Pan Alnerican , cargo plane, carrying cylinders of nitric acid, crashed and burned Saturday trying to make an unscheduled landing at Logan Jntemational Airport. All three crewmen aboard were killed. Coast G·uard vessels }ater fowld some of the .. cylinders in Boston Harbor and warned residents to · stay all.•ay from others that might wash ashore. The dead were identified as Capt John Zammett. 53, Cold Spring Harbor. N.Y.; First Officer Gene Ritter. 34, New Canaan , Conn., and Flight Engineer Davi$ Melvin, 37, nhaca, N.Y. The three were the only persons aboard the plane, which was carrying ca rgo and mail to Prestwick. ~tland. , An · .ail<port spokesman -said Pan Am cargo· Flight · 160 was en. route from New York· fo Scotland . when it radioed the airport from a location 50 miles north of Boston .asking pemUssion to land about' 9:20 a.m.' · The captain saicl ~ • was a1 "sitUa- tion" aboard. -an indicator. 1lght that showed a fire ·in the pl?Jle's No. 4 cargo hold, the, s&;'id . Wilnesses~ , approached the-ai,rport withou • ~ it was aboul 3llO !°"t o!! the ,. and !hen suddenly veered out of cont9>1 and crash- ed near the end of runway left. Bad l\liishiooms Held SANDUSKY, Ohio (UPI) A spakesman for-Grill Meats, Inc .• said Saturday the firm has voluntarily recall- ed food product entrees believed to con- tain contaminated mushrooms. Logan ClemoW, Grill Meats manufacturing , manager. said the products are being taken from company sales trucks and held in storage freezers for disposal. Twenty five percent o( the Republicans and 31 percent of the Democrats said they were undecided. Field said 40 percent ot the homeowners favored the tax limitation measure while 35 percent opposed it: Among the 18-29 age group, 21 percent favtfred Prop. 1; in the 60 and over group, 44 percent faVored it. ln the 18-29 group. 35 percent were undecided and 44 percent Were opposed. · l111111ovable Object -When this van, driven~by Michael Dennis i\1arrion, 21 , hit this tree on Poppy Avenue, Coran·a del ?t1ar, Friday night, something had lo give .. j It wasn't the tree. A Newport Beach policeman surveys the damage ~: · !tom the crash. which sent Marrion, from Chester, Va., to Hoag Mem· ~i orial Hospital "for treatment. ~e ~as later r~leased. i lv ) ,I S~ett~tl .Out Window t ·Man . '• Wh~nJetEn_gh1eExplodes ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (UPI) -An KLAS-TV. in Las Vegas, Nev., ·lot~ engine failure aboard a National Airlines authorities a . man wa!l sucked out of DC 10 jetliner shattered a cabin window the plane during the cabin decompressiOn at 39,000 feet over lhe rugged New despite other passengers' efforts to grab Mexico wilderness saturday night . him . Witnesses said a male passenger was '"I'h~ stewardess had just given the sucked out the window before the plane man a drink and five minutes latet could land. ---' he was blown out the window," Smtth Passenger Mark .. Smith, manager o>er-~said:- RALPH'S -SEalONAL HUDQUARTERS • Transitional Elegance in Luxurious Velvet _,,.._ 111" _:_ 1e 61100 II 5&9· Rt'-111.• t J ~u:.'''" 4!~.: .... Br l' . • ' '' ' ._ I ~ 1 ' t • ' . ' ',1 • • • ' ' t ' •• ~ i . :/' ' . ' . I " · .. <1 ~ ' •• 1 iJ ... t t1 . ~' f 'jll ' l Tiii Ta,1lh1rness s.r. - lu.uriou. wrap-aroond sealini fer JO 1095. valu•7! 5. 0 0 Ann.w.1• Yet.et, Hetc•le• ., Yhtyl et Sole Prk• Todoy 12 to 5 • Mon. thru Fri. 9 to 9 • .. . .... Reg ular 399,9$ SALE PRICE 34995 _ ... ,__, iFFFTI .4HY." j t\t:J 469.11 -- -. . . Su~. Novtmber 4, 1CJ71 Happily Ever After-• • • . When she got lost Saturday at "Le Bon Marcbe," the rummage sale run by the Newport Harbor Art Museum, Molly Wood remembered the lesson: "A policeman is your friend ." The four-year-old Corona de! Mar girl was comforted by Newport Beach police officer Dan ~rickett, but it's evident that her heart still belongs to Daddy; Jim Wood. Others at the •ev· enlh annual evenl stuck to the business of buying out the store. From the looks of the heavy sacks they're cafrying, Chris Heard, Pauline Taonnina and Delores Hane would have liked to have taken a11 of "Le Bon Marche " home with them. The all-day sale took place in a new loc~tion , the underground parking lot of Pacific Mutual Lile In surance build· ing in Newport Center. WATER, SANITARY ELECTIONS • • • Only one of the 13 candidates i> op-incumbents for ~ats on both the Oosla posing FU: for the audito<'s pool. He Mesa County Waler Dlsb'Jct and the they share a manager, Ray Miller, and is Frank Godoy of University Pari<. Costa Mesa Sanltsry DblrlcL "!udl of the same field staff. The nine director hq>efuls lnclud<! C. Sea>nl is concentrating his efforts· on ~:,\ J.:"' ,,!:i ~ ~i:"~~ Orville Reinhardt, Jerry L. Frey, Angus wiseating City Coundlman Alvin Pinkley, (From Page Al) -.. Contempt Charges Cut By Chicago Seven Judge Soviet Navy Nearing U.S. In Strength, F. DwK:an, Ronald C. Lasof, Lawrence who has been on the .water board since ~e, now is not the time to meJ;"ge. o. McDermott. Robert J . West, George its creation 20 years ago. CHICAGO (AP) -A federal judge of contempt ar1s1ng from their 1971 ~~5· Long said the environmental Berrier, Charles H. Oliver and Gary Secord claims a 1961 ·opinioo by Uren• LONDON (AP) _ Tbe U.S. Navy acquitted the Chicago 7 def.endB!'ts riotrcon.sp.iracy trial for disruptions at ~ has been mounted because Rasmussen. state Atty. ~-. Stanley Mosk makes the 1968 Democratic Netiooal Ccl>-tbi incumbents "don't tnow where it's ~1 can ·no longer count on complete Saturday on nearly half of the (.'l;Jltempt ~' u.-districts -·e ·-~~ are In the Laguna Beach County Water it illegal for Pinkley to serve both on he So . N bu charg . t the f . t of ventioo. UUlll .,..... • ... .,_, WiA Diltrlct OJntest, the t'hief issue involves the council and on the water board superiority over 1 Viet avy, t es agams m, reemg v;o Judge Glgnow: made no rulings oo ~=., tx..,;ng densities and ultimate both the environment and population beca•,.. tile two lirlsllctiml overlap. woold stlll probably have the advanlage them from aD further prosecution. !4 cootempt charges against two d. -toJ iobS are up for-electiGo m the limits. Pinkley says that's ju,,t Mosk.'a opinion. -as an intervention force, such as in . Jlllge Edward T. Glgnoux <i U.S. their lawyers, William M. Ktmtler and -Rueb w-Dblricl, lhree d. The challenge is again by the Environ· Seaml's othel' challenge is against the Middle East, the edil<>r of Jane's District Court ilcqultted the eevm m LeooBrd I. Weinglass. ~ .., .., Ile board ml 8llOCber mental Coalliloo, whose candidates are sanitary_ di>trlct incumbents Ellis Porter, Fighting Ships said Satunlay. 18 of the charges and dismlsoed ariotber. Included In the acquittals """' lO ~ the IRWD -tax collector-~ ~~ Stan IIletala and Kenn Runa.:"d C. Thatcher Warren.. . "In a coofrontation situation, the u.s. They had been on trial for 33 counts citatioos stemming from · the !allure of ~ Canciidates ·-... h •·~~wu~ Li ·uiiSea'f -~s ~ii~~~Y~-Jl~if;-"Navy ·ball the edge," capt.-Join E. , J:ig~e1:".:; ~;ts~~J.= ~ otfkials af ~ d Alfred Hastie,. Paul Waterman Jr. and is challeilging tWo Los AliHI Water Moore said in an interview. Gignoux said the TeCOnl did not stvN ....,_ diotzict.,.. nming an Paul Beemer cxr the gmmcts they allow· District incumbmts in an eleciion that He said this was because the u.s. .Nixon · Boosts ·'that the court insisted that the deteod· 'Ina.unbent directors Ef~ Crandall ed for . ~Dalian of water and sewer will be decided by votes In proportion aircraft carriers, particularly the nuclear ants stand and there was no evidela: alil Gerald Cboyke and audllo<·tax col· transniss1on lines that could serve as to property values. The two Incumbents propelled ones are pre<0minent. "No Aid tO Amtrak of obstructioo of the judicial proceeding'-!~ Warren .D. Fix want to keep ~Y as 65,000 new Laguna Beach area Jn ~-raoe are W.J. McKay and Karl other na m' the world can match Tu'O ol the defendants, John R. Frotnes tijtir posts, leavmg open 8 seat vacated residents. Rodi. vy and Lee Weiner -each charged with b):: Irvine Company finance vice presi· The coalition members say the new Two long time inrumbents are also them at the moment and no other navy · three counts of contempt -We!"e ac- deiit Frank Hughes. service would include residents in the facing a challenge in the El Toro Water is ever likely to match them,'' Moore By $407 MiJJion quitted d all counts and dischar&ed ~(>ne of the primary issues in the Irvine Ranch coastal area north to Dfsbict. said. from the trial. ciotest, which i> one of those decided Crystal· Cove. John Toups and Hugh Walker, who But he cautioned that the Soviet Navy KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP) -Presi· Eight contempt counts remain agallllt bj UM: voting block. holding ~· most Incumbents have chall~ed I he have been on the bqard since it formed holds the advaotage over the United David T. Dellinger, three agaimt Jerry " 1$1<1, 1S that the _ll'VUle Company can, growth argumenl by saying the lines in 1960, will be challenged by Harry States ifi a number of important fields. dSa""..l__.~Yix~:la!!'.''~ ~",'._eservaby ti.:! 0. Rubin, one against '1'homas E. •~It choooes, decide the election. The in question were completed in 1971, Stsmkowskl, an engineering cmsultant. The Russians have the largest submarine ~ -~-. .,..,. Hayden, two agaimt Rennie Davia ID<I fitm controls 50 million of the 1118 miWon before all the ecological furor, They Large voting blocks are being cmlrolled fleet, and they have the most modern millioo the federal ald to Amtrak, the · live against Abbie Hoffman. posalble votes. claim the city would have all the volume by Ros!llnoo< Corp. and the Golden Rain navy afloat _ more ships Jess than National Rail Pwenger Cori>. Of the five conlempl cooolo that had ~veral challengen have. urged that it can use in times of emergency. Foondation in another assesoed valuation 10 years old than anyme 'else. He aid tbe feahns to wllkl! he been bnlugbt agalnot Davis, tWYJ _. tbe voting system be changed to a A -tight contest may he in the worl<s vote. It Is possible, Moore said, to conceive OOjeded in the biD ...,., outweighed . acquitted Satunlay ID<I °"" -pertaining "r'penoo, OOC!'vote concept in the Caplslnmo Beadl Sanitary Dis-The me UllCXlltested race ts in the of situallons where the Soviet Navy by the fact thal J8ilroods help meet to not restrlclinC llis an.<Werw to the •• ~ndonPaper • ¢!aims Israel Caught 7 Soviets LONDON (UPI) -Israeli troops cap- ttaed seven Russian soldiers in uniform ext the Syrian front during the first week of the Middle East war and may ltlll be holdin&. them as prisoners of War, tile Sunday newspaper tile Observer said. fl>e paper said the Russians were ~ during an I s r a e I i COUJl-" teratt:ack against Syrian forces on the ~ Hei&Jlts not loog after the out· hfeak of the 17-<lay war Oct. 6. "'It is understood that they surrendered wllen a bunker in the first line of Syrian defenses on the road Crom ~itra to Damascus was overrun," jt~id. '!"!be aI!air has been treated by the ia'aell military authorities with the ~ lleCl'OCJI-It is known that the men were ·taten to the Israeli air force bise at Ramat David in the Galllee, where they were interrogated," the -gpaper said. lrlct, wbere two incumbents lace three Capiltrano Bay !'Vb ud Recreation would have the edge, for example, plac-,the enqj; ~ :J1ly carryJag "'°" ooope cl questiming.-was dismissed. challengers. District, which oerves Dana Point and ing its shipo in 80 area first either '*"""..., ...,. greela' di3lances per The tmly dell!lldants in the courtroom Challengers Lawrence M o n t o Y a , Capistrano Beach. through earlier intelligence readings , or gallon of ftiel than cars or airplanes. ~ ='cte=~a~e~~heid William Smith and James Tennyson In that district, the filing deadlines because the Russians were manufac-th 'l the c claim the incumbents hav,e not been \vere not heavily publicized and only luring a local crisis. ~~l;irp-:~ust~ in contempt at conclusion of their aware rl. ~.r,mge land developmerit three people filed for the three available "On balance, there is no way to tell but f head, the coospiracy trial ~Y Judge Julius J. Holf. problems and the need for governn)ent seats. They_ were elected automatically., which . the st all 11 or some yeara 8 energy man ci U.S. DiJtrict--eourt. Hoffman to extract more for needed service from 'Ibe key issue in the district. is an navy 15 rmgest over ' effidency-ci rail travel is an especially originally sentenced the seven defendants the developers. upcoming ad valorem tu: cwmide vote Moore said. "You are nol comparing compelling argt.ment for expans.iOo m and tbefr lawyers to prison terms rang· Incumbents in the sanitary district that will increase t.ues Crom 10 cents like with like. Strong points in ooe appropriate fedef-al B3Sistance • t 0 ing from two months and 18 days for race are Robert Shaver and Al Gari· to 20 cents per $100 assessed valuation. nav:!.. ~ lacking in the other and vice--~~rak,but'ed' Nbyixtheon ~dainWbi".te'~~-one defendant to four years and four inghoose. The uoccotested board members in-J-;:~;;:~;;:;;:;;:;;:::::::~::::::::::::::::~:::":::'::;;:;::::::'::~'::::::~~::::;;.;;;;;;;da~ys;;;;;w::;;;oo~e;:;;;ts~wy;;;:er~.:::::::::::;;;~ In the Capistrano Beach County WaleT elude M.E. "Larry" Larsen, Donald District, a less controversial campaign Hickman and Sylvia Perez. The latter is. being waged by challenger Henry two are incumbents. · Halminsk:i, who is making his third bid Four caodidates are running for the for a board seat Fountain Valley ~ "'°8nl seat He is trying to unseat either Duncan vacated by trustee Mary Hix, who Blackbum or Kenneth Lawrence, the resigned in August to move to the East All ABOARDI Sears incumbents. Coast. Property ownership voting is also Candidates in . the contest include the main issue in the Moulton-Mguel Karen Ackley, Donald Frank, Kris Rog· Water District contest, is which a lone genkamp and Helen · Schoelzel. Major challenger vows to take a close look issues in the district are possible unif'ica· at financial advantages of big companies tion and all·year ·school. though none if he is elected. of the candidates bas come out with Attorney Eugene Watson is challenging a strong stand either way oo the issues .. incumbents Robert Aldrich, Thomas Huntington Beach voters .race· the only Beauchamp and Larry Liz.otte in the electioo nOt in a special di.strict. But coote<t, which baa Avco Community it ts a special Issue -three major Developeni, the Mission Viejo Company cbanget In the city's charter. and tile Mooltoo Ranch trust cootrolling The alterations, If approved, would 45 per91i11H of. the votes. mean the city · attorney, city clerk and In Costa Mesa, Environmental Coeli· city treasurer would be appointive rather tim member Dale Secord bas cballenged than elective posts. BIG 8'' x 1 O'' Storms Threaten. Nation LIVING .COLOR PORTRAIT .. '• ' Some Snow in Montana an.d Rain in Florida HAllONAI WIAt"fl SllYl(f JOllC.UT It 7PM IST 11-4 -1S 30.00 30.14 Temperature• T.,...-.tturt end JWIClplt•tfOll tttH tor • 1f.l'lour' Ptfiod t n d I n I •t 4 it.in. PDT. Albl.louttol.lt ·""""'-A"•"'• l•ktntlt4d l ltfNlrclt fi::: H19tl Uw Pt'Kl11 • .. .. " " .. S3 .. 0 23 lf .t1 41 ,, .. " ~ !t J1I Oern•er Oelrolt E1.1rtk• Fort Wortl'I Fort Worth Fr•sno Hlttn• ..... , . _ .... lnd11n1ooll• K1nu1 CllY Lis V9iN1 Los Anttlei Ml1rnl BtlCl'I Mllw•IJk" Mln11elCIOllJ Ntw Orltll'!l Ntw York ....... """" Ptto ROD1t1 .. l!llldtlDllf• ;~ r.t ;i."'" ·-~-....... Ukl Clt't ~--rtnclKO •14 .. tt1tr1 !El'"· 11t:,m:• Wa llOIOll " " • " " .. .. .. .. .. .. .. " " .. .. .. .. " " .. " " S3 .. " 17 " .. " " "' " " .. " " " .. " " "' .. " I .. .. I .. ll :i ... ... " l! ~ u ll • • NOW ONLY GENUINE FULL NATURAL COLOR PORTRAITS! Not tht old stylt tinted or painted black &r whttilphotot. FOR ALL AGES! llobltt, di-, odulu. GrlMlps pho-hM "•• eddilioMI "'I"' oull[ec~ • LllTED OFFER! 0.. I"' oubieit. -I"' lomlly. PHOTOGRAPHER'S HOURS: -. This..-, -!el oflw ls-1*1 n'" . ............ of our ..,..•.lot your pc1-. Effectlff tllru .S11nday, Nov. 4: DaJ/y: 10 A.M. to 7 P.M.-Sunday: 12 Noon to 4 P.M. SHOP AT SEARS ANO SAVE lelil{edlM Q..,.ltllftfll., y_, llMO B«A •• Sears r AlllaMWa c:...,.... OltMole - Lor!l- .otrlftfllal .... l"ii•••• • llloo ..... , . .,,.... ....... 1 • e • • • , ' • Cable Car City W elco~s . -- BART With Wild Fanfare Van Deerling Supports linpeachment Move SAN DIEGO (AP) .-Rep. Uonel Van Deerlln (J>.Calil.) says he has decid e d reluctanUy to support a move for the impeachment o f Piesldent Nlxoo. "The latest statement from the W!llte Houle -that the Ill)>-most ll:nportall tape reCordl.ngs were never made -seems ID me the last ol .many backbreaking ltr'aw1," . Van . Deerlin· said Fridey In a letter ID San Diego coo- llituentl. I /. lie oak! he has r«elved 500 letters lrom constitu- urging impeachment. "I ha ve 'been reluctant to support such a move," Van Deerlin wrote. "But because I do oot believe the couhlry can · withstand three more . \_.-----J· ' South Coast Plau only meet Perla Meyers., cook and author . of the Seasonal Kitchen This exciti~g new cookbook is .•bout cooking cre<>tively with fresh foods. Based on the author's experiences in teaching , traveling , en- tertaining, the book contains more than 300 inter~ationally inspired recipes. with full m,nu s. It also 'tells how to grow a home garden and how and vihen :to select fruits, vegatoblas. !look 12.95, Calendar 4.95. Moet Perl. Meyers: Monday, November 5 in South Coast Plaza, 3 to '4:30 p.m. in the restaurant. books U.-.:.oulll coo1!. plo11 \ . ..,._·--·----1- ' • MAVC:O • • -·-------• . . • • . ' 38~ 1.U. IAG OF SlllBIDID FOAM -............ . ...._ ""' ...... wth • ......... . NATUllAL·mETCH PANTYHOSE Tnty're not ,,,.91'11$)td so they conform 10 you! Sheer mrtlh ny. Ion. Populer lhldea. PIA: T/XT. • UPIT...,..._ Alone OAll V PILOT A 5 Man Falls .To Death ' : • . • SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -' An elderly canromia man died Saturday alter lalllng three , !loon down a hotel elevator' shall, police said. They said the victim. G<otge E. Loog, 71 , CUiver ; City, registered at the_ 1 Congress Hotel about 2:15 a.m. and was taking the elevator to a fourth floor roam. Witnesses told police that they heard the elevator alann sound and rushed 10 lhe SOC: ond noor. They said t h e y saw the elevator lodged about Iii leet above the floor. Despite protests, J.<og ap- ponotly got out of the e1.-and tried 1'> jump to the second-floor landing. polk:<> said. He missed and fell f8ce.down ID the bollool of the lhaft in the baiement. Women Repaid for Meal a·· 'jENNIFER' LIFE-SIZE WALKING DOU 711 THE DUSTER"' DUNE BUGGY PEDAL CAR liugged cons)l'\/.\:tion for loads of action. Adjustable easy·pedal ac· tion, safety steering wheel, Bil~ board tires. Racing slicks on rear. A real kid pleaser! Completely as· se111bled. the more for your moneysworth store Wal hlnl -Flows on •moothty, odor·lr••· Orle1 fast. Washable. Smart cok>ra. • WITS EIWIElED TOlETSEAT Avoiloble in Whitt, Pink. Blue. A-.. Top value! . -~ ., .. ···-....... • I . ' . i •• . ; . ' • 1 ' .. ') 11.,if!~H.!!.'!\-HU~~~TON. _BEACH EAST FULLERTON SAN CLEMENTE -..... ..-;:: 1 ..... llM9 IW. llf ~ S. DI .. fwy, et c..IM lh ...... IAHYA ANA, 20t I . 4tt. It. ~TON llACH, 11601 Molo St. GARDIN GROYI, 11119 Valley View ' \ • • • -_, . A • MllY I'll.OT Sunday, Novtmbfr 4, 1973 • . ·- ' . • .. .. ' ' •• . FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach ' --- • - ' I • • • • - ;) Spectacular sportswear savings. Now399 ()Ilg. 7.llO. Womono' nylon short -rib kn< top with contntting collar. Top ;.·100% ny1on for t•IY care and comfortable fit. Solids end -stripes in sires S-M·L : Now299 ' Orig. SL Womens"l.murov ]e~n1 in 100% cot· i ton with four pockets and flare legs. Assorted colors for any cuual ward~. Sizes 8· 18. Now299 ,.. Or1g. S&. Juniora• 100% cotton boy c:ut wntem jeans. Swing p<>ektts -complete th• western look. AS$0!1ed solid colors. Sizes 7·13. ·- JCPennev We know what you're lo0k~ng for. • I ' , • ;; -~ . Now499 Orie· t .H. wom-· bnJshod deniin jlcket in 100% cotton. Two fnx1t ·pocQts finish the Clltlll loot. .5o.lidcob1 . ."Miste1liz9s. ' •• • t • , " Now599 • Orig. St 3. Womena' 100% acrylic bluer. The double _ breasted style fits into any -, wardrobe. Vented back. Assort· ' 'edheathertones.stzesS-M·L • Charge it! It's lhe quick and easy way to shop, pick up a bargalh on the spot. Next,tim~ you're In ask for a Charge card application. We'll do the rest Chances are, you can Charge the same day. • ' Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores:. . I •, .. (714) 644-2313 . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington Beech (714) 892·7771. HARBOR CENTE~. Co~t~ ~·~e (714) 646·5021. -· . ,,,,:.._ . . . . ... . ~· . • f I ' t • ' ' ' ' • • --- -· • • s Gali will outs a n I, f;ounty Piiot PIJ . Those on Welfare To Reportln~ome SAN RA'FAEL (AP) -Most caurornia welfare recipients will be required ts>-report outside Income monthly under a new welfare reform plan -announced last week by State Welfare Director 0 a,v id Swoap. And ·a ~departm·ent spokesman says an Orange Cotmty pilot program has shown a drop in errors --and over~yments from 9 percent to 7 percent. Delivering the keynote ad- dress of the annual meeting of the County Welfare Direc- tors Ass~ation. Swoap said California is "beginning to travel the second rr'rtle of welfare reform " with a -series of new re!Orms intended to cut waste, close loopholes and eliminate confusion. · Hf: SAID THE plan includes a more frequent but simpler income and e l igibility reporting system, new pro- cedures to identify illeial aliens, increased efforts·to ob- tain child support f r o m persons who have left their famili es and .an '8.ttack on alleged abuses or the food stamp program. He-said -recipients receiving aid to families with dependent children (AFDC) grants will be required to report· outside inoome monthly instead of once every three months. "We have pilot tested tills system with the cooperation of the Alameda and Orange ~unty welfa re departments," Swoap said. "Jn Alameda 1 Co un ty e r ro·r s and overpayments were reduced from 12 lo ·3.5 percent. ''THE NEW system is in· tended primarily to get at the problem of overpayments caused by ' inaccurate o r unreported i n c o m e and welfare eligibility information . Our latest estimates show Lhese errors are costing the state about $44 million a year," Swoap said. Swoap also said there will be "increased acti vity" by the state in the area of requiring absent parents to provide child supl}()rt, and that a crackdown in the food stamp program is also planned. --·--~-· ---·--- .. OPEN INVITATION F:ounca1n vaLLCtl·· . communrcH HOSPILaL ~ -·~· ·•.!:L.', ""· S~ECON-D ANNIVERSARY Novembe.r 6,. 7 & 8 Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. 6-8 PM Children's Community FREE Immunization Program IN COO PERATION WITH . ORAN GE °CO UNTY CHAPTER THE NATIONAL FOUNDATION-MARCH OF DIMES AND .PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE Agesltol2 POLIO -MEASLES -RUBELLA OVER 6 YEARS UNDER 6 YEARS DT DPT CONTINUING COMMUNITY SERVICES CONSENT TO TREAT MINOR CARD PRE·NATAL CLASSES MATERNITY TE.~S COMMUNITY EDUCATION" SCOLIOSIS CLINICS POOLSIOESAFETY oi!4'ff0 UR EMERGENCY ..., VOLUNTEE-A GUILD ANO JUNIOR GUILD _.,. ... -"'••: 1'U4_1,...«%0'fl! m ·rP" l]IJ I ! ,,_,. -. ______ ,,, ____ ,, __ _ FOUNTAiN YAlJH ~m1~1i' ··. -• .-:;;.· .... " ¥< ' 1 • Eucl'ld at Warner FOUNTAIN VALLEY 979-1211 • , :' • .. • ' • • Sllndly, Novtmbtf 4,. 1973 DAILY PILOT 0 • • ''· \ ~· • • ' ' .. J .; • ' ' ~ ,, If .. ' . ' ~ ; ., ... 4 -. ' ·~-Our classic polyester· shirtwaist. Qu.ietly •"•;,.r • e.leg~nt and ·:' · understated.· JCPenney We. know what you're looking for •. Shop your local Penney Store . . 100% poaYeatet that fatia lnlo graceful. pl9ati. Accesaorlzed wllh Its own 1urtl~l<-dlc~1y, . Cinched· with Ila own ije belt. Select thla beautiful bulc frpl!I winter whl1', gr~ 11JM11, tlt;t lllul ind coral. Slzaa 'HO. . s24 • .. • •·' . ' • • .. ·t • Shop Sundff noon to 5 p.m. a~ the fOllowlng stores: . ------ll!!ll~lli!m~~_,: FASHlbN •IS.~Nb, N.W~·a..ch (114) ~2313. HUllll'INGlON CENTER, HuMin~onBe4ch {714) 892-717.r. HARBQfCEl'mR, Cost1 ~(714)'465021, c. • .~ 1,_ I • 1 - ' . , ~· o~u,y P O.OT ED ITORIAL. PAGE . . . .. • • N• ., lx ons Only Gh8:nce Even through senses dulled by six months of While Without overly dramatizing the situation, this does House shock waves,. the American people sUJJ had sen· appear to be the only way he can establl&b sufficient • sory ability to recoil from another Incredulity when they credibility with Congress and the people to remain at ---~....,era.askeclto..accept the "missing tapes'~!"!'"l---~~,-~1.lve. We woul !ikt bin ucceed In caP: ___ 1_~-~ by Presidential aides. luring this elusive ray: the alternat ves are gr m n ee . I Even the staunchest Nixon supporters have been The American people want to believe tlleir Pres!· hard pressed to buy any of the contradictory explana· dent, but only he can build that belle!. It can't be built lions qi what happened. Inside the supposedly well· on silence. 1 guarded walls of the White House. Jn Washington, Sen. Barry Goldwater volunteered the comment that President Nixon 's credibility:=• t,lP. all-time low while both conservative and modt . Ji. publican congressmen were considering ways lb l1lt President he should reslcn. Mr. Nixon himself undoubtadly knows ul. t!. S. IOl" emment cannot operate when no one can bellivt bin1 ~ him or any of those wllo speek for him. This -kend in Florida, he must be facing the fact that U.S. ctU..01 won't hang on while he "toughl ii out" through tUll an· other assault on his bellevabillly. Impeachment and reslrnatton are the allemaUvea being discussed this weekend, but there is a third poul· bility -that Mr. Nlson himself appear before the Senate Watergate committee u a witnea before the public. "! fell! now more than ever that thla may otter the only wa:v ou.t1'1,ll&id Sen. Gol4n ter. The Presld.,.t's office 11)'1 be would 1ubmll a mem· orandum he made Of the colllroven!al convorsaUons with former White Hou .. lid• John w. Dean m -• COD• versation on one of the mltlln~ tapu. But It l.o extreme- ly unlikely this onHlded recollectlon would 11tlafy the multitude of dark and unanswered queatlon1. This~cularly true tn light Of~undersland· able sus . lllllTOUndtng the dlaap ance of tb.e tapes;w ich were mad• 111ereUy at the sidenl'• cntn direction. State Should Help . ' The California League Of CIUll h11 liYlll a ...icome boos! to hoped·for legislation that could provide state aid for beach clUes now going In the red every llWIUllll' as they play host to out-of.town beach1oers. M11Un1 In ·San Franctsco, lhe leaaue 1ave near· unanlmo11.1 endorsement to a Newport Beach ,_luUon callln1 for lltale aid to help defray coats of beach malnte- nan~ and extra police protection to handle aummer v!Ji· tors. Mian,whUe Huntington Beach offlclall, following a ~\uc!I of ~t ty's costs, had asked ,._mblyman Rob-e Q ke (II-\llltlngton Beach) tg Introduce lestalaUon "" a · ti l\lldy of the p,roJilem. nB· "cb 1:tn"\~c, ~f~u~."'w~~::: l'.Qrt I.It ~'" . ·tta cOlt·'fersU!'.levenuf~l(W'OI fDoW !Ii• ~l<\!'i . . ~~ qp to U '1"1!10~ .J Y"'lr· Fig· \lf'Oll n.m {e& · eqiiifui ind La gun~ B~eh 1\11~ not _..n MP ! lful It's a 11\lre bet the5\1 CO!i\!11tmj!tes are not f\lllllil1 !Ir beaches much of a fi!iancj@l asset &Ith•'\. • . There l.o a chance -granted, a slim chance, but still a chance -that the President can clarify Ille m~\ler with a perao~ public ap_pearanc~ before the Watergate . With a 't· lnajotjty of 11Ummer ~ch ~ coli!· l,lft f')ll\l •utal lhe co~stal cqmmunities; it would seem ~\hnly fJ\f that e ~late shate this finaqdal biiiden with 'I love the give and take of the free enterprise system!' committee .. e ~c& !owns. · · ltevolutlollS by T elevisio1i . -Boo-b Tube _ Alters Face of S()~iety . . . 'l1'e clvll 11gbts r~vol~tlon of l~ past 11 Y~fl was trigger~ by telev!si~. Before \he adven' of f3qjo and television, tq lie a nMrea~l!l' w@l to be out off ' . from the worJq. Electronic rom-11\UDi~UOn brought tqe whole bl( sfar· ll!!ir \\>_Wld into ·u.e ~ves and i'l"'Bilta- of inlntoas 1\'l!ll ol~-ei'wife: would . ne¥er . have found it. Tetevisioo ls ' ~·.p~ "il!<llY amoog Ille -~ unedpted than ~ tliO well· lc><lo. Lon~ before teleVlstoo '!Ills were ~ j{i wosperous white su~. fWesta <; antennae wet. vtsi~\e aboye 11um &Pflftments in Har.lem, "hove t)¥l: Jhacks of tenant farmers in the !;outl1. ,,----... -----+-, 'by the highest paid <'Oll\ll\unicatloo ex- S. I. IJAYAKAWA television is. 11Want this produ ct . W~t this cqnveniepce. \Vilhi this luxury. Quy. Buy. jluy. ~; hair spray, this head~cbe rem.dy, this~ bniiler, this wall-1<>- iiill caii>elinl. Uiii ne•• Oldsmobile w111 bring Yt11 ~. popularity, selll81 fulfillmeifl, dom1'5Uc bliss and the envy and fesijict di ¥"'!' neighbors." All MpP(nesij, all ~ values, are tri\Jl:slat~ by a d v er t l s i n g into putl'has<j~Je ~ties. ,IJCH ARB 1l!E messagj!s o I le evislQlL PPr the cu It (fr a ~1 y · !icared, theie are few it\essages frumol: ~- perts and talent in the country to stimulate desire, to nw:t_ure the spirit of envy. "Man, I wish I had one ol them.". the vtey,·er says as he stares · into the tube. Can anyone -doubt the enorJn:QUS greed ror consumer goods that was released by Q1e rioting, arson and disorder in the Watts district or Los Angeles in 1965? Almost every store was looted. And this gr"'4 was by no meana coo- fined to N....... . FOR EXAMl'LE, what cbancterized !he dlsordetB aild looting In Detroit the follo\rlna yeari, acconllng to all -ts. was the-a~ lack ol raclSt rriotiva-1~· ammg ~ looters. Whites helped N ~-helped whites load tqto their and carry off furniture, tape , hi-fi sets and luggage. thing was an explosive respmse to col« television.'' Television is a powerful instrument of social change. It creates wants - and nurtures discontent. It works as a dynamic force in crealing new e1- pectatlons, new demands-and therefore in changing society. LIKE rr OR· NOT, it will continue to shake society to the roots -even as . we dismiss it UgbUy u the "boob tulle." Tbe poor, having .... the ...... men:iall, are no !cmcer -to watt far their rewards In bMven. Tbey want ·them right now. • , Mideast Crisis Valid, Furtbepnore, Am<Tjean te}~vt..ioo js commerct~spons...e.I. I\ I!QShes ""'° sumer g t is.-~ \Jif:fqre alwars friendlf and CIJO · pettu&sive. lt tells everybody, "No atter. what yodr p~t condition, )'OU dn ·have a . w~rful .-life. You Can bf: attractive. You can be as gocx\ as aflYbody else. You can enjoy all \he sa~actions ef liv"1!1 in thiJ abund4iit ~i'-" In ~y ~ the jelevlsi(Jq all ii lie...-,1\ltn•cfOI! (jp m.ntng to !Pill~ Into u,e,e homes ~uJtibillion ~ industry beams an stream of messag~ -DJl'SS3B~ ski y devi'f'd It was rfAitted that a "carnival spirit" ~I~ j!diCh of the looting. One Detroit JloUCe sergeant was quoted • saying. ''This W8sn'l a race riot. It was a riot of lbleves." The Union ol SoUtb Africa f..,. llOdal cbqe. Whites fear the majority blldm. Boen fear eny threat to tbelr traditional culture. South Africa. there!.,.., takes televisloo far more seriously than we do in America . It is the one technolotlically advanced nation in the world that baa forbidden the introdui:lioo ot television. - But televlsim will some day come to' South Africa. And their world, like ours, will never be the same again. A neirspaper man said, '1The whole ""' Despite Cries of Doves It's Fast, But Is lt_Food?· WASHINGTON -Senate jo1 refuse to believe the Soviets are of any ulterior purpose -even it is apparent to the entire d. They see the ldl'COllfrmtaUoo be- tween Ille Unl!A!d States and he Soviet Union in the Middle East as something · promored by Ille ad· ministration for mer· ely legislative rea- .sons. ..,,..,,,,. The attitude taken by such doves as Sen. J . William Ful- bright, chairman-of the Senate Foreign Relations Commit- tee, is more ridicu- lous than the suggestions of some news- men that President Nixon trumped up the Big Power crisis to draw at~ion away from his domesic troubles. IN 111E FULBRIGHT view, there was no ieason for alerting U.S. forces when the Russians threatened to t a k e unilateral action in the Arab-Israeli con- ruct. He told reporters that a Soviet note to Pre!ldent Nixon was apparently couched in urgent terms, "but from what I know, it was not threatening." Fulbright suggested the crisis at- mosphere was deliberately manufactured io win congressional support for the administratioo's defense budget and to make it more difficult for Congress to override President Nixon's veto of the Wlll'l1""""" resolulioo. Evm such rabid Nixon critics as the wUhlngton Post are now willing to ldm.lt that the Soviets pushed hard on beba1l of their Arab clients and Would not let up until the United States pushed 'back by aJertlng its forces in several ....,. ol !be, )'ot!d. l"llOM THE BEGINNING, Fulbright , 1111 y I e w e d the Middle East as Quotes . ., ..BecaUK we had had our in-JtWt.;. ·with the Soviet Union, because 1 llld a bMI• ol COlllmunlcatioo wlth Mt. LeaDid I. Bnd!Dtv, we not only a..idld a oon!rontadoa bul we moved a'pl = lliwwd toward real peace ill 1118 nst" -Prtlldeat Nixon • .. ··~·..-cl1a~te and its W' y.. Jll I rt IS. BARRY GOLDW .A:-TER- the fault of U.S. support for Israel. To listen to the senator, you wouJd think the Soviets had oolhlng but an academic interest In developments in the oil-rich area of the Suez Canal and the Persian Gu1f. GINE THAT Y9'1f' a :a N to whom tJii> teie on set fl s mesages ha.j . been · ja baby-iltt an comparuon F.Ver he C8lJ req\ember. All yoojt life ll>f. !riendlJ se1 ~ been saying \i> you, 'You are mi 'ifrierican. You are entitled to eat, drlnlj 'l"~. wear what ~h$!' .\J\ieri~ eaj, \lrillk and wear. Ye~ '1~ a memll!ir Of our national cqpur111n1tt:" 'rhen imagine t<jo tliat are "°led, bj!cause ol pove~r and la· of edueatlon, !fie chance to sflilre in ~ the beautiluf t[iings adv~. Woul4 you not be ffustra!A!d and apgry? The basic riiessage of oommerrlal . (.'· < . Take CfY9lal 1ialI firmly In ~ IDCI COtll of food al 30 to 4-0 percent o1 the bill. envision. YO\I are aeared al Chez~ The markup on fast foods Is far )Ugher wlth your !ljvorite compaijion. II '. C;llARLES McCABE since worl< and care ·are almoot candlelight j)n the tablesel. Charles .• '~ eliminated from what one of my been his ~ charming ~f. The Ill , . restaurant-owning friends calls "the food gleams, t_l!e llpen Is"~· ,,,e w&W 11 : .... ~aces day to day, ~you listen to problem." both servile @¥ patroruzing, @S they Clll the cats wlJI> know Ille restaurant biz be in a good F~ JOIDt. ~ best. QUICK Frozen Foods, a trade organ, The bill lo. lflll . between ~ and $50. The restaurant biz ol the future is con-r<eenUy found that at least 80 percent of The food: lusi wl>at you left boijle to _get tained in two labels ol singularly food sold by many chains and industrial away from, ~ TV' !llnoer, except piat II Is repellent mien. They are already in the feeders bas been al least pilrt!y pre- done in a midi:>wave oven. . "host's" lexicon: Hccnvenience foods" cooked. 11le magazine survey ~ a '!bat Is whai Is jlappenlng now _to the and "food management." That ts. frozen majority ol restaw-ants use !ittne pre- pleaaure ol dirijpg Opt. It Is bappe!\lllg m food and thawing out et the right time. pared foods and plan to use more. Cuisine without coots. With food to A pretty kettle of fi!h, ii it not, when The Russians can be blamed almost entirely for continued frlctloo and """' in the Middle Eaat. There ts lltUe doubt that the Soviet Union spon901'ed the latest ARb attack on Iarael by pouring massive supplies of arrm and equipment into Egypt and SyrlL There II re880D to believe that the Soviets bad advance knowledge o! when the latest ettact was to take place. Superior Female Brain match. lhe skills developed over centurieal by As they say, ii all gets back to men and women who love food and the economics. In an affluent society, people cooking thereof are jetUaoned becaUle are just too good to be cooks. A cook ls a we are geared in to a"\ economy where it drunken Frenchman with a moustache. is not feasible to ' '' for a penon or a . . Chases Off Many Fiances Thanks but no thanks. couple or a famr )d ls "prepared" !or mllllonJ, in same rote and One thing aeema to have been overlooked abolll the Soviets' ~ to assJlt,in brlnglng about a ceaseflri!: They showed ablolutely no Interest in such ~ course wblle It appeared to tllem tbSI ~ Arabi """° winning. The urgent lhitillibt m_,e fn>m, Leonid Brezhnev to PreaideQI fijxon, asking that Secretary o! stiie Henry Kissinger fly to M~ to dllcula .• cease-fire, came onlj liter an ot>-lbe:lllOI appraisal by tile Rusalans qj!Vlnced them that the Arab offensive wu begin- ning to fail on all major fronts. • THE LATER THREAT to introduce Soviet troops ln the Middle East on whatever prete1t heightened the chance , or a nuclear confroptation. The Russians may have miscalcQtated the determina- tion and ability of President Nixon to respond to the thrtal They may have felt the talk of Im· peacbment had so weakened the Prest· dent tllat he would be either locapoble ol or afraid to stand up to )8 Jmpll<d No. 9 OJJ that U.t of unfortunate characterls!!CS which , \jl most likely to cause a young ll}IJl to break fl ma~ engagenleht ts uld to be his gir!frt~· 's "s~ior lntelllgeoce." II ranb t behind No. 8 which Is her.11§lm e inconsldtdteness." And No. 1 -whlcb ~ bt-r "e--'-~tric ~behavior." Or .. psyehological ~ .. show. That ~ay l*iqj '1n late November and early December is the Ume of year 'when -the most babies are con~ ce!ved. . . .Sixteen out of every 100 books printed hereabouts are fOr youngsters. . . .No, why a woman'• hair grows· faster than a man's I cah'l explain .... The bleaching of clothes Is older tllan the w11hing of aame with soap. . . .In one out of every four murder-cues, It wu thC victim who lint .....ned to violence, studies show. military threat. . TAKE THESE two types ol executives, One~ )lave learned the fellow who hu work&I hll way that Americans can be pdled too bard up from the IK>ttom •Into management and tOo (!!!> They dlscoveted this during as opposed to the fellow who jumped the Cuban rnisall• crllll ol !IC, and into some top job right out of college .. they now know the lltuatlon bu DOI Exteoalve health records sllo1I' the bright changed. boy straight from school. suffen far But we slill have the doves of~ the · • fewer illnesses than docs the' man .who · Fulbright variety who appeer to believe climliell hig11 tllrougb the ranks. Bui that Ruasian mo!IVH • r • llwa)'I the why of II remalnl Ul!Hplallled. honorable white American motives are A medical scholar who baa atudled always '"'JlOCI. left-handedness contends J4 out ol every • -· • LISTEN to a group vice preaidenl ol Howanl Johnson's, Frank M. Barrell; "I think anybody who's not ming con- venience foods is out of il And IOlne of ( ) the preparod food arouod today ii IOI> L 'Li BO:Vn quality. You'd never -the difference. LT~ · ~ u We're going to open a restaurant a week lbis year, and where could we get cooks '-----;1;----11--..-4fld. chels for this kind of expansioo? ~en If we could get them we couldn't • i. ~babies would ll!'PW up to be left-band· train them fasl enough." ' ta ·per with their n~tural tencleqcies. Ta the matter of fiab. There are but a ll the grown11Pf around th@m didn't !~'st foods" is the name ol the pme. jj. "WHAT SBOljLD the temperature ha uJ of first-class reatauranta In all JI,. J>e: in 1 room w'*1'e you're 4!>lni to ~and this Jncludol -Id-lamed . bag a aide ol beef for aging?" ~n's Wborf, wbere the 111b oo - ri r Undentand 35 d-, F. ii !_bg\lt ~:~.:: = Dab you do terrible ~ illtre moist I!» &r, the less things to It. Flash freezing to minl!I 50 likely you are~ to Caicb cold, contract degrees destroys celll, dlangee tmure the flu, or come down with pneumonia. and damages Davor . January's average humldJty runs 12 pet'· uMANY FOODS, notably full+ are now cent. !Is lncidehce of respiratoey !rerun in bulk.'" according to food critic diseases goes 92 per 1,000. July's average John L. Hess, "thee thawed and pre- bwntdity runs 59 percent. !Is incidence COOlced, then frozen a~atn, ~ of r .. plralory disease goes only 'l1 per further dam'ie. In sblllmenl aad _.... 11,000. So reports the U.S. Public Health before consumption, tliey frequently, m Service. penntlted to rise to lemperl!W'OI wbere Claim Is that a single girl's chances · det<rloratlon Is sp6eded, de&plte the of meeting eligible men are worse in 'Mark of 2'.ero' eimt>Olln bj the industry Washington, D.C., than in any other · to encourage handferl to lteep lood. at big town. That's because the unattached ..,..,... · women there outnumber the men con· Naturally, much ol this p"-P Is put 11lderabty, 11 you may know. But It's ... out as "gourmet" food under IUCtl •Po •!so true that mliny of those glrltl work -pellaUona u PJllDpmo a la '!"<le de extra hours, -,. find little Um• to TM!eyrand, « wblCbrlW . aoctlllu. Tbe ordinary mtaurant fl&ures the I .], • m!ndlesa way. Llke ..:iklng plastic toys. We hllve como ' long way, in trading home cooking .and good reataunnt cul!lne for junk tha t tastes ball u aoocJ, at best, and colts four tlme1 u much O!flet> eaten outalde the home. Tens Guinan Wa! right en point when she greeted her butter-and-egg · men wt1h, "Hi, Sucker• II OIAN .. COAIT DAILY PILOT Rol>m N. Weed, Ptib!Uhfr Thom~ Kem!, Editor Borba·ro Kreitrich Editorial P* Editor . The edltorlal .. -of tho llall1 Pilot-to )nlonn and -..... . rudtn by -· .,. ... -dlvtne•Commemuy·on topk:s Of tr.. tmot by~ciied columnilta llld ""°""""" 111 praytdlnr • 1....,. .,.. readtrl' vtewJ Md by p;twnUrc tlail JreWIPlper'• oplnlonl and idtu • current topk:s. n. tdltorlaJ Opl:nka of °" DaliY Piiot _ ... Ol\IJ tn the • editorial co!Umn at tl't 10p Of tht .pace. Oplmon. txptWWWd by the eof. umrdltl and cartoonl:ltt and letttr wrJtn ah their own and no C!lldoc • 1nunt ol ttltlr vtft'I bt 'lM DallJ' Pilot ..... Id bo.- SUnday, Novembor'"4, ~ J told stat 1) 2) w en re fr na ol wl • f E · 1 I F·or -Israelis: Why? By DR. PAUL D. AUTHUR 2)~AS a pilot example ol dernGCnlcy, Once again we are backing Israel Isra~l has benefitted only the Jewisb in its 25-year e>paDding conllicl wiUt majol'it~ among its populatico, its Midclie East neighbors. Two 'billion In additlo& Soviet Influence In the Mid· dollars one week .... mollilizaUon the die East, ~xistent 25 years ago, is, next. ... coofrontatlon '!!jti 1jle .-•• _.-very 1/iilcb· In evidence. a cold wln!e< comJDg up 50 From a 7 percent lihare ol the ii ·~I be reasonable lo ask' .;i,y ;.,. Palestine population al lhe lllm ol 1lle ·•-··• •-' a try 'th century, immigration. from Europe in-'° ... ~-Y s.,.,..... coon WI -creased !be Jewish portion lo nearly which we have ro treaty or lonnal third . .1.,. bel .-. look over written commitment one-m ..-.v, ore , .. cy · entirely as a slate. Even then, ll>e Would we leap lo !be brink of war Jews owned only 7.7 pem!DI of the l1lb readily I« ~ • • .« Norway· property tn Palestine. ... «even England . During World-War JI, !be world-ceiter- Just after World War 11 we \\'ere of Zionist influence shifted from Em-ope told by Ziooist proponents tnat a Jewish to New York and Washington. and the state ~wld : U.S. became involved at the domestic 1) Provide a secure haven for Jews election level. Tne tradition OJntinues 2) Provide a glowing model ~f today. Tne Washington Post quotes Sen. democracy and freedom for Ute Middle Henry M. Jackson CD-Wash.): East population. "Jewish support is bound .1o be an . asset in any future presidential aspira· The subsequent 25 years have d1~1ly tions of the senator _ and be Lt now refuted eadi ci these lolly ..,pirallOOS: in a pooitico lo cash in on years ol l) As we are reminded at fund-drive support of Jewish and Israel causes." times, Jews in Israel are net secure, ' bul dependenl upon U.S. money, arms, JUST _ BEFORE !be 1916 election, maleri'I) and political influence lo main-President Harry S · 'l'nlma!1 promlaed lain and e•pand lbeir positiOD. lo deJ!vec...100,0llO Jewislj European Hopes for Opening Up Of-Presidency Wither W ASIDNGTON-Wbeµ Pl'e.S!denl Nix-( ~ ) .., ,,.. a11ou1 to !rill"" bis shuddering S NO'' .. ..,. crlm two weeks ago, he """"1ted the -EV AN " 'T ~ two senior aides with the poorest creden· . • llals for forecasting Ute mood o1 . z . Coogress or the public: chief <i staff Ziegler bave been involved in politics Aleiander Haig and press secretary Ron on!y as Nixon campaign aides. Ziegler. · ' Haig. Ziegler and the Presidlnt's three BUZHARDT, A Wes I Point grad-la~')'crs handling Waterga,te legal affairs uate-turned -laW)'er, ·has a back· ....,, lbe ooly advisers sought ou! by grOtJDd in cxmservaUve politics in Mr. Nhoo. Sage political practitioners South carotina. but olher White House on the White House staff, aome brought staffers "OM\Sider him ~ a blunderer in In al lbe Prqldent's pleading alt... 1be national politics whose miscalculaticos · Walt<ple crlm bnJke last sprlnc, were bave deepened lbe President's Watergate !pared. pnib1ems. Some "war-gaming"-that is, '11111, In to d a y'1 bod times lcncasting likely impllcaUons-<>I Cox's as Ill yesterday's good times, Mr. Nixm's dismissal -dcoe by lbe Pr!"tdent a....ion lo seeking ...-1 from wiUt Haig and Ziegler, Bui Dleie was Republican polllidans r em a i n s un-DO S)'!llemalic calculatim ol, wb.al would dimmed. He prefers nmpoiitlcal ledmi· follow. . . a--loyalty he lrusll and whose What m at e s Otis bumbling so ~.he comiden willkely<" "\. ~ is I he oltundance of . •• -)Jlilllloal wiskm at the dooo:oleP of THE ADVISER held by Republt""!" Ute Oval Office. Pr<sidential mimselors lo be moot respcm1bl'e for Mr. Nixon s Melvin R. Laird and Bryce Harlow, disastroUS oourae Is Prof. Charles .Alan irnpm1Uned 1o relllm to government by wrtihl, Ute tooSlilolicoal lawyer lrom Mr. Nixon last spring 90 he could avoid the Unlvmily ci Texas who for months future blunden were not consulted. Nor bas led Ute President's Watergate was William nmmons, his unsung bul dof..,.., Belides Wright, assistant While smsible and ei:perieooed chief ccn-~""':"~1.~~~G: .,_I 1-0llbyist. - 1111111 comuited wiUt lhe President in LAI11D BAD LONG held privately Uta! deTlltng a atnlegy oo lhe surrepliUou.s ii won1d be politically lethal for Ibo 1ape monlin(s Utal was bound lo furce President to resolve lhe laP<8 Issue out An:bibald Cox as &pedal prooeculor. by firing Cox. Bol Laird, Harlow and The ooly nonlawyers al lhe White Timmons wse nol inlmned ci whal Ilouae consulted by Mr. NIIm were ,.. .. happening by Haig 1Hllil Friday, Ute two men who bave jointly ,.placed Oct. 19-4be day before lhe Satunlay the depar1ed H. R. Haldeman as Mr. mas>aae. By Uten, ii was too !ale Nixon's most trusted aide: career Anny to war-game the ~ences ol the officer Haig and adverti~ng junior ex-President's !aleful cnne. _ ecutlve Ziegler. U the President scorns such 1es1dent Nl.tical experience Is scarce among politicians, be naturally bu not d:>nsulted lbele five. Haig and Wrtghl, each wlUt Republicans out.side Ute Wblle House. a brilllant record In his own !leld, are For example, a.,>. John Rhodes o1 1oW nqi1y1es po11Uca11y. Garmeol and Arizona, set to replace Gerald Ford • Abundance of ----By JOHN HAMER tCAllD a. EGYPr /llUJITl!RRANEAN .... SINAI PENINSULA • JORDAN-~ , Sund1.y, Novtmbtt 4, 1CJ73 DAILY PILOT_ A 9 . JORDAN JORDAN } • Dilly "li.f M#t hi Hlfl'I (t\lllt STAGES OF ISRAEL -CL·Rl AT TIMES OF STATEHOOO (1948); AFTER 196l WAR; AFTER 1973 CEASE·FIRE refUgees to Palestine-. Not to be outdone wiUt the pivotal pro-zlonisl bloc ol New York, Republican candidate Thomas Dewey raised ii to 200,000. Aiding, refugees is an admirable concept, bul lhe warnings ol trouble from the SOOD·lo- IJe.<liaplaced Palestiniam were heeded neilber by eutgreos nor by Truman. As Sen. J . William Fullbriglit (D-Ark.) commented again last mmlh: "Tbe Israelis coolrol Ille policy in lhe Otqreos end Ille Senate. " • .on anything the Israelis are interested . " U1 •••• -Untted-Slates·poticy bas-thus-drilled from Franklin D. Roosevell's lull con- sultation with both Arabs and Jews in 19(3 lo !be present unquestioned lull supPort of Israel. 1be origin a 11 y Dr. Paul D. Arthur-is professor of electrical engineering at UC Irvine. He taught at the Univeriit11 of Cairo in th< aprlng of 1960 and at th< Univer- lity of Baghdad during the 1953-54 academic year. He is a student of the Mfdeail and · has spoken and had -«rticlel published on the iub;ect. humanitarian if uninformed sentiments have been carefully nurtured and amplilled tiy bl"""""1Sclous politicians and a biased media into autcrnatic emir lional support of all Utlngs Israeli. MEDIA PRESENTATION of tho present crisia includes ,descriptioos . of "Israel ~·-tile ~ Canal inlo Egypt," ignoring !be fad Utal all of Ibo Si!lai is F4YJll. United Nalioos Security Coonctl Resolution 24% from 1967 bas be<n enmned, calling for wllhdrawal to p-e-1967 lines, but no mention d. tile U.N. General Assembly's Dec. 11, 1943 resolulion-orderingoreturn of the 1 million Palestinian refugees. 'Illa! reoolution bas been repeated an- nually but to no avail in the absence of .U.S. pressure on Israel. While seriolJll c&cussion has been possible in Europe and canada, the least questilring In lhe United States of WllSi>qlon policy brings on the vehe- ment att:1isatim of antl.-8emitism (read anti.Jewish). In fact, there ha1 been a loog, I! oot well DOied, hislilry of Jewish antt-Ziooilim, as exemplified by the existence American "Q:Miieil for Judalam. ' "'l'"'----.. ... , ............. .. 'Gene r1I H1i9'1 Stiff, I presume.' as Houee Republican leader, never sees lbe President alone. Acconlingly, he was not asked his views in advance two weelcs "80· 'n>e iron ring around Ute President has oot been breaobltd since Haldeman's falL William Rucketsbaus, a proven Nix- oo loyalist until f«ced out by Cox's dismissal, never coosulted wiUt !be President. from the time he bee.a.me . acting FBI director April 30 until he V.'BS fired as deputy attorney general Sept. 20. NOR HAVE THE latest conwlsi.ons changed anyUtlng. In tbe crisis at- moophere of last week, poUUcal wise man Laird was oH "'· a previously scheduled spe-g lour-far !run lbe President's side. Otqressiooal party leaders remained Jocted out. Whereas Republican politicians last spring were demanding that Ute doon ol lhe Wbile Hoose be opened and Ute President exposed to expert political ad- vice, Uteir bope has shriveled. Facing lhe worst trouble of any President in a cen- tury, Mr. Nixoo insists on his is>lation from Jll'riessionsl -and perhaps uncon· genial -political advice. U he survives, be will do II wlUtooil such valoable help. With the welcome introduction or the U.N. truce team ·again, it should be re- called that from 1956 to 1967 U.N. person- nel were able to patrol only the Arab side. Jsraeli deception and lack of cooperation 'with U.N. investigators at that lime has been adequately doc11mented by Ute many reports and booloJ written since by the U.N. ~. Swedi&h Maj. Gen. Carl von Hom's "Soldiering For Peace" (1967) deals witll lllb Issue. DUE TO mE MANY CWTelll shrill calls for aid to "beleaguered Israel," ii ha> been oOOcured Utat lhe present fighting has taken place in Syria and in Egypt, not in Israel. Historic U.S. concern for se 1 f • determination ol. people is mocked if repe>rts are true -that the U.S. flew fighters directly into Israeli-occupied Egypt to maintain the Israel expansion policy. Is it in our oatJooal interest to support continued Israeli occupation, annexation and exploilalion d. large ;ireas of Syria, Jordan_ and Egypt? The colooial era is past. · · The h\S1«1C Israeli llllf-necked al· ~.::~-~ Iqrit (prevented from returning to their homes because they are not Jews) or the larger number al Christian and h-1oslem Palestinians ke}X outside the ever-expanding borders of Israel, has been made possible only by !be United States' unwillingness to disdpline Its client state. The lsraeli-Zionisl establli!tmenl roost at sc:me t~ face up to its: disc:rimina· tion against national minorities. 'lhe Palestinian's search for his identity cou1d conceivably Iasl for lhe 2,000 years often quoted by Ute Zionists. WIIL-..rnE._U.S. be mired in this v.·rangle for that time? F.ditorlalisls and political cartoonists bave pursued avidly the righleoos Iheme thal we should nol be bladanailed by oil'°"ning Arab governments. (The Palestinian homeless have no leverage to blaekmail anyone in lheir quest far ju.slice.) -. Admirable, il cl>lly. l!ut lo otr anlJ altemalivo 10 be hdklor..t contlnmll;r by domeotic ix-ire -ind polltically amlliliom. -Into kJ!OO'j•riC ailpport. ~ l..llate pnulng . it•"""·~ almoJ t Nixon Should Get Credit . -I For Peace in Middle East ,,, ·•!'(' 'lbere are good rea90lt! fir Pn!sidenl ,-------... --.... N'txm's cmlidence in Ute proopects for ( NORMAN ) peace in lbe Middle East. It would be undiplomatic for him to elab«ale, · COUSINS' but Ute reasons are nonelbeless oignifi· .., __________ _ cant. Tiie President believes Utal Egypt and Syria, at long last, have given up the illusory.and dangerous notion that Israel can be eliminated as a sovereign state. For more than a quarter-century, Arab • leaders have been seized by the idea Utal ii only llley could combine their military strengths, they could throw Israel into the sea. The six-day war of 1967 served ooly to intensify this conviction. The humilia- tion. of that defeat convinced the Arab leaders Uta! !bey could make 'lhelr mili· lary superiority cotllt il·they could keep !heir anliaircralt defeme> operallonal and if they could copen up the ir tact.tea in tank warfare. They were also determined loll•• !heir lank perscooel better train- ing. ALL THESE resolutions were in evidence in the Arab two-frmt surprise attack of early October. The strategy almo61 worked. II Ute allack didn'I lal<e Ute Israelis completely by surprise, ii at leas! succeeded In throwing Israel ooto the defensive. F« Ibo !Im SI hours ol Ibo war, Egypt and Syria genuinely Utoughl they were "' !be way toward Ollerwbeiming vict.ry. Wbat Ibey didn't realiz.e was Utal Utelr Initial success also carried with ii Ibo polentialities,d. disa.ster. The strategy of lhe Israelis, ii is apparent in retrospict, was to lure Egyp- tian tanks in large numbers into the Sinai Peninsula, retaining only enough force to keep them engaged, but un- dertaking a bypassing action that v.llUld give them a mllitary position on the wesl bank. This strategy bas two objectives. Firsl, to ail off ·lhe lllll'PIY line for the Egyptian !oroes on Ibo eaal -; second, ·to lll(JUlll a dlrocl Utreat against Cairo itself. . This strategy came close 10 prtJducing an even greater military victory for the Israeli s than they scored in 1167. Having routed the Syrians on the eat, Ute Israelis Isolated Ute main F,gyptian' lank force in the Sinai l'lDln!ula arid prepared themselves for a direct atla<k Oil Egypt. • Ute U.N. oa1I came for a .,... lire, lberef«e, Ibo I ..... 11s were bard1>'1 enlhuslaslic aboot stopping Ute war a tbal point. Bui Ute United Stales, Clll which • the Israelis W"ere m a in 1 y dependait for -military equipment, uoed its full weight to press for cessation. THE UNITED STATES was able to persuade the Israelis that they were now in a position to achieve their basic aim -lull recqplition of and respect . for their existence as a sovereign and · utdependent nation by the Arab slates.. As lhO price I« its withdrawal from Syria and F4YJll, !be Israelis oould de- mand lull rea>g)lilian. rn..., u-clreumStances, Pnsident Nixon ts cmlidenl Utal Ute chances for • structured 11)1! 1aating peace in lbe Middle East are better than al any time since the creation of Israel. Some may say Utat the credit belongs nol AO Richard Nixon bul lo Henry Kissinger. In Ute Watergate ~ • the point was made that Richard Nixon had to take responsibility fer the actions of his sub<rdinates. 11lat point is correct. In l!L(aiu)ess, Ibo. same prin!:iple should hold in lhe field d. foreign policy. Scarcities May Include Love wASHINGroN -'l'he Ametlcan COl'llll<llll'i•, tut ovelflowtnC horn ol pl<trty, bas en ominously -· etr -11 lbeoe days . II ltll1 11 midealably 'bountllul, but lalely Ute EDITORIAL RESEARCH included such basic materials 83 natural gaa, paper, metals, plastics, cotton, wool , wood, ceram.l:cs, leather, cement and rubber. These led lo consumer product shortages of blue jeans, rugs, diapers. wire, toilets, rags, cardboord, belts, stationery, furniture, burial caskets, automobile part!, electric motors , musical instruments, fuel tanks and_llarch. World War Il brought severe shortag,. of many items, and again the major rePDfl.'eS were Substitution and rationing . "During the Second \Vorld War just about everythlng was ·scarce at one time or anotller ... .'' wrote historian Richard· Ringeman. "To oversimpli!y, we had guns but we did not have a whole lot of butter." lo stabilize world ecooomJ.c and populali0;n gro,vth, As long as _Ule number d.· people in pursuit of affluence keeps growing. the demand for food, raw-materials and energy v.ill put great strains oo finite '\\'orld supplies. Baning ez· lraontinary ledmological breaktllroughs. mankind soon may ftach the "limits to growth" 111 I nation bu axne up lbort of -rather Import· anl items -lnclo!dlnC foods , fllels, lumber, chemicals and leUllM, lo name jUlt a low. 'I'hou8l1 not yet criflllling w universal, llh>rtag<s bave be<n wideoprood and llTllallng enouglt lo wake up tile American pdl>Ui: lo the banll • fact Uta! abundance no longer can be taken for pttod. - Many claim the llhoriages ""' merely tan- porary and say depleted aupplles will ooon be repl<nllll>ed. Bui otbers grimly roreeast a future fraug!lt with tnsul!lclency and wam that lhe nation muot !elm lo cope wllb the economics of scarttty. "WE ARE GOING to be conUnoously confronted with chol... belw.<n higher prices a n d 1bortage8," predlctl Herbert Stcln1 chairman cf Ute Oouncll ol Economic Advlser.t. As wtnw aJ>l)tO&Chos, tile problem of potenlial foe!. and energy lhoc1ages has l>«ome acute. Even·belon the outlnak of war ID lhe Middle I I ~;-ollldals WiffiOd tbal healing fuel 5t1PP!ies m~ be inadequate II temperatures were unusually cold. And Ibo embargo of Arab oil ell)lOrla In relallatlon f« U.S. military aid lo lsrad mak<s !be clanger more ....,.., An em«geDCY mandatory tllel allocation -cram will be~ Ill Novemller. Food ~ bne -another major con-cern ~ the Amerttao tu>J1c In ......i montho, as many foods -mall notably beef -were elUter, unavailable or priced out d. reach. Experts l>huned_ ~ WM!her, crop failures, Increasing demand, the dollar tlevaluatlon and Ute Russian grsCn tleal. • Shortages extended lo soch staples as potatoes and rlce, as nil as rallins, salmon, sauerkraut, shrimp, 0>rn synrp, grapes, canned frults and vegetables, IMXley and popcorn. Ol'llER -AGES that U1* Ill It7S_ covered an --11 wide nap d. ltoail. 'l'1e IJat \--~-- 'BASIC INDUSTRIAL produels in short supply have included chl«lne, aoda ash, phenol, new .. prtn~ bides, imUlaling material, elhyl alcohol and lallow. As acarcllies lllOW'Md, many looked lo pasl perlocll d. deaUt for 1 ....... World War I, wblch fin! demcnstrated the voracious appetite ol llgl!llng Industrial nations for raw materials, broiighi an elaborate Jll'iortly system whlch n!iied on substltu'llon and rallOltlJ1i. Vegetable fibers were woven into woolens, and ciUcory, cereal and beets were used to make ersAlz coffee:~ and cbocolate. Food ratlontn:g cards entilled h o I d e rs lo Umiled ernouots d. staples, While victory gardens prolllcrated and sheep were grazed on the White llou3e lawn lo dramalize !be need I« meal and wool protlucllocL 1 Tlll!S, rubber, gaooline, supr, oollee, meal, canned goods and r"'1 were all ratlooed. Bui boarding and black markeleering """extremely, widespread. CU!\REll'r SCARCITIES relate not lo W81' but, lo a great degree, directly to rblng al_lluenee. Am«icans, who have become accustomed to -.....unc1y 1"111mited aupplieo of diverse-goods, now suddeoly are shocked Utat some things are DO looger attainable. Bui shortages are a universal tondillon in much of the developing . \\'Orld, and the efforts of poor countries to raise their Uving standard$ inevitably \~·\II eiwctrbate scarcities in tile United States. With only 5 percent 6f the v.-orld's population, this nation can hardly expect to continue using 27 percent ol the world's resource production. - Mail)' believe that tlie only final solution b "spaCelbip earth.,, . • <mlERS MAINTAIN Iha! Ute real diltl<llSion'I of ocan:lty are not environmental or economlc, bul uislenliaL F.cC111omist Waller A. Weissllo!lf. regards llme, life and eneip: as tho resouroei Uta! are ultimately "scam>' becausc of buman mortality. Brltlsb -D.H. Robemon bclievl'I that 8l1(l(ber vital commodity -"love, !be scarcest and most precious ol all resources" -may be lhe fmal casualty d. a wcrld In which I ''progress" only br1ngs oblivion c1-. The tiuman need for lovt, 11long v.i th such attampanyinc amenilits as peace of mil\d, self- lullillm<nl, cornpan!onship, leisure time and .,.,_ templation, is nol likely to be •ntW!ed In a ~ l"''""''holeljl bJ<,lhe_........Ucs of scri ty. ) ( , J ' J \ ' A J O . DAILY PILOT Sunday, ""•mbt• 4, !~. • Chri~tmas Brings ·Daytim·t: No Bright Lights For Coast Contest . ·---.. ..., ---- • PLAZA AR1' CEN·TER IL ADOll PU.ZA, SUITI 15 ...,. s-J .. c.,11tt ... fl'•h1tln9•, Art M1t•rl•I•. ·Frem•1- \Vc Frame tlie Us «at a..nd·thc U1n1suaL Art-Ci •• ~., Mon. H1r11 s .. 1. zo•/• OF!' 0. AH Art Suppllff • -· 4.93· 1950 to-con tin 1------By....TOM-AtcCANN•---decis· Ot th• c1rrr ~lltt stiff contests IL! in the past. ' , The Orange Coast's tradi· tiona1 "40 h1iles of Christmas Smiles" Christmas decorating contest will emphasize daytime greetings this holiday season. Concern for the energy crisis has forced the Orange County Coast Associatioti, ro- • sponsor with the Daily Pilot of the area's annual holiday contest, to concentrate on daytime displays. Entries will be judged on how they appear during daylight hours. "IT JS HOPED that these areas will be willing to sponsor entrles in the daytime competition to be conducted by this group during the 1973 holiday season and it ·is further hoped that critical supplies ol fuel , which tradi· tionally worsen during the wintertime months, will have eased su!flciently by next year to 'allow the resumption of the usual competitive displays involving the use of electric lighting." Mfflff Clllrtt • A-lc.M l1pnlt 1M•A111fflcat4 • ,.,...,tli1N '""'' -SOUTH COAST PLAZA JJJJ UISTOl, COSTA MESA MOutS1 .... , 1~'100 ..... 10.6. ( ..... 51 .... - EXECUTIVE COM~UTTEE ~of the\is~ation, in a meeting to set dates for the aqnual ntest, issued the foltowing policy statement: Judging of the daytime '4400 ?\1iler" is sch.M uled for the T S t d ' N Q.o~ ... weekend of Dee. 15 and 16 . .., •• ,.. .... ....... ' ry ' a lll' a y s ews uu._. "Due to the environmental impact aspects of the tradi- tional holiday use of large amounts of electricity-often at peak use times of the day-and becawe of the ap- with Monday, Dec. I?, listed NATIVITY SCENE IS A TYPICAL DAYLIGHT DISPLAY THAT MAY BE SEEN ALf·O.:.N~G.:._C~O·A~SjlTjlTilHiiilSiliiYiiiEiiiAmRmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiii;;;::--as a "cushion date" for judg~ · to use, if necessary, to be . • parent energy shortage, it shall be the Policy of the "40 Miles of Christmas Smiles" co-sponsors that the judging for this year's event 'Wiii -be -oomructed ~· during .. daytime hours. '"It is acknowledged and understood that some of the cities and areas which have participated in this event may nia]l:e th~ir (>wn inQependent able to view all entries in }lirth, vi'ce president; Jack 'normai' the contest. Feehan, treasurer; Bob Weed usage." peaks in pov.·er \Vinners of the 1973 com· petition wil"'8 announced just prior to Olristmas and pro~ ably will be featured in a Daily Pilot picture page, cis in the recent years of ccr sponsorship i of the contest by the Daily Pi!ot afld the_Orange County Coast Association. and Carl Kymla, exec;utive committee members; and Ralph· Kiser, executive manager of the association . Kiser. a former executive with Southern Ca 1 if or n i a Edison Co., declined to estimate the amount of elec-- tricity used by Orange Coast area residents and busines.ses THE DA YUGHT POUCY in lighting up the coast for was formulated at a meeting . the holidays. ·a.ttend~ by. association of· He did say, however, that f1 cers mc1uchng: the peak load could "range Dick Stev.e~ president; Ed from S_to 15 percent · over - Allenswortl1 Larid Goe s For Pa1·k i . c~Pitol · New·s Service \ BAKERSFIELD -T h e state has acquired a signifi· cant part of the land and · buildings at h i s tori c Allens\VOrth. 30 nliles north of Bakersfield near U.S. 99. for a proposed state historic park. Purchased in the ~acre to.wnsite as the Allensv.'orth schoolhouse and 7.94 acres at a total cost of $29.825. The Legislature has appropriated $200.000 from the Bagley Conservation Fund for the purchase of property at Allensworth. DETAILS OF SANTA'S WORKSHOP WERE LOST TO NIGHT LIGH:rlNG Allensworth is the onl y tO\\'O in California ttl be founded. fina nced and governed by black Americans. ' -·-· .. NOW thru ~OV 1 0'" Bi.ggar' s Fall Festival You've Got To Price It To Believe It! FLOOR SAMPLE SOFAS and CHAIRS UP TO V2 OFF Selected floor somples from Big9ar's Own Custom Shops, and other leading , uphofst.ery manufacturers. Plus o special selection · of choirs, sofas, and sleeper sofas available-in o wide choice of fabrics at Sale Prices, • Biggar'• Own Budget Aecounl1/BankAmericard/Ma1ttr Charge SANTA ANA • l110 N. MAIN t (71 4).547,1621 . ' (All ,,.,,., 1.i•f•tt t9 ,,,1., ••I• I .. • lo turn on Christmas lights • Elega·nt . custom . drap,eries- from Penneys special collection. Order now.so they'll be "home for the holidays. W••lsohnecustom: •Slipcovers • Reupholltllfl' .:·woven Woods .. • Shutters • Bed•pr ... •Shades We have lhe .-..wers to your decor•tl"9 questions. PenneysCustom Decorating Service will assign a professiohal decora-· tor to bring .fabric swatches from this beautiful special collection to your home. Our deco rator will he lp you select fhe perfect draperies for your home. Whether it's a .ques tion of color, texture, pattern or whether you can't decide on a jabot Or a swag valance, we're ready with expert advice. And it's free. ' So order now and you'll enjoy your eleQant new custom drB_peries by Christmas. We promise. Penneys Custom O~c9rating Service can he lp you with every- thing from simple accessories to decorating sehemes tor your enlire house. · ' ' .. ' ' JCPenney • We know what yo.u're looking for.' ShoP..sunday noon~to-5 P .M. at the followlng:stores: 'I FASH!ON ISLAND, ,Newp?rt ~each (~14) 644-2313 . _a:'r HUNTINGTON ·CENTER; Huntingtofi iBeoch (714) ·89~~71711.' ,, ' ' . " r • , . , I ' T • • ' M .. w " H J ' • p .. ~I "' g ,, J " '" "' llldlV '" Cw 0<1 ' N • • • I • .. j • Sunday, ·NOYtmbu 4, 1?73 DAILY PILOT A J 1 R~publican Angry " Family Circus 1J11 BH Keane '\_,-,:; ~""T"'---Greenbelt LeaS,es .Okayed For the Record Harassment Cited SANT A ANA -SUpervisor David Baker'• proposal 1o lease \r donate surplus county land lo cities or chambers ol commen:e r... greenbelts and recreaticn areas has received final approvll of the • oonstructlon and flOOd tlOl\lrol Orange County Board ol purpoees available to clues: ~lsors A provllioo was-added to In Prop. I .i~s~e ( "-· . ' the original BaUr proposal ·Last week• actloo made which "<!uires development about M acres of surplus land within nro years or return originally purchased for street to the county. Dissolutions OJ Marrf.ag_e __ By O.C. HUSTINGS ~,.....,,, -~~·~~ - A prominent ~range County . ' ~- •• } --.. .t ...... ---... ' ORANGE COUNTY Hearts Club Plans Meet Republican said he has been harassed by aides to Gov. Reagan for what he h'imseU called his "violent opposition'' to the governor's tax and spending limltation proposition on Tuesday's ballot. Thomas , C. Rogers, -a Newport Beach ·businessman ,and immediate past j)residenl of lhe Orange County Republican C e n tr a I Com-"But, Mommy! DADDY'S don't get sick(' ~ mittee~ said many other top--------------------! Republicans are "afraid to spealt out" agalnst Proposition ~ because of the hal"assment. l'"l'hey've been putting the screws to everyone," Rogers said\, 11They," he said, are Reagan aides &nd party of· ficials managing the Proposi- Trustees Check Texts For Probation Schools OllANGE -"It's Great to tion .I eampalJn. • ll<gers outllne!I his op. By CANDACE PEARSON determine .. dve and Help Others" position in a letter to Reagan 01 1111 .,.,.., '''°' Staff ti wlll bo Ille theme cl the a1de Mike Deaver. SANTA ANA "Oink ':i'randt said reviews often • 1111, when_ 1he Orange Rogers said he has received -Y are unreliable. "My son ~ dulpter cl Meiided many "berating" pbone calls _ Hocker Shoots Smack" but she ~ed out a book from !be · a.ta. lac. celebrates its from f e ·I Io w Republicans,. 1 doesn 't do it at the Orange yourig aduJt section of the.8an· llrll-1vtnary Wednesda ma!1y of whom ~e said . ~e <minty ScMol Board meeting. ta Ana Public Library,'' he "I· trying to make his oppos1bon "Dinky" was one of n books said. tt1mll1:1 have let 8:30 p.m. look like a persooaJ attack on It was supposed to be on car • ... time they will meet Reagan, It isn't that at all, recommended for ~hase by races. But It turned out to ., .... and• IOCial session Rogers said. teachers_ at iroi>ahon schools be "170 pagt11 on sex: organs/' Ill ... dialns room of st. * in the cmmty. Brandt claimed, adding the ... lloopital ln Orange. THE HU1''TINGTON Beach The title surprised county librarian he questioned said trustees, who called in C'.ounty she bougtx it because "the ''p ' f · HMrtt draws its League of Women Voters is Librarian Ellen Earquhar to reviews looked good." RI a 8 from pe1'IOllS who -now offering-a s p e a k e r B explain. Trustees finally decided to .... I heart bureau service oo oelected na· .r . bu u 11 ~c. The 1m 1: ... ~ tional, state a·nd local issues, Author M.E. Kerr tells me y a ~. Y are •pii tr are <00\emplatlng Topics on the list ol 15 to .story of an overweight girl papert>acks and cost lesi than .. ... ,. Voluatoen from 30.mlnute talks range from wlx> fe,e18 deprived ·cl her $10 total. Trustees said Ibey Ill orpitzatlm .,._I pa· the U.S. Congress to .,,. parents love aod lies about :'f~~ :::.m~ .= ~ llove doubb -viromnental legisla~ _and_.~~-!.iget attention, Ql~te tr fwl about . p I an n ed. Ofonge COWll'YfiP!d tfijjsfi. ' dltiO.i-19 Dtiiky and!"Dra~mgg-"ed'!',~· Coll Karen Kallay at 114Ht!'6 "Is there anythil1g (in the M1"1· for more infonnation. book) that suggests thi s were "PoiM of, Departure: 19 wll!ll't the ·'·-t thing to Stories of Youth and do?" sax.,i-..T;;tee Dave· Discovery," by Robert Gold; Driver Fined In Death Case * ''The Peter Pan Bag," by Lee REP CRAIG Hosmer (R· Brandt asked. • Ki•-••, and "Hot Land, 1bere are moral values in . ""O··-· Long Beach) has protested the the book ... F uha 'd Cold Season/' by Pedro Juan Federal ·Food and Drug • n!.3. arq r 531 • Sot Administration's decision to altOOUgb she added she had ~ teachers chose books ··SANTA AtiA -A fl,000 regulate further the sale ot :!!~e ~reviews, not the they believe will attract pro- flne. bas been levied on a vitaplins. · Tnmees didn't let their in-bation students to reading, Westminster man found-guilty The new . FDA otder pro. quiry Tlmsday rest with Ms. Farquhar indicated. "And of rillsdemeanor manslaughter • hlbits sale without prescription Dinky. I stand here speaking for !be by an Orange eoopty SUperior of any !able~ containing mar< "l!m . .lleally ·Dragged but teachers too." eourt jury tbat rejected ad· thail one ~ a hall llines Notlin ·Gets M Do " b Trustee Donald Joidan ad-~·-·• .... -., of •--~ the recononended daily adult· •· i-, ,e wn 1 milted an Interest In ·oae of ~ ~& \Ul&mQI Nat Hentoff came under driving. "<!Ulrement. acrut1ny Thi!! librarian said the less provocative titles. Judge9~ Hol"14i~~dlllrk:t ii>-.-tmi!&"~approved "!want to read ''Mjlalery I"'-<' ,"' ail'·~'.·~ucleO :1« ~·~~·~· i,y g~Fi(q1dlor" 00 !be cl tJio Flt (lat,'" ,IJe aid, Eugme , lild fllileed Oranlie Gounty, aalll Vl1IUllllll 'request. , smllmg. "I'm curious. I have . • At last, a four bedroom condominium 1n Newport! .. --.... ~ Cjn~ irthe'-pc:rfe.<r_:ba<ge-di<pGsat•dlsh.,..'her•~min°"s­ sctting in which to begin. a new and kitchen ceili ngs • cboicc of carpeting elegant life, or continue a wcll·estab-•attached enclosed garage' )Vith auto- lishcd, mcll~Wonc. These condominium matic door opener •a fireplace with units have been specifically designed to gas lighter• private community uso- rtflcct the individuality of the owner. ciation pool • private patio and bal· ~Viii~ Cjra~di\,.offcrsa park·like c~ny •. complct~ly landscaped yard setting where walks \Vcavc bc:tween With maintenance 1ncludcd •we! bars. cucii.lyptus and bottlcbrush trees. New- port Beach is a uniq_ue community, and,. \'Illa <jra1111d'l,is quiedy nes· tied in one of its mos t lovely and p_rcs- tigious·l~£jltiOns. ~ 'lll&VillaGNftada's premium houtih9ld fca&rCS.iilcTude: four bed· r6oaii: '•two and one-half baths •gar- " z PUBIJC 'NOTICE him CID one ,..... lnfoimal or minerals never lhown to . Ms Farquhar said she can't ""' myst.ry books at home probation for his rote last Eeb. be harmful when taken in read · all the books requestccll=-;;;;now;;;;;;;;ha;;;;lf;;;;lini;;;;. shed;;;;;;;.';;;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii_iiiii _______ iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii--~ 14 m the death cl'mototcycUst quantity should not be defined personally, and so goes byrr Raymcmd Jolm -Helm, 19, of as drugs subject to a preacrip-reviews of books a n d 'ICTITIOUI IUIUfl!SS No\MI ITATIMINT Iowa. lion. knowledge of authors t o TM follQWI,. Pf'llll 11 doing bullntu ·~: . JOl'S tt. • H. ,aURa!R.S. SU w. 111tt.f'$!., ~-MIN, Ctlll. nll7 sttn\l*I 11~ .. 1 ttnnll Ave,, lrvlnt, cl11f.\f'219t")"r Tiiis bu$11'1... ti COfld"°"" W M · .Newport Motorist l~:,du~;-=,n:m .. .-~,.~·I sue·· d ' for $3 Mi·zcw· n ~'i'::,. 3~'.·~;,, of ~ ~Ol.llfY ~ ~ ' •. :.-,_.,... . . . \' . Pidlllltd or.. COllt Dilty ""' ' ' ' Iha . NOYltf'llW ., '1· 11: zs. 1m alf.7'1 • SANTA ANA -A_ Newp:irt wheel of, • car ~ swept . Beach motorist awailil!I llial across tlfe center divider oo · · :i:1"~: .,et-= \vest ~ Highway neer the .FOR for nearly "1 mil1loo by i · Stull Shirl restaurant and col- girl woo received 'oerlouS In; lided bead-on Into an auto 0<:· juries In • colllslOll ancl Iii' cupled by the two girls. ADVERTISING IN OUT 'N' ABOUT PHONE NORM STANLEY 642-4321 the fl!Jlllly cl-her fatally ~ Miss Yenalavilch died later jured companion. •· in a hoopltal. Her parent.!, two Melvyn Douglas Wbeeler,,35, brothers and a sister demand ol It2 W. Coast Highway, Is $1.1 .milllm in damages. Miss named as principal ~fendant Trolboltz ... ks a further $1.8 In 'the Orange County Super!Or mllllon. COurt action filed by Debta Wheeler has been ocdered Lynn Trofholtz, 19, B~ to f8ce trial Nov. 9 in Superior Park, and !be family cl Janice Court on !be c r Im in a I Yenalav!tch, who was 18 -charges. Named as c<><lef~­ she died last May 1. ant in the civil action is Amsting Newport JJOli<>! William Martini, his com· allege Wheeler wai at the panion In the auto. . . • 72· ·:m:-... ~. ·'C"l9 :=-••"'41111 "'-;r;;;;;;;-•• ·--!t ... ·--::c.. !f • ,_ """~ Plane Death Brings Suit . SANTA ANA-Damages to- taling !800,000 are being sought by the nert of kin of a Corona de! Mar man who died when his t~ aircraft plung· ed Into a Buena Park field last July 30 and burst ir.lo flames. . Jeffrey M. Koppe seeks those· damages in an Orange Comly Superior O>urt action that names Ceosna Aircraft Corporation as the principal defendant In !be lawsuit stem· mlnC from !be death of Evan Koppe, 47. The actim claims that there were defects in the Beechcraft aircraft in which Koppe, who was alone in the machine, met his death. ~ ~=-~~ 1----=-·-.. -·--___...~ '24'·--JLe ·sm. .... ·i:--:::::--·==--•f!e!!1!9!!:!' -·--. M, ......... -......... -..... ,.. .......................... ..... Pi!oYEN ON.ovER A M!LLIQtl'l.MNl~TOCOAST '"' • ,ltWI l.AWN ANAi.Viii wlrtlOvl "4111tllon C•ff ~~ H~f Man" CO,.YlltlONT (Cl 1'12. UWN-MAAT CNIMICAL & lllUl,,._8NT c0.P':-ACT NOWI ' ~tilll Ptl IHctl AA GET CITY EMPLOYES OUT ·Of POLITICS Vote YES Nov. 6 on PROPS.-ABC . . PROTECT GOOD GOVERNMENT IN -HUNTINGTON BEACH I Good government requires all employes to be r • s p o n s I b I e to you the people ltiroUCJh your seven elected ~ouncilmen and tfle councO-answerable aclnllnlstrator. An archaic system has left three depo11u~t heads without any real accountabmty to the people. A YES vote on propositions A, I, C, will put the contiOI Into the hands of your elected representatives. Presently you inust get over 15,000 signa· tures to start a recall if tfle an-y, d..t or treas~ are not cloillCJ their jobs. A YES vote on propositions A. B, C, win put these offices under the strict pe_nonnel system which lists 31 causes for dismissal on poor performance -all wll liout hav· ing to stage an expensive recall election. Covndlmim and administrator work with an department heads and know their perfot mances and know whether they are do· ing the job or not. TH c~-approftd City Charter requires that the tht '.!e incum· bents be retained If tflere ls a change to appointive. We are fortunate that·the three exceed requirements for the!r offices ,now. Help make sure future derks, attorneys and treasurers will have to ine" strl11gent education, experience and professional stanclords. Lets GET cit'( employes OUT OF POU1'1cS and under the STRICT MERIT SYSTEM which guarantees strong stanclards of hlrillCJ and ~rmance In office. ·~·. -' ' Partial list ot those supporting im· roved city government are : Chan1ber or Commerce American Assoc. of University Women · Cillzens Cliart.er Revision COmmittee City Council HB League of Women Voters Home CouncU Boa.rd of Directors Huntingtoq Seacllff Home Owners Huntingtorl Beab:h Penonnel Board Ma,yor Jerry Matney Eve Dobkin Mike Bogen Ruth Balley Bob Terry· Shirley Kertn.1 Ethel Trindle Jerry Sapp John Henricksen Diane Reed Hitoski Toru Mukai Donn R. Bravender, D.D.S. Chuck Sperrazzo Ed Sullivan David P. Garofalo Laurie Hill Margaret DQn Cornelia \V. Johnson. Esther 1''unk Mary K. Lent Esther Ha ggberg Gf8Ce Winchell Peggy Tucker Tony Tovatt John Sartc:eda Wayne Heyden Dean Stanton Peter L. Brueggeman Michael Cox • Margaret Carlberg Dr. Peter Greeen Donna Cox' George McCracken Marty Slates Muriel Gillespie James DeGuelle Jack R. Higley Robert Lambert Joe Irvine · Harry M. (Cap).Sheuc Jane Lambert Mark Hammarquls t Edna Sheue J. Sherman Denny Judy Hammarqulst George KircboU George Lusk O,arles Geer Thelma Denny Delbert G. (Bud) Higgins Isabelle Kirchoff Willi am ~fC'Court , Eula Hlgrjns Linda Achey Arthur Achey Cc Ce i\fN'nu"' - Art Gllle!J)ie Roger 0. Slates Don Bloasom .Peggy Freeman Carl Lawrence Ste-ven 0: Fenley Ke n \Vhlte Shirley n.ttloll Harriett M. WJeder Jim Hensley Bill Wnod.s CALL ANYTIME .. - 556-1424 \ Pat Downey ' !;cnneth E. Jnmea Doris \Vtllls Burton Wlllls I • Tom Smith Audfey Hensley Kenneth K. Rogers Tom Welsh Jerry Bame Marguerite \Velsh Joe Perry Trihn L"~l· t~~...,,. Pl11n._,.,. •,. 1' 1-'i>n"i"l i>E>n ..,A, .. 1,•t<;_('~ • ir,, ,: '""'" ,..,,. •• ,..'t' :.,,li'"d"' • ·~ .. , ... ,· . Ann '·o~!1.nd Jnl\ Blossom I I ' ' • i , -.- , • 11 -104 GI ~TARS ,,. f • .. • ; • • . . ' . • Surida1.~t-iovtMbt~4, l<J73, •. • " , ., 0 IMPORTANT NOTICE ·' TELEVISIONS~ STEREO CONSOLES, ·REFRIGERATORS, WAS.HERS, DRYERS, ,_ RANGES AND MUCH, MUCH MOREi · . -~~~~~~~~~~~ .MBICllAlllSE -. MDlTI-MIWON .. llY-IPS. E · IN SUfflCIENT QUANTITIES TO S• ANY R llfM. SAVE ID '150· • - ONLY YIHITE FRONT COULD HANDLE THIS GIGANTIC CLEARANCE SALES EVENT • WE PROMISED THE MAN'9FACTURERS NOT TO ADVERTISE OUR LOW LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ••• We Promise Savings to Make Your Visit Worthwhile · *Fair traded items excepted WHYWAITI _BUY NOW ••• · • 1 r • ( I • • . . • r 1 \' ' i ! I ' I • -I • . I -I • • ' At.Your Ser:v·1c·e .DEAR PAT :. W~at is the n'ame or the organization !bat provides wheet- ch?1rs. !~r ~eedy children? I want .to find thls out for a friend who knows a child ltv1ng 1n another state who needs a wheelchair . ' . ~ G. L., Foutain Vall_ey Variety .~l~bs International -sponsors a worldwide Wbeelcbalr bank Jor needy cbHdfen. The cblld'a family c_an · req11e1t iriforibatlon by writing to club headqu~rters_: 7%16 Red Road, Suite 208, S. Miami. Fla. 33143. Jndlat1s Still Have. Supplier DEAR PAT: r havC-a boX"'tlf clothes 1 would like to send to the ~dians but I don't know who to contact and l'd need to ;irrange for.a pickup sine~ I don't have any transportation. There used to be a man wtio carried tru ck .loads to an Indian rese rvation e".ery November, but J haven't seen anything in the ne\f~paper about hint for at least a couple of years now: Could you tell me who he ts1and how to contact him? · Y D. B., Costa Me&a · ou ~ro~a.bly are referring to Jim LltchUeld, Sr., lhi_ena Park. He and - his family tiave been makfpg trjps io rejervatlons for 19' years wtthJ~lotlieS:­ and supplies for lnd~nt from the El' Paso, Texas afea, ·through ,t(e-Soutb-· western and Northwestern United States and into Canada. A number af volun- teers assist LltcbfJeld tbrougbout the country. Pickup ~an be arrang'ed. You may contacl him .by pbonln& 5Z1·7411 or 521·1147. .. DEAR PAT: I'd like to find an individual or organization that \\'OUld be \Vtlbng to hem and put, together. -quilts ~rom two patehWOrk quilt tops made ' by my grandmothers. I d alto like to find out tM name of the organization that \vants ·old prescription eyeglasses. I have several pair tO donate, but don't know where to send them. · . . · E. R., Balbl)a Regi&ter your qullt request with tbe Voluateer Action Center. ~Uvocado St,, Costa :ftfesa, arid the Volunteer '"Bureaa ·of West Orange County 11412 Stanford Ave., Jiarden Grove. Old ·prescrlptloa glas1e1 may be dellv;red to Dr. Leon Axelrod , 160 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach for ,. 'collection pro- gram administered by the Lions Club;, , I 1tlagath1e Problems SoJ~d'l' ~ . . . . DEAR PAT : Publishers CJ~aring House t:ealizes that the my;gazine industry 1s one-_of ,your larger ca~egones of con~mer c:omplainb and we are doing something abou t it lhrougb. our ,uMegwne,Actt0n Line."-Your readers can n~w have any . of their unresolved magazine complaints handled free of charge simply by wr1tlng to me. Even if the magazines -were .not ordered through PCH, we will gllrantee satisfaction. All we· ask is tbat your readers first try to settle l!1e problem directly with the maga'zine or the subscription agency. If that fails, a short note · to me describing the problem is all that iS neces- sary. . · J .... K., Port Washington , N.Y. Clip aad &ave this .Information. Ifs on Ute level ·and Publishers Clea~g House bas a staff of tGO ·employes, many of wbtm handle its Magazine Action Line Complal~ts1 ·All mapdne complaint teuen from At Year Service readers are being forwarded to PCB. MaU complete Information 10 Joseph J. Kelleher, vice pre1tdeat;--Pabtlsben-Clearing Hou&e, stt-Olannet--Drtve, Port Washing· ton, N.Y. I~, ~Udtloll: Magazine Action uDe. Cainper 'IJl~trlbutor Sought DEAR PAT: ~y ~band and I have a. tent traHer that wC purchased used, The br~ ~ .. ~!~".Jl8llija''1 qJt,was manufa~ed in Lodi. After pulling ~thc-Ua ~·~.ibit .""we-stopped M~l:A>dl because we badly needed 11' ~v • ~ · iiy 'ii new top. Locaf ';."tra11cr supply alid outlet st<reJ in.Lodi t · Wu 1' lollger bEdilg distributed and '"'e f were told·to ·Jo6t~ln Uit! East:.' t no one ineW where. Could you find some- one who catPles the Heilite canvas! • ..>' -D. G .• Mission Viejo I walJi•t ablt to locate a ReDHe distributor either. If ilny At Your Servtcf: rtaden ~now where to bay tbls brand, or another tbat ~•oald serve as a good substitute, let's ask them to write to you at um Aagutln, ~tissloit' Viejo" 121'11. ' 'Snoopy' Needs Dru Cleauh1g DEAR PAT: My young son's stuf£ed "Snoopy" dog petds a good bath. lt's his favorite toy and i£ I ruin it, as I have mme other stuffed toys I've attempted to scrub with mild soap and water, I'll be the. one who will have to sleep on top of the dog house. Is there any way to "dry clean" a stuffed animal at home? T. R., El Toro Give Snoopy a dry bath by covering him with spray'. starch. Let It dry thoroughly and brush. The dirt sboC&ld come out with the' dried stattb. Next time you clean a stuffed ioy wttb soap and water, don't.get It 1oaldng wet. Apply suds with a vegetable bmh. Let dry and brusb. . ' l\'ewcoiner Needs Directi.011s -,, DEAR .PAT: ·1 am a new resident of this area and am wondering where J cou,ld obtain a road map of Los Angeles and the .sw;rounding area. I'm inter· ested in becoming acquainted with the major free:ways '° I can learn how to get from one place to anothet. ' · . : ~ . · • • • C. P., Costa Pt1esa Some newcomers take oae look at CallfOmt~ Jitewa)'J and want to bead bad to W'bere tbey came from. Yoo teem to,be taking u unataally-po&ltlve attitude.· Farmer's Insurwe Group ts mallhag yoa Its ".Soatbera Callforala Froeway System" map, ~· to acquabltlng .pewcomen 1!1~ freeway roates, locaUon of points of lnteresc add entertamment ·attmctlon ·tiit0rnta- tlon. Additionally, you wlll receive tbe Automobile Club tf Southern Callfor· nla'1 a::tmblnatlon Los ,Angel~ Ar'8 FretW"f System.. and downto'!fll L.A. map. 'MocJdngf>lrd' S!!u.ltrtrack Scarce . . ' . ~ . .,"'., DEAR PAT: For the past few Years I've searched for the sounOtrack re- cord from the movie "To Kill A Mockingblqi" with no success. Sh6uld I just • give up, or can you offe~ SO!De aWUlllce? l 'J..:· . · D P ., Lagpna Beach This part.lcular .,1~cHrack Is a~ a P_!!!;p\lum\1m4 you are not 81one In four se1n1b. Wllb tbe )lelj> of Cost{ Mesa's W1llil:bli MU1lc Ctt}lliid Rare Records, Glelldale, .a J19Vate Hrty wllh u exte111v, Cttlectlon ~ ~ack rkonb WU located. Write to 'Med RoberU,'3141 ~yd AVe.> lllif ... 'Pllf.,"Ga< 111'1, to-arrange -J!!!Cba_,.,. ~bertl '1014 me tbe ~jliolloa ,,.._.: sta.dlol ue bethlnlDI to release motlO·~ incl< recor61P ~·tld(ilr .. mu and mulWI ID ,.._.. to la.,...po'6c delllllld ltf,iiel!lt •I otiilAI· Iii• _,j -r Wet Scraping . Is E .. ler DEAR PAT: Several' years ago we •had our Windows Unted by a com· pony that subsequently went out ol business. In· the meantime, we acquired a fairly large dog, which in an. hon"'t effort to defend"bs against skunk.!, deer and an occasional meter reader, jumPs aga1nlt the wtndowl end has scratched tile tinting ralher badly. We'd like to remove the tlptlng from some ol the windows, but haven't been able to find out how to do It. , ' R.R., Lagaaa Buch A·I Otass Coating and Tinting, Breo, 1dvl,.s yea to ke<p the dated coat-• ' tng voty'mol•t with ·1 strong 1mmo1la and water IOlatloD and scrape It off. Be 1Ure to ventUatl the room 1Dd protect yoar 1land1 wltb rubber gloves. A·l · . n.. '1<tommercl1l """'tb 1mmoa1a for ~-·""1 removaf, but ii'• DOI a..uable o~ ntall oadeto ·due tocfto potetatia117 ian&eiou fumrJ. ' . ~ • • r • '" .· • ) • ... YOU • •' ·: ----"'·' DAILY PILOT SECTION ,8 ----~ Sunday, Novtmbtr 4, 1973 ' .. :· Bu'y.IDgAritiqiie:s: StUdy First;, . ' Then .l(eep Dealings to rheme l By Hll,\RY KA YE Of tflt O.lly l'llol Sltllf Dr. •Frank Gorham spent $20 on an . old ) beaten-up Jove seat he found sittin ct unwanted,in a second-hand store. 0 of old furniture from a Teproduction!'- Gorham asserted. "But 1 don't recont# mend people buy antiques for invest· ment as I do because it tak es loo long to le.am enough. ".l.t ~~ sp,,rayed a terrible gold au over1 and . muu have had -six layers ~f 'upbolstery·m it,'! ill! recalls, grimac- ~_, ~ But Gorhaln is no loilger grimacing over the find he made. The $20 piece was .. p~obably. built in 1800, he says, anc,J 1s 'f(>rth from $3,000 •to $4,000 today. The 1.ittle J~ve seat, no longer a garish gold with thick., bulging u~slery, has good company ut Gorham's Huntington Harbour home. . GOft:HAM'S ~OUSE ~s testimony to his skill at buymg, sellmg :and trading antiq~es -particularJy early, Earl y Amen can. The entire house iS decorated with old pieces -giving th~ house a sur- -realistic appearance. It is like walking . into 17th Century Amprica, with a · panorama of Huntington Hai'bOitr ,beyonrl t~ li\'iilg room drapes. .., . A,, very modem-day Dr. -1Uld Mrs. "But one, authentic: old piece can leod an attractiveness ~o the room that is unn1atched." tie said. ''It'll be a conversation piece. a sort of ;household God' to the 0\\1ler." By recognizing various period designs. and cheCking to ·See how the piece is constructed at ,the-joints, Gorham says the amateur can be \Veil on hi! way to knowing something about antiques. One impartant aspect. according to Gorham, is to confine your interest to one· OJ'.' two-fields. -''lf-yotrtruy-everything- that comes along, you're collection isn't . much to look at and it's easy to make mistakes.·· Gorham restricts his deall!tgs. to American and English, furniture prioi- to:1830; •\rorldwide ~Uque glass before 1850, and any Oriental artifacts before · 1900 .• MUCH OF THE "fad antiques'' cur- rently in vogue mean little to Gorham. "11le oak furniture made in• Grand Gorham sit not so omfortalily on an )835 wooden churcll':l"':ir.::--while a 1810 grandfather clock chimes loudly from lhe comef. " The house is one, big conversation piece. _ One ·or. Gorham's two young dauihters sleeps in a room full Of 1 7 o o \~illiamsburg flD'Riture. Isn't he afraid his eight-year~Jd daUghter \vill harm the val uable antiques? -Rapids Michigan-lrom 1890 . to 1925, i's ·pretty big now," he said. ·:'.,'But L car\'t really see why. It was machine madef could still be .made today, and is rather abundant. I really· don't un- derstand why some of those 1900 roll·t9p desks can bring $3,000 to 4,000."· "Well," he begins, running 'his fmgers ~hf9~h 'lhick, shaggy gray bcµr, ''ir 1f$lasted since 1700 already, I doubt my little girl can hurt it much." AS JF THE first daUgbter's room is ,: , , DallY '"" lllff ,... .. DR .. FRANK GORHAM WITH 1790 NEW ENGLAND CHEST OF DRAWERS not unusual enough·, the Other daughter · · . age 6, ~s a room decked Out in 18th at Long, ... Jteach 9eneral .ffosp!tal, says ~ ~ been buying and selling Century Chinese furniture and artifacts. such buys don't .~peq often~. bµt ad~s , anPqui;s· Since · befor;e . V{orld War · JI Hunting down _valuable__antiq~ has that he can teach amateur antique 'beginning when be JP'8$ • medical stu-~ m~ a "!~ern f~ with ,huntrrs jliStWOaf'fO,OOk !Or. in-fact -dent. _The-hobby -helped pay_f~r his 'llisband$! an<fl WlfCS> .werly ~gf J ~ni!F, Ille auspices;'\llf i1l\ei Hlintington ~ucat\0~: . I' . a~hque s~ps . Of\. ~eek.ends. toping to ~ch lftstorical sOCiety ~ ~1Qorh'am ·will Ht1 .cl~Uds his c~. can ~aeh anyone pick up bargams sueh as Gorham's 120 sbon be lJrescnung a · .erreS of fiv! the-~ · ·' purchase. • . lectures on how ito' identiff and buy "I earl teach a housewife in five Gorham, a neurologist and psychologist antiques. easy lessons how to tell· a· good piece One bit of advice Gorham ,will giv,e his lecture aqdience -is that an antique collector can't totally rely on dealers. 111 know the ·few dealers who knoW more than I d6 and I'll tell !he people ju& who they are. But serioos:cOllectors have to study antiqqes. tiheni9elves and Jeam about.it:" ' )i. . . ' "Me, I'm lucky. I usually ll!!>w more !hail die ®ale<s do.~ ;'be'. sale!-"It's a gold rhine."" ~ 1 ·-"I ,., ' ' ~ Thi 1ecti® .. ser1.,;'W!ir:liegiii ;Ja!f. !. and ,"91;~d'cil Tu~ evenin~s. Per.sons "in~ shoold ·cont a ·ct Vltjpnia 'Wbljlple, president.--.1 the Hun· tington Beadl Historical Society, at 536- 5481. -,- ' What They '.Say About ,Prop. I . , . I . • " . ' . ' ..... ,1, Here's Sampling of Rhetoric on TfJ,xrmi .iiative _, ·' • • ' " By WILLIAM SCHRErBER Of 1~1 D•lly l'llot St11f Proposition I. Governor Ron a l d Reagan's complex . controversial tax and spending limitation plan, v.·ill confront California voters Tuesday amid one of tbe biggest storms of rhetoric ~ state history. . ' Whit, then. have people been saying about the proposition and, more im· porta.ntly, what do they say it will do for California ? PROPONENTS say the n1easure will cut taxati on, put limits on spending that will force legislators to reorder their priorities, prevent a shift in taxa- tion \Yithout a vote of the people or two thirds of the legislature, provide for emergency situations and protect state programs consid~ed valid from cut· backs in funds. Opponents say the mea~'W"e will lock a questionable piece of legisla- ion into a rigid constitµtional . framework , will shift the tax burden from· state to local levels, erode· -con- fidence in the electi~e process of govern· iJient1 and enlianger ~d programs. Commentary on the measure has come from People big and itmali, politicians and common citizens. or KF\VB Radj_Q, said in a recent ISn•t." said Councilman Carf: Kyin18, who editorial. "It's time to put the-tax tiger is also manager of the Moulton-Niguel on a diet." Water District. -. ...'" · Houston Flournoy, a candidate to sue-• orange County Second ri'i 'st r.i ct ceed Reagan next year· on the GOP _, Supervisor ·David ·Baker, .. who is ticket, sai4, "Our federal system works chairm~!1 of ~~gan,'_s dri ve to pass test wh,en experiments like this are Proposition 1 m Orange Cbunty, ·said tried. This experiment is particularly "government now takes « pe~nt of se~sible in mooring expenditures to the our income on all levels and unless economi$! conditions of the state." something is done to ~top it, it will Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke another GOP be over 50 percent sooh." hopeJul next year, sai~ "This is the Opponents of the proposition base their people's last chance to control their comments on s~atiQO on the impact o\vn destiny in relation to taxes It such a measure might have on state tells government •get your hand · out fwuling and services. cf my pocket.• " , Assemblr Speaker Bob ¥oretti says, , • ~eath 1~s cellophane wrapping, Prop. ASSEMBL YPtfAN Robert Jadham (R· 1 IS nothing more or -less than an Newpart Beach) said, ..:;-ne governor's attempt by this state's wealthy tnlnOrity war is against ~~ever-increasing tax to transfer a greater share Of their burden Calilorniafls are forced to carry tax obligation onto the backs o! working people. th,e poor and the elderly. · An explanhtion. 'of the T.as Limitc- tion tn~tiative, knoum as Propo~ition l , was publishe:d on Page A7 of last week's Sunday Daily Pilot. This article does not repeat in detail the argu- me1tts fo-r and against the measure, but gives the ·camments of ·state und area ·officials on the issue. "If proposition 1 passes, representative gov~t in this,. state is out 'the windo\v, ,-Moretti added. . Stal~ ~·.George itOscoge, like ll_t6ret- t1 a-~Candidate for the ~mocratic gubernatorial nominaUon next year also opposes \the Jlroposition. · ' ·~It v,,.ouJcf strip local government' o! its atiUity to provide municipal _ servi~ and strike a fatal blow to local · property taxpayers,'' ?Ito.scone said. ·: WORDING ON BALlloT ' Below -JS' some of tlie rhetoric from • <f-both sides of the issue. Proponents of the ' measure voiced arguments citing a need for the ta'x- payers to pull the hand.~f govcnunent out of their pockets. ·and Ire< spending liberal legislators who wlll then be forced to li ve within a butlget." • LEGlSLA'nvE Analyst A. Alan Post, \vho says the money figures 'Y.-OD't v;ork out, also opposes the measure. of Women Vote'rs, whose st3te president, Mrs. Kenneth Kaplan, S;aid the measure Y:ill turn Ute, legislature into "nothiftg more than a-Coilstitut.iooally pro- grammed computer."1 She also said any existing lax loopholes will lie locktd into the constitution.~ " DOZENS OF OTIIERS, inaluding hlllf of the governors in the United States. have come out against a taxation and spending limit in the consUtutional framework . " ~erick caJdcrhcad, president of the Newport Harbor-Costa ?11esa Board of Realtors, saijf the state legislature no1v enjoys a "blank check'' and that Proposl· ··~E VOTERS will be as~ed to decide lion 1 "restores to the people their whether, gov~rnment spending can be right to determine· just how much tax- , l !lQweCI lo grow until 'll gObbles bp' ation they l are · able and 'willing to the jlon's _jliare of personal• income oi:, absorb " ~ , · ' ·Wbe~r the ¥0Vll)'nment muat lie forced , SupP!!i:t fof!Jie measure has also' oome to live witll\n tho .~~•:means," said.: from GllJ!rg~ . De!Bhi!nty chalnMn 'of Gll<':-Reagan. ~ . • ' • ~·!the , RepilbliCan. Cenlral '. C<lmtnlttee of • "The cbatg~ that Proposition I will Orange COUnty,. who .all! a Umltation raise property taxes or require other of this sari, '~is Jong overdue not only local taxes to rise are j~st ploys to In ~IUomia but !n the 49 other stales try and fool the people," Reagan said. and our natioohl government." Actor John Wayne ol Newport Beach In taking tlielr recent stand in favor who says he usually doesn't get invotv;\ o~ the' m~suret the Neu'PQrt Beach 4n the political arena,, also favors theo· city council called -it a valid means measure. · ~f putting the ·lid ·on government speQd· ''Every taxpayer knows our taxes are mg. too high and getting higher. If we don't put a rein on the tax spenders, our , "IT MAY CAUSE conruslon but ifs free enterprise system will be in ntetssary tO fotce government to ex .. danger,~· Wayne said, · amine ·its ~ndJn·g ~ priorltlc! itnd Atthur A. Schreiber, general manager ' dell:rmlnc what .is .imPj!l'tant and what -/ • "The legislature ~· 'Y.'OUld be stripped J)£ the· ultimate power of the purseStTings. It could• not call an emergency wUhout the governor'~ approvlll. The real oootrol over state erpenditures "'1>Uld be held by the chief executive." Post claims. Secretary of Stale Edm.ind G. Brown -Jr. ""11• the measure a "two-~aded ~ that will · give new tax breaks to Uie W<!.a 11 h y and undermine C.lifomia's public . schools by putting them in com-petiUon with every other ~am for a cut of the pie." Dr. ~williarri Cunningham, former NOwport·Mesa Unirted School District Superlnten<tenV and now executive dlrec- to< of the Association ol C.llfomia S<hool Adrnlnbtrators, soys · much the same thing. • "As the state budget presses 11 fixed ~ndlture limit. support for local agen- cies such es schools •will be cut," he said. Opposition 1ls0 co~ from tile League • , ;-1!,. . • The Orange Qluny and Orange Coast League of \Vomen Voters chapters have spearheaded the drive against the measure in the county as part of'" a statewide group called CslitomiW Against Propositioft One. . • "The League for y .. rs has support<,d the concept OI · taxaUoo based l•rgely1 on ability to pay. We opp<)oe this 1n: ltlaUve because it would move the staie111 system ol taxatlon in exactly ·the op~ direction." said Jeanette 'furk, cha or the Orange County lmgue. "If the state can't raise funds un the proposed limlt, there's going lo :t>O a shortage of money to provide certaini services and the local government t'QAY have to step in •nd make 1J1! the ·dlf, reretice,'' said J udy Sw1yne:,-trmaa ol the Orange Coast league. -- , ,, ··-'PLAYGIRL' EDITOR MARIN MILAM, PUBLISHER DOUGLAS LAMBERT LOOK OVER LAYOUTS ' .;:Female Sex Mags No Bust I·· . . ... ... -':: Publisliers Bet 011 Erotica} but Psychologists Wonder ~·· ... .. · ~LOS ANGELES (API A trived," although he does use female centerfohh in his Penthouse magazine. Dh<>tographer focuses on the roclinlng rpde, poslng seductively for the cen- -toerfold of a national magazine. The --.!o:Ubllllt model -hair chest-.. ponded ' a.a biceps buiglng -looks lustful ly ihto the camera lens. Guccione thinks women respond more to the "real·llfe approach, pictures of honest situations and honest people, artistically presented." Viva's fi!st i.!sue has a pictorial story of a boxer ana the fighter is shown in lhe nude ooly in natural situations -taking a shower, sitting in a steambath, getting a ma.ss;age. Cosnopolitan was the first women'• m1gaz.ine to have a nude male center- fold when it featured actor Burt Rey- nolds in the April 1972 issue. Cosmopoli- tan editors have called the Reynolds pic- ture a one-sb>t "ftm feature.'' . • i : The centerfold model is a well·known J .ictor and his J>h<>tosraph will appear ift a woman's magaziile with a different 1 i8ok: -Playgir1. ~· ; When Playgirl began publishing last [ Jrlay many t.hooght the pictures ot WlClad 1 Jjien were a put on, a comic strip. ~ t-For years, psychologtsts claimed that t ~en weren 't stlmulated by I J1!bot.ocraphs <X . male nude!, and few • ~ Playgirl seriously at first. r ~BUT THERE'S NO ignoring success. 1 Jn ils first six issues, Playgirl's print l' {""has swoU~n !rom 600,000 to 2,00ll,000. ~ And-now the publisher of Penthouse ~Playboy's major competition in mco's lfiagazines -has conceived .a skin- , :pwgazlne for women. Viva's maiden ~~ tfaa: released Stpt. 18. ·.: Viva and Playgirl both have interviews :pith celebrities, fiction, c a r to o n s , :inonthly lloroocopes, book and movie ·i:eViews, letters from readers and n8ked ·inen between their covers. ;~·Their presentation of the male nudes : Is dlllerent. . ; Playgirl uses entertainers for its four· . page color foldouts, and allows them .~PP""'al C1I the print! to be used. The :fll'St six Issues featured Lrle Waggonf!, . George Maharis, Gary COnway, F'abiail FOl'te, Fred Williamson and Don SlnlUd. 1 None was paid for posing, says the rnagazlne's publisher. They did it for the exposure. Bob Gucl'lione, ~he 42-year-old publiSher-editor of \fiva, says he con- shiers male centerfolds "trite, con- "rtfORE OFTEN than not, \\'e will avoid celebrities because the reader-bas a .predetenntned idea of t h e I r per300alitles which takes away some of tOO ability to fantasize," Guccione says. However, nude pictures of actor Ben Murphy and a girlfriend will appear in an upcoming issue. .. The publishers of Playgirl and' Viva agree oo one point. Both are convinced that most women enjoy the erotica in their magazines. Psychologists, too, are taking another look at women's reactions to erotica. "11le women's liberation movement and the sexual revolution have contribu- ted to a gen«al Joos ol inhibitions among ?.'Omen about sex," said Davkl Scars, a prolessor of psychology at the University of California at Los Angeles . "There might have been some women · who would have enjoyed thia type of picture all along, but £bese kinds ol photos have never been available before . except in brown pa~ v.Tappers. I don't think the majority o( women are turned on by theae pictures. That ~d be too radical a change to · expect all at once. "But, as women's traditiooal roles keep changing -as they become more liberated in their attitudes, f~lings and behavior -the more likely they, are to respond to erotica."' Good Deed People Douglas Lambert, the 39-year-Old publisher or Playgirl, says it was the success of the CosmoPOlitan centerfold that gave him tbe format for his magazine. Playgirl is Lambert's first publishing venture. "It is successful because l know what women want," be . says.. a smile spreading across his youthful faoe. Lambert Says .be bas applied the. same foftnuJa to the magazine that he has to his large-grossilig Playgirl nightclub, , which he had been operating. suctessfullY in Garden Grove for 10 years. "We giv~ 'em a variety of.' things," he says. "WE JIA VE seriousness. jokes and sex. And, the overall effect is v.ilat happens on a stage When everything is goiqg right. I think the magazine is successful because I have a knack to choo5e the right act." Viva's publisher subscribes to the theory that "centerio1d beefcake is de- meaning to both men and women." Guc- ciooe thinks women prefer Wl~ pic- tures of .male nudes . "I thlnk both men and women like to fantasize sexually,'' Guccione says. "But. wbeo a man does jt Jt's as if he's looking .at the sexual object through the small end of a telescope. He focuses on just the · object. But I think v•omen look at a sexual object with wide angle vision. _To fantasize, they need atmosphere. romance, a man doing something, not just standing there." ' Halloween is normally just for kids, but a group o! 19 girls Crom Brownie Troop 1373 in Coro na de[ Mar round out last week that it can be for old .people too. With pumpkins donated by Alberlson's Market in Corona de! Ji.far, the girls set to decorating them, using c~rrots, parsley and sliced bell peppers. Then they visited senior citizens in the Har- bor Area showing them their handiwork. Pictured with their decorated pumpkins a.re Lisa McGee, Maryanne Beclpnan, and Kerry Sanchis, all second. graders at Corona de! Mar Elementary School. Help foi• ¥oai ·:Sniffles? Read Thi s \Vhilc science carmot yet cure your cold, you can rest aasured that -according to National InsUtute of Allergy and Infectious Disease (NIAID ) -your cold Is not lik ely to la!!l more than a week. If it does, you may well be the victim of an allergy or Q sinus infec· tion rather than a cold. See your doctor in th&t case; don 't continue to rely oo self-treatment. Although you cannot cure your co.Id, you can relieve oome ~! the discomfort or the symptoms. These sug· geltloru com~ from the Americlrn Lung AJsoclation: e Aspirin can relieve headaches and muscle pains. . •A vaporizer ,or a hot bath may relieve nasal con- gestion . • Unless you have a fever. bed rest is not necessary. But rest can• help your body· to mist compllcallons, and It 11 certainly recommendtdVior children and elderly per..,.. 'V\ • Don't expect lllrJe d.,.. of vitamins to help yoo : 1boJ ... 111t1w. Fruit jql!!S! arul waler, however, will , JOliorally male youJeel helter. · r • ¥ 011 Can Delp Fairview Needs Aid Fall days go hurrying by and soon the holiday sea· son will be approachilig. Clubs and organizations looking aliead to benelit project! can gel an early start by -Oeterm1n1ng now the opportuniUes available at the Yohmtary AcUon Center, 2f!1 Avocado St., Costa Mesa. A call to SU-0963 will put yoo In IQtlch with commu- nily needs. The office Ill open -kdays fl'Oin 1;30 a.m. to 1:30 p,m. A variety of vohmteer areas 11 avallabie at Fairview State HoJpttal which provides catt, treatment ·and train·· Ing !or 1,700 mentally rttatded residents of all ages . PootUons are open through programs l'!lnainf !nnn l0«:rvlce volunteers, 14 years of age or older to junJor voluntoors, ll and 13, lncludlng college stU\ly programs and special programs . Some areas needing volunteers include ptlyslcal and soclal development which US<I coordination, speecli and arts and crafts therapy, behavior adjustment , bUnd and adult ooclal development program~ A I • ·Buyers Warned On Product Risks Disabled Hired SACAAMENl'O (UPI) - n.habilltatlon led to Jo\>I for nearly 4,500 disabled Calilomla Wellare recipients 18$! !ilea! year, """" than In ony other atate, tbe Health and Welfare Agency said lasl week. Twtoty millloo Americans are injured and another 34(000 k.Uled each year by constimer products, accoidlng to the Consumer Product S a f e t y Commission (~PSC)', which has just publlslied a Product Hazard Index. ball -activity• and related equi!Jtnent' and apparel ; II. Nooupbolstered chsJrs: ZI. Storage furniture, lnchlding ches.ts, bullets, boo.I< shelves. 21, e u t) fl r y (unpowered knlvee); II. Clothlng, includlng t -It was the sixth. year In . j a row th•~ Call!omla led the " nation in . .Il!!lL!ng handles~<!. Wel!are reciptenta back to work. day and nightwear; !.'I. Paints UffELL' and. solvents; %4. Household chemical products other than ca.,tics, pA!nts and waxes; UPHOLSTERY 25. Coins, paper money and Wllell Y" W• toy money; II. Floors and Tllo ,_, The lndoz lists hazardous product.. based on a survey of 119 hospital emergency rooms nationwide. The list which covers 369 products ex- ch,1des cars, cosmetics and food 1nd drua:s which are not regulaled by lht CPSC. fiooril)g malerials; !.7. Gia .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiliiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiii ltJI H-""'· bottles ap.d Jars, including solt.' _________ __.:~~c-te~~M~,..~-~114~l~.U~l~t~ drink 1loltl0$; II. Washing,. Below ii a Us! ol the top 50 product categories, which alone were responsible for about 3.6 million · injuries to chlldren in the year ended last July I. In reading the Ust some of the hazards will be obvious, but some may not be. For example, the not-so-obvious hazard o! number.. 3 7 , u~latered luniiture, is fire; the obvious hazard of ~ber f9, mnupholstered furniture, Is sharp edges or JQ(dlng parts. Here 15-the list: , rn1chines with \vr lngers ; Z9. Matches; Je. Ladders and step stools. 31. Sun lamps and heat lam~; 32. Home work!hop saws (eleclric); Sl. Fences (nonelectric outdoor -all types, including r>osts); 34. Pens, pencils and other desk supplieS; S5. Pins and needles: 36. Cans, including s e I f - oPeD&S anCi resealable furniture; 18. Furnaces and floor furnaces; 31. Wa"ter heaters; 4. Porches. baJconies, floor openings and open-sided. rooms. 41. Baby cribs ;· 42. Roller -,...It __ ATTENTION-ALL ART LOVERS! now open OLD WORLD ART Specia.lizing in tnvestment Pa intings. . Restorations, Authentications and 1 nsurance Evaluations by Expert Craftsmen-Fully Guaranteed in the heart of Design Center -Fashion Island 230 Newport Center o·rive, Sulte.302 , IS.nllld C~•Mel & Cm1hn) . HENRY VORGAN G, Cu rator Gallery: 649·13'9 . Residence: 673-76'9 t. BicYcles, bicycle equi~ ment (baskets, h or n s , nonstandard seats, handbrakes);!. Stairs, ramps, landings -indoors and out- doors; 3. Doors other than glass, including folding, swing- ing, garage and &Crttn doon:: 4. Cleaning agents and causUc compounds: 5. Tables ( nonglass);· &. Beds,.incJuding springs, box springs and frames; 7. Football -activity and related equipment and a~ pa.rel; I. Swings, s Ii de s, seesaws and climbing ap- paratus; I . Liquid fuels kind· ling or·Wumlna.tlng materitls, including gasoline, kerosene, lighter fluid, charcoal starter; 10. Arehltectural gl,.!, ii!,; eluding doors, tub encl06Ul'es, • shower enclosures windows. skates, skooters and skated ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; boards; 43. Pots and pam,11 including lids; 44. Fishing equipment, including poles, lines, hooks, fishing knives, scales, tac'kle box : 45. Jewelry watches, keys and key rings ; 46. Hockey -activity -and related equipment and a~ pare!; 47. Irons: 48. CNtside structures, including retaining walls, patios and te1Taces : 4!. Wagons and other rid~ toys, not including bicycles atJd tricrctes; SI. Minibikes. The ccmmission is con- sideriDg ~ible steps for dOiillilii wttli ·two or the llelll! high Oil the .tbp 50 !isl: -• A swtnuning pool safety standaid to deal with "prob- 11· Power lawnmowers, in· lems of .shallow depth, dlv- ctuding rotary and reel, gas ing boards, water slides, sli~ and . el~c, riding a n d pery surfaces and shock ~nding. lZ. Baseball. -ac-hazards arising from lighting. t1v1ty and related equipment and apparel· 13. Nalls carpet · . • Standards !or swings, tacks ~ 8 n d' thwnb slides an4 other children's tacks; 14. Bathtub and shower playground equipment, in- stnlctures other than doors eluding regulation of the or panels including tubs minimum strength of metal walls, han'd grips, etc; is: chains and ~ required space Space heaters and heating between swings. stoves; 16. Swimming pools For a copy of the list of and asaoclated equJiwnent, not 369 product categories, write including above groWld pools: to Consumer Product Safety 17. O>okiqc rangee, ovens and ~mmissioq., Was~ton. DC related equipment; 11. Basket· 'JJ1/J11. ' . H u N T L I A N N G E T s 0 N BEACH Rl VO NORTH OF AOM~S 963 ·4587 ''1-'!&tu.., • . BUSINESS MEN'S LUNCHEON 95c, $1.25, $1.65 FRI. SPECIAL: Homemade Taco, Beef Enchilada, . Rice, Beans. Plus Plus · CUFF'S SUPER MAGGIE ll.89 • HAPPY HOURS . 3-6 P.M. WELL DRINKS 50¢ • Spec:i1ls To Clubs & P1rties • B1nquet1/ C1tering ~' .' \ , " MEET ADRIEN ARPEL. SHE'S HERE TO INTRODUC£ HER NEW SKIN SCIENCE LAB . 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FOUNDATION. $7.50_ AOBIHSON'S BEAUTY SALDN . .. 2 F ASHION,JSLAND S HOP TOMORROW I0:00-9 :30 644-2800 ' ' • 1 i ' I ' . r- 1 I I I I I I I t l I I I r I I I I I t I I I I I I L- t- t I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I I L I I I t I L ' I . ' To Enroll in ':Courttt by New11Notrs'' for credit ctiP and mail theu coupons, with _ appropri_at.J '"''· .._, HJt.O •• poJJittlf: -~ r-------~-----------A ----, I L••rning Kit for I "•merit••ndthe FutureofM•n" • .. AMERICA Courses ~y, -AND-THE FUTURE DP MAN Newspaper . You can set college cre~t for readln& Untvertlty of CaUfenllll SU Diep Elteas5o1 the article below, provided, of course, that for nationwide dlltrilMldo8 by Copley: News Service. Sunday, Novtmber 4r l'l7l ... I I I I I I . , For your personal copy or 1'he r~ulure l''ile t lncludt!S intropuctory record, book of essa)'i. learning guide, to ~I( ~ts and ''The l'~uture Game'') for .use iii studying the course. "America and the 1-~uture of ~1an," send $IO by check or money order to: ~ you pay the feei enroll ln UCI Extemlon, The Dally ~Uot ~ oae ti w newspapers "--=--and .Jucces11fully complete tbl} CQur..,se,,.'---part.lcipaUng la -the-JlllHUllL. ltbJln: I Suceesslul compleUon includes attending series; "America ud tlae-)'l;tan ol Mu,t' America and the Future of J\1an P.O. BoxF (faync, N.J. 07470 I I I I I I Name--------------- 1 I Address _____________ _ I I ... ;J I City·-.-------------I I I I Stalc ______ ZipCode•------I L------------------------~ r------------------------, I UCI Extension Enrollment I : Please enroll me in ! check one 1 I I o XCal 101 <For Upper Division credits applicable .I i to\\'ard degree I : I o XCal 427 ("Industrial" course for self-I I improvemC'nt or commercial credits~ I I I I . I I Name I I I I Address I I I I I I City Zip I I I I_ l.>a~tinte P~onc I I 1-Soc. Security No.-----------1 I . I SrndS25incheckormoncyorder to : I I UCI Extension Room 1325 • I I Cr<n\;foY.d Hall lr\·ine, t:a. 92664 I L------------------------J two on-campus ·evtnlng lectiii'es, one on Is prttented to DUI)' 'root ·readers al Tuesday, Dec. 4." and one on Tuesday, a fOr-credtt course la, t'Oljudlon wttll UCI feb. 12, at which mld,·year and final exams Extension. ' wtll be administered. For lnformatlon or .As Wlth any o~ef eat&ep; coarse, ~ registration Jt UCI Extension, Phone 133· Jeuon material eiprH;M;J lM penoaal 5'14.) views of tbe !Ddlvldur writers of -~ This ts the sl~llt ~~Y ~ the !6-week segment. Tliese viewt are oot .neces~Uy series ln a .. Co urses by Ne~speper" pr&-those of the Dally Pilot, Capley New1 Serv· MACHINES OF 'MODERN TIMES HAVE TH gram ·funded by the NaUonal Endowment Ice, UCI, UCSD or the .National Endew· for the Humanities and d e v e I o p e d by meat for the Humaaltlei. "' I . 20th Century Technol~gy Taking;Rt:lish ' Fr:om Life Editor's Note: This is the sixth of 20 essays by lead· ing men i1~ the world's aca- demic conimunity. T h e writer of this article is professor of econo1nics at the London School of Econoniics. Her ei1i he -dis- cusses. iii 'co·nnection with what lie calls tlte 11iaterial- istic soci ety, acl1ieveme·nts and social costs i1t connec· tion with global plenty. By E. J, MJSHAN of which ho\i.·ever ....... were y,•e really believe that people can nwnber of much her'alded in· in earnest-would be difficult somehow be maae happier as ventlons. Tite automobile, in to 4eal with. (One has only they absorb more goods? The addition to producing con- sccret .of how to keep ~pie gestion, noise, stench, Visual to. remember the speed with running is to widen the gap . . -· which Britain in i 9 4 0 between their material con-distraction, has been resp:msi- transformed herself into a dititm' Md their material ex-ble also for the monotony, total war eeonomy-, and sue-pectatiQnS. That gap is a -sa~ess and ugliness of vast cessfully maintained a strict measure of their discontent, urban areas the world over. rationing system over all con-and it was never wider than Having multiplied like the sumer goods for about 10 it is today. locust, having swarmed Tickie Dickie ori41lnal years. to realize what ex-' throUgh every street and alley, tra0:rdinarv feats or organiza-IN AN AFFLUENT soci·ety automobiles have eliminated Gu•r•riMff for ·' th and Duration tion a-nation can perform people's satisfactions, as all e gaiety ·mingling 1 p · T . ted h th 0 -flt"'"··· Y.'hen its will is set.) Thorstein Veblen observed, once asSOCla ·wit e or 90 D•y1 .•• ·Mak• no mistake about this ••• 0 lam NO. 111 • tim• pi1c1 , conv1r1ttion pitc• • collector'• pi1c1 Sit • 'Pr1c1dent ! Pun lrittndedl. e. th1 fir1t to ordtr now , . - Btfort tim1 run' out for TkkM Did.le An answer to the question depend not ~ on the iMate famoUs cities of the world. ;w111cntYtr co'"' 11r10 whether economic growth is A.ND. THOUGH it would be utility of the' gOQds they buy r: - --$19.95-- --. 'necessary fo r survival. re-of sorr.e interest to speculate but also on their status value. THE' AIRLINER, in addition ..1.-' I quires onJy a glance at .the on the extent and form of 'Dlus to a· persol). in a high to plunging us into an era lostd is m·v cheek or.money Pollptid·. Btnd ln,lud•d h'~· . I d For t . •-· H •"""t ...tin of shrieking skies, has been I order. p1.,,,. ru1h mt -• '• , I ~...,r1ca rec or . . . . gove~en U1..c1 •enua:n •. uo. .consumY""'n society,~it ·is not Tklde Olcki• wotclllu), thousands of years prior to lvould 'be neces~r.r.. ~~1ng _the his absolute real income that responsible--for-a-to!Jrist-ex----~ -. -- - _ ·:. . . • .t~e last tYi'O hundr~d.' eiviliv-_:: ,transiJio.l) .. tO !_Stable economy, -;_ i;ounts as.much,a·s-rus relative plosion b:hat 1rathedes~oyred ~ . I N1me ........ ·• -• -- ..................................... , t!ons rose and fel.1. There ~'ere and tli~ alfernative schemes income-his Position in the revoca Y a once-am limes of p~r1ty and times for rationing the use of ra'1 structure of income. resorts. ·'This process 0 f Addre1• • • • • • • • -• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ·., r h d h' B t . I ' h t erosion Continues Yeir by I o ar s ip. u tn none wa s m.ateria s, ID .t . e presen_ Thus, he ma.v feel aggrieved A 1 f Citv •• ---••••••••••••••• St•t• •• • •• • • • Zip · • • • • • • • • • th f ol g d I t f ch Ye a r. .as or our ere ~n era o pr on e c 1.ma e o. opuuon s u receiving a 10 percent rise d hild ho . th L .. n.e c.tlcoturw Wotch Co .. P.O. loir 2527 _J economic gro\\·th. d 1 s cu s s1 on s woo.Id be in his income if incomes -of gran c ren w art? on e H•1tth1gton hoch, Collfonlia 92647 The question that exercises · pren:ature. They v111l . be others have risen by 20 per-ii~(~See~~AMER~:l~C~A~,~P~a~ge~Bf~) ;:l;i~~~~~~~~ - - --- -thinkers today is not whether· pertinent only _Yi'heD ~5?C1ety cent. Ii societ~· can survive without is prepared to regard seriously · 'lbe mor this tt't de s H El economic .growth: Since the proposal that we move prevails--a.J the etOO: J ~ur ''JUDYr.JUDY, JUDY'' I ER • ecorom1c growth is an ex-off the growth path. . !y tend to t . I · I •-· 1 th . t .1 soc:1e s .promo e cepllooa state -a~a..,.;11~hon n e ctrcums ances. ~ i.t-the more futile is the ob-,,, perha~the question at issue 'vould seem (o me more sens1-jective of ecOnomtc growth for J. u DY-.' r. is just how long ~mic ble to cOntr~bute to the debate •society as 3 · whole. For it ~ •.• growth can be sust.\lined on by unc:ovenng some of the is obvious that over time '. • the sniall planet earth. tmh~p1er ~uences ~f everybody cannot be c 0 me . For!Mfly ~ Itek OieUett• . • · • I . Vle of this generation are continued econo~c. growth in reliltively better off. --a _ already being pressed against the affluent soc1eUes of the Thu. _,. isl NOW. LOCATED AT . . 1MOMI h I · I' l West s, ooce y<O"-'.,.e s sat ac-t e tnescapab e 1m tatlons of · h tlom come to depend almost · • · ' . "'so'n• u•.2151 ·I a finite planet. Y.'het.her ~r Consider . first t e moli.ve wholly 00 relative income, or .,., ~ not v•e succeed tn time 1n forces behind economic onsomeotherindexofstatus HA'IR ·HUNTE RS 70Faslllonlslan~ '1~ stabilizing PQpulation, ~·e can-growth. As ~rd Sha~ once a sustained rise in the level~ : not much longer conti nue to ren:ark~. Discontent .~s I~ of consumption _ though itl!ooo!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'~~ ....... !'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'!'!!'~!'!!'!'!!'~ .... use ~p space, to ransack the n:a1nspnng of p~gre~. ~JS may well be necessary for earth s resources. and to fill discontent is wnt lafBe into maintaining the momentum of Its air ~nd waters with ef· the. ethos ~f . UM; 9'0S~r powerful corpontions-yields fluent wfth ~e reckle~s aban-soctety. It is .institutional!U<f little addilional satisfaction to don that has characterized our by the ·agencies oC Madison society even in ihe absence a~tivit~ since the industrial Avenue, and haJ~O\Ved by our of all .~llov~ costs. Indeed, revolution. system of education. obsessive concern With ·status Here is a holiday special you can't atford to miss. All active Towle sterling patterns are available at 25~0 011 ·the regular retail price during this limiled 11me promolion. You m~ purchase single J:?ieces, 1 place settings or complete seis and Save-2S11i; on every purchase. Now is the lime to sta rt or add to _ your Towle sterling service. Com~ in today. TWO HUNDRED YEARS or sciel\tifie discovery and in- novation have imbued us with faith in techn9logical progress. Yet, Iha\ technology has been based on phy~cal conditions j that no longer obtain : virtually unlimited resources and a virtually unlimited capacity of the biO;Sphere to assimilate t b e effluents of teohn-Olbgy' If continued discontent with and lncome and µi con- what they have is r:equired sequence a Ilfet~e devoted to keep people buying the in-to nursin'g ooe's prospects go creasing output,, of modern far t.o drain the joy from industry, and if cOntinued 00e's spirit. discontent with their status · Secondly, we might want t9 is necessary to keep them ponder briefly on some of the working the machine, can we tmexpected reperc\lSSiom of a . Save up to$ 19 .25 on a 4 piece place sett~ng Save up to $154.00 on a 32 piece service for 8 Save u.p to $3J6.00 on a 72 piece service for 12 i.wtr Mtll _, tM Wtlt"'ll SOUTH COAST ·PLAZA · Bristol at the San Oie90 Frwy. Coste Mt•• PKone S•0-2627 ,_. It remains to be seen how technology will cope· when abundance in these vital respects gives way to con- striction. If eventually we conclude that economic growth cannot continue much lopger, or if we conclude thit""the existing growth mofnentum will result in a decline in S()!:ial weUare, we may eleet to move off the growth traj~tory toward a more stable economy. If · we do so, a number of economic, administrative and social problems arise, none SPECIAL AUCTION PERMIT NUMBER, 02956 SPECIAL COMMISSION ANTIQUE AUCTION NO LIMIT -NO RESERVE AuctlonHrs Note: Reymf•'• Antique Whole11lt Co. Hat comml11ioned us to liquidate their entire Inventory. (Including • 1960 • 40'ft. delsel semi.}, e COMPLIT~ LtNI O' OAK ANTtQUll-0.kt, Chl .. o, Ta~I ... Chost1, Commod.,, chfln. ltc. e clfMPLITI ·L!Nl f?.P AMIRICAN t!IDIAN TURQUOlll JIWILRY-Slf"alll 11.....-. lr.cttetl. ll•ftll, CeMfMI.. NeclrtMM, 1,c. e COMPLITI LtNI 0, ANTtQUI DOLL 'URNITURl,-H-ter Co~. 1'9¥ ... lffli DMceft'• leftch. ' - e COMPLITI LtNI OF ANTtQUI IOUTIQUI CLOTHIN,0, e UNUSUAL INDIVIDUAL ITIMl-Dlnlnt RMf'ft & 1•reem Ortvpt. lrau Cash .A .. lthr, Wlcktr Chain. Ofpn, Ceuch ... 1 • TWO SESSIONS 1 SALE: Tues., Nov. 6 • 7:00 P.1\11.·Wed., "ov. 7°7:00 P.M. SITE: Jakes Antique Auc~on Gallery 1721 NO. MAIN ST., SANTA ANA tN ......... ~ PREVIEW: Sunday I all clay I Nov. 4 10 A.M. to 6 P .M. .. • .. .. Frosting Is buty an added attraction. Want a · c:: sunshine look, or a subtle cover tot grey. Special priced, this week at 14.88 •.• shampoo and set, and the expert advice of our very knowing staff, included, of cout1t. Also: another special this week:. Helene Curtis 'Springtime' perm, a h9dy-bullding treat for any texture hair. Cul, Shampoo and set included.110. JCPenney beauty sa lon ( . Sony, beauty -.,. ·-llundoy. • FASHION ISLAND, Newport B11ch 171•1 6•4-2313 HUNTINGTON CENTER, Hunti119ton B11ch 171•) 892-7771 I • 74.95 MBn's .block inltiai' ring In 14K florentln&-flnlsh gold. 17.50 1nltla1 pendant In scroll script, sterling silver or gold fll1ed. 1. 125.00 Men's block initial ring In 14K llorentine- linish gold. • . -.. ( 12.50 Initial pendant In block letters, sterling sllver or gold filled. Name pery:tant in scroll sc~pt, sterl ing silver or gold !Hied . Use Penney. Time P•rm•nt Pl•n. Ad.vertisements .. ~ . for yourself~ Initial and name . jewe.lry from ~enneys. · JCPenney We know what you·re lOoking for. Shop Sunday noon to 5 P.M. at the following stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Beach (714) 6'44-2313 . . HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntington lleach (714) 892·777 1. ' '· .. ., .. .. .. .. .. .. " . ' .. •• ., ., • .. ..... . .. ., ' • ., . . • . . ' ' ' ' ' ' . • . " I • \ . . . J • • . , . ,• ' ' ;; .... ... ··!'> .. ..,. .. .. .. • ...... • ' , • • ' - "' • • Tea for 1.6, 8, or 2 ' ' Sweet-Music t~ Symphony By JO OLSON ' or Ille Dlltr PU.I Sti ff What's the best way to find a sym- phony orchestra that's vanished? Give a series of vanishing teas, of course. A group or 16 professional musicians and their friends have started a round ( Daily _Pilot ·Photos by Patrick O'Donnell The Pac ific St rings were the attraction at a t ea given by Alayne Arm strong (at left). Above , Rosa Lee McKay (left) and Leona ~iiltz play violin "'hife (below ) Hannah Skuppen concentrates on her viola pa rt. I of such teas with lhe hopes o( raising at least $'l,OOO to help get the Symphony Orchcstr~ of Orange CoWlty started again. The tea!I are vanishing, explained Adriarine Geiger, because theY literally dwindle a~ay to nothing. Each of the original 16 is supposed to give a tea and invite eight friends. Each of lhese eight is to give a ~a for four and the four to host a gathering for two, and there it ends. The idea came from AJayne Armstrong of Huntington Beach, a cellist, who.se mother's church used it to raise funds: because they believe it robs youth ol an opportunity to play prolesslooally at home. "Where are lhe yotmg, i.Iented musicians going to go?" one guest at Mrs. Geiger's tea asked. MUSIC A LUXURY "The general public sees music u a luxury,'' another commented. ''The county's problems are part of the problem." said still another. They agrccd that studying music "im- proves students' capabilities in other subjects." And they were unanimous in the opin- ion that. "we need government 1Ubtd.~y • EACH CONTRmUTES for music.·~ Fund-raising is accomplished by asking The -Symphony Associatioo cumnUy each guest to contribute $1 to the is SJX"ISOfing a series of Monday Mini· . symphopy coffers. . CQncerts skillfully designed to 11chue --"The teas are -not stuffy, formal· oc--awai-your Monday blues." -'· ca'si6ns, stressed :fi.{rs. Geiger, a Hun-Uptoi.ning concerts include the Strln&'s tington Beach resident who "plays violin. ' the TIUng, featuring the Paclfic Strings, Some h06l.es ses invite a musical group on Nov. 26, and.ELIVit All Together with to perform . some have garden parties the Pacific Pops. Dec. 3. All concerts and ~sk guests to bring cuttings to take place at 8 p.m. in the Anaheim er:change, and some exchange favorite High School auditorium and all are ' recipes. presented by Orange Counly rnustclan.1. One hostess had a Bible study and 1\lso in the Symphony AleodaUoo'a another showed slides from the Sym-schedule are a series of cmoerts fer phony Associatioo's youth concerts. some children and a Young Artist Audi.Uoo parties include husbands and some have which includes a cash scbolarshlp fer featw-ed foursomes for bridge~ · the winner and the opp:irtunlty to When it gets to two, son:ie. hostesses perform ""ith a major ortbeatra in ~ choooe to take their guest to lunch. · :ccri. .:. , \ · These women are con~ about ••. Gatll*n oraaoDl" ilJ 'tlGrKluctor 1or the lack ol a cowily symphony orchestra Symphony Associati(ll concerts. . . • Late Bloomer Nee-ds a • Ill Budding Little ·Help I • . ,. • , ~ DEAR ANN LANDERS:.._My__problem might not sound important to you but it , is so important tome that I've coosidercd : ' seeing a psychiatrist. · J I am a girl, 17, attractive and a ·. good student. I like people and pel>ple ·; like me. But 1 don't have tbc slighlelt •I desire to date. Many feUov;s bave .aiked ' me out and I've inanufi\Ctured stupid excuSes. son1e so transparent and clumsy ihat I later tried to make it up to them. J feel guilty if 'I hurt someone's 1 jleljngs. I don't know whr I don't want to tei All '1111 prllrlenils, do J>ul J have lJllAil'ell Ii' lL Am I •bnoJ'mal'' II . 1111pecl that 1 might be a ,J,.bian, ~ 111\n you rm· '!'!· L le<! 'no ltn<oila9'1o Olltiet gltlo QR l>oYs: ~ Do you bclleve l ' shOWd ace<~ a • ' few dates anyway? If you say go, I'll • . - go. -ALEXANDRIA . ' . A-.l~ •• , .. ' I , DEAR A.: Yoa remlDd me of the fellow who didn't like peaches. "Did you get sick lrom a peacb OKt?" asked a friend. "No," was die rtply. "Pve ne\'er eaten one." Tbe; ~tural ' question OK -until recenUY:-betel ca D protluee, pir1GlltU&J cM.-~ followed, "Tben bow do 7til Utw you . Ever since the doctor told her lhe es• especially ff the pert.. ts ex-' don't like them?" (}las diabetes she has been hell on W!\eela. cesslvtly ap~9easlve and ..willlag io My advice ts to accept a few dates, She complains. feels IOJTY .for herstlf, make tbe neceaary adjustment. even though yo11 aren't excited about calls her friends and cries on the pbooe Talk to yo1r sls"1'-in-law'1 dodor and the klea.' 1r after six months of datlng by the hour, and stie !'ras developed Osk ·&Im. &o explain "&bis to you. l& you stdl have no Interest In members a terrible temper. mtpt belp U be explained It &o_HE.R1 of tbe opposite sex c_et.iorne CO\IJltellD&. T~e woman is n:rvous and' depressed, too. ~., • ' .. ~ •, "(> ........ 1 _._ • atra1~ ~r every::thing .. and beMvu 11 ,;.. . · • •• · .. • DEAR ANN -LANDERS· '.My ,w1re•i '(r she ·~· ha~· • menial b .. akdown. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm i I1·ye•r-· . , ; • 'ho Is II possible that lhlll -hty change old glrl with a 40-year-<>ld pr®lem. MY sister l.!J. a 'Widow. 'Sh~ m.•k~ her ~c Is· related_ to her diabetes?-J. AND mother. She picks to piece. every guy with us. The woman-'~ ' bllJ1illO "I'. IN PE6RIA . • who walu 'Into tlril boult. Thi.! one 0£ chartn , bot" we' aiwllY' gof alorig Dl!All J:, AND I !JI.: • -• .. [S,1'>o lhort • .tbal one la lot lat, • I or his hai r is too 1on1. or his mother · is a tramp, or his pan.ts are too tight in front · Three times last month she arranged dates for me with the SOM of businw friends ol Dad's and they .were all ao creepy i nearly threw •P· - What burns me Is thal Mom doesn't even ask iI I have planl for 1 ~rtain evening: She goes rigflt ahead and ar· ranges things and then I have to go even II It means canceling -hilt( I really want to do. ; • I trus\ yqur Judgment, Ann. Am I an 1111gr~ul brat or a dwnb kid? What are my rlgbta? Please give me the -11 .l HUMAN SACllIFICE DgAR'IRJllANi Aa....., =W'1• • mother like youn. can ruin tbe ~ ol some very llk:e (llYI by 1rJt.a lo cram them down a da.Pttt'1 dlnet. Yoor molher lo betoe ulllr lo ,.. and lo lhe young men •118 flies J'R ap wllii. Yoa .... ; tlltm lleltre .!My 1how ,;'p. Tell Mom Au lt)'I lo ...a IL What's the story on pot, Un, cocalDe, uppers and downerl, speod? Can JOU handle II if you'"' car.full Send for Ann Landers'• ·new booklet, "Btratiirt .!)ope • oo Drugs." For 'each booidet ordered, send a dollar. bill, plus a l1ong, solf·addrtuod, llamped envelope (II cents postage) to Ann l..andeni, P.O. Box 3348, 222 W. Bank Dr., qaio, lli.tolSf. t ' I •• ' I Sundly, N-~. 1973 Doctors See _Sound Desert Tow1i of Mojave Searches for .its Marcus . . r-: • { -As New 'X-... ay' MOJAVE (UPI) -Thls,. Aqeles area and residenls Mojave Medical Center Board-the conunlltee seeldng I new ~ndtnl lndiVldualist wilfi at '.I. lliib-desert Korn County com-...st travel ZlH5 miles to hu gone fl'ultl<Ss in its se•rch doctor. 1Wt 10 yurs experience In mUnity ts looking for• Marcus Tehachapi, Lancaste r or for 1 permanent physician. "And doctors tehd to try general 'proctlce who isn't Welby or a Doc Elliott, but Bakersfield if they wish tnoat· The teallOOI are l\UIJlWIUS. and congrecate within lar¥er af"~id of workin~ alone. . consist! of a cyUndrical tube wm settle for a gOOd general ment-and can get an ·~ communities ror rebcm or -All· the'·deeialons are his about !I inches long connected practitioner. pointment, "FillSI' Ol" A', ·is boon being near other doctors. And own he has to mal<~, them to~ control unit and a display It has bEen 10 months now A new $50,000 medical j ......., 1 8 -the wife a.lid family often likes , and live. with them, says screen. It operates us.Ing since this town of 3,500 has center built with community dock area,•• admits earl a city area " he adds. Stone of the small town doc- sound waves of three million had a doctor:-,The fonner Jone funas is empty and despite SWne, Mohave ' s only Stone saYs ilie comrn:wilty tor. OAIL y PILOT B s Wel_by by Jack or a nearby doctor are obviow:~ Lt. Lcon>rd Kahl, com- mander of the Califomi~ Highway Patrol office at &10: • jave, says serious traffic ac- cidents are common in the area and moderate injwies can become critical because of the distance .to a doctor. STANl"ORD (AP) -Doc· tors may aoon be u.ing eounc1 waves rather than x-rays to probe the human body and take pictures of internal organs, a team of engineers hen! reports. cycles per second which ere doctor moved to the Los a Jetter-writing campagin the iiharmaclst and chalrmn ,of would • ld~ally tlke , an In· THE · PROBLEMS created ,barmleso and beyond the,, ______________ __::___:_..::_ __ .-,---------:--'-':__--'----------------------- Stanford University re- searchers say the device - the Ultrasonic ImaginJt System (ULISYS) -will make possible a greater medical use or sound and is being developed now. Although commercial ap- plications of ULJSYS are lll least two years away, medical experts are already excited about the possible uses, said Prof. James D. MeindJ, direc- to< of the Stanford Electronlca Laboratories and head ol the research project. "WE HAVE talked to cardiologists, ·neurologists and obstetrlci'ans and they are an enthusiastic about it," Melndl said ·Wednesday. He said that by al.ming a concentrated "bundle" of high frequency sound waves at an organ, such as the heart, the device will "produce Unages of the heart in real time and can actually show the heart v.·orklng." The ultrasonic "camera" range of human hearing, said Melnd.1. These waves, when focused on an internal organ, create an echo which is processed to form a picture similar to a television image. 0 UUSYS COULD be used without breaking the skin to determine whether h e a r t surgery is needed !jl not," he said, and later d be used in the surgery itsreU or for monitoring results of surgery. Cardiology is on1y one possi· ble applicatioo of ULISYS. said Melndl. He said thf: new device cotild also be in fields such as obstetrics, gynecology and ophthalmology. "It might also he very useful for monitoring large numbers cl. people for diseases sudl as cancer," he said. One advantage is It perm.its Immediate diagnosis because It does not require a com· plicated deve1oPing process, he said. DAILY 10.-10 SUN. 10. 7 While Quantitiea Laat REESES PEANUT BUTIER CUPS 2/1.00 40 bite siz•, milk chocol•t• peanut butt~r cups. -. . . . SUNDAY &· MONDAY ONLY! HOWARD JOHNSON · CLAM CHOWDER 31' IS 01. can of New England style Clam Chowdar- buy several at this low Kmart pri~e. READY TO FINISH BAR STOOL 4.97 30" stool -western cabi- net wood. I 2"x 12'' seet. Charge .it!! • --· -~·---- l I ' L.ee- pre-Thanksgiving . QualiOraft were· 8.99 to 1199 • were 12.9~ and up • Big servings on styles you wont right nowt · Groups of fun shoes ond dreS$·ups.. Come in early lor ttie beit selections in your sire. Big handbag group at S'pectal Savtngl! Special Boot Group save 50% & more! , were 12.99 to 22.99 & hllber 6.49· to 11.49 U1• yo11r M••t•r Ch1r9t or l 111kAm1ric1rd FASHION ·ISi.ANO, N1wport l1•ch HUNTINGTON CENTER, ~1111tl11tto11 l11ch FASHION SQUARE, S•11t1 A111 SOUTH COAST PLAZA. Co1t1 Mt•• ' -------~----------! I 1 • • '~ ,.,. •"¥.. "' ,.-:%'• ..... __ -~--~-·---' BASE CABINET 22.44' 24 inc:h base micart. Top resists St~ins , Gl.eaming white finish. ~-z=nw Charge 11! '· Popular vcirieties of annuals for a head start on summer, beauty oil · summer long. Ready to ~:::::::::::::::: transplant. Charg~ it. =---~ IJ!l'l~.__,,._....,,.,__,.,,__~oam"-il 50-FT. GARDEN HOSE Reg. 1.97 Look what you save! 1 44 long ·lasti~g vi nyl' plastic hose. Bross . e COU ~QS ~. li" J.0. oornoo 18" DIAGONAL COLOR- PORTABLE T.V. '248°0 • JIGA1:.4nNricarrl • K_,.,e CAarp ... ,.,. CJtMte .... • Miii ELECTI II( CALCULA TOI ··~· COZY DURAFLAMfLOG 2 Days Only! 2:1 00 ?n• lo.o will mOke • tompltte t¥1ttint'• fW.. tt> l1~hts 1nsto ntly , no kindlin; reqvir.ed. luriia bndily ~ to 3 hours. Saw ot "'mart. ' l • .. ' • > . • .. -·/ 1·6.:88 ··,: &otte.ry-operat~~·.r~order feat}U'ts Slide·o·motic T· ~ fu~tlon contfol . plo~/~ec~rd. _fast fOrwo"rd 'onli. rewind on one contrpf. Batteries, not 1nchided'. ·,·~; . . ' . . . . 7-PIECE , BLUE ENAMEL COOK WARE 2~97 · ' 4 qt. covered Windsor pot. l qt. covered s1uce pan. 2 qt. sauce pin-skillet. lnterch1nge1ble cover foP t kiHet i nd 2 qt. Pan. . ' I 8 6 DAILY PILOT AMEIUCA .. (From Pago Bl) way to Inherit a world almost benellt of scenic beauty and grandeur. Thirdly, \\'e might "''onder in a general way whether the untoward con.sequences o f commercially i n s pi red technology are inescapable. Does not. univttsal plenty itself breed a "throw-away" attitude to things! Gift& kl6e lhe power to move when a periiOO has "everything'' and v.·hen "-'Callh is such that no sacrifice is entailed in bestow· ing thorn. But leehlology not only destroys' our reliJh of me by sating oo with goods: it i• an insidious force in its own right. As a rorm or compulsive systematization it has begun to edge itself into every niche of what used to be our private Jives and secret feelings. l\itethods for attaining success, for "optimizing" in sext are taught by tape and maiiual. T echni qu es for love, friendship, fervor, .sarcasm, surrender. repartee, fantasy. impulse tlfld laughter are all imparted to the buye!' of the ~ ·booklet or enroller in the course. Soon there might be · no comer into which a person can crouch and call his ov.1l. HE WILL become a part or a world of mim.c -and mimickry, where feelings are engineered, where spootaneity is rehearsed and no untutored emOtion is left to v.·eJI up in him . Imagine a world in ~1tich all the affection \\-'C can expect to receive has b e ·e n studied as a technique. Again. the laborsaving in· novations at which technology excels have the effect of transferring people's dependence on others to dependence on "the machine. Yet is it not true -that human interdependence is the source of mutual affection: ol giving • · -aild recei.ting!.l'aol<~ed and · precooked foods -save-the time"~ of the busy housewife, who is now enjoined to add to her dignity by competing for · cash on the labor market. But when a woman cooks for her man or . her f4mily" is it only a chore? Or is there not also an iMtinctual gratUication in such an act of tenderness and affinnation? Children's 'television pro- grams make storytelling at bedtime obsolete. But does not the child who listen.! to his parents gently unfolding the tale enjoy and share a richer experience? True, we can, at the flick of a finger, flood the room with orchestral music that is perfectly executed. But before the tum of the century, when the lnusic a man enjoyed mi~t depend an his wife's skill at the pianoforte or on his daughter's singing. was there not also some quiet joy Oowing between them'? IT JS SOBERING to wooder ·seriously if more and more of v.rhat is innately trivial is being gai ned at a cost ~f more ·and more of what is innately valuable. Allow that the machine is incomparably efficil:lnt, can its -~ficiency in ;.iielding services comoensate for the inevitable loss of authentic human eXl)erience'? Can anyane reasonably expect technological innovations in the future to be m o r e humaniring? Surely it is more Hkely that the m3.in thrust of oroduct innovation associated v.~th economic gro"1h in already "·ealthy axmtries will act to diminh1h o.ver t i m e op- portunitie11 for direct com. munication bet~·een people. For such innovation seeks overtly to reduce thei r need or the direct services of other human beings. Thus. personal c o n t a c t s have already declined v.ri.t.h the spread of more efficient laborsaving devices such as supennarkets, cafeterias. \'ending machines, transistors. television sets and. of course. the automobile. And lhev v.•ill continue to decline with the trends toward compute rization in offices and factories, toward patient-monitoring machines and com puter Cliagnoses in ,..llbspitals, and t0\\1ard closed-ci rcu i t television ins ti:u ct io n . automated libraries and teaching machines. Thus. the compulsive search for efficiency. directed mainly to innovations that save effort (See AMERICA, Page 87) ( JACK & JILL Children's Hairstyling Salon ' Sul\fl)', .HO..tn'lbtr 4, 197) • Shop Today From 11 to 5 PM All Stores (Except Downtow II): ' . • ,. Capture thit cild fashioned Colonial spirit! here's authentically reproduced Early American styling to give your home the hospitable look of the season. If s all done with the rugged. reliable ciif rm of country pine. Complete five piece set. Reg . $4.39 , •SALE $369 Matching 56" china. Reg. $399. now $359 • •. • Important look for pocket-sized areas! Antique candleglow white finish, and a plastic· top with the richness of fruitwood· parquet pattern. Set consists of 52"x38 " double pedestal table with fill and four chairs. Reg. $549, SALE $499. Matching 45 " china. Reg . $395, now ~ for holiday savings $349 I 111 . I I \ I Ii1 I ' I -- I ~ I ' . ' ' I Ir 1, I /1 I . ' • • I ,-1-14= 5-pc. set, $499 china, $349 ' 1 •, I tJ '-- 5-pc . set. $439 china. $359 Bring an Orienta I flavor to your Holiday dining with this brightly turned bamboo design. It brings a freshn.ess to small dining rooms and apartments w i t~ a softly ¢;tressed yellow finish, accent~d with deeper yellow striping. Reg . $495. Now at a low Holiday SALE $439 Matching china, Reg . $399, Now $3.59 · • Full-scale decorator look for compact dining araasl The • table top is laminated plastic, and the antique white finish has a green stripe. 42" octagonal pedestal table. fill and four handsome chairs. Reg . $549, SALE $499 Matching 46 " china. Reg . $399. now $349 ' • ~!..i.t! '• ··~ ---:~-~-'Stt-1 11= ' ' ·"~ ' < • l . ' Bold ang.masslvely carved Spanish is richly portrayed in a luscious dark oak finish. Set has 68"x40" trestle table with three 12" fills, two arm and four side chairs upholstered in gold velvet. Reg. $599, SALE $499 Matching 54" china. Reg . $399. Now $349 ' ) . , .Ill. .•• -•• '• • •• • • • 7-pc. sel, $499 china. $349 - ·, ~· .._~~~~~~~~.,.---~~~~~~~~-~~~~--·~ . . ~ UH rour l1rtcer I roe. FLWCCOUNT ... for shoppinQ convenience • Dtflffry Mrvlce encl HI up at no charge .. • Con1ult with ouJ ci-<allng ataff .• , smart ld.-s at no c;h1rge Huntington Beach-in the Huntington.Center, Beach Blvd. at Edinger-892'-4,405 • Santa Ana -2,522 North Main Street-547-7651 Shop Sunday 11 to s, Monday, Thursday and Friday 10to9, Othercfays 10 to.6· • .. - • i I , . 1 .. • . . • " 111 !If Monday all Stores illl 9:00 PM • BUY IT BEITER AT BARKER BROS •••• because we have the enormous . . • . variety of dining moo.els to fit every size and kind of setting this Holiday ' Season, at reasoniible low prices! Traditionalists will favor our hearty Country Looks and the old fashioned charm of Colonial.. Forthose who want to savor the full splendor of the Season. we offer classic Italian, French and Spanish .. And if you h~ve ir flair for the dramatic~ see our more exotic _9rienta~esigns:· . . . ' popular Mediterranean and lively Contemporary. Whatever you cho~se, you'll I _be proucj to bring family and guests into. your dining room this Holiday~ Season! --·. : -. . ... -.. ··--,::·--::-~-··---- ' Warm and atately Country English gives you bold yet casual design, with strikin~. deeply-carved ·details. It re-creates the impressive country manor mood, . . complete with a lustrous antique pecan and oak finish . Seven. piece set has 42"x66" trestle table with two 18" leaves, plus. four fully upholstered side and two arm chairs. Reg . $759 SALE $699 Matchihg 70"' china Reg. $699, now $649. 35" server $219. now $199 ' I, .. --I ' r-pc. group $699 • ' ' . / . . • -------. ---- - .... __ _ • • U. JOllr .. ricer lrGL FLIXACCOUNT . · .• tor shopping convenience 1111 Dellnry' .. rv1 .. ind.Mt up at no Charge 1111 Con1ull.Whll our "-cor1lt!19 '•l1ft ••• smart Ideas at no charge· · Huntington· Beach -In the Huntington Center, Beach Blvd. at Edinger-i92-4405 · · ' . · S.nta Ana -~522 North Main Street -~-7651 . Stiop Suriday 1l1o 5, Monday, Thursday and Friday 10 to 9, Otlier Days fO to 6 . . . • ' 1 • ,. • DAILY PILOT 8 r' AMERICA •• (From Pa1e Bl) and tlmt. must continue to produce fer us elegant In· • strulllf;nts for our mutual e5trangen,ent. T h e con· sequence cl the triumphant ad- vance. of technology is an unavoidabl e drying up of the direct now of syn1pathy and affectionate communication between people .. FINALL\', we might ask if the things commo nl y a~ated with the go.od life-a more settled '"'ay or Ji\·ing. less frenzy. more n1argin. a sense ol space and ease. an environment of natural beauty and architec- tural dignity, a rehabilitation of nonns of propriety -and laste-can c,·er be rc:ilized h\· rich 2consumer socictit's ei.crnally slrainiu~ to "'OO the consu1ner \\'ith c,·cr 1nore outlandis h a n d expendable gadgetry. and elt>rnall y seek- ing for faster cc on o n1 i c grO\\•th. And . '''hat or the other at· tributes by which men live? If it is conceded that once subsistence levels have been passed-and they have in the \Vesl-the sources of men's more enduring satisfactions i;prlng from mutual trust and · affection. Crom s h a r i n g gladness and sorrow. Crom giv- ing love and accepting it, from 'openhearted companionship and laught er: if it is further conceded that in a civilized society the joy of living is augmented prin1arily by the sense of \Vo1ldcr inspired by the unfolding of nature, by the perception of beauCy in- spired by great art, and by the rene\\•al of faith and hope inspired by the' herojc and ~ the good: if this much ls con- ceded, is It possible to believe also that unremitting at- tempts to harneM the greater part oC men's energies and ingen uity t.o the task of amassing an ever greater assortinent -of m a t e r I 1 1 possessions can add much to people's happiness? Next : Dr. Henry \\'1Ulch. professor of economics, Yale University. New Limits For Trucks WASHINGTON (AP) -,,,. Environmental P!0- ·-00 Agency 1831.'f"!'k gave · Callfor!lia pet'llll8SkilJ lo set strlngents Jimils oo. emissions from· Ullh!-duty truckl begln- nl!lsr wlih 1979 models. However, the agency rejec- ted CallfOrnia 's request to im- pooe '""" -Oil 1975-rnodel truclts. Federal otandards for 1975- model light trucks limit I"· haust emlssklns to 2 grams ol hydrocarbons . per ntile, 20 grams carbon mooox ide and 3.1 grams of nitrogen oxides. California had requested a waiver d these standards to set iU own tooghe< star<lards of 0.9 gram of hydrocarl>om. 17 grams of carlx>n mmoxide and 1.5 grams of nitrogen oxides. EPA AdmlnistraUlr Rmall ff. Train permitted CelJfomla lo opply its~ limUa lo 11176 light ~xoept for nitrogen oxides, which would be set at 2 grams per mile. In- stead ol 1.5 grams per mile . ' ' • I I • • B 8 oAtLY PtLDT Sunday, Novtmbtr 4, 1'17:! QtJ.iet French ' . \ ·' Capitt;il of Prehistory Hidden by Rural Aura In Quaint Vezere A.rea Christian Science Monitor Service FRANCE -ln the Vezere V.alley or south,vest France history is still being discovered. And Sn is the valley. Jes alv.·ays )?een an area of aesthetic appeal and quaint leftovers from the past. Mule-driven carts and pleasant v.une11 dressed in black and tfred little country villages. The kind o f sophisticated simplicity that drew only the vacationing French. But now the vall~y is opening up, spillin'g forth its qU.iet treasures and pulling in the internationally culture- curious. HIStory is helping. \Vhat used to be just a quaint look at the past century ha·s turned out to be a detailed account of ptimitive man. For, tucked into the nooks and niches of the valley arc some of the \VOrld's best remnants of Western man's existence 500 years ago. And 5,000 years. And 50,000 years. AND BECAUSE OF the vesti~es that date back so far, this area is often eon· sidere<i the world capital of prehistory. Kno~'ll more formally as the .Dordogne, the region has e'.lmed its title because er the remnant-richness that ran'_!es from primitive prehistoric caves to Romao· esque churches and on through the years to Medieval chateaux and Renaissance castles. And· each represents the best and broadest cross sampling <J its kind. But the historic IC'ftover label was actually only recently. eamed. In fact. the older the rcnlnant. the more recent is i~ discovery. Although inhabit'ed by ma,n 50,000 years ago, the caves. for cxampl.e, \\'Cren'f discovered until 1863 when paleon- tologlsts_ took the· discovery of bones one step. further to . .--th,e ,e_iq>loration 9f the sit~s now known as Lartet. le ' Moustier, la Madeleine and 1:£s Eyzies. ' LASCAUX, ONE of the oldest, wasn't uncovered until 1940 -when two boys stumbled into it while looking for thefr. lost dog. Other sites discovered in the interim cover the four great paleolithic periods of Periogordian. Aurignacian , Solutrean , Md J\.1agdalenian. The caves. caverns. and grottoes of the countryside are en the surface no n1ore than bol es in cliffs. Foliage an8 nature cnce p1·otected the inhabitaii.ts and · in the"·i'nterim years keP,t the historical habitats well hidden. But the intrigue, lies not only in the caves historical, but also th eir cultural nlessage. If yo u think Rembrandt was a genius \\/Orking \vilh a flat canvas, prepared pai nt and fi ne-haired brushes.~ think about fh~ primitive men's metbod of drawing \vith extended sticks on bumpy \Valls from 60 feet be low. These men invented painting. INSID\THE CLTFF caves are the deijcate awings of bison and horse, rei1\deer and cows that tell so much about "primitive" man, from his sensitivities and fears to his religion· ritual and hunting habits. Alf'a~ done i!!_·Stark red and black , • and all reflect a well-developed sen~ of form and movement. Besides the animals that still "live" in the caves for modern man to vie·.v. several or the sit are accornPa nied by . museums or ex ibits of skeletons and· utensils of the early Cro-Magnon man who inhabited this area. The best is the National Museum of Prehistory next to the Les Eyzies caves. Housed in a restored chateau, otiginally dating from the 11th and 12th centuries,, it is situated halfway up a 600-foot cliff and, like the cave site, overlooks the Vezere Valley spi-ead out arOWid it. In front, a mal'TlJ:\'IOth statue of Cro- Magnon 1nan stands mutely on the edge to both lure and greet visitors. Another la rge museum is located in Perigueux. HISTORY THEN moves on through the countryside and ·through the years. Romanesque churches and ancient stone peasant farms. Fortified villages and old manor bou.ses. ·The second most repr~entative rem· nants in the Dordogne are the Medieval chateaux. lmP.05ing and proud but not as luxurious as those latter models iD the Loire Valley, many of.. these massive monuments have been restored and open- ed tO the pubic. The charm of the chateaux and semi- castleS is the way they blend into the counlryside; earthy stone and brick with · little deta il except for sitnple spires and ivy. No embelli shments or ornate decorations insi.de or out. One of the more unusual is the Chateau of Beynac, a compounding of 12th to 18th century edifices that tells of the military exigencies of tbe early period and the peaceful epochs that followed. k spectacle of sotmd and light has in U:>e JJ!8Sl been held during the summer month&. , ·· Chateau of Rastignac is another C'lll'ioti.ty with its sti:iking resemblance to the White House In W<1Shington. , Besides those open· to the public,.there are many more either still occupied or in various stages of partial decay . The countryside is almost crowded wilh them. A THIRD CATEGORY is the bastides or fortified villages built by both the Br.itislt and French duriilg their 100-year rivalry. Many have survived the six-cen· tury interim, including Monpazier, Dcnn- me. Beaumont, Belves, Molieres, and Villefranche-du·Perigord. · For all its historic importance, however, the Dordogne is not an ag- grtsSive area. The sma11 towns of Le Bugue, Les Eyzies, and Sa.riot, the prime commuting stations for trips to the caves, chateaux, and bastides, are all still old st.one villages cut with a single modem main street. Nothing pretentious. Nothing false. · The Dordogne is a ~uiet region, humble despite its history. Without super highways. Without luxury hotels or modem superstructures. Without loud signs of modernization. In fact, almost as if it is humble because of its history. • French village of Beynac, above, on River Dordogne is built around I 3th-century castle, and in the some volley is Saint-Michel-de· Mont1i9ne, <:enter, where Mont.· aig.ne's 'Essays' ·'!Vere ~ritten .. B,e- low is a representative of the pre· historic paintings and engravings in caves at Las·caux, featuring mammoths deer, reindeer, bulls, horses ~nd bison. ~ Delaplane To Track Navigator Skiers Rate Chilean Slopes Tops · Stanton Delaplane. Daily Pilot columnist and Pulitzer prize-winner, \Vill sail ·the coasts or M e x i c o ai\d California next month in an TRAVEL . ·attempt to unravel t he mys1ery of \11hcre English navigator, Sir Francis Drake, landed on the Pacific Coast in 1579. '-....;... _______ _, Delaplane 1vill be joined by Robert H. Po11'er. Drake scholar and author o.f several jhonograpbs in the California Historical Quarterly on the cont.roversial site of Drake's llinding. \ 6.8 Million .Americans Go Abroad ON THE RETURN leg of the trip from Acapulco, they will attempt to ascertain WASHINGTON (U\l} _ Drake's landfalls with old JP charts and documents, as well 'Lcut year 6.8 m t ~ i o n as with the liner's modem Americans spent nearly ..$7.7 navigational aids. billion on foreign travel, •C· Delaplanehas been interest-cording to a Co m m e r c ~ Department report. ed in the route oC the British The agency said 2.9 million navigator since 1936 "'hen he foreign visitors came to this wrote the story in tbe San · 72 The t Francis.co Chronlcle of the country m 19 · y spen $1.7 billion. · discovery .of the now-famous eSliri'lated 5.7 million '1plate of brass." which claim· Americans traveled overseas ed the land in the name of in 1971, spend ing 16 percent Queen_ Elizabeth of England. . less than they did last yea r. It as the. onJy physical The nunlbe~f foreign visitors evidence oi Drake's presence who came t Lhe United States In ca.utontla. --in 1971 "8! !J million. ' .. . I I ,,- • By STAN DELAPLANE SAN FRANCISCO -Our Ski Reporter sent great reports from Chile -just before the Allende government fell. If we'd ever got that in print, every under-30 skier in the United States would have been winging south. I'm still getting reports. (While down there he fell madly in Jove with a Chilena girl and is about to get married.) ''Tourist business nil. Even other South Amer- icans staying away. Government would like to re- s ume tourist business and has revalued money. For-. mer rate was 150 escudos to the U.S. $1 but a black ·market rate of 1500 to $1 was tolerated. . "The military government trying to ease that off by giving 850 to $1 legally in banks. Black mar· ket exists but is edgy -who knows, maybe· you could ge t shoL . 11fi.farijuana's always been looked on as a minor vice. Probably because the Indians have been chew~ ing the narcotic coca leaf since.the days 9f the Incas. Marijuana is raised in great fields iJ\ the high- lands. . "Braniff who flies most of South America 'has . buttoned up advertising for tourists and is wait· - ing for better days." * * * "Food situation is better. Under Allende (for reasons I don't understand) farm products could .not move from one province to anothe.r. (Chlle is ~lg· ~r than Texu .. A Joqg, lean-strip along tile cout never more than 100 mile i!"i4e.) . • "The result was one province could lie rollin g in butter and unable to move · It to another prov· ince that was rolling in wheat but nothing to butter their bread with. That seems:to be over. . "! think nonpolltlcal . tourists. would be along well here. Unlikely there'll be any rush of them though. Put..on yow:, note file that Chllena .i!rls are \ the prettiest in all South America ! Ole!"· For Pacific. tfayelers: lunch in Sap, Francisco with" four men whose business takes thein from Tokyo -as far as Sydney regularly. · Ratea their choice in airlines as follows: CP Air first. Second was a tossup between Australia's Qantits' and Thai InternationaL (Thai is operated by Scandinavia'.• SAS -as you wili'see by the open face sandwiches.) Important to all of them was Qantas and Ca· nada's CP Air use of stewards more than · steward· esses.· * * * "l• dolli~ do .. 1u1tlon,IJl!l~ln9 1 dlifortnco for Vs In Mexl.co?'r ~ ""' . Not the' slipP.ing dollar. Inflation has boosted prices just like 11 has hete. New Mexican · hotels are charging as much as U.S. U.bor is still cheap . What ups the prices is fantastically high interest charges. - From" EVERYBODY I talk to: Forget France. Forge~ Japan. You simply cannot pay those prices. -. . ' ' • ~---' ...... !:tra~el ·• ... • • ;J ;.'TH~ GDND OPENING .f°. ) · . OF THE '. WORLD~,.·. -. WE · Ar,e. T:ravel Specialis~ 306· Mlrtnt Ave., 675-8400 ' ' 81lboi Island, Newport Bo1ch ( •• ' • • • • • • . . . .. BOYD TRAVEt'S OWN FAMOUS HAWAII Fl_Mll;l· CAR!YlCATIONS ' . .• • 'DRIYE THl·POUI lilAIN ISLANDS AS THOUfi'.H YOU HAD f9Vl OWN 'AMILY CAR \' .. . . UNLIMITt:D :FREI!. MILEAGE!' ND ·GAS .PROBL&MSI' . . . " 15 Days, Tota( Prices; Including'. Taxes: . . COUPLE or 2 FRIENDS .SHARING • , • ; ••• , ••••••••. , •• $tt2 COUPJ.E & I CHILD UNDER r~· .... ,,,, ,, ..... , ... , .$1225: C OUPLE & I CHILO 12 OR OVER .: •••••• ,,,,,,,,,,,,,ff2t9. COUPLE & 2 CHILDREN UNOH 12 ••• .' •• ,,.,.,,,,,.,$1646. COUPLE & I CH~LO UNDER 1,2,!I ~HILD ovt~ 12 •••• $17<4 ' C,OUPLI & 2 CHILDllN 12 01 OYll . 1112' TWO COUPtES tLAR&E'"'CitiR, ~ .. ROOMSJ---. .-.· •• ,, ,, ,, .tl'174" ,.. llAMILlh OF 4 TO ' HAYI 1 l00M5. 11 ABOVE PRICES IASED O~ MEDIUM ROOMS AT SUPERIOR TYPE HOTELS-AIR CONOlTIONED, SWIMMING POOLS, GOOD LOCATIOMS, UC: . . \" \ . DELUXE HOTELS ALSO AVAILAflt,..fl .:.: ... ! i't ' INDIVIDUAL oi PARJ.UREs' l~ER~,~~~j:j';.1~ ..... ··;t RETURNINIO MONpAY,TV>'Cl W6J.i;4T~ "';<-:i,' r, tSut<il"Y RETURN OK AT, SAfl!E rRICEI "· -... • ., 1 ->" ! ' l,___ Prlc:11 liicli.iCI· ro1111dtrlp .•Con•ll'IV 1•t' u · l11f1fjlla114' i•t, ,,,, 1c.h1di.1l1d 1irUt111; Cit fot th1 ful tim;-,1t oech lll11'M1 wlth Jnturlnc1 ind unlimfte4 fr11 fJ1llM9•: rlv1t crvh1 to th. fei,114 _fern 9rotto; hot1h; pl111nin9 .nept end h1forM1tlo11; 111d ell .•pplrc1bl1 t•••• and 11c11rlty char91i. ; 1714). ~3-IU• ·, BOYD TRAVEL '2730 N., BRISTOL SANTA ANA ,,• IArT!oee• ... ..,.,...._f" . "\ MEMBER: Hewell Vllftor1 l11t11u ' Or11190 County Tt1v1I At•nh At•n. " . • ! .. . •.' • • • • • ' . ' 1f' ••• ,. ·1 '· • . ,· . . , '" -..,, • • ' ·. ~ .... ~~lliafs,,98 ,,,,. .. ' ... I : ; J •1 ' < • ~ '· .\, ,:,( ' :'\I • ~ • • • ~ • :-, } i , I 1 . .; • t -I,~, I ·, ._ ~ ' I. • • ' .l.1 '1 .,-· . . ). ' . ,•, ,.; ' . ;' . ' . ,'' ··, ' ..... .. .. I • J ' . . I -. ' . . " , • .Jnday, Nowml>H 4, 1973 DAILY PILOT I - .bio9 ' in .. ~o ,~ig , d~pa.rt~ents. 4 days only . l J' 11 -• ' • • • • • i ' ' l .. -. ~-' '~ .. • I - ' to Reg. 59c io 3.99 yd. 1 • Pick doubleknits, ginghams, quilts • Flock-dots, flannels, fake furs • Corqocoy, terrys~denl ms, broadcloths • Polyester, cotton, vinyl, nyto11 acrylics, blends in the group • Prints, plaids, plains, textures • Decora1or fabrics. linings and i~~rfaclngs-on sale,too. -- Sayelle acrylic ~4 Reg.1.18 t ;,:;{;';'ng worsled o1' oz. skein. -· ( • • • I ( 2.40to16.00 Reg. $3 to $20 Grab up an armful tor yourself, for gllts. You get such great pickings in our every -sale. Pouches, dr1w- strings, clutch styles, totea, lallgo looks, dreumaker 1hap11. In shiny polyuretfilne, vinyls, le1ther, naked leather, suedes, more. All the best colors, too, But hurry. It's • days only. • • • BUENA PARK · Btich •t Orongothorpe · • Optll Dolly 1:30 lo l :H p,m. lundlJ ,10 lo 7 ORANGE Cily Or. et Gorden Grove Blvd.· OA•n 10.V p.m. Da oly lunday '10 to.I SANTAANA . 3900 So. Bristol .' No. of So. Coaat PJazt Opon· 10-t p.m. Diiiy lunday 10 to~ tU . "' .. • • I • • ·-- • ' • • . .J I l I ·- ... • j • Bl DAILY PILOT Sundoy, lmb<r 4, 1973 Y 0111• Horosco1>e Ca11c.e1·:·Tal{e Tl1h1gs Easy and cost~S to p pro.. MONDAY I By SYDNEY OMARR also is brought to forefront. Gemini, Virgo persons are likely to be involved. You need balance. Avoid ex 1 rem es. Don 't change merely for sake of change. And don't expect perfection from loved on~. crastinatiitg. ·,,., CAPRICORN I Dec. 22.Jan. ;..., :,. ARI.ES i~farch 2l·April 191: 191: New ways o( looking, seeing and perceiving __ are necessary. SO roe around you are Jired, lack enthusiasm and Your concern about long- dis tance communication could be waste of e1notional energy, 1'1uch is being decided in way \l'hich will not direct ly invol\'e you. Key is to maintain in· dependent s!ancc w i thou t being arrogant. Cycle favors success. \1IRGO '(Aug. 23-Sept. 22): You may be seeing through rose<olored glasses. Be op- timistic without beco1ning a Pollyanna .. ~~runily member seeks. more harmonious . at- mosphere. Be considerate. receptive. Othenvise, you could lose V.'hal means nlbst. i\·lake concession in ordcr'to make hon1e a happier place. sing the blues. But you can. ..,... snap out of dol drums. Do so ~ individually. not as part of \~ a group. Retain identity. AQUARIUS (J a n, 20-Feb. TAU RUS <April 2·T\-1ay 20 ,:. 18)': You make right n1oves; result is gain, collection. the _z... obtaining of \l'hat you need. v. Leo could be in picture. Ac· !: cent, 'is on evaluating. sum· ~ Intuitive intellect is ac tive. You get hunch about people, place!\. Efforts l<> close deal may be temporarily delayed . Use lhrtt time to tie loose ends. Check for loopholes . Friend inay not have all necessary . informalion . Do son1e personal checking. LI BRA rSept. 23-0ct. 22): Perceive subtle nuances. Ttikc nothing for granted. Double- chcck. especially '\'he re scrviC"c>S are concerned. One who 1nakcs pro1nises n1ay be \\'hi stling in dark. Know it and re v i e w intorm ation . Relative may be complete ly misinformed. ming up, perceiving and · dctccllng ..-"'ha t might be obscured. Good money ne\VS indicated. GE~11Nl (P.1av 21-Junc 20 ): Don'l be ln tOO 1nuch of a hurry to affix -signature fo document, agreement. Leave self room lo investigate. Highlight versatility. There is more than one way, mo re than one opportuni ty. Know it - and expect-additional offers .. PISCES (Feb. 19-~1arch 20): \'ou may be lelegraphing punches. • Means try not to be too obvious. A bit of discre- tlon now beco me!\ your ally. Give yourself choices. Refuse to be painted into comer. One -"'.:' SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ): in authority pulls strings to your advantage. ""'· JF TODAY JS YOUR , __ -0 1 . CANCER (Ju ne 21·July 22): Don't spend for something v.·hich is "too breakable.·~ Ten- dency ~xisls for you to act on impulse and to have liltcf regrets. ~1oney is involved. Fragility seems in picture. Go for the solid, in products and pesrons. BIRTHDAY you arc dyna mic, f _ >t,;i'1:~~-i.1.. activf, attractive and have ·a fi:ii:,-;i° •, temper. Yo1:1 ~eldom do thi_ngs r,,f,l!i ·~ ha!fv>ay -tt is all or nothing. -~-' -~." Social activity accelerates in ' Go slow. Check details. Soft- sell approach is OO\V likely to achieve bcsl res u lt s. Aquarius, Leo and Scorpio persons could figure prom- inently. You may be doing some revising, rebuilding. Get priorities in order. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 /: Creative abiliti"s are ac- cented. Your abi lity to analyze SAGITIARIUS rNov. ·22- Dec. 21): You are seeing only patt 'vay: You a re . ceing the smoo thness while th ough edges and blocks coul be escaping your vie\v. Get rid .of proposition \\'hich i s weighty. deceptive and costs Decen1brr. ~l::my born under f'~ c:e1nini and \Urgo gravitate . .,. to vou. You are attracted to '"ri.ting, drama and to general confllfl. \Vheri. things are tpo easy. you lose int erest. Teacher has had a great in· nuencc on you and perhaps changed direction of your life. "THE STONE klLLER" '" "DILLINGER" (RI .. SOUND OF MUSIC" A , ... ''THE CA.Nl"1r-.:,7i;" tfl'GI '"ELECTRA \..• ;D..: !N ILUE" And CPGJ "'THE cu·. -O!: MAN" IHE GOD.:Al'HER" tRI .,, "DILLINGER" flt) "CAIARET" IPGI ... "HELLO DOLLY" IGI LI Do NEWPORT BEACH (NTRJ,JK( TO LIDO ISlE 673-8350 NOW THRU THURSDAY ,_,_..,,...,.... . ....,.._._ .......... -.... ,, . , JAMES WHITMORE TIPPY HEDREN "THE HARRAD EXPERIMENT" TODAY'S CRDSSIDILD PVZZLI 1 /l~r•1111• :T~ r, P11>11 l''"' «•·I 1? A•i!'"~t 11' ST1fl:J"lf1 insect 71 Ch•.i' "I' 22 Larg'' l.g1lly 2J Moro' r.;Ct:H! 24 leg~I p•ocecdtriqs 7."i Cor.~<1:ned 26 T t:nn .... 1.cue '}I .. ii~"'"-· :!3 v .. ,, . .,,, ' 29 A>1e11~.~. 77 Gold 78 Accuse 80 Audible R2 Boarrj gam11 84 Gremlins B6 Deposit: 2 wds. 88 Water lily 90 Poised !12 Small inlets 94 Wharts 96 Manhandle 97 SHHting , 102 C111pli~e fish 104 W;,11 coating 109 /llge11an -;eooori 110 Ea•ly 152 Italian 1iver 154 Maxim 156 D.::inish coin 158 Hotel unit • 160 Square n1easure 161 At home 162 Till lhe soil 163 Strong fel!ow 165 Con1inen1: abbr. 166 Nathan's nickn1m1 168 Thicket 170 Girl's name 171 Vigilant 172 Sufficient 174 Debase 18 Thespian ·100 Damage 19 Fixed look 10 1 S!able 20 Soci,11 doing anendant 33 Whale school 103 Cuslom 35 Furnish ed funds 105 Ticket portio" JS.On 106 Clocking 40 let 1all 107 Poetic muse 41 W;;rrble 108 Placeanew 43 Sphere 111 Gush forth 44 PapermeasU1e· 113 lukewarm 46 Stalwart 117 lnlime:2wds. 47 Helping point 1'19 Compound e1her 48 Reddish brown 121 Fortification 50 Bralilian.port 124 Italian article 52 Panicularize 125 German 11ss 53 Poltery clay 127 Spirit lamp 54 Eastern country 129 One nostril Bt•oadway's Best Mo re than 150 girls will be participating when .New- port Harbor High School presents its annual aqua ~show aM:30 p.ll\,~!lnesday and Thursday in the · Newport Olympic Pool.ADOv'e, front to back, Teri Cra ig·. Kris Darius and Denise \Vaite perform in a · "\Vest Side .Story" number which is among 15 Broad· WflY: favor ites to be performed. Tickets will be $1 and 1i·ls. Rita 1'1rFarland has more information at 547·1211. I I • I NEW LOCATION Same Great FREE , JO Print1;;q n••·J~•«e 31 Cont1,,~nt ·;iLbr. 32 Con~ohdillt' basetl~lier 112 Zogrell natiii~ 11~ Con1plete 175 Paradise 176 Doctrine 177 Boy'sname 178 Jugs 56 Markel booth 132 Three: comb, form Cooking School 34 F1enct1 summer 35 Briel 36 Japanese mile 37 Greenland Eslomo 39 Late 42 Bre~the no1S1ly 45 Spanish king 46 Whiskey 49 Simpleton !i l Miar gree!!V 53 Pretend 55 Broadway parts 57 Knotlfke 59 Bread makers 62 Sum&c genus 64 Kicks 66 Famous rabb•l 68 Shoo1ing star 70 Female• 72 legisl<itll 7d Disables 76 Prosecutor: abbr, I ll lO ' JI ' I " • *" • '" ' 115 E1!hm 116 Grrm<in "ye~" 1 HI Ahscond 1ZO ArrowrQot 122 Frrnch writer 123 D•ssolll"ed substance 126 Unattached 12'8 Mature 130 Morsel 131 Mos1 uncommon 133 Curs 135 Kind of vva \'c 137 Negatill"e wo1d 138 Corundum DOWN 1 Arabian comm;inder 2 Florida city 3 Picnic pest' 4 Pk lurosque 5 Solon 6 Baby carriage 7 Track even1 8 Unconcealed 9 Jumbled type 10 Di estive tract 140 Choir voice gl"nqr I 142 Bo!d 12 Men 1 nt 144 Don~ev 13 De a;m , 147 Worked \'i en!ly diligently ~ 1;1 1.1inister 149 Fas1 ./""'/15 Saul's uncle 1!>1 Len1ngra 's 16 Add rive1 17 Lave 8" 9 !G II " " . .~-- II • II '. " " • !01 ~-lQZ ))2 lJ.l '" @t 140 ,. :i ,,, Ill Ji 111 58 Ci11us fruit 134 Singing voice 60 Concerning 136 Habitable 61 Clea'nscrs 139 Sailor 63 Skidded 141 Spanish 1iver 65 Ladle 143 Bigoted 67 Junlpe1like 144 Plenteous shrub 145 Compact 69 Man's nickname 146 Filched 71 Condemn 148 Male ducic 73 Coach 150 Tu1kish 75 Portmanteau pan 79 Hemp string Bl Swine breed 83 Small egg 85 Pronoun 87 Artless 89 Orig1na1e 91. The impolo 93 Fishhook line 95 Scrub 97 Catcalli; 98 Mistake 99 GalHum symbol 14 l~ Ii mcasu1e 152 Tlgh1wad 153 Extraordlflary peopl11 155 Exact copy 157 Dillseed 159 Wise men H:iJ Head covering 164 Femalcsheep 165 Coterie 167 Definite ar1ic!e 169 M1jestic wonder 173 Hindu manlfl SEE CLASSIFIED SECTION FOR ANSWERS I • • • Every Thursday, Oct. 25 thru' Nov. 15 9:30-11 :30 A.M. EDWARDS NEWPORT CINEMA, Newport Center (Across from Fashion Island) •Prizes •.Surprises t • (;ifts Wortli More Tlia1t $2 ,000 Irlore excitin g and profi table than ever before, the annual Cooking School returns to the Orange Coast area for its 22nd great year-but in a new location, Ed\vards Newport Cine1na i~ Newport Center (across from Fashion Island ). You're in- vited to attend free and to compete for prizes includ ing a Litt on Elec tronic Oven, A~ana Radar· Range, Electro-Grill Tabletop Barbecue and more -nati oilal brand names among prize items in· elude General Ele ctric, Frigidaire, Oster and otlt· ers, Plan now to attend the area's greatest cook· Ing school , , , .co -Sponsored by Richard's Mar•ets, Lusk Hom9-s, Davis-'Brown Ap- pliances, Edwards Cinema, Southem C.lifornia Edison Compa~y. Orange Coast .Oailr Pilot,. Coast Community Colleq& • District !Orange ' ,, Coast and Golden West Colleges) • ) . . -- • ls .Honesty Wh(i~ . Yo_u Really Need?"' By ERMA DOMBECK There is an old English prov- erb that says, "lf you want the truth, ask a ehild." 'W,elll who wants ll? 1 have suffered more self~fidence breakdowns as a result of chl1dren's "honesty and in· tegrity" than any woman has a ria-ht to, suffer. From those wonderful honest kids who }!'ave me, "Boy, Mom, yoor AT. WIT'S END knew Dolly Madison ?" "What makes that noise when your legs rub together when }'OU walk? Crickets make a noise, bot they sound neat." As" a mother •. i iiaturally have 1aughl my dtlldren to tell only the lruth every time they opep their mqyth, As a · coward, I also have been known to feed them intra-venously and keep them under sedation when I can. The-other day ·as J was \vork· in2 around the kitchen my son asked , ''Mom. why do you have a lap when you stand up?" .• . "\\'lien ' you have babies, il sometimes takes 20 or 30 years to get your figure back." ·anus are bi1uier th!ln Pete "Is tha t \vhy you don't wetr Rose's," I have also been hotpant<i?" • · showered with such J{ems as : "I don't wear hotpants • "Laugh fOr Lero y, so he ... 'because my girdle 'bangs out can hear you sno rt." about 17 inches." "What are you going to be "Jerry's· mother wears hot· whep you im>w up, MOOl?" pants," he said. "Mark's mot her said you eat "Jerry's. moUter i<i a size so many TV dinners that wh en 10 who still wears . her pom- they thaw you'll have the in-·-·pons and mar~!nng boots sides of. a . bride. What's that around the house. . mean ?''. "~t's the matter with "What's homebaked cookies, that . . Mom?" From the window. I heard "H~y. that pigeon is here to ~im calling his friend, Jerry. buy your-car.'' Hey, Jerry, do you know "h-1y mother can't come to why my Mom has a lap V.'hen the door now. She's hidin2 in she stands up? And why the furnace room." she doesn't . wear hotpan ts? "~tom, didn't you say you \Vait till I tell you what she • .! ' , ' Cluarley • Coun try singer Charley Pride will be joined by the !<"our Guys of the Grand Olde Opry when he performs at the Ana· heim Convention Cen- ler Nov. 15. Tickets to the event are $5·7 and are available at the us- ual ticket agencies. said about your mother." r suppose you have all heard the old proverb about telling lhe. truth ... evt'n y,•hen it hurts? That kid isn't going to be able to sit on his integrity for · a \\'eek ! • •. ~ ' • • \'; 1-"~·,; • -, .i;J;Ji>.." ~ Clll*~5 .. !N1'1 llO).CT(lll-"""'~ .g f!l(lJll!Jo 11( •II: IUl ·l•STll'!r'·S'!Wl !'WO-·---mtllfl•.lll(CIUCRJll ·IOll 00.. ... !llllJfl°"lli'll)O'IU .. _~OID ---.0·-•M\IUIWUB·-•Jli!Sill·-•Sltlll~ = s .. 11WEDNUDAY= ~==~I· Ctl1Ptl'lln Avenue •I S.A. ffWV . Or•nt9 . 532-3361 ' Sin Oi9fo Frwy. •t Bfookhurrit Founuiin V1lt1Y. 112·2411_ NOW OPEN NIGHTLY• DINNER AT 6:30 • CURTAIN 8:30 A UNIQUE CALIFORNIA EXPERIENCE Dest l\1nner-Jlapbouse • ... presents !hie-theater and a "served" buffet. Wednesdays, Thursdays;' Sundays -$9.95; Fridais -$10.95; Saturdays -$11 .95. Cockte,ils extra. No food or beveraQ8 served during the performance. .. j j . WitfJ !_)our 1Binntr mrama OK LAHOM A! ·: , , ~ .; 11 ICl/,~f':D HODGEP'.:i i'·"·d· 'l"I ,,,, • f,y r·:;cAn H/IMMfJl:;Tf:~'! 'r1.i 1 :Attendance by ·, RESERVATION ONLY·· Phone 7141.492-9950 l -. ·: 140 Aveni~a Pico at the Ocean, San Clem•nte ' Free Parking r -T ' I .. • •• • . ' ,. • ~ ' ~ . -EJRRTAINMENT ; Voice Solo Concert ' In Laguna A solo vo\ce concert will begin the community Concert Association of Laguna Beach's new season Nov. 11. Simon Estes. a Ne\V York bass-baritone, will perfor m at 3 p.m. in the Laguna Beach I-ligh School al!ditoriwn. Ested began, his singing career at age 8 in his church choir:. In 1966 he receiv.ed a prize in Mosco,v's Fir-st I n tcmational Tschalkovsky Vocal Competition. At age 34, he is one of the rew black n1ales performing on opera and concert stngcs on four continents. ·Meinbership inforn1a· : tion may be received by call· ing Hoyt ·Post at 496-1701. • \iiiiii"' ---WIS1'WOl:l0 IN! SOYLINT OlllN '"I --··"''··-··-_.._ DlllVS·IN SUHR SWAP MEm MARMMI IK.VO.Ortwe•lll .... ""'···--.... OllAllO• Driw·lft 11 a --............ io • ...., ,,..,.,...s..,..i ...... ...... F•mllr '""I ~11•11 a.,.alM O.'°"t MQJUtl Of'IM 6'11 , .... 11/2 .. , .••. a.. '"' , ... SHOW1 SJUT •U I UJ99 12 "9 ·==~ -'m•.,J1 ltl-tt. 52S.~5H -""F.fr KUNG-IV INVl.$11j.I· ST DUIL-OF.}HI IRON ~IST fl'l lltoc•I" ....... -~·l .. ·~· I Zl-t070 l'\ll •nMI .... llOtJI .....,,.._ WIS1WORLD ll'lt SOYLINT Gl:llN I"' .... Ol<oll• ,......,.., •'- lt--t.1 lkl 962·2'11 M•••.....r. _,, ~·­Sll·1Z71 ..... ILICTU GLIDE IN ILUE "°' u ............... -llllllM'lt 527·2221 ''llll ND OM UNDll 11 MiMlnlO flQ JIJ, 'WIFE lXCHANOI CLUI ~ (2). flMALE atllONll • i), IWIDIStl fl T OllLI .. """""• ·-"' St•l•Co .... 5SS.702Z ...... '1NTIR THI DRAGON .. , l'Wle ao.tNWAM TIAIN IOIUH ·-· Sunday, NO¥tmbtr 4, 1~73 DAILY PILOT ft J J Madeli°:~'s lier. Own ·F.un;ny Girl --- Madeline Kahn hu a dazzle in her amlle and a dimple In her voice. On the screen and in the .stage roles she's created, the smile and the voice have been twisted into a grab bag of funny s.urprbe.s. ~eading that I'm in that''and seeing it on Rona Barrett, and 1 don't ia\<lw wh~r to believe it or not. But I'm taking tap<lancing just In case." Things just koep happenipg to. her because she's so talented, ht.1t she's more surprised by her success than anyone else. The girl simply has no ego. She's worked with some egos as big as housing developments (Streisand , Dan- ny Kaye, Lucille Ball, to name a few ), and it just hasn't rubbed off yet. In the raw Rex Reed ; Mmha Raye-carol Burnell "f guess 1'1f:Just loolrfor comed'y that aMumes come-quality in the r~le I play diennes have to be ugly to · and try to keep f gelling be flUlOy. Femininity. has type.cast. My st ards are always been a stranger to high, there are t ings I want the comi c tradition. Now that I haven't done ye t, but here 's Ms. Kahn -intelligent, I haven 't finished it all." funny, and attractive -and The clown with the face she's wiwtlling to be self· of an angel sighs. "l think deprecating. She won't play I'm talented. l just hope I dumb, she won't do pratfalls. live to someday be old and What's left? talented." ·AS ENTERTANNG AKJ INTERESTm A MOTION PtC1lff: AS CAN POS5IBl Y IE MADE." -Phlllp l!:IWOOlt, $.P', C)(.lmlntr The Madeline Kahn who lmocked.everybody deJ!!i..dol~g a parody o1 Marlene Dietrich singing Kurt Weill I!) "New Faces of 1968" is different fl'9m the Madeline Kaiiii who almost stole "What's Up Doc?" right out from under the considerable nose of Barbra Streisand. And the Madeline Kahn who sendi in· somniacs seai-ching for their TV Guides when she stop5 ·the late-night talk--ahoWs cold with her deadpan comedy is still Another Madeline Kahn from the heart·bresltlng Miss Trixie Delight in "Paper Moon." ACTRESS Madeline Kohn 'Ibe biggest blow to her own personal career happened last y~r. when she was fired from the movie version of "Mame." She had been signed to play Agnes·Gooch. Lucille Ball took 1;=========::;;1----------I one loo.k at her curves; the next thing she knew , she was standing in line for unemploy- ment jnsuranc:e. r .... JANICE JOPLIN Right now she'• addihg two more portraits to the con· fusion, with a five·mlnute guest appearance in the Ingrid Bergman movie "The Mixed- Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler" (she's the mud- dled schoolteacher with the gro1,1,p of_ mop~t moruiters on a tour of the Metropolitan Museum who-steals the movie ), and a starring role in Joseph Papp's production of "The Boom Boom Room" on ·the New . York stage. Playing a tawdry go-go dancer with laughter and tears, she steals that one, too. The girl is unique. ( She's pretty, she's stacked; she's wearing a bandana halter and tight jeaus. In h<lf CAU THIATll fO• SUNDAY MA.TINll SCHIDULI ~tN7tMM ~-- -Soptlia -a-""'" ... °"" "Manof bMancha" --1111• WW.,.71»ti• .... ~111W.....- 7:»t:• I apartment, there's a .big ·stuf- fed Raggedy Ann doll Jn a wicker chair surrounded by Rag1edy Ann babies, a Diana Lynn coloring book, a Magrite pelntin( ol " Mked woman ·with a vertical smile, arid a framed soog aheet ol "It's Only A Paper Moon.'' , ."I'm. not exactly sure what happened. 'llley s ho w e d Lucille Ban 'What's Up Doc?' and she like me in it, but thon I walked on the set aitd I guess I don't exactly look like· fnunpy E1.D1ice in the movie. Madeline Kahn 1s in a special predicament. She's following in a tradition of "Those are some of my ptay-toys," lb& grW. She's sby, bright, semltive and unaffected, and there's not a•----,----,,,.-----11 sign ol vanity. The columns say that Peter BogOanovlch will star her with Cybill Shepherd and Ryan O'Neal in his new Cole Porter musical, "Quadrille." H e r eyes widen. ".Oh, I keep Colleen ast CAIAllT CPGJ • HIUO DOUY (GJ DAILY 7:1J.f:40 1 iAT. SUN. 1'°°4115 513 .. 7145·19:10 · '~ •• easily the ~est movie so far this Y.ar:lf -stepR'en !"•rt.er • NEW YORK TIMES .~ I, ---youin'R? • EXCLUSIVE ~ORAllGLCOUNIT ENGAGEMENT FAMILY TWIN CINEMA OHIH •i'5 W•l'ICDAYS SAT/SUN -C0'4TINUOUS 12 NOON CINEMA I "CAMEl:OT" (Gl · ... "TOM S_AWYll" CINEMA II "LAST TANGO IN PAltlS" IXJ .,, "A.YANTI" Cl) FELLINI'S MASTIRPIECE "JULIET OF THE SP,IRITS" ' . ~ ·. -+ 'Ol Mlchelor19elo Airtoiile'i "RED DESERT" wlth Rlch•rd Hctrrls C.nt cmt::i• 1213' p.m. tt • 2:00 P.M. l•xC, Sun a Hol.I Sl.00 M1rl111 lr1nde "LAST TANcaQ IN P'ARIS" Allfft ,1tnt'1 "NAIC•D LADY" Caltr (X) Ryln & T•lllm O'NMI "PAPER MOON" lll• MlnMlll "STERILE CUCKOO'' tPOI -~"'-· ·---. ''IMMENSELY ENTERTAIMHf3• ·Al.AN R. HOWARD 1-!0LLYWOOO REPORTE •INCREDHll. Y IEAUTIFUl" -BOX OFFICE MAGAZINE Surfing Film Festlv•I 11th w.-·. Sltew "ISLAND MAGIC" .... Betty Boop Cartoons Co111Pttfe Sll;ows 7:30 &: t 130 ' -WIN A SUINOA.IDI OM OIYlll AWr( I•~ WM Ywr Cllolc• ...... '"°'" Dyne CltllJIM & O.t•llt At TllNlre .llt:s. 1 1884 Newport Costa Me\a S4B · 1 SS2 NOW THRU-TUES. Stne Mc._.., All -M .... r.w_ "THE GETAWAY" + (PG) ,., ...... "JUDGE ROY BEAN" Iii. Sl•ll• "lllCTltA • OLIDI IN •LUI" "'THI DUTSIDt: MAN" ..... 111 c ... ,. ,~, "ICUNG-f'U, • TH'I INVISllLE ,9'T" "DUil O' lltOH 'IST" ,.. 111 C.lerl Cltl ' ' ' ····· ...... ··~··············· llVO. AT llUS, a£T, COAST MW~ Miii Dl fGO fWY., MUNf11ff:fON IEM!'l ••?-••o• . ••?·•01? "MONJEREY POP" THE ONLY ORANGE COUNTY SHOWING FROM A LITTLE BOOK ·coMES A GREAT MOVIE I Richard Boch'• phenomenal best seller about a sea gull striving for self reaiiza· t-lon becomes a powerful motion picture. First, there was LOVE STORY, and then THE ~OFATHER, and now from the unparalleled successful book (30 million readers) comes JONATHAN LIVINGSTON · SEAGULL. Co~pled with the Mac Gillevray ·Freeman acro~ltic helicopter photography, and filmed at California's Big Sur, Mt. Whitney, Hawaii, and DO!lth Vallay; this feature 4ingth. film ' ranks emong t~e most breathtakingly beautl· ful films of •II times. JONATHAN LIVINGSTON SEAGULL is thrill· Ing, exciting,· incredibly beautiful,· incl lnspir•· . tlo"!I, Ji.ut •1!o¥• ~!I IJJuirnt motion P.lctu,.. ei:ttertaiftmen,. Enjoy ,ftl ~ "Immensely entertaining," Al1n R. Howard, ·rhe Hollywood Reporter "Incredib ly beautiful", Box Office Magazine YUL 61tYMNER RICHARD 6ENJAMIN Plus-CHARI. TON 1£STON • LEIGH TAYLOR-YOUNG SOVLENT.GREEN • . ... l PLU~ EDWARD COJC ffll~lr.f TJIEDAYOF TBEtL\CKAL ··- I· • 1 • ' ' B 12 OAJLY "LOT Sunday, Nowmber 4, 1973 9 OZ. SIZE Wizard AIR FRESHENER Assert•-Sc11ts! 49~ .. SQUI•• Theragran-M 4.95 JUMBO 3X Color Prints b~ ·'.~ 3X-le1ri1fs I fro• 111 & ur1er C1l1r Negatites ~t4c All Colar Reprints from Color Negatives are on our new super borderless silk prints. 3X -Repri nts frDm Cal1r Sli-es 33c SIZES 4·6X 4.29 LADIES' Tops ' ~f :~. 'JacKets '100% Aorylic in novelty long or short sleeve Styles. Cozily lined quilted nylon wilh zip fronts. Sott. cuddly alta<hed hoods. Jaunty styles lor )Joys & irresistible detailing for girls. SIZES 12·21 MONTHS SIZES 2-4 SIZES 4-7 4.88 5.48 6 .88 ~~;W/,j 13 OZ. SIZE Pastels or smart bold colors. Sizes S-M-l. 3.97e .. ~ 6 OZ. SIZE ARRID ANTl-PERSPIRANT l111far 1r li1•t Powior 88~. r " , 12.oz. BONUS SIZE TAME CREME Rlt.ISE Rtf•lar, Wit• hiJ, Wit• -,..llMH II S!rlJ•OI f1r••l11. ~ 77~ . . - 22 OZ. GIANT SIZE DOVE LIQUID for DISHES 17 OZ. SIZE Softique BATH Oil BEADS 69~ GRlAT Place lo Shop!- LOTION SHAMPOO Anti-dandruff fomlula . leaves hair easy to manage. a oz. !WIN SIZE ODUBLE SIZE DOUBLE SIZE w/DUJL CONTIDLS 1.2.4913.49 23.9 • -• ' " For imples, m:ne an~ oily · skin !. JAR OF 75 99c The i r cosmetic , • way to • ' removt hair. Smooth on .•. Canadian Reserve · BLENDED II Pruf SAYE 1.07 "'~!.~~!GIL. 8 o 88 MacKinnon's BLENDED 11 Pr11f SAYE 1.41 SCOTCH 8 43· Rec. 9.81 10 GAL· • Count Vasya· EXTRA DRYID Prut SAYE 13c V~,~~1' Gil. 6.66 ' Foster Creek I YEAR OLD KENTUCKY STRAIGHT H Proof SAVE JOc BO~.~=?.c~ 7 .89 Roman Brio . PALS' 2.79 SQUIBB BROXODENT AU'IOlilATIC ACTlotl HUSK for TEEllhtUUMS - - Ouick, gentle up and down 13 49 action-gets teeth really clean and leaves yourmouth tingli ng! - STANDARD MOD!L • ' . ' • Coricidin KOOAK Ektasound_llll MOVIE OUTFIT PRESENTINQ •1111 Talkies!" The sound is rec11rded right in the camera. One button captures ~~~;ne 144 95 ~ounds. . 1 KODAK Ektasound 235 MOVIE PROJECTOR Sight and-sound playbacl< for Super 8 movies. Two-way pro- jecton .. · 144 95 lrom front or baC~ • KODAK Pocket INSTAMATIC 11 DUIFIT New,• small and inexpensive! ~n~P-\'or ·:~~ 17 88 color pictures. • · Tape Recorder ly PAllASOlllC "Do A*l"*I" ••• &ilt·in condenser mike. 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W'dJiL 53c Am Plac~ To Sllopr° NlWl"OllT l !"ACM-1020 lrv\llt, Wntc.Htf l'i.i1 HUNTINOTOH llACH-AdMl'll & lfldlhllrtl -)IUH\INOTON 1•.lCM-&prlngMlt I E"flntlf , . f Oll0-2M Jtockflftll RoM ) , -. - " t Contains Neo·Synepf1rine. ltr. 89~ , ·-· - . . .. l • • ' I ' I • - Sunday, Nowmbtr 4, 1973 DAILY PILOT 'C J Falcons Collide 'f oday1 I ATLANTA (AP) -John Had! and Bob Lee, a pair ol quanerblcks who have performed amaziagly in luming their clulis Into ln!tant Winners; match talents today When the Los Angeles Rams clash with \be Atlanta Falcons in a mJCla.l Western Diviaion National Football Conlerence encounter. Hadl, JI"' bal!)lng 33-year-<>ld k!Jown as the "Mad ,BOinbe.r" before arriving In Los ' Angeles thJs season after 11 years with the San Diego Chargers, has trans(onned the Rams into a 6-1 po .. rhouse. A Year ago Los Angeles finished \rilh a 6-7-1 record. Bruin·s Lee, 27, plafed out l.Is option at Minnesota alter warming the bench for four yearl, took over the_ faltering FalCOJW ollense three games ago and has been impressive In glliding Atlanta OH TV Tod•!I · C,._11nel 2 ac JO tQ three consecutive victories and the rwme'rup . spot behind Lbs Angeles at 4-3: Had! "'"1 Lee also .fank. 1-2 in NFL passing statistics With the 8-foot·l, 2lf.. pound Hadl. passing ~t a 61.9 percent Breeze, clip on 70 ol Ill completions for 1.044 yards and 13 touchdowns. Lee Is right behind, hitting at a 11.5 percent average on 48 ol ~ strikes for 750 yards aud five TDs. t "I think 'we can beat ·them ," 11y1 ~. who has a 10.2 career mark as a starter, achieving a 7-Z record Y.•ith the Vikings and a perfect 3-0 mark as a Falcon. "But our backs are· still to the wall unless we can beat Los Angeles," he added. · A victory would pla.ce the Falcons on~ game behind the Rams with six 62-13 • Troy -Explodes; 50-.14 . . ·' r • Davis Scores Jam•• to play. A loss would just about end AUanla 's playoff hopes. "Ia. ls doing a great job !or them," acknowledged Rams coach Clluc' Knox. "l'bis will be a different galrie than the one we played the first tllne," be added, referring to the Hams' 31-0 blitz or the Falcons in U>S' Angeles earlier this year. • • "Los Angeles beat us in every phase or the game," said Norm Van Brooklin, head man 'of the Falcons. adding that this one should be diHerent, "This will be 1 Pier 6 bra~l. for men only." Had!' would only oay Abat "Atlanta ' . is the .teilm we're getting read/ !or. We'll' only thinking a game at a time, but I will say we !have an excellent football team and I think we 'U do all right." History will be on the side ol the Rams. )l'ho hold an ll·t-2 margin on the FaJcons. However, Atlanta's only victory in the series crune last year in Atlanta when the Falcons won 31-3 on the running of Dave Hampton and Art Matone . • The tv.'O backs power Atlanta's running game with Hampton No. 3 in the con- ference In ruJblng. Malone h a• chipped Jn with 330 yarda. HoweVtt both are nursing injuries, HamptOn bruised. calf, and Malone a stretched ' knee. Both are expected to see acUoo · with Eddie Ray backing up the pair. Hadl will have favorite target Harold Jackson at one wide receiver spot along, wit h a ruMing auack spca11headed by Jim Bertelsen and L.irry Smlth with La"tence McCutcheon doubtful. Jackson bas grabbed oil 20 pas.es for 509 yards and nine touchdowns whi.1# ll<rtelsen has rumbled !or 495 yards.. _ Sciarra Leads UCLA Past Lowly Huskies 5 "Touchdowns-- In USC Romp LOS ANGELES !AP ) -UCLA's Johii Sciarra and Kermit Johnson , each break- ing away on li>ng touchdown n1n1, ~ blned for 271 yards "'"1 the lOth·i:alted Bruins crushed Washington 's Hus~.62- 13 Saturday in a Pacific-8 conference football game. BERKELEY (AP) -Southern California's Anthony Davis, his running talents stymied most or the college foot· ball season. exploded t h r o u g h Califomi2's defense on five touchdown nms Sat~y in a 50-14 Pacific 8 victory over the Bears. The Bruins, nmnlng for mucb ol their yardage out of their Wi&hbone-T forma- tion directed by quarterbacks SciaITa and Mark Hannon, posted"their seventh SPORTS Four of·the:touchdowns were on plays atralgbt: vle,tory after a. sea~ openiDg from scrimmage, tfie fifth when be took defeat to Nebn!:k:a. .,, . a free kick following :i safety and ~ They exploded lllr more than' 5o points !Ml yar<ts as the game ended. for the" fifth time thls season ind re-But the ninth-ranked Trojans' R o d mained tied with Southern California c· ' R McNeill outnlshed Davis, 164 yards to at 4-0 for the Pa<>I lead. The Huskies, mcy S ose, t06, as they alternated at the tailback 34-point underdogs. fell to 1·7 over all position. Third-string tailback Allen Ca.r- and lhl in the Pac.I. H J Ge ter played mo<I of the fmal period and arre · t ran seven yards for a touchdown. Sciarra galned 130 yards on only five son carries, including a 43-yard keeper for SOuthem Cal. whose 23-game unbeaten 8 touchdown . which gave the Bruins streak WilS broken last week by Notre a 21-6 ·lead in the second quarter. $250 F• Darn<;:, remained tied with UCLA for and third ~ mes the Pao-8 lead . The Trojans are 4--0 Hannon, wtio played the first in the conlerence, S.1-1 for all games. quarters, directed four touchdown drives. Sciarra, a sophomore who spent three Davis, who scored six touchdowns da. · 1....n 'tal I · the k CINCINNATI (AP) -Cincinnati Reds against Notre Dame . ]ast year as a ys m .. a """Pl eary m ·wee ou~r .Pete. Rose and NeW York sophomore, had just five for the sea!OO ~~~ :: !1~ ..ba~~'s ra~r ,5~ ~tels Sbohstop Bud.Harrelson said 'Satur-'"-before Saturday. -He dashed six and touchdown, a one-yard bW'it that made day. thel(.\Jt~, ~'fl~~ 11):_the ·1 ./I yards for first ball sCor.s, then went it U:ll. · '""-:-' Nahonal-~™fbe far fl~~~~ .. ~?,"Dg the· ··into the end JOne from 20 yards and P,layoffs with the New York Met!. · ~ yard out as Soulhem Cal scored Jollnson, who bad 141 yanls on 11 1 · · hi h II carries, went 57 yarC!s for the Bruins' "How do you like that?" said Rose. w1ce wit n .a a· .minute early in "I get fined $250 and I didn't even the fourth quarter. first touchdown of the second half. then throw a punCh." Quarterback Pat Haden threw a 16- rested while UCLA reserves continued The incident occurred Oct. 8 at Shea yard touchdown pass to J. K. McKay, the rout. for Stadium in the third game of the giVin.g the Trojans .a at~ lead at Frestvnan-Wendell Tyler ran playoffs. Rose .tangled with Harrelson ~alftime. ~uek Mu.nc1e ran four yards . three rourth.quarter touchdowns. after a play at second base. m the third per 1 o d for Cal's first H~ marched the"Bruins II ya~ Both benches emptied onto the field, ~ouchdown , 81!<1 one yard for another ror their fint touchdown, a 36-yard run and the Mets fans reacted by throwing in the last penod. by Russell Charles, and then made it debris into the outfield. The game was Cal quarterback Steve Bartkowski was 14~ by throwing ·a 51-yard scoring pass halted ror several 11\inutes when the tackled in the end zone With two seconds _to ,Anaheim's Norm. Anderson. fans directed-garbage-at-Rose-Ur lefr--l~t;-in~the-g~to--set-up---tbe free 'Jbe Bruins romped for 566 ya~ field. Order was resiored after pleas kic~ a place kick by Greg Mwm, which rushing and ad4ed 105 yards pessmg by Mets manager Yogi BerTa and several DaVlS. returned all the way. for a total offense of 671 yards against-ptayers. Southern Cal totaled 542 yards on the Huskies, who lost their ~tarting In his Mlire at East Northport, N.Y., o.ff~ Saturday, despite Io_sing the . ball quarterback on an 87-yard drive for Harrelson ,cOIUirmed that be had receiv-five tirne:5 on fumbles and mtercept1ons. their first touchdown. ed a slnu1ar letter from Feeney', cpn-The TroJans also w~e penalized 112 Dennis Fitzpatrick suffered cracked gratulating him on his seasm and then ya rds. ribs on an 11-yard run and was replaced informing ~~ of ~ $2SO firle for 'his pe~~~tie~~~~t g:}, ;~i~I~ t~ by Chris Row~. _ part in the incident with Rose1 first two toochdown drives wtJ' h t Rowland, who completed 16 of 3S "When I read it, I laughed," said 70 and · 82 Y.ards ,and took a~t cle~t passes but had five intercepted., capped Harrelson. "It started out as con-minutes each. On the second drive L the drive with &-fourth-down, five-yard gratulations, then .I find out I'm fined. Trojans were forced to '.punt once_. but touchdown toss to Ken Conley. But the man (F6ene)') has a job to Rowland also threw a 2 3 ·yard do." (See TrojBllO Page C4) touchdown pass to WaUer Oldes that Hmelson said · be did nnt II.now il cut the Bruin lead to.21-13 in the seeood any other Met playen were fined . quarter. "W\lal,' I don't gel" said Hooe "is UCLA, surwased the, 60 point m~rk the timing, why he _:_ National ~gue for the third thne th~s season,• to raise president Chub Feeney -waited so Its average to 50 points a game. The long Bruins entered the game ranked second .. ·, to Alabama in the nation in rushing lt s Ute last summer, he fined me "ith" an average of 398 yards per game $100 for throwin; balls into the stands. to Alabama's 398.3 yards., He didn't ~ne me Wltil ihe.fou~b time ." , Fullback OiarUe Schuhmann, playing Rose '!"d he was also cunous about In place of injured James McAlister the wordmg of the letter. for \be third straight -k, gained 17 "He0 wognt~ted me on having a )'ards on 17 carries, and Charles bad good Y~~ he a\'bnires my C9Uf&ge for !Ml yards in aeven carries. conttnU!iii to play in Iha~ game - then be •YB,. .unfortunately we have to fine yoU .$2!0 lot' your pact in the fight. : 11 don't know who 'we' is." Rose said he had also heard Cincinnati pitcher Pedro Boibon was flhed $150 • and that· Harrelson was fined $250. "I think they shoold have lined the · Mets management for-nOt controlling the crowd," Rose aatd. 11Il's a ll,ltte tilixed up; I'd say." · . Hooe added he believed Mets players Jon Matlack and 'Wayne Garrett should be lined too. • . Top Coll~giate Football Scores WEST Stanford 24, Oregon State Z3 Washington, State 21, Oregon 14 (See West' Highlights, Page C 2) '' MIDWEST Ohio Stii.te 311, 'Illinois 0 Michigan 49, Indiana 13 , Notre Dame 44, Navy 7 Oklahoma 34, Iowa State 17 Nebraska 28, Colorado 16 . (See Midwest HighHghts, Page C 3) ' SOUTH Alabama 35, Mississippi State' O Kentucky 34, Tulane 7 · LSU ~t', Mississippi 11 • Georgta ,35, Tennessee 31 (See South Highlights, Page C 3) ROCKIES Utah 35, Arizona State 31 See Rockies Highiighls, Page C 2) . .. UPIT .......... USC'S ANTHONY DAVIS SCORES ONE OF HIS FIVE TOUCHDOWNS AGAINST CAL., • Laver in Hong ·KongFi;na~s.'.;.·_ -. ,. Smith Seeks Fr~nch C:row~· HONG KONG (AP) -GiantkiUer Charles Pasarell of Puerto Rleo scored his third consecutive upset victory Satur- day, beating sixth-seeded Fred StOJle . of Australia, 6-0, 6-7, 6-4 to : advance into the final round-of..--a-$25,000-in~ temational tennis tournament against to~ S(eded Rod Laver or Corona detMar. Laver, the 37-year-old. left-hander, trounced Anand Amritraj of India, 6-3, 6-J in Saturday's other semifinal. In the doubles semifinals, the top-seed· ed team of Laver and Colin Dibley of Austr"'1ia rallied for a 4-6, 6-2, 6-2 victory over Pasarell and ~ e 1 j k o Franulovic of Yugoslavia, and Brian Gott- fried and Paul Gerken topped Stolle and Mal Anderson of Australia 6-2, 7-6. • The singles and doubles finals will he played today . The ~year-0Jd Pparell, who had surprised second-seed'ed Vljay Amritraj of India and seventh-seeded · Raul Ramirez of Mexico in straight sets in earlier rounds, used a powerful service and overhead smashes to undo the favored Stolle. It look him only 16 minutes to win the first set. The veter8.n Aussie was so frustrated at one stage that he shouted at the crowd: "Anybody out there want to take my place?" . In the second set,· Pasarell took a 4-t lead, but Stolle rallied and won the set with a tiebreaker. Pasarell then took charge again in the third set, playing deep into hi$ opponent's court, then rushing to the net and scoring with overhand smashes. The match between .Laver and Amritraj was one-sided, with the Aussie in control throughout. PARIS -Defending , cbampion Stan Smith and controversial Ilie Nastase of Romania, the No. 1 seed, hammered out straight set victories Saturday in the semifinals of the French Indoor Nastase, who had been expelled ~l>Y Open tennis tournament. the Association of Tennis Prof~iOfia!I The tall, powerful Smith, seeded third, when be relused to pay a $5,000 fine nvcrwhelemed young Karl Metler ol West imposed by the ATP for defying ils Germany ilJ:(). & I, wbih>. the_tent_ _ban and pl@~l!!g ID. W~oo last~11:· '---' pestuous Nastase earned the right to mer, haO a change of heart and iiii1 face the American in today's fl118l with he would pay t.herfine. • _"' a 7-6, 6-2, 7-5 victory over fourth-seeded The ATP then reinstated him but did Tom Okker of The Netherlands. , that both be and Roger Taylor, wfu Smith, heavily favored against Meiler, had defied the ban and also been fme.i, won , the first 13 games against the would not be allowed to play ip AT;· ·west Gennim with }lis blistering serve sponsored tournaments in Las Vegas and brilliant voUeys. and Xucson. .,~ Only in the third set did Smith slow On the court Na stase overcame okke} 1 the pace, losing his service in the eighth with a strong service and accurate -:- game for the only time in the match. placements. -. Officials Can ·Turn Down •• TV Commercial Request Something you may ,Mt have known about calling of timeouts on the field for presentation of commercials during televised -football games : the TV people on the 1idellnes can ask the referee ·to take a timeout. but if he feels such action would take away a team's momentum, he can wave off the request until a more opportune moment. • Veter~ college official O ave Kamanski tells this column that having to keep aware of the person on the WHITE "!fl ASH in Germany. That can hardly be coo- sidered a reasonable hour to begin -~ gold medal basketba.11 contest. But it was done to accommodate U.S. television and its vast audience. ~: * * * 'lbose watching Channel 4's praen. tatfon of a hJgb school football game Saturday ' may bave nOUced a y o a D'I girl gymnast lo tbe program '• ~ sporta flicks. ....~ Tbe girl Is Kyle Gayner -E1taq¢1f lUgh student. The Costa Mesa girl W84 recently Invited to compete In Japo with a U.S. team , Ulen the lnvita~ was rescinded bee1ae of petty politics within national gymnastics functloaarff'I. ~~~·~shaw Be.i_n~ ~~If Lead With_ 66 sidelines trying to call a commercial tinieout 1s disconcerting to th e referee. It seems the women's committee got bent oot of sbape because u . offlelll In Arizona · tnvlttd Ky'le without gotnr through the commJttee. The latiu retaUated and put another girl ~ KY.le's plate. • That might .. ,kfy • few rces, b9t it doe.sn't sbow much class. WUb thlit kind of cheap allot, bow, can a.d •It 1 erpeet respect from the younger ftilkl't . -\' . ' . SAN ~NIO. "!'ex. (AP) -Rookie • <;maw, who ~ · bit a!)pmi!d Ben crensbaw bn>ke a four.way Ue player's card as • Aill-nedged member for the !Op spot wltb a fiveWer-par o1 the pro ll>tlr i.i: -k, held a onc- 111 Saturday and ogaln • a8111lmed' sole slnllu! lead• ..... Qecqe Archer, a control ol the lead tbrough lhree rounds litrmer Maaten ~ wlio bas been of, the lt25,ooll San AnlOnlO-Texas open in'a lengthy slllllll!-' 11<>lf tournameat. • . Archer mang91 • 1'I Jor 204 In the The 2t-year-<>ld Crenshaw held the lead cool, cloudy wi1ther. • alone after the first round , dropped Orvtlle MOOdy, -· In two back Into a tie after 16 holeo "'"1 tournlnleota tbla 1W' blit a llOn-wlnner ~tabliabed his flrtt place posltipn sloce·hla 11111 U.S . O!>at lflmriPh, aUJll>ed liter 54 holes with a 203 toJrl. llkmder· Jnto thin! plact with a .17-l!OG, eight· on \be l,JlllO.yard WoOdlue Golf iillder.per an4 two abota b e b I n d ~~-. . count. ....-.-w. .... • with big Ml!>.;. Jack Nick1all.!, Arnold Palmer and Lee Trevino among the mlss- iqg, -the handsOme, young Crenshaw coo· uOucd to be the gallery ravorite. The three-time wiM'1f of the national collegiate championship while a student ot the University of Texaa P..obably is the most highly·touted rookie since Nlcklaus turned prol~1slonal. He drew most of the gallery·ol l4.500 and treated them Jo the best . round of the day. Ills fiv~r-par effort lnclu~ only ti putts on \be undulating, --· .. 11R1s a diltracUon that bothers you someUmea," he admits. "I recall a time when I worked a Rose Bowl game and w~u lhlnklng as much about getting lhinp stopped 'for com1nercials as I was abo~t the game itself." I hive always felt it is criminal that television exercises such power that it can interrupt games for commercials. dictate wh111 events will begin, etc. You at home may not have realized It became of the great time differential, but !be 1972 Olympic Games baskctb.111 flnlla In Mualch bepo at u ,30 p.m. .. * * * Soccer in terest (igures to steadily e~ pa~ in America with more high schooli ta king up the sport w~ich enjo~s ln\.. mense popularity in m<>&t other coun· tr ies. And an upsurge (){ interest m,. the cltange C o a s t area is bein't experienced with youth teams aboundine' in ~fission Viejo, San C I e m e n t e. Capist rano Valley. Laguna Niguel. Huq- tington ~ach, i>"'ountaln Valley, Irvme..' Laguna Beach, Balboa !Jland, Newport, Costa Mesa, Corona del Mir Diii \VestmiD$,ter. • • ' ' ,_ .. r I C 2 DAILY PILOT S11.l'ld.\1, Nowmbtr 4, 1973 iSlanford Trips Beavers, 24-23 "roRVALLIS. o; .. (API -Stanlord. .hebind for l?v"ee quarter!, tunltd a 36- :Y,,rd field goal by Rod Garcia with ._ • 4:19 le!t ln!O a 21-23 vic!Ory ove< Oregon Stole In Pacific-a Conference football Saturday. Garcia1.s field gool. his second of the game, a.ssure<I the_Ca_1'!4~ls ol their third P>c-3 win In rour starts. The field goal moved Garcia v.ithin l\\'O ol. the NCAA career record or 37. Oregon State, now 1..3 in the COil· (erence, Jed until early In the linal period. Quarterback Mike Bocy!a's sec- ond touchdown pass of the game, a ·three-yarder to Erk: Tess, gave the Bills Get Big· Scare ' Cardinals their first lead, 2l·ZO with yard.er to wide receiver BiU · Siogler It: 51 ldt. wllb seven oeoonds lert In the first But Rick Kut ... • third field goal of ball. -Oregoo State quarterl>ack Alvin Ult'! gasne, y,iflh 8:07 remaining, gave Whl~ the Pac.a leader in passing, ran the Beavers a 23-11 edge. for 006 tGucbdoy,'D, a 10-yard rollout Stanlord then mardied-io tbe Oregon with $1 ....,nds left In the llrst ball. State 19, setting up Garcia's game-win· Oregan State, a youqg team twrt by ning threoi>ointer. l!l!tl!tkts In i!~Jlll! .. ven pmes, didn't Ron Inge-kepl Stanford In the game have a turriovCr' until early ln the final In the first hall, returning one kickoff period. 'lbe Beavers fumbled a punt 96 yards for & touchdown and .another and Stanford's Bruce B 1 a ck st on e 67 Yltrds Jo set up Jiatcia's first fie!d ____recovered at tJie OSU 36. goal. ' Bocyla later threw to Test in the Boryla fired a pair of toucfido\\'ll end zone for the Stanford quarterback's passes for Stanford includiJ1g a seven-12th scoring toss of the year. ' Oregon Slate,.' now 1-7, controlled the ball for the first ball. Stanford dominated tJie final two periods wlndlng up on top In wtal offense, 343 yards to 324. "T feel lenible," .aid Oregon Slate coach Dee Andros. "l never saw a team that wanted to win nlore," M said of the Beavers . .., '"11le game reminds me d the game tv.-o years ago with Stanford when we lost a big halftime lead and Slanford \\'00." He said White.. "had a real good day," passing for IU yards and running for 46. Ricardo's Boot Gives ~tees Tie . SAN JOSE -Ex-COllla Mesa High and Orange · eo..t College star Benny Ricardo kicked a 35-yard field goal with two secoods to play Saturday night to give San Diego State-~ 27·27 tie with San Jose State In a key Padllc Coast Atblelie-4J>ociatlon' gatne. 'Itle tiE! gives t))e, t\Ztecs a fine shot at the PCAA championship. They have a 1.0-t record. )\'ith tWo games remaining \\'hlle. San Jose State ftnlshed its con- ference slate at 2.0-2. • San Diegt> Sfate can clincfi the title by w~ its final two ·games . EDDIE ARCARO Arcaro's Trademark: Confidence h1 Plane BUFFALO -A United Airlines chartered plane carrying the Na- tional' Football League Buffalo Bills to. New Orleans made an tweheduted 'emergency landing Saturday i n Cleveland. Duck~ 'Upset, :By Cougai·s ht Snow Tilt PULLMAN , Wash. (UPI) - Quarterback Charlie Peck g u i d e d Washington State In a SO.yard touchdown drive through driving snow in the final minutes to beat Ore_gon, 21·14, Saturday and all but destroy the Ducks' slim Rose Bowl bopes. . The Spartans had a 26-3 lead at one lime · before San ·Diego rallied. The Aztecs drove 82 ya rds in the final two minutes to se( up the tyi~ field goal. Quarterback Jess Freitas u!ed sideline passes to stop the dock and move tbe ball lo tlt e 25-y~ line from .where Ricardo kicked the ne14..goa1 . San Diego State trilled 2'M7 with four minutes to play when Freitas con- nected with Darrel ')lfogel fOl' an 11-yard touchdown pass to narrow the gap to,,. 27-24. I Editor's note: Tlie modern era , ~ sports vista is providing enter· · tai·nme1ir, quality an.ct occasion· ally controversu ai~ a scale never before attained i11 the world of athLetics. Yet sports of days gone by also had great moments ', · ,Lmy Felser, Buffalo Evening News ·!!p<irls writer aboard the 727 jet, reported ~t the pilot said he could not raise a right-wing nap to its proper position ·15 minutes after the plane took off from Buffalo Airport. The plane was Over Lake Erie at the time. -Felser aiso quoted the pilot 8$ saying be had a pi-oblem with an imbalance of fuel. Before the landing, Felser said, the second officer had to 10\Ver the landing gear by handcranking. More than 60 players, coaches and others in the party were instructed to assume a brace position. .nu-ee emergency vehicles were on tile runway when tbe_ plaoo landed. The party cbanged I<> another craft and n.w en_ to New Or:leans, where _the ..Bills meet the New.Orleans Saints 1oday. e Kings Fall, 4.3 INGLEWOOD -Glen Sather, Bob Kelly and Lou is Angotti rifled across 1oals within a 2:15 span of the second '1Jeriod Saturday night to po.wer the St. 1.Clllis Blues to a 4-3 National Hockey ' League victory over the Los Angeles Kings. · ' 'The victory, foun.h· in the Blues' last Jve games, moved them into a tie •·.rith the Kings for third place in the mu. West. Both teams have 10 points. : 11le Kings traded power play goals ~n the first period with Bob Berry getting • :US sixth of the season at 12:49 and .Bob Sabourin his first of the year !or .~t. Louis at 15:35. ... Kapp Charged SAVANNAH, Ga. -Former Minnesota • 4 ~rytgs star quar~erback Joe Kaw w~s duu'ged Saturday with p u b I 1 c 'drunkenne~. assaulting a police officer, :iffray ~ theft of services, Savannah :>0tice reported. The charges resulted . rom an incident at a local bar Friday light. • VCLA on Tube NE\V YORK -the American Broad- ;asting Co.· announced Saturday night :hree college footbalL games to be .elevised regi_onally next we~kef.!d. Th~y ve C.Olorado-Kansas, UCLA·Oregon and \1.innesota· Purdue . The netv•ork said there is a chance >ne or two more games also may be ;hO\VTl. .e V11ser Injured PHOENIX -Gordon Johncock slipped >y teammate \\'ally Oallenbach 19 miles ·rom the finish and v.·on the wreck-mar- ·ed Arizona 150 miles championstiip auto :a~ Saturday. The final event of the season for :he po'\rerful Indianapolis cars was 1al1ed early by an accident that sent ,;peed record holder Bobby Unser to a·hospital. e Zimmer 0111 · SAN DIEGO -Some ba s e b a I I managers lose thei r jobs in a dramatic firing, and some quit. Not Don Zimmer. ·He simply heard rumors he was losing llis job, and didn't hear any San Diego Padres official denying them. So he announced he \\'O\Jld start looking for work ,· but no one objected. "Nobody said a W"Ord to me for the last JO days of the season," Zimmer said in a telephone interview from his St. Petersburg, Fla .. home. "I finally got my separation in the mail." e Nemeo111be Wins JAKARTA -Three-time \\.'imbledon champion John Ne1,1•combc \''OO the men's singles title in the Jakarta Open tennis tournament. outla sting feJIO\\' Australian Ross Case, 7-6. 7·6, 6-3 Satur- day in a 212-hour match. ' The victory \\·as Y•onh $5,000. The 29-yesr-old r\ey,·c<11nbe, ho\\'ever. had to settle !or seconn~place money ln the doubll"S, as he and countryman Allan S!One bowed I<> Mike Step ol Dallu and Ian F'letcher ol Australia ' ·7·5, 6-4 In the final. , ·• Title to Taylor -' JOHANNESBURG, South Africa .Arnold 'l'aylor of Soutlt Aftlca knocked eut Romero Anaya of l\fexico in the 14th round Saturday night and won the World Boxing Association's ban- 1 !Lam weight UJle:. The Cougars trailed by one point late In the game when defensive back Joe Daniets '!ell on an Oregon fumble at midfie'ld. Peck then took the Cougars to the end zone in 10 plays with running back Andrew JQ11es scrambling the last three yards for the score with 75 seconds \eft. The loss evened the Ducks Pac-8 .record at 2-2. The Cougars piclced up their first OOlference victory against three losses. The CougarS took a commanding 10-0 Jead at 1la.iftime. "But the-Oregon offense, dormant in the firsl half, came alive to score two qui.Ck touchdowns and take the lead for the first time in"the game, 14-10, early in the fourth quarter. WSU came right back with an SO-yard drive , ~nding in a 24='jard Joe Danelo field goal to put the Cougars within ooe point of the Ducks. The two teams exchanged the ball on downs ljntil Daniels recovered the fumble of Oregon quarterback Herb In the third quarter, Freitas passed to ex·Sanla Ana College standout Keith Denson for " yards and another touchdown. San -Jose Quarteti>ack _Craig Kimball, \Vho was named the game's outstanding offensive player, passed for all three San Jose touchdowns. He hit Dan Prager v.·ith two touchdown passes -a four- yarder in the first period and an 11- yarder with six minutes left in the third quarter. Kimball also lofted a s i x -y a rd touchdown pass to Robert Evans in the final period. Ron Ploger booted field goals of 36 and 31 yards to complete the Spartan's scoring. Titans D-lt Less Francisco Salcedo booted two field goals and UC Riverside got two touchdowns. one .on_the ground and ooe in the filr, as lhe. -HighlaJl(lers beat Cal Stat€ "(Fullerton), 20-10 in a CCAA contest Saturday night at Santa Ana BO\\'!. . Fullerton had a total offense of 505 compared y,•ith the Highlander's 376, but the dif£erence w:is UCR's 149 return yardage. HIGf!·FL YING BRUIN -UCLA's tight end Raymond Burks flies over the pack in an attempt to gain control of the ball after a Bruins fu mble in ac[ion Saturday against Washington. The Huskies rec;overed the_ ball, but UCLA bree,zed to a 62-13 victory. ... Singleton to set up the winning touchdown drive. WSU running back Ken Grandberry scrambled for the corner and into the_ end zone !or a twe>-point conversion to the delight of Cougars fans. The Cougars drove 74 yards in nine plays !he lir.;t time they got thoir bands on the ball to score the. game's first touchdo\\'ll with 9: 16 le ft in the fifst quarter. Peck, on a quarterback keeper . went one yard into the end Z(lle. Salcedo opened the game with a 44- yard field goal and · kicked another for 36 yards in the final quarter. Highlanders tailback Derrick Williams scored a touchdown on an ~yard nm in the first period and UCR tallied another in the second period on a 22-yard scoring pass by Bill Taylor to Frank Johnson. VCR is now 6-2 for the seasoo: end Fullerton's record is >3 . Paeltfe Eases, 54•2 STOCKTON -Junior tailback Willard Harrell rambled for 240 yards and two~ touchdO\\'JlS -....·hich led the Unjversity of Pacific's triple-op lioo clfense to a 54-2 victory over the cat State (Los Angeles) Diablos Saturday in a non-con- ference rootball game. Rockies Roundup Llght snow began falling in the middle of the third quarter and the snow was really coming down by the end of the. period. The Astroturf was covered wi th haµ an inch of snow by the end of the game. Utah Bags 36-31 Win Oregon·s first touchdown came on a 24-yard pass from Singleton to split end Greg Lindsey to ca p a five-play , 77-yard drive. Singleton hit Lindsey again at the start of the fourth period with an 8-yard TD pass. The Tigers, who led 31-0 after hi" periods , kt.>pt rolling in the se~ h~l! to total 563 yards for the game while limiting Cal State to only %12. Over Arizona State The Tigers. ~2-1 for the season. also held the Oiablos to minus 17 yards rushing !or a UO P defensive record. SALT LAKE CITY (APJ -Utah ca pitalized on seven f.irst-half turnovers to build a runa.\\·ay lead and fight off an 1\rirona State rally in the fourth quart.er to beat the eighth-ranked Sun Devils 36-31 Saturday in a \Vestem Athletic Conference football game. The loss ended the nation's longest winning streak among major colleges at 12. The game, played under wet, near- freezing conditions, ended a 12-game Ari1.00a-State winning streak. lt made ASU's record 7-1 over-all and 3-I in conference. Utah went to 5-3 ove r-all and 3-1 in conference . Ulah burst into its 30-JO halftime lead \Vhen three recovered ASU fumbles set up three Utah tOuchdowns in a two- minute period of the second quarter. Aggies Do1vn Cowboys LOGAN. Utah -Safety Bob Fuhriman intercepted a \\'yoming pass in the final quarter Saturday and ran « .yards !or a touchdown to put Utah State Uhiversity ahead and the Aggies went on to defeat the Cowboys 31-20 in a non-.conterence football game. Fuhriman's touchdown pushed Utah State to a 24-20 Jead with 10:59 left and rwming back Jerry Cox ran eight yards \\rith I: 42 remaining to clinch the victory for the Aggies. · TI1en, \\'Ith the clock ticking oU the final seconds and \Vyoming threatening on the Utah State 17-yardJJne. Fuhriman again intercepted a Steve Cockreham pass v.·ith eight seconds left to ice the USU victory. Air Foree Rolls AIR FORCE ACADEMY. Colo. -Air Force rover-back Steve Heil and ·end Paul DeHart returned interceptions for touchdowns as the Falcons whipped a turnover-plagued Army team 43-10 Saturday in an inter-service rivalry, The Falcons converted three Anny turnovers into scores in the third period with Heil's IS.yard return one ol the TDs. The 23-µoint third quarter by the Falcons broke a 10-10 halftime deadlock and enabled AF A to en d a three-game losing streak against its seniice academy rivals. Air Force is now 4-3 oo the season, while.Army fell to 0-7. DeHart's 32-yard runback capped the Air Forc,e scoring in the final period. BYV Routs Foe PROVO, Utah -JWlior qµarterback Gary Sbelde rompleled 3'l ol 50 passes · for 408 yards and six touchdowns, tying a Western AUtletic Conference mark, to lead Brigham Young University to a 56-21 football victory over New Mexico Saturday. Sheide 's six touchdown passes tied t!le conference mark set by Danny \Yhit.e of Arizona State against New MexiCo in 1971. Shcide threw three touchdown passes to fullback Wayne Bower and split end Jay MiUer. Washington State will take a 2-S record to Oregon State University next Saturday· and will complete the season with a home game against canromia the follow~ ing, week an d ·at the University of \Vashington, Nov. 24. Oregon, also 2-S for the campaign, hosts tbe powerful UCLA Bruins, co- Jeaders o1. the Pac-8 next Saturday followed by a trip to Stanford and the see.son finale at home with Oregon State Nov. 24. 'Today's Sports On Television 10 a.m. (2) -RAlllS FOOTBAIL -Tbe Los Angeles Rams meet the Falcons at Atlanta. It a.m. (4) -PRO FooTBALL -The Cleveland BrOwns meet the Minnesota Vikings· at Bloom'.- Cal State's only score came when Har· rell bobbled the second half kickoff and "·as tackled in lhe end zone for a safety. /tlustangs Roll, 58-0 HAYWARD (AP) -Fourt!t-ranlred Cal Poly of San IAlis Obispo rolled up 46i yards in total offense 'to beat Hayward State . 58-0 in a nooconference college football game Satuday. Hallback Riel: GYniak and fullback JGhn Henson eadl scored two totl!txlowns to lead Cal Poly to vtctbry. ·Quarteri>ack CliffiJohnson passed for 180 yards and ·one ouchdown to set up many of the Mustangs' scores and reserve quarterback Rich RobbiM P8$sed for two touchdowns in the f.ourth period. Hayward was beld to a minus-three yards rushing while Cal Poly -ran £or 211 yardS w j!O with 258 yards passihg. The victory was the Mustang 's aeventh straight white the .Pioneers' record is 3-5. - Trevmo, Colbert Tied " ingtoo. SYDNEY, Aualtalla . -Flamboyant I p.m, (2) -PRO FOOTBALL Lee Trevino, buoyed .by an ~· at -The San Francls<o 49ers meet the tltlrd hoje, fashioned a 'lour·imiler-par !be Lions at Detroit. 69 Saturday and tied feUOl'I' ·American 4 p.m. (5) --'.COLLEGE F00'1'-Jim . Colbert for the lead ,after three BALL -The Washington Huskies rounds of II $74,lioo InternaUohal golf meet the UCLA Bruins in a game tournament. floy,ed Saturday at Los Angeles. Each hnd a 54·bole wtal of· 2()9 over l! -bOLLEGE FOOTBALL 1'71 th• 6,850-yard,_par-73, rain-soaked.Likes -S<ffedulcd : Hni'vard -,-.-1--"~ course. Pennsylvania : Co I o r a d o vs. Colbet1, th~ leader at the end ol Nebraska . ·36 holes following two .eonstcutive 69s, carded a third·round 71. " Chargers Bid to Upset Kansas · City SAN DIEGO (AP), -Hank Stram's . Hoffense of it.be '70s:" has shifted Into low g .. r but the Kansu City coach isn't perturbed. ult doesn't make a difference if you take p. ·jet or ~ bus," he says. "Just so you get there." That doesn't mean Stram is pleased •ilh tbe Chiefs' puncbless a(taok that has knocked them out of \he lead in ~City at 3'1·1 trails Oakland ~offense bu ranged from adequate l game. to embarrassing, u In last woek'a 23-14 'Ille <llargcrs, l·S.I, have little to loss to Bullalo when !he Obiets gained hope !or except a repea t of last year's only IOI yards. 27-17 upset tbal knocked tlte Obieb 'out With veleran quarte<haclt Len Dawson of first place for good . sldefined by shoulder and heel Injuries, Four years ago Stram's club dattlcd ·tlte Clifels may have Ju.>! as much the Minnesota Vikings with a moving troub!!\ against tho <llargers, who pocket, multiple for1Mtions, shifts and tilasf@ Bullalo !l-7 earlier In tbe year trick plays and walked oil wlib a stun, and h<ld Cleveland to tM yards last Co. con put pressure on the san llle(o offense. . ~ Olargers l~d ltie ·~M In .turnovers with 21 and baV< blown themaelvea out ,ol. aeYeril-wf)t with "!' epidemic oi flm>t>l!t 11f1 IJ>. terceptlOOlf. • 1 ~ • Bolb weighed tbe class limit ol 118 pounds, but Anaya had to shed more than a . pound in less than an hour aner .tbe wclah-in wemonies. • the National Football League'• American Conlcrenco West. Going int<> tod!y's game with tho San Diego Chargers, ning 23-7 Super Bowl viotory. -k ln a tf-!i tic. But now Kansas City Is a team that But ·Karisas City nil .. a slight favorite lives on its old, tough defense while on the premise that Willie Lanier, ·Buck averaging a bare 12 points a gsme. Buchanan, Bobby Bell, Jim Lynch & Rookie quart_~t Doh ~; a surprl,. mid-~ent ror John Unilas, is having ~ ltiinl, bY experienoe tho I""" docttl119 or ~ ror-a loss when your recejven are covered. Coach Harland Svare la sticldng with tbe promising young Foull. ' - ~· ·: \ 1 and star. performers. Today OUT look back at those days focuses 01i Edd ie Arcaro. .:i Eddie Arcaro, ''.the Big IA'' of ~i the jockey ran ks for 30 years. ~ ' sat on a horse wUh such gracef\11 t arrogance that he seemed to be doing the animal a favor by riding ~ him. Eddie !lad tbe cold, haughty coo- fidence of a dancing master. A compact S feet 2, 114 pounds, like all great jockey11 he was strong in the \vrists and shouJders. The railbirds, especially at the New York tracks where be rode most ol his ,....,, calleot-b Im . . Going Back IN SPORTS ~ "Banana Nose." His nose. however, I,. t more closely resembled a \\·edge ~ ,"; of pie -thin ati the start and fat at the end. Eddie was, io the judgment of ~ most racing ,people, the greatest I rider in the history of American turf. His fabulous career ractd through three historical decades, from 1931 to 1961. ~ Arcaro was the kin~ of the Triple • Crown events -'lbe Kentucky , Derby, tbe .Preakness and tbe Bel- mont. He rode 17 winners in those races, a record nobody~ else has threatened. Arcaro \\1\S the onlv man to '· double in the Triple Crown. He \\'On it 'vilh calumet Farm's \Vhirlawa y in 1941 and won again with the same stable's CitaUon i.n 1948 . Tn all. Heady F;ldie rode five Derty winners, a record he shared with Bill Hartack: ,sir Belmont ~ vietors. a mark shared with Jimmy I l\lcl.aughltn, a 19th century rider, and six Preakness champions, a record unequaled 'by any other jockey. ,, Arcaro '\\'8S a magnificent mooeY J. ride r. Although he neVe.r led ttte national jockey list in number of wiMers for any one season, he ' topped it six times in money earned by his mounls . , Eddie rode 24,092 mount!, \\in-, tr nlng with 4,779. He was second •ith 3,807, third with 3,302 and Q\lt ol tho mooey with ollght!y more than hall his 11o,,..,, 12,204, mathematical evidence of what a di£ficult sport racing is. His mounts earned the immense sum of !30.009,$13. Eddi(!'s fint race was at Bain- bridge Park, near Cleveland, on May 18, 1!131. He was IS. llis fina le was at old Pjmlico In · Baltimore on November 16, 1961. , He \vas 45. Ar<:aro's great t'ides numbered l in the hundr~. Many times his I abil~y to stage a raging ftnlsh seemed lo be the dlllttenc:e between wlnnlng and losing. Arcaro himself doubted the value of the , jockey. Bui · there was sometl!lng special about a great ride by Arcaro. It was a work of art. Ills five Kentucky Derby vilnnen • were Lawrln. winner by ..,. length In 1938; Wblrlaway, who breezed by eight In 194t ; Hoop Jr., by six in 1945; Citation by three-and- • halt In 1913 and 11111 Gall, by two in 1952. Arcaro rarely resorted to the Whip, designed IO sting a sluggish horse into action. On one occasion, however, in tbe 1950s, M:aro did use iL But he finlslled ......i, and aa he weished out, dlooe in the -who bad bocked Ibo looing favori te beg~ to vent tbelr_feellnp. AJ Eddie, •91ride his moont In the next ra<e, come al>-t ol one particularly loud heckler, the post ICrelllled, "Banana Nose. you 're a bum. You never tried with tltol h<lrse, yOU phony." It was IOo much for the Irate Eddie ID take.-He leaned over, . qsl<Jlslbly ID fix hi& boot oo the left side, and as be passed the hecltlcr; ho said oollly, "My frletld, I wilh y00 had the strlpee oci' your rear end !left oo 1,llat hol'!t!." • • • • • ' . ,, ·[')Vols, Tige1~s, !' t . -~ Tulane Lose I • ' . In South • KNOXVllLE, TeM. (AP) -Andy Johnson ran• elghf yanls for the ~mo winning toucbdown In .. the final m11111te Saturday helping Georgia upset Ten- .._ 31>31 after , the Vols gambled on fourth down and gave the ball to the Bulldogs oo the Tennessee 16. , Eleventh-ranked Tennessee'• Vols bad ' a 31-28 lead in the sOutheaslem eon.. rerence tilt and app:arently were oh their way to a l\.ard~amed victory. But 1\•ith 2:32 remaining and fourth down and two on the Tennessee 28, coach Bill BatUe elected to try for the first down. 'Ille alert Bulldogs smothered fullback~ Steve <llanoey oo the Tennesstt 26 for a two-yard loss and quickly took ad- vantage of the gift to take the ball in for the winning margin. Georgia scored three times in the first hall with a relenlless ground altaek. But safety Eddie Brown ran back Don Golden's kick 85 yards for a third period touchdown to put Tennessee ahead 23-21. Auburn Defeated AUBURN, Ala. -Vince Kendrick rip- ped apart Auburn's highly rated defense Satunlay and led the fired-up Florida Gal.Ors to a 12-1 football upset over Auburn Saturday, their first victory ever on Auburn's home field. Kendrick had lots· of help from quartertack Don Ga!fney, starting his first game, and from a tough gang of delenden who played like Auburn's defense had hoped to perform. Kendrlck, a t>lool·2, 2271'0und fullback from Miami who was pinch bitting at tailback, ran five yards for ~e tooclldown and set µp Florida's first acore with a 40-yard-run. Gaffney, a sopOOmore, who was coach Doug Dickey's choi"' IA> -.tbe offense in .place ol injured ,David Bowden, put the Gators in front th the second pel'\od with a %2-yard touchdown · pass to Joel Parker on the first play after Kendrick's long!"""!. Tiolane De•lt Lo•• LEXINGTON. KY. -Sophomore Son· ny Collins passed the 1,000.yanl rushing mark as quarterback ?.like Faouzzi directed Kentucky IA> a 34-7 upoet Ii Hth-ranked Tulane in oollege football. Oollins ru!bed for 176 yanls and Fanuzzi gained 68 yanls rwbing and 44 pasoing. So devutating was the Wildcat. defense that Tulane did not cross mldlield until tile final 1 :47 or the thin! quarter. The Tulane touchdown came on a lipnllle ""'1TM'! at tile Kt11tucky It in lite last period w!ten Tulane moved for the score in six 2tays. ~Banta Crushe• Foe ' JACKSON, Miss. -Secl)nd-ranked Alabama got 11. 38-yard touchdown run from Randy Billingsley and a 29-yarder from Willie Shelby Saturday mght as the W1defeatcd Qimson Tide crushed Missl>Sippi Slate $-0 , in SOOtheastern Conference football. 'Ille 2&jloint underdog Bulldogs stayed with Alabama for a half. tntiltng only 13-f afler several of their offensive thrusts were choked off by Alabama's big-play defense. ' \ COLORADO'S DAVID LOGAN IS HAULED DOWN BY TWO NEBRASKA PLAYERS. . Sooners Ral.Iy for Victory; . . -~~hraska .T_ops. Buffs_, 28~16 NORMAN, Okla. (AP) -Quarterback Steve Davis tossed• two timely twchdown passes and halfback Joe Washington scooted 136 yards and scored touchdowns en runs oC one and 30 yards Saturday, helping thlrd·ranked Oklahoma beat back stubborn 1owa State 34-17 .in a Big Eight football game. Davis hlt split end Billy Brooks oo a 68-yard touchdown pass to give the Soooers a :».17 lead at 'intermi.ssioo. He later hurled a five-yard score to Wayne Hollman, giving Oklaltcma a 27·17 third-period advant~ge. Halfback Waymon Oark scored on a l'YO"Y•rd run ·in the <teCODd period after Iowa State went to a 17-7 lead on Tom Goedjen's 22-yard field goat. The Cyclones Stormed to a 14-7 first- quarter lead on tbe passing of Wayne Stanley. 'Ibe sophomc:re quarterback was seven for seven at one point and hit tight end Keith Krepne Oil toochdown tosses ,ol nine and 16 yards. Bum"' Sparks B111kers Nebraska scored all of its points in the first half for a 23-3 lead. Col'orado rallied for a pair of touchdowns after the intermission to close the gap. The Joss dropped Co!orado to 5-3-0 for the seaSOll, 2-2 in the Big Eight. No team in 44 years has won the con- ference crown with two· tosses. Nebraska kept its flickering title hopes alive on a 2·1·1 r'ecord in Big Eig"'ht. The Comhuskers are 6-1-t overall. A 73-yard touchdown pass from freshman tailback Billy Waddy to David Wiµiams highlighted Colorado's second- halt surge. Kansas, LA WREN CE, Freslunan Mike L<>ve kicked 47-yard field goal with IO!h: minutes emaining Saturday. lifting Kansas into a 1~10 tie with Oklahoma State , in a Big Eight college football game. · State bad a chance to tie with just 12 seconds left, but Abby Daigle falled oo a Z9-yard field goal attempt, forcing Oklahoma State to settle.for the tie. first half ended, capping the drive with a 22-yard touchdown pitch to Errunett Edwards \\'ith only 39 seconds showiQg. The visiting Cowboys made all ol their points in the second. petjod. Missour' Rolls ' COLUMBIA, ~fo. -Quarterback John Cherry ran for two . touchdowns and passed fqr another Saturday, leading the 12th-r;ated t.fissiouri Tigers to a 31-7 Big Eight football victory over the Kansas State Wildcats. Missouri started breaking open the game early in the third quarter when Cherry ran Over from three yards to make it 17-7. Missouri's Ken Downing had recovered a fumble by KSU·tailback' Isaac Jackson at tAe Kansas State live. . MU ta_ilback Tonuny Reamon made ~t 24-7 Wlth a 25-yard run on a "pitchout i~ the final period, and Cherry planged five yards for the Tigers' final score shortly after Missouri recovered another Jackson fumble at the Kansas State 25. • Missouri used up nine rniqutes in going to a 7-0 lead · on quarterback Steve Grog~'s one-yard plunge. Sunday, Novtmbtr 4, 1973 DAILY PILOT C :J Buckeyes Thump1 f Big Ten Foe, 30-0; Michigan Romps CH A M P A l G N , Ill. (AP) Quarterback Cornelius Greene smas hed to two of Ohio State's three touchdowns in the fourth quarter and lhe lop-ranked Buckeyes wore down error-prone Illinois for a 30-0 triumph saturday in a batt!e of unbeaten Big 1'en football contenders. The Buckeyes took a 3-0 lead midv.·11y in the first quarter on Blair Con't''ay's 25-y::ird field grol. but then '-''Cre checked by the fighting Illini until l~te in . t~e third quarter \\•hen Archie Gr1(f1n squirmed across frorr. the one, capping a 41-yard drive. Ohio State,· in stretching its perfect over-all record to 7-0 and its Big Ten mark to 5-0, h11d two Jong touchdown runs cancelled by penalties and the Buckeyes didn't wrap up the game until the fourth quarter explosion. The Illini, suffering their first con- ference Joss in five starts, were stubborn on defense but feeble and butter-fingered on the attack \\'ilh their best advance reaching Ohio Slate's 44 ju s \ beIOre halftime. l11dla11n Falls, 49-13 ANN ARBOR. ~lich. -'Chuck Heater and Ed Shuttlcs\vorth scored two touchdowns apiece Saturday as fourth- :r~an;;k;;ed~llliii'' c;yh~igma~nttirho;j.lle~d to a 49-13 Big ~ ry over 1ndiana. It was the 27th conse tivc home vic- tory for the undefeated \\'olverines, 8--0 this seasoo and 5-0 in conference play. Indiana is 0-5 in the Big Ten and 2-6 overaU. Heater, who rushed for 108 yards in the first .half, scored on a nine-yard sweep in the first quarter and sprinted quarterback Charlie Baggett, who suf· fercd a severely sprained knee in the first quarter. Baggett may be lost tor the final three games of the season. But 5-foot-8 Tyrone Willingham cooly took over and guided the Spartans to their last l\\"O scores. It Ytas the finest oC!ensivc performaoCc of lhe year for l\Iichigan State, as its cffensh·c line blasted holes in the \Vlsconsin defense for Bro .... 11. tailback !\like Holt ar\d fullback Clarence Bullock. i\1ortl11cesier11, 52-43 EVANSTON, Ill. -John Lav.•ing pass- ed for three touchdowns and ran for another lo offset a br illiant passing perfo1mance by Northwestem's Mitch Anderson and lead the Gophers to a 52-43 Cootball victory Saturday. The 13 .touchclO\vns scored by both clubs tied a Big Ten record and Anderson's fi\•e touchdo\111 passes set a Northv.·estern mark. ?\Iinnesota, 4-4 and 3-2 in conference play, had forged a 21 -14 halftime lead after scoring three touchdo't'm as the result of Northwestern fumbles deep in Wildcats _territory. Despite the fumbles and the explosive Gophers otfense, the Wildcats remained in contention~on the ann of quarterback Anderson who fired touchdown passes of 18, 19, 21 , 13 and 20 yards. Nittany Lions , 71 yards for · a touchdown in the second perjod = Mictt!nn's.JQngest .. run from.:.·-R ~lly....:.to· .. _ ·T·op··· .... scrunmage this season. . _ HJt. , P11rdue Wh1s, 48·23 . IOWA CITY, Iowa -Fre'shm an . tailback Mike l'fortttlngton raced for five touchdowns Saturday and Purdue rocked winless Iowa for 461 yards rushing in romping to a 48-23 Big Ten Cmferencc football victory. Purdue, 4-4, scored on four of its first five possessions. After an early 7-7 tie, Iowa, o-a: never displayed a cocsistent offense until the final quarter. Northington, a s-root-10, 165-pounder from Louisville, Ky,, scored oo runs of nine,• one, 38, one and one yards -the last coming with 39 seconds to play. His touchdown output broke a Nlle Kinnick Stadium record and equal· . cd the all-time Big Ten record set ~Y Ron Johnsori of Michigan· in 1968. 1'1SV Blanks Badgers ~ EAST LANSING, Mich. -Miclligan State tailback David Brown plunged for· ·two touchdowns and caught a pass for a third Saturday and the Spart.ans defense 'throttled Wiscoosin's attack in beating the Badgers, 21-0. The victory was tempered, however, by an injurf ' to ~tichigan State Terps, 42-22 COLLEGE PARK, Md. (AP ) -Tom Shuman passed for three touchdowns .and ~ohn Cappeletti ran for 202 yards as unbeeten-slxt.b-ranked Penn State thumped Maryland 42-22 Satunlay for its eighth consecutive victory. Held to a 22-22 b31!time score by Maryland's 13-point underdogs, the Nit- tany Lions scored twice in the first lour minutes ol the third ~ follow· ing a pass interception and a fumble recovery to break the game open. - Shuman co~ed with Jimmy Sooti on a 29-}'ard scoring aerial to put P~ State ahead 29-22, then tossed his •econd TD pass to Dan Natale . A 98-yard return by Gary Ha,m&n \Vitti the opening kickoff and a three-yard TD run by ,Bob Nagle after Maryland fumbled the next. ldckoff gave Penn State a 12..0 Jead arter just 1:24. Harvnrd Nips Pet1n The kick was not blocked but the ball was buried among the onrushing Kansas linemen after it skimmed along the ground five or six yards in front of Daigle. ·Southwest Roundup' PHILADELPHIA -Fonner Villa Park High star· Pat Mclnally grabbed a 30.. yan1 touchdown pass with 1 : 16 IA> pllly Saturday to give Harvard a 34-30 victory over Perm in a key Ivy League football game. LSV Bree:es, 51·14 JACKSON. MISS. -Explooive running by Brad Davis and Steve Rogers sparked seventh-ranked Louisiana State to a nil· tionally lelevbe\1 51·14 1-11 triumph over MJssisslppi Saturday, enWng a 39- year daylight vlclA>ry drought in this series. LINCOLN, Neb. -Lefthanded quarterback Dave Humm passed for t"'o toudldowns and sophomore Tooy Davis nn for two more Saturday as Nebraska's 13th-ranked, Cornhuskers virtually eliminated Colon!do from the Big Eight football title chase with a ZS.16 win before a crowd of 76,555, the second largest in Memorial Stadiwn history. Dave Jaynes, the Jayhawks' sensa- tional passer, took Kansa s on a 73-yard march on seven plays just before the Leaks Gains 342 Yards Mcinally caught a Jim Stoeckel ~ to cap a 63-yanl Harvanl ~ve wfilch followed a Penn score with 3:31 to p~y. . It was the eighth straight victory for the unbeaten Bayou Bengals this season and their first daytime conquest of Ole Miss since a 14-10 triumph in Jackson in 1934. The Tigers. hoping to Impress scouts from the Cotton, Orange and sugar Bc.wls, averaged 16 yards a play in a trio of long first-hall scoring drives that . buiU a 21·7 lead and extended it to M-7 wi1h two more touchdowns iq, the thin! quarter. Tech Trip• Duke A'n.ANTA -SOphomore Riek IDll exploded for a J3.yanl touebdown Ml midway In the thin! quarter Saturday, giving G<orgla Tech a 12-10 college fODtball victory over D.lke as a last seoond Blue Devil field goel attempt mi!sed. Duke's last ditch effort went for naught when the mue Devils swept « yanls in the final minute!. to T~'.$ 17 yard line. \Y.ith nine 90000ds remaining; David Malachek's attempted game winning field goal went wide IA> the right, giving the Yellow Jackets the victory. UNBEATEN IRISl:l BELT NAVY, 44-7 SOUTH BEND. Ind. (AP) -Notre Dome quarteitack Tom Clements-set • up lour touchdowns Saturday and the • firth-ranked Irish muttled Nayy 4+7 in the 47\h renowal of the natloO's loqest oonUnual lntersectlonal colleco football rivalry. • The Irish raised their season reeord to 7-0 white handing pi1stake-pron• Novy Its lifth lo.S In eight tries. · Clements, a 6-lool junior, ran the op. lion play effectively be/ore leaving the pme midway in the thin! period. lie wound up with fl yanls In eight rush<a and completed four ol eight paaes for as yanls before giving way IO aenlor Clill Brown. \.!PIT ...... ~-· LSU'S MIKE MILEY DRIVES FOR Sl:f()RT GAl!f AGAINST OL~ MISS. j In Leading Texas, 42-14 . DALLAS (AP) -Texas fullback Roosevelt Leak s set a Southwest Con- fereoce rushing record Saturday, gaining 342 yards. the last 53 on a touchdown with 37 seconds left to play that capped a 42·14 romp over Southern Methodist University. Leaks rushed 31 times for his record, sroring three touebdOwns. 'His lotat was just eigbt yards shy ol the NCAA record owned by Eric Allen of ),fichlgan State, who gained 350 yards in one game in 1971. . The 19tb-ranked Longhorns trailed 14--0 in the natiooally televised game when safety Terry Mella.neon returned an in- tercepted pass 56 yards to set up Joey Aboussie's IO-yard touchdo"11 run. Jim Moore chilled the SMU homecom- ing crowd or 35.096 with a dazzling PWlt _J:el_utn_ for a touchdown to tic the game 14-14, Leab, who lost three fumbles early in the game, put Texas ahead to stay after Bill Rutherford pounced on Alvin 1'1axson's fumble at the Mustang 21. Tel1l5 scored three quick touchdowns in an eta~ time of 3: 18, putting the game away in the .fourth quarter on Marty Akins' one-yard sneak ror a touchdown and Leaks' second TD plunge. • .Hog• Edge A&ltl. FAYE'l"l'EVILLE, Ark. -Sophomore quarterback Mike Klrkf4nd and senior toilback Oicke'y Morton turned in big gainers to keep alive an 83-yard scoring drive that give Arkansas a 14-tO Southwest Conference victory over Texas A&M Satunlay. ' Arknnsas broke a 7-7 haUtime tie by moving 83 yanls following the second· hot! klckolf. Kirkland, with the aid o1 a block by wingback Freddie Douglas, scrambled 2S yard& to a first down on tbird-and·l6 from the' Arkansas 23. 1'hen, .. secood·and·20 !tom the 50, . ' ~1orton broke loose for 18 yards on a sprint draw. Arkan&as, then faced with a third-and- two, v.·ent into a \Vi.shbone fonnation . The Aggies put all l l deCenders within t't''O yards of the line .. of scrimmage and Kirkland lobbed a pass to l\.fatt t.fOrrison for 17 yards. Kirkland scored five plays later from ' the one. Raiders Top Rice LUBBOCK, Tex. -1'exas Tech struck for a quick touchdown Saturday and trudgea m to a 19-6 Southwest Con- fe~ verdict over the hapless ruce Owls. Tho 15th-ranked Red Raiders, securing ,their seventh trium)Xl against a Jone loss to Texas, dealt the Owls their sixth setback in seven outings and retrained an outside shot at the SWC crown. James Mosley slashed 12 yards for .the first Tech touchdo"''ll and John Garner bolted tv.10 steps for the clincher in the thin! periOd. TCV Wins, 34·28 WAro, Tex. -Tailb.1ck f\likc LuttreU. playing on a bad right leg, ran t~ yard.a on 31 carries Saturday. IX>"''ering Texas Ouistian to a 34-28 South\vest Conference football victory over Baylor. ' rev built a 27-7 lead with its best rrou.nd attack of the year behind the running ol Luttrell, lullback Tim Pulliam and quarterback Kent l\.farshall1 then reeled under a three-touchdov.n. fourth quarter. Baylor auack led by the passing of quarterback Neal Jeffrey. Luttrell, who ml,s.,00 t\\'O gnn1es and most of a third wilh a hairline fracture qf a iower bone of his right lrg. 11nd a strained knee and pulled muscle in the same leg. was a pile driver the Bears couJd not stop in their homcco1n- lng pme. Jelfrey passed for 339 yanls. most of them to spilt end Q1arles Dancer tn the fourth quarter. Stoeckel cqmpleted a aehool record 27 passes in 48 attempts !or 291 yards as he led Harvard into a fjrst-ptace · tie with Penn in the fvy League. Big Greeia Salls HANOVER,' N. H. -Junior T0m Snickeoberger ,passed for th r f/: e touchdowns, t'vo within 44 seconds Jn a decisive second period, and DartmoUth rolled to its third consecutive Ivy League football victory saturday in a 24-13 decision over Yale. , " Yale. capitalizing on a f um ~I e recovery, stung Dartmouth by · taking . a 3-<l lead on Brian Clarke's 18-yard field goal on the first play of the second quarter. The Big Green retaliated quick- ly. Takino the klekoll at its 33. Dartmouth marched 67 yards in 11 plays to go in front to stay. Freshman Sparks Pitt . PITTSBURGH -Freshman tailback Tony Dorsett and quaMerback Billy Daniels rombined for 376 yard s rushing, pacing the University of Pittsburgh to a 28-14 college football vtctory O\'(lr \\inless S)Tacusc Saturday. • Dorsett. who carried 'l1 times ·tor )H 1 fards, ·boosted his season total to l.139 yards, breaking the old PiU rec:prd of 964 set by Toby Uansa in 1929. Daniels rushed 19 limes for 16S yards and scored two touchdowns, as Pitt boosted its record to S-Z-1 with its fourth straight victory under new coach Johnny ~1ajors. Syracuse f~ to o-8 •. .Princeton B~e11 PRINCETON, N. J . -A 77-yanl four.th-quarter drive capped by a one- yanl plunge by halfback Mike Sol<olow!tki gave Bn>\\1\ a 7-6 football victory over Princeton Saturday. • The lone t o u c h d o 'v n of the ganit capped a 23-p\ay man:h. engineered .by Brown quarterback Oonnis Coleman. capitnli1ing on his own short run5. and rushes by Sol<otowskl. hallback Hubie Morgan' and fullback• Kevin Slatll<Y and nob McNamara. It \\'as the first tlrne since Brown has beaten Princeton. 19;4 that • .. \ I' f (; 4 DAILY PILOT ' • Sundiy, NO't'tn'lbtt' •, 1'73 Ex-CM.Chier It's Goose Eg,gs for Bucs, ,S ~nta ·A'Ut! Has Wmner . · . : · · ~ · t.· ~ , . BJ,!!~:,'!~ fashion to "the way they dlspoaed~ol 'lllO)' drove lnim lllere-Jo tbi 15, Sai1IA Ano-dldn1 ~~a pois all ~~~!!it.~::i:."1:.. ," J 1illl ':,m A B • hr Santa Ana last aeuon. end set up for a SS.yin! field goo!. night, iot no fiirtlier 'than the Pirale• '""""'"m-"" Vo ·f' t ret en In 26 years of football . Orange Coast But Gary llaloir's towering boo! with · Piretu I.iced the i<lek, but holder 35,yanl line ht the ftrlt bait, and didn't ·• ' -" -· • • -College h:id never played to a 0-0 tie 19 secondl on the clock sailed just to Lee Joyce was nabbed for 1 t.,..yard dent the 29 in the te«!hd:balf, ~::,,"'ioett 11 ,i \t '': 1 o ~ S ·i::s -until Saturday night. ' ... •UIMIN• ' • , But poach Dick Tucker's Pirates broke the left toher the ~J1!igbttimand S&nta Ana lossooc, ~ yUdl 9hort of the first doWn. Bob deLal'cellotth Grut 'Gelkw, ••i.t• ..., •• . v• f YI 8"1. Neil Peek coaehed !oolball al Costa Mesa High SchoOl for tour years during J96S-89, but only one back among those .lour teams could have made Pe(>k's present starting lineup at Bret hren High _ in Paramowtt. 'l'bal's Wiler< Peek, a Fouotaln Valley resident, is cun-ently banging his clip- board after a year's laybff from lhe education field. He quit at Mesa following the 1969 season because 'Of the time involved in ooachlng on the 3-A level. ila,, he's back and he's got a '\\'inner ~i-A classification. The Warriors en· t It-man football for the first ti1ne year p.nd CUJTently hold a 5·1 . They are e)reing a CIF playoff ~hind probable Olym pic League mpion Lutheran. ~ c Warriors are ranked se\•e nth in t latest CIF poll and aside froin a ~ loss to Lutheran, Peek's 23-man ROGER CARLS()N squad bas ripped Canyon, 42.fi ; Sherman Indian Ins titute, 69-0; Bell-Jeff, 28-8; Ootario Christian, 26-8; and Valley Chris· til!Jl, 34-8. Among bis group at Brethren, Peek has quarterback Les Pe8rsfy. (6-2, 18fi) a five-time AlJ.CJF choiCe in football , b8sketball and baseball, tailback Everett Williams (6-2. 190) and fullback Charlie White (6-2, 195). . : 'rbey all nm in 10.0 status and they l double In up baseball. h 11 t • ran out remBJ.ning e. penetrated to the Senta Ana 20 ~!cy~arul.,the fest Of. thl oran e ••r:i•u · · • • 1 fr •• j ·r1 ,, ~~~ti speAn wi hlh ! goollsebegg gamkede oagJinst The tie leaves Orange C-Oast at l·l ·l ~r Balch ~locked. ' ~ Ni I-~rty -in Co.It ~·'eoder'; . fh""''--t an tm:-7 ~:rr: I -~~ 'r ~ ·o ~ ... -;&:~ .:xru a a w '"I.I 8 ut coo rilnge in conference play, and the Pirates would the fowth period, J:tt.d quarterback Mike '.' ~ T1i"'. " ·&r=.. · I -. •· 11 r, ' " i·' Coast's 'oose as far as ils South C-Oast need a loogshot combination of wins Ma~r underwent OO!Jof ·nlne sactidait penett~bletiaJ::rle&:·moaof ntpt. lf.cltl!NI' ~-t ,'3f·;1,·f 1' f:f Confe;ence title hopes are concerned . and Fullerton Jos.w: to take the league -he· suffered -at ~ A&f.1~ i>--:-The -game mai;;ect th6 f P'lt ,__tjme • \~~ , , , n 1•1 • 1\1' >4S Over 5,000 fans · turned out for w,hal crown. Santa Ana, meanwhile, takes stop that drive. • '. • i ' , . Orange C.oest bad been held ICORless ~-.,... °'...., c ..... 15 i 1., • .:3.2 proved to be the epitome of defensive on Fu11erton. (3-0) next week with a And the final ~ !nla.sed. ,fWd since opening game of. the 1'70 _ltUOO 01111on · is 4i."''·" battlu at Orange <A>ast. They saw the 2.0.1 r ecord -the tie is much less goal came after· a U-yard -~" Jlad ' · -a Spin of 34 games. ' • ~eotJO ' 'i! ' ~, .. ~j Pirales get the helter scoring op-damaghlg lo them. been '"''ted. at the SIDta •-/f ~-· c;r-· · :, ' ' 1''1·' portunities, but throw their offense into Orange Coast got inside the Santa ,~to's128-yard l'\U1;~i;,geat_ ;h; ..WI tTATllflCS • '" occ 'ilottia. .,.,,,,,.. ·~ ••1-' n '~ reverse at ell ' the wrong times. Ana 20-yard Iifle ~wice. Tbe~first time · of the 1light for 1h6 Priates, cot tile· ---~\~ = ·~,,,,~ _ ..L • 10 ••• 1 • ~ ... The Pirates even bad a closing second came after a fumble recovery by Herb drive started. . ·.,. f Ll'lf ..,_ ·.....-'* .. . ,, t 1t.idr110ft. ~ ~ 1 ': .. .= chance for a 32-yard field goal which Marshall .on the openi,ng kickoff whldio When it came to defeme, however;"\"·+~·~~:'!" ~~~ .,U -~V::;. ·•, ·11 ·t l J':.:m would have won the game in similar set the Pirates at the Santa Ana 38. . ·fJange Coast wu ~with ~ts.' ~::3: .,...,._1no ~ .: ~ ·' » or•• c~· ' , IOlll-po MaQN-r , , • , · 6 !• , ». -::!5' _l11ierc~pti0.n · PacesFV . ' . Win, 37-21 lly STEVE BRAND Pf * Dtllr l'lltl l hlff . Founiain Valley-a ·Kevin Sereno wonlt rmd his name anywhert In· the flriJI statistics but it wu his pass intercep!iQ!I with , eigbt ·minutes. to play Which ·~ pelted ihe Barons past Magnolia's s.!ri· tinels, 37-21,. Saturday niglit at La .Palma Stadium in Anaheim. , ( The Bal'OZ)S held a precarious 2+2:1 lead but Magnolla was ·on the move when Sereno stepped in !root ol tile intended rece!ver, ·picked of! tlie - and ran 53 yards to the Sentinels aix. : • Only Ramon Ricardo, the fellow v.·ho 1---l bealJ:ivJlJ Ne~rt !!arbor _with a fie_~d _ • goal ·in 1967, 3.-0t would crack l'iis : backfield. · 4 Two plays later Bill Ogden -~ his third touchdown of the night; -two yards out, aod just that qWclc!y FouMain Valley WU In comman4 '1f the lrviDe Football 1-le football lilt;" 34),21.____ . ' Sei;enO•s play broke open i gime thil saw the two teams amass more Ml 600 yards in offen.._se. ,: I' I 1t's a surprising statement considering ,. <¥ta-Mesa's enrollment is arou nd 900 : boys. while Brethren's totals 'are 155. : It's also surprising to see Peek ·back j ~ the business of ~ching foothall. l• But he explains : , "I was contacted by the school last I. opring aod I've had some background • in', the Bf'ethren Church . all my life. • MY father is a Brethren minister a n d ; now I have my three · children, Bruce, j Olris aod.'Dave eorolled. • "l't's a small school atmosphere and : one of the big influences was getting : the kids in this school under a Christian S format. .. ; "I'm cOmmitted to doing a good job · ! tere, but not to the extent of scouting : aDd reviewing films all weekend long : like so many sclXM>ls do. i iTm glad to get back-into educati<>? • and l think this is where the Lora : wmtted me to be." · !. '.'J'he most impressive item for Peek ~ in' bis fu'St year at Brethren is the I nq>p<>rt between black aod white ; students under the oommon bond of I re)igliin -despite varM! religions ht the school's makeup. · Peek's also found raw speed a com- n:iodity to his liking. . !l'Yoo get Y"'i'" skilled people in the rfkht place and turn them loose," says tl~~~;i,n speed is the fast~t way II t. earsey, incidentally, was nariled play. of the year in six-man football for t\\'O rs and is being eyed for duty by 1.TJl....\ basketball officials. i '$.rt Peek says Pearsey will probably l &Wn a professional baseball contract ! t·Re's a B-plus student, ·a Jeft . ..footed f Pinter with a 40-yard average and passes I 'fhl handed. TROJANS ... ~. iCOntlnued From Page Cl) ii&ned \be baJI when a personal foul Wis charged to a Bears' play~r. ~al's first good touchdown opportunity 4 s ruined by a penally. An E man-like conduct call against r Steve Rivera with 20 seconds ng in the !irst half moved the tfdl from the use one-yard line to tie 16. ,.JU.ve.ra gained 25 yards on a pass from dirtkowski but stepped out of bounds ar--the l, unable to change direction <tllckly eoough. He drew the penalty · ~ he exploded in anger and tprew ta ball down. f&uthem cal sacked Bartkowski on tF ftnai two plays or the ha1r, pushing "' Bean back lo the 40. ICOlll IY QUAllTl•I •. tMr"n Ctl 1 U C 29-30 ~~~vis '5 NII (Lh111htlu :l<k)c 1 T-I• 4i~VIJ_ lj ri,m ILllMhtlU kl,~) I KtV '' O.$S from H•Otn (Lil'n•ht lu l~M~~ rvn IV.t"dtr M!tr kkt) c-1v s ~ '" ~lm•~tlu kit~! C-ru" \ lm1htl11 kl,kl ! ~ llfl( 11 run enier MHr ~ick) _ .... ~ ••"""' """' '" '"' ~~· -0.vll Ire. kick mum ("D 1tt1mpl) I r ITATllT"I :~' ~~ is: 'I>'.! . l fie~~ G~l ~:r~" i:,GUNNJSON; Colo. -Colorado Mines ... kicker Mike Flater tied the college lot the loogest field goo! Saturday be kicked a 62-yarder In Mineo' Joos lo Western State College. lf'iat.er tied the mark set in t9'11 by 9teoter MlrllOI In a game between College and Fairmont State. major · ci>Uec• distance record 10< pis Is St yards by SbUthent ., r I iplll'• RoJ Guy last year. . . . Magnolia's Mon'y Bullerdick scorii:I all three Sentinels tollchdowns en ?OU& t~ gaining 146 yards. His sc;ores carile . from two, three and two yards and the third TD handed Mqnolia a 2\.1'1 lead early in the thin! quartei. •. ·sut the loos of starting quarter1>1clc Larry Randel in the """'d ~ haunted Magnolia in the second hail as his replacement, Tom Tello. was rushed heavily aod completed just lour of 12 for 37 yards while lolsinc .\'fo interceptions. · .: ORANGE COAST'S JOHN DIXON RUNS FOR SHORT GAIN AGAINST SANTA ANA SATURDAY NIGHl'. Fountain Valley grabbed a quick ~ lead whm · the Baroa.s· '1ll&l'dled to ·!lie MagnoDa nine with the -kicltO!I. having to sett1e for Derinls tress1~· 25-yard field goal Vwiwm the Scntitlels stiffened. -------~---- Blocked PAT Gi ves Gauchos 17 ... 16 Victory • Special to the Daily PUot SCOTTSDALE. Ariz. -Saddleback CollC'ge's Brian Hester blocked a third quarter PAT attempt and it ultimately \\'as the difference.i n the Gauchos' 17-16 non-conference football win over Scottsdale College, here, Saturday af- ternoon. Saddleback, trailing 1:µ) after Hester's heroics, rallied to take the lead minutes later. Gauchos defensive lineman Don. Roy blocked a Scottsdale punt at the Drovers 40 and recovered the ball ·at the 11. After an incomplete pass, Saddleback quarterback John Springman tossed an 11-yard TD aerial to Jerry Charlson. Dan Brennan booted the PAT and the Gauchos had a 14-13 lead with 4:06 left in the third quarter. Brenn~n added a 23-yard field goal rn•o minutes into the final period and Scottsdale kicked a 24-yard three-pointer \l'ith eigh~ mirlutes to go. The Drovers attempted field goals from the 31, 32 1llld 50 in the closing minutes -the final try .coming .~ith just secouds remaining. It wps short by 2Q yards. · I. After Scottsdale had· taken a 7-0 iead in the first quarter, the Gaqchos came back to tie it· with 6:07 left in the half on a 51-yard driVe. .. RW111ing back Sam Peek tossed an eight-yard aerial to Mike MeyE!'S for the TD aod Brennan toed the PAT. The drive was highlighted by a 34·YBrd ~s.s ~ Srping_man to _ wide_ recei~ Bill crumley. · • · _ " MARK WETHERBEE OF ORANGE COAST CATCHES A PASS FOR AN 18-YARD GAIN.' ' ' The Barons upped the adv8nlage lo !<Ml when Dan Troup, who completed eight cl. 13 firsl haU passes for 147 yards, found Rick llolfletd in the end zone lnim 25 yards out with 3:24 to play in the ftrlt quarter. Alter Magnolia came back with a rush ·to take the lead, 14-10. Ogdm, who finished with 71 yards In 13 canies. went to work: He scored on a flv~yard ·run with 3:32 to play in the first half, gave the Barons the· lead again, 24-21 with 42 seconds to play in the third quarter on a three-yard scamper and then capped Sereno's play with a tWl)o yard TD. Mit~h Chambers collected the final Fountain Valley touchdown, a three-yard nm with 45 tleOllldslo play, aod Tressler finished the night lour ror five 1n tile PAT depakmeui with tile extra pohtL 9AM• ITATllTICI M Flr1t doWnt nittil119 10 First down• PIMIM ' F1r•I tlDW'lll ptNl!ltt 1 'fof•I flrlt c1ow111 17 Y•rdt rinllh'IO !" Y•n:I• 0.1.ins ?? Y1rdi lott ..., NII y1rd1 911/lld 322 Pu"IS/tverqe dlst•nc:• 2132 '"-111H/Y.rdt ptNUitd 413' Fumbll.tf\lmblff '°'' 2/1 &urw 1:1r hlrttn ~t· .... , Fountain Vttler 10 1 J •USMIMe MltMN• .. v • 2 J Yt JI ft9, I.cl I J,l ... , 12.0 • 0 ... 5 0 . ,,0 0 lt -t.S 210 25 J.2 l"DUnt1I• YIU.., 12 110 5.1 •llOt.O l'AlllNO -· ' .. ,o ••• I I 1.0 ~::::'1 1 .. 0 A, 21212 0 -.. " toe _. .,. I'd 111tH::Fi . ,23 n 1 131 ,,..,, ....llftlft VdlJ 11 lO I 111 .W Brennan's fieJd goal was ·set up· when· teammalAI> Fred M'ayrboler recovered • a Scottsdale ftimbl e et the Droyer's 13. , The Gauchos running game was held ~ to just 86 ya rds, alt@ug!i Saddieback's ' Aundre Holmes netted 94 yards m 25 ~eeves ;-ll.ollll1ns 5park Diahlos . ' carries. · · lt was a frustrating loSs fOll Scottsdale, which had a 331-216 edge ht total yar!lage when the ofinai gun sounded. ---.--- GAMI ITATllTICI ~ -r-._. ... Finl csown• rur.hlntr J F ll'$I """"' pMlh'l!L s Plrtt _,,M pelltilllff ,•, T ot•I flnt d<i'W"' Yonb ~·" ' -l" Y1rd1 Pll•&lna .,20 Ytrdl lost NM llfd$ p ined 216 ,._ flffl V•rdi penallted 11/lO F1,1mt1l••/f\lml:llt' tost " , , J(i $1ddltbKk ICll'tl rt ~ 1 ' 1 SCP11Mllle ' I""\\ • JtUSHlff S•cldtlkdl • ..L ~ .. i . 11~ " ' f ~ " '" ,, ,{ • " ~r » "' "" m ,_,, ,_,. rl ,.,.. ,. 3,1 • -1·· 0 , 3 -1.0 11 -11.1 " .. PASllHG l•dllllMclf •H !IC ... ,, llCf ~-I ~ !!! ,, I 0 i 1:000 ' I 121 .:Mt Missio1i Viejo .Rolls to 1 7~0 Triumph O~er ~range By HOWARD L. llAN!IY quarter. Don Reeves add<!d tile extra of llle fiMI M minutes ol ploy. This °""' ITATllTttl '\'! -ot "" oa11r l'llot 1,,tt point. _ one came with 3:18 left 111 the third ~\~U := ==' ,•' ,! MIBSion vtejo's R and R boys, Guy · This was_ all MissiOn , Viejo needed · quarter. • ~l:.\ ~oJ::'""· :':O::: ~the~~~ ::C1!°'t :~~~a~ Jeegue victory acainst ~'-:= = =~ ~!$,.f=-! -] ~~in to J~ad the Diablos to a 17-0 victory ~ na: the workborse, c8rrylng closl;er thin tbe Di~ •yard ~ e=1 -4MC1dltt111t1 ~~· ti" over their Cl'estview League foes Satur-27 times to -IO for Roeves. Robbins ht tile fllsl half wlile ht poellllioo. ••=i:.:::..ri::I'"' •. 'ill .daY .night in action on the El Modena • gained.121 yards for _a 4.t averace. • Inthetile ~~· tlle·01'1n111erslhen movb ~ -"' - High field. La Bante .intenpened the runnlni cl. to ~. ""'"' Howe "" ""' ~ V1•1• -1 1 I ::,i But the Mission Viejo defense pooled R<ev .. and Robbins in the first ball to the 11 bU1 the play wu "1WBed ouSH>•• a shutout and quarterback Greg LaBonte wtlh five po• attempla. Tbat WIS the 00 a 'OllPl>lng ~If and tile ~ .,_ "' lJ YI' .... rose to the occasion when needed 10 entire Dtab\Os or1..,.1ve attack. the doaest !Ml' .,... lll,'1De ~:r'' 'I " if tt·l pe~s With accuracy to give the Reeves-lJaBonte lnterpened the running of half. . '11v~ J' J' I Ro~ns duo big assists. • to Kevin Eaton at the goalllne for the SPeAriltedlnc ihe del .... ,,_ Eoltlt, -~F, -v••• " h ·Rl>•v••. the inside man on the power second Mlsalon Viejo _. wllll 1:18 Jert &vane, Boll Fr<ed, Jim llaulllMrl ~-•• allaCk !or the Dlablos, rambled for 83 left In the haU. Stove' Hevelend, Rick Wblte aod Jel " B, 11! j tl yards and a 4.3 average, He scored LaBonte hit two ..J. three attempts llolettt. RoletU DOI ou1y ~ •. . r, I J II -l,.1:1 the 'first Dlablos touchdown from two in the second hall but ll was the accurate fumble, 11 , did Hevelaod, but ailO ht· ,.,.,.. 1 . yards out to cap an ~yard drive In right loot \! Don Reeves on 23-yard t~ a .J>tlSS that was, tipped by . " " "' " "' JI plays wUh l :,16 left in Jhe first field goal that posted the only ICote teammate Wlllte. ""'" M•-·~• • o " ,,. ·, ! • , Eagles F_all., 23-2 Sharp~ Eiggatt Spark Mesa By ROGER CARLSON 0 1 Mii ~Hr Pitt! Stell Costa Mesa High's ?.1ustangs unleashed a potent running at· tack ·behind a superior or. fensive interior Satw-day night and com bined it with the pass· ing of Steve Sharp and the all·round 'play of Rod Flggatt for a 2.1-2 footMll conquest at Newport Harbor High before 4,000 fans. Coach John Sweazy's Mustangs dominated the 'rival EagJes of Estancia fr<lm start to finish and the outcome was never in doubt. ·PAT had Mesa on top, 14-0, with 11 :37 left in the half. r.foments later Gaudry kick· ed a 27·yard field goat after Steve Teregis set it up with a 42·yard run with an In· terceptlon to the Costa Mesa 10. Another apparent first half touchdown for Mesa was call· ed back (a pass from Sharp to Figgatt) on one of 14 penalties that plagued Mesa. It was a penalty·fillcd garn.e with 24 violations marked off and another half doien refus· ed. As for Es t ancia's at· tack-perhaps the best thing that can be said is that the Eagles band was outstanding as usual. COSTA MESA'S DIRK WHITAKER 125) TAKES A PITCHOU:r FROM STEVE SHA RP 11 0). Sharp completed 10 of 21 passes for two touchdowns and Dennis Delany and D I r k Whitaker made hash of the Estancia defensive setup as linemen Kim Jos,phson, Paul Farris, Jerry Schepens, fl.1ark McDorman and Jim Davis won the battle up front. Mesa dominated the Eagles offense at every tum and Estancia 's deepest penetrati<ln was to tt:ie Mesa 21 where a first . period field goat try was no good. . . , It was Mesa's third victory of the season and secOnd in Irvine League play while coach Jim Hemsley's Eagles remain winless after seven games. Figgatt intercepted t w o Estancia aerials and was on the receiving end of a nine. yard strike from Sharp for Mesa's rmal touchdown in' the fourth quarter. Sweazy's crew wrapped it up in rapid fashion dlll'ing the rll'St half as the Mustangs swept to touchdown drives of 73 and 80 yarda..lh~. first two times they' had ~ion. Dennis-Oelany broke the'ice~ early 'Yith ·a ·1~yard scatnper over . left guard with 4:11 spent. Later it was Delany who caught Sharp 's strike on the Estancia 28 and scam· pered in for h1esa's Second touchdown. The play covered 51 yards and Dave Gaudry's second Estancia averted a shutout when the Mustangs ceriter snapped the ball out of the end zone on a punting situation with 1: 50 left. OAMll: STATISTICS .. I CM Flrll doWn1 r111htna ' • First downs pesslrll! ' • First clowru J:;:!llu ' ' Total llrll ns • M Yards rushing I~ "" Y1re1s pessl1111 ~ •ro Yif'CIS loS! " " Net y1rd1 lf•lned 147 "' Punts/aver•ge diltanc• Al'' '" Penel11HIJ1rds Pl~llld 101138 1•1130 Fumble1/ uml>IH lost 3/1 '" _ Sc-by Q111r11n El.tilncla o 0 o ,_' Col~ Me11 7 10 O '-" RUSHING ....... tc~. " " ... _,.,, • . " " ,--. .• Adrr.Js " " ' ... Bu lllfllJ • " ' >.O P"leelrlno ' _,.. -0 ... ~·· ' • ' ••• ~tinessr ' ' • ... "" " l • ' 3,0 H1rt11~ ' ' ' " Toi" " m " '3.2 Cwta Mall "'"' • :u • • •• Oel1nk " ~ ' u Whll• er • " ' 7.> T~i• ' 7 ' 7.0 To111s PAS~fN~ " ••• l 5tllkil .. " •• " '" Mo"°" " ' ' " .... Sharp CHll Mesa " " ' '" .07 Football Standings SOUTM COAST COHFERIHCI CRESTVIEW LEAOUI W LT Pl' PA Fulllrton 3 0 f 71 38 J~1 ""' i T ~~rl "(;,.,:::: Ce111st 1 l' 1 27 , •I Ml. Sin Antonio 0 3 0 U " Sin OMAo Mite 0 3 0 21 so W L TPFPA vm1 Perk 5 o o 121 26 Fooltiln 4 o 1 ts :u El Mlldene 3 I l 6S 1C1 L'f'J~ Vf1lo i ~ ~ 1 }g : IC1tt111 1 ' g 01 77 Sllddllback 1 4 '2 101 Colle~giate Football . Scores h""*Y'• Sewn Or111Qe-CNJI O, Santi AM 0 Cerritos 7. Sin OllOo Mell 0 Fun,,..ion .27. Ml. Siln Mlonlo 21 · s11..,,..n .,_ Ore~ COIJI ill Cln"ltol Sent• Anl ...._ Fullfl'fall 1t A11ellllm Se~1'8~ Mell 11 Mt. S1n Anlonlo Orlnh 0 ' 1 60 106 11tunt..,..1 S<lll"H M11sl011 Vf1lo 17, Or•not O Foo!lllU 14. Killllle 1 flr!H.,..1 GltTMt Mlulon Vl1lo If El MOdlna l=aolfllH vs VIII• Perk et TU11ln Or•/11111 •I S•ddle!)I(~ S.lurHr>1 QI;'"' Katt:ll1 .,.. Tu1rtn '' t..e P•lm1 Coll"llt w .. 1 UCLA 62. Washington 13 USC 50, Califomia 14 Stanford 24, Oregon State 23 Washington State 21, Oregon 14 Pacific 54, Cal Stale. (LA) 2 San Diego St. 27, San Jose St. 'll . UC Rivenide 20, Gal State (Fullerton) 10 Hawaii 28, Qll State (North· ridge) 3 S.n Dlt90 U, •1. AllJ~~·P..:lllc 11 C•I l11thlr•n A2, VS lnlltl'"n1flonal " C1l Poly ISLOl 5t, H1rN1rd Sl•I• ' . . UC 0.Yll 71, Humboldt Sl1t1 0 SI M.lry'1 '2, loYOll (LAI 21 Whl1Tl1r Al , PomoN 14 Chico Stai. 35, Cal Poh• IPamon1J A~l•nd• n . LIVlrM 7 0Ccld111111 1~1 c11,,.mont-Mudd 1 ldtho St unlY 21, POl'lllnd Sl1t1 s.o!~t11ern ar-lA, Vint W.shinciton " P•clllc U. Ort. 2', i..wt1 & Cl1rk e!~~n 0r'f90ll 10, Drtp0n T..:11 3 11!111 Wish. St. 10, Whltwol'tll O ' ldtho Cotleoe 24, Whllman 6 Llvlnos!Ol'I Col 14. Ellulillt! Cltv 0 Mor.Mao Stile ll. E11t TMlll s1111 " S.mlord '5, M.tr1 Hill 27 Wrt \11. WHll Y 3. Gtnt~ C41191M Ft. \11l~v Sl1t1 'II, S.v&llMh St11t • J0!\1'11 HODl!.lru 5', Sw1rthmore 1 l(fnl\KkV Slllw 52, Ftder1! Cllv I Mlltv1i:i. Col\9a 1, 1NrvvlH1 ' Murr1v s11111 31, Austin htv lf S1ll1bVrv SI. SI. Am~ Univ. ' WHI KtnTuCl(y 4,. Mlddle T9fln St, A.!c°"' .U.M A4, Mt1slul-' VII. 0 C1t1wl>a :M, Woflant 11 Gr1mbllftil '2, No. C.roUn• A&T 6 Htlf'Odtn·SVdll*'f 37, TIN1oOll Sl•l1 :M J1clc.sonvlll1 St. '6, NE Lou11J1n1 St. 24 --· J.}. Smith lS. No.• .... ronn1 Cen. llltndoll)h-Mtdin 21, arldgew1tw, v1. SI~ P1ul'1 I(, Htmotbn Inst. ll E11t Ktntudl:y 311, TlllMll" Ttch " . Tullr.egff 17, Mlltl ' Florence Stilt 21, ACIOlllChltn St. llow!e Sltl1 «I, D.C. TMChtrs 0 PrHOYterl1n Col 21, Gll'*"'·Wtbb " 8tlrwtlt.C~n 3l. Altti.111'111 Slt te ' c1rson-Newm11n 34, Guilford co1·0 01111 sr1te 14, S!: L011Jlene 10 E11t c1rolln1 3'. W11Utm & M1rv ~ CoUMM .,, NtWWrv Col l ~mono & Henrv 53, &lutlleld Sl•t• " l'•h'mont 41, Wttl Llblor:IY 21 Furmen s2. LMlolr IH1YM 20 McN-St. 14 tl'N LOlllL11ene SI. 0 l1tem Coll-21, Sl'ltpllef'd Col 3 1n11ts-Sl•I• ~. Ctlllllanoooe 1 Trov Stahl JO, Tinn u~ ft\•r![n o W11t Carolln• 41 , Floria• A6M f COf'tlll!d s1111 0, E. Stl'Olldsbur11 0 0 1c1'1hnao l1, Unlrius 21 Fr1nklln Mir l3, MQl'lvlln 6 Muhltnblro 21, Wl~ Colleqe lt Rhoae l1l1nd ..0, New HlmDslllre 16 Wtc1rto1r I(, S«if'IOfle!d ' WHt 'Mlryllnd 31, l.eblllOll Valley 21 • " o.laware v~r. 25, Susou11'11nne 14 M1rh11 Merlllll'll SI, New H1v1n a SUDpt:rv Rock 16, LQ!:k Hlvt-n 0 8 ttllenr, W. Va. 1, Gr-CUy 1 Bloonuburg 14, Kutztown 1 Junl1I• 15, Wnlrt1ln1ter, P1.' Klrig1 41, Scr•nron n Morp/'f s1111.27. llbwilrd 7 L'l'<:omlllt 211, Upsala 6 MUl.nvlUI $1 21, Cf'leVney Stall 11 l=ordl'lllon 13, Geoni1town O Montctalr 2• t~n•on SllM 10 C•rnlQle.Mihon 21, woshlnoton I. Jel " ll\dl1n1 IJ, Pe. 34, Celll Sl1te, Pl. 3 SOUTH•ttN CAL CONfllltl NC• CMdron Sti le M, Huron 7 w L T'"" PA D•vlon '21. Xavier 21 ltlo lionclo 5 o o 120 :U EurN l4 ltllnoll College 6 Los Ancielet: CC • l 0 122 67 Fr1nklln 35, Geot'aetown 1 Goldin Wiit J 1 1 llO t2 G1,11li1V AdotohuS f•, HlmllM 0 C'fDl'ttt 2 2 I ft t$ LIWl'lllC9 23, Blloll 0 LA Hilrbor 2 3 0 71 t5 Mllllkln U. 35, N«'ll! Cenlr•I 12 E11l LA 1 A I n 131 Nebr'll.kil, Omaha 13,• EmPOrl• St1te .LA SOulfl~I 1 a 0 65 97 10 Sen11 Monie• . I ' 0 9t Jjf N'f' I Ml..ot.irl SI. l•, SE Ml1sour1 Silunflr'I sc-1 f'fl'U si11t: 62. Cul....,.-$tockton 21 LACC 2, CVPre11 ' Alrion 23, MonlTICll/11\ 1 Easl u'11, LA SOll!h-11 SI. Cloud Sl1k 20, Mootl'leild St111 Sante Monie• 21, LA HerbOI' l l 1 • S•htr'U'1"1. Gllnl5 Sew-,7, Ch1Cl!IO 0 LA H1rbor VI. Golden Wtsl el OCC Taylor 24, Ftndl•r 17 LA sour~,, ..... CJprtsl II a-· '.l;'.!1shlnoron. Mo. 31, Mll$0Vrl, Rol11 Park "" Sant• Monica el E11t lA w'~'''" lllinoll :JO, Norltlern 1Ulno11 LACC It Rio Hondo Krio• 22. Cornell 10 l..lklllnd 35, Nortllw1st Wisc. O MISSION CON,.EltlMC• .Mfuourl SOllfl'I' 35. Mluourl Wntern W L T Pfl P'A 31 ~ ••• S.n Oltga 6 1 0 l37 t7 W•rne St. Mich. 1•, Elllltfn IUtnols Slddltblck 5 1 0 120 U . Midwest 10 , P11om1r ' 2 o 111 1l6 Whl•lol\ '27, North Plrill I Groumont ' 2 I , .1» 106 Ohio State 30, Illinois O W11. Pl1t1tv1ne 53, 1tl.Chlc•oo 6 i11~':11de i ~ ' 1~ 1~ Wl1. Riv, F1Us f, Stoul Stille 6 Soulh-$llf" I 3 2 '1 l" Michigan 49, Indiana 13 w11. SllOll'lor 21, wlL o.11ke1h 27 Ctilff9r , 1 5 o 12 ,, '!•chi St ( 21 W' . SI Nort»r1 1 .. Mor1tl Mlchlgen·,7 Sen eernard\'no 0 6 0 11' 1 .. T~' Kennedy Lowell Svnll'I' HUl1 6Ulf\e Park U Hebr1 l=1,1Utrton 51venn11 "1 gan a e , 1sconsm . ~ ,,1,ll'ldlan1 ~''" 1, s•tllffl.,..• ktftS 0 -unl'f' 7, OttM"btl" 7 Rlvtr:sldl 20. Cl'llllftv 10 W Ok11homo ll, NW Sii Okl1 3 ' c•o--'° •-·-·-o·or"O GAOOEN GROVE LEAG"O Notre Dame 44, Navy 7 w11111'" Jf'Nel ~1 &•k« o c,o;'imai.1i2."'siii01.oo 1 w L .. ,., '"' Pure! 48 l 23 Yllllftln'-11 12. NO CMk0111 St 10 P1lom•r 62, Sen 8em1rdlno 41 P1clllc• ' 1 1~ 61 ue . owa k•ns, St11t:. Pin 21, w11hbvr11 14 S.ddleback 11. scottldal•, Artz. 16 s.n1111110 3 1 1s SJ Kans. as 10, Oklft '"Ama State Lincoln 23. Ci&nt. Ml11QU1"1 sr. 13 1oon<0nl•roenc•l A•ncho Alamflos 3 l 1115 91 4'tu NW Cot, low• :M, SW Mlnnesot1 Sllur111Y'I Oemtl .,, LI Qu!nl1 3 2 115 59 lo l• Gardin Grove 2 2 50 S6 .... S1ddleb1ck 11 San Bern11r:jlno Boluo Gran.Ill II 4 '21 99 ~1innesota 52, Northwestern 43 ~A:: ... ~''ke,~?: P~?"9s:!~1,.!!:I~ 1.len1. ~r::w.1:1 1~~im:''''"' Los Amkl°liturd•v'• sco~' 80 142 Missouri 31, Kansas State 1 \1tne1. Kins.'~ McPtle~Jc G~~ .~ ~r~cWtsle<n (non-s~~= ~~1:~~.Lg'f~J!:u!1 Oklahoma 34, Iowa State 17 ~r·H~~!'°'Q.~; E:,~' ~~~ 21co10 conflrlnC:I) ,.tffe.,.., Gilmtll N b k 28 Col d 16 1 l • Quinta VI Santl990 •I 9oluo Qrande e ras a t Ora 0 ME C*lehom1 SI 7, Cl n'llf'(ltl 51111 lltVIN• Ll!AGUI! ltanc:llo A11'"1!os 11 Q1rden Grove Miami. (0) 24 We S ' er Q 0 W L Pfl PA P1clllc• at Gr1nad1 Hl111 l(ennedv Sunday, Novtmbtr 4, 1973 DAltY PILOT° C If .. Pilot ·Pigskin -P/Ct<EROO .t ' 1\ Sponso red By > DAILY PILOT $100 A WEEK IN PRIZES ! ~ sso TOP WEEKLY PRIZE ' ., 'I , r.i • • ··- • s20 < For Weekly Second • Place Winner s10. Each for Third, Fourth ~ J and Fifth Place Winners Here's how you can be a pigskin prophet for profit.'· , Weekly cash prizes are offered to winners of the Pilot Pigskin Pickeroc geme. Top winn er eech week . gets $50 in cash. Second piece winner gets $20 in , cash end third, fourth and fifth place winners eec~, get $10 in ,cash. All "cesh" ectually is deliver,td +011 wi nners in the form of che.cks~to.....b_e pick_ed up byu_ winners at one of the 10 participeting members of the Herbor Boulevard of Cers essocietion. Check~1~ for this week's contest wili be prepared by: --.-...;. Miracle Mazda 'J. 2.150 Hal'bOr Blvd., Costa Mesa I The 10 part1cipeting auto deelenhips along Cost _ Mesa 's "Harber Boulevard of. Cars" ere: Atla11.1 Chrysler.Plymout h, Bauer Buick, Con~ell Chevrolet, Costa Mesa Datsun, Dave Ross Pontiac, Johnson I'~' Son Lincoln .Mercury, Miracle Mazda, Ne bers Cadillac /' Theodore Robins Ford and University Oldsmobile . Wetch for this pleyer's form each week in the DAILY PILOT Sports Section. Circle the teem you think wil(' wi n in each pairing in the list of 30 games and send in " the player's form entry blank or a reasonable fac .• "1 simile . Then watch the DAILY PILOT sporti pages fo·r each week's list of five winners • RULES \ ' . 1, SlllNllll 1M 111try ~llM ...._ .,. I .......... flK .. Mle If N 11 ...,,.:f flll C..tel.t. "lttllO!la~ll tkll'"I .... 11 ....... 11 Ill "nKt ~tia,..- •t1trilt '""'' .. .....""". In Ill• •Ml .... ,. .................. 1'1lelllJ. wflkll Mtt'I CMllrm 'JflU Ill cN-...IHIM . • .;J; 1. SIM 11 te1 PILOT PIGSKIN PICK•ttOO COHTIST, 11'1111 Dltlf"""""• P.O. lox JUG, (Hll Ma., CA. "'"-, .. .,. 3. Onlr -.. IT, "' "'"°" """'"'"' '9cll ..... Cllltlltltlh -~.\ 11111 Cllltat etfkl1l1 _, 111v .. t11111 """""" •trill ,,_ • •llltlti ......... .,. tl!llil If!""" ... .,,., ~ ..., "fkttltlw ........ tlllrils """' Clbc..,11'111. DK111M ef 1-..i M 11111 1191111 ,_.. .. M• • CIPIM •I fiMI lly Ill Cllll .... 1111. '- 4. lnlrlll mltll Ill ,..lmerlltll !IOI 11111' llletl Tllttndey A.M, W lnltll .: • lltll~lf'tf hi "" DAIL'r PILOT.,,.,,""' P.M. ThurM•r. 1•., S. Pll"llCIP1tl"9 ........ ~ I/Ill lllllr ''""YHI atM1 DAIL V P ILOT ,........,.Mf 1 11111 llllir lllttl*ll•ll ''"'""' art "'' ltlllllll ,. lllllr. 6. Tl• e 1tEAKER IU.NK MUST eE fllLL•D IN Olt ENTRY IS vot6. '• n ... ________ _.. ENTRY BLANK ~ I Clrcle tHm1 you t hink wlll win tttll WMk'1 11fnn • I', (home tNm It MCond OM lltttid) !'' I New Orleans vs Rams t I Pittsburgh vs Oakland : r· Cincinnati vs Buffalo I Stanford vs USC c·,. UCLA vs Oregon I Carnell vs Brown I' San Jose State vs Cal. I Colorado vs Kansas I• I Illinois vs Michigan 10 Oklahoma vs Missouri I sNotreu Dame vs Pitt . l I M vs Texas A&M I Llnf191d 33. P.clllc LUlri.t'ln 22 Dr'90" co11tgt "4. c.n1r11 Wish. St • s.Uthtst 1 ~ MluOlll'I V•Hev 42, Grtc!lll'ICI 1 t•n'!1 Ana V1l1ev $ 0 •17(. 7S (non·ltlill.111 Michigan 9 srer111111 22. TabOf 1• L~~iim1tos ~ l :n ~ 1----------~------11 Cincinnati 52, North Texas Junior College E=:1~a~~ ~ J 1~ 1ll Navy vs Tulane ' I LA .Harbor vs Golden West (: W1t11mttle 13. Puget sound ' Rockies ~ Air Force 43, Army 10 ~~t :: ~:o~~l~:,t;131 Idaho 20. Montana 7 •'Utah State 31 , Wyoming 20 C.Olorado State U. 21, Toledo 'H New Mexico State 56, West Texas State 14 _ Ariwna 35, Texas (El Paso ) 18 Color•Go Colfl<lt 30, Kan1•1 \V9sltv Fl~3 L"•l1 Cot 70, Weit Mew Mt._. ~llftl STiii '5, N«lllltn Arltt1111 M:.ild1, (llt-f 22. eohl Stilt 21 Sovlhltt1 Ullh 23, Wt1l'"lt11!, Ulah • Soalb LSU 51, Mississippi H Florida 12, Auburn I Penn State ~ Maryland-22 Alabama 35, Misalsslpjii Slate 0 ' ·· VMl1%I, Davidson 17 Geor&ia 35, Tennessee U Kentucky 34, Tulaoe 7 Clemaon 35, Wake Fortst 8 Georgia Tech 12, Duke 10 • , Vll'll!lla 44, North iarollpa 40 ! • Rlclunood 27, Citadel 0 · ' Memptiis St&te 19, Virginia T~ II Nonh Can>lina State 56, Sotllh : Garolina 3S , ' So. MIS!lsslppi 211, Weber slate 7 . ~)I State SJ. COICOtll • Texas 42, SMU 14 Arkansas 14, Texas.A&M 10 TCU 34, Baylor .2' \ Texas' Tech 19, Rice 6 Houston· 34, Florida state ·3 Sta.te 3 i!f~~r,esa i ~ g l~ Ti.· ;,1;.,. 17, l.ouliville 9 MefTWolllet1 Cotlfl~ -MIQnolla 0 5 II 12' ~ Bilklfllltld 17, P....o.na 1• 1 .".-t State 34, Marshall 3 Lona e11e11 cc :11, LA v111er 1 ~~" rt..'1!s~~~sT.i~ :,.°i:r_ Plerc:1 34, El C1m1!10.;l:t, y II 1 11 21 . UillU 24, Bowling Green 23 ._..,.,. state CC111flfellc• °"n" n • '" • M111no • .,..,,__.;. • C1nvon1 ,,, H1i'K;ock 11 fll'Ml'/"1 .. _ · ut-e 13; Wichita State 10 wnt LA :M. comoton COl'Oflol c111 Mir -n.. Fountain v1111V Aucie6crr. tt, St. John't. Mll'lfl. 20 Sent•· Blrblre 21, Glendtlt 17 11 Hllnllnoton BHC:h Arklntes SllM. •• llllntlls St. 20 OulClllll 21, Arkll!Ht TKh. 1 A~Oln CoUICM 17, N.iirelli:e W .. lev B~'t.1.1i"21~ f)!"ff1 l• Venlvt'• 20. ~:....C. c°&:'c Miii "'· LM Al•mltoe. •I Cel'ltr•• low• 31. Wiiii•'" Penn Sl' °""1 u lrl'talfll l v.11..,. 20 E111ncl• ..... Mlonolt• I t N.-1 Henll!\11 Col. ll. SOii. 51111, Ark. 0 L1111tll1n1 TICh «, TelllS. Ar1111Qlon a S1rri Houston SI. lS. Tllllt Cot Aa.1 §OI: ColllOI Slt.1 C1rl1lqn 0 Ml. S111 J1dnl'O 26, Pelo Vlfff 10" H1rt10r h-n G·-oricOnllo T 21 D•n• ' e1r110w "· Cel State (NOflh dcl•l -·-1kot1 St.. I.' n: Bl•ck Hiii• St. JV 0 Edison VI. SA v111., II W11!mln1tr. e:!nsvllle 35, 8utl1r 34 1;;;,;;i;i;i;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii_iiii __________ .,1 " Sl1111hln F. Austin 21, "'*lo St. " , How.nf PIYl!t Jl., SW Tlllll ISlllt 7 E1$t Te11i1 SI ~. SUI Ross St1hl 0 Hllndff!IOW St 21, Al'k Montk.tlo 14 Ttlnlh' I•, McM.llrrv Cot 12 Abll-"9, T1r1ftlon Sl1t1 7 J...:~1011 S!~" ••, T~•"'I~ Soutlltm l• Al'keriw St .17t Mlt51t$1J'PI Col. ,. l.Ulhlr Col~ l .. Sir. 7 Mjdl•l!d •2, H11ttriq1 M THI Dutulll 21, M41c 1 .. 11r 0 'O«!erlln ..o, c111 W11tern 7 ROSI Hulmll\,«I. Prlndlll• 1 51. Jose1111•1, 1nd. 6. lndl•n• C1n1r1I " . So. Dlkolil TKll Jt, D1kol1 Wiii .... ' Ai~lllld lS, W11yn1abUrq l Affll.I Collea• 2 .. Adr~en l ' ' Auqusi-, S.O. XI. ~I 1 Elst 11aldwtn·W1ll1ee 37, MOunl Union 14 oen•nc:• Jt, Olllo Nortbtrn 1' H ' rd .. Penn 30 Del!'•UW IS V1loar•ltd"IO arva '"• F•ril• s1ei'1 21, we11 V•, s11111 is Dartmouth 24, Yale 13 ~ll:if~::l' .... 20t.~l=11~110 Com.ell 44, Columbia 14 J•m1•tow11 1,1 V1nk1on 1s Pitt 28, Syracuse 14 {t~~~~~o1.'~0l~ 17 ~ Lehigh 581 C.0lgate 2iS Mlchkla!'I TKh .... Ml11M10l1-Mllrrt1 ectl t -Rut 19 M~lllQVm o. Ohio WHl"tn o Conn CU '' • ltf'I Norlft 01kofl 64. SOut11 Oikofa t1 I'-· Brown.'1, Prliicetoo-1 ----Mrlt!wood Mlcl'l_l4... Grilnlf 1/1 ...., 7 VUlanova 24, Delawau-e 7 I'' oi.1 co1r..,. ., Gr111n111 1 M-=":...K'a?~"' 1 'M T11om11 cot 34 C11ntonl. ~tr•ln t"GM-ii:·f,., Af!'lll'lcan' 11111 '°•Diket• sta11 16, Nortlllrn Iowa 0.-C~ \'f!!!!Llf ~7-CkltM.toVt 1 ~ 2'. ,,-_,, ~SI,~~~ 14 l tfl 11, 3 g~~ll lf4 '" • 10"-1 ' ••• 111,. ' .. :=lv it""' It u.· ~ ochllfw S L~111 =:\'' ' it,,_,.., Sttll 12 ' = "':ri~•l'{" 14 Coltl Giwt1' lO, Tr1~ (~~ 0 Hilltdtle ~ 11. w .. 1 Chlt.lw 1 M°"'tcl•lr Tit g1a11 10 ~Q,"~, ' ' I, I !:i'r , ,. Tteh t , 11Cel17UG 9 HtiV f, N'v {~\ ~2 • ~~~~·m~·u Sii Tl41 MIW DATSllC B-210 AT • .• COITA lllllo DATSUN 1141 ..,,..,. ""'-• C.M,' l40-t410 • TH E CANNERY RESTAURANT PROUD LY PRESENTS MON., NOV. 5, 9:30 P.M .. . ' A He),W S,.rts C...., Pre4ttcta.111 "THE CAT THAT FUES" Tht . .tfoblt C1t1mar1n In Action And A Dick Borrymo .. Movie "THE PERFORMERS" . Ftoturlng Tht K·2 SkrT11m And K-2 T-Shlrt Conlt1I ALSO _A DEMO ON SHORTIE SKIS . . 3010 LAFAYETTE. AVE. NEWPORT BEACH • '· HERBERT L. MILLER TIRE CO. INC . S INC[ 1920 Sadclleback v.s San Berdoo · I occ vs CerritoS 1; I Pius X vs Mater Dei :L CdM vs Fountain Valley "' I . Dana Hills vs Brea .l ' I El Dorado vs University ,I: Huntington Beach vs Westminster I San Clemente vs ·Valencia 1: -• Costa Mesd vs Los Alamitos .. 1, Sonora vs Laguna Beach · ' I Mari na vs Santa Ana . • Mission Viejo · vs El Modena ;. I Magnolid vs Estancia I Edison vs SA Valley I Arlington vs El T-•• I Western vs· Newport J -.. Tl• t•I AKlll -MY jirij" ell lfle-Jtlel 1111iMlr el lllMllll ~ 'I ti! 111 Jt flmtl lltlW IM\le b ---------- 1 N•mt 1 Addte1s I Ctty I ,.hone ... _ Zlp ... ------- I ;I 1 ~ • ' I • J I i I I ! • ' • ; • I I • • • • ~ • I I (1 C DAIL V PILOT Sunoi1, Nowtmber 4, 1973 UC Irvine's Kruse lnteri_se Polo Player By HOWARD L. HA~DY 01 ,... 0111, '"" '''" "'aJer polo has been t!i lot 0£ hard work for UC Irvine's Jim Krwe. But It has also had 113 rewarding momenta a n d Kruse wouldn't have it any other way. "If I wasn't play~ water Polo, I would have a lot of cd:ra time that l would:n't- knov.• \rhat to do ~ith," he s~. ·'It's something I enjoy and I ;bave made a k>t ol rriencls playing the game.'' 'OCI coach Ed Nc\~;land is biF in his praise of tile most prilific two-year scorer in Apleaters history., , _ t_~~ is probably the most mr.l!fR iplayer I have ever hail. He has fantastic inrenslty Ad be wants to throw the bl! in the cage. It 's not •l!raY• easy to get people to •htot -to take t h e r~nsibility. 'Probably one or the most '· 3~rate quotes I have ever hPrd about Jim ca me from &hrd Philpot '*"'ho roomed with bib v.'hen "'e went to ~1oscow ~ summe<. ~yd told me, 'Kruse even gqes to sleep intensely. He sa,s to himself, 'I am going to>· sleep right now -and he goes to sleep.' ''That's very typical or Kiuse," Newland says. 11\e coach then adds : . \'!Je has a great desire to aQUeve and it is very difficult to1have players work against httn. In practice ' because he doe8n't stop for anything and' II& plays very physically. -~ · like lo put TOOmas Bcloghey on him most of the time· in practice because he doesn't get mad." JIM KRUSE \I/hat type of player is Kruse - similar to fonner UCJ All· America n Ferdie ~1assimino? "No .. he ·s a very different style of player. Kruse is a driver and v.•e use him in this spot most or the ti me. He plays more like Peter Asch did ~·hen he was here. "Jim is a grea t 8·9·met er dri ver and has fantastic strength and super quick hands. I ha\·e netier had a player \.\'ith quick hands like he has. "When ~·e are playing gaQleS, I often hear the other coaches start yell ing when hfi"'s at.hall cowt: :Look out. he can shoot. he can put it in from out there.' This worries the coaches a lot." Kruse, a product o f Fullerton tt;gh School ood junior college, has scored 109 goals in 39 games for UCI. A little more than a ytar Cage Outlook GWC Has Speed, But Lacks Height Golden West College will be !all oo speed and sbort on height this basketball season . And whal Iha! probably adds up to is a very long season. It's not often that a fresllnan-dominated team is successful in J C basket- b&U -especially a short freshman-dominated team. Coach Dick Stricklin has three lettermen back from his 197:2-73 squad which fashioned a 13-17 season n1ark. •All a r e gua rds-Taras Yo.ung, Ken Kile and Val Popov~nd all sa\v a great deal of action last season. '.Young, the Rustlers' top shooter, is actuall y starting his third season of pla;· for Golden Wes t. having perform· ed in the first four games of the 1971 campaign before a knee injury sidelined him. $lricklin also has Brian San- der! returning. I-le lettered two seasons ago and sa t out last yea r. Sanders is 6-5 and will carry lhe load in the ~-Sports ! ·calendar rebounding department. Another top candidate is Keith Stowers (S-2), a ireshman guard ' !rom Los Amigps who may play some In the !root line. Other top freshman can- didates incl\,kle Bob Clark (Qirona de! Mar ) and Gary Andre\vs (Westminster ), both of whom are 6--5. Others on th~ roster are Ron Carter 11.os Amigos). Dave Ax e I s on IHuntingtoa Beach1. Bob Beal (~1arina ), Jefr Hatfield ( F o u n I a i n Valley), Theo Williams (Long Beach Poly). Kim Join e r 1Long Beach Poly1. Ed Haynes (califomia, \Yhittier) and Mark Gibson· !Lynwood ). The latter two are both S-5. "Right now Stowers is look- ing good in practice, Young is shooting well and Sanders has looked good on the boards:• says Stricklin. ''I'm pleased v.•ilh the way the other guys have looked al this time , but I really can 't tell what type . Or team \\'e'll have unti l we fa ce son1e. outside competition. We've had real go1d prac tice's, ou r guys have been working hard "'"and shooting pretty "·ell. "We don 't have any big name stars. so wc\·c got t()<o. get together as a team. If we 're going to win ball games. it 'II have to be a team effort. more than an individual one:• Stricklin says he'll cootinue to use the fast break . "\\'e 're 'going to try to run if we can keep our turnovers down and lf v.·e can get the ball. Last year \\'e slovr"ed it down in certai n g a m cs because ~·e v:erc com pletely outinanned, bur \1·e don't plan on doing that. this season." The Rus i ters open t h e season Friday nighL Nov. 23 at Cerritos. then ho!d riva l Orange coast thr follo~·ing Tuesday. liolcl.., W~1 Sd1Nvtt Fri .• Hav. 2.l--11• Ce•ritc' l ve1 .. Ho1r. 17-0t•noe (Olis!. HOY. 29-0«. 1-tt Moorp,o.... I0111n ... mtnt fFlnt t'Ollncl Oll?Q"l!nt: Sen Dl1110 t p.m.I. TVll!I-• Dec. ~fltpmen JV Wed., OK . .S-Btr,taw, Frt .. Dtc. 7-S,tn OltQC CC. DIC. 12-15-11 (l\t!lt't IOllrntrntfll fflr11 ~ncl opoontrol: El C1mtnq, 2 lO!. WtO .. Dec. lf-11 lA Trtdt Teel!. FrJ .• Dec. ?1-Stro Dlt;o Mew . $al .. oec. n .-Joul!\welle!'n. OK. l4·ff-t ll:lve•ll~ tourn•mt nl. Fri. J11" . .._,,,..,,. Monlc11• WM .• Jt n. t-11 Crprei s• Fil •. J11n 11-1.A S011l!\W11t• Wed •• Jan 16--1...1!' Al'lQele' cc· f rl .• Jon 11-at E"t at L"· Wld.. J111. ?l-ll:lc Hondo· Fri.. J11n ,~, LA ~trcor• wm.. Jtn. ,,_., S11111 Monie•· F<fw-FICI 1-CVll'"~S· wm .. Ft'b. 1-111 LA S<111•~w,.1 Fii •• Feb ·-·· LOS Al!Deln cc · Wtcl., F@, l,__1!"111 LA• ago he scored 31 ·goals in ~ five games against the best colleGe alld university teams in the country at the NCM tournament for a record . His future goals? "I would like to play on the 1976 U.S. Olympic tea m and will continue playing ror oo.ach Newland and NI~1A after J finish at UCI," he say,_ Out right no w he's ha rd at \1·or k atte ndin g classes at UCI and working five hours a day on water polo. This means he's at the poc.I at 6 each morning and again in the afternoon hours for the team workout. At 6-foot and 189 pounds. he enjoys his role as a dri vfi"r but admits his shots from the left side are not quite as in- tense as those from the right. And hard work \Viii continue after graduation . "Baslcally one or the ma in reasons I a1n an elementary education major is to conti nue pla.ving water polo and I feel this job 1rill give me the time." lntensi ly and hard work are two ingredients Jim Kruse uses to advantage. -tr -t..· -t:;· KRUSE GETS VCI AJVARD Jim Kru se. lfieleaOing scorer for the UC Irvine water polo team this season , has been nan1ed the first recipien t of the college masters ucr athlete of the month award· for October. The UC! athletic department staff will select an athlete each month for the award which is sponsored by an area insurance firm. .The winner will receive a trophy with representative Bob Vaughn making th e presentation to Kruse and the November winner at halftime or UCl's bas ketball game with Idaho Stale University at the Anaheim Convention Cente.r. Dec. 7. Area Prep Football Summaries JV FOOIMH Score bf Ou1r1...-t Hunllnglon 8e&eh D 0 0 AntMirn O 0 0 Hun11.,11ton 8t .ttl• TO: O•clt r. JV FoolMU Score bf Ou.tr1"1 NtWPOft H.t<bor 0 1• 0 0-H LOllr~ 6 0 0 ._11 Ne""'°'' TOS: Wel!S. H 0 0 I •. Corivenlon1: Sovrct 12 kick). SopJMlmof'e FOOllNIU sc-bf Qu•r1..,... NewflOr'l Ht<bor 6 6 0 '-11 Loer11 0 06 0-6 Newporl T01: Folt'I 2, MllKWtll. s.,..ornore l'OOllNlll Score bf Ou•~ Minion Vlelo o o I II-t Or1nge O 0 O 0-O MIHiDrl Vlt !O TOs: C•ltp l no. Conver1!on: Schmidt (pass). S09flomore l'OOIMH Seoni lry Q1t11r1itr1 Unlverslly 6 6 \( I~ LtllU"f 8HCll 2 0 I 0-I UnlVlll'llll' TOS: Cooper 2, Htlle 2, Grthtm. Olkt1, Oltrlt. Conv1r1lon: Robinson (1M11J. L1gun1 TO: Pike. SopollomOl'"t l'oolbtll Scor1 by Qu1rlt•I Antht lm 0 I 0 0-1 HunllnQ!on Be8ch 1• O 21 7_....2 Huntington Beach TO: Sthttdel. Con- version: Scht !Hlel (p111). sophomore l'OOlb•ll Mi ler Otl 0 0 O }J-ll SI, Anthon't' 0 0 0 0--0 MO TOI: Ch!Kk Sevt rlno <l l. PAT : ~tv-rlno. l'f'ftll l'OOIUll SCCll't bf Ov1rltt"I Unl.,.,rsllv I 6 I U-l6 Ltount 8Nch I 0 6 0-12 Universltv TOs: SPllln I. Hetrtt 2. Jes1uo. M•••bolr. Cor>ver1ions: M"'o (PllU ). S1><1ln C runl~Httr .. t•ull ). Uciunt Btach T : Wn~1rCI 2. l'l"Mll II ,,_ bf QMr1'in: FOU11l1ln V1ll1r • o I ....a Marll\ll (blue) O o I II-I Fourrt•ln VtlllV TDS: Rots. VMGrot 2. Conve!'slon: Prlll frvn). ·--• Mtrln.1 TO: Hef11i.. CO'lnnoon: FUM,,.r (k1clll. 011tario 500 Dates Moved The Ca.liforniri 500 at Onl8rio Motor Speedway wilJ switch to Sund ay, ~larch IO and will be the first of four USAC sanctioned 500-mile races in 1974 instead of the final such event. Also. for the first time ;n history, the Indianapolis_ 500 will be staged on Sunday - May 26. Tradllionally it has -been run on tlle Memorial Day holiday (Monday) in past years. Other sanctioned soo.mllcrs Include Pocono on June 30 and the Inaugural Texas 500 at Texas World ,Speedway on Sund ay, Sept. I. 1 'ttiree of the \four events are on fiollday weekends. In· dianapolls on the Memori;il Day weekend ; Pocono on the JWy Fourth weekend j and Fri,. f tl>. lS-.t llllo Hondo' Wtllf., ll't 't. »-\.A Hl <bOr' 'ilMllOln "°"'""'"' c 1ntornl1 ,.,._. ··-· . Texas on the Wbor Day r.-weekCDd vacated by Ontario. _ _, . -. .. . " • Prep, Cofiege - R~g UC lrvlllt 11 l lolt lnwll1Htul u111 Int 111111 o1 1~ tttlM) nsrJ 20. s""'"'ort o> 1•:121 21. io:l'IHO Cl ) 1'::U; lO. Arlttl'I Ill 21;221 JI, LeeCI• (I) ?712•; JS. C1~ll (I) :it:Oh ft!1t (I) :M1'31 (Oft!lt!IY Ill J9:10. V1rllty •• ,, 1 l. St Tnl !~It) t :CI.(. J , •t:z IM1rl .. t l 1110, l . kht ,.t..tl 1\-- Ftrli"9 fLO!Ylpocl O· L C f :ll, <I. tlWll<t IL~ :14, fMIHltfl Vlel•I t :l1. 7. T • (Gle'f'I. t1~1~1 t :7t, l. Hower !Ml°"" VllMI t:». t. Ytvtltr IA••O'IOl •:34. lo. k rwurl (SI. 81tr,.11C1) f : S. TEAM; 1. Lotr1 <ll·J.5.4. ?. Lcwnooc tl:olCI, t. Ml1.it11 Vltlt 4•i4l, <L Foofl'lllt •l:.U, S, Arroyo ft:G1, OIMr1; &. Mtr1n1 '''"· llltt 2 1. ~ IHlll•ll"lltfl IHch) t :Jt.4. 1. Mtrtll'ltJ CRtncllo Alt ml!CllJ t ::JO, 3. Oot~t !R-hO Altmllol), <L Gf-11111 (PKUlc1l t :ll. J ,. rl l'ICI IWtllmllllfff) t :•J. 6. MotJttt 1Rtnc1"1 Attmllllll t i"6, 1. SlrlNI (El Mod.,, 9;SI. I. WU-fH ) t :SJ, t , (Wflll f:ff, ICI. St1otvna !PMlllc1I 10:0!. TEAM: 1. H1111tt"9f... ..Mlt M:n.r, 2. R•nchO Altmltot so:os. J. El Modant A50: IS. 4. W"'""-~;17, S. P1clllc111!~01j l. Wllfhl1,111r (Boht Gr•ndt1 t :'6.1 2. l('ilw (L• Q11lnr1), t :S.C, l. l<otlel fWn rnl 9;5$, ' McL••rn ·C8ol11 Gren(lt) 10:0., s. H11,.1c (Lt Qulnltl 10:06, 6. Fr•Mr INtlfl 10:11( 1. 811nc11 rwrsternl 10:14, a. Ru11111 lAr111111 10:1S. 9. White IBolw Ortndtl 10:1•, 10. Hu11t1r !W11t1rn1 10:20. TEAM: 1. !10111 Ortnck Sl : 4.1, 2. Westtrn .51:11. 3. L• Qu!nt1 51 :11, 4. N'"'"'1 H•~r 52:42. S. South Torrtnct 51:51. "'''' !. Hli'UltllOll (51111 Clt-19) t 141.4, • • •• • • t . ••kltll• u111 ...... 11v1 ll:N, l . ....... ~ CK) ,,,,,, ... Nalltflb•ct {Tustin) 10:01. 5. f lQrH (LOI Amloool 1o:ot. •· Murr•v 1cv11rrs11 11:11. 1. TONY SAWAYA'$ GOAL TENDING lblnei CLIJ A.,,lootl IO: 7, 1. ,._ (IJfliftrtlt'I' lf:lL 9. Nlltlel (Loi Amlcio.i 11 :21, 10. Ploman IC'lfH"Hsl •• ,a. "~' .. ,~ ·~-""'· W. B El T ' AD 1. Unl"°'"'t'I' n 14t, J. Tustin "''5· tt t J.'" '!'-'" u ,n. < "~"' l ecame oro s. J1111i• Vtcs!IY Estancia ·-· 1. French fl.ai,..> IO:n .r, :t. Gr11ve1111 CWntmlnWl 1f:M. l .Wt !SO(I CP1I~ verctrs) 10:35. "-Lima• (Lotrl ) 10:'.M, ). Sltve"son (PU.. Vltl'dls 10:36, ' HulKWI {l.olrt ) IO:lfi, r. llflnt11 (Wm) 11:"9, I, Jtnkln1 ILHr1t 10:.U, t. Allen 1M11rl1111 11:a , io. '"°""' l.Pil0$ Verdes) 10:53. TEAM : I. L~ra -311, J: PtlOi""Vff"OK .sl. 3. Wut1rd~•l1r q , '· M.lriN 116. 5. South Torr1nc• n•. Othl1'1: r. NfWllOrt l111Ch :tot, I . HVlllll'ICllOll l11Ch Ut. lttce 1 • 1. Mtlllt fMJUlen Vltfe) 11:J7, i. Gtrlch tFooll•!lll 10:'1, l . Unc•1t•r IGlet!dtll) 10:42, f , Ct• (MV) 11:43, s. Aldtrman (FCIOlhlll) 10:.u ••. ,_ S~lll,bun• {Foothl111 10:•7, 7, c-"' (MV} 111.tf1 I. Alder' (Fciothllll lO:Sl, t . S<hw1r1 IBoht Grtncle). lO:s.t, 10. ·~· 1s1nlt An1 ) 10:56. TEAM: 1. foothJ1 3'. I. MlulOll Vltft JI, l. ArrOVot 10l, .f, S1nt11 An• 121 , S. Glendll• 12t. •tc•, I. Per~er (Mlr1111i.) 10:#.0, 2. 8tnl1 (Mir1Jrslt) lO:Sl, l .. l!trrv IL"' Quinl.t) 10:5 '· ... ODertl• '"""'"""''') h :tl, s. Al>Clerson {LOI Amlqoa) 11 :01, •. LUCe.'O (Mlrlllfl'9) 11:07. r. EJlbt•o (Mlr1lrst•l 11 :!:*. 1. Jntild IM1r1ltt1lt \ n :ot, t . Allison rstancl'IO Al1.,,11os 11 :11, 10. Ltt (Nel fl 11 :17. TEA>.\: 1. Mtr1lrste 24, 2. ll11ncflo Alt mltos 13, l. Lt Ouinl11 76. 4. Ufllyenlty 17, S .f ullerhln IOI. 'opf\tnMrt llf<t I 1. &l!llr1Q1 fP1tos v r re1e1 ) 10:3•..I. 2. Arto• IAAlrlru.1 1o:Jt1 l . l r1cket tWnlmllufwJ 11,.•1 '· Youno !P•los v..-ctesl 10:41 ; 5. wyman CP'tlos Ver· des) 1~:51 ; 6. SvmfMf"• fW11:mh11terl 10:5'; 7.FwlcU<Mto 1NtwNr1) IO:SS ; •. Ttrfl!I (WW,,,lnst..-J lt:W; •. Turner IWntrnlrrsltr) 1l:ff; 11. W1l11! IWtllmlns\el'l 11 :'1. TEAM: I . West"ll"*'"" St:it lt 1111111111 2. P1tos Vtf0e5 42 OQlnts; J. Hl•llOl't Htl"Wr (14 .ooinhl1 •. LOllrt fltJ DOl"ll): $. Mtrint 05' p0j11!1)1 .. P11~lll~1 +1SI POlnts); 7. Tu11ln CJIM )I l. :s.ovth CH"rtllCt .(216 DOlnlll. Rtce I I, Stm060tl CEI Modlt'n11) 11:l2.2; 2. Aou!J CEI Mocltnt) 10:3:2.2; l. H01111h11 !El Mod.,,1) 10:'3; <L E. HOPkln' (S1 nl• Ant ) 10:•7; s. 80"t'l'llDn fArroYO) 10:50; .. CQry 1G .. ooa1.1 10:u· '· Or!li (Arrove) 1 :Sf: I . Ttrr S1nl1 Anal 11 :031 t. ~ ...... /Mlltlllft ltio) 11 :0t1 10. C11n1&hlro Arroyo) II :OS. TEAM: 1. El Moeltnt (4' POlnl1 ); 2. Arrwo f45 POlnh)· l. S11111 ,tint ru oo1 .. 1111-'I ur.i...,..irv nn po1n1,1; s. Foo!hll 139 PO!ntl: '· Mls1lon V1t lo (1'1$ DOlnlJ)/ 7. Glenel•lt C16S DOintsll t. L• Qui"tt ti" POl"llJ. "'" J • J. ONn fFuU1<1on l 10:2'.2; l. Arttfl IStn Cltme11t1J ll:lt1 J. Arndl (!.o.i r•l"IJ 10:42; •· F01!1tr (Mlrttest) 10;.c); S. Frorn•,.e.:M !Fullerton) IO:ol'I: 6. Gtrrison CMlr•te5tJ 16:15; r. Wttol (Miral•sll 10:i7: 8.. °'""! /Mlr1lel!) 10:57: t. 81nte CFutl~ 11:02: 10. VtT......, fFulle<1on) 11 :03. TEAM; I, Mlralesl f21 POint1l ; 2. Fullt<1on ('1 ooinfSl; 3. Art"1t lf S ft"h ); .~. S~ll Clt1MA'9 n• ·..i111111 s. Nell 1112 ooinlsJ: •· E_t,,ll ( "I pOlnt1). ·-· tltct 1 I. HolOllbe~ (IAITIJIOe) 11:07.2; 1. 51eln (Neff) 11:17i l. LtlM (LornPCK J 11:'3; A. C1rn11cr10 fAnfl.f1l 11:l;f; S. Mlol..,le (M1<11tt1U 11 :31 ; 6. Martlnn (Arelaltl 11 :.'.ll; r. Mov~ 1Ne111 11:«1: 1. Mtndtr !"'"''" 11 :'8; t . Cohen (Mlr t !flt 11 ;5'; 'lo. Ltlls CMfrtlKI) 11:55. TEAM: 1. Mlr1IHI (fl/ POlnb): 2. Artosl1 ISl eolnhJ; 3. Ntfl (52 ool1'1!1l; A. SI. 8trntrd (134 P01nl1J. •tCI I 1. Aoutro fl...os Am!qcn.) 10:37.•i 2. Aftftl'Mft CMlffiOll Vitlol ll:OJ1 3. Alllion lll:11ncho AltmllosJ 11:07; '· Hf'r.Clrlck• t8oli.e Gr1ndeJ1 ll:Ot1 S. Ml~n (Los Amklo') 11 :1,t 6. TQblrt (Footh1111 11 :111 7. OOntvtn (Foofhllll 11:21 : I. frltncl I L• Qulnltl 11 :21 , 9. Co~ (ArrOYt l 11 :21 ; 10. V1rK!trhotll (lteocho Al11mlfDI) 11 :32; TEAM: 1. MitllOft Viti• ('5 llOinll)I I. Rt,,ChO Al1mitos \7.1 oolnll); 3. Botw c;.,,,.r1, 115 'OOlnts ; '· FOOlhlll (IQ.I ooln"); S Arrovt1 (1119 oolnfs)· 6. Lei~ Ami.,~• 114 POint,); 1. Lt Qu{n111 (\6t pot.,!$): I. san11 An1 Cll& P01nt1). ll•c• J I. WiQQan' IPllQS VitrdH I lO;U.I; 2. P'ltlt (M1rl11t ) 11:111 J. Gtlluo fM1r1t11I ll:S71 '· Gryelt<" 1P11IO!I Ve<""d~l) lO:SIJ : • CtlVtlll IHllllll ... lon BN<h 11:'9; •· Steellefll \H11nt11111.., ktcb 11 '"' 1. Schuler (Pl OI Vt <dts) !1 :12; I. Pe11w IP1clllc~1 Jl:l~; "· Teutn !HUllll""IOll l ttcbJ l1 12t1 10. OM!ei ISou!h T"'r11oce) 11:1l. TE •M: 1. P1los Verdes flt ool1111); :t. Hvn-lfN'fOJt lt•do 114 ool•hll J. M1rin11 (tl l'Oinlll 4. WntmlMtor 1115 ~1l1J 1 S. NtW-1 Ht111or 1141 .-!fits 6. S1111lh Torr11oc1 fl62 oor1111J; 7. uatln ll~~?,;.;. Glri: J iii Ct~I (Wt1ltrmfnHtr), ll"Ht!m1"· (ll:SI . ·--F-'•1• V•Un IUI uo L• Al1111ltn 1. S~lnblck (Ll \.1:02/ I. S1rmlt nto (F l 11:101 3. Rlt1t Fl 11 :11; 'f Flllitr fLl n :n ; s. Mu•lltr IF l1:2t; '· llffd !Fl 11 :36; 7, Senclrt Fl 1\:AO; I. 8ur1 (Fl 11:431 t. ll:~[ev ILl 11 :~7: 10. Mlllt• IL) 11_;,AB. HIHll ..-... •uch U'j' 1111 Mtn!Y 1. Gtll\111 !Ml ll :l ; 2. ll:Oblr'tl-(ln lH) 11:131 J, Hfndr ck lM) ll:lll . Tf!.st<"1 IH) 11 :11: . C111vtno (H ) 11 :2•• 6. St&vens Hl ll t'"'I' 1. Buller Oil 11 ·45; a. io:ot~h M 11:49; t . Solct r !Ml ll :SI; IO. Miit IM ! 11:55. • 11t11011 Amal J"\ f,.) Mtt•r Def 1. Lott I~ !; •: j· MIJ"t)1n1n 181 11:1$1 • ........ 8 ) 11 :11 ; '· Luvvsl re 1 181 S. Hlron !Ml H :l~: 6 Will l•m! 18 1 11:11: 7. Gtrcl• 18 ! 11 :27; I. Duril IM.I !J :l2; t , cci.mt n !Ml fl ;)(: 10. Gto CBI II :l6. Unlvtnlty (Ill ("9) CilflTM I Peterson IU) 11 :20; 2. Lonq (UI 11:3.S: J, Kun1t (C) 11 :'7; l. (ltrlt (UI 11:44 ; S. W1hm1n CUI 11 :.fJ: 6. En(ltl (U) H :SS; 7. Mlll~ll IC:l ll:St ; I. OtWOOcll' fU I 12:10; t. F~rrtO (C) 1f:111 10. HM!'lt IUJ 12:1J. Pro Scores • •• Goh:ltft Sttlt l:U. lvt11lo 121 (OTI 8 1l'SIOl'I 11?, Allltllt IOt Cll!CtOO IOS, C1t'ltltlld f~ MHwtuket 123, 0.t<oll IU fOTI C•~lat 112. PllJlltdllp!\lt I A Porll1nd 101, New York 100 ... c•rolltttt 130, Vlf"lll1\11 11• $A:'I "nlOl'llO tS, Dolnll'I'" It lttnllKlfY f'), Nrw York 17 HHC At11n11. 2, 111111/ldllOlll• 1 MOll1•••1 " c 1111or"'• 2 •• Ntw York 1Sl~r1 6, 911SIOI' ' TorOl'IO ... P!nibiltvfl e Ml-II S. Ctllc• ~ St.: '-"""' .t. \.II ~ ' After Seekip,g Teaching Job Goalie Wendell -Witt ' came to the -position oi enth\l3ed -.bout leaving Missi~ Viej~. ~t ·Spark:les- athletic director at El Toro High school especially am.one: the underclassmen I'm .. via a very circuitous route. But be pow beginning to sense-dewloping·interest." . By ROGER CARLSON finds he's glad~to be there. ''We've.aot an enthusiastic group of players ot lfM. ~u., Plitt ,,.., Witt, v..to built a successful si%-year basket· out for basketball, and while they've got · There are two major re- ball coaclling career at Im Alamitos bod a 1ong· way to go, I think we'll be a good quirements for an athleto to been ~ for a place oi employment team !ale in the yeer and next year." somewl)at clooer to bis Mission V"Jejo home Witt says the C01Struction of El Toro's be i good goalie In Waler for some tune. He wu prepared to give compus (ttle Qiargm presently share with polo. ldlsskln V"IOjo) ls ahead oi scliedule at the · First you must be able to preoent Ume, and balTing unusually heavy play high in the ...ter - rain1 or other setbacks, could be completed to have the . ability to get Oii -next August. The walls of the gym are go~ up anyway, up and stay up in order to and while that's only part oi the picture block the oppooents' thrusts. HANK WESCH to atMetic director Witt, it means a lot Secondly you have to hive to the basketball coach in him. quick reOexes. * * * Estancia High's Tony Sawaya apparently has both in spades as auested to the Eagles rise in water polo circles. Dana Rills athletic director Del Tanner ii •videnlly well --bis job too. up the helld coaching job at Los Alamitos and planned on assisting Saddleback: College. coach Roy Stevens with the basketball pro- gram there this season. DwtDc ;a.. ........-, _, ....etved • rather tempdllf offer tt Meome team trainer with Ille N-.J B-boll Association's Plloenb: !Inns and llelp in establtsbtng a lljlOlts medicine cllnlc there. Then he beard about the opening at El Toro. "I ,;u..t planned on aJll>iylng foe a teaching job, but they asked me first if I'd be interested in the basketball coaching job and also be athletic director," Wilt relates. Bu1 after 1 visit, ~ decided be wasn't nelly lntaested In' llYtat lo Arizona. "J said I'd be interested in the athletic director position if it would help me in getting the basketball job. and within a short time 1 was hired." . Tanner says be'• toatmt nnnlng the athletic program 11 Dua HUis for now, but lf the World ProfeuloD&I Football League ever gets off the ground be may consider a position with one of the new teams. The football picture is evidently looking up al University High. 1be Trojans' A1u:rry Graham coulO finish the season as the league's leading rusher if be cootinues at his present pace, and the Trojans' un- derclassman teams are doing well. \Vitt, who was 1972 Orange County basket· baU coach-<ll~year says be is enthused about the school's athletic program overall and specifically about the upcoming basket· ball team. "The football team going uodefeated so far is a great thnig for our program," Witt says. "A lot of the students weren't The University sophomores are undefeated in four games. and the freshman team is 3-1 in league play. Dunlevie, Adams ·Leading SoCal Running P1·ospect.s Randy Dunlevie oind Garry Adams are the SouUtern Cali£omia College rross coun- lry team leaders. Dunlev ie. a freshman from Los Amigos High School, is probably the most consistent runner en the Vanguards team and coach J1m Crumpton has high hopes for him qurtng the next four yelft'S -not only in .,.... country but in track distance runnlng u wen. "He has tremendotn abili· ly," the coach says ol his prize freshman. ''He is 1probably the most relaxed runner I have ever coa ched and he is the most consistent.·· ~ Dunlevie is a pre-med stu· dent and was directed lo the So~I campus by his church pastor, himself a maralhon runner. When he turM to track In the spring, Dunlevie will run the threM11ile and Crumpton 'predicts a ruiure time or 13 :30 or better for the even, ... ~more.Crump ton feels the young student can run 8:45 or better for the two mile and get under 4: 10 for the mile. Adams , a Junior classmat1, is from Oregon w h e r e Crumploll held forth as a high school coach for a number of years before moving to 5oCaJ College. He is alao the cross country team captain. "I've known Garry slnce he was . in the eighth grade, 11 Crum.pion says. ~ "After high school, he at· tended the · Ut1lversity of Oregon but became disen· chanted with the big school atmosphere and dropped out to work as a fry-cook tor a year and a half. "I called him one day artcr I came to SOCa1 arid asked if he waJ interested in a smaller achool and If he thought he could sUll put it together u a runner," the adds. came down and ran i all-comers: meet at Fulltttoo ln the mile. He ran 5:07 aod. struggled but he jum- ped in wilh both feet and worked twice a day to lake off 20 pounds and he's come a long ways . "When he was at Oregon he ran a 4:08 mile and was fifth in the Pacific·&· steeplechase in 9:07 h is 30Phomore year." These are the two Cl'0$.5 t'OWltry team leaders for SoCal College and the ooes on whose shoulders a great deal of responsibility wlll be placed next Salunlay in the NAIA district meet at Biola. The Vanguards must place among the top thr~ teams in the meet to qualify for the nationals at 5alina, Kansa s a week later. After that Crul(lpton has Ounlevie, Adams and Wal t Hill, a sophomore, teamed with Lewis Patterson, Roger Davis, Steve Lassegard and Al SiddooS Oil the Vanguanls Track CJub to compete in th e USTFF meet In San Diego !ale tliIJ monlh. COach Steve Farmer''• Estancia cnw leads 1.he Irvine pack with a 4·1 mark with onJy Santa Ana Valley re- main'ing on the schedule and appears headed Iowan! It.. first~ver competition in the CJF pla)~lrs. Circuit rivals Corona del htar and CoSta Mesa havt 3-1 marks with two games remaining in t~ sevctHeam setup. The playoffs consist or 32 berths "1Jich w i 11 ac- commodate 23 leagues pfwi: representable free I an c e teams. J.. Co-champs are con1idered first, tben tri<hamp.s, then~· ond place teams after sole champklns are placed. The Eagles got a lnmen· dous boost when former Newport Harbor lllgh players Steve and Ron Smith enrolled at Estancia this year. And Farmer, a former Newport liarbor and UC Irvine standout, has installed new thinking into the Estancia attack. Coupled with the Smiths. team unison and the tough goal tending play d Sa\vaya , Estancioi tias finall y so lved the Costa Mesa-Corona de! Mar setup. Farmer says Sawaya, a &-l senior. can play college ball now and lhat Estancia baled its de!ense around Sawaya in the f..3 overtime victory over Costa Mesa. "We prefer a man·~man defense," says Farmer, "Wt against Costa Mesa we went with what we thought would do best against Mesa. "We dropped back and col· lapsed on Mesa's hole man, allqwing their outside shooters to take their shots egainlt Sawaya . He can1e throuah by stopping all but three of their 16 shots. The only way you ca n do that is ir you have a really outst anding gOalie. "He has a real gooil game sense and fantast ic abili ty_ in the water. He stays up high Md perhaps his tennis ability hell" him with his quiet reflexeS.11 103 FM 111CM F'a:\hion l"sland Newpo rt Beach STEREO SOUNDS Of THE HARBOR. ~ . . . -• • • • I ' -' . • ·~ I I • • The Week's Market Highlights VOLUME, HEAVY TRADERS • NASD . Quotations on M utu.a , - tttw -Y0111--flok' COMPi'ONWlTH -IJUllUt .... ~ llld 4'1> 10,1111,11 K UOOl ll ,.OS:• 1DWl1111 11 t ti" ol f ftlJIT: • "''(ff S.13 S.62 lu1i.rn 10.N 11,19 lnlr Inv 1~21 T6.21 CHO ~ l~ed P'I· A. & 8 1.1• t.h lb Eq_ly ,,3t ,,11 luttln In t ,lO 10,t:I 8•1f l'I( lt,41,,4 (ff on MVll,ltl c 1.4 1,'° F~ \.IE!! 11,tl lt,M ~nll!n J.M ,,]1 corn 10,1110.tt 'FUl!f.i.f\0 ~M Dy Comp~ ,,76 1.39 F•MtCIP t.Sl,t.S1, M&UCO: Spe(fl 30.11:J0.11, ht .... ,c frc;, GOrno •.• , •.n fllUHOI UKIJ ,f rttrn •• ,. '·" SI AiO Oft!JI C0111p 0 7,U •• lt o•OUJ'; fn.Oo F •. 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S.S3 S.S3 '3rd Ct fl\ 10.8811.92 Hot•le 18.6020.11 O!vldn J,63 3.t1 Apprc 1•.1111 .!.4 Am Mut 1.15 t.U 'El.£ Mil J.St 3.:Jol linprl Cp t.U 10.n Pref $1k 6.• '·'' '"com 11.6 1'.lS A/'l'INI Gr l,fl 2.St Et11lt Gf 1.93 t .6t Imp Gr 7,JS 1.0 lncorn '·'' S.18 tnw~t ,,tS 10.11 AH(HOlll l!AT-OH & Inc tdAm ll.10 lt.•l Slock Sr 6.19 I.SJ !>II Oe•n 11.tli 11 .9' USAA: C. 10.63 1~.63 US GvtS 10.07 10.27 VALUt: t.IN t: l"DS: -VI I L.nt $.'19 t.56 V•I lfl( ,,s,, ~.'M Ll w G1h 7.•? 1.1• V•I SPt 3,lS 3.67 VANCE SANDlltS: J'lllWk, . . .. 17,%1,)tO • • • .. ' ",Slil,Jtll """' 1•,ua,UI u.,2lt,1Dt 15,IU,tM 1s,»•.•t1 1',tt,,•,• IO,llS,JJJ NY, AMEX, OTC Gainers and Los~1·s G•OUI": HOWA•o: Ind FAm l.6t •.CM GfWl1' •·'' 1.•l Side FO l,2t '·" .... "·"'·-Clp\tl •.M S,35 B•ll'I FCI t.IO 10.11 Int~ t.ll't t .13 HI'# ENG LI': SIGMA FUNOS: Fnd 11\V '·" I.SO G\lf'lll F u.n lS.41 II! '"VIS! 11,60 12.11 EQ111tv 11.1118.Mi Ctp Shr I.IS I .SI Grwtll 1.23 t .O'J In(..._ •.11 6.7J lnvtr" G t.n t.11 Grwlh n .01 It.OJ Inv 10.10 ll.6t 1nc.orn •1,U 1.11 Sottll F 1.11 l .tl ln)I Guld l,'1 7,11 Sid• 1&.ll 11.2t Trsl •I.It 8.S1 in¥tst J.'lt 7.91 vs com 1.61 e.l2 • ·•••• 16,t16,1\0 ........ U,)60,1)1 •. , M,1i.,n1 Nfw Vo·~ lUPIJ -Tiit 1011ow;n sllows 111t stock' 111,11 twv~ 9•1 mo't •nd IO\l Ille mos! b•seCI •JV Vtr1tur t,21 10,U, Skk Fd ll.08 U.20 Inv tnd!c 2,t6 ... HEA Mt t.SI t .18 Ventur 1.t7 t .80 W• NtU 1',H U.tO £01 E So 2J,102J.IO 111¥ fkK U,1111.IS Neu Ceflt S.63 S.U Srnltfl II 10.91 10.91 -"Iron 4.10 •.4 l!:Ortt Gt 11.11 13.et IHYIST Ntuwth t.'3 t.63 SB l&Gr 11.33 11.13 AV<llx F I.t i t .t/ Ellun Tri U.1S ..• COUNSEL Newton U,7616;1) So Ge<1F 13.1113.13 AXIi EfMrg J.90 t.U Ct p.111 7,11 I.ts Nw Ptrt. lt ... 16.!M Swst Inv 1,11 1.J.I "OUOMTON: Ener11w 12.3J 12.33 CtOlt tv 3.0l 3.l2 ~w Wkl 1J,2l 13.11 Sw 111¥ G 6.46 6.9' • Fufld A .i.M s.n F•lrt o ·•.ts t.11 , C•olt sn 5.IS •.U Nltl'llts 16.t l 16.tl Sow In 11.13 12.ts SF<'-""• .•. •'.· .. °' 41 .... •1 FIT! Butl t.11 t.'1 INYIST GAOUI"; N1,51 lvlr IS,2:1 IS.U $Pe<lr• S.Cl6 S.SJ ..,. Fed Alb 9,33 ,.. IOS Giii 7.16 ••. Oniev-1.2t 1.3' S&J' ln0 • 7.l• 1.1• ..... Sci •.36 '·'" PIOi\.ITY IDS NO .,,,. 6.et 0 Nell Id U.9912.91 STATI IMO o•P: BLC Gtl'I 11.'2 ll.03 GltOUJ': IOSPr 4 . .0 •.71 On• Will 11.?I 11.?8 Cl"" FO S.(11 S ... l'llb'l<ltl 11 .... 11.... 8nd deb Kl ... t .11 Mulu•l t.10 JO.Sol OJ'JtlHHM 1110; OIJ-eslf S.•1 ,.91 l'l•Yroct 1.IS 1.11 Clpt.I StQCk 20.12 21.16 Op Alm 107111 71 Proo;irs S.32 S.11 l •trk <;tr 6.31 6,'6 •11,lt 1:,&1 Sllttt t.tO 10.11 Op Fnd J:s. 1:26 St Fr Gr S.12 S.12 llt1cn Hl I.ft 1,911 Con1re 10.J.I ... Vtr P1y 1.92 t.St 00 TIM 1.6' I.JS St Fr Inc 9.11 9.21 0.l (on 10.'310.93 ,.,. SSI< 1.S2 I.IS Inv Rt~ j,11 S.66 ore Ste 10.Sl 11.SO S!llf. Sir U.SO tJ.75 U.rk~f •.01 •.tS DIS! l.12 ... I S I: P1ra1T11 7,11 1,tJ STiAOMAN FOS: londslM •.IO S.lS Esww l0.01 . . Grwll'I t.36 •-11 P•ul Rev 1.12 1.00 Arn lno 3.2t l .?9 lost FOn t,M 10.1141 Ev1r1l !ntom l .'ltl 4.lS, Poa1u1 F S.lt S.M A.~\o FCI 1.20 1.20 8t'own l . ..O ,,11 •1?.16 n . ..o T•1t Ut J.4t ~fin Mt 2.16 t.16 tnvt " 1,41 1.u l'lrnl'lm l0.6110.61 Fund 16.1)111.Sl Tr1t Sii lJ,95 1'.IS ~nn s.q 1 ..0 OCtafl 1,)6 l.36 CA\.VIH ,UHOS; Puriln t.lt 10.M Isle! Fnd 22.11 22.90 Phil• Fd 1"14 1'.ij STl!IH •OE l"Oi: 8u!I Fd U.61 U,tl S.lem F x•.l l '·" Ivy F11nd l.&6 7,'6 J'ILOll:IM GP; 81l1nc 21.11 7\,17 Clln Fd 21.dlS.Jl •Trend 24.Sl26.8' J J'GWl l'I t.SllO,,I C•ot•I J.IS '·" C•oUI 10.HIO.n Olv Sflr J.Sl 3,86 l'IHAHCIA.L J•nlll FCI 11.6911.69 !ncam 1.'1 9,80 Stock lS.13 IS.IJ Nltw<I 9,tl 10.IS J'lt0Gll:AM5: JH1n j111 1.10 l .IO PllQrm I.ti t,lt SIS G•OUJ': NV Y•11 11. .. 11.1~ F!" Oyn •.tt •.t9 JH1n 19 I.SJ •.21 Pint St 10,tl 10.•1 Grwtl'I 6.5' 7.22 CG Fvnd 10.'2 11,J1 Fin lfld t,)1 .i.31 JOlln•tn 2S.1S2S.2S Pin Tr• 1 ...... CIO Trln 11.06 13.11 Fin Inc. S.91 S.91 tc.£Y$T0tott:: J'IOMEl ll FO; tent SM 1].91 U.28 Vtn! 4.19 4.2& CllSI 81 II ... 1t.t6 Pion En 1.8' 1.61 CMANNINCi 1\IFCI VII 11.9113.01 Cu\l 111 19.76 21.116 PlOfl FCI 1?,)I 13,,S SPIC! 'I.II 1.93 YnllfOll •.S1 '·" V1n11rO I.» l.~6 V.nl 1ot0 6.06 Vt rle>d I 3.11 •· 1' Vlkn! Cr S.73 S.13 W•ll t Qr 1.n a.'4 Wt~ Mu 11.S212.Jt W.1110 tQ_ 11.19 11.19 WILLl~TOM OltOUJ': E•plor. lw" Morgn TCNllV Tr1r.ot Wtt'llr Wlllltn 23.tl 16.13 t.M 10.75 17.39 U.S4 t.OJO ... 11.0t 1l.'1 11.91 U.01 •10.80 n .IO W~!mn 10.10 11.CM Wind~r l.U 1.11 WlllCI Gr l .ll •.s3 WIKons S.M ~.JI Zltg!er 10.11 11.11 •·,•·d•v•Clend. l·u,..v•ll11>1e. Yr, A9• t1,MO,MO S\01,MJ,000 1t,7N,121 s,ns,oot Yeutly Contparison WM. IEllOlll Niii ..... Z, lt7l OCt. Z6, Hll ....... '· 1t7l Ntv. s, 1t11 Migfl Low Adv Otc ·tt .. JSS 14tl " J1 721 10ll lit !:M U07 50:1 )0 '2M IOI ISi Slan<lartl and Poor HI.. LO'# ClaM Cflt n s.OI 1111.w 110.)t-S.oo Jt.10 ll.Ml ll.~11.lJ SJ.M S1.t• $1 ,14-1.•l 111,u 101.01101.or-4.ll Fr1111 Tiii Welk OCI. ~Ht". t, 1111. ,UNOS; l"IAST Cun IU 1,q 9.?9 Plonr II 10,9111."' EA•HINGS IHCREASED OIVIDENOS ol ch"n<ae on 1n11 Net •n<I '~'~' art tllt ll•tferenct w~e~ s closing pr.ce ilnCI do~ln11 price. GA IHE ' 1 ~pWljk Cp '1'/li· • 2 N•tonvs .1S 111\!o+ '• 3 Ston Wllb 2b 1• "" .. qCl•~ I. Piii 10 \ ... < s Cl'll E 111 :a IV 1l' 1•1o I 6 Miss Rlv .96, 19''< 2~• 1 Boelrig C .•O 1o.oi.+ ?~o I Myers l .IO Ult..-p, t Tx PLT ,)tb 1S\>t+ f>4 10 Hunl (II .11 JS'"+. J'I< II F1lrmtFa: 9\t+ 1 12 Fld Fine! • ..-"' u s-vtlnCp . ~ 1• + ,,,. 1' GAC p l"'•+ lo U NoCntGs .60 1H1+ 1'~ 16 PrCICIRet . 10 a + '·• 11 U•rco 1.10 18~•+ Uio 11 HOmesl•k 1 tt + .. ~, 1q Ontiid•L ,76 U'•+ 1\~ 20 tntrllll9 Sir '"•+ ''-21 QAet0119 Co 1Vi+ \'o 21 Comb E 1.s1 16 + J•.'t fl Mo!lltt H .20 7J.lo + ~o 1t GIUW 1.2tb 1S2 ..-n ?S C-1'11. .SO. SIV.+ •'lo LOSERS Up 21.0. Up '10.1 , UP U.O Up U.1 Up 1•.I UP 1'.1 Up 11.2 Up 11.1 UP 11.3 Up ll.1 Up 11 .t UP 11,6 Up 11,3 Up II.I. Up 10.I Up 10.3 Up 10.3 Up q,9 uo 9,2 UP t .I Up t .1 Up •.O UP I.I Up 1.4 uo ••• 8.ilncd l0.6J 11.61 INVl!STOftS: CUii Kl 1.11 l.t6 Pl•1111d t.~t 10.St 9nd Fd t.l• 10.10 Oil( Fd S.l1 s.• C1111 KZ 6,12 •.12· 'PL! GRO 11.lt u .ot Mltlltr t Mo11tll1 .t.me-r, S1otrld-11'hc. lrom 12'1x. 1 CMI ttw er, 21 -11 Otf 31.1 Cam Slit 1.3S 1.4 Gftll Fd 1.13 1.U tuu SI 1l.lt24.SO ,.IC~ llOWI: £q1y G< 1.1• 9.1)1 lncorn l.3S t .15 Cu\I SJ 11.1112,lS Grwtll 13.11 13.71 EQtV l'f' 3.18 3.41 Stock F xi.% 1.n Cust SJ l .:Jol 9.1t Nw Er• 1?.3111.J1 FllO A.m t.Oll B.ll ht Mulll I.SI 8.S1 Cll\I St •.\I S~O'l Hw Hor 10,1110,11 Grw111 s •1 S.tl Flm ~r 10.as 10.as it.POiio ,,Ol S.Sl Pro Fd lll.211-I.ts ln<om 6.'lfo 1.6' FOll:UM GROUP; Pollrs 3.9) •.:JO Prov1Cll 4.11 4.M! SOtcl 1.93 1.11 IOQ 1Fnd 11.1111.11 Knickr 6.11 6.• P.ovcr Gt 1.12 t .SJ Ventur 9,9S 10.1 101 Frid 1.1.i 1,1-1 Knkr Gth I.OJ l .IO Prud SIP 10.n 11.11 CHASE Catum 9,21 9,11 L.nOmrk J.1' l .O'l PUTNAM BotTON; 2S FunO 6.tt 6.4" Ltfl• FO S.62" S.61 FU HOS: Fnd llGS 8.11 t .6l Fein Gr •.66 S.10 LEX GltOUJ': Conver 11.2117.?S' F•on Cp S.12 6.15 l"OUNOERS Cp Ledr 16.1S11,lS EQultt 9.1610.01 -s1'1Tr-tis---i:u -1;u -o•OUP: Grwll'I 6.63 I.JS Geo 1S;1l-16.1S SPKt 6 .• 7 1.2t G•wtll S.•l S.9'! Rt~rt~ l•.Ot H.:M Grwt~ 11 .31 12.43• Olem f d 10.91 11.'l'l lncom 11,4 11.IS Libtt Fd S.24 S.ll Int l .ll't l.M COLONIAL · ' F Mtual 9.03 9.11 Lilt lnlv l .6S t .'6 lflV t .Jl 10.63 l'UHOS : F SQ>ttil ll.16 n .ll Lll'IC C•P 1.60 t .JI Yi\!t F 10.77 n .11 Conver 9.M 10.IS Four~ F 9."3 10.31 LOOMIS Vov•o 11.01 n .03 Equ!ly l.lS 1.66 PftAHIU~M SA..VLES: -Ri!cwtrt F_ l.69 1.31 Fund 10.M 11 .63 •GltOUI': C.p 0... 1J,M ll.M Alnlrt 11.16 •..• Grwltl 6.1• 6.11 ONTC l.lt '·°' Mutyal 1).02 U.Ol Sltet EQ 1.61 t.'l lncam t.18111.69 (;Wiii Sr 1.19 I.~ LORD A&I: Stglttar 1.lll 2.l~ Ven tur 3.3\• l6l Fr lncm 1,90 1.0ll Atliltl J6,t3 7.SO S.Chlls FCI 111.47 t .26 co1um G n.tl n .11 vs Gv s 9.n 10.16 Arn &ut l .06 l.l2 scriu' So 1.10 I.ts 6ell'I. Stell SJ.Sl .,., ti.SS Betll. Steel-.OC from 3k Cytlops co. J.11 vs ,tt BWll Ca.-20< from lOc Ktrr-McGet 1 16 v\ 1.$8 C•ev. Cliffs ••on--SJVx from sac ~sont C11. 1:1t vs .69 Janes & L.fll\tlllin-'60c from ll'looc Llogetl & Mver1 2.M vs 2.36 Klmtoerly-Cl•r--l6c. !rom 30c McOOnald's Cp. ·"' vs .10 lu-ens StHl-2k from lOc 0-0k~p C091"r 8.2t vs •.06 MCL&an Truck.-18c from lk StallCI. Oii c.1. 6.60 vs; •.73 ~lltnco l11c_.-.lr: !rom 2c v .s. Steel t .09 .,., 1.89 Newmont Min.-lSc lrom 26< UI lllCl.XI, S.ll V'i 2 . .0 Rlt f)el Textll~27'h< trom 2k U•r t MOfltrlJ Stewart-Warner-•k from 46' •l Autom•1;on lnCJ S 08 vs .•1 Te••s.c;iull lnc.-l'k from 1k 1 c;onJ.t._lmr. co .31 vs -• .50 _1.t!f_ng;lt.lfJ:ll=lllii:.Jr.11mJfk_~ Gen.-c1;.r .•s v~ 1 .2.~ ACQUISITIOHS. MEll:GEll:S AND Gltftt f'ol1. Ctm. 1.ll't "' 1.46 Pll:EUMIHAAV NEGOTIATIONS McGraw Eells, 1,JI VI 1.116 Akton• lnc .-CUltt f L.fll. P01orn11 CO. .llO vs .93 ' N~at• Nit, Cp.-Cl'l•rmcr•ll Pub. i'SA Inc. ,23 n 1.70 Cabot. C1bol &. Forl>ts Lnc:ITr.-lCM Riv. Pittston Co. .'18 v1 1.0. Oun & B•allst•Hl-W lsel P!'lotocnrome !it_, 8rot0c•U 1.n VI 1.41 Aollln' !nt.-T1•. Orl,,.,-Urstll Int. Union 1nw11. 1.1• vs 1.u Tl-s Mlrror-KT8C·TV, Ausun CASH-EXTRA D\VIOEHOS Wl'lit11~er CP.-OyMsclences (p. Cr.wt.-Clltls lroro-12'"t . Copyrogtrt 1'13 · ,SI,,,_"' c.o.-lh •w un1110 Pr1t1 lnttrn1tlen•I 2 Htrdft1 . 6 l FldMll 2.62b • LtYl Slrl .4 S Morse £1 Pl' • Glollill INr I Al~I .12 I Carn 8 1.10b 9 SCA. StrVkt 10 HQwardJ .'10 II PlUI Hui 11 Glblt tll!IS1 IJ 8t-tr In .16 14_HoSPCp _.Ull is Un'lti'fng_ .n 16 Cvc1opsep I II Spr•11U<i El -11 OiHIOtl .1211 . 19 NII StlT!icon 20 FlyTIQr .tti. 21 Ponc1eros.1 S Tl ArC1 lt N .i.. ?J Gen Med .12 • 1' Roc-owr .21 JS H•r<OUl'\8 1 10 -s 011 lJ.J 16~ 8 01f 32.1 211/J-I O!f 21.1 1ov,..... J•.~ oo 23.6 u .,,._ •111 Otf 13.l ,,,,_ 2Vo Off 23. I tt>t---~"" 011 n .1 11 ... 1'1• Ott ,,,,' 1S1h--' 0 11 20.S lS"ft---6V. Oii 2{1,, ll\\o.-l~ Ott lt,t !fl'~ S Ott 19.I 1S -_3!i_OJ1---1!,S 16 • Off 19.4 2114-S Ot! "lt.O 1t'h-S'4 Ott 19,0 1S'I\--3~·, 0 11 11.3 S.'l't-1-W. O!f II.) 11\1--6~~ Oii II. I 66''--"'"' Otf 11 . .i •'"'"-·"~ Ott 11.1· 11 -3'11. OH 11.2 1o•r.-2',.. Off n .2 20 -• Oii 16.1 Business Booming: It's the · ater NEW \00RK (UPI I -One out of every 500 American homes uses bottled w~lcr -double the number 10 ·years ago. Why has a custom generally considered European gro"'·n so quickly into a $125 million busfuess in a country where tap water has always been as American aa apple pie! The American Bottled Water Assn. credits the. purity and taste of bottled water, which comes from natural springs and wells or is formulated or di stilled. There's also the conve1tience of bottled water in factories, offices and schools. The association does not officially credit the boom to the public's fear of pollution. "mERE'S BEEN a tendency to advertise bottled water by knocking tap water but the ABWA has an adv.ertising code of ethics that opposes this • sort of ·ad," said John G. Scott, president "Most tap 'water in the United States is safe except for temporary periods." Scott, president of the 103-year-old Mountain Valley Water Co., admits lhat the pollution is.sue has attracted a number of "fly-by-night" water bottlers to the buslness·clurlng the past !ew years but he said many already have folded . There are 700 firms active today, many of them serving anall areas where the water of a local spring has loog been considered healthful. Mountain Valley of Hot Spring, Ark .. FINANCE known as •·the v.·ater of presid ents," is thEi only natural spring water distributed nationally and the major boldout against plastic containers, which have become common in the market. It is a hard water (low in "sodium) end ~s to pick up some taste of plastic. "WE EVEN AGE our bottles six months before they are used." Scott said. "That's to guard egalnst the chance that chemical activity in new glass would affect the tasre." --pevotees of the Mountain Valley taste range lrom President Nixon. who took the v.•ater v.'ilh lti1n on hi s trips to Peking an d ~Iosco"'. to Secretariat and Riva -Ridge, the thoroughbred race rs. French bottled ,,·aters have I o n g dominated the Eur opean market but the late Ameri can-born D u c he s s of Talleyra nd inlported ~lountain Valley in· to France. ' - "All · EUfopean bottled waters by law are natural or mineral and a number of them are laxative," said Scott, who pointed out that there are no longer any laxative waters on the American Market. "But in the United States we've · made progress in making water -taking 1n inerals out and adding others to taste. It's called treated water." AL THOUGH most natural springwater bottlers do not play up the medicinal aspect of their product, some medical authorities say natural water washes wastes from the body twice as effectively as tap waler, Young persons drink 8 to 15 glasses of water a day, but older peroons may drink only about hall tliat many and expect it to do tbe same job. "That's where bottled water can play its part," Scott said. A3 bottled water becomes big business, big business is buying into it. American NesUe has purchased Deer Park Spring Water Co., in Maryland. the Coca Cola Company o! Atlanta purchased Belmont Springs-\Vater Co., near Boston, and Foremost.McKesson bought Sparkletts Drinking \Valer Corp., in Southern Galifomia, an area that accounts for half the bottled water sales in the United States. Human consumption is the main use of bottled water but it also bas industrial uses. IT IS MIXED with jet aircraft fuel to cool engines during takeoff, , applied to the pla ting of space rockets as a final rinse, used to wash electrical in- sulators whil e the current remains on, and mixed with concrete for a finner set. It is used in distilled liquors mouthwashes, soft drinks, b a b y fonnulas, medical injections 3.!'ld tests and for a wide :range of del'iydrated. and powdered food.5' and bever.ages. Several nursing homes in natural spring areas have ihe water piped . tight into patients ' rooms. "' "The largest increase in liquid intake in the United States in the past five years is soft drinks," Scott noted. 0 Add this to the increases in the consumption of beer and bottled water, and it's plain to see that the increases have been made at the expense of tap water. &me people thinl: that by 1960, hall of the liquids Americans consume will not be from the tap1" NtW Vo•• 'cuPI) -Tt.t lollOWinQ h\I 1flow1 1ne stocks 11'1<1! riavt Qai11ed 111e mo11 •n<I lo~• Ill• fl'IOit ba!.i'CI on llff(tfll ot cl'lal>Qf on lflt Amer lc;m .S!oc~ E•C~ln'}f. • Net .1nCI 1>ttcen!•<;tl' clla<1~~ '"' '"" d1l1'1~n<t b~lween 1a11 w~·~·~ clo\ing prlC• •"d Ill<\ wee~''i clo'iln<J p11ct . 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Vor~ tUl'l) -•~t IOllOwong 11•1 Silo"' 1n~ <tac~• !"'11 ll•v• 11ou•ed Ill• most an<I IC\! 1111 mo't t>~sro an perttn1 01 <lldnq~ O'> ll'le Ov~r·tn•·Counter1 rn••>~t "' ouoi~O bv lht NJl.SO. N(I a"d u~•<•fl!.<Q~ <hiln(Je> ~·· t~• <!il'<'r<n(• b· lw~n f~ u•ev.0111 Id;! biel P"Ce an~ lllt cu<r~11\ 11>1 b•d or•<•. GA.INERS 1 Pa!•lc k ~trol 10"•+ 1•11 VI) 1•.o 2 Ent"ilY Cv 111' 13 ..-P~ Uo 1~.6 3 O<t•n Fl,h•I' 1111\.-I'• Uo lS.O t MoqulCoro .ll 30', -l \• Up 14,1 ~ E•<hQO•I c.~~ a•; .. 1 Uo 1).1 6 Ener')y (On•r i", \lo Up ll.O I O~!Of'CI labs U''. ! 1·16 Up ll.O 8 SVlO' lncorp 11'•• ~ \>lo Up 11.7 t C0tCll~ Corprn 61 + 1', Ult 12.6 10 Oot\Oir Oevlp '~I• '·~ Up 11.1 11 K1lv•• Co•p S't -'> Uo 10,t n TenntlO 011111 t'1..-\i Up 10.• 1J AUIO l"r•ln (p !O'l! 1-I Up 10.1 U A11'1all (O)mm S'•f. V. Up 10.S 1S M<>y ~lro•m 6'o o-'' UP 10,t 16 Pdm• Avrl 10-s1,,_ ~, Up 10.l II N•llDall Corp u~. ,_ 1..:. Up 10.1 18 Otr\Druq .13 ~,,,_ '• VP 10,0 19 EDS N11c!e.n " .. 1\'4 Up • ~ 20 ~alhw lnd1t 11~.+ 1 Up • J 21 Adv.in ~aStl 1 ,_ '• Up 1.1 12 Heath. teen• "•+ 1 1 UO I.I 23 Hori" Rt .(110 ''• ,_ '. Uo 6. 1• Ofhflar Lcu;s1 a • •• 1 Up •. I 2S Tawle Mto o9 ••• t 'I> Up • I \.05ERS 1 (Im f:lrw WI• H't--,,,_ Ott 1 CCf:lllMl<IA .20 I'·.--1•,:, Oii l Unit; lnto•11 6\11-1 011 • Motloro lndu~1 10 -'"' Oii S Jtff1(0 tnl111p 161/.,.... 2'4 Off 6 NcutllCoro .•8 401/J--s Oil l Oat1 OilC Inc t ''4-1 Olf I Supreme EQP! 10Vt-1'1.o Olf ' Pl!t1n.11ffw .?I · 21'h-1Vi Ott 10 Gtlco COro 11 );,-lV. Oil 11 Emp Fire .ISb .,._ •~ Ott n H•Mn ew .0011 ,..,._ 1\lt Oii 11 ACMA.T Corn u •:.-1'4 Otf U Sei n 0.1• Cp l\o-\.:. Oii U We)t(o,tll Pl!! l•o-" Oii ,. Tvm~.,.,,~ Inc IO t.-~-. 011 u ~rtllan1~ .71 ll -11\ OU 18 Fun-5eed .OSb ,,...._ ~ Ofl 19 Gr•nmM111 l• n ,,,_ 1 0t1 20 P;onetr We11n ~lt--, Ott 11 Ofbroro Co ·'° ~:\<..-~ OH 1f'MCMlilln .~?b 13 -'t ·-Off 23 Tri Cntm Int 1.1' •-1 Ott U Comco!r Mlcl'I 6\1.-V. Otf l l.I lt.3 n.• 11,I ' 11 .• 11,0 10,1 ~ .. 10,, ••• . t.s .., ••• '' '/.'I u '·' IS ••• '" I.' I.' '·' ••• .. O•Ht l"li.t or.wr ... ,, TIM .. ....,._.. Paint Firm To Open Mesa Store '!be Sherwji>Williams Co., CleYOland. Ohio, will open a tull·line store in Costa 'Mesa, It W8S announced by W.W. 'VJ,lllama, regional director. It < w!U be in operation by Maroh 1974, and will be located west of the San Diego Freeway on Harbor Boulevard. "In addlUon to the extensive paint selections available to both homeowners ond palnUng contri ctors, our new store will offer unique d ec o rat i ng materials and services1"--he said. "Sherwin-Williams selecttd QiOta Mesa because market studies have P.Olnted out the , ou tstanding b u s i n e s s o~ portlhlltles , in t h I s . con1- munlty," Williams sald. The ·world's 1 a r g est nl<lnUfaeturc.r of p a I n t s , Shenrln-Wllllams opeeializes in cootlngs 10< prof..,lonnl paints in the residential, com- mercial and industrial con- tllntcd tloo ud • tllalntenanee liai s. ,~ • In Peking, Businessmen M1ist ll'lind Manners GENEVA. Switzerland (AP) -Vodka Is only a nickel a shot, and even heavy eaters will have a hard time spending all o! their dally meal allow- ances In a Peking mtaurant. But throwing ice rubes at a dinner companion may get a Weatern visitor kicked ®t of the country. P.laytully pat- ting a wallress C®ld draw the same penalty a n d backslapping is considered "in extremely bad taste." _ These are some bl~ of ad~ vice In a justiJU]>llshed manual for bu s ine ss me n traveling to mainland China, the rapidly growing com- mercial partner of the West. BUSINESS ~comm to China should tie braced for lruSlration, the 124-page guide makes · p!ain. .. Doing buslneu with the P .. ple'i Repuljlic o!Chlila bas never been--'euy," it says. "Latecomers -and all U.S. finns must be included In that category .....: may find lt hard to displace competitors who stablished themselves as su1>- pliers in the ' past t w Q decades." Failure to observtl the special set of ruJes for China. the manual notes, can tum frustration into failure as it did for one European bllsinessman "who playfully fllpped a piece of ice from his drink at a co.mpanion." The cube missed the target and landed pn a nearby of· flcial. The businessman was sent home and uso was another visitor who playfully patted a waltreM." any part of y o u r ac- quaintance's anatomy • Shaking 6ands is the ex- ception, but shoulder-slapping, button-holding and arn>grlp- . -ping are in .. tremely bad taste. changes with the Communist world. Trade with the United States shot up from about $5 million to almost $100 mlllion within a year, according to a figure av ailable here. . Ahd ~ first rule of eti· TRE MARKET potentia l is quette: ''Don't discuss politics huge. However, the manual and never, never speak lightly oompiled b9 the Geneva-based of Chaitman Mao." Business International S.A. Peking'S~ttade with Western notes that China "does not Europe and Japan totaled have 800 mi llion customers . "FLIRTING with Chinese some '2.2 billion last year, but only seven:'' These arc women, even -in the mildest about 15 percent more than the seven state trading agcn· and most tnnocent way, is in l97l and three times as cies which have a n1onopoly de£Jnltely out," says th e much as China's tot al ex· on all imports and exports. manual. Also : "Do~ touchli",_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,_,_,_,_. HAIR TRANSPLANTATION Neweort Bank Group Elects SKIN DlllUIS & TUMORS-ACNE ALLUGY TISTING-TAnoo REMOVAL COSMITIC SUAOIRY (WAINKLIS-SCARS) FlEE MIDICAL FACTS '8'>bert B. Dliyle, aenl0< vice resident of the Hartford Na· Uonal Ban~ & Trust Co: or Conntdleut, assulned t h e presidency of the 2*member conSUlller bankers .. soclatlon 1 .. t wtek ·~ lls 5.'lrd annual convention tn Newport Beach. Second Vice President Paul L. Stansbury. senior vice proalden t, Valley Nati on a I Bank, Phoenix. ,Etigbt new members were electod during the niecting to aerv~ three-year terms on the CBA board 1 of governors. 'J'bese were 1\.1.ason O. Alex- ander, Vice president, Citizens & Soothem National Bank, Columbia, S.C.; Gerald A. N.Y.; Elmer G. Grant, presl· dent, Central Counties Balik, State College, Pa., and 0. l.esfie Nell , executive vice presid ent. Indiana National Bank, lndlanaROlla, Ind. ALio el ected was Jam .. L. Smith. senioi vice prcslden1. Security Paclllc Bank , Los Angeles. The 1974 convention or lhc Consumer Bankers Associa· I MAI• Tlt.AHSPlA.HTATION I SKIN CAMC~lt. SUM I X,OSUll:I! COMfACT_Dt.RMAf.llll -HAIL AIHO•MALITllS tAnOO •rMOVAl. l"SO•IA'9S fllUNOUS INll'ECflON A.CME llllT" MAll:KS WA•T1 HAllt ll:I MOYA.L MO\.IS ALLlltO'I" • • M.IVl l -ECZ I MA MAIR l.011 A DAHOll:Ull'IJ C'rSTS lCAIUllNO/WltlNK\.tl • OfHI • American Oe rm1tolo9y Clinic s' Hei1Hh Se rvice eoWAll:O •• l"•ANkll., M.0., Otrma101091,1 . Olrtci.r Wt A.«t$11 All Meffc;QI P~r~ll\t'-MICl!cl•-M•11tr Cht'l;l-ISlnkAMtr!Qn:f L. A. Count'y: 531-1420 $203 Lakewood lfYd. Ltkeweed 90712 ... Uon Is scheduled to begin Oct. "'"' ............. : ...•• '·~ .. . ........... . ··-·· ............................ _ • ORDER ;t 1000 YOURS \ TODAY! Personalized • Stylish • Efficient Order For Yourself or 1 Friend Mey be used o n envelopas •• return address le.bets. Also very h•ndy •• identific•tion labels fo r marking personal items such •• books1 records, photos, etc. Ltbtl1 stick on glass and may be used for merking home ctnned fo~d items. All lebels ire print.d with etylish Vogue type on fine quality whit .. gummed paper. · r------------------------, 11m in 1111, ctul!'n, cno •~• m•U w\111 ll.U It: 1 I l"ilot P•lntt,,.. \.•IMI Div., P.O. •~• 1160 I Co••• Mts•, c1111. ,,.:I, -I : I. I ~ I I 1 I I . I L----~~~!-~~!~J!~J!. __ ~J . ' , Also elected ot the final day or 'the _<Onvcntlon held at the Newporter lM were First Vice President Robert E. Tobey, vice · P.reti4eg,_t Na· -tional Bank or llttrolt; and It, v:ice pr.fsident, LinCOIR ·First -National of Rocll~ter r 6 of nert year at the Aoo11us .... -···""'-·· .. 1 ...... Homesfea<I in VirilriJa. IL~:., ___ ...;1:·:-:;0 ___ :,· _;1':;:'":;,1 ____ .;•::;•'::"...;..IUI.!!'."'.., ... ~...,.~ .. ...,'!"...,...,~...,..,..,..,..,""-~"""""'~ .. I ' • • • • ·1 • • , • -" • • C 8 DAILY PILOT Sunday, Novtmber 4, 1973 HOMEOWNERS HAVE THEIR OWN WATERFRONT AT THE SHORES IN LAKE FOREST Sl1ores Home s All Accessible to Lakes ., -Opening Continues ln-~g1:Jel 11le townhomes of Park Niguel are attracting hundreds of visitors each weekend as the grand opening of the development eontinues in the Laguna ·Niguel Valley . .__Paik Niguel isSifilire<t c.n the western · side of the parkway between La Paz and Niguel Roads, adjacent to lhe 160-acre Orange C o u n t y Regklnal Park which cont.a.ins Niguel Lake. The one and two-story towlthomes in {our different Door plans wiUt up to 2175 square feet of living space are priced from $47,500 to $64,900 w 1 t h conventional financing offered. Commwlity management will provide for all exterior maintenance of 'the homes and grounds, except for pat!~, atriums an d design is .such that those a dressihg room and fuU bath which starts at $38,950. courtyards. homes which do not front on with double sinks. ·. Four models are open dally The two aaj Ulree·bedroom -· -. GRUBB & ELLIS RESORTS, INC. General Partner We are pleased to announce a one-hour information meeting relative to IAKELANll YllUGE, SOUTH LAKE TAHO~ CALIFORNIA ' Lokel0nd l\(illoge is· a plonned unit resort. community locoted olo"9 the shore of South Loke Tahoe consisting of I 03 lu:\!,lry re sort townhouses end 96 condomini~m oporlmenls ranging in price from $28, 100 lo $131 ,000. Coupled with 0wnership in o unit is "•n opportunity lo )oin"o limited part- nership rentol pool offering these polenliol benefits. . TAX SHEL TE RED INCOME POTENTIAL TAX REDUCTION .MORTGAGE REDUCION ~OTENTIAL AP.PRECIATION , NEWPORTER 'INN Tuesday-Nov. 6 at 7:30 PM • • • Space is limited. Offering eireulers w~ll be distributed at the above meetings. FOR RESERVATIONS CALL COLLECT (415) 139-4350 GRUBB & ELLIS SECURITIES . <;ORP. Marlborough Development Corporation's the Shores at Lake Forest has been designed with a total community con· cept in mind. While each home insures complete privacy for its owner, with most homes facing one of the two lakes. nevertheless the m a s t e r the lake have access through • Plan 2 is a spacious two 4 ~nd Can be reached by taking homes have gated f r o n t greenbelt mini-park arc as story, three bedroom home~ the El Toro exit off the San courtyards shaded by Um-Thi purpo1• of th• invttt?ntnt m••ting i1 to offtr townhou1•1 tnd condominium •P-•rtmtnt unih leading to the lake. ing varying levels, including a Diego 'Freeway. Tum left 00 bered trellises, the formal en· coupltd with th• opportunity to join • lirnit1cl pt rtn•rthip. Thi1 1clv1rtl1tmtnt 1haU not con1titut• h f. lace conversation p1·l lo · tU •n off,r to ,,11 ot th• 1ollcit•tion of •n off•r to buv nor 1hfill th•r• b1 1ny ,,1, of th••• 11cur1-The homes ave many irep ' El Toro and dr1·ve ·one mile to tries include ceramic e · l l nd a ch"lec tl11· In •~V Sti tt in which 1uch Offtr, 1olici+1tion or 1111 would bt unl1wful prior to rt9i1tr1tion d•0 tm· m••shm· g fealur"" such as create in eres a r 1 -·Mwr· lands n--d. Go left on floors, creating an atmosphere I '-" e.~ "" nl.Hl of qut ificetions uncltr tht 1tcurilit1 incl rtal 11t1tt taw1 of 1ny 1uc~ 5t1t1. floor to ceiling glass doors and tural distinction. The entry is:,_M~uir~l~an~ds~f~or~anolh~=e~r~m:il:e~l:oJf~or~p<=nn:a:n:en=l~car:e-:fr~ee~l~ivJ-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!'!!!'!'!!'!!'!!'!!!!!!!!!'!' some have second s t o r y on the same level as the din-the model complex. ing. private b a 1 c o n i e s vlith ing room which looks out ov~r commanding vie\vs of the the sunken living room al)d ts lake. located next to the large Sands Villas Enlarging Spa Model s Plan 4 is the largest of the kitchen and family room . The homes available at the ShorP.s three bedrooms are upstairs with four bedrooms. A seldom with the master suite located included feature of interest by itself .at the front of the is the built-in breakfront for house. china storage between the Plan 1 is a three bedroom, kitchen and fhe dining roon1. one story home featuring the A recessed conversation area Uving, dining and kitchen areas Amfac Canyon Sands Villas, around the fireplace is another in one large complex with a 4300 E. Palm Canyon Drive,. striking feature in this model. kitchen pass-through . bar to next to the Gene Au.try Hotel . £Ian 3 is also a four the dining room.· The three on highway 111, Palm Sprfngs, bedroom home that is design-bedrooms are ·grouped off ~a is stagirig the grand opening ect for an· active family with practical central hallway at of its new and enlarged "mini'"' lots of friends _ from the the opposite end of the house. home show," four furnished glass-walled Jiving room which The third bedroom easily con· model homes. is stepped down out of the "verts to a den, as it shares the Last season 's three two-main traffic flow , to the large atrium with the living room. bedroom, two-bath mode I. kitchen c 0 mp 1 et e with All the houses feature large homes have been sold, and breakfast nook and convenient-master suites, family rooms three others with like floor ly located next to the dining and large kitchens with plans have been furnished in area. Also · on this floor is a luminous ceilings, b u i 1 t -i n 197• styling by \Y. & J. Sloane. den which can easily fWlction dishwasher, disposer and Jn addiUon, a new three-as a fourth bedroom, .!is it has double ov.en, one wlth bedrooms. 2~ bath villa has a full bath adjacent to it . a self· cleaning feature. been built and furnished in Three spacious bedroqms and ~efrigerated air coodition- contemporary decor. two full baths are upstairs. ing. shake r o ors and This "mini home show," The master suite has a wall of wall-to-wall carpeting are also located nea r Canyon Sands' g1ass overlooking the lake, and included. in the purchase price main entrance, highlights the I ...:~::..:.:..::=:=~::..:::::::..:_:cc__:.:_ ____ _;__ __ ..:...._ four different outdoor-indoor noor plans available. Immediate occupancy is available to buyers. No walls in ,living areas are shared with neighbors, pro- viding individual, single-family privacy. Six tennis Courts, put- ting green, heated swimming 1 and therapy pools, saunas. and caban&-<are 6n grounds of landscaped, maintenance-free development. Owners pay no initiation fee or dues to use recreation facilities. The one-story homes have floor-to-ceiling, wood4>urning fireplaces. 11 foot vaulted "'ood ceilings with exposed beams, double attached garages with electric , automatic door apener· \Vet bars. and air conditioning. Prices run from $36,500. Armory Up For Grabs NEW YORK (UPIJ -You may have never gotten higher 1tmn private in the army. but.1 if you want, you now have a . chance to buy your o~'ll arm- - H ~re plip\_ning a ~~~ Half gone in half a year and the res! will not last long . Hurry to see this distinctive Newport Beach development of condominium homes, built·in clusters around handsome courtyards. Eight superb models, eac~ a masterpiece of luxury, comfort, convenience and quality construction. ·sundecks, fireplace, wet-bar, elegant Master Suite, Sun-Lile• kitchen . legaQce . ill . tile -·oo.ntty byt)1e--ea - • ' There is nothing quite like the beauty of ocean arnl"hills together. • Sea Ranch Capistrano is nestled ~ th~ hills between valley and ita. The be..t of a country.and seacoast setting. Hen. Pacesetter Homes is building with the heritage and quality that hu become their trademark. Rustic homes of majeltic heavy beams, soaring shingle exteriors and robust wood accents. Nothing Jiu been left to chance. Luting value is here ••• the premier loc:atiOn·in South Orange County. It is a muterful plan that provides an elegant lifestyle for you and your family. Come and see for yowaelf. -3or4 bedrooms from $49,950 Excellent fmancing. .. -. ory. • ~ · 'Ille offer for fledging field • marshals is bffng made by private enclosed double garage-Recreational facilities include heated swimming pool, lighted tennis courls, sauna, therapy pool. · the City Real Estate Depart· ment at the departments auc- tion Nov. 20 of surplus ciy property. . - LookFro1n Outside MOBILE, Ala. t UPI ) - Gov. George )Yallace has · been urged to stand firn1 against inside-the-home in- spections by stae officials attempting to assess the value of personal pro- perty. All exterior building and grounds maintenance provided: Satisfy your curiositrsee Newport Crest today! Two, Thre"e, and Four Bedroom Condominium Home• from$62,995 ~~~ From Pacific: Coast Highway µ,#H'?',,Y A and Superior Avenue (Balboa BIVCl.f. drive up Superior -to Ticonderoga, and directly to Newport Crest Information Cent et Telephone: ( 7141 645-6141 Sales Office open dalty 10 a m.10 sun51.1t ~~ • ' • San oiqo F teeway to Ortega Highway offramp.' Go west to Del Obilpo. Go kh on Del Obilpo.to.Callc Atpero and fumishtd model•. ~ . . Arnold De brow. 1'fobile County tax assessor, told Wallace that 'interior in· spectiOM are unnecessary. He said e xpe r I en ced personnel can learn all they need to know with an exterior appraisal. \"Without the continued protection of the residen- tial sanctuary for the private rights of our citizens. _ .. there ren1alns nothing left that l h e American citizens ca n consider private and safe [rom the invasion or go \•errunent agencies," dcbrow said in a letter lo Wallace. • 32092 Via Carlos; San Juan e.pi1trano (714)496-3451 ·-• • • • • -· ' ' .. ~. ·-... ,, ................... ·-,... .. _ .. ·• "''"" -··-~ ....... ~ -.. _ ... _ ............ ~ ...... -..... -.......... 1 ... ~,..,,,,."' '"I"·• ,...._ ....................... ~ .. -.... ........... ..._..,, .......... _...__ , . ' • . ' I \ • . ' ' • ' \ : l , . ___., ' . . .. .... --. Sunday, Novtmb<r 4, 197) DAILY PILOT C 9 Baylront Honies_ Started, Construction is under Way Promontory Bay homes,'' ajd ln ac!._dition, e:ic~ home will Jn c.Qlote.<l :wd te..ttu.re.d pal· PJllb_ will wllld ne.ar . ftie on· 18 bayfront homes on Akins. "Privacy begins in the ncco1nrnodatc Jndlv1duaJ piers terns, will provide a hard water's edge along a revet.-· · Promontor Ba a $ 6 . 5 motor court area where tbret· ;ind slips tor boats up to 55 surface for the motor courts. mcnt o( hirgc boulders below · -mil on man·ma e wa cr"'·ay car garages l>f f\v o • c ar-reet. colorful coral tcees. From adjacent to Balboa Island ai1d garages with carport lead to .. A $150,000 landscaping pt°'" A PRIVATE beach will be theret _.ylf:wers can "'g .. t.e , the last land available'for a private entry court that is gram along Bayside Drive by available to all residents of throu&J\ tile entrance ctwioel . single-family wat erfront screeQed by a. garden wall. Frank Radamacher and Bayside Village. Public Areas into Newport Harbor. On 6Q1~ , .development in the Newp0rt Interior rooms flow bayward Associates of 1'ustin is de-include Promontory Bay Plaza sides of the Channel entrance, Harbor area. onto private waterfont· courts 1 signed to enhance the private and a neighborhood park at bouginvillea, official c It)' The homes arc being built where Olitdoor dining and\sun-nature of the motor court en-the bay's northwest extremity. flO\\o'er of N.ewport Beath, ...;iJJ . by Irvine Pacific Development __ b_at_h_in_:g_,.,.., __ •_n_a_tu_r_al_.'~' ___ t_,ryc.t_o_e_ac_h_ho_m_e_. _Co_b_b_le_st_o_n•_._A_l_on..:gc.B_a..:y_•i_d_e _Dr_i_ve..:,_a_b_ie.:.y_el_e--:c-a_sca_d_e_ln_t_o_the:_ba_:y_. __ Company, home b uildin g subsidiary of the Irvine Com· pany, on 18 of the 61 c.ustom home sites that surround the -J0.5-acre.__bay. Irvine.....fa.cllic purchased the 18 home sites earlier this year when all 61 · were offered and sold in just six weeks by the .Irvine Com· pany. "In building 1hese · homes. we are trying to show ho'v imaginative and gracious a waterfront home can be." ., ._ t!& '-"'~ -· Mo11teelto 1'ract E.B. Akins. president of Irvine Pacific. stated. "This is the first single-family residential project in which the T\ViOP Companv is both developer and builder." fQ~ uel Sea Ranch HQmes Roomy THE llOMES will sell in One of the roomiest slngle- ltvel homes to be oflered by any homebuilder in the pic- turesque Capistrano Valley regjon of Southern oranae County is now available. at Pacesetter Homes' Sea Ranch Capistrano. .. The many , personall7.ed features in the new f\fontecito model make it particularly suited , for the family that wants an easy-care home which doubles as nn en- tertainn1ent center." said Lan· dan f\t. Exlt!y, ·vice president and general manager o r .Pacesetter Homes, Inc. "The extra large kitchen. formal dining room. living roon1 and unique family room with wet bar and wQOd-burn- ing fireplace-alcove . welcome . all kinds of gatherinris," .he --·aadei!. --. ~-..."'-~ SEA . RA NCH Capistrano, one or · Pacesetter lfomes .nc"·est projects in Southern California , is located jy_st minut s away om the center of San lstrano. a col· orful coasa community ,steeped with California history and tradition. and surrounded by many recreational facilities. It is approximately one hour by freeway from .. both Los Angeles and San Diego. • "\\le have included many extras in the design or this line-story. 2.326 square-f6ot ')iome with its four bed rooms, t\VO baths and powder. roo.m, so that housekeep ing requires a minimum of effort,1' Exley continued. · the Sl95-000-pus r11nge, ioclu<l· sha~e roofs a n d rough-sawq· ing the land. They are located wood · sldini:t: all situated On on Bayside Drive v.·est or Jam- mlnimun: 10.000 square-foot boree Road in Bays ide Village, The utllity roo1n is con-lots. Newport Beach. · venlently located inside the Pacesetter's Sea Ra nch Speciallv designed r or home, and al.sq has a con· homes range from $49•950 to bayfront living, the ty,•o-story necting door lo lh• three-car homes 1·nclude lhree-bedroom-'" $63,950. Ex....it..nt convenU011al garage. Large closets are financing i:-available with with-den to five-bedroom-and- standard in every bedroom down payments of ten and den plans, and are designed and the spacious master suite twenty percent. according to so that the major living areas has its own separate dressing Exley. Eight & three-eighths dramatically exploit the bay room and bath \Vilh a walk-in percent interest ( 8 n nu a 1 view, Akins said. closet. The m11ster bath is Each of the 18 homes has h. hr ht d b d . g n percentage rate 31h ) percent a formal diving room. a \vet 1q 1g e Y es 1 er· is available with a 20 percent selected brass f i x tu re s. bar and some homes have down payment. · 1· d. Ceramic tile, larp;e mirrors a Sit 1ng room a Jacent to and 1narbcline pullmans are To reach 'Sea R a n ch the master bedroom suite. sta ndard in each bath. Capistrano take. the San Diego Fireplaces in the master The kitchen plan pro.vides Free\\•ay to Ortega High\\'ay bedroom and sitting room. as for easy access to pantry, ·in San Ju an Capistrano. Turn \\'Cl! as lhe living room , adrl. refrigerator and stove, with left one short blo.ck ~o Del \vannth to the modem, in- enough space for a family-sit· Obiapo, then right. From there terpretation of 1he California ed. table. .Built-in electric it'a about two ~iles to C~lle waterfl'PJlt home desigri~ _for range. self-<;leaning oven. Aspero. _!u:rn r1g~t and dr~,~v~e -"'Irvine .Pacific· ··by · Mmtfi 'iti ·-- ·dfsh\\'ashcr, disposer· a· ii d-~ w:•t· ~~-bi~ Sea Ranch sign Loliibach, --Newport ·-Beach- hand-finishe<f cabinets are in-to Calle Ricardo: Turn left based architectural firm . eluded in the kitchen. to reach the fums1hcd n:iodels , by Marcia Wyme Interiors of "OUTDOOR -yet private -Uvirig is the theme for · A STEP DOWN from the .skylighted entry leads into the ll\'ing roon1 with its slo,ped celling. Slu1g carpets in wide selection of colors are pro- vided throughout the liVing areas and slidi ng glass doors lead to the patio area. There are Qther one-and two-story homes. r a n gin g from 1,774 to 2,254 square feet , in three and four-bedroom. l\\'O, l\\'O and one-half and three-bath plans in 1he Sea Ranch Gapis~no subdivision. All ho.mes feature a rustic, natural appearance with their ·Tustin, ·on vi a carios. Foothills Townhomes Open in . Laguna Niguel The trend to greater leisure Contemporary interiors . are and recreation living .has designed for c.'Omfort and brought a new neighborhood ~hore-!rcc Jiving. There will or townbomes to Laguna b e woodburnin~ fireplaces Niguel. available in al homes, nylon 5%_ DOWN Announcement or' the ne\v shag carpeting in all major Foothills project and in· living areas, separate pcnvder t r oductory pre-construction room facilities, and all-el ectric sale was made by Donald T. kitchens with range and dou· McMullen, marketing director ble oven, disposal ·a n d for Avco Commun it y dishwasher. Developers, Inc. ( AC D ) , Each unit has its own ad- dfvelopers of Laguna Niguel. jacent private e n c I o s e d Located Qil t~p s Io p es sarage, front and rear patios, ~11cendln1 from th• nntbY . "1d a SOflllrale I au n dry Laguna Niguel communities of servlct room. Heating is · gas lliO Hlift\lndl and the North !orotll ;ilr which u in- Vlllw, the Foolhillt •Ill c:oro-divldually eolltrolle4. 211<1 the . ptlle • neighborhooCI of 320 equtpment is ltJily ptepared "townhomes, with 88 to be DQll-for air-conditionin1. Aft ad· · structed in the lirst phase. dtUlonal facility is an ifljt'1led A temporary -.lb. office has water Jine for an ice-maker. been locateO on lht properly McMIJllfJI ;ilsq pointed out to enable hotntbUYe~ to tltat the H~meownen '.A110Cia- prevlew · drawings, pli~ tnd Uon provides all ~ u t e r plot mapa prior to 1\11 -.Qal• mafutena~ an.I lapda~aplng . construction. '11ie mo4t. oom· core for • fl\Olli)lly . loo of plex u scheduled for <oin-112. This enables 'I'll• foOtbllb pletlon in November. residents ,to elijOy t~e 9Pfn Architectural plllllll, b y greenbelt areas, tennis IJi l Daniel N. Salemo and neuby parkiide, and Iii• Aaooclates " SM Diego call many recreational adv1nt11 .. !.or designs th blond ·with the lll!OR in this 8,000 1cre <;1>uJal - niiliiral setting of Lafl\ll• community. • ·NlgueJ. 'Th.e townhomes, Wtilch P r i c e s of the new are one and two stories, oUtr townhomcs range from $33,990 a Choice of two , three or fol.Ir to $38,990. ) T'ownhomn A Very Private Neighborhood -· in Lag~na Niguel Home Counlrr, Park Niguel. Uncrowded:9a luxuriously green and open private neighborhood, Here are single story and two story homes of Stunning elegance, ~ ,.:< . • incredible value. Prlc&-lncluded extras fo~m . . ~ a long list, indeed. Architecture is superb with . . . : t .• . great quantities of shake roofing, brick chim .. , . 4'ji'n5_?~ neys, disli.nctive woodwork. A good selection of ' .. ~ • floor plans awaits your pleasure. Corne to Park Niguel •.• it's home country. Hiii Country. Park Niguel is set among the lovely hills of Laguna Niguel ~·· :views to far mountain horizons. Too;high ground here enjoys an almost constant light ocea.n breeze. That means clear, clean, healthful air. Miles of Bike trails wind·through the entlre-communij:Y, - · a nd majorohopping's just down the hill at town.center. c.._· 'un CounflJ. Laguna Niguel offers.so much. There'• \t:lf.~:(ll~~., the Country Club and golf course (a: champ!), the Tennis Club, a nearby· inland lake and County Regional Park,-and great restaurants, • theaters (film and legit), and cu tural centers ar'e all within brief driving minutes. • Su Country"' Park Niguel is three, perhaps four, minutes from newly dedicated Laguna Niguel Beach, one or California's prettiest, with striking r'ock formations, white, white sand, and clean water. There's a private beach club, too. And, remember, you'll not find such a community SQ close to the sea ever again. Once gone, that's it. ' ; Patk 8 --- ---... -·--·------·-DAN" POI NT r.;t'i1 A --lty lly . l!U.IJ OHR DevtlOpmlnl Corportllon . .. • bedrooms With up to 21> bathJ. _ . . ~:ri~::i.a::~~,t::~~': ('#'!t.WH-IUW.e'~''•t\-.:Uh-W:W~""'\-.Tl'H-WiiYH..(\•mtr"\ . stucco, a~pped ~, t'lllUo.ahake Iii · • · _, tOINOll ' . " . I • roofs. ; J, --.Sales Pass ' ' 1· ' '' $3!,Mil~ipn ' I'. ' . ' ' :i\!1'ra~t Kids Like to A.ak A.ruly ..l • i The . g6iid tim£S . . . \ • are .-i. but tho best. times pt better, And now is ·lbe lime to enjoy them. Al Beachwalk, !he .A. J. Hall Corporation's award-wlnnlnr!>lanned noldonlial oommunity just 1ix blocb tiom the boacli and ininutee from the marina. Enjoy golf, tebnia and boalinr IMJ'! momenbJ Biway~ Or, simply relax witlnn,~,tommunity, with~ two recnNltion rented, awJmmin1 poo)e, • U UDM and jacuais. Here is maintenance.-free Jiving. with schOoltl from llfementary to oollege clcloe li)<! . I . , J I A II I • Fall in love with an invigorating and excitin1 . ' lifeatyle --, -BEST THINGS are youn at Beach walk. One and tw<Mtory privata townhomes with ' from iwo to five bedrooma. and Iarse private yards. ~--1:1--· r:i:~e1 -· dall¥. 1().6. 19751Detp Harborl>mo·· Han~ =·c.n-(714)53MAT • - - • . I " . I ' ' • J ' ' I • ~ -. (.' J 0 DAILY PILOT Sunday, Noq:mber '1, 1973 ---~· Real Estate · Questions/Co'!'ment -. By Realtor Ran.dall 111cCardle With the tight money, the high inteNJt rate1 1nd infl1tlon, how i1 the re1I et1te 1ctivlty in our 1re1? Are we 1tlll m1int1lnlng 1 healthy real estate economy?' In the past with very few exceptlon1,. the real estate in· dustry had 1 'ffry solid bu1IM11 .foundatt.n•. Are p.:0,,· ertle1 holding tMlr value? What Clo you *· for the fu· ture? -M.-D. H., 1wport Beach The level ol wealth and business activity in Orange County continues to climb in spit~ of tight money, high- er interest rates. inflation and a. growing housing short· age. 1 , As a Realtor, I find that heartening because the cqlbmodity I deial in will continue UJ increase in value and be a good investment f9r those looking to the fu- ture. We don't have to be seers to come to that conclu- sion. lt is encouragin~, though, to back up such optimis111 with figures. According to a report just released by the California State Chamber of Commerce, time and de· n1and deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corpor- ations in commercial banks have increased substantially. REAL ESTATE Irvine's Allergan , Expanding Continuing expansion at its 24-acre headquarters complex in Irvine 11\dustrial Park. Allergan Pharmaceuticals has aMounced plans for a million dollar manufa ct urin g, warehousing and distribution center. according to Gavin S. Herbert Jr.. president and chief executive officer. • • New HouBillfl Progra11a • . ' ' . ~ ' Middl~ !!i~ome Suh~idies . Urged WASHINGTON (UPI) - A l)l'Ogram ol f ederally sub&dized housing for middle lnc;ome families has ·been pro- posed by a oonprofit research foundation which uid it could provide decent housing for every family and aid nlne limes u many households at the same cost. The i tudy, released by the American Enterprise Institute for Public Policy Research, was wrltlen by Irving Welfeld, an analyst in the Department of Housing and U r b a n Development (HUD.). Two of the three proposals outlined in the study are aim· eel at young families with moderate inromes, 'while the third would aid the elderly. • Welfeld said his pNlposal was geared to helping middle. class families afford new homes and open up existing housing for the poor. A "PAY ,AS )'OU grow" plan would offer a mo-r t gage finance program involving low initial payments that .increase by a seJ; percentage each year. Welfeld said that a family who now rnµst wait to buy a house until the bead is in his· qtld-30s could afford it in the 20s. Welfeld said "in all likelihood,'' the . rising morlgage payments would be offset by increased family in- come. Welfeld also pNlposed a con· dominium r ental program for Laguna Niguel the elderly wblcll would offer be roqut....i to spend more Welfeld criticized • cumnt >ublldies for •uch ilem& as tbon 10 pel'«!lt ot his in<:omo federal bo11Slng Progrtll\I l4r taJ"es, lnlur8JlCe and main-on rent. · providing new 'unita to pubUc lalance coota to protect the The """y ,.Id ils objecli!es housing lenanls at 1\0 dmes Id I were to produce more housmg t! er y ownen from hl&her as long u the need exl&ts the average cost of bo1111ng bousinC ccots not offset by and to eliminlle the lbortage OCC!JPled by the tupaylilg rlsillf inco-.. of decenl. housing by enabling public. He Also ,..W prmnt By mov!nl 111e elderly -private builders to build for programs lend lo' provltle the dellued by Ille eludy as age markets lhat would not exist highest subo~ ~ f~es 55 aad over -into neWo!and-without Welteld'a three new that can •ffOrd the molt ex· smaJJer con d o m I n i u m · prograrna penslve 1 ~ • residences,larpr,~clerbomeli'ii~~~·;;;::;~~~~;;;;:;;;;:;;~;;~;;;;:;;;;::;:;;;~ would be fteed f 0 r young r famlieo. PRIME VIEW PROPERTY • w!!;!F ..= :: PALOS VERDES PENINSUIA to provide up to IO perl'e!ll FOR SALE r of Jhe rent for. IO pereent of new units. The short-term subsidy would be available on- ly to initial tenant who would •• Public Auction . on December 12, 1973 -. • <,,. East Nine Uni~ Selling 7.25 •cr•1 In the Clly of ,.oOing.Hlll• Etl•t•• on P•~• Vtrde• Drtve..North ne•r Ptlol Vlfdee Drtve EMl ' • Adj•C9"1 lo P•~· Verde• AtMt'Voir Zone RA·20,000 Being D4apo,.d ol by Tht Metropoitaa Wat9{ Ofstrlcl at . SoulhemC ...... So, in spite of the degiands for money and the high- er cost of using it in the form of loans; there is more available in California now than in the past. And there is more wealth here being gene.rated to create those savings, such activity should be reassuring to the home buyer and the investor in other forms of real estate. Part of the increased business activity is the result of our rising population. The more people, the more goods and services they need. The new 63.000-Square foo t building will be the second The last group of con· project was star'ed last year, range in price from $34,600 major structure to be added dominiums at the East Nine most of which were two to $42,700, the latter having this year at Ailergan. The . in Laguna Niguel are built and bedroom homes. three bedrooms. Inside _com· E1cehnl development potentl .. ·fUly buld11M-c:&ose pro1lmlty to m•Jor lnl•r•tcllon-owtttandlng lftvestrMnt possibillu. ... unott•trucled v .. w overlooiing btfbor •r•• Telephone. wrile, or call for "Nohce ol Sale" brochure 10: Tht Metropolitan W11., Of•trict , But the amount of land available, except for that being added by increasing irrigated acreage, remains the same. Competition for it is increasing. Housing con· struction has not reached the level we need to take care of demand, so competition for the housing \Ve have and are building is increasing also. other \\'as a new utility center . forts include air Conditioning, occupied in July. Sequoia ready to move into, according They are located on the edge self cleaning ovens 8 11 d Pacific, diversified 1a 0 d to Avco Communty Develop-of the El Niguel Country Club carpeting in· ma1or living development affiliate of ers, Inc. golf rourse. Only 18 of these areas. ..., So uthern Pacific, is rontractor More than $5.9 million worth homes in this preferred loca-All extetior maintenance is for both buildings. of these East Nine Con-tion remain to be reserved, taken care of by the al SC>Ylhetn c.-om11 • Post Otftce hi 5415l T ...... ANMs '" LOI ,Angeles. Caltomill 90054 Anention Righi ot W•t Md L•nd Dtvl9k»ft -or telephone: (213) •21-4212, ••tension .... 0# .. , Mr. Staatt:r °'Mr. Ship•ht•. cir call at 1111 SunMI Boulev•rd, LOI Anget.1 • '\Vhatever measure you use, investing in California has a ring of solidity about it . "This new building is the dominiums have been sold or of the 172 unit development. Homeowners Association for fifth in our master p1an for ~· a~r~e~on~~re~se~rv~al~ion~~si~nc~e~th~e'_=±T~he~L~a~gu~n~a0!N~ig~u~el~ho~m~e~s'.__a~mo~nlhl'§y~f~ee~of~$38~.==--=~==================~~ development of our Irvine site. I· Allergan h a s experienced greatly increased demand for its Jin~ of dermatology pro- ducts and this . large, new I've paid for more th•n one policy of title insur· ance, but I've never had 1 good explanation of what exactly I am buying. How does 1 policy of title insurance help me? -B. J., Costa Mesa facility will be used for the manufacture, storage and cen- A policy ol title insurance protects you when you Ira! distribution of all our con- puy. EI1minate delays when you sell. A'lay pay attorney sUmer products," llerbert fees and court cos4i in the event of.litigation._ said. Guarant!es and insures against unknown or hidden A ergan PMnnaceuliCalS cjefects such as: (a) lost or forged ·deeds, (b) deeds by . marke~ its P.r o du c.t s incompetents, (c) frauds as to marital status. (d) claim worldwide. The firm .•. wh1~h of undisclosed heirs, (e) recording errors, (0 indexing had sales of .$16 m~bon 1n mistakes, (g) falsification of records, (h) claims of chil-1972. rep~esentmg an rncrease dren born or wife married after will has been executed, of 25 percenl over 1971, ex- (il delivery of deed after the gra ntor has died. (j) in1· pects to top. that gro\vth personation of record owner, and (k) other undisclosed performance lhts yea r, ba~ed ri sks \ · OD sales through the third · quarter, Herbert added. Allerga n's ne\V building or Tent Bo1ne one-story, concrete tilt-up, is scheduled for completion in Decen1ber. according to Se- quoia Pacific's Lloyd R. Massey, Jr, vice president for planning and constntction, and Don £.step, ·general manager ' lva11lioe, Couple !l-ougli It -... "''\ol construction. VISALIA (AP i -N'ot manv people would give up a good job to move to a 30-acre "'alnut ranch and li ve in a tent. But Jim and Sandy H<lll did. and they say .they've neve r been happier. The Halls both held good jobs in Santa Monica but decided they didn't want tn get caught in the hii.slle and bustle or Southern California just because they \\'ere mak- ing money. · so TllEY purchased a 67- year-old house tast summer and moved it to a 30-acre \\'alnut ranch near the tiny Tulare County community of Ivanhoe. Since the n10·,re, they've lived at the ranch in a ·tenl pi tched under t .... ·o \\'alnul rrees. Their household belong:-· in gs are stacked outside the lent. Jim raises the .... ·alnuts, \l!hile Sandy helps and in between runs a smatl antique shop here. JN CO.ME FOR Y OU ' . . . ' ' '''E ALlfAYS wantt!d to move to the country and live in an antique'" home ,'' Mrs. Hall said. Aft er the Halls bought their "dream ~ome," hO\\'ever, they found their troubles just ~inning. . The ancient structure and its' roof had to be separated for the n1ove, and four tele~e companies had to be E!\!isted to temporarily disron&ct their lines so the t\.\'O-stoi)r\1o~e could p~ AND oNl::E THE house was delivered, new problems arose. It sat perched off the ground \\•bile the Halls \\'aited for plumbers. a i r condit ioni ng men and electricians to hook the house up so jt could be lowered to i1s ne\11Jy poured foundation. The Hall11 are still waiting for that day. ~ And with winter coming on. grUing that roor back on is an absolute necessity. "I g_ucss \Ve just have the pioneer spirit to do something like !hi.\" :\!rs. Hall said.. ,. · To,vnhomes Under Way In Clemente Ground was broken last week for San Clemente Seaview Townhomes, a joint- venture or BuUer Housing Corporation of Irvine and Pacific Lighting Properties. The $5 million, II-acre pro- ject is adjacent to the San Clemente Civic Center, fron- ting on Presidio Avenue ea.st of th e San Diego Freeway. The development will include ·92 townhouses, plus tennis courts and other recreational a1nenities. In addition. S e a v i e w Townhomes will offer full security measures and will have a speciaJ recreational vehicle parking lot. Prices are expected to be in the ,55,000 range. Open H~se today 420 Fernleaf 1 to 5 p.m. • Plee1e come for • p1r1011•l •11d critic•I i11tp1ctio11. You won't bt d i1~ppointed. lt'1 re•lly ch~rminCJ . • . " • -TN, U~lf$ . -f N9wP.ri'.-J;tit l11V111mfnt ••1t1ti•lly with th 1 whol~ iM11•irl.'the·1u11 world ol Old Coro0111 dei Mer ... wtterfrotlt lu1t dow11 the 1l•e•I. The oce•n, tht be.diet, the wi•-•lt clc11 by. ONE 5TO~Y PLAN I ~·· + 1111 _...11'1 """ ~N • 111111-.... , ....... Olttllll .. , '"" 1•1111 lveu o--... Mnel 011 l>\IUl·lrl ~llChfll o"" bNrn cllill11ts 0"4il!h!tu! JNltiO 1 .. ulllully dKOflllMI WEL I Aftor yoll •t.fu•llv \ee •11d feel •ho w 1rmt~ 111d cht rm off.red htte -the per.J.ct loc•fion -th• «nm•cul.t lo c11n~f~:o1. 'fo"J'll f;-d th• pr1c• very r•tllttic. Como ' Pre _-Construction Sale! . . ) The Foothills has lovely townhomes, clean sea bree~es, an ocean nearby for only $'33,990. What price do you put on Jiving where the air is clean and fresh and the sur- rounding countryside is a lovely setting to see; where friendly people abound and the ~n is but 3Y.i miles away_? At The Foothills-the new townhome neighbor- hood at Laguna Niguel-we will pric<dt considerablll_below what you might expect. Don't let the fact that there are P""" ently no models to-dissuade you from coming out today. We do have a tempo. ruysalesofficestalledwithhelpfalpeople who will show you renderings, plans, and pictures so that you can get a complete picttUe of how yoo.r life at The focilhllla wfil ,be. We ~you to ....,.outto<lq-.Hfm 14t~rouid. , Eich 1 " 2 ~ •. 2, :t, " 4 bed--- !OOlll'townhome with up to 2Y.i lialhl, ' wm be a creative gem in jtself with the space, features, privacy, and built'\> in& you want, including dou)>le oven, dis~ poeer, dishwasher and alirej>late in ,,.ery home! ~ . Of course, yardwork and maint.enance won't be a chore any IQ!lger. Membeishi11 in your Homeowners' Aseociation, for a monthly fee of $42, will takepue of_ of it.-while you enjoy the.ilJlnumee recre- ational advantages all arouad you: the ..... ' -., - Don't wait. Come see how eaaily 31411 could-take to easy, chore-free liYinc u Tba Foothills. . Prom .. SS,990 to $S8,990. Directio!ls: Go110Uthoit theSanl>ieco/ Santa Ana Fwy. to Crown Valley Pkwy. e:rit. Turn right (approximately siw mi!M) to Niguel Road. Right on Niguel Road to Alicia Parkway. Right on Alicia Parkway to temporary oaiea office. · pfivate Laguna Niguel Tennis Club, (::]t .. where there's ~t tenl\is ~d member- !hipo are available; the ocean peaclieo. -- surf, and sailing; and the proximity - ,of the 'lbwn Center, :fine shopping, . -,tliea(.er, ........,111;~-~...,. ....... - · ;-everythingfor ~""°'"'°"Wnl' eat life8w1., and aa tbi )rice f6djmlell, • ,.. quite alionlable, too. ' ~ ' • Put a I' inyour.life .•. today"come to • ' , feci•y -Ste fer yourstl'. . ; '-~ ' , Laguna. Niguel • th~. ~hoice cdmmunity : \. ·• . -...:..doailVill.tpJ>or';-~Nw1bwiiobJ4~C.:-...11r~1na.a(71•)4lll~ --. I \ ~'ORI I '9 ...... •ttHlllT. ~.O.t; 1 -~+·.;,..._ . • -• , ' ' • • ' -·-- ' -' j I J' " ' • -.. • • . ' • • l r73 · SURFER YAN I DISCOUNT FROM SUGGESTED L!ST Au to. trans } custom w;;{ets & .tires. . (E14GHR92609) · BRAND NEW '74 PINTO 2 DOOR TOTAL DOWN 2300 Eng ine , 4 Spf!ed Trans Dix. Bvmper Group Vinyl Interior (4RIOY115388, 88. ....... • Sunday, Nowmber 4, 1973 DAILY PILOT 1J J FULL PRICE '74 FORD PICK·UP TRUCK Full sized s!yleside body. Ready to go to work . $ ftlll cd,..0:• ii lfUIAO «1.-. & I~.~'""-"'"' i'ld ... ,.,_,,diorJ11 w3l•L ii 1293:1 .... 4'.L 1,.13:.0 ................. PER MONTH ORDER" YOURS TODAY . ' ,IMr.,IDIAT~ DEU'{.ER,Y ........ ~"""'!--................... ~----'!'--------+.,..--!!!"! __ -.!' ____ _,"""!'~--'"""--'"!!"------+---------------------------------"-I ' l :~::01 173THUNDERBIRD , " ~~ND ~74 MAVERICK VS, auto. trans., vs, auto. factory air, leat~er inter., opera wi~ow, am/fm radio, vinyl roof, power ~= ~"="':=:;~.;..· .::w.indows, seats, brakes, steering, 1""o.l!!!,Jo tinted gtass. DISCOUNT FROM FACTORY LIST IMMEDIATE DELIVER,Y • . (3J87A217509) " '74 LTD 2 DOOR HAROTOP FULL ·.PRICE ORDER YOURS TODAY • _ ~ V8, auto. trans,, t: pawer steering, • power (disc) brakes, .,... heater • Deluxe carpeting. ~ '• ' F_ULL PRICE . ' . .. IMM~Dl.AJ.E . DELIVERY AllJto. ttoM. ... _ radio, heater, ,-(SGTANG25090) IOTH UNITS ;~7 MUSTANG "·"·''. . VI. stitk· ih1tt, tldlo, htattt. License No. 70HEO . • I ' ~ . .t · · '69 BUICK · . ' . .$7-s 8 w1LocAi:. v-a •. 11u10. trans., air, P:'t"'· $1 2 8 8 ' ·. • steering, pwr-;-b,rakes, radio, w-w tires)·virivl J·. -· roof. License No. )(TK802 , ~ • '70 F~RD Win~o~ V~n $ . , .. ·-a· 8~ ... 6cyl., auto Irons . ., ""'· h<•le(, I poss', LI<~ 1 · · ; .Ho.t5121E .. · 1 . • f t' ; . ' '71 TOYOTA CoriHct :· \'f'gn., 'IPff:d, air condltionfng, rldlo,1htat•r.1 . rebuilt fnglne. #43JCQS '71) ·cAD. Cpe d~Ville • V-1 .. auto._trans., factory air cohditionlng power steering, pew.er (disc) b~akes, pOwe( wlndoWs, P<>Wet"seats,·AM/FM radio, Maf!!r• whitewall tires, wheel covers. #'J66AKW 17l .PLY. Spt. Wg. ·. V.1, auro. trans., factory air condifioni1"151', 'poWer'stee~ing, power brakes, radio, heater, whitewa11 1 tires, ti nted glass. License No. 92•JAZ . . $1 988 . '. ... ,. $1779 ' FULL PRICE ORDER YOURS NOW Big 250 engine, heater. padded bench sea,t,deluxe seat belts, padded dash & visors . ~ -, BRAND NEW '73 CNTRY . SQUIRE I DISCOU~T · FROM FACTORY LIST IMMEDIATE 'DELIVERY '71 ECONOLINE Van Auto. tran.s., ~r se1t, ,PldY tor work. License No. 75641H '69 IMPERIAL v.1, auto. li"ans., factory afr conditioning, power steering, ' power bfllk•I.· ~ windows, power seati/ radlf, hNfer, . wheel covers. License No. XH"2:2 ' ' '70 FORD • LTD V-1 , auto. trans .. factory liir .condil!~i~. PC>wer steering, radio, heater, whitewall tires, vinyl roof, tinted glass. Serial No. 233CIE . ' I ' . • . I ·(#3J76S223106)' A_uto. tr1ns., ,Power.' • srtierlng, brlkff, fee .. · torv 11r,·rugg:age rack, -r1dlo, 'he1t1r, ·tinted glass, , 111 ft. 1uXury goodies: · ·• 1 ·,3: ·'.a ... ·.,·a·- " '66 MOST ANG · . . . ·$·6· V-8, stick st\itt, radio, heater, Ralty9 pack. ~fcense No. VIX90f , . • . . . . , ' '. ' 1 ·' ~$1 ~69 :?~:~9.!9Jl.~~D~J.·: " " ... '7l DODGE. Colt . 'sP.ff(t,.radio, heater. #193DiE • ' '69 VW Squareback . AUto. trans., radio, l'leate[, License No. ZRA-21A • '69 DODGE ~Polara V-8, auto. trans .• fa~tOl'y air condltioing;' power steering, power brakes, radio. heater:LlcenH No. 7SICRZ • • .. • ' ' '. '71 FORD CTRY; SED. ; ' . . . 'I ' v ... auto. "'"'" tactory ,;, condaK>n;.,., $1 ft 8 8 power steering, radio, Miter, wf'lltf#alltires, ~ tinted gl1ss. 763-AGO. · ' • • • •. • , I , \ . • I ' ' .. I ' ' •, • .. .I . ·I . ' I • .. • ~ . J • ff 2 DAIL V PILOT Sundl)', Nomnbtr 4, 1973 Annaunwmwls, 0 0 0 I 0 I 500 -s:u -...... !Obi .. ,. • • • • • • • 950 • 990 L14!1a¥nM • • • , • , • , 100 • 799 financial • • • • • • • • • 300 • 299 ....,.,._ 1w .s.m. •••••• '°° · n• Lott A found , • , • , • • • 550 • S74 The Biggest Marketplace on the· Orange Coast . DAILY PILOl CLASSIFIED -ADS --"" w. . • . 125 • "' "'1ondl. • • • • • • • • • 525 -549 ' ,... .................. IS0-199 ... h* o...f .••• , 1SC) • "' ............... 1300 ·--"9 Mad••. • • , •••• IOO • 149 . . You Can $ell It, Find It, Trade It With ·a want Ad (642-5678) One Cal 1. Service Fast Credit Approvai _ ... --· •• l1S·J991 s.w. ............ 600• General . General General General 0-rol ]~ * *-* * * *WESTSIDE 1~-~!Jt~S~f~~~:-~~~=~rr~;:~~i~~~~:m.d~~~t~~~~~.~~~~~-;i * lAYLOR co .. *' BARGAIN DAILY PILOT•-11-bHlty for the first $26 fM ...... , ... * * * -* * *' Heritage Collection ·---.-- OUR 24TH VIAR Offortng Sorvl .. Only Exporl- Con Pl<IYldo 1..-rect lno•rtlan .. 1y. IRVINE TERRACE BEAUTY-$112.5GO """' --Greatest view of bay, ocean & Catalina! · 3 BR 2 BA modem born YA-tlEPOSSESSION 0-11 0.-11 Customqualitylge 3.BRhomew/FR,formal w;u.'torc..i'.ir hea~ ~ ·BIDS OPEN on spaciolls 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath dining, S baths, 3 frpls & beautiful pool. ::=, flrepl>ee" a ""Udn builtins, dining, fireplace, double garage' OPEN HOUSES * R·EAD THIS LA CUESTA VILLAS from $30,'90 A now co11copt In Homo Ownership 'by Ayres Construction Company You Own Tho Lond .ond tlio Home Not a Conclomlnlnum \:, No Monthly Malnhnonco FM 4 Buutlfvl Exteriors 12 UNITS AVAii.ABLE: 3 BR, 2 BA & HUGE f.,m kitchen + soparato 2 c•r·t•r. ' IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY NO PAYMENTS UNTIL JANUARY Mod.ts et corner of Ad11m1 & Florida l block W. of hocfi Blvd. in · Huntington hach AYRES SINCE 1905 -~lML_ ---------.General ' 1935 SABRINA TERR. SAT/SUN 1-5:00 tool ..;..i,~t::i:': slate entry, new C8'J1"1a & paint. Large lot 001. 'ttas long curvirtg:drive-with roo~ for family orchard. Priced at HARBOR VIEW HOMES-$89,500 way to a larae double gar. $26,500. with $1000 down to anyone. Hurry, Lovely Portofino model w/3 BR, formal DR age. l»atJ>h" camper mr. CALL 540-1151 & lam rm plus sep. bonus rm w /study & , yaga~ """. In this 00.., back· MAKE-OFFER ba. ,Grt. pool & jacuzzi . Vu from mstr ste. '"' 1812 PORT STIRLING SAT/SUN 1-5 :00 WHO'S FIRST? MUST BE SOLD THIS WEEKEND ~ LINDA ISLE-$195,000 ALREADY THE BEST VALUE in Mesa Bayfront luxury! 4 BR ·home w/study, lge Newport Verde, rut owner still invites offers on this play, nn, DR &'4'h baths. Unusual plan. High •t· 1800 sq. ft. 4 Bedroom home Beautiful de- ceilings, book cases, plus. Pier/slip: . F 1 ·1 · cor, wOOd paneling, wallpaper & good car- 8 LINDA ISLE OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5 :00 1 rv aw pets. Elegant setting on spacious lot. Room 646-lt11 for boat or trailer. Must be sold this week· SPECTACULAR OCEAN VIEW-$119,500 (onytlme) end. CALL 546-SllO Bz:and new home on Spyglass Hill w /view of ocean & Ugh~. 4 Lge bdnns, sep. dining / !!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l!INEWPORT HEIGHTS rm & 2'h ,baths. l,'ool-size yard. 3-Car gar. EASTSIDE JUST LISTED -FANTASTIC BARGAIN - 15 POINT SUR OPEN DAILY l.S:OO·· HOME Large 3 Bedroom, family room, prime OLD CORONA'S BE;;ST DUPLi:x-$149,500 TRIPLE' X.+ Heights location. Owner transferred -Must Outstanding style & guality are evident m· sell! His loss -Your gain. $52 500. COUNTRY CALL 54().115'1 · ' this most attractive new dQplex,. Lge 2 story 2 BR, FR owner's ljllit + .2 BR rental. SmlNG MESA VERDE FIXER-UPPER 608 M~GUERITE SAT/SUN 1-5:00 sttuat•d o~ a '"'J'• l30x150 SAVE$$ $-Do your own cleaning, decorating . BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLU"-<129,500. lot with towenng '1>ade & minor repairs on thi s S BR 2 BA home 304 OTERO -BLUFFS Exciting 3 bdrm., 2~ bath home, beauUfully decorated. Owner offers early occupancy & will consider lease w/option to purchue; $69,500 OPEN SUNDAY 1-4:30. . 420 FERNLEAF -CORONA DEL MAR Delightful duplex, close to beach. Thisy e of our finest values. '86,500 . OPEN SUNDAY 1-4:30 2912 ALTA VISTA, EASTBLUFF Save thousands with thls truly "great value" 4 bdrm. & family rm. home in lovely Euf.. bluff. Priced for very quick sale & fast occu- pancy. $59,500 OPEN SUNDAY 1-4:30 PLEASE CALL 675·~000 El -:--r trees, a comfortable 3 BR Lar dd . • · • egant near·new 4 BR home w /view of area . 2 BA home with den and ge a ed family room, perfect for pOol & goll cours_e . .FR, formJ>R & many extras~ front porch for you? rocker table, teenagers, etc. Vacant, neglected & General Gener•I ·l CHERRY HILLS LNE SAT/SUN 1-5:00 . Plus ready for-your inspection. Call us for further -I-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, -------- separated . &\\"a)' from the information. I• NEW-usTING Office Open Salurday & Sunday_ hou.e a triplex w;u. Income CALL 540-1141 * 59'x290' LOT -Ii; . IN THE SO'S . ''Our 28th Year"' potential or $440/mo. C-1 ZONE WESLEY N. TAYLOR co •• Realtilrs ·c:~~·:2~n1i11 . NEWPORT BEACH $32,SOO E-Z TERMS CORONA DEL NEWPORT 2U Nl San_Joiquin_HIUsJ! .. d . ~T'S qOT ~VEltYTdininHING ~ 4 Bedroom, lam· ~~m+ ~ = MAR _ , CE TER, N.B. . 644-4910 Y room , Orma.\ · · groom, 20' x _40' pool + den, 3 baths, many ex· Just listed, a :r bedroom, /Jn NIGEL ~AILEY & 1155LlCIAT ES GeMral General W!-th pool sweep & jacuzzL Large corner' lot tras. Quiet street $58 700 2 bath. family room mme with boat door' and oversized double garage. · ' •<th all the quaintness and 0 Do JuStlistedat'84500 Hurry CALL540-1151 * C-2 Property. Newport charm ot Corona dei Mar, THE BEST IN BLUFF.S N 3 .BEDV:.~o~A. GOYERNMENT HPO • :'.~".""'30'•30'buildlng. :.::-.·::;,::,;,:, · * * * * * '* -FABULOUS BUY! PLUS POOL -FIXER-UPPER -Do your own repairs & I * . BA.LIO A ISLAN. D . ~ · •. Owner mu s! sell. L<>vely, l'h yr. old 3 bdrm., v~~ ~t :.:;: f::3s$!:· ~~~t!\~1!,~~ n~w~ebob~:..iwi~ ~~~ :!;.~~.·~~!,°' ll~l;lf ffi • 'JI'{' 2'h Q8ths, family rm., formal dining rm., hal!way. s . ..,.cloo. .,..,_ Irvine. Priced only $27,950 with $1450 total 225 GRA . ND . C"' · L e~pens1vely upgraded thruoul Cliarming rooms. Dramotio (inplace. down payment. Bids close soon -Call us -.. NA wraj>'arowfd ··patio on •wide picturesque Sparlillng pool with beutilul immediately for full details. CALL 546-5110. • OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO 4 . greenbel1, t. £eiQ)V .. inarket '1iuue at . only tumbling waterfall. Aooent Charming waterfront bonie. · 2 · affrms., ·2 $64, 750 . · , , ts on privacy 1n backyard. MESA VERDE baths._ 2 Patios phis ~undeck. ·Ample park-OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY 1;5 == =:".:'~ $23,500 SUPER VALUE-Just listed-condt> mg for 3 ws.-Stres,sed for expansion. ·so% 324 VISTA :fR4CFIA (Off Ylsta del Oro) ket 101'"$35,900. No-.., minium, builtins, garage door opener, extra Loan available._ . · _ · 'UELE. N. B . DOWD &.\i =· Beller humo! nice carpet & drapes. 2 patios. End unll Lota ' $109,900 • , . ~ -• . --• ""'"""·'"'"""'"'NICE' ~1~~1· Asking only $23,500. CALL 'CLARK SOMERS, lEALTOll . REALTOR BLUFFS .SPECIALIST . 644-o134 ~ • • ~· · . 306 Marina, Bolboi lslend • : 675i000 ·' • · · . 1 , , CHARMING TOWNHOUSE . ~ ~ •* •. Like to trade? Our Trader's The '.fastest draw in the West 2 STORY SECLUDED UNIT -featuring 2 I * · 1f • .• , . · * * Paradise column is for you ! 'Fast results are Just a pbo~ Daily PUot Want.· Ads have bedrooms, 2 baths, oversized patio & beauti· 1 , • . '• '4.,. -. ·:.· 5 lines, 5 days ror 5 bucks. call away -642-5678. · barltalna a:alore. ~ ful carpets & paint. Spacious grounds with ' · l:.IDO'S EAST E D General Gen,ral Gener•I · beautiful pool & lai1dscaping. Lota of trees, ocean breeze in quiet adult only commulity. Perfect !i>cation near Newport Back Bay. Priced only $36,500. CALL 546-SllO ERITAGE I ~ Open Saturday & Sunday 1·5. 844 Vie Lido Nord. 4 bedloom, 4 baths, bayfront wfth . p~er ~d slip J>_rlvilegeo. 40 foot )ot. $295,000. ~~ ' I ' l I I " ' OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 # 10 Ruo Fountelnbloau. Comer Dover model. 2 bedrooms and family room. Very private side yard. $89,500. ' · OPEN SUNDAY l..S #20 Ru1 Grand Ducal. End location. Dover model 2 bedrooms and family room. View. Super decor. $95,000. ' OPEN SUNDAY 1-4 i# 12 Ruo Ch•INU Royol. 3 bedroom Bor- deaux model. End location. Highly upgrad- ed: Air conditioned, large lot. $LU,500. BIG CANYON CONDOMINIUM Beautiful 3 bedroom Monaoo in original section. Air conditioned. All upgraded. Fan- tastic view. $149,000. NEVER OCCUPIED 97511 TIANIPOITATION, POI AN OPTION TO PURCHASE THE FOLLOWING PAICIU OP LAND AND IMPROYIMINn AT THI SITES AND TIMIS IN'DICATID-ALL HOUSES OPIN FOR INSPl~ON NOYIMll~ 11, 1973, FROM J.OM:OI P.M. AUCTION SALE NO. LOCALITY 7179 1610 Ki"9t Ro11d N•wport B•1eh, Ca. FOR SALE IMPROVED WITH : Sin9I• Family t11idene1 lapprow. 1,7)4 Sq. ft.I luilt 1959, I ro om1-l b1droom1, I '4 bet+u, double g1r11 9e and mi1eell11n10111 yard 1 lmpro,em1nt1. ZONE APPROX. AREA 7,150 Sq. Ft. $41 ,000.00 DEPOSIT $ l ,l00.00 DATE OF SALE: TUESDAY, DECEMBER '4, 1973 ON THE SITE 10:00 A.M. 7110 2NOOl ·OI \11 king1 Ro11d R-2 7,700 Sq . Ft. ewport Beach, Ca. $41 ,000,0!1 IMPROVED WITH : Duplex r 1pprox. DEPOSIT $ J,J00.00 1,954 Sq. Ft.) luilt epprox. 1956 C.E Colesl<1ll'lhy & Co.· Realtors IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY-. -SETTLED FOR THE HOLIDAYS HARBOR VIEW-SOMERSET MODEL 5 BR's., 3 baths warm family room with fireplace & wet Mt. Breakfast nook In all eiec. kitchen plus formal dining room. Ill- ness forces sale. Vacant & ready, Not leased land. Reduced. $84,500. LUXURIOUS BLUFFS CONDO . MagnificenUy decor. 3 Br, 2'h Ba home. Bright & light. Oversized garden &i::J.o· Fully air conditioned-You own the priced $79,500. "n.e fastest draw tn tbe Wt.111. Thi fastest draw ln tbr West. • • .a Dally Pilot Cluslded ••• a Dally Pilot O••""""' Ad. 642-5611. ~Ad=. 642=-::5671.:;::_ ___ _ General MACNAB IRVINE DOVE·R SHORES-VIEW U you are reasonable, open minded, and want the impossible-"We think alike"! Lei us show you our finest 5BR View Home on Galaxy Drive-Harriet Perry 64U235. (s30) NEW VERSAILLES BIG CANYON Most lwrurioua 4BR/FI\, DiodeL Magnif- icent double Fairway· Vlew1. '175,000. OREN SUN. I-5p.m. #4 Rue Gnuld Du- cal (s32) ' TURTl.ERocK CON~ .. Plan #2: SBR/LR 81'1>Wld atrium. Prime location on park! Martha Macnab 64U235. (•33) FABULOUS VIEW-POUNDING Sl.IRF Privacy of China Cove-Multi-level ,w/ele- vator-3BR's, 2 baths. Sh9wer & dres!lng room for beach. New cpts., drps, & hewly painted & paneled. $143,000. OPEN SUN. 1-5 p.m. 2716 Shell St. (834) • ' ONLY ONEii Custom Newport Heights home w /mill .... view of Bay & Ocean. Fantastic potential! $64,960. OPEN SUN, l.S 29 Oceanvlew. (llM) GRACIOUS SPYGLASS Lovely 41!1!. & FR, l·year old. Super billiard room. M06t elegant landscaping around. Superb Hill & Ocean View. $129,500. Jane Frazee 64U235. (s36) VINTAOI! BALBOA ISLAND 2BR quaint • cooy-good renlal unW you bulld. $61,000. Martha Macnab MU235. (s37) DOVER SHORES-$91,500 ' But [i' can move in today! Yes, the land· ticap and drapes are in, and this 3 bed- room ~ bath borne Is near the pool and ' teruiia courts in University Park. Just listed at only $67,000. HARBOR VIEW HOMES Somerset model, 5 bedrooms, 3 baths. Large famll,y room, 3 car garage. All this plus a '11eW of Big Canyon Country Club. $93,500. 2 bedroom1-I b1th i11 ••ch uriit, doul:ile • 1tt1chid 9er19e end mhc1ll1neou1 yard lmpro¥em111ti. • DATE OF SALE= TUESDAY QECEMBER 4, 197J ON THE SITE 10:10 ;,M. : HARBOR HIGHLANDS ConvenienUy located to Mariners Park, s~ooi & library-excellent f11111Uy neighbor· hOod. 4 Br, 2'h Ba, bobby rm. Large cover· ed patio, warm hardwOod floon '541,500. 3000 sq. ft. of farrnly living. Room for pool. H ""1io!.I ·4BR's, FR, S balhl + powder-room. OPEN SUNDAY 1-6 p.m. 1209 Santiago (838) ·. TOUCH THE STARS • Top ol Spyglass IWJ. Ocean view. Elegant ' liedroom home. Family room and bonus room. Pralusionally decorated and land· .i:aped. tllf.llOO. YMllTSMAN'S DREAM J1Grtb ~~nks, kekh and whaler , ID JOUl frGllt aWJ have room for man. 6 tbs . 8 years old. Fee laD4. ....... • • CAMl!O IHORES ae.a YilW wry *'9 living room and ~ ~ wit( beautiful parquet llOal'I. '11 Did celW!p. 4 bedrooms, 3 ..... tut.•· ---~w1l,llanker ......... !tllltM., ..... 7111. 1000 Cliff Drih"' R·I , 6,491 Sq. Ft. N1wporf 811c , C1. $21,000.00 IMPROVED WITH: Si119l1 famllv re,idente DEPOSIT $ 2,000.00 I approx. I, 119 Sq. Ft.I luilt epproL 1924, 5 roomt-2 b1droom1, I bath, d1t1ched 3·c•r 91r191 ind mi,ceH1n1ou1 v•rd impto\l~me11t1. ,.. DATE OF SALE: TUESDAY DECE MBER 4, 1971 ON THE SITE: 11 100 A.M. 7112 711-720 Iris A·2 7,010 Sq. Ft. C. F. COLESWO~THY 640-mo WE HAVE RENTALS • Coron• d1I Mer, Ce. SJ7,SOO.OO Gener•I General IMP~OVED WITH: Duplex IApprot. 1,140 DEPOSIT $ 2,600.00 11;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;/ Sq. ft,) lullt ,,pr_u._lfl2, 2 ~roo..mto I beth, I bedroom I beth In • ether •nit, ett1chM 4oultle g1r• .. en4 . 1nhc1U111"u1 .,,,.. '"'"°"''"'nt1,· DATE OF SAL" TUESPAY DEcEMIU 4, 1971 ON THE Silt 11 !10 A.M. 711J 71&.161/a J11mln1 A¥e. , A·2 1 • J,640 Sq. Ft. Coron• del Ma r, Ce, • • $34,100.00 IMPROVED WITH: Retlllenc• (Approx. DEPOSIT $ 2,300.00 1,14' Sq. Ft.I with e '"'It 1745 Sq. Ft.1 •"•r ga ra91, luilt 111prex. 1957, 2 Mdrooillt 1n4 I beth each unit, 4etached double 9ara91 1nO mltcell1n1ou1·y1t4 l111pt9'l'1Mlflh, DATE OF SALE• TUESDAY DECEMIER • 1971 ON THE SITE 12 NOON Fll1ancln1 1¥1l11bl1 011 p1rc1l1 11lllnf for $20,000.00 or m"or1. No per1on1I, b111Jn111 or 51¥11191 and loa11 ch1ckt will M 1cctj.tff. STATI qF CALIFORNIA _ DEPT. OF TkANSPORTATION 12' IO. IPllQ ITllll', LOI AN-CAUPOIMIA ... 11 . PHONI 1)111 6J0.17tl. ASll l'Cll ,ML WBT . , \ of;nJa J6f, PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES 30 Lindo 1110 Dr. Opon s..nd1y . Lovely 4 bdrm., 4~ ba. bpme wilh swim- ming pool, .pier & slip, panoramic view of main ch8DlleL Lge. f1mlly rm. w/space.for billlarcla & family dining. Waterfront formal dlnJng & living rm . '290,000. ---For Complote ln,.,,,,.llen , On All H-& Lota, l"INol Call: llLL GRUNDY, llALTOl 341 llyih11 Dr., llulte 1, N.L 61U 61 TERRIFIC TIMES for active couple or family, basketball court in backyard of this 3BR beauty! Loaded w /lots of extra luxuries at only $64,900. Joyce Edlund 64U235. (sS9) BIO CANY~UXURIOUS iBR New Monaco Model Condominiwn. Spa- cious LR w /high ceiling -lots of glus. Choose your Door coverings. $120,000. Tom Queen IH4-6700. (•~) . IMMIDIA-TI OCCUPANCY OWner tr1111!erred to San Francllco. Adopt Ibis lovely 4BR Immaculate home NOWI Steps to-nearby park. "8,900. Joyce Ed· 1una 114U235. ( s41) . -' -· --..... [ llVlna I ··--...,0 • .... 1 ~ ... --'41·1111 1 • ! I I l • • J ' Ge,..r•I Gen er1I Gt n1r1 I Goner1I Go-rel Sunday, Novtmbtr "· 1973 liAIL~ PilOr D ':i t ,-,~--~~iijjjiii;jiiiijiiiiij7~~~iii;jij;iiiiijii1iii.-il;~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiif~:::·-:::~~~~==~°"'~'~"~l:::::;;;;;:::;:;;;;:;l ~°'~lle~r~•~l:-:-::-::;,;;11 ==*=.,.='=~==:::::::::::::::::='""=:'1=1:::::::::::\=:::::1,I f!ete Ba~rell leraft'I: pre6enb . . ,. ' . -CORONA DEt MAR DUPLEX CLOSE TO SHOPPING -Darling 2 + 2 - -cleverly givl.ng utmost privacy to both units. Charming brick patio, separate laundry room , & many more amenities. $85 000 703 Ctrnlllon, CdM. Open Sun'. l·S BEACON BAY EXCEPTIONAL AREA -Private beach, ten· n1s, boat dock -all thi s plu s a real nice 4 Bedroom home. Located on the Strada with delightful patio. $69,500. ' # 41 Bffcon Bay, Open Sun. 1 ·5 , IMAGINE A NEW HOME! NEWPORT BEACH FOR $64,500 -We have !l for your inspection . This 3 Bedroom home 1s very "California casual " with open bea1ns Lhruout & many sliding glass doors for gar- den or pool viewin g. 1717 Irvine Ave .. NB. Optn Sun. 1-S VIEW • VIEW • VIEW A VERY SPECIAL HOME -With custom quality design. Spa cious li ving \\'ith large gracious roon1s. Greenhouse for plant lovers. 321 Kings Road, NB. Open Sat. & Sun. l·S EASTSIDE COSTA MESA BRAND NEW -Custom home. cedar & brick exterior .. Builtins. Fully insttlated -your choice of carpets & drapes. $49 ,950. 235 22nd St., CM. Open Sat. 1·5 BAYSHORES COTTAGE r. , IMMACULATE & READY -2 Bedrooms. J · private patio, cozy fi replace and nice wo rk· 1 shop in double garage. Immediate possession! ~-2711 Boyshort Dr., NB. Open Sun. l·S. i·-ENJOY THE SAILING SABOTS I-ALONG THE CANAL -~·rom your master bedroo1n balcony or lo\ver brick veranda. Beautifully appoinetd 3 Bedroom \vaterfront home -1.'ool & tennis close by. $69,500. ,r NEWPOR-T DUPLEX . LOWEST PRICE! -Roomy. 3 bedroom earh u'nit -and you O\rn the land. \Valk to beach. Top rental area. $69,000. Offict Open Saturdays & Suhdeys PETE BARRETT REA~TY 1605 .Wtstctiff Dr .. N.B.'· • 642-5200 Classi(ied Ad.~ • · .... 61Z--5678. ~"{'fl a ''PR11··~ l-'1 .. ..:r an ;111~ -General General 1 -.1'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~_.....~1 * IRYINE TERRACE * I ! I c I I ! I I I I I I • [ 181S GALATEA TERRACE OPEN SAT. AND SUN . 12:30·5 Outstanding vie\v of bay & ocean. 4,200 Square feet of magnificent living. Unusually Jarge rooms consist of 4 bdrms., fa1nily rm., den, 4¥.i baths, 3 frpks .. pool, palio, 3 car garage. Corne by & see Sal. or Sun. afternoon or call for app't. $179,500. DAVID D. CARLSON CO. REALTORS 833-9293 Gtneral Genera l Sells More Homes Than Anybody! Two area offices serving you · · · COSTA MESA ~ 2629 HARBOR BL VD. NEWPORT BEACH 645-8080 277 EAST 17th Optn Eveni"91 Until 9:00 Call and get, the RtD CARf'.ET TR.EATMENT EASTSIDE TRl-PLEX $39,000 Anxious-Submit reasonable offer 2 BEDROOM 2 BATH Beautiful town house-sunken living room $23,950 'I• ACRE-VIEW 2 bedroom one bath-cute R-4 zone $30,000 BACK BAY BEAUTY 1/3' ACRE 4 bedrooms 1000 square feel, custom home secluded $54 ,500 3 BEDROOM 2'12 BATHS DELUXE . TOWNHOUSE FHA-VA terms $25.500 MESA VERDE EXECUTIVE HOME 4 Bedrooms, dining room, .large lot, 3 yrs old , extra nice, $45,500 MESA VERDE SLEEPER f beilroom & family room beauUfU! home · near shopping '36,500 ' EASTSIDE BARGAIN 3 bedrooms pool home ,huge lamUy room with masslvt!'brlck fireplace. Large private ( lot $35,950 BACK BA.Y CHARMER 3 bedroom cul·de·sac lot. Qulel.-private, owner must sell-talking' $39,900 soltly BRADFORD TOWNHOUSE Beautiful 3 bedroom 2 bath priced below market at $27.495 FAMILY DELIGHT 3 lar~e bedrooms family rqom 2 brick nre· ' • . • places $41.500 • NEWPORT'S .FINEST FAR.M·A-PLENTY ~ s ~· . I 2 BRAND NEW LISTINGS On lhl• huge lot, ! iled'"°m ~ ~'" BROADMOOR _ HARBOR Vl~W 2 Bath, rcdcrorlltcd 110"'4". """"4 "' / SP• "'!ISi' '"'~LUENC E In thi1Uge. 5 bdrm,, VA "'""'"''""'"· 126,500 n.11 ~~ Cali COL\\'EU.. &46--055:> 3 bath home. Fron1 the 1nassive entry thru lhe iron gates lo the expansive redwOOd ASSUME 71f2 •/o REAl 'JORS 1 1 deck. with its unexcelled view of Newpott VA LOAN 00 ASSOCIAT(S L l·S TH IS AFTERNOON Harbor. The dining rn1 . v.1all is oovered \Vlth crystal 1nlrrors: the entire house has the ele· Top IOC'iition -Top <'Ondl t\on. Easl!ide COAto. l\.1esa. 3 gance you expect in Corona del ~1ar. Offered Brd.. 2 baths, Ftt.niity at $129,9.?Q. Room. f'i.replaL'C, Shake · OPEN SUN. 1·5, 1123 GOLDENROO noot. New Quality C.1r11eling, Chilth"Cn ruay CONTEA1PORARY \VITI-I POOL. Superb, 1\'nlk to S<'hooL Offered for adult occupied home on lge. lot, \Vi.th an ex-~:~. C;Ul COL~\IELJ. pa nsive entertain1nent center surroun<ling the pool. Vie\v of the harbor fronl the front room: situated above the street level for con1- plete privacy. Offered at $79,500. TRIPLEX FOR TRADE ' Do you O\l"n up 10 20 unit,; 644-7270 SEE THESE OPEN HOUSES HARBOR VIEW HOME 1727 Port Stirling, OPEN S.t I' Sun 1·5 Enlarged Monaco model, 3 BR., 2 BA. witb f~rmal DR., frplc.,1 den , ram. rm . Lrg. bltn. ki tchen. Easy prof. lndscp'd yard. Yours £or $74,500. OPEN SUN. 1·5, 1126 GOLDENROD an11 11·\~h h) trade do11-n? BLUFFS CONDOMINIUM • • I ! ' IN CORONA DEL MAR -Remodeled 2 bdrm .. den. 45' l\·2 lot, good fin. avail. $108,500. Berl Reedy will be there. NEW LISTING WALNUT SQUARE: air-cond., 2 bdrm., den end unit; beautiful patio, pool & park ~rounds. Offered at only $33,500 . Thi!; 111ny hr Y-Oltr ttnS\\'ci·: 443 Vlst• Rom.i, Open Sun. 1·5 ' To11 i::a.~tsitlr r..()Sta ~lesa I A1~a. l..urge apartnirnts. 2·story c:o ntpletely upgraded 4 BR., 3 BA., 1 on!' :l bcdroorn H.nd tv.-o 2 ' frplc., close to everyth ing. Pr i c e d ri ght. 1 bedt'OOms, 3-ycars ne\\', 1 t1 r.:4 950 213 Fernle~f Ave. Corona dtl Mir IN BAYSHORES -Re·done , 2 bdrms .. cute, l!ke ne\v, roon1 to expand, $62,000. Marian Reedy \Viii be there. 2582 Arbor Ave. Newport Beach, 1 ·5 IN .WESTCLIFF -Secluded yet ~onvenient to shopping, Beautifu l pool & clubhouse. A (antastic air conditioned 2 Bdrm, 21h: BA value at $38, 750. Marge Ell more will be there. 1061 Dover Dr. Newport Beach IN THE ~LUFFS -Unique vie\t'S, wall· papers, Trma n1odel. 3 bdrn1s 1 900 sq . ft value at $71,500. Vergileive • H~ll wili be .. there. 426 Vi1t1 Parad1 Newport Beach IN . HARBOR VIEW HILLS -incredible cabtnetry .. 4 bdrm. view, lge. lo! $96 500 Zoe Ann will be there. ' ' · 915 Tillor Woy Corona del Mar IN HARBOR VIEW HOMES -Under COO· slruct1on and under comparable prices 4 bdrm, Palermo, big lot, $71 500 . Bevis ,;,111 be there. ' 2333 Port Ltrwick Ntwport Beach IN THE BACK BAY -Country-like area 4 bdrms. vie''' at ni ght, treeualo.re-.neat' $66,500. Kay Glavas will beihere. (Off San'.-ta Isabel ) 2326 Tustin Newport Be1ch IN CAMEO HIGHLANDS -New listing. D.eep \Valer d1v1ng pool , wee bit of an ocean view, 4 . bdrms, immacu late $76,500. Kay Glavas will be there. · 4521 Cortl1nd Corona del Mar ON SPYGLASS Hill -Super view lot. ocean to front; can yons to rear, 5 bdrms, elegance, clean, $139,500. Jean Cole \viii be there. 1607 Ci1stle Cove Coron1 del Mar IN CORONA DEL MAR -So. of Hwy huge duplex. exciting features. 5 bdrm unit and 4 bdrm unit, $139,000. Maril yn !lodges will be there. 618 Ac1cii1 Corona del Mar IN MESA VERDE ~ Several excellent listings froi:n $40,000 famil y coinmunity, top value, entire sales staff lA'ill be there. 2850,Mtsa Verde Or. Costa Mesa U ,._ l()U I: t1()MI:§ ON TOVOF THE REAL ESTATE MARKET WITH THE NICEST PEOPLE SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES CORONA DEL MAA, 675-6000 • MESA VERDE, 546-5990 • NEWPORT BEACH, 645·6500 • CALL US Gerleral General OPEN SUN. 1·5 . 5162 ELKSFORD (Off Culver Dr., in Irvine) CdM OCEAN SIDE OF HWY. -income unit in rear Unusual offering, ocean side duplex. 2 Nice· houses ori" 1-lot. Li\re in one, have income from the oilier. REDUCED $10,000'TO $79,900 TWO NEW DUPLEXES OWNER WANTS ALL OFFERS Expect real l!exican tile entries, the lavish use of Northern redwood . large balconies to enjoy the ocean view. These duplexes are one of a kind, custom bt1ilt & designed for those \vho \Vant to be different ... ocean vie\v available. OPEN SAT. & SUN. l ·S 262 WAVE ST., LAGUNA BEACH CAREFREE LIVING Lovely Newport Beach to\vnhouse close to everything, yet clo se enough to smell t~e clear ocean air. 3 Lge. bdrnis., 2 baths, patio & just ·a fe\v steps from the pool. Priced to sell at $48,500. OPEN SAT. & SUN. l·S 4Sll. OJUON WAY, N.B. (nr. Hoag Hosp.) . CORBIN -MARTIN REALTORS Call Anytimo 644-7662 Genera1 'General LAS?. OF THE CLASSICS? Will environmental controls ·be the end o( ne\v duplexes in Corona de! Mar? Buy be· fore the law of su pply & demand inflates the prices & while interest r~les are stab1I· iz.ing ... see 613 & _615 Marigold nG\V ... the best priced ne\v duplex_es in town_. Just completed. 3 Bd!ms., 3 ha: 10 each unit; blt- ins, (rplcs., patios & outside decks. Lovel y residential street. ~125,000. OPEN SATURDAY & SUNDAY 1·5 P.M. • GREAT SOUTH OF HWY LOCATION . Charming CdM 2 bdrm. front house done \\•ith great taste & 1sep. guest qt~s. Secluded patios. To be sold furn. Call for info. $72,500 CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX WOODED AREA. $95,000 ct Orange Coast 2600 E. Coast Hwy., Coron• dtl Mar RF.Al ESTATE 644 4848 g1~111 tondition. Exrellen1 ..,a ' · I ~.Call COL WELL DELUXE COl!f:)NA DEL MAR DUPLEX 400 J1smine, Open Sit & Sun 1-5 1''ront unit just remodeled , paneled LR. w/ warm lrplc. 3 BR .. NEW upper unit 2 BR., beamed ceilings, So. of hwy. $119;500. LAND 2 A<:rt>s plus. 6 mi les South of Santa Cru.'C in Aptos. \\"iU take 30 unil.s. O\vne1"S 11·\JI exchange for Orunl?t' County Arca. Offl't'l.'d for $10,000. 20 At•res. Betwct'n B.1rsto\1· I end Randsburg on propoSftl l·:xp1-esS\\'UY. Off<"t"l'd fur I S!l.000 CJ\LL COL\\'ELL I 6'6-0;>; I BlG DEAL! 3 BH. & 2 DENS DUPLEX 719 Marigold, Open Sit. 1-5 Front house has ne\\' cpt s., wallcoverings & paint. 2 BH. LARGE l BR. upper unit. May \ve sho\v you U1rougb?? $79,500. NEW LISTINGS • TRIPLEX AND THE VIEW TOO Pr ide of own-ership. Newly painted in & oul 3 spacious unit s. 11i rent area. I blk . from bch . in beautiful CdM. Asking $132,500. TWINS 2 identical 2 BR. duplexes. Side by side on separate lots. 1 has extra room off patio, could be ou·tside rec. rm. or office. \Valk to everything. Asking $74,500 & $73,500. HUGE WE CAN HELi' YOU IUY, 100 x 140 LOT SELL. OR TRADE A HOME ' ll:early -acre I o I . ANYPLACE IN THE NATtON Boat/trailer acceM u.~eful for stol'age or l ruck s. 2828 E. Coast HighW1y, Coron1 del Mar cnn1pers, boats, etc. Plus -------~--"--------1 fenc:cd ramblin~ cwton1 General General h6me"1caturing -22.:i0 S<t> ft. =:~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;=J of llvtng space, 3 J;u·ge • bedrooms,' 2 ba t hs, hardv.'OOd noors. fireplac<', 2 dens, (one -22x22l dining room, heavy shake T'OOf, covered patio. And best of all, a low 1111 assumable loan. $42,500 .tul! price & $3600 takes! larwin realty inc. equal housin!l oppty. .968-44(15 (24 hrs! I ASSUME YA 8°/o INTEREST 1 1\·i1h a loao ba\anct' or · 52'2.jOO. The paymrnt of $230 pcr/n10. inc ludes a 11 . Sparkling 3 bdr111 111 iddlr of tile-blocker \\'ith big hack yurt!· and Jot:ri o[ pl'l\·acy. Hd\1'd floors \\·H h ne\V shag ra rpc·ting. I-luge · hitchen \\"it li built-ins. Sub1nit ''-'hat cash you have for do1rn payn1t'nt let seller carry !he balance. Everyone qualilies_, Walker &Lee 1114l ll TA TI Call 54:;..9.191 ~pen eves. PRESTIGE HARBOR VIEW HILLS The exclu sive, original section ot Harbor Vie\v liills, \Vith a spectacular Vie\v & a spa~ cious 3 bedroom, 21h bath home. Paneled..,' family room. opens onto nicely la·ndscaped · 1 enclosed yard with swimming pool & lighted fountain. Owner transfer.red . Home priced to sell at $95,500. CAPE COD O\\'ner \Vi ii fina·nce this lovely Back Bay home, with 4 bedrooms, a large family room with \\1et bar. a den or office, separate from the house. plus a large heated S\Virnm ing pool. Re· duced to ~64 ,500. HARBOR VIEW ,HOMES Private co rner lot '\'ith beautifully landscap- ed ya rd. 2 bedroo111s plu s den. Light & cheer- fill . thruout. r~or rent ~t $525 per month, gardener included . , General Generol BY THE SEA -----1;;;:;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;; I" ''t'l'Y desirable, beautifully 1 landllCapcd Dean Brothrrs F.statc. \\ ilh n pool and j trnnis (']Of;(' by, a ·wlu·n1 l'ireplace and ru1 C'njoytlllle I f;unily room are just part I of all the cujoyment or Ui il\ 1 1 CALL COLWELL 'COMPANY REALTORS 2&41 E. Coa1t Hwy., Corona -del Mar "Selling 'Real Estate in Newport H1rbor ·' Since 1944,. Propert1es.1nc f I RSJ Realtors OPEN TODAY DOYER SHORES T.he best view of the upper bay from a mag· n1~1cent Ro1nan garden with terraces, foun- tams, and other \Vorks of art. The home is a · loca_l deco.rator's ou'.n home done to a per- fection with the finest of materials and t~len.t. . This lovely property for the · most dtscnmtnatin g buyer. $295,00.0 -1812 Gal· axy Dr. AVA ILABLE BY APPOINTMENT ONLY TODAY -CALL OUR OFFICE. HARBOR VIEW - The most attractive, all wood exterior, Paler· mo four bedroom model -on great cul-de-sac street, next to new elementary schoo l -\Vith an enormous side yard for POOL AND PAD- DLE TEN1'/IS. Lease oi buy this line home. $550 month or $87,500. 1945 Port Dunleigh, Newport Beach 1·5 p.m. SPYGLASS HILL The most spectacular view from all the homes for sale in Spyglass -Beautiful lour bed· room one sl.1lry -$133,500. 17 Tiburon Bay Dr. C.D.M. 1·5 p.m. HARBOR view-RIDGE Extraordinary canyon and ocean view from a spacious Lusk Burlingame six bedroom home. "1otivated seller says try leasC/option. $129,000. Or. $750 pr. month. HARBOR VIEW Best view in "Old Corona" -The o,riginal Harbor View. Very unusual 2, 3, 4, or 5 bed· .roo'!' home. Great for couple or up to large family . $85,000. 1033 Goldenrod, C.D.M. l ·S p.m . BEST IN BLUFFS 4 BRAND NEW C 0 N D 0 S * BEAUTIFUL GREENBELTS * BEST OF EVERYTHING * PRICED TO SELL NOW * g GREAT FLOOR PLANS. honlC. \Valk t-0 lbe beach ~!'!!! ... !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l'iit'I and schools. CaJI for an Gtneril Gener•1 673-4400 appt., at 963-6767. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;J Ol'fNrtLO •rrsFUNTO BE ll/CE' *BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES*' 1·6 ' '~ THE REl!L ESTl!TERS NEWPORT ISLAND Pier & slip. Dix. du· plex. 3 BR, 2 ba.. 2 BR, 2 ba. 3 Car park· ing. $125,000. NEWPORT HEIGHTs Reduced! Spanish •.3 BR., 2 ba. split·levil. Extra lge. lot. OwDj!r extremely anxious! Ca ll & submit 642-7491. INCLUDING A \ ' . ONE LEVEL -1800 sq. lt .. 3 BR, lam. rm., 2 baths. * ATIENTION * VA OR FHA TERMS Open House Sat & Sun OPEN HOUSE SAT./SUN. 1.5 • 675-7060 2706 VISTA UMBROSA I off Vista dcl Oro\ eazY Eastsklc. J Beclroorn, MOTIVATED HELEN B. DOWD I 1 ~~ &111 home. Nice lar,:c I SELLER V. A. REPO. 1 1<11, ~i!b_boat or trailer galf'. [ ., Un a 1i11ie1 8,rCf'L Qf,el'erl N pt Island . Sharp Lge. lot. 3 BR, 2 be . at $31,jf)J, I '''aterfront. pier & S26,~l,OOO Do,\'Il REAL TOR BLUFFS SPECIALIST 644-0134 2.l·1;. \\IEST!\1INS'TER AVE. (Joat 2 BR den · only Costs & impounds $750 General OCEAN VIEW 3 + GUEST $31,500 R~~~.r e p r8tv~t:8~~ lined street "on the BluH". 3 bedroms including hkle-a· ·way master suite with viev.r, cmy den and chart house. Large living room with i;tanlen picture w i n d -0 "' . captain$ kitchen. GUEST f ACILlTY ~ \\•ith separate en1rrui1·c, private bath. 1 covered palios. Brea.th1ak· ing vie\v overlooking mile!! or scenic ocean. BE'ITEll 1-IURRY, CaJI. 6,U-0303 IOHl\I L Ol\O \ ' ' 2299HarborBlvd. GeMral I BAYFRONT OPEN SAT/SUN l·S 16 BALBOA COVES Cl'tl • ' ' !Tl e CALL ANYTIME e S97,500. Make o((er. $254 ~10., P · ~3928 or Evt. 645-2'86 57:J.742o. 55&-8000 ' * BALBOA BAY PROPERTIES * . 4, OFFICES TO SERVE YOU Lachenmyer General O\VNER \VILL FINANCE. === Realtor *******************~ Bayfront with slip. 3 Bdrn1s.. 4 ~RM 2 ba,, cu.ston1 built. Ex· • • po""1 bOam cemng, ·' retl· $2 500 * OWNER TRANSFER! VERY ANXIOUS! v.-OOd paneling. Dual frplc .. c " Beautiful 5 BR, 4 BA pool home. Supremely Spanish tile fir., blt·in kit· !~·,~ ~ .. a~!hi~ ..... 00d,• ... nbnin,,a,llon, constructed and decora. ted for.elegant living. c-hcn & loa.d!I or cuphoaNls. .,.... '"' Extr a lge. dbl. ('ar gar. \\·/ hnlhs, buill-in kitchen. dou· Choice Newport location. Price reduced to rl<."ClriC' opi'rwr. svrt \\·.ite1· blr car gnragC'. \\'I,,. I $135.000. 1315-Sanliago-Open 2-5 Sat. & Sun. s)sten1 rJ1r11out . Pri1'C"I at carpets & draJl('~. 8'-ll<'r [ • ' only s1 :1!l.500 . ,,·ith rxt'f'I· ch~ck ~thil' one out TOl)AY * EXECUTIVE DREAM HOME . lent tl'nns h> 11uallfic<l l}l1y<'1·. -61fi-i711. OJJCn eves. Custom. spacious. ne\\' 4 BR-3 BA, 2 (1rc- "C" THOMAS -~---places. \\'et ba r. exciting \•iew, pool-si.zed ) ,--~-@i'~-.., j yard:J-car gar .. Ne\vport Bayc rest location. Realtor Walker & lee I •Sl27.750. 1so1 Santiago-Open Daily 1·5. t22 1 \\". Coits1 1-h\-y. 518-~il27 1111L .,,,,,, Ontu Days 645·7211 NC\\'port Bf>ach ~5-5643 ~"l.·cs. -Ir-EVER STOLEN . ~ Eno. 54M.IM WALK TO OCEAN A DUPLEX 1 1733 WESTCLIFF Dlt. . I 21 VACANT 2-story 4 Bedroom, Try. this: two 2 \x>drooni . ~ NEWPORT BEACH .1/2 ACRE • 2 Bath, trplc. 2 paUos. units • double garage in· ~ I I • ...,,. pool k Jonnls. "'""' come of 13r.i "'" >""· I.._*******.-. *°CL * * * * *...: ~1 ..1 BAYFRONT RANCH w /POOL " lea .. /opllon. 148.500. .,king ~15.950. Try , •• , .. "llr .... " ... I °'''n pii t'C o'''ncr says G I · ~ Best bu y in all Newport of a bayfront home Ex<eudve Es"''· °"TI" EASTSIDE SELL' Call nro Carpet '"'" General \Ylth private sJip. "Cluster ho'!ing" !or low n1ovtng and must accept t..ovclr, clenn ·homr.. h!U'd· Jte:\l!Or~. 6-1.').SCNJ, • --------'"' refUIOnablc offer. Lovtly "'OOd floor~. 3 Bt>choo1n , VA OtFERlNG FOR SALt ma\ntenancc. New, S bedroom model -ho1ut for lante fnn1lly !1-plc piu.s 11:ur&t house. V\c. RATED ''G'~ ONE STORY THIS 2 B E DROOM $77.500. 4423 W. Const tl\\'Y· Newport Beach \V/c\!ru~ Ot'Chard. 101')' garden. Close 10 shop. r or a GREAT buy_ 3 2 BR adult condo w\1h new ST 0 R \' 8 0 0 K HOME 1·5 p.m. ping & ~hool~. $ol~j(}l.'ll ·bedrooms. Ea~l Slde Costa carpels, drnpe, k 101.s or snro:: B-S.Q 1~t<Mf:JC.. r:=-~---io:--, 1400l11" • rv • M•'Sll 125.000. c.1i ..., •. ··•litxlJ>Cr. Nf'ed• .... ""• CELl.ENT .CONO .. ,ON. CALL -67~7225 Walker e Lee C.M lllJS •·JO-ml or "" '"'" Wllh opl~n. TOTAL· Prutt SI0.500. S2!0 II • .. )_ A~1dng $23,9;.(l. 8 3 6 ~ ~ 10 6 l'IO\VN, $191 PER 1-10.' IN· ~i:~:if!!!!!!!!'t. oPEHnt.• IT'SFtm108E('ltCt• Agrnt. Cl.UOF.S ALL. V;\ AP· ~i.Ji.\i:.i ;~:::~~~;,~~-t'. ~~~·~J,d~n~..i!f~j ~ ly;~~~::~~~~,'~~~~:~~ ~l~~E=~=fk call too..v·MW'l6'71. Ad. 60-e678. ~· :::;::"~~~~!'! Pnot· Wtnl Ads: ca.u mvv Wut ad ~ti ... toalTS .I I ' • ..... • -- HOUSES FOR SALE 2 BEDROOMS 2821 Ocean Lane, Corona del Mar 644-1766 $130,000. (Sun 2·5) • •225 Grand Canal, Balboa Island 675-4000 Sun 12-4 2582 Arbor (Bayshores) NB 645-6500 $52,000 Sat & Sun 1·5 1574 E. Ocean Blvd. (Balboa Penin.) NB 540-2313 $65,000 Sat & Sun 1-5 2100 Seville Ave., Newport Beach 673-7608 $79,500 (Sun 1·5) 169 1'ferrill St., Costa Mesa 646-7171 (Sun 1·5) 444 Morning Canyon, Corona del Mar 644-7211 (Sun 1·5) 2 BR. & FAMILY RM. OR DEN #10 Rue Fontainebleau (Big Canyon). NB 644-1766 $89,500 (Sun 1·5) •20 Rue Grand Ducal (Big Canyon) NB 644-1766 $95,000 (Sun 1·5) • 259 Oceanview (Newport Heights) NB 64U285 J64,900 Sun 1·5 # 10 Rue Chat~u Royal (Big·Canyon) NB 644-6200 $85,000 Sat & Sun 1·5 213 Femleaf, Old Corona dei"Mar 64!>6500 $108,500 Sat & Sun 1·5 497 Costa Mesa St., Costa Mesa 645-7171 Sat & Sun 1-5 1824 Pt. Barmouth (HVuHomes) NB 640-0020 Sat & Sun 1-5 2535 Vista (Bayshores) NB 645-4342 $62,500 (Sun 11-5) 2781 Bayshore Dr. (Bayshores) NB 642-5200 $65,000 . (Sun 1-5) 321 Kings Rd. (Cliffhaven) l\'8 642-5200 3 BEDROOMS (Sun 1-5) . •12 Rue Chateau Royal (Big Canyon) NB 644-1766 $124,500 . (Sun 1-4). · 426 Vista Suerte (North Bluffs) NB 644-1766 $55,927 (Sun 1·5) 2030 Holiday Rd. (Baycrest) NB 644-1766 $89,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1951 Port LOckslioigh (HV Homes) NB 642-8235 · Sun 1-5 2716 Shell St. (China Cove)· CdM 642-8235 Sun 1-5 2646 Vista de! Oro (Bluffs) NB 644-6200 sat & Sun 1·5 713 Larkspur, Corona de! Mar • 673-6642; 675-6459 Sun 1-5 ~ 6lst St, ~Newport Shores) NB 673-9060 $45,000 . Sun 1-5 4831 Bruce Crescent (Lido Sands) NB 673-0210 Sat & Sun 1-5 1996 Del Mar, Laguna Beach 494-4558 sat & Sun 1-5 309 Esplanade (Bluffs Condo) NB 675-5930 Sat & Sun 1-5 •2018 Commodore (Baycrest) NB • 675-5930 Sun 2-5 115 Abalone, Balboa Island 675-1867, (213) 836-4740 Sat & ,Sun 1-5 · ' 303 Orchid, Corona del Mar , 673-2266 Sat & Sun 12-5 2006 Vista Caudal (The Bluffs) NB 675-3535 $79,500 Sat & Sun 1-5 1966 Del Mar, Laguna Beach 494-4558 . Sat & S!ln 1-5 341 Hazel Dr, Corona de! Mar' 675-3~ ., Sun 2-5 304 Otero (The Bluffs) NB 675-3000 Sun 1-4:30 428 Vista Parada (The Bluffs) NB 675-7080 $78,900 Sat & Sun 1-5 204 Kings Place, Newport Beach 64!>6646 $98,500 Sat & Sun 1-5 ••4423 W. Coast Hwy., Newport )leach 675-7225 $79,000 Sat & Sun 1-5 •5611 Littler, Huntirtgton Beach 842-2535 $35,900 S~t & Sun 1-5 292 Knox Place, Costa Mesa 646-7171 Sat & Sun 1-5 242 Cedar (Newport Shores) NB 642-2563 $47,900 . Sun 1-5 2811 Bayshore Drive, Newport Beach 646-7711 $69,500 Sun 12-5 235 Walnut (Newport Shores) NB 548-1290 $49.500 (Sun 1-5) 12132 Sk v Lane. Santa Ana 838-6341 $41.500 !Sun 1 ·5) 426 Vista Parada (The Bluffs) NB 675-6000 $71 ,500 (Sun 1-5) 10412 Sunday Dr .. Huntington Beach 546-2313 $30 ,950 (Sun 1-5) 3 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN 17402 Caspers Circle,. Huntington Beach 842-8069 $45,500 sat & Sun 12-5 1807 Port Tifiin, (Harbor Vu Hom .. ) NB 644-2354 $69,000 Sat & Sun **#85 Linda Isle-(Linda Isla) NB 642-8235 Sat & Sun 1-5 20332 Deervale, Huntington Beach 642-8233 . Sun J-5 22 Rue Grand Ducal (Big Canyon) NB 644-6200 $120,000 Sat & Sun 1-5 1806 Port Westbourne (HY Homes) NB 644-6200 Sat & Sun 1-5 1601 Port Charles Pl (HY Homes) NB 644-7607 $57.500 Daily 10-5 17706 Acacia Tree Ln ., Irvine 552-7706 $64,900 Sat & Sun 1-5 19011 Antioch (Turtle Rock) Irvine 833-1486 Sat & Sun 1-5 *1101 Ebbtide (H.v:' Hills) CdM -675-2373 Sat & Sun 1-5 •1128 Goldenro3, Corona de! Mar 644-7662 SUn 1-5 1982 Pt. Albans (H.V. Homes) NB 644-7662 Sun 1-4 471 Broadway, Costa Mesa 646-3255 Sat & Sun 1-5 21042 Miramar Lane, Huntington Beach 536-7119 $38,900 Sun 11-5 2865 Monterey (Mesa dcl Mar) CM 540-1679 '36,900 SUD 12-5 1740 Plaza dcl Norte (Pcnin . Pl.) NB 673-9060 '87 .500 _ .Sun 1-li 1727 Port Stirling (HV Homes) NB 644-7270 ·Sat & Sun 1-5 J 297 Hanover, Costa Mesa 546-2313 $37,500 Sat & Sun 1-5 t-33 Goldenrod (Harbor View) CdM 675-7225 $86,000 Sat & Sun 1-5 1717 Irvine Ave .. Ne,vport Beach 642-5200 $64,500 (Sun J-5) 2326 Tustin, Newport Beach 1 646-7171 (Sun 1:30·5) 9121 Mahalo Dr., Huntington Beach 962-4454 $43,500 (Sun 1·5) 318 Vista Trueba {North Bluffs) NB 644-1133 $64,500 (Sun 1·5) 1114 White Sails Way, Corona del Mar 675-7080 $83,500 (Sun 1-5) 1747 Samar (Mesa Verde) {;M 546-2313 $47,~50 (Sun 1-5) 16372 Birdie Ln., Huntington Beach 842-2535 $35,900 (Sun 1-5) 917 Junipero, Costa Mesa 546-2313 $36,500 (Sun 1·5) 4 BEDROOMS • 844 Via Lido Nord (Lido Isle) NB 644-1766 $295,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2012 Windward Lane (Baycrest) NB 644-1166 $89,500 !Sun 1·5) 1807 Holiday (Baycrest) NB 644-1766 $84,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) •247 Colton (Newport Shores) NB 646-3255 Sat & Sun 1-5 1014 Sea Lane (Irvine Terr) CdM 675-5930 Sat & Sun 1-5 4651 Cortland (Cameo Highlands) CdM 642-8235 Sun 1-5 1945 Port Dunleigh (Harbor View) NB . 675-7225 $87,500 Sat & Sun 1-5 •835 Amigos Way'(Eastbluff) NB 644-2991 $52,500 , Daily 9-5 396 Princeton, Costa Mesa 546-2313 $34.500 Sat & Sun 1-5 ' *4521 Cortland, (Cameo Hglnds) CdM 675-0000 $76,000 Sat & Sun 1-5 310 Via Lido Soud !Lido Isle) NB 673-7300 $122,500 (Sun 1-5) 4 BR. & FAMILY RM. OR DEN 16501 Los Verdes Lane, Huntington Beach 846-4621 $56,500 (Sat & Sun -12-5) ,#4 Rue Grand Ducal (Big Canyon) NB 642-8235 Sat & Sun 1-5 1116 Shorecliff Rd. (Shorecliffs) CdM 642-8235 Daily 1-5 1856 Port Charles (HY Homes) NB 642-8235 Sun 1-5 ~200 Francisco, Newport Beach .642-8235 Sun 1-5 1209 Santiago (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 $98,500 Sun L-5 4545 Faidield (Cameo Shores) NB 642-8235 Sat & Sun 1.5 2036 Port Provence (HV Homes) NB 644-6200 $75,900 Sun 1-5 42 Mission Bay Dr (Spyglass Hill) NB . 640-8684 Daily 1-5 1300 Santanella (Irvine Terr.) CdM 673-6210 :sat & Sun J-5 425 Via Lido Nord, Newport Beach 675-7414 $137,500 Sat & Sun 1-5 2567 Columbia Dr (College Park) CM 833-3200 Sat & Sun 10-5 *1815 Galatea Terr. (!vine Terr.) CdM 833-9293 Sat & Sun 12:30-5 1955 Port Claridge Pl. (HVH) NB 833-0760 $74,500 Sun 1-5 •104 Via Mentone (Lido Isle) NB 675-0123 $109,500 Sat & Sun 1-4 1726 Ocean Blvd., Balboa Penin. Pl. 675-4060 $79,950 Sat & Sun 1-5 1941 Commodore (Baycrest) NB ' 548-6125 $79,500 Sun 1-5 2319 Heather Lane, Newport Beach 646-7414 Sat & Sun 1-5 2113 Miramar, Newport Beach 675-7080 $79,900 Sat & Sun 12-4 2912 Alta Vista (Eastbluff) NB 675-3000 Sat & Sun 1-4:30 1742 Centella Place, Newport Beach 642-6845 Sat 11-4; Sun 11-3 2021 Aliso, Costa Mesa 646-0555 $58, 700 Sat & Sun 1-5 •2915 Setting Sun fHVu Hills) CdM 675-2373 Sat & Sun 1-5 * •#50 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB 673-9060 $250,000 Sun 1-5 1939 Sanderling (Mesa Verde) CM 546-5880 $48,950 Sat & Sun 1-5 3619 Surfvie"( (HY Hills) NB 644-1766 $120,000 Sun 1-5 1412 Seacrest (HVuHills) CdM 644-1766 Sun 1-5 1718 Pl. Manleigh (HVu Homes) NB · 644-1766 $89,900 Sun 1-4:30 17 Tiburon Bay (Spyglass Hill) CdM 675-7225 Sat & Sun 1-5 **#30 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB 675-6161 $290,000 (Sunday) 7582 Quebec, Huntington Beach 968-4405 $34,500 (Sun 1-5) 2726 Cardinal IMe'" Verde) CM 546-2313 $63,950 (Sun 12·4) 2326 Tustin (Back B~y) NB 645-6500 $66.500 (Sun 1-5) 2601 Lighthouse Ln .• Corona de! Mar 675-6900 (Sun 1-5) 3348 Alabama Cir. (Mesa Verde) CM 557-3133 $51,500 (Sun 1·5) 512 DeAnza, Corona de! Mar 673-8550 Sat & Sun 1-5 •700 Malabar, Irvine Terrace 673-8550 $89,500 -Sun 1-5 •3801 Inlet Isle, Harvor View Hills ~73-8550 $125,000 Sat & Sun 1·5 8160 Dartmore, Huntington Beach ' 968-1623 $59.500 Sat & Sun I-Ii 16671 Phelps. Huntington Harbor 842-2535 $68.000 Sat & Sun 1-5. 12811. Barrell Lane, No. Tustin Hllls 645-6646 $90.000: Sal & Sun 1-5 915 Tiller. (Lusk ll~H) CdM . 675-8000 $96,500" Sat & Sun 1-5 233.1 Port Lerwick ( HV Ho'ines) NB 675-6000 $74,500 ' Sat & Sun 1-5' 5 BEDROOM ' 4 Royal St. George (Big Canyon) NB 673-2222 Sat & sun 1-.'i ·ill325...Dew Drop, Fountain-Vall . , 842-2535 (Suil 1-5) 5 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN 17842 MaM St., Irvine 545-8424 $59,900 Sat & Sun 1-5 1223 Goldenrod, Corona de! Mar 644-7662 • Sun 1·5 #5 Royal St. George (Big Canyon) NB 642-8235 $265,000 Sun 1-5 1368 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB '642-8235 $400,000 Sat & Sun 1-5 1938 Pl. Trinity (HV Homes) NB 644-6200 $67,200 Sat & Sun 1-5 3728 Ocean Blvd., Corona de! Mar 673-8550 $i97,500 Sat & Sun 1-5 503 Hazel, Corona del Mar 675-6900 $125,000 Sat & Sun 1-5 2702 Sparrow (Mesa Verde) CM 540-5990 $79,950 -Sal & Sun 1-5 1706 Port Charles Pl., Newport Beach 675-7080 $79,950 (Sun 1-5) 1607 Castle Cove (Spyglass) CdM 675-6000 $139,500 (Sun 1-5) 1839 Pl. Tiffin (HVuHomes) NB 640·0020 (Sun 1-5) 6 BR & FAMILY RM OR DEN. 1607 Bay Cliff Circle (Spyglass #1) CdM 675-7225 $129,000 Sat & Sun l-5 CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE 2 BEDROOM 16651 Arbor Circle, Huntington Beach 847-3095 $24,500 Sat & Sun 12-5 3121 Wst Cst Hwy (Unit 8-B Npt Twrs) NB 646-8811 $79,500 Sat & Sun 1-5 1614 Iowa, Costa Mesa 546-2313 $24,500 (Sun 12-4) 31345 E. Nine Dr., Laguna Niguel 493-2687 $38,500 (Sun 11-5) 1061 Dover (Westcliff) NB 645-6500 $38, 750 2 BR & DEN •5(22 Elksford, lrvine (Sun 1·5) 645-8400 $32,500 Sat & Sun 1-4 3 BEDROOM 344 Otero (North Bluf!s) NB 640-0020 Sat & Sun 1-5 503 Playa (North Bluffs) NB 640-0020 Sat & Sun 1-5 458 Orion Way (Nr. Hoag Hosp.) NB 644-7662 Sat & Sun 1-5 •2412 University, Newport Beach 546-2313 $42,500 (Sun 1·5) 4 BR- 443 Vista Roma (The Bluffs) NB 644-7270 · (Sun 1·5) CONDOMINIUMS FOR LEASE 4 Bedroom 2906 Vista Quinta (North Bluffs) NB 644;1133 $575 Mo . Saj & Sun 1-5 DUPLEXES FOR SALE I BR EAC.H UNIT 404-404 '.I Heliotrope, Corona de! Mar 642-8235 Sun 1-5 2 BR & I BR 214 34th St., Newport Beach 556-8800 $76,000 Sat & Sun 1-5 2 BR EACH 608 Marguerite, Corona del Mar • 644-4910 $149,500 Daily 1-5 262 Wave St., Laguna Beach B4+7662 Sat & Sun 1-4:30 Cor. of Goldenrod & 4th, Corona del Mar 636-5369 $74,500 Sat & Sun 1:-5 2 + 2 703 . Carnation, Corona de! Mar 642·5200 $85,000 (Sun 1 ·5) 2 BR & DEN & 2 BR 408 & 408\0i Dahlia, Corona del Mar 673-4821 $78,000 (Sun 12-5) 3 BR EACH 279 Dolphin Way, lJaguna Beach · 494-4558 (Sun 1-5) 3 BR & I BR Corner Short & 35th St., Newport Beach 642-3781 $69,500 Sat & Sl\D 1-5 420 Femleaf, Corona del Mar 675-3000 Sun 1-4 :30 3 BR & 2 BR 431 Carnation, Corona de! Mar ·673-8550 $118,000 Sat & Sun 1·5 400 Jasmine, Corona de! Mar 644-7270 Sat & Sun 1-5 3 BR. EACH 706 Narcissus, Corona del Mar 548-9346 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 613 & 615 Marigold, Corona· de! Mar 644 4848 $125,000 Sat & Sun 1-5 3 BR & GUEST 3 BR 424 Dahlia, Corona del Mar 673-5636 $110,000. Sat & Sun 1-s· 3 + 3 5010 Neptune, West Newport 642-5200 4 BR & 3 BR 107-10711 Sonora, West Newport 673-9060 $130,000 4 BR & 2 BR ~ 44th St., Newport Beach 646-0W '82,500 4 BR EAC-H (Sun 1·5) Sun 1-5 Sun-1-4 · **1518 W. Oceanfront, Newport Beach 673-9091 $186,000 Sun 1-5 5 llR & 4 BR 2508 Ocean Blvd., Corona del Mar 673-6642; 675-M59 Sat & Sun 1-5 618 4caci~, CdM (So. of Hwy.) 675-6000 $139,000 Sat & Sun 1-5 -* .... ** • ......,.., *** ......... ..... .. • • IOHl\I L 01~0\ •.' /' .f L',;. 2299 Harbor Blvd. NEAR .OCEAN POOL · ASSUME PENIN POINT 3 Bdrm., 2 batfi home Jn ullra-fine cond. Obi. car gar., 2 patios & room for boat. $79,500. OCEAN VIEW Duplex. 2 Bdrms. each. Leased land. 4 Car parking. Xlnt rental history. $79,950. Call: 673-31i63 673-fi688 eves. associated BROK FAS -REALTORS 10 1~ W 8olba.-67J 16LJ OPEN HOUSE Looking for a custom home. with a vil'\V, in exclusive community', on a 1 ~ acre that allo\vs horses? Then by all n1cans stop by! Only 2 homes lef!~ Eoch home ctfer5 4 BR, 21.; ba, 2500 sq. ft. of living area. Fami· ly room, w/v.•et bar, and many quaility extra.•. See them at 12812 Barrett Lane, N. Tustin Hills. Call BI\R at Properly, 832·5141 or 645-6646. Open II o u s e Sat/Sun 1-5 Pl\.t BARGAIN TIME AU TERMS AVAILABLE Veterans t>ring no money - just a mop and broom. Fi. It and sa~ thousands. Huge living room. Big family room. 4 family s i z e General OLD SPANISH ESTATE . '· • Guest House Pool-Tennis Court Magnificent Spanish Estate located on J Acre 'vooded grounds in finest area of Tustin. 5 large bedrooms -Banquet sized Dining Room -Separate Den with fireplace -Living room \vith massive hand crafted beams -Base- ment with Hobby Room. Modernized lillC!ien. Plus 2 BR. GUEST HOUSE with living room & kitchen. 20x40 Pool adjacent to beautiful pavillion. Bathhouse with sauna. Regulation l\ght TENNIS COURT. Plus much, much more. For lull details call: 544-1440 Tustin Associates Inc. REALTORS Gen.rol * BOYD REAL TORS PRESENTS * LINDA (Means beautiful). A garden orientated, III on one level..Linda model, 3 bdrms., 2 balhl, secluded patio. · OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1·5 309 ESPLANADE BEAUTIFUL IA YCREST A top notch home on qule~ tree lined street. · Cheery sunlit patio & pool. 3 Bdrms., 21'> baths, of sheer perfection. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5, 2011 COMMODORE . STAR LIGHT • STAR BRIGHT Unobstructed view of bay, ocean, lights, that cw't be beat. Homey 4 bdrm.; 2 bath home with poolsized lot, for only $74,000. Best buy in the area! OPEN SAT. & SUN. 1•5, 1014 SEA LANE bedrooms. LO\V LO\V price1 ...,E"-.----- just $11,!MXI: Real Bargalns"~:L~ I&;] * 675-mO * ::e!qu~~~in'.'° call now to G· t !1629 &. CN1t Hwy. OPEN riL •. "s ,UN ro aE NteEr _ -=-: • Corona cltl Mar ~ lfil1ll1tl Gonorol 1 ·°"=.,.='""-1 -----~ J FORCED SALE-LET'S TALK TURKEY BY-TH"-SEA , S.'/2 010 LOAN u )w're looklnc ·tor a_,_ ., NEW POOL--pott Beach duplex only 6 Want a comblnallon of n1oun· door.ii to 'the beach wtth an tain seclusk>n plus sea~horc NEW PAINT excellent mimmerAvinter llvlng? You n1ust ~ lhls SELLER TRANSFERRED _ tental recol'Jf in the $84,500 3. bedroom. 2 bat h Forced to sell! New $6.000 r11.nge ">tlh a min. oI only hl(.\c&'>''ftY. Ultlm,~te I n pool _ loads or deeklng! IOSfi down and 11.uper tcrml pnv~cy -cxclUJii\e <!Im· New paint in & outl Sweep-C\LL US muruty. Only S 4 7, 9 .> O. ing cwved d r Ive way . \\'e're ready to ta.Uc 646-77ll -Open eves. Owered entry. Giant Uvina '""nll room overlookine pool. Cbzy 'I ,. ,, '· W lk D L . =::. -~r'Cup~ j 8 8f U' 88 Queen alze bedroomt. W•lk JllAL Illa.Tl to schools and lhopplaa. 'MUSI' SELL! Taki. aa· I ·---iiiiiiiilllml Trees-·TreeS vantage. NO QUAUFYINO PRIMI OCIAN VllW ' to asoume V.A. loan. Full 'ROl'IRTllS I I price ju~ $38,500. Call now r Live in a !oreat on lllia.Ea'1· -847-6010. FOR SALE side 72' X 300' R·l lot. A OP€NTIL t • ITS ,UN 70llE NICI/ BY STATE Olt"' CAW•"· r.!~kt~l~n·r,~~: ~~ 11~i:1f•'~1i.· ~::l;>).~3~c11t fu ture dtvrlopmcnl. Will m ii~ lake 7 unit8.,Needs lots of ' • L1'nda Isle TU: It we<'<llng lo uncover 5\~% wume loan, w/lra tome or U'le kwdy unuMJal dn or OWC financing 4 Ira By Owne:~ul .. r piantlni. Owner will carry a ... , rear ilv, dbl ll'plc, to $250 !st TD wl!h only $5,600 ~n" nwnt. yrci nr MESA l:kett<nt Torm1 Full -132,!00. Ulll VEROE CC,' Owner $41 91SO • May I .. • option -· &>u!hCo n..i-. -· 173-Tl82 * 873·7™ •,. ' ~~~~~~;;;~S~uoo~·~i~N~"""~~ber~4~,~1q~73~~~~~~~D~AJ~L~Y~P~ll~OT:::::D~ri--~~GG;.n~ei.r~.~1::::=::-:""'""'""~cro;ro;::;;n~.:--:i.;r~Mor.;;:r===r--ric:.os;;;.t.;'1Mi.e ... ~.~-~~~~~t~H~U11;;;iit1~ngt;;t;oirni1a..ci;;Cihil"~-~MH~u:n~t\:ngt:;;on:-1 .. ~Kdh;-~-rcL1li~iiuirn\.1~.!8; •• 1..~h;---L .. un• Laguna 1~~~~~~~~ J>~~~~~~~- OP EN SAT/SUN 1·5 MESA VERDE GREEN BR001f ASSUME G0V'T OPEN HOUSE NORTH f.'NO tTtltl ""'rd at rate you •·ish ASSUME 7~oy. '\ Home on R·2 lo.t1 with charm: * OPEN HOUSES SUN. 1-5 * •so LINDA ISLE Mag ni!Jcent baylront home. 3 & a maid's rm billiard rm., faiiiilx rm,. formal dirl. rm. Pier & sllp. On the lagoon, $250,QOO lO """' > 1 LOW INTEREST 2 Bdrm. & <lt.'n, 2 ~l ~' • VA l""'" 1wno to a<lll another .;.~ .. ~~l~al~~·.?~;,~.,. If you ~~~~i!!~~ @!most 5 BR SPACE MAKER LOAN $25,500. . NEWEST, FINEST, CUST0"11ZED ~~v.;TE.SETl'ING~ ... tl--1 lnlcr:crst rntc. Custon1 use _nt.-'W bqrnc.. IA'ilh a beautif\tl VA-TERMS 3 IR., z-&A~ 2 Bedroom, 2 bath 1. An thlt charmfug 21xlrm.. 1 ' . 1740 PLAZA DEL NORTE, PENIN. POINT Spanish. 'free shaded patio. Near bay~ ocean. $88,500 243 61ST. STREET, NEWPORT SHORES OWNEjl WILL FfNANCE Sharp 3 bdr m :, across from water. $45,000 107·107Vi SONORA, WEST NEWPORT Ocean vfe,v;-spectaculit ne\v duplex! Large lot, l ·door to water. $130,000 DAVIDSON REALTl 580 1 W Coa~t Hwy , N B fi4fl //6/ 311(> Newpoot Blvd , NB. 673-9060 of brick, "'OOd .& tUc, .n'iuke; lrg open kitchen, xtra lrg Go.....,'°us QWJJlty built home. All polhih\.'CI & t>blncd Unle plus 'balh ho1ne "1th Jianked. l th.Iii fain'tlY honu•, m B~ n1aster bcd1ooni with pri· ··~ ®U hou~. hnt.astlc U.st..'<i In (ten, ocean view, Z.st · I C1u1yon, Ot!tRtandlng, . • vate balh & dl"Cssil)JC area.. Ove:r 3000 sq. ft. lllrgC brick tlreplace. Plcnly or , 400 sq ft Studio above 2V2 car 91r19e dining IU'\.'t. .,.,.ftb bookshelv 1 Bdrn111., faniily tin. & din· you will love ouni \Ve w-e ;t~chc~~~l ~~i~~ htnd here to grow you r o .... ·n UNRESTRCCTEO ·VIE\V OF OCEAN. to the ceiling. 2Frplcs. R } lng 1·1n. $195,000. on a <lult.'t cul·de-$ac. prof ,~g"tnbles and 1ru1·1. p .. y C I 1 • d "th b ·1 1 N \\."ood docks Jc sarocn pu • i I··' ped 1 4 Bn & cfLfPC!ting and c u stom ".. .... ompetey equ1ppe wt . u1t-n u-•u::o.ooo .. , w11,11'(;"8 , 1ave 1 lh t T"J _, Ju.!t SIR2 ""'/n>o. ·on this ' """" · "'~ ' 3 BA 2 tOt . 2300 ft crt1.peg ~ • Jc ianu '"' Tone blender, range, dishwasher, gar-110,IE • 11 1es, 11q • nlirrored e,ntry, buJlt .. hi \Vet \'A resale. Cu.II S45--04U5 · ' • • · I I forrnl din & Hv nns, beaut hat'. m • s 8 iv 0 1>toue open ev('$. bage compactor & disposal. Hand hewn • • . or ultimate eJ~~-1 wood covered patio, an xtra fireplace, open beam ceil· Georgia Stone fireplace. Mirrored 12' Spacious .t spectacular, I 'DOH t' • rRl}(kJ.)J< lrk double gar'& much more. Ing!!, formal dining rooin closets and carpeted throughout, service My~'lc llills. Loaded ..... tJU._r,~. OJK'n house Sal & Stm, 1-5, nlany "lilx" extras below h t $74 950 ('xtras. 3 Bdrms., 2· be ._ J ... ~ ~ff33 3!~s9=~a Circle. inarkel v1due' or ·~.ooo. Walker-& lee P:.~ ~~~. su'n. ~ovemblr 3rd & 4th ~ ~fa!)~n~=--I ,._,,,.aau LIGHT YOUR 54&-1754. 11111o1 ••""''-v;ith beautiful $WTOUildlngi; OPEN HOUSES 456 CRESS STREET """ "' ·s·H-IE·••L"D· S1195,()(l! .• I SAT. & SUN. l·S PIPE * FREE LIST IT'S ONE OF A KINDi 2915 Setting Sun 1f.~e ~~~ ~~ing·~ ~~~ Walker & Lee 2,13: 631 -7422 or 636-5209 REAL ESTATE ~ j Harbor -V'l:ew Hill.s. ~I 111· used brick litcplace e:hd -all. I ~~~~·~ .. ~·~·~·~'~"~';;;;~ 1 'Goy't repossessed ho mes. "'!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!"'!''!""""""!""~"""""""' I ( Formel'ly Englund :R.E.f j gredl~nt~ for good living in Eust side Cosla Mesa -Ii 110n1e have pools. son1e no ;: 3lS Tha.1h1 494-' this timeless VIEW, 4 BR, $2l,500. Call 546-7l71. '"r OW.NER down pyntt, variOU.$ areas Laguna Beach Laguna Beach I I. rm 21' b at h 8 ,., & py1nls. No obligalio11. COME & BRO\VSE, Sun. 12' 1 m. . " 11 ' Ii ....i-.k Eq al 11 . 0 · · 4 4°1 I R bl b I air"(.'O nd. home+ pool. Im· l"C""' · u ouinng ppo11un1t1cs $48 200 EMERALD BAY . ~ ..os o es, y ' 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j med . occUpancv, $135,000 OPEN11L II • 11'S 1-i.wro BE NICt' TRA.NSFERRED 1-IERBE:RT HA\VKINS I ' 1 sea! Sunny, lge. instr. sui : 11 .. • b ~ i?EALTORS * 963.5681 NeY,. co1np!eted ho111e, bean1 A large fa1uily home at t lC + detached gut>st sui~e ) 1101 Eb tide ~~-, , S!,?rifledci,r g t nehowl y •!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!\ cl'ilings in 3 Br, 2 Ba, nice very lop of the new s1•ction pegged firs., rrplc., drd!: 1 Harbor Vic.iv Hills. Dramatic ,....,ecorat ..., -s ory 111c. • living 100111, dining roo1n, of the bay, 1vit.h the spel.'· 1 r 1 d , breutbtak1ng harbor, oc-ean ' ' 3 large BR \Vilh 4th BR Huntington H1rbour buil t-ins. clect11-c kitchen tacular vic\vs yoo would ex· rees, ooni 0 expan ' vie1v from this cust. bll., or den/o(ficc plus family 1vith lols of cabinet s1>ucc. pcct. 4 Bdrnis .. 4 baths & ~~ arcn. Like Ile\'' i 3,027 sq. [t.. 3 BR, fain., room with fireplace. Forn1al 1996 Del A1ar, Laguna a fnn1ilv 1·n 1. Sl85,000. ' · ~ ! din. rm., ,3~~ bath home. HALECREST 4 Br, 1~~ BA dining room. DisHnctive ~ Beach MONARCH BAY S\\lll\I FOR J.IEALTH ·~ 1 Secluded pilUo &. pool area. Shake roof, bl tin gas, DW, courtyard entry, separate '1!!;1,-OPEN HOUSE A unique 4 bdrn1. + df'n "Body Beautiful,'' as y® I Come see! Owner anxious!! frplc, Sh8J'p m.soo 540-5318 1<1uud1·y l'OOtll. Pave<\ b<x 1t -SAT & SUN 1..0 Pl\1 + fan1ily rnt. h ri1e or ~·atch the i;hips sailing pal! I RACHELLE ROBERS 3 BR, 11,f, ba. Brick frpl, and can1per parklng:J.loines $79,500' 1nany textures, built around 2600 Sq. (t. plus 1,000 un; Realtor 675-2373 Jg. L.R.; newly dee. $Z7,CMX> in immediate area selling OCEAN VIEW ~signed for entertainmenl a pool. This \\•anu con-developed. Attr. enlry lanaJ; 1 , F ~ c nr-L'A<> "'""" ai $50,000. See !'his today! Hard lo believe but only 4 Bl', 3 Ba. home 1'~ireplace ten1porary, buill by an Italian tile firs., hand c~ Buy Now Oiun o., '~"'· ~ •.13500 · f h" ho ed d f I I ~ • · $30,900 full price. Sit on your in living J'OOnl, with vie\11 architect or is own n1c. -oors, l'P c.; co EXPAND ·LATER Oa-na POinf --COATS deck, watch the boals & en· of ocean surging on rocks has an ocean view In this loc, A GEM for $72,500. i: A U~l()Ut: I-Ott: IN WESTCLIFF-Here's the best buy in the area! Three bedrooms, 2 baths. immaculate with a beautiful pool and exquisite appoint- property has been fully developed and beau- iuents throughout. Every aspect of this tifuUy n1aintained. Is no'v an excellent in- vestment at $82,500. joy the good life. belo\v, 32'l56 Stoneington Rd, private oceanfront co~ 494-7551 1 Consider this 2 BR home NR MARINA, 2 BR, frplc, & 3 Arch Bay 111unity. $158,500. 1000 N. Coast Hwy., Lag In an ideal Corona EZ care lncd yd, $33,500. WALLACE Hl.J.NTlNGTONHARBCXJR. OPEN HOUSE SAT 1·5 Pl\1 · NORTH LAGUNA ., Highlands, walk to private Reallor, 496-5112. . REAL TORS ~ $142,000 3 Bdrm., 2~~ bath~ viev.· beach, location with yard El T .-,.. " 962 ,,54 17214 COAST•tl\VY. New duplex close to shop-honie on ocean side of space and floor. plan that oro ..... (Tl<f) S'16-ll84 & l2l:I) 592.2845 ping, view to to11'll & ocean Hwy., in North Laguna. make ii a natural for an each 1v:ith (ireplace large Quiet cul de sac, intimate addition. . . . . OPEN House 1·5, Sat-Sun Irvine kitchen 3 Br 3 Ba lo\\•er ga.rden. $89.500. A listing of Nadine Croul UNIQUE HOMES Realtors, 645-6500 1649 Westcliff Drive, Newport Bffch Or 2'l892 Bonita Lane, 3 br, CONDO SPECIALISTS! 3 Br, '2 na.' 279 Dolphin VIE-W LOT Enjoy this suru11, well kept 1% ba, owner 830-6815. Have one to sell ? \Ve can I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I \Vay, Laguna Beach. General VIEW LOCATION :SKINNY-DIPPING Forever 180 ocean &: Catalina V\t"'· Thi~ home sits out on :i JX)inl, nc..""t to a gt'C'l·nbelt, And you can watCh I.he ll'Orld go by, from high in the "hills" above. Corona df!I Mar. Swim in your own fully nuton1atic hl•ak'd and filtered pool \\'ilh priva'.t-e cow·t.yard. All of this plus a SHARP 4 broroom -3 00.lh -fan1ily roon1 -3 garage -3 yards -colored outdoor lites - fire r ing AM-Fl\I Inl<>rco1n an(t n1any n1ore extras to make li\'ing fun. Call us no1v 673-8550. OPEN TIL t • If S FUN TO 8l NICE! little doll house as is. F t · V 11 do it! \Vanna buy one? Turtle Rock Plan 7 OPEN i-IOUSE SUN 1·5 P~l Only $56,500 oun ain a ey \Ve've gotten1! One or l\1·0 Beautiful 2-story hon1e 11·ith MARION MILNE Balboa Island CALL 644-7211 stories, 2-4 Bedrooms, in upgrading. The fa mily roo1n REAL ESTATE all areas. Beat the Interest is lat-ge, the dining's forn1 al 618 s. Coast Hwy /.Jn NI GEl ~AllEY & ASSOCIATES TRI-LEVEL El~ant contemporary ap- rate. Good assumable loans ·and the bonus room an ex-494-4558 _Laguna Beach avail?n,fe_, Our salesmen are Ira tha.t . you 'll Jove. 4 A BEA"TY WJTH proximately 3500 sq. 11. ,,. Finest executive area in bonded. Best protection for Bdl'm!>.'lbnd 21;; baths com· IN \VOODS C00VE. V Ne~ ~u •"hen selling or Usting 1 t h 1 ,,.ood & glass. c. u, ,,-• pee t e a1Tangcment c DR p \ & LARGE YARD ~=======I Foontain V a ll ey. 4 ' Bed & I ·1 Bedrooms, 3 !Baths, 35 ft. your h01Tie 01· lncon1e prop· this spacious !antlly home. BR, 1''anl. · ·· dooGood· ' ·11y. Call·. At t · 1 d . gsl Ilse, steps to san . rooms · anu Y room. fenced 1 · h on 2 or 3 connecling lots. • . poo ' V.'11 separate 503 HAZEL CdM steam roon1. Lrg. family Top condition. Gorgeous ' room, J....car garage, plus large palio & badminton ' OPEN SAT/SUN 1~5 many more amenities . r a ct1ve an scap1ng, SlS9 000 larwin realty inc. . park location and a view ~;CT~RIA BEACH. 180 deg. 968-4405 (24 hrs) of the hills. 'Just reduced ,fantastic vu. 2 BR. Fan1 EqUal Housing Oppty. lo $74,150. & ·rm for add on. Steps court. 1',rom $179,flOO. Ocean Vie\\'. Brand new. 5 Quality thru & thru. PETE BARREn · BR, Custom built. 1125,ooo. REGAL _MANSION BEACH LOVERS $36,950-1 YR •. OLD ~-1 l i "l"t llit.;h\\ I\ ( '" ''"' •Ir I !\1,11 ' •, r.'11 !I I ExtenSive use o( glass, woods, & heavy shake roof. 4 big ~~ 4000 SQ FT I' BRsincl.abigmastersuite. ;aib;. P.~.;. -. · · til-4411, r..::., 546-1103 ~~i~u;~:ae~ea~t~enov::. e NEW DUPLEX • 1 co\Ol'·loned appliances. Ste p __:REALTOR-OWNED BY - 642-5200 EUROPEAN PRINCE MINI BIG & BEAUTIFUL d". ""·· & lam. nn. with 0 M . ERCIAL 3 BR, 2 "·'· >"AM . RM., FOR THE YOUNG maring ficcp\ac~. Poot.,;,.d C M & FRPLC. "hf,\Jl:Y XTRAS.' AT HEART lot. New exec area. TEiti\·IS ConV('l'I this tha.m1ing CO!· $139,000 557-9!YJO TO SiJIT! Bkt'. 962-5511. tage io otfi('('. or business. around this ad. becausc you r· GRANDMA Only 60' fron1 U1l' ocen n: •won't v•ant to n1iss seeing fronl on Bal. Peninsula. this sharp .1 bdrm home ·HIDES AWAY! ll.ar.'.' op1)(lr tunity al only in Costa h'lesa for just CALL SSl-7500 to beaut. cove $79.500. VISION CHARM, Oc Vu Duplex, walk to beach.--•hops, Ea unit 2 sf!, DR, frpl, Quiet • d h" 11 area. $69,900. re I WOOD & GLASS. New 4 BR & Rumpus. 2100 sq ft REALTY REALTORS Great Vu, many xtras Univ. Park Center, Irvi ne .$56.000. Comfy Cozy Condo I ,- 011·ner transferred, n1 u s I see!! 2 Br. 2 BA, plus den, seeluded pq.tio, best loca- lion! ! Just listed & I-lot? $32,500. C . .\L.L 64~400 CLOSE TO T0\\7N, Rernodel- ect 2BFt Den, beams, lrpl, $45,900 CHARl\1, 2 BR. 2 bn. beams, frplc, patio, Vu. Pri cluh & pool. S48.900. ·497-1711 Laguna Beach THE REllL ESTllTERS $67.500. " $24.500. Close to schools, ~~~~~~~I Pacific Prorw.rties also fenced back yard, new r--.: Gov't proi?r a m that 67:>-6712 or 548·8796 everyon<' qualifll•S tor -Vo'ith FOURPLEX!!-Bayshores $1200 do....'n payment. Call (\bandoned Cape Cod on at. n1ost ~~ acre by the sea: S1vet'ping stail"\vay to upper maze of BR suites. Mother· \.\'ell-niaintllinl'fl unU s, near i----------BROADMOOR II fnr appoi11tn1ent. shopping & frce\•;ay. Lo~· Bayshores By Owner 2601 Li9hthou11 Lane vacan<'y factor. T "'' o -2 4 Br. 2 oo, 2 pvt beaches. Lg single story, 4 BR Dream bedrooms, tv.'0-1 Bedrooins. $59.500. 548-9697, 548-7391. ITouse on •Lighthouse Lane 'Walker & Lee cat'h \\·ith enclose<.! 'garage. with super view. Many HJ"/, Uo\1·n. Full price College Park amenities. includg "'Cl bar, 11ra1 r•rATI .,-.• ooo. ~ 1vall c..'Ovcrings, paneling 545-9491.0perT eves. COATS $37,500 LARGE 3 BR + den. etc. Xlnt eond. thruout. J ustl '-""'-'"'-""C--~"---- & 2 Ba. 2 frpl cs. A,$Su1nable lis!ed. Open House Sunday 5% % $20,IXXJ at 5% S~ or new 1-a WALLACE financing. Open house Sat . REAL. TORS & Sun. 540-6334 4 Bedl'oon1 plus bonus room. -546-4141-'ASSUME 6'1~ I-·1-1,\ Joan. 2·810Wfin~~::;·E (Open Evenings) ~1onth1y py1nts $208. PIT.I. REAL TY 3 Br, 2 Bft, 11·/"· erpts. frplt BIG CANYON I""""""'""""""""'""''"""" I Cht'ller \\'ill carry 2nd. Ph. 7 Rue Marseilles LITILE ESTATE 673-1.164. Prin. 8nly. 01oice 3 BR. "Bordeaux," 87-10 WARNER AVE. F'O:UNTAL'I VALLEY * 4 BDMt. ne\v crpt. paint ~paciolL~ & . elegan~. ~eep-* 842.4405 & drapes. \Viii finance. 2567 ingl °':ean vie~· & city hghts. Garden Gro'f'e Columbia Dr 833-3200 De uxe appc11ntments. Of. ---------- in·la11· quarters on 1st floor. UNIVERSITY PARK ~~~~ge f~~· rm".11~/r~i1:d OA'F'ORD T\\INI!SE. 3 br, frplc. Nearly vacan!. Un· 2'i-ba, panelled den w/bltin believable low price. TAKE rlesk. 2600 sq ft. expensively ADVANTAGE! BKR 962-55ll . customized. $64,900. In ViUage 3. 552-1706 Huntington Beach's UNIVERSITY PARK Most Popular Cliruming new house "•ilh 2 Bdr1n rondo. 1 ~2 years 3 BR, 2 BA., den, family 11f'1\', F1'eShly Painted ll'ith roon1. Ideally located nr. tastefully paneled a.nq mir· recreation <"Cnler schools- 1ured living room, plush park. $59 5CXL 5'fi3111. ' ~·aUpapered dining -ma:-~=~=·"""'"'""'""""-"""'°'= shag carpeL<i ,r;:. custom UNIV. PARK TNHOUSE. dl'apes, .oversized pantry ~mac. 2300 sq (t, 3-!rlJ"m. area, near schools, 11·alking Big Bonus ~~000. distance to Hunt ington Owner*Realtor.~. Center, .Swin1ming pool and WALNUT Q. CONDO many park areas. Asking air cond, 2 r & den, below only $241495 caJJ today market, steal! 644-4881. 847-3095. l\il~!>a Verde preslige "''ilh 4 br., 2 ba, forn1al dining and a-large· family room! Two \\'&rm 11nd inviting firep laces + a built-in 1vet bar n1akes it pcrlecl for entertainment. All this for under $64.000. We can help you at 963·6707. . fcrcd at $125,000. Coron• del Mar To see. call 8571 STANFORD. vacant, 4 + 2 BIG CANYO cu.'!tom built. 3 + den, · N OOx.150 Iol, huge garage, Lots of Privacy Lagu a Beach OPEN HOUSE REAL TY crpt, dcps. ·131.950. Subntit 4 Bedrooms + 2 Bedmoms, "1 this ~upe~bly d"lgned 3 - 444 MORNING 644-1193 terms. owner (Zl.3)431~505 11,i Bath btick unit. 94' x /bdrm with view! On a large * OPEN HOUSES * 155' lot. zone R-2. Roon1 I SJ)l'awling lot. Family rm, CANYON Huntington Buch duplex, fireplace. Dining rm. chef's ()PEN ~tl 9 • IT'S FUN TO BE NICE! PEG ALLEN $184,500 Emerald Bay. Ma.rv'elous !am. home: 5 BR, 3 ba., den, fan1 1 nn., v.:ork nn.; lovely patio. 3 gar. $185,000 Emerald itay. D r a m a t 1 c cust. home. Panoramic coast view. 4 BR. (27'.mstr. ste. w7[rpl.), den, wet bar, fossil stone Irplc. Entry hall \\'/fountain. 2 Patios. Owner \viii finance. 109'5 N. Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach 114:494-757S SUPER South Laguna charmer 1vith guest unit. Short u•alk to beach & ocean view from upper level. If )'Ou are look· ing -for the right price, try $49,500. ' ~Ian REAL ESTATE ·Sat. & Sun. 1-5 WM. McCABE kitchen. Patio. Easy-care SUN. 1 ·5 400 IRIS RAMBLING ONE-STORY REAL TY yard. Enjoy the cool ocean llilO Glenne>"" St. 2 bed h Duplex , ...... , •••••. $105,000 Beautiful 4 Bedroom home. 8740: WARNER ''' breezes. $45,000. 494-fKIOO 494-9473 549-0316. ~ Laguna· Niguel DISTRESS SALE ' Almost Oceanfront EAST 9 VILLA $38,500, honte, white 1vater vic1v, pl'iv Open house Sun 11-5. U stairs to. sandy cove, pool 12 Br.,' 2 Ba, ,on Golt O>lt & Jarun1. $99;500. 3134;:i E. Nine Dr. Emerald Bay Niguel. 493-2687 64 five lxlrn1, 4.000 sq ft hon1e LOVELY Pacesetter, hills· The 111\imate in living, a l hlon-Fri. By O\vner. • . ._ · 1v/fa11tastit ocean & coastal setting, 3 BR. 2 ba. pat!' vie\\"S. Tile l'OOf, cedal' in-c11sto1n decor, Assun1e , lrrior, $260,000. VA, S<la,000. O\vner 831·~ Decorator's Dream NE\V 4 BR. 2~S BA. NOR'n( Home VIEW. 2100' split le~~ :: BR, 3 has. Excel ocean $06,9j(j. 493-51971542-G'l~·~ ...,.. view, unique shingled ex· :-.;- lenor. lgc decks, custom l1k1 F~rast .. ~ cpts & drps. $79.500. ?'+,. Enjoy the Roominess . e NO SHARING e,' of this custom built home. A real new hotne of yoqf One of a kind, .beam ceil-own for only $28,450 ;i ings, spiraled slllircase. a Condo. Big yard _ Overlooks L aguna home value in the greenbelt , $74,900. Foreirt planned commun • Home on Lge· Lot .. Only 5% clown. . . . n1~ ocean & canyon views. 2 In right away. FHA/VA BR redecorated thru out. financing. Countryside , A $42.500. Lake Forest. -.:1 Liago Reil Estate • Builder TI4 :~ 4M-086 49S-~J97 lido Ill• ~t:-! UNLIMITED· posslbiUtles A FAMI L.Y HOME:!~ split level home, 4 bdrn1s, 4 BR., family rm., 3 ba. w;ttJrt "3 baths. Trees & Canyon Vu. lge. patio. Via Lido So~ $59,500. $122,500 :: PIER & SLIP ;~ 4 BR.. 3 bl\. $270,000.1 lease with firm option. t MARBLE HALLS are only a hint of the eleg;:.. ,ce in this spacious 2 .bdrms, ·family rm, pool rm l"'ith po o I ·table). Spectacular Coaslal .vie\v. $93,000. PRIME o:>MMERCIAL in- cludes a 4500 sq. ff. store, a 3 bdrm, 2 ba home and a parking lot. Call us tor details. $250,000. LI DO !-DTS ·;, °t>ttl,)' interioc Jots avai~ 57 Ft. for residence, w/ patio $74,000. 35 Ft. " comer (40 ft. buildable ~ $65,000. .. LIDO REALTY \.\ ~-I'·' I ,,1., " II Sharp mo! m ome on 313 HELIOTROPE hrdwd flnl. form. llv. & FOUNTAIN y.f'..~y· TARBELL, Realtors larg<' 60xl00 01. $56,500 fee Duplex .............. U.27,900 dm., Jrg. fam . rm. Private ~ 9~ S "-· H L.B OCEANFRONT EDGEWATER CALL 644-7211 HAL PINCHIN pa~k for the children to * 84~5 * 1 -· \,Af<tst wy., · · REAL ESTATE REALTOR 6~. , 392 enJoy, sch! around the cor-S S *OCEANFRONT* Magnificent view OYO apts. ~"" Co OPEN SAT/SUN 1-i ; ~ *673·7300 * CORONA DEL MAR DUPLEX PE:EK-A-VlE\V .'It mEES 3 BR. 2 BA, fam nn. /Jn NI GEL - ~AllEY & ASSOC IATES ,;,..., ner PLUS Ow y Ow A 2 BR, 2 bas, unfurn. $70,500. 1"""' So. ast H"'Y· 104 Via Mentone -.' D~U~PLEX==·.-2~B~R~e-ae-h-.-Co~m-e-r1 bl 6~'% I Call n our n pt. Ne\vly dee., incl new .cpts, Laguna . 494-8536 4 BR & 3~'! BA "Fixer U 4th & GoldPnrod. frplc, b5~'~ag~ntl2Day~~25.5l CA~ L MODEL So. Laguna . Spectacular drps, washer, dryer, refrig, ~~!!!'~~~!!!!!!!!~"'I per," with pool, 011 big t garage1'. $74,500. 636-S368 & Eves .. 962-8013. LuBxury !us 3 BR, 2 BhA. view~ 3 B$99R.,~baths. dishwshr, elec range, garb BEAlITIOF1JNLLYOoeS12,3!.. viev.· lot lot. O\\·ner anxious. A M ran ne1v autumn-tone s ag , disp blender POOL im· . ;7VIJ $109,500! ! , .., iOViiM<l;-~----f ~C~os~t!•.]!~~·~sa~-----CASH AT ONCE lt:ts thruout, custom BRYANT WIEST nuxl. occopan.Cy. Oceanview Really 67l-8500 .rt LOVING For your hoine. 1 can offer apes,~· fan1. rm w/"'~' REALTOR 714 :642-1188 1 Call Russ Swartz 499-JOOS Fat Profit Is attained when J3tittinttham J?cJtnt NEIGHBORS NOT EMPTY you any service you \vish to ~ • foiinal dinn~g, ~~n. 11.ny day· is the BEST DAY to ~"-"-'."-""""""""~~~· you sell through result-get· . "'11 · ~~ you re·do lh is old dog. VaJu. JUST VACANT home, the quickest poss· le &: rde\ecul. dapphance1 8• 011ruv~· .call today 642-5678,. • , .a Dady Pilot Class1f1e<l Ads. 6<12-5678 675--0123 ~ 3 BR, bath + guest unit. $110,000 Ca.II 6~ LIKE NEW HOME VALUE PRICED That'!': 1vhat :,.-ou·n ha\•c 1\'hen • get the nJOst cash to7. , Bi and .neiv d~l doo1 leh 1&'.· run an ad! Do_n'l delay •• The fastes! dra~v In the 'VE'."'· ling Daily Pilot Classified FEALTOAS ~ ahlc llclo\Y hwy. 45 rt. R·l way. No obligations. s1z c · e-.sac ot w 1t ---, lot. Solid 2 bdrrn. hon1e + because this lovely holne's l3RASHEAR REAy y trees &~flowers galore, As-BEST BU"t L.100 : ____.., \Vee guest collage. $69,500. just bee n finished. It's all 968-ll7S / sume 6% loan or submit ~~ [1'"-Cf}YQ. 3 BA, 4 BR +. Bay Vie~ ' S1vecping cu1ved drive lends to ~·ide C!'runtic 11lc entry. Garden kitchen. Ovcrsi.:ed living room vie\vs ma!"i· cured ~nds. FOUR Ml size bedrooms. Qui er -ell. <de-sac localion. Great neigh· bor'hood. Many built·in ex· b·as. Value priced at $41,500. Call l'IO\V to sec. 847-6010. University Realty new & sparkling. Ne\v green ' -terms. Vacant. c.rra-o ~ -1 p v8 88' to l:ich, 425 Via u~ 3001 E. ~t. ""'"'· · 673.=io shag ca1·pel.ing in all rooms OWNE.~pen S;at-Sun ~· BRASlIEAR REAL 1'Y \:)~ \" Nord 113-500 6..., 7'u4 n""" ~-,-"C"='=''""",.-,-~-1 3 h11go bedrooms with ~ury' B~.;i Ba, fanuly. 968-1178 Th f I f . . • w J G 'th a Chuckle . . " . ·~ u ....... * OUP.LEX * matching balhs, 11'hite brick dirung & hving room. 2 car a n r1gu1ng Ofa ame WI Mesa Verde I Very sharp, charming 3 fireplace. J..arRe back yard. heated gar3ge. Crptd, drpd, · idlttd liy CLAY a. POLLAN------~ bdml., 1'4 baths plus brand An)'<lnC can assume this VA papered,.'bbq, many extras. Sl\1Ai.L ouTc:H HOME: o a..arronoe th. '6 Krombled ·MESA VERDE :' new, deluxe 2 bdrin. un it. Joan wilh total payn1ent of N~ilr "Meadowlark Go If words below to mok• 6 " Nice property & owner $2.'lO per/mo . Seiler will c;lu $56,500. Corner '5840 Sunny Bdr(s'k. cozy pa~ sl~p[e WOl'di. Prif1t fetters of 4 BEDROO.M 4 anxious! help finance. Priced at W eil at 16501 I.:os Verdes copper kette itche.n. ul .och )n ih tin• of tqllClr'flo PE"CH 51(.4 01 00 ' MORGAN REAL TY $28,500. cau .tn. 846-46Zl. brick frplc. Assume VA oa.n " I I " balance of $17.500 with clown 1· ASSUM BLE 673-6642 675-6459 ~ / WALK TO BEACH payment & $167 pee mo. I L A N I L E A • BRAND NEW ' vp. REPOSESSION pays Pl"lnd ple, tnterest, tax· 1.,-.l~r, -.,-r;,,,... ,1-1 LOAN Qu•.litybuiltdo_plex.Bea.111ed Walker &Lee '3 BR, 2 BA. Like new. Only es & insurance Ol' you may $27,500 re-linance. Not far lrom L. =;:~;:~:.:~=: Fine ExeC\ltlve home loadel!I ceil ings, 2 !1rcplac~. sep. Jiil~ llTlt• __ SCOTT REALTY oc-ean. BKR 962-5511. r-wilh features: ·' ruiHe. dining roonL. I.ncl. 1 ·---I p E p S O O e 4 spacloUs bedrooms .... 1 , carpels, drapes & built-in!!. Call 5'15·0435. 536-7533 1--...;.....:c~..,...--,T""T'"-1 • forn1al dinlltg i-oom -~ OPEN SA'T-SUN 1·5 Eastside Charm CALL ANYTIME I I I I' j e t.:squisitcly decor at e!"a. . 700 NARCISSUS Wow! Nei,l'ly painted inside l\JODE L 1-IOJ\llE RESJ\LE L=====::::~:;=~ throughoul ., , Lois Vogel, Realtor 54S·!l346 & out. Lots of possibilities 3 BR. 2 BA, fan1. r1u., t'()V. • 7o;. ASSUMABLE r e Really nice landscapbt BUY A BARGAIN! NEW LISTING for n creative })<1rson. A patio,. shag lhtuoul, frplc, * Tiburon cond f N O L I T 0 '%'. \\'Ith pl'oducing !ruit 1rtes l Liquldalion forces stile ot 3 Ch81'ni\ng 3 BR. Quiet st., large yio'd ror that Added bltns. DA\1, 'h n1i. fl'Oni * 3 BR, 2 BA ~.-r~r....,.--..--.r-1 1 -::::~l:I "~~~''-. • 5~% ASSUMABLE LOAN BR. 2 BA. Newport Hghts 2 nlin, trom Litlle Corona roon1 -& gUes11 \\'hat? Yo\1 bch. l blk, el. schl. $38,900. * Model condiUon .. I I I I j ;:; ._ • TrnM!erred owner home. gill! Bl. flreplnce, Beach. 1'-or sale by O\vncr. have your o"'I). Polyn~ian 21042 Miramar Ln. 536-7119. *Lush shag 1.. _ _.._,._. _ _._~-~~ "?i!ove it to1• $46,0CJO!!" lam rm, 15x30 lt,t,F Pool, Open Sun (2·5). 341 Hazel pl! ror thal fam ily -BBQ. , SEA CLIFF 5BR : ~;:\!shutters .---,,....,,-,--,,,--:--, Call 546-2313 for inspect:i~ ~~\1{~ ~n =;/de~. of~ Drive. ~75-J.546 ~ Pri~i~s~~ ~_iao. Pool, jucu:.:zi, 3 ba,-ram larwln realty inc. lf--r-s....,u,....r ..... L_ . .,Y_S-r..--t When it comes to fashion, I OP{Nnt,..,.."'S FrJNrotNQ( -.Realtor fOJ' Info. ~5'-66f6.. .RARE find , l tilk to ocean. Realtors ~ ' 551-2022 :rln, '+ u11Jlt1. bonus nn, 968=4405 ·t24 hrs) I I I I 15 om not too observant. For in-Completely remodeled, 3 Wik to schl11, bea~h. goU, f.'h. • ..t., u..... ••• ,.... o·~-. 1 d'd , n not'o'" BIG HOUSE! Br, used brick galore! Open •'12 AC HORSE PROP ttinnis~ By owner, 536-2092 ~-nv\ol~ • .., .,.....,.-stance, ' n 1 eve • ""' LmLE. PRICE•,· Sat &.Sun. 303 Oreh;lt Av•. Cozy 2 BR, no....,,,,,m ken· 600 Sq. fl tam rm, 3 hr YA-FHA I , K I S N E C I that my wife wos1 weoron19 Owner, 673-2266 ·) l'I('), A-1 sccl~ded BACK 2, ba, 2 story. 3 car gar, ,, those highrise pl ot orm $0 es Wi lk pa.s1 weU-cnttd·for OLD CORONA DEL MAR BAY area. 4t trees, 7% nex1. tb new huge regional ·I I I I' I and heels. I Just figured her 1lawns ton JOI or home. Rfch 2 Jlc>ry dup. on 45' lot 4 br by o.,..ucr. 979-5364. park, 1 blk to Goldtn Vie\V RepMSes.(tons. IA1est_prices. . . . . . -hod g~lttn out of hand. "'''""''· 3 laml\y.slzed bed· down, .1 be ,up. 4 car g..-, GOLFER'S DREAM School. $<5,!00. 8-WM. McCABE !rootl'l.'I. Let'R'C, private SpQn· BES!' orFF.::R TAK E s. On Mesa Verde Country FOR Sale b)' owlier lovely REAL TY I I u-1/ \gh styli' s)cp-down fMtlly Owner 673-4144 C1u,b. Exec: 5 BR, 21;ii Ba. 3 bt', 2 ba, trplc, .• blt\ns, 8740 WARNER AVE. T U C M 0 S A Complet• the c:huckte CNoted · toom. If l~l'\'C IX-en look· DUPLEX, by owner. 2 BR din rm + COZ)I breakfast take over 6% Gt loan. ~II FOUNTAIN VAU...EY 7 I' I I I' I V by filling ln ,th• mit.alno w0td ing d'or n neat, cic11n home. + den &. 2 SR. apt., xlnt nooK . Only S7G.OOO. !>4&-9941 l>ef. U or aft 4_pm 9r ap~nt' * M2-4405 * . . _ _ . ~ you dev•lop from Jt•P No. S below. thf11 \$ it! Call U$ to 5ef! J 176000 6'f3..482t n......n · 80-0704 """---·· Wh•l" ~,900 w1;1 buy. s~. 12-6 . v"" 2 .e.~ ~00s23~~-y~o:.:: ASSUMABLE roan 7%. REPOSS ESSIONS e PRINT NUMBERED I' I' I' I' I' I' I' Ii I' I 1842··~.:5. ' PRIME: Vic"'' hon1e \\'/great down. bnl at 7%% 657.o385 Monl}\ly l)&ymt nls $182. 3 :;·or 1nfortn~l 10n and iocatlon -;::'E:T;;1!~t:S :::;::;::;;;:;;· =:::::::=·~~-~~-=~-=~-=~-~-OKNTfLt • lrs RJN roBl NICEI IJ1con1• on roar. on Ocean eves/wknds B'R 1~ ba, condo l~ )'?$. o[ these !11.a &VA homes, ".:I ~ ' . ''~~'Ii' ti~ Blvd. ·1189,fiOO. 615-4018. OVER 14 acre Jot, w/shru'p ·847-5674.' <00:!:1<1 • 8 ~~~\~M8lE fOtl I I I I · I I I I. j ' • 1 DUPLEX corner, charming, home, room Jo parl< equip<. Ally day ia the BEST DAY 10 KASABIAN I · · · · · ) 1 bY °'""''· soo POin,.tua, In bAck yrd, Try 121.500. run an edt oon·t d•14Y· • • S""" "'M·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 900 . . __ .,,, ...... ,. Open 1<; dall,)'. 81>% Int, agenl$46-T'll9. ' CALL DAILY PILOT RHl Estate '62-4644 __ .,._+--------------------------.. I \ . . ' • DRIVE BY lhis lOVtly 3 br, 2 lMl h"pk, home at 3Q78 lllol~ $4.1,500 •• with 89' loan a Lea.!,:C option possible, corWder low do\vn. ~ for f\tM:htt intormafion. • Newport Beach "i: OllEN 1-lu°uae Sat & s\m t.,-- 2();)6 Vl~n C:udal. Bay Bluffs Condo 3 br, 2 101 ~d. s79.soo Agt m TRADE Ne\\'PC)rt n e a~ Pron, for Out~ Prop. Bkr. 7Ulm-lll58 - • - J#\1 ,., r'll..UI I ewport b tat'h BEACH HOUSE :-·tuodc 10 beac-h; -l bdm111. 2 ba. 2 .PuUos. ~f11\n.' tena11(.'6.[ree yllJ'()., trptc., • bffmed ~11·1.. shag: dbl. Rlll'· \\"\1wkllhop. 10 ·1~ OooA'n ..... 1.11 buy, $4!1,'i5(). ....Ol!EN-SA.T/SUIW.5 . PRIVATE BEACH CJ••;;;;t.;";~t;p.C:;;d-_..;.P.;;;'0;.:;. ~.;;;•.;;;tv'--__ 1;.:s.::.1 ..:..P"'=~=--,_.:l~se I ~ Balboa Pcnfn, ilC!pg ftom PR VATE BOAT 1,.,3C,, & bay, 1''"'1"'1 & INVESTORS! RA, MP b~amed !iv tn'l, 2 BR, 11:1, den. brick c ourt y n rd . PROFESSIONAL BUILDING e Just ~ S!IOrt ""alk tron1 lh bi $79,5(l0. Open bouse Sun l..S, 3 dellt(hlful B::tlho..'\ Pcninsuln or <tt_ipt. 2100 Seville Ave, story fbU_ leased prime corner So. Orange eo1n1 ca~ • •-""'t~...-i;..~~'GOll~. ::;=:::;::....:-=-=-e"ounty. $675;000. ssun1able 6% 16an. Gross lil'H'il Sh"l'C.'t \ViU1 Nf'\\ CUSTOM dei>igned occun $128,000. 4Q1 Bruce CreKent Lido Sands 9 UNITS OCEANFRONT 11.fakfS dollnn t. C-..•nts! England atnto~phl'r~. 1111• vh.~\I' resirlence. 4 Br. 2800 11ir11.·uJu 1c ('(lndition offers a !'([ tt on fee s.hnple lol. gignnUc n1as1er lx'tlt'OOn1 ._!Jr 0.,vner, 6·'5-4426 COMMERCL~L e liUi1f' \l'ith dressing area nnd \'fllllly. ~I .. ~~ j n l c r ('!i t 'RUSTIC & ((>a;y a br, l l.1<1, t1\•a1!abll' at $6.\.000. Sr:t: 1 l~<'IUL. y n:I, gar. crpl.s, dr11s, JT: ! Ple~c call Ge Cl . ~ \V/utH. Cory Johnson, Thnntl'I~ or h111 aiiSOr1;1te~. Vt:)..6625 or 1n1>g. 613--l23a. All units leased assumable 7'i0 loan , 10% spendable. ·Price $190,000 -$50,000 down. INDUSTRIAL e JONES REALTY ll'IC. a1i;..r.13. · [3 BR vil'w home. 612 St. OF--; Tit!;· IT'S fl.JN ro BE NICE' J:.1n1cs PL SGS.500. Co.II to 10 YJ' NNN lease. $650 ,000 -over $23,750 spendable. "" .... I (714) 673·62l0 I I J Newport Shores M !<et' o"·nr/Agt 548--03!0 ii) BLOCK TO OCEAN ~~¥-~~~';!'. -2·!'.ity. A·frame. 3 BR., 2 ba. PIUNCIPAL.~ ONLY PLEASE PACIFIC R:E. 642.0200 or 673-6561 jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilLEASE WITH OPTION Nf'wly flt'<.'Ol'. iri & out, incl. l ~---~-~---==-=----;-;------1 VIEW. CONDO J..ovely 4 Br. & Family rm, nc\\' cru·pets & drapes. Ac re1ge for sale 150 Commercial $2000. dov:n $500. montJ1. $49.500. 1----------Property 158 Newport Towe,., top flo<" CAYWOOO l!EAL TY 135 ACRES ---'--'-----1 '"1th excelleut vieiv of /iONES * 548-1290 * SLEEPER NEWPORT , BEACH Balboa Coves, K c \\' fl o 1· 1 Prime baykont site Harbor & Pacific Ckcan. I R lTY INC San Clemente ~Iobil<' E:srate property For boat repairs & sales Large 2 Be<lroon1 . 2 n.9!h I E!ILl'MO only $3.50() per II.Cl'('. N!;'Ar Bill Grundy Rltr. G'l'"a-6161 "'ith d c I u x" npn1·1n1t·uts 1 (7141673_6210 i OPT<N IIO USE Sun 12-:i Luke I'aris. Jones. 336.1 Condominiums throughout. l"ull pr i <' f' 1 •13.~ Call(' ~:n1pahnc Pl:o11c G.19-1501. fo r solo 160 $79,500 or 1\il! lt'1..<.(' s1;oo zoo1 w.iu1t>0;-&tvd. Cany'>n & hill vit'1\'. :! vr mo. Opc11 l!nuSC' ..:;ti !;;, .'-:1111 1 ~fw1.°!~C:.~·~~ •·Id ~ Bf: hon1t•, 1in. (Sec Open Houst• Di1·1 ·Llur:.·1 · FOR SALE _1ll'1•g1'ou11r! tllil, fl'ult tr\"'€'~. 1 ~--:::... I BY OWNER 1;\·;~11:l r i<pacc. ~-1.q,~50. I Newport 2 blks frtun tx>af'h. J Br. I _:·._~l.C:ALTORS * 49.-2J(l0 1t 2 Ba hon.~'. ro1n1:I. rcneivt•rl inside & out. Communily r I~ falrvltw reereutional facili1ies in-MobfleHomu lilllil 646-18l 1 eluding S\\'in'ln1ing & ten. ..~;::;;~~~~;::;;::;;'....., nis. 242 Cedar, Newport •Iii• I DUIT NOW DON'T WAIT FOR PRICES TO RISE $21.IXXl for these spacious 2 BR, 11! BA adult condos. Choice of locations still avail. able. As \o\v a.ot $390 down to JTIOVC in. \\·U h $220. nto. pays alt 836-4206 Agent. (1nytlmel Beach $47,0CIJ. Open Sun Mobile Homes REAL HORSE from 1 pm. 642-2563 or ~ For Sale 12s PROPERTY OPEN SUN. 1•5 IN OLD BALBOA App•~xim,.ely 66 acres, will 5 Units on 2 lots \\'ilh xlnt GREENLEAF dividc. Adjacent to pllblic NE\VPORT RIVIERA Gracious 3 Br, 2% Ba, tpt, fant rm, 2 car gar. lmmed. Pos.ot. $32,<XXI. Financing avail. To inspect c a 11 6-12~2. -•BERYL LN. income--& tenns. OUered,at road. Elel'tl'irily & "'ater -$95 A private 5 star adul t com· Nice home in qulet Harbor ,000. AND Baltoo beach · . 1~ . a\·ailable. Close in. Price H. bland 3 R ' 2 hotJse \\"ith an inco1ne unit : munny, <JU Whittier Ave .. $230,000. Fol' fu11her ill· ig s.. B .• Ba. Id 1 h' ed 1 1 h C.1\-I. has available a 24x60 1 ,. 1 11 J k Income Pro-rty lg-11,;ng nn 'th 1 1 o as ion ron porr L'., \V t . "-1 ornui ion. p ease f'a ac ,.... • 166 ... · ...,, rp c.. & J'Q;u·ing frpl('. Ior only ~--Y ~s 111 ....:nut. .. cone·~ fo\rlcr \\"lth lge. back yard for the kids. $-19 500 • JUSt J1kf' nc11·. iHG-791<J E kh fl & A I $46,500. · · 9 an1 to 6 pni c o ssoc., nc. 446 CATALINA OR . NEWPORT BEACH __ · ____ 1 511.2sr1 E'<'.>t \\'knds ;H-1·1~'8-'i RED CARPET Large custon1 built hon1e. j Realty 675-1642 , B\' 0 \VNEn. 2-1 x 60 ti.lobil<' ' EXCLUSIVES 4 BR & den, huge fan1ily 2627 Newport Blvd., N.B. I ll•une 1972. up;i:1H.i.ded cpts. 1 15 ACRES $33.950, Tu<o 2 bdr. 1 ba. t'm, v.'itJ1 bi!Ji:~rd table, 21 \V RITER' S PARADISF:! J a~d d1·ps, cent1·a!. heat & polt'nti:i.! R-:l. nc.'lr Charrf'y on a lot. ~or:;-:: Dov.'ll. I11con1e ba,, frplc .. bit-ins, & many Fantasticvle\1•ofBackBay. a1r,1rctbar,n1ove-1n today! Co!l("."..:r , ALT,\ L O l\I A. $3,T:.:iO. \early now and extras. $68,500. .J large bedrooms. Custon1 ! &.58-274.1 01· 046-97·12. i\lust o:ily $;),50!) per a~·re. Jones rents need raising. Great CAL,,L ,.,., '46·1414 ) sha 1 d 1 es, s hutter s & Sell!!. SiO. ~l50l. lotawrt$ fi1:stt lin'le investor ~ \VR paper. I.deal fa m 11 y 10x45 f1.10BIL E homt', 2 BR, ~'J er uni s. . '9«Cl#tv home. Just hsted at $78,900. av.·ning skirting P 0 01 $.~.!rJO. Be3;Ch Tr 1 p I ex . REA LTY -Low down OK! ·open sauna,' adults.' $3700 : Lov.·est priced triplex in N1•r M••port Pott Offlet house Sat & Sun 1--5. 646-4700 NB Newport Beach and}.ii block GRAND OdENING GRUBB & ELLIS CO. . to boach. Great tor in-,.. 671: . .,080 MOB ILE Home-Budger Ex·-vestment, appreciation and Newport Bay Towers -IP pa.ndo in park nr beach. QWner use too. . -1 & ~ BEDROOM • REDUCED . N~\';pt Bch. 6.4 6 -2 7 4 8. $52,950. Fow:plex. Only 2 Jett CONDb:O.nNIUM.HOl'IES ' WESTCLIFF. 642-3l28. . ot-~t.i'l~e----r:~IXlr. l ~· 1 Bay~~t Homes :: hr, 2 ha, xln't cond. 20x60 3 ~R. 2 BA, ri.~obilt' fourpl.exes. 10 '" ~vn. \\'ill Boat Slips $62 500. Open sw1 1-5 l-fon1e \I. atrrfl'ont at Salton Business P roperty 154 sell . on contract or co~-1 Full Security l lighrise ' 1600 CoMl\\"Rll Sc:.i. ST.'JOO er ll"ade for ho USC' 1 -----~ vent:iOnal. Rents on \\'SY to : Steel &: concrete construction ,\. Sand & Sea Really / or land N.Ui·3278 f'\.('S \l'knds. PRIME 1 $~~IX'~ mo~th: • I Private Balconies _ G75-8800 S x ::.1 JN t.oVfLY· ad1111. COMMERCIAL C-2 bR·. bac~~n[!~ol~ ~~;,e1 Roo2garagft e.undpacesk~1·un1J. OPEN SAT/SUN 12·4 pets 01\ .. Fr£'e n1os 1·e11t, B . S63500 b t 10',f do\\n. \Viii .. ,.,, con: ops ec N\'.'1\' a 1\·n111" only $1930 Y o11·,1crs. . .. or s . .... Unusual Opportunity to Pur· 135 45th Street &12_2098 '" · offr. 1-feavy traffic. centf'r tract or conv~nt1onal. . chase-Bayfront Pt<opcrry in NE\\'PORT BEACll ~ Ci\!. on Ne\1•po1t Blvd off $175,lm._ Eastside 12 Uni~s. Newport Beach. , Beautiful Newport Beach S/,C. S&ICXl. dbl widC'. Lido 19th St. Succt'ssful business Attract1\'l' complex \\'1th 310 F ndo Rd \\latc1iront P:u·k. Pool. c.:ov-ovC't· 4 yr s, need more room, pol Tu<o ~-ner a'pts \Valk "4n7ar "'51 ., N.B. duplex. Ideal for owner OC· t'red gar, 675-8220. can live in. 1..rg equity ing. distance to shopping and ~ cupan~. Located s t eps G-16-2586. bus services. I" YOUR BEST CHOl'CE IN from the o;":.!111500& bay. r>.'E\V 2 BR. 1 BA. living For detailed information on ~ rm. Adult park .\v/private and NEWPORT CREST Ocean Shott Proper~ics beach . $16.soo. ~367'2. Comm1rct11 ~~e eenn::~~erB,::~ ~ is ttrls new $72,IXK>, 3 BR + 1, * 493-1181 * 12X40 MOBILE h ome Property , 151 unit speeiaJlst, Red Carpet, Cbnd. Plan #4, 3 'hath, pool, 11•/Sx20 glassene r 0 0 m . C-1 }Lot $17,500 Realtors 64~ m E. 17th ....,. (the "°"''l. . NOW AVAILABLE 544--0257 SI., Costa Mesa. Weekend Special _ EASTBWFP TRAVELEZE "" ad u 11 50' x H O' Noar 19th & INVESTOR'S ATTN: $65 500 park, nr ocean. carport. cov Pomona Ave .. C.f\I. Priced Oceanside area -good loca· 1 Fabulous VIia Gr a n ad a pa tio. S2650. 714:53&-0767 101~· a~ S2·50 per Sq. Ft. tion, \Valk to beach. 12 Unit Owner trans., niust scII. To1vnhouses 4 BR 21~ BA. ~--I Wesley N. Taylor Co. bldg, 4 yrs old. Priced at needs ciµh. Imm~l. poss., from $52,500. ?.10 DEL ~ ~ nr.:_o\L'f'?R.S. 7.4 X's gross. Oivner mov- x1nt. int .. best location. part OPEN. 835 A1nigos \Vay, Real Estate, 2111 :-,111 .1011qu1n ll1lls R,d. ing out of state. may help orcan vil"I\'. Talk to 011'11er Newport Beach 644-2991 I General i\'rivpo1t ('en!('r 644-1910 • 11'ith financing. Ca11 for appt fmake .offer, no RE com.) FANTASTIC BUY * C·l * ro siuay possibili ties or l 714: 00-74-19. CUSTO~f vu 4 Br., lam. rm. Acreage for sale ISO llC:lJSE & SHOP build~1~._;ounSle~:~· DUPLEX $69,500 hon1e; quiet cul de sac, * M 1 * '""'""'rt 1a.,...,.u. -Los Padres Really, Inc .. 1 Blk to beach. Pvt rooftop C."OJ"~nabSa"°'t /phSu'n".'·l~r:;UtTy? SAN DIEGO COUNT\'. f Rl7V3x1·3EllOR. ANERll.EPOARLCTY Investment Div. 494-5000 sundeck, corner lot. \\ralk V"t"" .. 507 act't.>s hc1. S;u1 Dil'go· 1 to restaurants & Lido Shops. 2319 HEATI:lER LANE Escondido. Ideal rrallr-rs 149 Bt<oadway, C.i\f. •2 l86RU,NITS2 BA. POO&· 3L,8stuR,di3o 2 Br, 1 Ba. -lge crptd ·JOHN P . CAREY can11>ing \vith gtt">(:nlielt rec.1 642·7007 645·5609 Eves sleep--Joft for teenage or REALTORS 646-7414 area. Over 150 acres for • BA. Name your tenns - studio use. 2nd unit: 1 Br. HARBOR View J-Iome avocados. \\'ater _ pcru·er. Like to trade? Otir Trader's \\'ill cany pa.per -No points 1 Ba, patio. 2 garages: 11onaco. Beautiful 3 BR. 2 Cash. Tetms or Lt>aschClkl. ~aradise column is for you! or excessive interest, etc. Comb. g:af8;ge/playhouse. & BA, dining room, lrg. patio, O\rERALL LA NO CO. a lines. 5 days .for 5 bucks. S27ubmit trade for down. rarage/Potting shed. Gar. quick sale price $57,:ioo. 746·0889. 332 S. Juniper, Mobile Hornes S 5,IXXJ. Agt/Qwn. 642--2221 dens& vegetable area. Cor-0 ,pen house d a ily Escondido. For Sale 125 lmsg. 646-9666). ner 9lol1. & 35th St., Open 10AM-5P~f. By O\\ncr, 1801 Sat-Sun. 1-5 Owner, 642-3871. Port Oiarles PL . NB. *Duplex + Cottage* 644-7607 or 6"4-0113 ext m view Iroh.J, upper unit. I AT T R i\CTI\'E Eastb!ufl Steps 1o beacti. $6,4SO Jn-horn('. 3 Br + farn r1n. come. Ask. $67,000. 1 J)("aut. landsraiX'tl. "\-1 conrl. * CONDO * I ~G9.500. 2345 An1!ia St. /Jl<>:tec<c,r .. , 3 BR., 2 ba. Jiobby ,. U\\·ner 644-5Hl9 room. Dbl. garage, pool, NE\VPORT Crest Condo 1$43,700. deluxe ne1v 3 Br, din rn1, LEISURE LIVING MOBILE HOMES Gffi \VALKER 3 ba, dbl gar. Below ALTY 675-5200 nu1rket, $72,500. O\\·ner. FEATURING * 5 BEDROOMS * =G4~2--'"'=· =-~--r , , dining area, 3 Ba, BY O\VNER. Bayshores. cll!'an, spacious I -s t o r y , Leaving area. 21,;. BR. 2 Clif:lbaven. $89,500. BA, xlnt lease, by appt onlv Santa Anita • Skyline Greenbriar • Lancer Service & Maintenance with Courtesy, Always ---GEM eves /wknds $62,500,! 645-4.~42. 126-F Tustin Ave .. N.B. CAPE COQ 00 quiet Cul ALTORS 642-4623 de sac near Mariners Park. -WE LOCATE SPACES -AYCREST, by ov.•ner. 21100 4BR Fn1/Rm 2BA. by sq. ft. 4 BR. fan1 rn1, forn1. 01v11f'r 642-684:1 ' din. rm. 2 frplcs. 2 ha. I OPVN H H . , lrg slate foyei'. kitchf'n _ ·1 ?U~ a1 hor \ u w/bltins;-dbl-(J'(>®-;""""~7:1:50(.J. l ~oinc~. Cauncl, 3.BR. 2BA_, Call for appt, 548-6125, Opell f?.1n. 1111. 011~K'r, 1807 Port $$$SAVE$$$ house, Sun 1·5. 1 effin, 6·1·1-2.'..'i-1 1425 BAKER, COSTA MESA BIG CANYON You can buy a beautiful Deane home in Big Canyon. 3 BR, 3 BA from $79,950 to 189,500. 644-6056 lOAM·S PM WATERFRONT PIER & FLOAT $94,500 BROKER ,833-0780 J Harbor Vu Somerset 5 br, 3 h:i. 2 frplcs. nu see· I tion. ll1gh up 1r 'll1~ ,·1ev.. Comp. app1 ., .. J)el'. 71h. f 'ulJ IPnce ~~l :JIKi 011·n er 499-Ul)J. /REDUCED $20.000 ocean· front dupl{,'x r•1 1• quick s!ilc. (2) 4 bdrms, 3 1.J,1th.s, elcc· tronic oven. Lot~ o f amenities. l\Iusl s e e ! 6'/3-61111 . n!E ·CRANNEi. REEf. ? hr, 2 ba. Waterfront Condos ISS,000 to 1150.ooo ~Y Realtors 67S-3535 I-PIER & Sl!PS- f». Bo;ytron1 wl:h 3 Hr. 3 ! ba. + &'JM ap .. Con$ldcr 1>65,000. CIJJ Oenfoon A>so<" !!ARBOR \lu Hon1c i\ilontCgo 1 lf'\'el. 4 hr. nice 1iic"" S1\·in1 pool/!C'nnis privl.'gs. 1.9o;r Jn. nu unit 644-4&S7. · Take Harbor off-ramp from San Diego Fwy. DUPLEX nr OC1:'all $62,500 (714) 979-4111 i\iiles Larso.-ReRllor 673-85E3 Across the street from Fedco STAR ,GAZEK~~ J'-11-"""'-',"11'!.,-.----By CL\ Y lL POLL\ N wM. i M YDllt Daily J.di'<'ity G.iid• .Ji... ~Af;. ,, "'Y"" .A.ccordi11p fa flit Slaf'f. '9-.52·SJ. To de\'e/op messoge for Mondoy, 71·7J.7.5 reod words corresponding to runbets of your Zodioc birthslgn. l Ma.-.elQ..I\ JI Qr, 61 Rfftphvt 2 P~ J2 Now 62 Clot~ J Mol,,e JJ Yoor 63 Y°""llsterl "Wondtrful J• A11..-.rion 6" S.0.-5 Yow 35 Rullo 65 W11! 6 Na J6 Or 66 Thclf UIU s"!. ,, .m ocr. 11~l~ l-11-1.C-17 .. -~3-81 ~ SCOlPIO ocr.11~. Hor.11~ lG.12-1.S. . ... 7 Won.ing 31 O•go.,.te 61 To SAalTTAllUS e T..... J8Th·~ .,"',= Hor,.JJ~ 9To J9M .. ,._ 10 Don't 40 Be 70 Cet>t.-ote. ,, ll0av Al51ort 710te19'qdow S-7·20-~• 12c;.. .. 2°"'"' ,n,r~J._, .c1.(5 :0: lJ Shwkf Al Show _ • .._ J.4 To A4 J~ 74 tt CA"lteol:M 151nto A.SNoW 75Vo1uee OfC.J!~ 16 l«vt "6 !M 76 Today ' 17 Culh\IOtt: A1 CoUld 71 N•c• JJ,.H. '' • 11 ~icry "8 Laoklnf 78 Pfon1 .c8.J6-60.63 19 Unusuol A9 l'.ll:wl't 19 Sotisfy;"9 7.C 20 Lit.'1 ~On 80 /\lftclir.g 21~ 51 ~ 810ff 22 MCl>'I!' ~2 lei 82 Your 2l People'l SJ Mol••lol .83 ~ 2<1 St 5' F1nanc:lol 8• P«'l)N 2s 1JtwJtr 55 Cotic:ittm es Olly 26 ~tolitf . 56 f(W' 86•N.otbr • 279'.op 57W11+t 87To~ NEW TR!PCEXES AND OUPLEXES $55,!XXI 10 $67,500 Wilson at Placentia Ave COSTA MESA PHONE 547-6791 AGT. 11 Units, roont ror 3 more. J & 2 BR. Gross $1875/mo. Prine only. See 187 E. 21st St, E/side C.M., or call Chvner, 642-1960 EASI'SIDE, thirte<!n 1 Br units, inc. $1960 per mo. Cpts, drps, stoves, refrigs, pool. $176,oo:>. By Owner. S<S-9695 TAX Shelter - 5 X Gross 34 Units -$265,IXXJ. L.A. area. \Viii trade for Orange County. Age nt. 675-4630 64fl..-0166. TRIPLEX, live in 1 deluxe a-pt. Get }<our rent free. Use balance for t a x ;Y.Tlteoff. Rllr 833-1355 ; 49!1-1731 BALBO.A Pen1n, 6 units, beaut 2 Br, ownrs, nr point. $144,000, 15% dn. Tom Mil· ler RE. 642-48ll, 64>-4200. SUPER 4-PLEX Great l;l.B. location Priced right. $69,500. J. Carey Rllrs. 646-7414 OOSl'A MESA 4 plcx, $62.500 Income pays prin int tax, 1 1 ins & util 10% dn. oo pts. 675-1669 or 1·728·Z749 eeDUPLEX, Z-2 BR's. Lfg yards. Assume F1JA Jo.Jn. °"'net/Agent, 545-&>25 DANA Point new duplexes •149.000.-$69,000. e Webb Realty 831~2'170 6 UNITS, CORONA DEL Jl.IAR FOR SALE OR TRADE. OWNER 833-1891. TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT 6 4- 2 -5 6 7 8 D A I L y p I L 0 T c L A s s I I E D -5 6 ' 7 ri m.nu. ABllLOUS "£" Plan vil"11• I hOP'l(l on lht Bluffs. 3 s·r. 2~ .Bl, tormAI dlnlnar. J U:i! colldM.-'· f\fJll\Y cxtraii. i Pri*I well below market. ow.r.- 28 Fcroorob!e .se 11.t aa Idiot , 29 Dtlilltrot. 59 Off, 19 Proorm: JOY-60bci~ 90$4c.Utity ,,,..,.t ii ~Good @Ad-{)N:.\161 • ; WANT AD 642-5671 1 8 --------.... -... - • .. " ·' PVBIJC NOTltE PUBIJC NOTICE l"ICTITIOUS IUSINISS N.&M• STAT!MENT "Tnt lollowlllCI pe11cn1 1rt dolno bu1ln1U ••: TEXEL, 640 Tl~lf Drive, Sffl le1ch. Ctlltorn!• '°''° IMlormed!t , lne. I• Ctllfol'!ll• f.or-p«1!1011), "° T•r Drlvt . s.11 ee1c11, C•Ufornt1 901..0 Thi• bvtl,,..11 I• conducttd In • cor· porttlon. _lnfol"m..:tlt . Inc. H•rrllt e. Ctlrns. ,,.lftnt Tl!lt slllMlenf Wtl t!IMI Wllh 1M Coun. 1Y' Cltrlt DI 0-... COi.iniy on Oc11Mr 10. '"'· ,.-., l"WCl11!td 0nll09 CMst 0.lly ,llol, Odoblr ,.. ti, a. Ind Ho+ttnbtr '-lt73 1110.n PUBIJC N011CE FICTITIOUS IUStN•ss NAM!! STATIMlllllT Tnt fonow1119 i>er&On• ••• dolno buall'lltl ••: -HA~ .. OWENS dbl Plt&CIOUS METALS LIMITED, 10062 lhlMVt Or., H11ntlno1on 9tKll, C1I. nut. Jt lcll1rd G1ry ~s. 100!!2 Thtltus Dr., Hvrrtlngton le1cl!, C•I. 926'i Josel)l'I W1vnt H1w1. 1 t • O 1 c on,tttl•lion. HuntlnglOft IHCh, Ctl. .,. .. Ttl!t M fl'lftl I• clll'lductld by 1 on1r1I p1rt...,..hlp. R.lcherd G. ow.it• This 1talemtnl wit fllMf wlltt tlle County CMrk "' Or1no-c-rv on Otklbtr zs. 1'n. · •. ..,,, ~11Md Or1nte Cottt 01lly Ptlot ~r 21 91111 N-rnber 4 11, 11. 1m J:m..7J PUBLIC N011CE ,.ICTITIOUI IUSINl$S NAME SY'ATIM•NT TM followlnt penon 1s·dolno ou1lne!s t•: HOTtE INVESTMENT CO.. 2-SU Monico Or., LltUlll 8•1cn, C1Ulornl1 91652. P1cl!Jc Tll'I I. Jllm Inc., 2-SU Monico Or .. LIOllM ltl(ll, C1lltornl1 92652 This btnlflff!I II conducted by t cot· poratlon Pit!llc Tlrt I. Jtrm Inc. DIA Hotlt Enl1rprh1ff Y. oel1Nntco Ucrtt.,.,-TrMlllftr 11111 •l•temtnt w11 llt.d wlltt the COunty Cltftl of 0,.,.. County on Ot· '*' n. 1m ,.u 'tlbllshed Orell(le Cbtlt o.11, Plkll, OdObtt 14, 21, 21 •Ml Nov911111t1" '· 1tn ~i41.n PUBLIC NOTICE PICTrr.ous •1.tSINl!SS N.&MI STATEMENT 'Tlre fol1owlno person 11 doing bu1!n.s1 11: VILLA ROMA. 11120 8rOOkPll.lrlt, F-l1fn Vtlley, C1. M1rl1n Haft. 7» MDl'Qll'I St., Ot•ntt c1. 92W This b\lslMU Is concl11<ttd tlY 1n Jn· dlvfd\/1•. M1rl111 Noli Th!s ll1temen1 w11 flll!d wltll ll'>t' Coim· ty Clerk of Or1ntt Countr °" OctODtr 10. •m ,.21n1 PubUll'IMf Or1no-Cotst D1l!r Pllot, Oc!Oblr 1.. 11, ti, tflll Nov....btr A. ltn 3155.73 PUBIJC N011CE PICTITIOUS IUllN•SI NAM• STATIMlfllT, . Tiit fq!!_ow1no !*'5on I• doing bvtl~t11 ••: ENVIJl0NM£NTAL ENTEJIPR ISE$ COMl"ANY 40. ''M ETALGLASS FAfllUCATORS", 7at SI*" Slr•e-1, H1111tlnglol'I AtKll, (1111. t2M7 AQOtl' O. F11~r • .001 C1lvln Clrc!e, Hlllltlnoton ee1c11. c1nt. Pf9Sly Fll~r. '°°1 C1lvl11 err .. Hun- tlnoton ee1c11, c.111. 926'1 Tllll bu'lnM1 II tonduc;ted Int 1 gtner1t P1rlnltf'1t!fp. i-tttr Ftfpper Tiiis lllltmtl'lt WI! flied wllh Ille Coun!y Cltrk of Or1not Counly on Oclobltf' 25, 1'13. P:rtlU Pllbllr.htd Or-noe Coes1 OellY ,.Hof, OCtobltf' tt •nd Ncrrtmbtr .. II, 11, 1m m•.n PUBLIC N011c;j!: ' PUBtlC N011CE PUBLIC N011CE ••CTITIOUI IUllNl$S NI.Ml! ITATIMINT Tiit lollowlnfi WWI I• doing ttu1!M~I ••: A SANO ANO SEA IU!ALTY, lot McF.ikltn Pl,. N1""'*1 It I f f'I , C11llornlt fH4oO _ ,.,,,.. ltcot r l urkt, Q'6 tlrJMtt' St., lrvlne, C.UI, n70S TM1 buJlntM 11 ~-1W t fl lndlVldual. JtmM It, 111rkt Tiii• 1t1tltfltt'lt was l'lltd with tllt Countr Clttle ot OtMlt• C-.ty Clll Oc!Ollltf' 2s. 1m. ...... 1"1111n.-i1 Of1not CM1t O.lly ""°' OclOOtf' Jl tlld Nowmblt •, 11, U, • I PUBIJC N011CE 1113 121'-111-----------·"--- PUBLIC N011CE PtCTITIOUS IUSIN•SI NAM• STATaMIJllT Tiit fotlowltoil ptraon1 tr• dol nia l:Ktllflft• It: SUNSHINE SWIMMING POOi. MAIM· TEHANCE & SERVICE, 11'5 Foxil•ll Or., H11n1l1191on 8"ch, C1lll. 92"'6 M((hl•I C. T1!00t, 119} FOlll'll!I. Hvn· ILl"·ta IU,.11101 COUIT 01" THI! ITATI 0,: CALlfl'OINIA ,OR TNli COUNTY 0, ORANOii Nt. A·1'0H NOTICE OF HEARING OF PETITION FOR PR09ATE OF WILL ANO roll LETTERS TESTAMENTA!l'f Ellll• tJf ERN!I, JOHANNA KLEIN, c.c..m. .. NOTICE 15 HEREll'I" GIVEN lhar EVELYN ICLUM8 n.c. lilld ntrtln 1 l)t!flllon lor PrOb•!t of Wiii Ind for lt111IJ\CI ot L•1t•r1 Ttt11n1ent1ry ID Ill• Plfllloner, rellftnce to wtilch 11 med• too' lurlher p1rtl(ul1r1. and !hi! !lit time. 1no p11,1 o1 he.ring tilt .. me ¥M11 bffn ,., 1or Nov. 20, lJ73, 11 t :OO t,m., In lhl courlroom tJf 0tci1rlm•nt No. i of .. Id court, 11 100 Civic ce111.,. Orlv• W111, 11'1 lht Cltr Iii s1nt1 An1. C1Utornl1. 011.ci Novemlltf' \, 1973. WltH•f'l'I £, SI JOl'ln Cwntv C1•k Mlll.11111 OAYLI! ASICltlN lust lr'tllkllwn• ''""' Sfrltt. J G,lrll111 Greve, Cllll. fU40 Tlt1 1114} ,.1121 AllWMVI for Pltlll- P11bllshed Or•l'!lll Co1sl 011ty Pllol, NO'ffmbtr J, .. f, 1973 3361·13 t!nglon BNC:l'I C1UI. 92"'6 1-------------Lltldt 0. T1lbof, 11f3 FOllflelt, Hun· llngton Bt•cll, Cell!. 92"'6 Tnls builnew I• conC11JClld b\' 1 gtn11r11 pertntl'Jl'l!p. LIMa 0, Tllbol Mk111t1 C. T1lb0t Tf\11 llll_,,I -w•i flltd will'I !I'll C0<.1ntr Cltork of Or1ngt Countr ~n OCIOOtt' 31, 1t13. """ Plltlllll'l.cl Ortl'llM Coett 01lly Piiot, NOVMlbtl' •• 11, 11, 2A.. U, 19T.l UJl.13 -------·--PUBLIC N011CE SU"-lft PICTITIOUI IUSIN•ss HAMS ITATIMINT Tiit foll~ro Pltf'IOll II doing M ltlllA ••: . VIL.I.AGE 1$ LTO, 363 Sin Mlv\NI Orlye, Sullt e. N~I 8Hcll, Ctll!on111 t2t.60 l rtM.-A. lltr!ht, l&) Sin Mlovtl on .... , s11111 'iii> Newoon 111cn. C1tlfornl1 92660 Thl1 b111lntJ1 11 c11nducltd by I Llrnltld PUBLIC N011CE STATEM•NT 0, WITMDIAWAL ,ROM "AITNEltSHIP Ol'EltATING UHDIElt 'ICTITIOUS IUSJNESS NAMI Tiit lollowl"ll IJtr-'Oll h1s w1lhOr•wn •• 1 aenertl p1r1n1r from 11111 p1rrner1hlp OPerallng ..,flll.,. 1111 Hcll1lou1 bUllMu n1m. ot AMERICAN BEAUTIES, •I 3700 N~ 9HCh, Sit. 202A, Ntwpoll B•ecn. Cl . 92660. Tiit tkUtlout bU1lnnl nl"" 1ttt9111tn! tor tllt ptrtMrll\lp was fllkl Qfl 111111 In the county DI 01"1•.,. Or, Hit N;w1 Tin 321 W. Cirri~ Or. 'E' llMO MaocA.tt1111r 81\ld. Ht. 11 S.nl1 Anl, C1!1torlll1, '1101 Hlt No-Tin '21m PUbl!slltd Or1no• (Mil O•llr i'ILol October 21, :;:a. and Novernbtr .., 11, 1913. lU4·ll PUBLIC NOT\CE P1rlntrshlp. FICTITIOUS IUSIH&SS l r!1n A. ltrlhl I N.\MIE STATIMliNT Tiii• 1111~1n1 w11 fllkl with Int Tri. following Ptr$Oll Is ODlng bullntu County Cl.,k of 0111111 County on ' 11· ()(tDOet 31, lt11 . S. O. STEWART AND SONS, 10361 '·ttm Otnunort LI,,., Huntington 811cn, Pl,l\llls.hed Or~ Coesl 0111r Piiot. c111t. t2i.u No.......citr '-If, 11, U. lt13 :m2·1l ~ctr 0111 S1ew1rt Jr.. J0061 PUBIJC N011CE D.11-t . Hunllngton Buch, C1UI, m" Tiii• llutlneu II Condll(i.d by 911 PIC'TtTIOUI IUllNISS llld!fldi;.I. liilAMl STATIMINT I , O.lt 51-Wlrl Tiit followlno P«MWI l• dOlng Ml,.... Tl!l1 1t11-t wit t!i.cl ...-!11! 1114 as; COl.llllY ci.111 DI Ol"tn;e COl.llllY on THE COVElt.UP DAESS Sl+OI", 2C1GU ,()(fotltt 25, ltn ,BIM i-uWlslltd Ortl\Oll COl~t 0 1Uy Piiot, 0c1-r n •flll NovemOer .., 11. 11. Jt13 31S4·1l $Anl1 ,,,,. Ave .• Slnte ltnl, <•111. t2101 Juifith AM Tl\ol" .. I, ltoll WOOOWWd U-. Hllfllllllflon llMCll, Call!, Tiiis tiya1,,.,,. It conduc;ltd b)' •n ln-dlvl<:r111I Jud!llt Al'lfl Tllortll Tiiis llt l-1 Wt• ftltd with file Coun· ty Clefll DI Or11111 County °"' ()(!Ober 10, 1'13 P'21111 l"11blhh9d Orange Coan 01llv Pllor, Oclootr 1•. 21, 21, i nd Novemcer 4, 1J73 ~u3.73 PUBLIC NOTICE P'ICTITIOUS •USINESS NAME ITAT•MINT TM tollowll'l';l pw1ons •rt 11<>lna MilllltSI 11• TAATAN l"UILISHING COMPANY, 7Dl1 c.ndltUgt'lt Clrcl1, P.O. lo• 2206 Huntington IHcll '2"7 Cf\llrlet E. C1mptiell, l'\'131 C1fldltllOlll Cir .• Hunllngton a.Kt! '2U1 K•rtt1 M. CtmpiN!t, 1931 C1fldl1tlfM Cir., Huf'lllllff'on 8"<11 '2W Tlil1 lllnll!UI II conduclMf llY 1n In· dlvlclvtl Cl!tl'IH E. Cam!IMll Thi• lflltlNnl Wll Ill.cl wlllt !'tit (OU"' IV Clerk of Ot1~ Countr on OclobM 10, lt1) ,, ... , P11bl1sh9d Ortn0• Coest 01lly Piia!, Oct!lblrr U, 21, :II, •flll Novt1 rnbtr '· 1971 Jlll·13 PUBLIC N011CE ,ICTITIOUI •USINISS NAMI ST.t.T•MENT T,.. tol!OWll'l';l Pltf'I0!1$ ,,, dolna buslntts 11: POCO JO'S, 1511 Htll Av t , , Wtstmln1ter, C1MI. '2'1) J1rne1 Kenntllt Whlttlnoton, tm M1rlPQt,11, Founl1ln V1Utv. Ctlll, Slllrl4y DI-Whltt!l'lgton, t51' Mlripow, F-111" Vell•y, C•UI. Tiii• OVslMlol 11 c:ond~ 11Y 1 oentrtl ptirtnersllfp ,.,.,.. ~ Wlllttt,..:on Th11 tl•,_I Wll ftl4d wllll IM Covn· IV Ci.tk DI Or1no1 County on Oc!Obtr 10, "'' ·-Pr.obll,htd or..,,.. Cot1t Otlly Piiot. Oc!Ol:let" U, 21, 21, •nd Novtrnbtr 4. 197l Jllf·13 PUBIJC NOTICE ===~=---­,ICTITIOUS IUStNISS HAM! STATl!MINT The following oet'SOl'I ll doing bu.in1u IJ: RAY QUINN l"OOL SERVICE, 7061 81ut Sins Drlvt, H111111na1on e11c11. C1lll. '2W. Rty Qvlnn, 7061 erve S1H1 Drift, Huntl119ton 111ct1, c1111. nu1. Tlllt ~JIMU IJ condu<:ltd by t n lfllllvlclu.I. Rtr Qv11111 Thll 1ltl9!'Mlll Wll fltkl wllll IM C-tv C'-'k ot Ortnpe Coun1y °" OCtObtr 17, Im. ·-Publlll'led 0rtllf9 Cot1t Otllr Pilot, PUBLIC NOTICE NAM£ STATEMENT ,ICTITIOU5 IUSINISS I T~t tot 1ow1no perton 11 dot1111 bu1in1u ts: I LIGHTWOOO MF G. CO., 1325 Stn·1 t1nell.t Ttrrec.;:t, C.d.'-'··· C1ll1, ~26lS Dorothy O. Wllk1'. llli S1nt•nell1 Terr1c1 CdM. C11il. 92&2S Tnl~ bu•ineM 11 cond11tll'd In 1n lnol~lduel. OorOlhy 0. Wllkt This Jtlt911'1enl w11 llltcl wl!ll !ht County Ci.rt OI Or1ng. Counh on OctDbtt 2s. 1m F·2fltS Putilllhed Or•na• Co.tu O•!ly Pllo!, Oclobtf 2' •rid NOYtmbtf ~. l l, It, IPn l'US.13 PUBLIC NOTICE SLl'·lt1 llllOTICE TO CJIEDITOJIS SU,l!JllOJI COUJIT 0' TH E STATI 0, CALIFOJIHIA ,OJI THI COUNTY OF ORANGE Nt. A·nMt ESl.tle of ALOVISE CARROLL, Dece11td. NOTICE IS HE AEfl Y GIVEN to file crtdll0<1 ol !hot lbov• namld drc.clen! ll'lilt 111 per,on1 ha~•n; cl1lm1 1g1ln1t Ille ••Id <IK.ctenl 1rt recivlrtd 10 lll• lhtm, wl!ll thl l'lt(tHllY V(IU(hlrs, Jn ttw ofll(t of ft\t' cl11k ot 1111 1t1ov1 enuneo courl, °' ID P<•1tnl t!Mm, -.llh lh• n«H .. ry voo.rcl>tr1, to lllt 11n· ffrMtlll!d •I c/O IClndtl .. A"'*-, 1020 Ncirtll ltOldw1y. P.O. '°" l:u. S1n1t AM, C1Utornl1 '2102, which 11 Ille pl1ct DI bu1ln.s1 DI tnt 11,,.,,,.11gneo In 111 mtlltt• perltlnlng to IM 111•'- of M(CI dte.otnl, wllhlll 10<.lr montn1 tll1r fM flrll p11Dllc1tlon of tlllJ notl~. 01te4 OCtobtr 30. 1t13 ·· Morrl1 J. C1rrotl E.lKUlor of tM Wiii of IM lbove n1mtd dt<ldtnl JAMIS •• WlLMILM el Kind .. I A"""- 1 .. Herth lrMdWIY Sa11l• An1. C11ll9t'Trlt n 102 Tt1: 1n41 SH·1m Attomty1 for l 1ec11lor PvbllJri.d Ol'•ngt CoaJI 01!lr Pilot, Novembt1" l, 11, 1$, 25, 1971 3"1·7~ PUBLIC NOTICE l'ICTITIOu5 BUSINESS NAME ST,,TEMEHT Tht IOUowln~ , ,, dclng bllslntH 11: LltJ ASSOC! , -~. 11Wl S11rlwDDd Lint, H1.111!1ng1un 8~1cll, C•lll0<nl1 '2646, P.O. 8 011 1)11, H\lllll"1110n BWch ~ ... Ltt GrMn, 21092 S11rtwooc1 Lint, Hvntlngton fleacf\, (•lllOl'nl• tU.S - Thll tru1lnts1 11 conctucltd by Ml lfldlVlclvat. Ut Grtt11 PtCTlnotJS IUSINIU Not.Ml STATl!MUT Tiit tondwlnt ,..._ .,., dol"I bUllnt9 M: OclllNf' 21, 21, •nd HO'femblr .. II, 1rn J1u.n Thlt 1t•111rien1 w11 frttd wllh Ille COl.Hltv Cltrk of Orlflff Counly on Ocl0bt1" ,I, ltn. ·-P11~Us!Md Or9not Cot1! Ot!ly Piiot, PSYCHOl.OGV ASSOCIATES, AIJ1t Wttttt"IY Pi.ct, S111te 202. Newporl Betc:ll. t2660 PUBLIC N011CE Nov. 4. 11, 11, U. 1t13 lm-11 ICtllh J: Gol•r. !NJ C•l•lln• St., l111111.1111 tleecl'I, C•llf«nl•· tuSl • PICTITIOUt •utlMISt R•r mOl'ld F. Cllolnlltf'I, .,., Ttru lta. NAME tTATIM!NT PUBLIC N011CE Newoort lke<fl, Ctlfforn!•. tzUO Tiit totlowtnt P't'Mln I• 00!119 bu1l111U ••: ,:;.:~ c.~~I~. 1'172 Btlh•llY Dr.. OltANGE COAST SERVICES, 1)1 St. 01i. wootr.y, 2m Stnlt An• Avt.. C11rn• SlrMf, Cotti Mm, CtUtornJ• NIW'fJOl'f lktcll, C1Uforn/1, '2611 '2626 Thi• ll111lnt11t I• tond\ICTlld Int • g.entrtl EllOftlf L1n1r, t~l FIOl.l!ldltf' Drl'l't, ptrlrwrlhlp. Hun!lnoton h .cll, C•lllortrl• m.u ICETTH J. GOLAY Tiii• Dutlneu ,, conductld lly Ml Thfl lfll-1 Wll flltd wllll Ille llldlvldt.Ml COlmty Cl.rk of Ortnot County on E\lffflf ltntY OCtober 1,, t•73. Tiii• lfl,_I Wll fllld wtlh !tit P2m1' County Ci.tk of Ottl\Ot County on ,UO!lthecl Ot'tl'Oe Cotti 0.HY ,I~. OclObtr 2:5. ltn OCtoMr 11, 21, Mid HOY*ITIW ... 11, "'1 tm / 11n.n hbllthtd or.,.. Cout Dilly PUot, Octol*" -a, Miii ·Uo+11nMr 4 0,-11. PUBLIC N011CE '"' "''"'' PUBLIC NOTICE ,.ICTITIOUS IUSIH~SS NAM• STATIMIENT Thi following pitrlOll 11 doing bulll'lell ••: IHTERIOJI TEXTILES, 1 t I I) llroot.1111r1t, Hut11111111on 81ed'f, C1llf. Judlll! E. GHdtwtll. 1nt Hr.om· mlll\lblrd, Cotrt Mell, c1rlf, '2'24 Thll l>llMntA lt tonducltd by t n lncffvldu.I. Jlldllh E. OlkltWlll Tiiis 1t1ttmtnt w•• flied with thf Countr Cltrk of ar.ng. CO...ntY on Octobef tt.-1m .... ,,. 'lllltlrtled -Or'"" c -t Dtlly '11ot. HOVMIMI' 4 11, 11, 2.S, 1m '321·'3 PUBIJC N011CE PICTITIOUI IUllNISI \. NAM• ITATaMaliitT Tiit followl119 ptl'IOlll 1rt dolnt bul/"4St I l l THE INN£R GAAOEN, 27.01 '°"t>U lto.ci, l11un1 H101111, CtHf, m 11 L1Gt!M I. a.M, 13902 Via LI G01'11n1. MIHlon VltlO. C•, 92615 J\IU" llttitcc• Gw1n, 260.W. VI• PtrJ, MIN.Ion Vl•fo, C1. t?•7J Th!1 11119'nttt II Corldlltltd by l ·flllll'll jNrtl\trlhl~ L1Gett11 I. Gib• Tiii• llt~I Wl l lllld wlll! It!• Ceunty Cl«I: or Ortf!Ot COunf'( (II, October n. ~m , , . ll'llbll"*' or.. c.-11 o.11Y~i: ~--.. 11, ... ts. ,,71 i' Jm:-73 r • • ' Sunday, Novtn1bet .;, 4,,.., ~-=~~-:-:,=:--:::::;=ir-:::::=r;:z::::-~ I u1trl1l-Property 161 nveltmtnt DUNS urn 1 Hoviii Unfum. 305 ouw urn. or ~ s. vrn. l-----''~.-.....:--1 0 rt I 22 Unfur n. 310 '"------'--.... · INDUSTRIAL . ~ Fount1ln Volley Irvine --* S'I B 11' !;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;~ * SPOTL:£SS 3 BR. family Cotto Me11 • • 2 SAl.E +. LEASE 1 ver u ion* WINTER 1e ... , beaut. so. CO'M'ACE 1 hr 1195 >Tly. 2 •• ~1 ·~ ~i:;w •BR •BA - ' ppo un ty Q Lido Isle 81° lbo1 1111"'° '11.,lon Viejo lolboo lol1od \ 99! + f lNE· BARS 83S.$3oo R • tit pd t• k 3 BR • ~ room, ~. '• C. •v v , • tl'<lm Ba ' v<ly ~r wt •••· sell and wW teA&e back .. llay(ront home; 4 B •. ~ U . got Ape · o · BIG, Fabulout, •'"' """""· t Bedrooms New •.•••• $315 OW, ww cptg, drps, 2 car EASTSlDE Lovely 4 BR. 2U:.377=1lss "sn-n"'::: _ -&lid brld( \\'ft~ho\ISt? ~ Monty to lNn 240 ba., beaut. furn.-i Saijj:ly StNCl..ES _3_ .Pr S2G5 yrly, 2 B_Aa_ Jrpliifc R ! 0 • 2JlR.,_.:Lbaths ••.• , , v ., im aar., fonoed-yal'd:-S355;-No--24.'\3 Nortt Ave, Rel, 5S7 11-~~! Sq ft ""l • ))each. Pier & n091. $1.650 bllns/1-e:lrig, CJD, pet ok. dlshwub&r, w I to watt 2 BR. l bath .......... $315 ADV. 1' .. ee. ALAN REALTY uni. $425 furn . 333-2639 Balbo.t ,Pen(n,ul• I le~ ·~ gu~~e:f ~1 NEED CASH? Month Bill C~ Rltr SUN DE:CK 2 br 2 -ba $275 crptq, drps, patio, ~r 2 BR ' 2 t>a den ale .. S21'5 63&-5650 loa:dlna. Full price S28,IXXI! $1,000, or up to $3,000 .~i5-616t - . uniquo 5el~int;:. f.p .•. patio prqe~ fenced yard, . 3 DR:, :?a 'ba. : .•• $38$/400 8 EA 1J T I Fut.. qu i e. t CondUomf ~nlum1 -o SU WIEK It UP 1 flurry ·Call $10,000 AND MORE Newport ... ch ALA R..,!•lt· M~ ~ki.W.' ~~-A L A N l ~~: '::,!."' _;;.~;·:::: = cul-dHac 3 BR, 2 BA, n um. •• e $1e,ptpg_llootm ll 546-1600 Rf>m~mbr.r Avco Thrttt for M'llbo• Pen1ntul1 4 BR 3 bah S42!i F.R,, Call 8~ dft11, C t ~ eHoUMkeepina: Roomt INVESTMENT J?lVISION a Reul Estate. LoAn. Upon \~~~~~T ~:~ LOVELY~ BR.. 1% ba, tam 4 eR.'. 2~ tt!_~··:::::: ~ ~ Eve. °'I Sa • Oceai, View "m il!~iilil'-'!~llll "wrov~I. Ute the m~ bcdrm' dupleK completely 2 BR, dbl aar .. on quiet rm, w/w sFiag, drapes, 5 BR 3 ba N'£)t Bch .•. SS75 Newport Beach 2 BR TonwhoullO, nie!e yard, BALBOA NN I ~ IJ.Oi:1t9 =vt~r>uu~., per. ~~ier~~'t:. t~~~ ~~~eai;;1b..~mo. Bal'-~~·r!~~ ~:· ~e;,..~1l CALl 552-7500 DREAM HOME ftk.' ~~h~'i'!J=~· 111J-~~~trHt • . !liim ~· ,tonal loans. <8'Xll 687-. Copl1trono Beech iron coune, SJ',;j."',;lter. VISION NHr Tho S.• · Fountain V1l11y BAYFRONT BACH i J'AICICI T1-R . I MALE needed to &bare I~ 963-1064 in exciting Newl)Ol'l Beach! $160. Winter RenJAJ. 926 E. • ' f •-J ~ N 2 bdrm 2 ba house NEWER 3 BR 2 $4, tam 3 BR. 2 SA, 2 car gar., d h'ff Ne"· 1600 sq, ft. luxu~ Coil-NU Fountain PAl1c 2 br, 1\~ Balboa, 673-9749 i Tots or ~ e 170 .,,..., ewrwrt i:fter Dr., w/same. , 1 blk to beach . rm, den, bltl~. trpJc. fenc-all bltna, swim pool. kids e re I dominittnt. 3 BR, 21,i BA, ba condo, tf'_plc, '11~ crpts, C d I Ma_ · LA . COSJA New~.1A~o-ch !,.. ~;. Responsible. $115: ~-~., $293_!__ a:-4559, -ONK,o 1,.llk.•A',!wnt' 9." nilyy 12 o;:•49 mo . c_pta1 drps, & 2 deeks. Swim· pooJ, d'bt eat ~<'1dultJ. 1 \n. ol'ona e r I o.w ,}'f't 11•J'"mll1U 01:ri1UM3 -~-=""~"'·=·.;.842-4421""'=7,,-REALTY REALTORS ming pool, tennis court, !4nt ok. $250 n10. Aval! Dec FURNISHED B a ch e lor . ~!!~lll ~\~~'·,0~~~fos~ci: 1st TD Loans Sen Clement'4 Corona d•I Mar_ 3F~~ll;,~~~~tb~rp~~~:: Univ. Park Cenler, 1Mne . :~~T~1n':f·~~1!t g~o: w~~b :·J:J~t'" Euclid. Ph. ~~°:r ~·J.~~· ~I ! Jones 368 Phone G3~1SOt G d 1• rt 2 · Call 968-!021 operator. Fot· lease with OP-I B h 2 BD"'IS, new app"·--, 'I • · LR e uxe very P vate BACH unit $125 uUI pd. Cook, ' 3 BR. + bonus, 2-\! ba. $425 t 7 kn 14 ,_ AtLI it..., 7 dcsircd. Cal I Hunt ngton ••c ""' .....,,......., .UP TO 90% BR beach duplex w/pool. sleep, lhower A shave. Garden Grove ~,..,1 pool. $123. mo. 3 29 l 8'"291 INTEREST Totally furn, $190, Mllllt ,.., mPLC.2 be 2 ba $ZIO. See ; ~~-21'%°!,!,tt;"'""';: BLVF1'i ta1 E JO th< 2 BDRM Condo, patio. shng Marauertte. Ol!On 1-4 l> 192 Del Ca4o Rd call to appreciate-NOW. 4 BR;12 ba, dishwaabcr, 2 ·• 2 8 ...... $430 vi f reffi1 •1 ~ yl b crpt, drps, fri&'. washer & C t Me 2nd TD Loans 213-448-53'17 collect. CHINESE mod l hr 2 ha car gar, fenced. Yrly Tease, 2 BR. + den, ba. ••• • .~... 2 •baw horom -.,,,! __ ohlyv. Yal edr, dryer. $1&5. lse. 536-2375 · _., __ • __ ,. ______ 1 305 "~ W • D b'""' gar rY.1:-... m 1:134 2 BR., 2 baths •••··•••••~ me. rn::> p nl -Houses Unfum. ~i--nice~ • u .... , ' .....,,, .,..... .....-u • 3 Br., 2 ba., incl. gdnr .• $335 & :ready to be .occupied. Irvine LOW WEEKLY RAT~S Lowest rates Orenge Co. General SEE Forever 3br, den $425. Huntington Beach S495. Owners~ lease op-Executive Suites S.ttl Mt C Fr I Dlw , ki tch/ba It tlon. Sandi Al e xaqder, 2 BR, 1 ba .. waiher. dryer, 2080 Newport Blvd er 9 • 0 • Pc, • r 'WALK to beach, big 4 BR, Walkel' & Lee R.E. 646-t rerrlg, Cully drped, pool, • 642-2171 545-061) more. 2 BA RIO D\V ; pt $250. 5!51-1268 att 6/\\·ken<ls Costa Mesa PARADISE Servin• Harbor area 24 ~ ATTENTION ALA Rentol1 642-1383 • • • w w c " i BIG, clean, 3 RR, 2 A, 642• 2611 --,-~·~· RENTERSI Mak <lrps, 2 car gar., fncd yd. frph:, \v/v.• C'l'pt, tb·pe, & 2 BR. 2 BA \VALNUT FOR SALE . ~-, DON T BllRROW $250-2 Be, 2 ba Townhouse, 12651 2albr, ~· pan-' 1245. , o. Dir . potlo. 2 cru· ARE. 1225/MO. Avail STUDIOS & I BR'S Buy ~ piece of Ha\\'a1i & TIL YOU CALL USI has all incl cable tv, \vtr e i:ng, I i=re<:, great I BIG, beaut 4 BR, 2 BA, "SINCE 1946,. S\Ylmmlng pool, te n n s Nov. 25th. Call 551-1008 • FREE Linens ~it. f ee property, $500 Borrow on your home equity pd. On greenbelt area. ~~\i-g j' br, yard, patio, :tr~· f~ ~~~~. d$~5: 2 car 1st Western Bank Bldg. cou1·ts, wa lk lo lxh. $355, WALNUT Square 2 br Condo, : ~~l~~!i~s • :'l() mo. AL S 0 for any good purpose. Serv. Vlew. Immac. • •~ 1 ,~ & · " UntVerslt.v Parl<, Irvine ' No Adv. F~. $235/mo. Uniqut Hoines oceanfront -+ res. Io t . tng llis Angeles County tm $265-3 BR, 2 BA, ha• all, ~ ~ N~~ 3 !1ria.m rm. I VACANT, big, clean 3 BR, Deya_ 552·7000 Nithts ALAN REALTY. 636·5000 Realtors, 6~. • Heated Pool $22.000. 645--J33.l Realtor over 20 years and NOW in frplc, 2 car ·gar, tncd & excc~l:lonally nice 1tarbor .~. 1~~ 2 8!z ~· ~~d HARBOR View 4 bedroom Newport Beach : ~u~~i~a:!,.ti:!au. Babson Orange County! Indacpd, older child ok. View Homes y.,ro, $26S. · 1 AVAIL Now _ 4. BR, 3 BA, Palermo with exceptional ---e Phone Service SAN CLE~ENTE r~ d~I SIGNAL<n¥10!IT~IA06GE CO. S 3 Osh0'2 /dryBr t Hou• c, NU·VIEW RENTALS I BIG, fabulous 4 BR, lam ~k, pool. Yr Lite. 1st &: yAndard -nexth to I n e •d· BRAND new 3 BR, 2~1 Bn, $30 WE Ek & UP ocean Vle'W, -.5e ot, .. ~ wa er er, am. rm, ,,,,.,., ......,n ...._. .,.. • ., nn 2 ~ R IO DW / S 3 6 5 / • ·-••nt: erson s c o o an deluxe condo. New n o r t underground util, sidewalk, 4500 Campus Drlve, N'.B. beam ceil, fi'plc, Bluebird "'..-"""' or ...,....,,."" ' ua, ' ' w w 897:1305 m 0 ' .,_......_., greenbelt. $550. Bk r . Crest -p001, feMfi • • Stqdio Ir l BR Aptt. beaut fully d c v elope d LOANS TO $25 000 Canyon view: "OLD Corona" ch&rrber -r~· d~, ~· 2 car gar, 615-7225 co~ setting . singles e TV & MaJd. Service Avail. :_' .neighborhoOO, $20,000. 2ND & lST trust ~ loans $.115-3 BR, 2 BA Hu all excellent location-80Uth o1 _1n BIJ bei. 5 BR ,.. •n Laguna Beach LUXURY ocean vu home. or famll)' $500/mo, unt. •Phone Service -Htd. Pool 1 AA REALTORS * 492-2100 over $5 000 Secured by a inc d~hwhr, fenced, lndscpd highv.•ay -three bedroom "' · ut., "' iam Brand ne\V 3 BR, 21,i BA, $600/rno furn. 644--72i.1, Agt. e ChUdren &: Pet Section RNI Estate combina'tio~ ot real estate 'v / lovely ild v~\v, frplc. 3 bath and *1rnh;hed or ~ 2 ~1!; !rr:i ~e, ~ti~· Sl40 -Oiarming 1 br cot· form. din, .frptc, \vet bar, FC ~ lease Newport Beach 2376 Newport Blvd., CM E h 182 &: personal property. Younger ch 0 ' ba unfurnished. $400. Bk r · 2 c8r gar, fen~ yd'. $350.' rage, facing pool. everything -Pool. tennis, E,astbluffs, beaut new Co~ (Ad~fo~ ~3:it) XC ll'!9e NO ~int11, no prepay ~3Ji.R~~~~.21Tn,ic: 615-7'225 ./ FABULOUS large 4 BR, $2llrgO d ~bi:'~ vi:W apt, sauna. Winter $500, yrly do, 21BO AQ tt., 3 BR, 24: . AUIAMBRA penalties to $10,000. patio, fantasUc harbor view. ROOl\IY one bedroom duplex 2 BA, !pie, RIO, OW. W\V $310 .!!: 3 b~. ~ o~. new lGOO. 968-4254 ba, formal din. rm. $525. 1 Br lrg. $160 & $150. Ter- Trade -2 Bedroont house F~ SERVICE t'hlld/pet ok. unit across from J)ark and cptg, drps, patio, 2 car gar., crpts, dt'JlS, beaut ocean 4 BEOROOl\t. 2 BATH. 714:871-1141 aft 6 PM race. Ideal fol' bachelors. . near LA for house in Deal Dir-ect With Lender .~ .... ~ BR 1..,. BA incl all tennis • comer separate en-fncd yard. $3~. v'iei" , ~-k. Family nn, formal dining Son Clemente A548-dot 9633 ts. . 1993 Church . · ' . rl 9 CITY FINANCE ~ ' ,... ' ' tra nce · garage $2'Z5/mo. 1 GOLF' 3 BR t • "' """"' · & I this: area. Full p ce SI ,950. Orang C t ,714) 547-6633 New crpts. Frplc., Newly 644-7211 .1...... "' course, , am NU-VIEW RENTALS rn1, private tennis poo Ownr/Brkr 644-8668 e oun Y redecorated. Will conside1· ""&• rm. 2 baths, fplc, R & 0, pr I v ileges. ~15/month. 2 BR, spectacular oci!an vie~ I LGE. Jo"URN 2 BR, Bltns, R I E t W ted 114 VENT Un E ca PI ta l child &: pet BUNCALO\V. Newly decor: DW, \\•1\v cptg, drps, patio, 673-4030 or 494-l248 644-5686 even In g & on goU course, lease $250 pool, bean1 ceil. Adults, (In· H S •te In I\ s si s t ll nc e for any $500-2 BR hOme on OCEAN· 3 bdrms, den, irplc'8, shag 2 car gar, fncd yard, $345. ATTENTION \\'eekends: 642 .. 5735 days. mo, 492--0437, 492.:.2780. tant okl, no Pets. $180. 1-IANDYMAN \\'/5 l itt'Je \vort_hYlile project FRONT. Yearly. Pool. Ja-& nu drps. Sunny kitchen . ./RAMBLING clean 4 BR, RENTERS!! !!ARBOR Vie\v, 4 BR Pal-Townhouse Unfurn •• 335 642·953>. htlper.g wnnts to locate in $50.000 to $5,000,000. cuizi. Newly decorated. All Lrg lot. 2 car gar. Nr. 2 BA. !pie. range, oven, Need a horne? Apartment? or ermo \Vith exceptional yard 0sM~Aµ,~"'l~bdrm.,.--ap"'t,-all..,,..u"'tua"". C.M., 1-1.8. area. Need 3 MrD. J.larrlps· P.O~..,,Bo1x682GC v.'OOd & gia.ss~ 180 degree bch-shops. 6i:H2'75. D2 w, \V\V cfptgd, ~· .~tio, Roommate? We have them -next to new "ndel'80n Huntington Boch Adults over 40. No pets. Bra. $2000 dO\vn. Under ana oint. ~ vl~frplc's. Fumw. 0r,un1. NEAR Beach, View 3 Bft, , carHUGgEar ... _ncut fa'"R ~,~BA. all! OPEN 7 DAYS. school & grel'nbell. $550, bkr I $12;. $35. securlty. 1973 s:ll.000. 64fN-i71. Mort11ges, v...,,.. 1 Days a ee 21h ba, ownr's unit. cust ..-' .,,,,a ' · BEACON R~NTALS sr.,.7225. . Beach Walk Townhouse Newport Blvd. Trust o..d1 260 BEACON RENTALS duplex, beam clng. patios, lplc, range, oven, DW, WW 1854-S. Cit Hwy #6 LUXURIOUS NU CONOO. ! Bran<t New 3 br, 2~ bal, LGE. 2 BR, 1"~'-a-. . 1B54 S. Cst Hwy No. 6 fplC', nr shops, S375. 675-6900. cptg, drps, cov patio, BBQ! 1 .. -.~ .. Beabh 494-9491 t 6 blk ote P --J ..,... l[i] 1 ...... na Beach 494-9491 2 car gar., fncd yard'$329, .._,,....... LR, dining nn. 2 br, 21rii am. rm. s ..... an.C "°i 'i BJtns, ·quiet, heated pool. • PUT YOUR MONEY _.. · CHARMING c.dA1'. hOme. 2 No Adv. Fee. FOR rent/lease. 2 BR, 2 ba, 1rplc, ocean vu, pool ~~ ...... etc. ~· a Adults. 19th & Pomona. bdrms., 2 baths~! Ocean ALAN REALTY, 636-5650 ·bas & den. Panoramic ocean tennis crts, $425. O\vner .-.-.1iv. ~ • 66-12$9. TO WORic.FOR YOUJ close: S32:J mo/yearly LOVELY 2. br $200-avail. .view. Washer, dr)ter , 541-8947. l BR, l ~ Ba Frplc. Shag 1-"=s"'R~Spa~cioulc--.-=6-un=1t'"'b~ldl~.1 i Business Earn ID% or more on well-BOYD Realtors 675-5930 walk to beach-fncd w/gar. 'blt-inll. $400 mo., 494-5689 BLUFTS OONOO 3 br, 2 crpt. Pool. Private patio. Like new. Ca.rage. Sli). ! OpPortunity 200 ~ured ~Trust ~son NEAR new 3 BR, 3 baths, FRPLC 3 br 2 ba $285 D/\V, SHARP 2 br, 2 ba. No. ehd, ba, 2 car gar. Pool. F.P.. ~ :f.thls. Avail. now ~ Adults, no pets. 2220 Elden, Jt 8 ~ unty Gre G estate. ' frpl., patio, bit-ins. dish· patio, gar, pet ok. Nr. bch/shop'g, atrium, bltns. 833-8635. Ls e l · C.M. &t&-1512 aft 6. ~ · °" __ bu_______ I N 71 MO!IJ n~ E CO. Y.'Shl'. Xlnt! $450 ~fonth. PRIV-Pool t br apt $140. adults, no pets. S 3 2 5 . $450/mo. Newport Bach NICE 1 br dplx. Quiet Sep l tri 1orshlp i 4) :;.,.,.,.. * 145•0111 * Scenic Properties 67$-5726 util pd, mature sngl. Now 494-8109 aft 5. DOVER SHORES ----by g&rages. Emplo}:'.ed adult 11 A CANDY 45()0 Campus Dr., N.B. 43JW.1llhCOITAMEtA \VALK to beach, ~ BR, 2 ALA Rentels 642-8383 FOR lease or? New $115,000 Beaut. view bOme. 4 &:Inns., S 2 PLCIT lcvepl 3 18 Brttns' 2 ~· over lO, no pets. 548-1021 i SUPPL y ·RpUTE BA den yrly $l50 ......,n •1 2 I ho fan ta st I c 4 baths. Sl,100 l\10/lease ar gar. 00 · • cp .... < "featuring" $35,000 1st TD on xlnt com-$145-2 br wU. apt, b 11 n s , S 1·1Su ' 4 2 9• Heiiotto;... · 11 1°2ve Today.lrp Br/D, l~!i Ba. uxwy me, 8 .,11 Grund• Rltr. 67 .. 161 drps., refrig. Adult couple •STUNNING l Br. Garden '· UCT n1ercia1 pa rcel 11cross st. cpt/drps, Child ok. a n · ~ 15. ~ltns, , \V . P ·ts/ views, &. draped. $600 mo. " <HJ only. $300. Rltr. 642-&33 Apt . Pool. Rec rm. SlGIJ. :; CERTS PROD s from f\.1ission. San Juan $165 HOUSI' 1 br unf. ~ra1)Cl 640-0851 -8'~1~ ok. 759 Kendall Dr, 649-2683 HARBOR Vie\V 5 BR. 3 B,\. LOVELY 2 BR + den, l~~ now. 1Ath St .. CM. Capistrano. Payable $350. new. Stv/ref, crpt/drps. COZY, Rustic 1 Br. unfurn. Calif s Lrgest Rental Agcy CHARMING 2 Br, part furn, Only $525. Gardener incl. BA, quiet res., balcony view, $115 .2 BR. 1~ ba, patio, : Male or female, age no bar· per mo. incl. 9% due 3 Kids/pets. Yard. . . Beaut garden .. $2'25. Adultii, Homefind•rs 547a9641 frplc, garage. 1st & last, Cul-de--sac. 'Nr. p o o I . patio, shag cpts; b'plc, garage, crpts, \ rier, can be \\1>rked full yn. 10% d i s co unt . ~2 & Den uni. Nice & .no pets. No child. 673-4169. NEW 3 BR, 2 BA luxury $295. 494-4941 . I 644-4157. bltns. Ad lts. $300 S46-ll9l calLm8'731 or part time. Qualified (714)831-12:10 pnvate rear duplex, gar, PERSONALITY Plus Harbor condo. Elec. bltns, crpts, Laguna Hin5 BAY Vie\v from 3 sty rte\V NEW 4 b 3 ba t * SHADY ELMS-POOL , person v.'111 b e come WIU. Buy lat and 2nd TO's c>xtra room. Yard. Pet ok . Vu Hills, 3BR, 2BA, tam drps. washer, dryer. 24 hr. 3 br, 3 ba huge sundeck, r, ' am rm, e Adults Poolside $150 up, I rU.stributor for this na· up to $100,000. Call betwn 5 $200-2 br duplex newly redec. rm, $575. Gard incl, 644-2883 guard. Comp!. rec. fa.cit. intercom, wetbat, bltns, pool, tennis, $450. m o 642-3M5 dooally advertised product. &. 9 PM or 7 to 9 A?.f ~n shag crptg, fncd yard .. 3 BR 2 · BA frplc, bltns,' Mature •dulls. 962-197l ./VACANT, big. beaut 3 BR, dbl/gar. $485/mo, 646-272.) .642-3513 ]i77 E. 22nd St., CM , l• You may keep your present 00-5.511 Children le: pets. t ed. yard ' So f H 3BR 2 •-b 2 BA, frplc. R/0 , OW, v.w SINGLE LEVEL LINDA TownlioUH, **2BR. $100-.No childnn. it.ion All locations are $350-Pool Home 4 br unt. enc · · 0 wy. • BA, cpts, ...... ;,, ltns, d · 2 U I ~ .. ,., no pets. 2281 Maple A.ve. ~ let~ly fumtshed by our $5,200 2ryd TD for sale $4160, crpts, drps, 2 car gar, yard, Call 67~ dble gar., children & pets cptg, rps, patio, car gar, , MODEL. 3. BR, 2 BA. ruce Furn. or n urn. """ CM. Call 60-6730 _ comp Ve hi'"" income> lO"'fa int., 3 yrs . du:. children & pets. _ COZY, private, irplc, bltns, OK, walking dlat to 8Chool, fncd yard $29S. locatlon Beaut. condition. )Xl'ten~" Yourymu:i'have 3-S 833-1129: 546-9754 eves. $350-Llke' new ~ 3 br 2 ba refrig, crpui, drps. $170. mo. neyet'. rented before. Clean. ALANN&~Tf~ $475/Lease. 675-5982 Miislon \ileio FJf:· ~ ~.:.ptN!~: I hn. per. "Uk spare time. duplex, gol~. shag. nr heh, '673-2288 r.r;o mo; 968-4340 ' SHARP-Vacant 3 br, 2* ba. BRAND nu 2 br, 1~) ba, Bkr. 675-5800. q Can be Mirked days or ' II _.., yrly. Refrig, washer &: 3 Br,'1 ba, stove. Crpts. NU PAINTTHRU ·OUT . GRANDVIEW! Pool Ir yard malnt. Leue util rm, wardrobe min'or, ~ves. "lf she Jd8se1 you """* · r' d~c~· l-1 Fu . hed drps,. S325. Yr. Jse. 504 Sharp 4 br, 1% ba., gas 3 BR, 2 BA Cottage.;type. $500/mo. 833-8635. attach. gar. 963-7352. Dena Point ' ooee. will she kiss you e ave n us Narcissus, 673-8676 bltins, 2 car gar, fenced Condo in 4-plex. $275/mo. HARBOR Vie\\' 1'Iu1rfes-3 br, D I F 345 Again. Be Certain \Vith LABacNDh.LlOR, 2, D3 SbrFA~uE. E 3 BR 2 Ba cl•an ,~.,.· .. yd. $270. mo Evea. 962-5319 Call 979--0493 fam rm. Pool, tennis prlv. up exu um. CERTS." · HouM1 'Furnlihed 300 R patio, gar.' u2s ~o~earlY 2 BR, 1 BA, bltns, dbl gar., $430/mo. 644-1759. Balboa Peninsula $1900 REQUIRED ALA :RENTALS . lse'644-0611 lrg. lncd. lot Xlnt cond. Lo9une N!.f!uel NR. Beach ·4 Br, lam rm,l;:;;=;;;...;c;;.;.==-- Investment tecured, lnterett General Wf~illJNstMCI C MMI $2'l5. Ask tor Dale .FOR lease 4'bdr 2 ba. house 3 Ba. frplc, condo. Pool, :fBR $195. New crpts. K!ds/ free financing available far ·' qste 962-4471 24112 Estacia L aguna tennis, $500 mo. ~1658. Pets OK. Move Today! exparWon. Sll5 -UtU pd. Lrg bach, f / vACANr, big, clean, 3 3 BR, 2 ba, 2 car gar, Niguelnewlydecorated 3. BR House. View. Dbl Callf'a Lraest Rental A~ For more information write: full kitch, 1 blk beach, iC~ HOUSES 8 lg fenced yd, to be redec .. 54S-461l· garage. Newport Heights. Homeflnders .547-9641 NAnomw~~ING s~~ u ni pd. Bach, run W JJft ::s. Rf!.& ~0:,1~\·~~~. =: !::. ~.ll~ color Lido Isle $325. CA1I 642-9879 Corona del Mat Department 93 kitch. patio, smJ. pet, CdM NfWPOIT i IAY, C.M. 642.13a1 screened patio, 2 car gar., SOOO I I I I THE Bluffs, lmmac., 3 BR, CORONA DEL MAR--ONE P.O. Box 5512 $145 _ l ..... & nice bach, full · . . · · fncd yard. $325. 3 BDRM, 2 Ba, frplc, ..ease, year y, c io ce .2~ BA, fam rm, $465 mo. San Mateo, Ca. 94402 ki t & ~-Laguna -. I VACANT super· sharp beautifully decorated in new location on Lido Isle. 3 BR, lease. S»-1n7 BEDROOM DUPLEX $150. 1 Please include phone number M'l:: _ 1 .__ aep rear unit OVER Garage $70 utll pd. 4 BR, 2 BA, fplc, R/0 , w/,v tract, near ocean. 536-6398 den, din nrea, bltns, 2 ·BA, """"'"' ba * 497.1215 * ---......!-~""'"' •n-, ' sl & b th d . 2 or 536-1150 eves & wknds 2 fplcs, huge private patio, l'lr I Shores l BR, 2 'r~,....~""''"a.-.-.h~--N.f\.1.S. ls not ~ted frplc, pool, g~ CdM Let's U eat, eep . a . cptg, rps, cov patio, car to d 642-9224 o t frpl, ~Yearly. NeWport c with Wamer-Lambert O:i.. NU·VIEW RENTALS LAGUNA l br unll $165. gar, fncd yard, BBQ, gar. 3 BR TO\VN1.JOUSE, 1% ba, ~n ·· -Pi'opefl1 House 642-~7 .;..;;;.;.;.:=:.,..;~=--- UVE ln the all oew Dana Point · Harbor at t h e beautiful MARINA INN 1 ownera of •'CERTS' ' 673-4030 or 494-l24S Fncd for pet. Stv/refr. · dener incld. SJZ, stwe,' trig, pool. $2lS mo . BIG. CANYON HO"fE FURN Lr( 2BR duplex on tradernar:k COZY 2 br $185. close in. I HEATED pool, big 3 BR, 546-8860. Linda Isle 4 BR, 3 BA fam im: $'780 Balboa Penin, 2 bJka fl'om Affiliate . $ LANDLORDS $ Cpts, drps,'pet ok. Gar. lam rm, 2 BA, !pie, RIO, I • 97 54~ beach. Fully lllrtt. Utn N OWN YOUR OWN Let US rent UR properties. BRAND Nu 2 br 2 ha $225. D\\', washer, dryer; w/w rvine 1 OR 2 yr. lease .. Rier It L&e. 493-51 or · in~d. $350 per mo. By ap-BEAUT. it~n d S~ , SS We service all the beech All the extra.a & garage. cpt, drps, poOl table,.2 car slip. 6 ,BR 4~ ba., air cond. CONDO, 2 BR, 2;) ba, fomil polntment·No brkf, 67J..8876 Bachelor. 33966 Mala&a. • Motel. 34002 Del Obispo St. (~1\53). KltChen, ~-,• ficlencleg & Apartmenfi Heated pool, direct dta1 I 'phones, televts\on, uuna 1 bath, 1 au n d r y !acllltiel, meeting room, close to San Clemente & Laguna Beach. ·Come play in oii-f llJIOl'!(ialting, shopping 6 restliurants. $60 week Ii: UP: 1 'Bring this ad &: recetft ', SS off on first week'• rent., _ -: ., BUSI NE Cities & inland Oranae·Co. SH,ARP 3 hr, 2 ba $260. gar, toed yard, $350. ./ BIG vacant, clean 3 BR, 7,00) Sq. ft. $3,000.Mon.th. • liv nn.. trplc1 .le wet bar, Duplexes Unfurn. 350 Xlnt loc. · : Mobil Wash FEE FREE. Save Time & $$ Beach area, pet ok It gar. No Adv. Fee. lam nn 2 BA, fplc, R & 0 , Bill Crundy Rltr. ~ 67S-6161 great k.c, $400, 644-5173 675--1849. . ~ ' $ ALA RENTALS S ~~ -our other ads under ALAN REALTY; 636-5650 DW, w!w cptg, drps, 2 car Mesa Verde Newport Heights . Qalboa Peninsula Huntington Buch " ·,' No f jedl here N rt Bay CM 642-8383 cities, choose from many. G l b $90 gar, !need yard . .S215. ----1.c:.==...;..;;.;.;..;.;;c=-- just 8d°A·:'°~~. well s~iUTIL Pd. $125 Mobile ALA Rentals 64U383 • ~~ri~a~ur ;t. now. No Adv .. Fee. IMMEO OCCUPANCY Rumc & cozy 2 br, 1 ba, NEW 3 br, 2 ba, outstanding $155-$165 1' estab. Y11orking Mobil model. CM. $U5 gM Clemente. i On.story 2 BR adult NEAT 1 br dplx Sll5, sngl ~REALTY, 636-5350 10Vely 3 br, 2 ba, 2 frplc:s, beaut yd, gar, ctpts. drps, View of~. Yrly $600 mo. BACHELOR & 1 BR. Patloti, p NETS up to $2500 m:Hllh, BR, ocean view, Lag. Bch. condo, new carpets, stv/refr, c&:D, .turn-av.all. lg rumpus rm, $350. Option $275 w/l(trl. Gill)' J<iln:soo, 548-6761, 548-2103. frplc's,-priv. garqes · Di· • mosUy help run. Service all 3 Br Mobile $145, CM. Many drapes & wallp1per. VA'<;_ANT 2 br, $150-RF.AL. 3 BR 2 Ba, frplc, cpta drps, possible. s 3 8- 6 3 4 ~ or ~ or rqsg. 613-1235. BAYFRotIT 1 br, tum apt. ~~.!nth, i!,i1: i!ic=~ 11 company supplied accounts, Bachelor unlta $90, utll pd. Onl d It ho has gar, fncd fOr ur pet. fenced yrd, $295 m o. 540-9700 Newport lsl•nd Ptj. bch & pier. Util. pd. sauna batM. See for .YOW'-• new and used Car Dealers. Agt. Fee. 979-8430. Y1 a u s 1 w 1 ap-NICE 2 br $200~u paint 837-9115 FOR l~ase. lrg 4 br house, I -";:;;;J;.:;.;.;..==--~ $300. Wntr $100. 673-6790. self. 17301 Keelson Ln. Cl \ Airplanes, Boe.ts, F I e e t 4 BR 2 BA beach.front 1812 prec ate a c ean, pro-beam, nr park1• ~~t.;.. s Jines, 5 day• for $5. Call lrg lot, nr schl, $400 mo 3 BR, 2 Ba. Not crptd. Fenc-Cofone del Milr / blk. _ W. of Beach, 1 blk N. Truck Co's, :f\.1otor &..Mobile W. Oceanhoot. $300 ~mo fe11lonally decorated ALA Renta 1 642....__, today ••• 642-5678 w/gard. 546-4305. ed yd. 3 car prkng. $285 homes. til June 15th. 1-'17&-4755. home wlJI be occepta AVAIL Nov 16. Attrac 3 Br HouMI Furn. or Houses Furn. or mo: 1st & last + S250 Spect1c,ul1r· V1ew Apt ot SlatM)&ri-7848 ' , HERE'S JU~ A ~FEW B•lbol lslaftd able. Fast occupancy. on extra lge view lot. Lge Unfurn. 310 Unfurn. 310 scc/cln dep 675--8140' ON OCEAN BLVD. 2 BR, MEN, small bE!ach hotel. ~ DETAILS $195 per mo. · kit. 1 be, laundry, gar. Ten-_::;:.:.:.:,:.:::.. ____ :.:..:.;_...:co;,:.;..:;c;.__;.__,;__ I San Clementi 2 BA, frplc, b a I con y, Rooms $Zl.50 per wk. Apt.a ::!• : ~~~fil:Tr::11!t secured 9!:~~ .. 3 J!~y ~~: 1 __ 8_3_6_4_2_06_At~ae~·-n_t __ ~~ ex~n 1!~f d:~: 1 :~Giot~·~11~r~a~I ;;;iiiiiiiiiiGioneiiirialiiiiiiiiiiii 4 BR, fam 1m , ShottclHf11, ~~~11!;:.· ~=· ~lu ~~( · $85 per month. ~7006. • 1 '. _Work from you hon1e fum., yrly. $.530 mo. FREE RENTAL BOOK 645-6221 fol" appt (tenant). priv l:iCh Y.'/club privl, conv, Wkend1 675-5587 or Wkdays Laguna Beach -Part or full hme available William Winton DROP 1N' &· BROWSE 548-3153 for owner into. $375. mo, 213:791-345-1 , =213!~76Z-592o=-=....,1""":-=...,..,. OCEANFRONT COVE -No experience necessary Real Estate 675:-33l1 Q1.ieen sized 3 1*m: home, -. mo to mo. ~ant• Ana , BRAND new 3 SR, 2% ba; Channing 2 BR. turn. apt. COMPANY PROVIDES BelL--Peninsula 2 bath, dble garage, huge Sh•rp ·3 BR, 1 BA, dbl. M' AC NA-B unit w/frplc. It bltlns. 1650 n-lrpl h declt -•~• I Qui t Circle This! 3 br, 2.ba. $165. sq tt . of chann & a su-r go;ams, c., uge FULL ON THE JOB fenced yar, built-ins . .-..00 gar•ge, poo • • . .__ , .. .Lo .. ...,... ...... Winter $l50 month · ....,. • h.'ING PROGRAM CLEAN, SltWJ.. 1 Br. rear per/mo. New carpets. New atrfft. Avail. now. $275 HUi'e yrd iur __,., • ~a. netghbol'bOOd to boot. $450. Shields Real Eltate 1 ~" ~·-N ~-& bt pal t Clilll's ......... Rmta1 Agcy 673-~ h ,.........,.... r. .....,.,.. ' y. n · per month Coll D•v• 1RV 1 NE Homefl",·rl. 547.~1 318 Thalia, Laguna Beac I Total Investment SU,500 416-',t E. Bay. or phone Walker It Lee • ' nu. ~ Cott• Mes• 494-8093 494-4192 ' u -uln!d C..h $10,IXXI 213/812/3036 . REAL ESTATE Herlt09e Real Estate, u Pi' k ~ d•-& u•1lSI nivenlty r . I BR __ , ... ed E -~--Im.FUR small c o zy ' Send name, a ""'"NI Corona del Mar 2790 Harbor Blvd., at Adams. ~ """".,,'"' Dwi-h. 1 telepltotte No. to: lllstrlct N ORDSI NEA 2 B l f -• d UNIVERSITY' PARK & shop, mature idwt~ $tal Bachelor nr beac . \ AMl-Mobil Waah, Inc., .,.1............ ""'-..... ·Hoe. H ••. LA DL T r. sm en ... ,,,... yr • ut:IJ pd. &4.;.6456. , ~~.!!;.. employed aduJt . _,. vtil.lt.."" Torrance n.u.-...... PCIO.T• •w-> nu paint, drps:, cpts, k1ds QUICK OCCUPANCY Brand ne\v 3 BR, 2 BA, den, ,. ·~ I PCal.Oi.I ~ ~·-~ (2!3l Ut!I pd. Kids/pets ok. We Specialize-In Newport & pets ok, close to parlc Nr. J!ChooU, ll<Creation c<n· Newport ... ell 1 "R on. -an. ·-Incl , ' ,_,... .,...,..... 'Caltrs ,_Renta!Agcy Beach •COrona ~IMar~• & Sch. 2 houses on lot. 4BR w/lg.J.ard , pool & J'acuzzi-in Har· -... -..a.-••75 6733177 -·~------0 --- 542-Ml83. -·--& '·-·" Our R tal s;r ·--~ ........ ~ · · · NEAR'-3 a· R. 2···BA· -•--uw. ""pool" Albtrtlon'~ I Homtflndon 547°9641 --·•· en · 316 A. i::. 21s1. CM or bor View omes. 6 m o. - 1 yr. lease. W 1 1 ~ ·-· ~ 729 G-r _, 1719 FOR SALE vice II FREE to You! Try 556-0347 Children, pets OK. Furnished~25/mo. ts rn n1 •• r ed -· Yeorly. 60-3188 av..Ia. ·-, ., PEANUT CANDY A: GUM Costa MIN Nµ-Vlew! l"=;B:;R;:::;p'-;1,-u-s-;:lrg:--;:tem::::--:nn=-, Unfurnished $595/ J e Newman ./VACANT, blg, Clean 3 BR. or 60-7914. EPTIC. le Deluxe 1l'011\ $50 ' VENDING BUSINESS in 1 BR. Mobile Home l lZ NU-VIEW RENTALS t t1rpo trelthly • -mo. eann 2 BA, RIO, Ww cpts, tlrpo, Duplexes, &ldry$15, vt"1·~·.!001n'n', mal494-1'.J" ~:. Hunttrurton Beach, GOO O Kdls ok M "l'A.4..: . 673-4030 or 49;1-32CS pan~teda;'n!Jde and out, lrg ~. (s42) patlo. 2 car ....... , fncd yard Furn or Unlum 355 -· ~ INCOME 6 to 8 houn week· ' ove 'VU"'J· 1~. ·-' • Newport 9 -•ch ' T ta1 . ll 23SOOcash Calif's i......, Rental Agcy 2 BR, $UO. 2 BR. CM $140. htcd yard. Family, no pets. BAY VIEW APT. FOR LEASE ~· -· ~Mt~ ~s· KANDY Homefindfn 547·9641 ~ fili T"'• 1155, Jm-$265. 547-<1191. · Beautifully & completely furnished $500/ ALANN~E~ri°k""'1 Jl!•we:irt S..ch 2 BR lo~-.;. water view, , I KOMPANY, Inc., 1327 Basse GrooVy Bach pad. $125. Prl $1T5 •l;lel t~ai::· >.gt' 4 BR, 2 ~n"~· db~ mo. (unfurn. negotiable). Full secti.rity FOR lease. Ne~ 2 BR.. 2 BEAUTIFUL a pa c 10 u 11 on SeashO're Dr. $220. • I Rd., San Antonio, Tex. 78212· ent.· Lrg )'I'd for pet. Car Fee. 9~. · · gyardarag.,,2501•.,. .. u ~rsc. pt'al bldg. -underground parking. Pool-near BA. patio home, Bltns, oceanfront BaJOO&. u"""r. 3 Property House 64)..3157 Include your ph011e number. Avl. .. · ~ mo. W'I a 1 • .e.AA 1:,200 ( " · N ··~ -l loiiiiiiioiiiii;;iitliiiiiiiiiiil catlfs Lrgest Renml Agcy COUNTRY living -Back CM. 646-72'13. · Lido Isle. Lois Egan v-n-u . S":"') carp, drape!!, trplc, r bdnns. D I sh wa s h e r , NICE 1 br apl for atna:ltl , • Liquor Lie. on Sale Homeflnders 547-9641 BAY ~ dart, 31rpBAI • Hpool, BRAND new 4 Br townhome, Douglas, H.B. $300, 968-0lSS dlsposaJ, fprlc. $400, mo. lldult. I.rave mess.age •Liquor smre $300K Yr. cpu K rps, c. .,.. !295. Double gorage, pool. YEARS LEASE W /POOL H-Fum. or 673-0729 -e A!rpOrt UphOlsW'y BUJ .. Singles OK. 1125. 2 BR. area. $3'15 mo. 2 0 3 7 2 Pets, kids. Call Dave 38R, 2 bath: FR-by...Westclill Shopping Unfurn 310 LRG 2 BR, 2 BA. Newport BACHlilLOR ap~ farap, •Carpets Orapes-i140K Yr Moblle.Home • ..Util-patd. Blrci>-A,vall. now. Aaent. 919-~833. em s:N394. Ania. Pool service incl. $500/mo. Bill Burl ' Slttim. Nu crpt'~. $273/mo, rwirn. pool. 1 blk btlCJt.. e F bric Store S79K tr Calil'• t.rged Rental Agey 642-Sa'.q • CD c:trps, 644-6200 (s45) Gener•I •Yrb'. s= winter. MM802. 1150 )Tly. $0-7290. .• HOLLAND BUSIN&SS Homoflnderi 547·"41 .. ,...., l1land 3 ,JR8&r.2 , bri:t;._ :t!'.:c..i yd. • :====;;;;=;:;.!!Aptt.~~Ftii'n.~-!:.:===360~ FURNISHED lltdlelo<, no I SALES -Llilo I I 12MJ !ll9-Q29C THE BEAUTIFUL BLUFFS -coot! no -$115. IMM171l · · 1 • Ll'rrt.E ISLAND OEM New paint ' · ~lous 2-level condomlnlulil w/view of 2 JlR., l bt., '"'!,New CG1>. 0-rol ~ ""'.' • ONLY d,... shot> In Otna RUSTIC CHARMIR SpodoJ.os 3 BR 2 BA. N.,, CARPI'S, dr>pes, gar, MW!Y. Ba. BR'' 2u. L·th b draj)OI deoor '"" $250. • Point. Pr!c«l at lnventocy + . Or!ew Cbo'1ner lino! decorai.d, 1155 mo. '2 •WP.Ort y, 3 s, ,~ ·-s -earn 3 BR., ; bt., Uni. ne,. corp, ATTINTIDH YRLY 3 i.-, I i. 4 Gii', • I nxtures..:;rmery RealD,,fl~ns.; .. '&b·bltPi.= •ll<loled brick patto, ~; cltililrcn,nopets646-5223 ceilings-close to pool•& shoppinJ1· ,$525/ drapet, dOQOr, yrty. $32!1. RINTIRS ll"sl°~'::l'-.1!1& )I ' ·Eetat•, $35o ~67S-2227 213~ lrpl~ Lavloh ...., of bricl<, LRC llv rm, trplc, din rm, mq. Jeanne Newman 64U235. (s ) 3 BR., 2 bt. Oc:e8ntiont. ~$ll5. !;looms Ideal for * 1 n•--k _ -·· 'Jr:: -I I YARDAGE shop, Westcllfl, ' ' ' beluns, knony plno paneling, 4BR. Woodland & HARBOR Film . Winter 1325, ~ ~ k I -•• ----' " estbl'd 12 yrs, NeU UIM. 3 BR .. 1% ha. Winier 1325 4 l>tln ca-ts. Country ltlt-HS 325 Esther, 673-0Qll 2 eJl'.: 2 ba. tum, winter •l\l~uil. ~mm. 1 ·• bachtl'I!' $150 yrty ·~ Tel'l'lfle oppty. SlOM + ln· o~JtRS400 mo. 675-&200 c~:_Guage w/e~. &>or. 2 BR, epts/drps. fncl gar. f,lrvlQ . I $300. S= w~~fos °t:f' ~~: Incl. m:mi • ~' I ventory. Lucas. 54S..sT38 8 . 3 QWf"ll r:rom So. Bay. $5&). Cple .only No chldrn/pets. M9Cnab-ft.llM""ttrCotn,.nr Octattfront, S:udenta ok. 'n75 bet. ~nn A bty. AYIO a, ASSQC.INV·N'EED $1500. to 2 BR. 2 BA, very pVt. paHO, Yearly only. Move ln today. Sl7ii ~l, 548-l400 sr,;S204 . 1 Br's SOmt Otc. I. hkc a prt ~ •• [ '1 h alth food dbl -•. winter $.'145 mo. OPEN S&tl&tn 1-5. 1U '· · vi 1 lrpl · t bt· wpt GT'>-8374 pllp cOkA.gen~sen,.,..Se ~-~•n' n_.:..! ... l n' •• ., ....... -, A'-'---, ~1-or ('Htn a BR. A!lk for Bettu, 646--717' D ~ ••t 191 •/ ewt, gt rms., c s ' . UU-" .w• 1 1.wu ,_.,.,, au.., IJV"i,M\Jll 7ne vi.,-(Jll~ •wi U Sal S.., Aft 5 Ill Dovef ,,_ -•I &: 11undtck1t. "Make Roon1 ,.fJr Daddy'• ~ior ph: 1 (n4) ~ You don't need a gull to 83&"'4 40· ~1\f ~7086 ' un.; · 1.,... MacArthur M4~1200 Open 7 D8)'I A Weck ... d9n out the 1911111* 'I ON-8ale c.nel'!lt L't qu o r "Draw , Fast". when >"" YEARLY $350. 4 Br, ram. BIACON RENTALS ... tum thnt junk Into cub I Ltceme ·Tnu\lferrablo By pla .. an ad m !ho Dail> RM., 111.Y vJew, tl...ulyl LOVEL~ BlG 2 BR. -,.,. hooll,Cttlltomla ltH3 llave--lhh>! ,... want to 1!ll! s. Cit. H•')'. N•~'-!!:!lb a Otl\Y )'Uol (!11H•llod N 1:•, t9T3. By oWner. Pilot Want Adi! ClU now 110 . Colllrw Ave, 0 r E. aid(!. X-<ln. No •lna:lcs. I "!'!!!!!! eeU? Clau\Oed ads do It li.rW\a ~ach ~91 ~ .. "-._Cl=.11_60-l61L'--:"""~,_-...,.. Pr·~. .. 642'-5618. SaJli1bury Realty. Ga.r. $200. MS--"573 -:: _ • '' ' . • ' • .. • • l -. • ,.,.,.,..n .. I I • . . ' ON th~ beach, yTly, 2 Br, UtU pd. Adults. No garage. $235. rilo. 16545 So. Pacific. (2131592-2359 Apt. Unfurn. BEAUT. 2 BR , 2 BA. walk to Shopping. 2 ¢lOsed gar. $)50 nm. Ca.U qt. 642-435.1 Balboa Island uNnrn.N 2 BR apt. -Little Island, Yearly or winter. Inquire 220 Abalone, or 61:>--1314. Ll'M'LE Jslancl Deluxe 1 br crpt; drps, D\\', ice maker frig. some furn. gar. \Vb·, $235 .• <\'\1aJI. yrly, 675-1669. Costa- NE\\1...Y DECORATED 2 Br "-'/gar, SIM. Fned yard w/ pa.Uo. Wtr pd. 2228 "C" Placegtia. Call btwn 1 & 5. 63$-413'.), L Co1t1 Mesi Costa Meu r······· .. ··· ..................................................... : · i Distinctively Different Adult Living . . . ii : BACHELOR APTS . or 1 IR APTS. w/lOFTS From $155 :. • • • ' -""" . : :1 New Bteed :, •' 393 Hamilton Costa Mesa.Ca.92627 "1714)645-4411 "" ~I • I ... Vista los Mares Apartment~ in San C le ment e Brand New G.arden Apartmen"ls Priv ote Patios New Shag Carpet Enclosed Gar~s New Decorator Drapes A M.inule to the Freew ay Near Shop ping Cent er Many with Golf, Ocean Views Children Welcome Available with Fireplaces, Di,hwashers A Block from Complete Medical Facilities 2-Bedroom, 2·Bath from $195 3-Bedroom, 2·Bath from $250 !n flit 111!el nerth ind of 5.,,.. Cltmtntt: 1•1y commutint lo Stt1t1 At1•, 1IJ b.1~ch citi11. T1~1 Cimino Estr11U1 offr1mp from Stit 011190 Freew•y, 90 p11t G1111r1/ Ho111it11I to f11n1 i1hod mod•I, Wttch for 1ign1 . ·- l ' • BUSINESS CORNER l[S] Found (frff ads} 550 ,t(>.31-73 wk old fem.ale kil- ten, part Sianicse, bluti 1 eyes striped tall. Vic Sea.view & Narcisaus, CdM. 61>-1064 FOUND Black & While male cat. Vic. or l!it & Grand, 1 Santa Ana. 5.">8-1096 8At:80'1\ Jslarid • yng nutlc collie/shepherd niix -flea collar • 67a-6070, 6'19-2561 F'ND: Sn1all lortg haired Ter- rier ·v ie. Slatter & Los Jardins ~'.V. 96.1-61.27 FND h'ish IW'ller, Vic ~larket Ba!tkCI & Ba]boa Bl'id. 11-1-Pleasc call 673-9t.191'""' FND: Cnl • yellow and "''hite -male about•1 year-old Vlc Vil. Wilson C.M. s.ti-2889 &ft 6 FND: young Siamese cat Vic of 18th Ct. CM. 548-8907 . I . • -- ' Suridly, Novembtr 4, 1973 DAil V PILOT J) tJ L __ carp•~ Service H•ID Wontod,.Mf.F. 710Holp Wonfod, -a, F 71"' Holp-Wo1\lod,.llOA~ 7JD Help .Wantod, Ma. F 710 Help. Wa~tod. ~ & F 71!_ H•fp W•"!_MI, M. F 710 H•lp W•nfod,"'. F 110 I Holp Wonfod, M AF m Carpet Claaning Floor Care & Windows ou1ch ~luJnL SC'rv. ~7·1~ - DWYER TELEPHONE DIRECTORIES EMPLOYMENT OFF£f\EO JANITORIAL lltlp wanted MOTO.R ROUTE PHARMACV !"l"'lllrl, lull l Mille, ama.µ lite mtg . co. r.1en, \Yomen or COOplt-i: "'e have an Of)('.nins:: tor a I ~~ ExpcMl'f1C'l'd only. need! reliable t I timt' for p/Un~ evt1. Apply 8-i motor route c1t.rritr In South 1;i;O;iliiii~' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil Cement, Concrete Cf!'.IEN'f It. alock \\'Ork. \\'all~. pa!IOlii, 1\dewalk~. etc. By hr. or job, 6-llJ.6915 (l;.'1Dtl': _ Pati6, dri\.'c.11 wu)k!l·ltcpol~. S81\' .'& rt'IHO\'t. i"rt"'<! e!U. 5t•1-..t'l9!1$ OfilVE\l/AYS • SIOE\\IAU\S Patios. Jess A n z a Id u a , 9)lf-0099. CISCO'S MEXICAN RESTAURANT • employee. Oppor. to 1n:iw t>ton.fo'ri, 249 B Ea 1 I ~"\Ina • Laguna NIJ\it-1, • v.•Jco. Mln. el!'per. rtq'd. Emenon, Onrret. NW"1"~ lJI. PlraMt rall *Print Shop Coordinator* South Coa1t Villi., "1.en or women 18 oi over with cars, station • 9!!l-2'l90. Jim C 11 n t. JANrI'OR. Pan 10 ru.1t tlnlt. HaJTY ~ly, 642-021 for ln- l W. S1111flow•r a s.. c .. u Pt.-. Dr.> wagons, or light .trucks. Pleasant outdoor \\:0Ckday1. Day tin~ hwMt Must be-f«m:inon and appoint.men•. s woik, your available daylight hours. Cali-EXCITING new •al~ oir flexible. $2.Q an· hour. Ph. F.qua.I Opp.>rtu•iily ErnpToy. -anta Ant fornia license plates requlred. Apply for-job portunity tor men & 644--4332. r:r. A If · description ana training 8:30, 10:30 AM or \\'•men. 96i-2U& JUNIOR SALESMAN· ;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;• pp cohon• Now Being Token For: 1:30 PM al.the location nel!l"sl you, daily. EXEC. SECRETARY Earn t~l<O per week.,.,:... NCR OPERATOR Cocktail W1itre11e s B•rftnder• F·ce . ~Id $700 ins nrtrr lk"hool and Sa.tur· • BEGINNING NOVEMBER.7th Exc1Ung caret--r !or l'llarp day1 llf'lllng ne,11 tubtcr1p-\\1e Kre look1ng tor an u~r. Ho1tes1e5 W•lte_rs • rx1i;aon w/lanct dcvrloper. !Ions for !he DAILY Pll.01'. Nert. OfH"rator, ho\\"tvcr, \\'e -' 1940 N. Glas.1111. Ave., Or'•nge . Xln t ben,•lltll. Al*> fee Po-Tills is nol a pt1ptr route wtl\ lrnin. P 1fime only. • GIVE US YOUR BEST AND WE'LL l l Cashiers Busboys c 1134 Gilbert Ave., An1htlm s~tlon~.. Call Elly ·El.lis, and does not Include de-AJ')111'(1x, het"'n 20 & 24 hr!C JACK 'J'tlulane. r •·JI a I,.; 3328 w I s S A [ 5$-8505, Cuntrol career F~m-liveries or '-'Ollectblg Open. IX!i' \\'eek.-GIVE YOU OURS! • 11'nlod. add. tic A~l 269012. And Kitchen Help ' st trett, •nta "' ployrncnt Agency, 3 4 0 0 ing11 \n Co;;ta l\1f'sa F~ntaln I ' _l\ly ~VllY Co. 5·11~.___ 88 Fair Drive, Bldg 16, Costl Mell · I Irvine Slvd., N.B. Valley and South 1i1trUington Pleture Coniact VA Jt lAN OA1'/\ MAOllNES Contractor GEltWfCK &. ~lN -(Orange County Feirg rounds.1 enter from EXEC. SECRETARY Beach. Apply now by calling Greit Nel'•land ~3505 1hc bit:: 1•0111~ll1Y in small Apply 111 P.no• "4ol!Clo, ttlr11Frldoy10 •l'll·l p-Nei"port Blvd) •o Bonk of Amer1co Bldg Conu·. Atlcl!t & Rctnod '" ~ · Controller of n at i 0 n 8 1 I)' 5~·3013. . , t•(in1puleris ltLA 01 11 inl· State Llr. Bl·ll·IJ'.!l lqu•I OpporhlRlty lmpley.r M/f knov.·n ~la 1!harp indiv. Equ11.l Oppoi·. Employer 500 Ntwpon Ccntrr l)r. I 1uNU:ite openi~ in our In· Sf"....ootl 54 9- 2110 ~ Equal Opportunity Employer 11,1go00 skills & 10 kry ad· Jr Admin Aide Newport Bea(.i\, Calif. I -huui;{' i.irl111 shop taJ· i:i • Gardening dr!" .Pn>f .. 11tock brokerngf' needed by Newport Beach Equ:il Oppor E I t'OOnllru1tnr. Rcspon11ibilitlcic Televl • R • H I W M 71 Help Wanted, M & F 7JOHelp Want~, MI F 710 of flnancu1.! expc, r. Jll~ rorp:irntt> otfit"C. K"°"'·ledgt ~ · nip oyl't' ' inchul" <'\IOn:lln:1!1ni:: fl 11 , A GOLF' COUnSE L,\\\'~ 11on epa1r l --~~-~nted, & F 0 N.B. otcs. Salar; to $650. of 1re1)(!1'al oUlre 1-·u· ...... o. NEED 6 coopl('s. F..an1 Jlhascs of prinlinx and ' !----C II It I tit 5'1()..6055 ~ ""' '~" ac r<'f'll'O\IUcllon. You "'tit he- al 1 3 lhc 1,_'0>.1 or hiring a COLO!? TV Repair espa·i 1 \SSE 1 LE . A e en n.son, • tl'Ptng neccssary. Pbonco $100-$1.000 nlO rts 2nd in· l'f'spon.,lblc for o!'>'lrring antt I ,,.,.n .. 11,., .• !l's 11 ... ,. • .,,.,, 1.,,..... bl 1 ' b. '· / l\ B RS, rltnne days. D I' S d 0 I Co&tal Pl'rsonnC'I A""nc)· ·, t4-' •• ~" fo• appo' 1 1 -m· Appl •11 ""' . ,.u ' · '" o..o ..... ...,nA C', lll0$ Ill Onie. ,\pµly Ai·row '1•-•factu" e 1very u a n "' ' '1'tV"(lo.)O..I • In men "" "' ' · .,.. " • 11111 1111 :1111111" rnale1i:il--1·e· ~ . .. ' I•' o la ""''" .--n y y 2790 Harbor Blvd. Ot * KEY ENTRY . • "' • .,.,,., " .. • l'IC/l,,,(' • na -/ Ii )' Hr ivn l>'n-c 1.'Slinu.11<' H. B NB · Ii· C I ;i'~~i;;;i"iii0"~· iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii. Quin>d to prodUl'f' eopi1'S ol l , & u1i\orll. n 111"o~r::in1 fin· you. & c.~L Bert' G~ll~nm· ing, -1:> Logan Avr.>., ~1. Execuli\'t' 5<ocretary OP ERATO S I' I final 1u·l11li!<I 11ubllcatioftl. 1I ' 1h•·n \\" n111kf' p1'0p1•r· upph· 966-218J. ' AUDITIONS bcini:i held for Highly dcpcndablc to \\"Ork R * NEYER A fEE lktrnnlr)(• 1yp1· or plut(',: • <'ation~ nt thC' ri:,:h l rin11•: 'ff ci1"Cus sidt' shov.• lype 0 .F DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE· 1 for lop executive in small Oo you need Cbristn1as 1'N'i1111·r<I !or ~·ai·h iirintl'li l , lh:dllcicl.:~. in1'•'l'il1·\d1·~. !1\111 1 e I b<.irker to \\'Ork exhibit al QU IRES THE USE OF' A LARGE STATION fast gro1ving company n1ov-l\loncy? \\'" nl'ed yoo. IOb l'lr. You \\:111 ltl1'11 11u,'l'.1 ~ur1•;l'nH·n1.~. 1 u~~ki~"~ .. ni· CEllAl\ltC T!Lf: NE\\' S.·. convention Ph (7141 551-9906 \.\'.t\GON OR VAN . CONTACT MR . HARRY ing to Irvine Industrial 1vr.t'kcnd1. all shift&, nan1c oind supcrviS<" t'flllation anti\" T1 1Y~n,. O\•·t ·Si~ d in~ 'I ot1 l'l't11odcl F'l'l'(' csl S111 jobs I AUTO PARTS SEELE'Y"' 330 WEST BA y STREET, COSTA co1nplc~.loShurp skills, letter r:r !1~: ho1117. Col29n""•'ta. GENERAL O FFICE I :ll'l'Ctnbly uf public:;ilions. A ~lvr, l":.-~u:s1.· .).~'~' 111:111 & \\ch.'Onl~. 5:U'i-212ti: IO:XJK'l'. or \\'ill !rain, Young, MESA TELEPHONE 642 '321 FOR AP composit n, n1ust knov.• , t')' ra cs. ey ACCOUNTING CLERK I cnu1~111~h kr\O\\'lc<i~r or 11flli't. 1\\,<' i.:1.~1 )OU 11p!i 011 T S 'I [ ainhitlnus, rasl k•arncr. Call PO · l ·'t • SIH, Mln 3' yrs exp, contact ~.i~· ~s{X'rie11£'t•. JDC, 2283 FILE SUPERVISOR uffsl't 11rintini.:. pla1i· inak· tlws\'. too. 1 c.1v(• U!i .n try . op 01 IJny 01 , ('Ve . 5.'ll- 1180 INTMENT. !\tr Proctor, 54()-1880 ext 9 airv1e1v Rd., Costa 1lc!\a, SECRETARY 1 111~ ;in.I rclutf'd bincl('l'~ )Ou'll be glad you dtd. ' s. ' ' · ~'000 1-landler, male 18 Ol' 'S-IG.fiOOl, CLAIM. S EXAMINER 1 <lp1•r:Hion11 JlCCl'>;..~nry . If )'OU , i * QUALITY * AVON MAKES I over, full time niles. Apply . 1 1ncct lhc.se c1ualilication1t Wfl S{] ~(II * l\IULC':! & TOP SOIL * CllRlSTMAS THE S~OON An Equa Opportunity Employer Burger King, 2015 llarbor KEYPUNCH OPR GEN'L OFFICE P .T . n111l ;i.rf' looking fo1· a c'f'n1- 586-6!l30 · TO BF. Jou:v ... · Blvd., C.M. D II p pony 1hal ottcr:o;: :,,q<1-021· ~c lJ r<~1 1 I -~ artne ersonnel · .l a v• £'I'll Tree Service Earn rxtra n1oney for .gifts H I W eel M &. F 710 1 Hel W eel M&F 710 .FULL tln1e gardener & 1 • Service Ag9 ncy , • :\lnd<'t'n Facilltlt•s PROFESSIONAL g<11'rlC'tk!I'. EE . _ ~s an AVON Representative ~ P ant ' P ant • · maintenance man tor apart· 2 Yn min. ex-pe r. I* E.'\!'l'lll'lll Berwflts ll'f'C "·or k, pr u n l n g ·1TR . Truninuig & Ren\oval U\ )'OUI' sn"''" !Im•. Call.· menl ""mpl••. Do not apply IBl\o1 02-1 500 N IC I D c D£obr1s 11auJhig Hort t , .. ~.. " "v ~ ewpor en Ir r . ii on1pe1 ilivf' pay .~p1·inkle>rs. ~ll·u11up jobs, , · . · s u-540.1011. ·, CLERK, Part-time. must COOK . fltime, ev~s only. unless fully qualified. Good Jo n cl s ca JI 1 n g . George, ·dents. 5l8-&t28. Reas. BABYSl'M'ER & 1 i 1 e hav~ own transportation. Conscientious, reliable, to salary. Refer. 644-5494 ROYAL INDUSTRIES Newport Beach 64Q.8470 \ Plf'USf' apply In l"'•'!l(in l)t' ' " IH6-a893· houS£"kccping wanted. HB Prefer live in Ne'A'JIOrl ~earm & 3dvance. Call FULL time help wanted, gift »i<> E. Dyer Rd. t•on1111·r EUROPEAN l:11r11Pnrr. I . 111·:1 a.~a. 2 children, 6 wks & Beach. Co"a Mesa area. ,..,. aft pm. store, apply between 10 & Sanla Ana 540-3210 NEVER A FEE \R· K1~1fka . :\lainlt'nnnef' · Landsi:upin~. EmpJoyment f 21~ yrs, hrs 10 lo 5 ri.1on-1''ri, 5-47-1681, 1'>1on. 8-4:30. qoc>K -Breaklast needed 6 PM. Tat's 320 Newport Equal Oppor.Employer mlf Tree R<>tnoval. \lrry J't•ason-1 ~· $45 lo s;,o a \\'k, 968-7413 immed. Must be exper. for Center Dr .. NB KEYPUNCH "'96 0" 9610 ' VDM abl1-. 612-:i:l.."9 ""'~s. ...,.., ~· 12 CLERICAL fa ~t 0"'"'atlon "' ·~· -• J b W -• " I • • <ll' """'":u " ..-· ~. , GAL FRIDAY . I exp. Pe-p/11·-n1·1·".0 ACCOUNTING CLERK , ANY AND ALL Gardl'nin<>, o ant""', fema e 702 l"VV'\K fl ' 'II · '"' ...... '"~ "' BABYSIITER needed for R PART TIME '-VV • time. IVl train. T.hlS. C?· needs v.'t'll organilcd ~ys 3 opr. cxpcr pref. Tras!1 ll11uli111,,~1 pletl' NEED h<'lp at horn£'? \\'c yr old boy, 2 to 4 dRys Conv~lcsccnt hos Pi I a I . 1nd1v1dual \V/general <lfc 5'1&-{1331. Entry lrvcl position for 1 Serv1Cf'.· Glrn :00-3210 or have-aides, nurses, l'll a time. while Mom & (TEMPORARY 642-(1593. expcr. & "":ath aptitude_ to LADIES_ earn $IO a day bright individual \Yfpolcn-VARIAN DATA 89io-231:.! ho u s e kpii;, conipanions. Dad g<> on businl'SS lrips, COUPLE or lady for occas. 11,andle . vanet>: of duties. in your <lWn home part tial for unlimited future. MACHINES EXP. Kn o \\'Ir d g <'a ht e Ho n1 c nia kc rs Upjohn JIN'fcr older Y.'On1an. Beach 5 WKS.) 1vknd~ & vacations Slay t antast1c starting sal k co. · l . · 1122 l\fichclron Dti\·t· Gnrdl'ner. Clf'unups. Haul· ;,.17-£GSI. v.•alk art>a HB call 5:16--0789 overnite w I grand pa . beneJ.i.ts. ~~ Fee Paid. 1,~ ~~!Ja;PP fn~n 'frr*:~ ao~ Dartnell Personnel hvine, Calif.. 926&t ~ng. Totat Yard ~'faint. DA \' \\'Ot·k. Ccn'l clng. and BAB'i'SITTER 11 cl' d e d , General clerical de ta i I . Prepare his lunch & d inllt'r. Reimbursed. Fee Jobs Also. 9em-5pm, Gold C oa 1 1 Service Agency iTI41 833-ZKKI . '· :>16-2889. ""'"'Sci<.L'CPI""· , Rel. trans. mature. Late aftns &. eves. ·Hours: Mon thru rpurs~ +-8 No personal care. 846-6449 Jaton Best Ag.ncy Industries, 1;os s. Grand, ' ·~ ·~ Sal o ·' 7400 kh 500 N ·•· I C t D An t:qulll opportunity ' EXP. Japanese Gardc1l('I'. ~·~ 1w; 01· 5'11·9330. 6 Yr. old. Our hon1c. ri.1eals pm, .,..... pm.-DELIVERY man for-early 1 Broo ursl, F. Vly. Santa Ana. ewpor en er r. , ~ Sul ,...,, employer 111/f • Comp. 'i'ard mi~int. Shrub-Jobs Wented, M & F 704 ~7~sp. prov. OCC area. Interviewing hrs 0 NL y ~1i:ning LA TimMes llome te ,,..:, 963-6775 UGUN·A Bdt. Lh·e-in, Lov-NawportS..eh.A4t-84J!> ; ~ry. t.rl'<'11. I: r l'e l-sl. :J.') • • J2-2:?.0Thurs, Novem'ber8lh . ....., tvcry Route, ust have GENERAL OFFICE ing ch.Md care + lrte hou• PRODUCTION 'TECH. ' 5''6-0527 aft 3. Apt. House Owners: BAB 'i' S I 1' TING. J 1 . econo~lc~ car, 23 yrs ?Id, Fee reimbursed. X l n ' t keeping. Separalc room 1 MOW & ~OGE Marn•~ <OUplc available 10 housekcep;ng: room & PACIFIC MUTUAL ~?·0>hcll1:'fi, no ooU~ting. •tarHng llal. Great co .. acros.' from bead!. <!J.1·84€6 NEWPORT BEACH ':~;;:~~:i t~~_:;~g;nf~r P~ ! , CLEAN UPS ntanage your property. lli~h-board + salary. 833-3343/ 100 Newport Center ,Dr. '2 hrs d ly, Wl'Strrunster1 be:nf'fiti jncluding "pr o'1. a1t. 5 p.m. · : ctucrion 11ituatlon involving !' e flM--0651 e 919-113.i eve_ - -NewPQrt' Beach• GG, Iffi, areR, Good sup-*sharing Fantastic futul'e L ·nc1 · -CLERK$ I ly expcrieneed sll'Ong rent· -_ plemcntary income. 63S-m4 for sba· rp ., •• ,· ...... 1-~,.._.; •. a 1~ape_Ar~f\itect TYPISTS 8 "'orking knowledge oJ General Services t>rs. \Vr guarantee to----,in· BABYSI'ITElt. 4 nights per ...._.. "'-' • .. ;,u'"" Desi --11ng le 11 & cl~ e i mu I , crt'asc )'OUr present in('()nic v.·k, short hrs. in my home, DELIVER¥ man, early tUn ofc. expcr. who enjoys lots or 9n1r No l'Xperlence Necessary cquivalenls. PositJOn will ii\-1 "TlflNliS" by l\100..,;1•. Gl't1'l & upgradr )Our units. Rrf-Npt Hghts. l child. 64S-6850 COMMERCIAL· I Times Route Costa Mesa I of vaiicty. ·AJ90 Fee Jobs Exp'd, eary oocn I voh'f' lhe phasing of Ca~nlry, Rcpnin;, Plum-rn:u~s. l111n100ialc a\·aii-1 BAKERY Saleslady ( u 11 TELLER area. Must ha'.ve dependable Jason Besa Agency. Flintridge Landscape Conip. Staffing beautiful ne1\' officl' precision electronic <.'On1- hing: F.IC<.-. It e nl od f' I in i; il>ilily !:l9S-1-133. : time for good shop.' Experienced ti car. S46-&t27. 17400 Brookhurst, I-'. Vly _ a-16-01 91 in bank of Cal Bldg, 2 blks ponl'nls. RN1. min of t yr. &tZ-5613 . Help Wanted, M & F 710 1 Call 613-8686 DENTAL Assistant, exp'd Suite 213 963-6i75 I ~EGAL. ~e<..'t'etary; good typ-from QC airpor1. O.C. residl'ncy & \\'Ori< CARPENTRY.' <'lc.•c1r1ca!. -,BOAT ""l••n1an, full 11·m,. UNITED chairsi<lc & fronl desk. El i General Ofc to $600 11~g skills, i:nln. 80 ~·.p.m., hisl6J')'. ""'" .. Toro ~1395 • 1ght dlctallon, son1e exp D El t • plun1bln.t:. hx·lL t & B . . &. marine n a r c1 ware CALI FORNI A BANK • . . . I ~re~t opportunity tor sharp prefcrrcd. 83l-903l (Irvin~ Call for application & in· uncan ec rOftlCS home Rl'p..'l.ir. s.W-1 IOJ AU BeRllG" ETeNmpT. -tv"°" I sale~n1an .. paI1 lime. Call DENTAL R eeephon1st. 1 1nd1v. w/r.o.me ore exper. Airport Ar ea.I lt'rvil'1\' appln: J\trs. Grinics: m,r; Fairvii•w Rct. Hauling for 1ntciviC\v. &:hock Boals, 2301 S. Main SI Laguna Jillls, El Toro area, k good typing. If you like . (ill) 833-3741. Cosio Mt'tiD 2900 La r ayctle, 673-2050 Santa Ana rxp'd, all phases n1astcred. activity this is the job for LOT ma~. Full t.ime. Allen NO EXPERIENCE Equal Oppor. Employrr m1f fl4 7·95Sl Salary open, repties ('()11- 1 you. ' Oldsmobile Cadillac. Ask . NEEDED BOOKKEEPER fidentlal. 830-113U. J•son Best Agency lor Mr. Stevens. 495-0800 PUDLIC rclalions 11:gency LOCAL n1ovln;:: & hnulinit by atudcnt. LatJtl' lruck . Reas. Ba1Ty. 5.14-18·16 or Equal Opportunity L "' · . NECESSARY ~re k ~ seeret\U')'/assistan1 & l.:\'nC'ral ortit1, v.'Ork, wilh EQ\plcyer DESK Clerk. nite shift 8 17400 Brookht.ht. F . Vly VN""'-halleng1ng .,os111on for \ 111ith wriling ability. Send UNSKILLED l"l'staurant eiq>. Apply al pm. Ask for Jackie Suite 213 96l-a77:) full or p/hme rmployn1ent. TRAINEE POSITION I I p 0 Bo 1903 ·~h Ibo \Vestbrook. Surf & Sand GENERAL HELP Opening on 1 1 P ?w1 -7 A ti1 I resuml' 0 · · x • CLEANUP-ll11uling. Ga11t~r. Ani?rosia, 50_1·.lUl · Ba 3 CONTROLLER l shift. Top sRI & benefits. NOW OPEN Nt'\\'poii Bl'ach. yard trnsh. trl'C!I _-\\thr1t I Peninsula, :-.i.B. rear en· ... 1·1b •x~nc· < ,.,.11,··-ss hotel. Ca 1 Mon thru Fri To $7 hr. For tire mounting, Pl 11 ... 2 GB PUNCll PRESS TRAJNEE P I LABORERS I o ..• 1 •1 11 " .. """""" '""" ·~ .. ~ only 4g.1-6574 a•-~ '"ashing, c a r ease ca vo..,.. 410, for ap-Inclustl'ies of Sci. Calif. I · . havr )'OU? ron1pt, l'l't' 6~<,tn<'I'.', or '-'u " u er to be associated \~ith a uo.:•jl_ll y polntn1ent. has immediate opening11 ror , 1·~ $.'\. hr. !0 1· . large na- 613-0tM7. eJ1tin11:1tes. 841-8115 1 1 r:i·0200. .,...,,..,1h , oriented company. DlSllWASHER.. 1nodern con-maskers it sanders, utiJ}ly I lrainl'e' in _,ii. P 1a Y.1 IKln\\·tde corp .. ,. c e k In g SKtPLOAOF:R & t1u1np !nu: BOOKKEEPER sal"~. _ ~.'able. Ca I I "" · 11.· ·v •11. '" •vu. u'"""'"· marketin0" dislributi"•J & career nunded •"""°"' k •···· valc--cnl hosp Xln't •·or'· .-~.,-& ,~ ,,__._,._ LVN, modt'1·n eonvala.cent u I 1 ..._... '"'t.~· ing conds. 642-0093. F.OIO JOB AGENCY hosp. Xln't ~·orking conds. "' high 1 .,, \\'cu·k . Con<·rcll'. uspha '·'1 Interim ! For largl' n1usic store. Exper. 979-8860. 315 3rd St., Suite~ Cnll 642-0523. credit merchandising. 6 1l<'1v J\1ust he schOO gt"clll iqi,\·in~. hrc:ikinA;. ~16-71~ p I S . in A/R .t-A/P nccc~~. Xln't DOMESfJC llclp George u . . B h 536-1439 locations 10 opi>n in i111-& haw nrar appcor. Be '.\2 t 'T. I-'URNI TUrlt: Va11 ersonne erYICe IX'n<'fits ,r., plcasAnl sur. *Cust. Serv to $650 Allen Byland Agency, 100.B .,,untinJton eac LIVE-IN hOust'kceper I baby-m<'diate fu tu1·c. l\1any J>Ol'i· j a ble to \\'Ork overli1ne. I-lap. for local fu1·n h11uls & ~1•n'I 17581 I rv"1ne Blvd. 1'0undinRs. Alik fo1· M1·s. Jnl'l operation. X l n . I E. 16th St., S.A. 547-0395. GENERAL Office -mature sllfer. l\f11tul'e. \Viii have tior,s now open for full tin1c '.V.Y to trnln you. Co. pro. ,716 v.•oman, must be accurate own room I:. TV. &15-5420. pcomancnt """'pie.. 1note1C pcoplf'. rro1n \,vithin hauHng. ; .. t~·IS62. j,·,_1-· · ~11 5 Tustt"n .l~le<=l~'~'·=C=o='="='=M=u=si='=· 6=46-0271::..:=:·i typistf\itl' sh. , 1~u --*M h' • h $4 52 D • A • typist, able to hand I e MACHINISTS, exper. needed * XLNT TRAINING PRO· lhl' oryan;i:nl.1011. Work ln FREI'.: Pirk-up. Appliancl's. 838--5460 Bl\PH & Sec., Bnlboa Pen. ac inist r . • r 5 SSIStant telephones, lill' bookkeeping for small manut tirm. Xln't GRAJ\t their dental prod. div. scrnp n1cl11I. Call anyt1111c. E'lual 0 r EiTI i<l er l\latul'e woman . non En~nr or turN'I lathe, LD. Young lady ( 18-281 to assisl background belplul. salary \\'orklng ('()ndS & c 0 . * SUMMER & · P/Tll\lf~ ~C!fO J C?B A<;JENCY 675-:>2.18 ppo · p y s111okcr, JX'ml position, full grinclcrs in healfh spa. \Vil! train;'no open. 979-14,2:1 • benefits. Apply Tapmat.ic, WORK ALSO AV,\IL FOR 315 3rd St.. Suite 203 HA l:1 LING. Ruhbish or ACCOUNTING CLERK J !imt' sAlary open 642-9006 *Keypunch Opr $550 exp, nee. Apply in person ' GIRL FRI PAY Corp, 1851 Kettering st. 1-11 G H -SCHOOL & lluntlnglon Beach 5.l&-1439 furniturc-Sn1al1 o; lnr:;t". Assist crt'dit !Tianagcr in Rfl 7 P~1 I Yr expt>r. req'd any a1t .or eve. 2112 Harbor Dynamic )'OUl1& co. seeqjJl-lrvil'I(', 919-6080. J COLLEGE SfUDENTS Call ror C'SI. &l6-l•ti8 ,·rrifyin~ c·redil applications, Cashier Hostcss, f/time *Purchase Sec'y $550 Blvd., Costa tifesa.. div. who wants resp. & MAIDS • C011PANY BENEf'JTS J Prog1:am. Mgr S22K Housecleaning 1 IYI><' lc1tet'S. ptl'pal'e de· l\1aturl', Experienced Xln't aC(:uracy in typing. chance l<> advance rapidly It $01\-!E P;\ltT T 1 J\t J-:. EIN.'tronic Components . . . x e BLUE DOLPHIN e tikr detail DRAFTSMAN/ to .,__,tary to V.P. of co. PO S l TI 0 NS AL S 0 ·,Product Linc Mtu,iager S20K pos1ls, mau11a1n . e1'0X 111a· """'"' v ·ia L·,~. N.B. ..._Sec'y Ins. to $600 SI --;;~ Call Sall Harl Maiu-. be AVAILABLE Oat.a Communieationg rhinr. rte. ~1any finc rom· ~ ~ . uu . . :in't sh. Report to VP ol DESIGNER ~Coastal J>irsonnci Ftti~e. ;;s~ er so ~x~:i FOR PERSONAL Design Engr lml'Chl to S14K " puny bc11C'(its. Call 111rs. CA~HIER nights. part llme, production. 2 _lo 4 yrs practical exp. "'-cy, 2790 Harbor Blvd.. f.f...... _ INTERVIEW CALL: 'Cost Acent Manul 10 Sl 2K Grt>enn1an for intervie\\', exper. Call ~ *Rocopt/PT , in mechanical drafting + CM'" ... 5 ILO. B Cl b ,.,25,1 General Offic1• S450 642--1'.121 qr apply al th c 642.7880 52 .-$ 2 .SO I min. 2 yn tccltnical train-or a uu. ay U · ~ Girl Fri, Bu('na Pk 10 Si50 DAILY PILOT. 330 \\"l'st C G . I f I .;nr equivalent. Exp. in machine HAIR Stylist wanted, within 1221 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B. Monday Only f.5 Fi C Bkkpr, 1'·. VI)· $700 B SI I Co t ,1 ~-ASTIN e(lucahona 1 m L•tc t · Pl I I 1··• y · f "··ta •t uy • r('(' . s a i c.,a. nced mall's .~ females from yp1ng. G us l sur-100 s or al lo:u equipment 1c o u.io esa. ~1ALE help wanted, apply • Secretary to $050 D~llITIN(' Cl 'k . rounchngs._ row in lo df'sirable. 5'46--3361 1-4 K l ky F'r'ed c 11 J · s· •; , A , : • e1 ·, t>XP"f' 20-15 +, }TS. _No pxpe1 . (/lime. Kard Co . pm, en uc 1 NOTEI a eannLe 1sco • f/tinu-. 3-11:30 pn1 shirt . ncccss. S3 !>Cl' hi·. Apply *Sec'y/Travel to $650 1714)~s03!}on HEALTH & nutrition club ·Chicken, 693 S. C~t Hv.'Y, Real Estate Silesman & Sid Hof(m11n DI i\lun thru Fri. Hospital l'X· Fri. Nov. 9th, 1-3 p~t. Sh 90 1,.,,...,, . kills lorming, need men or Laguna Beach. NEWPORT HOUSE OF CLEAN P•'r :1 n1~1s1. I' a c i f i ca Conceiir Jl.1edia, 1500 Ada~s . · .. ;-~\·. 1;vvu typing s DRILL PRESS TRAINEE v.·qmen Part or full tm. tiitAN-TRAIN for window 1in-If you have a license or Y.'ant Personnel Agency Prof i'lil'l' tor l10llll' or 01 , .. lloi:p1tnl, 842--0611. l'xt 211 1 Ave .. near Harbor. Suite & 1nilt!11!\l'. To $2.75 per hoUr. \VIII ~ \\'ork yo ur hom~mem-ling installf'r. StArt $2.2."> hr. one, !rec Peg Bolinger for Ill Dover Dr., N.8. . ' Cal'.JH!ts, upholS'ICI')' & flex.II'~. ADl\.TtTIING & i;isx clerk. 306. Cosht l\fcsa. • *~ec y/~T . . $.2.S~ taught compleJ l'ly to run berships. 963-5878 tlalses to s-i.;,o ivil hin 1 yr. ronfidl'nlial intcrvic1v. ncd , 6G-3170 ~>-16 ··r p/luil•' 11Pti1-7:3()Al\I. Sat CASUALTY I • A Ctl· Xln I <lppcn . fo1 caree:r 111 drill presses&. several other llELP 1vanled for a beauti-Over 25, t:ill, neat. Sorry, Carpet, 497·1161. ' ... !"! .. ,..,., .......... 1 · ·JI· a. ~ • 11 .. , 1 1 nsulance g hotel biz \rill bcc0n1c types of machinery Regular fu1 J b w need I h l 6~94. LA D'I: \VISllE;s DA y \\'OR!\ '" ~\111. .-?sp1 a t'X~T. a \ cy Girl. P/linir . pref'd. f/tin1l'. , 30 . M . be , supper c u . e no ong a rs. ~ ---It I Est ' Sule GOOD . AND RELIABLE. 111t1!>it P&ic1f1c~ ~I o s p 11 a 1 , \\'ork your hrs. Oic 111 CdM. *S , / R E $,lS day raises. 1ust 111 cockta:il \Yai:lresses, wait· l\'IAN needed lo I earn NURSERYMAN - Helper ea a II s .. . , ~ ~ 411~ .~lZ--()(111, t•xt 211. Exper ncccss Good sat ec y • • to good physical heo. th. Pern1. J'e'Slll"S, cyster nian, dish-s tat i 0 n er .y business. Gardner. \Vater, \\'Ced, earl'! VILLAGE RE~ ERENCF.S 1 AMBITIO.US? ; S~ncl ~sunle 1~ P. O. Box Oppo~. for carec'r in p~Jl· v.'ork. ,\·asher. Femaie apptica111s Pleasant work. t~/timc. ot planls. SZ.00 per hi-. 40 Masonry \\',, !lrt look in< lor inatut't' 8, Corona de! J\lar, Calif. le~s1ng. Gd sh & typing ECHO JOB AGENCY n11.1st be attractive & natur· Beach Stationeri;, 1 so 7 hr. wk. Permanent. Call 92625 skills. 3lj 3rd St., SUite 203 al looking. Apply at Kismet Newport Blvd, 01 673-2261 Mond ay only. 8:30 Brick-Block-Stone in;:on, \\'On1cn or couple wilt-. . *Sec'y Mktng $550 11untlngton Beach .546-1439. Inter . 1100 \ll. Coast Hwy, AM·l1:30 AM REAL ESTATE ing to \l'Ork for thl'ms.:~~~1ves. uJ "'A"',,._ .. ,... MARJNE Maint Co. 9Ceks _ • &lf>.8266 • 1 ·f 1 CEMETERY 1\1 ark et in g or sales E.'ITAB. r~ IC'r Brush route. N.B. Ask for Eric . .....;.."°'" f 11 . . 1oy NURSES A rea <lJIPIY 1 you wan ° bRckground helpful. Sal or romni. Car & pholl(' u &: part time emp ees, Painting It , gl'l oul of that rut. t llC'CC'S>i. S!H-t~. HELP Wanted, full time. must have so1ne painting Peper hangint ,ow· hon1r, part or full HELEN SHAFFER Cult Station. 2436 Newport & Boating exper, apply in RN Assistant DNS, P t.I ' s , 1 Supervisory exper. req 'd. Sa1 nc1,'0. Xln'I lrin:::;l' I benefits. Sk:iltl'<I nursing facility. Park Udo Hl'al1h I Care. 466 Flqship Rd. N.B. tn co n j u n cl io n 1v l I h LUtl-IBLEAU SCliOOL or REAL ESTATJ:: is offt'rin;:.: an unusual oppo1 tun- ity in this C'AC!lini;: fic>ld, IC )OU Al'l' iull'r· esled in joining !hr ranks of hi{::h paid ptof~-<ional real c.,_ slate JX'Oplr, C:i11 5.'\I·~. Ask for "Ir. Ca •erino. iin1<'. r-or intrr. call 646-5390 FUN"'E"RAL PERSONNEL AGENCY rat Profit i.;; attarflCd when Blvd. 642--1TI1 person Mon-Fri at 8:30 AM TOP QUALITV or :H0-0928, 8 a.n1 . · 11:00 4212 Can1pu.~ Dr , B--4. N.B !>:ou sell. thl'OO;ih rci;ult-g.el· 1 * HOUSEKEEPER. hvl'-in, Sea Lancers 211 E Coast Inttrior & cx1e1ior C'nan1rl :1.111. O:iily. , 557-2ill ting ~~~· Pilot Cla!l!Wod o\vn \\later vie1v room. exp., ,1~Jwy='-~N~B::__~~--- 11ricrialist. 1 1mn1 or any ..Ae:PLICATIONS COUNSELING Ad!S. 64-5618 _ refe~s. nn1sl d1·ive. top Marketing T r a inM p-.:1.rt._ C:ill Lylf' fitU--.:.119 orlto bC' iffkl'n for 1011 & pari Help Wanted, M & F 710 I Help Wanted, M &. F 710 salary, 846-0106 Skilled or Unikiltd ~$-9:)1~. !inic JIOSltions. ?-111.le or llOUSEKEEPER. live in, MEN PROr. \Vallrovertng ~tale ff'n1alr. l\1u:;1 bC' lS yrs of . cook. scnie meals. n1ust lic . ....c:l_o. 279514, insu1· .. nll agl' or oldcr .. Tues. Nov. I Bc:1ul1fu.l Pacifl<'. VI c 111 EXECUTIVES-MANAGERS drive. Lgt" Laguna/beach Needed oc>1,. to 1\"0rk f(lr large electrical concc1·n in Orange Co. Bxper oot ncrl'ss. clue lo xln't training program. EAm as you leam. Slj() pet wk. a~ per \\Tittcn aireemcnt. Call l\londay only, 9am-5p111, • types ~j'l('r. i \ ·1 : Gth thru Sat Nov, 10th. 10 i\lcn1oru.tl. P.arle ts located ~h=s~c.~4~M-""3~1~38=~~~-,.. 842-4386. 11111 to 5 pm i or1 lhe h11ls1rlc overlooking K K HOUSEKEEPER, xln't cook. * PAINTING & STAINING K·MART the Newport Bal y area. 15 ' 25 ' 75K . . 12--8. N.B, area. Call Days I ' SALARIES. NEGOtlAILE INT/EXT. TRIM. ACCOUS 23691 El Toro Rd. Cemetery lots. crypts &: f S k (213) S3tl-8866-Ask" for Mrs. I-·REE EST. Jim 9i~8186 El Toro. Personnel ofc. · nichl's. B e 1 f 0 r e need Ar• You Unemp oyed Now-Are You ee in9 Payne PAINTER, highly qtLali!ied, APT. l\1gr. Exp'd. for 15 purehasc plan. A Ch1n9e -Worried About Your A9• -"n"o~u=s=E~KE=E"P"ER="","'c"°oo"'k'","'1,,...1ve efficient, \\'OUld like Your unils. Costa l\1esa. Tired of Broken Promises-Und.cided As To out. Own transp. $100 wk. business. Reas. 642-3158. call C.C. Doyle, 548-1168. A fast growing compaey A Proper Co11rse of Action -Linda Isle. 613.-5436. '94-0543 MASSAGE TECH. '"ith complete s c r v i c e PROF. \Vallcove1·lng, St. Hr. ARTIST factlities. l\.1ortuary. Chapel, ARE· YOU UNDER .PAl07 lfraU ....... •-V-• r'l no 279514, ins, all types of Mausoleum & Crematory all If You CCIII Answer The Poftowl, Cotetorln paper, 714/842-4386. \\'ilhin !he c~mctery. In The Affirmative, We'd Uke n Interview TRAINEE Young lady 118·28) 1valited for legitimate lull time posi- tion. No exp. nee. \Ve send I<> school, earn while learn. Apply In person n.ny aft. <lr eve. 2930 \V. • Cst. lf\''Y·· \'l'1vport Bench. PAINTING-Inside ,t-Ouisidl'. Capable ()f p 'f e P a r In R \\re 'want 2 cm<lt.ionally Wltll Yow Sma.H Jobs loo. Rcfcrtnt'CS. architectural renderings for 542..atl5 aftl'r 5' Pti1 l':<1panding 1oca1 firm, ~~~U:ary m~a~ ~fx~:; IF YOUll ANSWERS ARE TRUTHFUL PROf. painter, honC!l1 work. NEYER A FEE professi<lnal !raining. Do not -WE CAN HELP YOU rcais. ln1 l'-.:1, f1w f'ltlima!c. ~ss 1111 this opportunity. A. Do yo11 h•v• lttont vocetlonel' driv•• 7 Reis. 5.\.~·27":>9. 642-:t!llS. I. Do yo11 hev1 goocl n1tive int1I Hg1t1c17 * Wallpaper Hanger* · PHONE C. Do vo11 f1•I t11fficl.ntly rnotiw1t1d lo 1chi1vt 7 &16 24-10 Pacific Personnel 644 0212 D. Do vo11 h1v1 th • 1bllitv to m1k1 d1ciliot1•7 Carl Reblm • Services • E. Ar• vo11 r11dv to tit 1 rttlltlic c1r11r objt ctiv17 HI · QUALITY, LOW $ 500 Ne\\ rt Center Or. F. If vou w1r• cot1•it1c1d th1t htlp "''' avail1bl1, wou ld Lie, Ins, Rl'fA e :H2-litll Newport ~ch 6"0-l9'70 vou 1cc1pt it witho11I dtl•v? PIHl•r. Patch, Repair -DARREL WARD • YOU SHOULD KNOW iiiiiiiiiiiiiii Thi b1fltr lobt ''' not 1d•1rtlsH * PATCll PLASTERtN.G * ASSEMBLY v.P. Ir. Dir. of SA.Jes e Third p1rty prof1u;on1I i11fh1•nc1 h •om•tim11 All types. Free estlma.tcs Clean assenlblY \\-wk for n1en 11tc1111rv Call 541)-6825 & "vrnen. Day It awlna CH A'lJFFEUR, extremely e Gettint th1 right doort •p•n, •I tlt1 rlthl l1v1I rt • Plumblnt tttitt:t. No expcr. MCCSS. 18 odd hra. Must be bol'ldable. q11lt•• t.chniq111 ! & over. No Qiarge. N.S. 1lre11.. ctll Daya (213) e b1cutiv1 potitlont 1tt fllltd through •••cutlv1 In· L.R. OTIS PLUMBING e Office 3.10--8866, atk for Mrs. tir•liw• Remodels & Repal\'1. \Valer 8 Overload Payne. • M11• 11u1m• 1111l1ln9, i1 not 1 tot•I 1n1w1r heaters. dl•posals. "''""""· 3723 BIRCH ST. "'""". =--~C~H=EF~---·EXECUTIVE SERVICES, INC. · dshwashr9. 642-6263 MIC & T E CH 11 B/A. Com~lr.tc Plumbing NEWPOR B A ,ooo per n1onth, Blue Beet, M-HaYe A• AMww for YHl •·rvlcc. LI ~·. 557-00 '" I 6421551,J bet 10 am. -r <IOC •1-" R "' 2 CLERK TYPIST 5,,.c1 R1111~F?,:_C1ll lod•v PL~:t~N~ ::i~I ASSEMBLY of electronic Great ~l n.rllng 1;11lery for NO COST IXICUTIYI tNTllYllW * * 642-.'\128 ** pnrtii. Lit" pmos\\o0rk, will 11ht1.rp lndlv. w/11."1, typina EXECUTIVE SERVICES INCOIPOIATID lrl\ln. O~ shift. Gcio<I condt • Ille e:<11>er. Xln l-opnor .. , -HOMI OHICI -SANTA ANA Remodel & Repair & hl!neflts. t>U-1871. lot:: ndvanct.mcnt. t s 1c11r!tv •·~~ 1·11ildint JIOME REPAtn..Jl'D.tODEL The !.utctl draw in the West. J ason Best Agency S11it. 702 CARPENTRY CONCRETE ••. A Dally Pll61 Cl"'lifil!<\, 17400 Broolthur", F. Vly. PHONE: (7141 $47.HlS ~ Ad.fi4M6'11. i Su~llO~:ll3!!:!_~~_!963-4115!!:!:!!!?~"'"' ..... ..,....,..., ......... ~11!!!! .. !!!!!I!!!!!"" - I . , ' . • . l\fATURE n1nn or \\"flman \\'/outstandin1t J>l'l'l!OllR lity. Espcr. prcl'd tor l'Xclusivc tRY1NE ~('/"'Wro.lfrlo.l'CI n1cns shop. 6~. rD\.J'..lt ~1 ,u. MEOtANIC. cxper. Clas.OJ SfRYK:ES•AGENCY A Lk. >"!time. lop pay. Accountant S1 4K Arco, 19th &: Newport, Of. Sak!s Reps (So. Sta1cl$16K~ ?i1EDICAL Stenog:rapM!' · Sr. Cl>emhtt <• $161' -· ~tdlOtoaY o!Ilct. hf.mt. El'1gl' ME EE S15K Phone ror I n t er v i" w Sr. CO&t Accountant 10 $12K ~1775. }"/C Bookkeepe.r I<> $100 ?tl 0 0 E L S • M 0 0 E L S , Exec. Seeretary to $700 ?.100El.S Sec'y/Dictaphone • to $623 \VO~tEN. MEi'I Jr. Secretary lo $625 \\'11n1f'd for tall Md \Yinter Secretary!Purehasing to $600 fashions. Call lor appt! ClCTk J'Ypis:I 10 $.WO 675-8442 Reccpl/Typist to PIO Al\fERICAN BEAU'I1ES Oerk Typ~t to $500 "\·> I A rl ?\.1acb1ni11ts "'$:"l.00 hr 1• vue 8 • c11, emy OWct Boy-~lan $~.%; hr. 3700 Newport l}Jvd N.B. <!A:l~L 'l.'RJ.~11 HOPKINS l\tOTl::L ?\.1f1.ld to li~in J E RRI Wl~t'M'EMORE Stud\o Apt avl. Adult• onlr. 488 Jo:, 111h St. {l\t Jni1Je') G11t 492-1)74 El R.Bncho Mott , Sulfo 2U '42-1 471 1-FS.C:::.,.....,.-,,--::=="°' . 1' .. ' . .. - ..,. ... 1 AQI' day 11 tho l£ST DAY k> nin an adl Don't delay •. . - - &12-8().14 . ------ NURSES I ~Icdicine &L ~:~e expcr. \ Progressive skilled nuning taoilrty. Xin't b1ngc benetits. Park Lido Health Care, 466 Flagship Rd, N.B. 64~. NURSES AIDES !'Y1atlltt, exper. pre:f'd. Ir you care we want you lo join us. 1'"'/thnc &: p/time open· ings. Parle Ll do Health Care. 466 Flagship Rd, N.e. I 64>-8044. I ATTENTION SALESMEN If you havt' a real estate lic.'t'nsc & ar(' limitcd with your present job, 1vhy not lnvcslignte the oppor- tu11\1y offrrt.od at Vil- lage H.l'al E!ltalc? l\1aximum !'Xpo!O.JrT. \\le pay all expcnscs. Add itional bffictits in· elude; 1"0mpa11y-paid irlSUf'311!'l'. pubilell· 1lon~. rstcnslvf' nrl- \'l'rtisf'mf'nl 111 !I ll'Hd· NURSES Aides &. Ordel'li<'s. 1-3 & 3-11. Exper. pl't'f'd Intcrvw Mon-I-Tl 8anl·4p1n ~tcsa Verde Con\·. Hospital. 661 Cenll'r St, C.:\f. 548-55.iti, UR s . I II ·r 11111: /}f'\\'SP>'ll~'l'S. free N SE. ;;II(~. a Shi ls, I 1•1'0ff'~lon:1I 1rainln" Convale~nt Hospital , "' _ * 6•12·0598 • $i 8!\ll·~ ll'tilniq~ I lhl'O\lgh tU~1BLU\U NURSES Aides. All shifts. ~~OOLS rn1:ompas· l\1odt>n1 ('()ft\'. OOsp. Xln'1 I sina !Iii phases of rt-- \\·orking conds. 642--0593. AAlf', nt"\V h0n1tt1. OC'CA:SION1\L reas<>nahk> property ma n l\ g e · sitter lor rettirled rt yr old. m~ •• lnv~ent &. SeH-relia~. 16S77 O Nichols. comtn\'rclal. Call for Huntington Beach confidential l n t ~ r • OFFSEI' press. opc.mtor at vii_'W, 963-6746. ruk Orqe: ,Q>a.at Co It e,g e . fo1· Mr. McN111mec. OperaHono of oll8ct ""'" REAL ESTATE SALES in rthtted pl\OtGgrRphic & $4f duplica.ling e qui P • Ex· LICENSING SCHOOL perif'nced required. Oinmcl personnel office. -1 3 7 0 $49 includes books. malmab Adanis. CostR l\tcM1. tutd 11tl clASllt'OOm $1'llllk>ns. No COSI lo '.VOil -if ymJ Pharm•ci1t Assistant join fl Tarbl'll office aft('r NE\\'PORT BEACH pAS!llng your 11tatc ex11.m & PH,\RMACY your fl't" ol S49 wlll br l\lust ~ ablC! to rtad prr· re funclc.d 1r yuu qut1.li[y. CAii l!CriptioTI~ IJld tYJ>(' pre-Al Slonn. tcriptiorr~ l~bcl!I. Reccn1 PX· 8.~~ pericnc(' rtqu1mt. Contact TARBELL, Realtors K. l~yd<>r, &t2-2'lll. 61 olRCt'!I & grow in( -"'--"''-"-=-'~~-.•,_--":..O:.::::::::..::...!!::::::::>...-' .. -. . r i ' I .. • ' ~ • • - • I· '" I ' I -t I I ~' . • I ' I I • • • ~-" t> OA y PILOT Sunc111. NMmw 4, 197) .t ;:Help W1ntod,M & Filo Help W•ntod, M l..F·71D tiolp Wan~t§od~·~M~l<~F~7~1DITTH~1~1p~W~1n~i~OCl~,~M~i£1!~l}~O~~~~~~:~~~~~!!~~; ~~~·~·~·~·~•~le~;:~~ 11 -.. 1 a Muslul ln1trumont1 ~ REAL £STA'1·t; sA\.Es SALESGIRLS W1111led, $2.00 SE.CURI TY Tnmft'S ( ..,;;....,, 11~ J[ •-II" J llAYCREST ur;.TE SALE: MOVED to oma11er \tome. RENT FOR ONLY $3 SUCCESS CAREER hr,pe,rtUme,Sinet'fSludios l~U V Y Sat Ir~ J0.-5. Etecant Much left ovtr. Zenith T\t, OR RU~ \VI1'H NOTHING ~~· ot ticpt_'fiirhctd. Joln U. 66-0472 2 pc lk'(.'OOna.1 to!&-Ukc oew ~· w/remole conlr01 &. OOWN. Orum, PA't, Mikes, ·World's 1.,..., and la.stet SECRET·RIESlll GUARD 0·1al-A-Job! (Cool 11264/s.115), Uv Rm >tand, $0. Maple 1 .. earl G·1 •ta-AMP•. Roc<>~an· ~'Nwtnii ·~sate _.izatlon ~ AntlquM IOOAntlq-·900 chain, coif .. tbls. 5 IM11>1, l<ifl. Large GE rotrlg. & Pla'i:;. all brands. 'wi th a network ot OYl'!' 500 Marketing Secretary chests, bedding, 2T book en-w/treeier acros.-t botton1 No age UniU DP parrnt nffil• ~~• and beeooM a F _,_ , -~~--t qc_lopedia Mt (Co• t $85. Vanlty v.'/filp' \II) mlr-ed OPEN N1Gl-ITS TIU. 9, member of wr Millionaire or our ~°' l ....... .., l' • VARIAN DATA ~tAClllNES NOW Orana:e O:lunty'g most AN IQUE AUCTIE>N $312.1$99), Juggage;-boob, -ror, antique white w/swivcl siT. TJC. 5:30, SUN". 12•5. Club. Multi7milllon dollar !\fin o( 3 yrs al ha1 an lmmcdlllle opcnl"8' Pl'Op'CS&ive & innovative ! Wednesday Night November 7th,17pm records, trombone, kitchen Atool $35. Maple telephone Now TWO Convef1ient, c•=d\lerdsl.ng .P~li:am·~-~iOOalto r m':'ne:~~ lot a Sec:uritf Cua.rd lo ~d·~m~ 'flelp $e.rv1ce LOCATION: 0,range Coun ty Fair Gro@(ls ~JptlSlanceteo--~ .. A~ucRdh m<>n!N • bench S25. Occ. chain, 1.«•t'-~~ Serva You ll ieita. ~•-1.... Duties lnciude cw;1omer \\'Ork 3.1 to 40 hours per ~ u agam;'--'l"EMP()-or.-ih tne--sports Bullding-ss-FatrDr ~Costa: uu•-.--' pt amJ)l,-muchi. much more.-~ Of(MUSIC ee ent lllMfS llV.UIMqj• liaison, $1llel' .......u,.;.w...., in-week. Prior po.'Jtal e'.'C• fer~ a truty UnlCJUe & time M (off N8wport e1,' d) '1 Bch (Nr. Irvine A 21st) 6f.5..:1876.._ PULl;ER - Please <-'all 542.~.1-tcrlaoo w/C!Qt;;-;;. ofc, pcrlence desired, but not i; & v t n g opportunlly tor esa, V • VlCl'OR All.ilnr 11-fach. 2 10" NO UE 18191 EucUdr Fountain Valley Real Dlta.te ~ corretpandence, etc. •m=~~JT::el)Olpel:!~ 7c; skil led • • • • · TYPISTS Hb uge ass.ortment of Antiques. to be liquidated spkr,s cbemJatry set, W. • • • • • • • 1 Blk. N. SM Diego f'rn')'· OPENING .,...R I d E t:ti I rte bed set ..,... bwtk bed• I BUYll & Euclid. "" M1nuf1cturi1'.'9 work it)dependcnUy an<! BOOKKEEPERS Y ea mg uropean n tque mpo r. etc, mi ·Port Camey, NB: -" • 557-4836-e h<ew-or-experienced "real s'e ~ handle tt. variety of plant KEYPUNCH Fine collection of. Furnitu , Clock$ & Glass-644-0896. · , Good, l11.1e n\Oek!I furniture & 122 N. Harbor Fullerton ~e ~e. Your own ,.c1•t~l"Y protection and 5 afc t y ware J I 115 ~oplll'Uloo' or sell .for ~u?l_ e 171-1805 e priva~e desk & phooo, gooc1 \.\ith mm. 6-7 yrs exper. to astiltnme.nt11. The nor1nal SECRETARIES s ' ewe ry MASTERS AUCTION - wu.lk·ins, fttt. advertising, RUPJXl~._tf~ d!rector Of nt~· tcl'ledule will ~ Saturday \.\'ho \Vant dignified & PE ~IA,~ NOTE,: ,, , ~~ Newport, CM 646o8S86 VINTAGE Wuclftzer E1cc300. same location 18 )"l"S. Call ufactunng. Operatlons ba'ek. and Swtday 10:30 1>.M. to 11T1mulaUnr tong or Shoi't French -Jaz:z Band Music box, Simoens & Honch•llaBrowne Bkr1 839.0974 aft B or Sunday p!Jno. Nu SUnn amp. i(Or 1ntcn i<."'" • ~~ htlp(uJ: w/tJOme 9l'a· 6:30 A.f\-1., \Vednesday and t~m assignments . te1v Lorez. Plays 10 tunes, 94" high, 45" wide, Basket runt 8 dia. 290 81.'htnd TonY.s Btdl. Mal'I. warts. pe$.k'. Cheap. $200 ea. • CALL ANYTIME e tisticak:typlni, ~er con. Thursday 1~ noon to 6 P.M .• d11.ys. L'Ouple "'ee~s or few restored to mint cond.-Eat~y ,Dutch. Sleigh Black Pearl ear 40 54().MfiO, 3921 Eve 673-4577 tact, •pon cypuw & xen'l F'rlday u A.M. to 6 P.M. n1onU1s • you dc<:1de! N<>w -Very Large Bronze Clock Set witli figures Point 74 Solllnte nawleas 620 REFJUG·Fttezcr • no..b'ost . ~GOc:::Y::A=-sw-ed~is-h-~G-u_l_ta_r or · • correspondenr4• with M--••y &nd Tue 1••· ,01, "'" • -Bl•-dias ""' Gen. Elect. 18 cu. tt "am-~ 12 _ old wt· , E. LACHENMYER . off. lndlv°idual_ chooen ~;;y APPL y 'Eiy ·PHONE ~ocorenta0te0c0a5ndBira~~~!s s0ign0edPaMr18,a°:_ Mo1,rgehlayu ;aJ!a ~ opo1 2 dia :iii avocado '°" $400, Sell 1260. ;;,,,,i"$i'.2s B ~-; u ti i u 1 ral ESTATE SALES ~,:'l'':"' ""~"\\]'..= be asked to work oth<r APPL y ·av PHONE ~-fl 1912 Court, NB, 613-lm ,.Sola 100" gold/green. Coot ·546-08s:i. · · UI phone personality w/a de-sch«lules to . <»"er "'"': APPL y BY .PHONE Carved Oak SJdeboard. testored to mint 1 block fl'om the pier l6.IO, ,.u $250. Gannen1 .::;;=;:;_--~--1 Nt'1v office in Laguna Beach. sire ro grow in a .&mall l'om-~i:,· Etc., This position of· Call 'fEJ.IPO'S Offil'C at cond-Hlghly Carved Oak SiOeboard with Mlseeli._neoue 111 !S~~vett;_a~~~ ~~O ~~~~ ~~Ms1 tai.'r,; ~iuA! be licensed, but will puter oriented !inn. · 540-4450 & Let us kno\\• gl~tshsd.!Uront book~sed ( top.-Set of 6 chairs Hair dryer, sunbeam, $5. w/coveNJ. call Joe, 675-4539 ronsider eagrr, new sales-Good fringe benefit. & nice-*RESPONSIBILITY \\'ha t your &kills are. No WI I erent carve igures on each back-O\''ERS'rtJFF'ED chaii:'a, 2, Wig case, blk patent $5, _•::':..' ,::3_,p:;:m;.:·~~~---.I poople, ~lanv advanlay,es. \VGrldng oonds. *JOB SATISFACTION nl!t!d IG come in pel'SOnatly • Highly Carved Oak Sideboard dated 1612--$20 ea-ch. Small rocker' SlO. Travel ironing board $3.50. SLINGERLAND drum set. 6 1 'Contact: Dorie Sn'iith *EXCELLENT until we have the 'just right' candlesticks, 11" high-Fine roll i:J' desk-Coffee ta~ 110. I.arre old Can, 6#-4584 or 644-7067. pc Xlnt condition Red ArTMrlcanHomeRealtor Si>tl<I resume or upply: spot for you! 'th d f ' p · f · T 'U andirons $lO. l\tovine _dolly MOVING OUT-MUST SELL pe8rtlzed finish. Pri. Ply. BENEFITS \'our. lin1e is va!uabl<'. Don't 'vi carve igures,-au-O sign 1 any $3, Extension ladders $5410. 1 -. antique conrv>r 'cooking 547--00.> Si.5 N. csr. lf"'Y" Laguna Standard Memories, Inc *COMPETITIVE \vaste it. llivcRt It wiM'ly candlesticks, 11" high-Fine roll top desk ~~~ ·~ $15C\.~~~~ ~I. 18.5. ZetsSrikon SLR.o "o;11~1c.::e::::,,F~u-rn-l-tu-,-.~.1---1 • 4M.lOOl * <subsidiary of PAV 1\·lth Tempo at hi hourly Pump organ-Fine assortment of clocks & lJ\.IVNf .....,.,.___, _,..., '™"'""' t •·-1 he REAL Es"ATE ,, NE'~ h ~ IOc.; •-~ lay many ea .... ~. eat r case. E • 124 . 1 Applied Mngnetlcs Corp.) *MODERN ratP.S u vc.R A FEE A1 muc mote. All items to be sold with no recoius . ....,. '.""°"""'" P · Fine camera le line cond. _;::.:qc:u;i•P:;;·-~---·=1 SALESMEN 22'l1 S. Anne St. FACILITIES TE~tPO. reserves Doors ope n at 2 pm fo ·e ' g er $8. 2412 Vista Hogar, $125. or best 9f fe r . 'h ~--Tempo Tomporory Help · r vi WlD • Blurts. NB: 'l:"t)A11..n1s el·-. guitar, •·•n ADDRESS-o-graph class 900 \\ Y nol work in tht' hottt'st ... ,..,...;-iii'ta;;,;Anaiiiji;;;;;,..;;;;;;; s-~""""u "" •w• perfect condition. $1200 new. ,area • lfuntingJon Beach • It }'('lu meet fuese re· C & L AUCTION SERVICE ~LOWIN Acm90nlc Splnnet pickup w/rMie $125. Or best sell 1395 include• over l<XKI ,Fountain Valley.• Let us SECRETARY quirements and are in-TRAINEE piano, 88 keys, brown offer 494-5156 or ~0092 reusuable plates w/cabinet. '11rain yo11. Call Phil' Mc· te.rested In joining a gT'O\v· I-lave you built model cars Ontario, California ~Iahogany, perfect cond. ELECTRIC heater, b a 1 e 646-6411 9 to 4. Namee, VILLAGE REAL ing Orange Co=L'Om-or model airplanes for a APPRAISERS·LIQUIDATORS..AUCTIONEERS Duncan Phyfe solid board circulation fluid, 7' -"''"""""""°"'~---I 'ESTATE, 91:i.3-4567. For sales & oonb-a.ct office. puter .t'Ompany, pJe ap-hobby? Why not earn a Jiv. FOR INFORMATION 714-628-0516 Mahogany oval dinin& table long, used only 3 wkl, cost $2.-0o-$80.00 ~ Receptionist PBX Prefer previou.s exper. in ply in person or ct: ing while enjoying a hobby. ""~'""'""'""'""'""'""~~~'""~'""'""'""'""'"""'!!!!! w/8 needlepoint chairs & $100. sen $60 Hkle a bed Desk!I, Credenzas, ml s c . of Ii c e de a 1 in g Must have good basic nlath '!' matctilng buffet, 492-8043. & Other tum1' 1 .. -, w~...111 Eves aft 7 pm & wkends, Local ma.nut. co. needs Your w/........,mment &: engineer· The Personnel Department Salary 10 -. Call Ed. Antique5 800 Furniture 810 ..... cu... 6+1-6471 ·happy perso l'ty t t ···--ONE DAY ONLY! Signature 10 cycle washer, . na I o gree 1ng co n t r a c t s , Good Wolf, ••0 •~•. Co a s t a I ----------3 pd 5 b " EXEC SWVL CURS $15-customers & hancU PBX VDM .,...,.....,.,. Salt Fri/S t /S Amer. Kennin Rug 9 x 15, s •, com inauons New 1N X1ii't starting sal c & co· °i!fi'1;er &;red secretarial • Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 0 ANTIQUE 10' nautical bar. STOCK TO THE• CEI~NG perfect cond. $650. APl'il n, used only weekly, Sec chrs 18/24 Desks $20190 be ft A 1 . · s 1 s. requ1 · Harbor Bl~ .• CM Need lrg. recreation room. · Mt'chaelangel ·~q·--like new, $125. 642--6432 Pierce 867 W. 19, CM net s. vg. ypin g ROYAL INDUSTRIES Ideal for commercial WIBE'ITERFURNITURE! nuu ""''" cA..,.,Ano helpful 9 Ora Dresse do t 11 'B' Ocean Ave, WESTIN GHOUSE elec. ~ J.501 D-t A. 2040 E. Dye1· Rd . URGENTLY display. Only $200. 67J.-3177. . wer l', ve-a . Laguna. 497-2355 ey-•-vet double ov·n·, '"h1'te n u.I .-,ency Santa Ana 540-3210 VARIAN DATA eel, center fl.lided, dustproof, -"' .. 17400 Brdokhurst, F Vly Equal Oppor. En1ployer m/f MACHINES OAK roll top desk. ~autlful $99. Arrnoi1' chest $99. Sofas 24" Color TV, 1 yr old. Klng $100. Beautitul Medieval Suite.!13' !~ 963-6775 2722 Michelson Drive NEEDED Poon~~alttleonp ... l1!8.'547reAf!~shed. $59 '& Up. Chairs $29. Lg. size bed, Th oma sville hanging lamp 3 piece sect. I ~ Irvine, Calif. 92664 .... "~ -...:iv.:1 dresser mimir, bed $149. dresser , pecan. Cocktail like new $75. fi6 Pont. REC.,_,ONIST Secretaries & 171.) 833 2400 COUCH $200, Oak desk & Sofa & Love Seat $139. King table, low, round,. rosewood W0agon, oPvrnh fead cam1 6 $395. '£..~or n;,•·~ exp, nee.: Typists " -c·hair $5S. size bdrm. set $139. Dinette finish. 2 Bar stools. Antique uncan Y ~drop eaf din· ~.fun job. \\'iU train. no Haven't \VOrked f()r a\\'hile? an equ~m;i~~ro~t,~nity Secretaries can 536-7300 ~T1~1i~·.1 ~~1~'.~ l~~ip:O~i ~:~esk. Misc. Uems. ~~~r~:~~rs~~:~ut, .\:ypi ng or shorthand, etc. \Vorricd about testing? ~~~ ................ ..,,. Appliances 802 $149. Sofa and Joveseat, 3 50 ccu uJ tlo 20592 Appl I f Come-\\·here il's t"0111fortable :: & J 'st MACHINISI', &: misc, tools, yr a m a n, Y in person any a ! or \V/girls \\'ho understand. SERVICE Station salesman JPI S FP.EICH'I' DAMAGE SALE rabies, 2 lamps, $199. Special 2 tool chests, l drawers Laguna 'Canyon Rd. ~~ at 2930 \VeS!._ f~ H\vy., You do"have·skill&, Let 0.0 . & lubeman. Top pay & fringe New Hotpoint re f rig• s, savings on housefuls!!! Cash roll-away, $350. Like new Mltct111neou1 I ' · put them to work. benefits. Experienced man dishwashers & ran g e s . & Finant'ing. BoL\ available. mattress & sprlng1 w/older Won~• 820 ~efe-• full rt ti REPO~SSION CENTER lne l d l 4 .1 _..:.;;:;::,:'=:""----= bECEPTIONIST fGr oomm. e Office ll..,,,. or PB me. lntefim wa!hers & dryers, facl!'ry p app e es gn poeter,. I' ho e Ov I d ell, 17lh & Irvine, warranty. ' 619 E. 4th St., Santa Ana single bed $85. 613-ei27 ORIENTAL RUGS I? to st u d i o . Good er 01 Newport Beach. Personnel ;Servi"ce BEACH. CITY APPLIANCE Daily 10 to 7 * Sunday 11·5 before s pm. •personality, typing required. 372~ BIRCH ST. NAUG --•tne PRIVATE PARTY NEEDS lApplyA JO;.-t ~-LqsJ ,4'gan •NEW-PORT .. 8EA'-'H· S.£WING Machine Operators. 17581 lrviM Blvd .. _ 3623 WN. Warner, SA 54;)..-0780 . ,....,., r, 3 piece sec-KINGSIZE -mattttss. box A\•f!'.', Cosln Mesa. ~ S\\irn .. wear. 3760 Can:ipus.. #llS T . , 2002 , T'w:tln, '"Orange titlnal sofa. 2 chairs, round spring & frame:. Mm car-$EVERAL USED RUGS. b--557-0061 Dr .. Newport Beach 540-4511 ust11') 998-5656 coffee table, transator TV. rler air cond. t4,0CO BTU. 644-5.U:i *** Gra-8773 RECEPTIONIST 1 day a ;::=::;:::.:;::=::;:::.:;;;ii!::;:::.:;; I 838-5460 Pac;ific Tr. Park, 80 Hun-11 xi nd WANTED t b 1""" \\'ttk, Apply 1916 Harbor SE\VING Machine operators. . MAYTAG washer & electtic t' St S 412 A nt co . An Y o uy: :.w_ IBM port. 22-1 -&: 2 1 2 transcriber. U10ed very little. $175 and $195. Beach Sta. tlonen, 645-8300. Pl1no1/0r91n1 826 Free Organ L8ssons lu ~ong A1 You Llkol Non-players &. playms wtl· come to attend Tuesday night at 7:30 PM. We want everyone to learn to play "the organ! All materials furnished. TomJ>iete.dcb.-Jn charge. Phone 642·2151 COAST MUSIC . Newport Blvd. at llarbor Costa Mesa Blvd, Costa Mesa. ~~ exper. Top pay. Apply 890 ::=E::lq::lu::lal::=O::lp::lpor::=. !!E::lm::lp::ll=:oye::=r~l .dryer $175. Kenmore elec: ~5s. ·· pace • H.B. reasonable offer considered Chevelle or Chcvelle Malibu RECEPTIONIST / Goo.d Stc'y1, Girl Frkliy1 W. 18th St, CM __ dryer $50. Kenmore washer ~'='-""'~-~~~~ 496--0358 · left front tender, grille BookketlWlrS SHAKLEE Prod t M k VOLT $40. Guar. & delivered. KNG Sz Cane .Hdbt·d, Hen-At.rl'OMATIC G A R AGE and front bumper. Call ask fta.ld\\1n Acrosonic Piano O\l-l)'pist, lr\lin<> Con1plex area, ,..-uc s, a ers 54fr.8672 847-8115 dl'O<f~n. 2 Wrought iron DOOR OPENER. Fl-t for Larry, 968-4971. Call Mrs. Suga». 546-6!70 Gf Organic CI e a n in g I 1 t p I 1 bl & h . ""'~ ed walnut, xlnt cond. .... ~ - H~HARBOlJR REAllY ~xpands Off-Shore J'wo resale ofi~ opening 'no\\•! Ground Door opportun. ; .l.ty knt an1bitious sales peo. • pie. Immediate Door Ume 'available. Imn1ediale earn. ings possible. \Ve have solid refelTa.ls from new home sul>divisions or the Oiristi· ana Companie!!. CAIL BILL C0~1STOCK .(714) 846-1384 & (213) 592-2845 Robi11$0n's ~ Fashion I Island ;. Now Hiring Far _ Christmas All Areas + Security_ Apply in ~rson lo-5 • No. 2 tf'aahion Isl., NB Equal Oppor. Employer RUBBER v.'Orket"S to learn inflatable boat r e p a i r , Seagull f\.farine, 18 S 1 J McGaw. Irvine. 979-6161 • SALES Ground floor oppor. TI1e . worlds Jargest dept store photography co. has immed openings for Soles & Photography Representatives in their fie\\' No Charge To You Products, t'ood Supplement£ ns an ersonnt 1 YR, 19 cu tt Hotpoint a es c air sets. Ames known brand. Reg. $200. \VANTEO: Cas kiln or pay $750. 540-~199 Liz Reinders Agency & Be au t Y A ids . Tempo1:ary Servi~e re frig/freezer, trostless, Aire patio furn. Settle Special $139.95 ins ta 11 ed to fire load· or l)O.llery, Cone ~F"'a,,.-stre-"•u°"l'-':_•"'...,""1u."'"'1-ap_h0ne_ 4lZl Westerly Place Di1nr:ibu!Grships available 3848 CanlpuS Dr .. Suue 106 Harv gold w/\\'ood. trim. .benches. etc. Call 6#-0809 w/S yr guar. gm.3577 or 10 ln your kUn s.S&-8009 caU away &42-56'7ll:. Suite 115, NB 833-8190 546-5632 for informatic.in. Newport Beach 546-4741 S:.MlO. 557-5839.. HOME Sold -5 rooms 530--1415 Established l96S SHIPPING REC. CLERK Equal Oppor. Employer KENMORE elec dryer, xlnt furniture must go • come - ----~ .... d 15 f 2 d browse. Space 94, 1•~ Jef-ww~ Immed. opening for person \\IAITRESS wa ted E 'd con . retr cu t: r, ·•o.u ScC'retary q u a Ii fled to handle Good hours. Ca 1: m :f, ~ to~ fr e ezer coppertone, trey, SSl-2579 EXEC. SECRETARY ship/rec. functions. Have Dining & Pie shop 628 N G11.ner 963-1940 COUCH, 11' modem w/bltin \\'e need a top , notch valid CaliI. Drivers lie. ·Coast Hwy. Laguna.' 17 cu ft frostfree refrig/ end tbl, good cond $600 neu·, secretary for the pres. & Xln't advancement oppor, WANTED male or female f~er, 1Dx33, white, $100 $85. or trade for freezer. V.P. Front ofc appearance ~1Qt°J~B & A'CrENcr MANAGER TRAINEES/ ::,f'::-""=· .::54="-cc1=90::,7:_~~-->l8cl009 ~hm~~~1~p.:~sofy'j,b~eg 315 3rd st .. Suite 203 ASSN1' MANAGERS for Rent Washers/Dryers * ~!':er&u~:~~~T * 6!>-70 w.p.m. 10 key adding Huntington Beach ~1439. KENTIJCKY FRIED CHIC· $2 Wk. Full maint. Vacuum cleaner $10. 96&-7910 machine he'""""ul. SaJarv Sh' /L' D I' /M . KEN stores in So. Orange . * 639-1202 * YARD Sale: Lg appliances 8c furn. Sat & Sun, Lido Village Trlr Park, 2 doors from Delaney's Sea Shanty, NB. ORIG. Matiase Lino. Bloci: SllO.. Picasso Lltho. $65 •• Jijroshige Wood Block $50 .. Oal! Etching $45., others. Pvt. ply. 53.i-5595 For 1n ad In Wo"11n•1 World based on-exi:r: Apply Na-IP tfe e •Y a1nt County <;oost locations. Call KENMORE ~.'asher & elect Garage Sale 812 tional Systems Corp, 4361 WE~T~EiFF for appointment 675-8960 dryer, xlnt cond. $125: call SACRIFICE good Christritas BirchSt.~N.B. p 1 \VANTED dependa ble eves orwkends,640-1051 gill Item!, all new. Ex· BABY turnUurt, misc . household items, 13 cu ft Coldspot Retlig $50. End Coll Mary Both 64215678, ext. 330 tables, col1ee tables. Att 6, S · y __ ... SECRETARY/MARKETING ersonne Agency mat~ man for nigh~ shUI SEAR'S Kenmore soft heal pensive metal detectors, o-n-ssive develo""r in 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. a! liquor store. Pall5:8des elec dryer, 3 yrs old, xlnt marine radio, CB radio, div· • "'&"-r-(Mark Ill Center) Liquor, 2072 s. E. Bristol, ""nd ~, Ph· ~2747 LADIES diamond ring. % Orange Co. desires a ·542-8836 (near oc Airport) "" • ••J· · ...,_ · Ing equip .. depth recorder, karat 901Jtalre w/baguettes Sec/assist to the marketing SHIPPING O k /ty . -· . . KENMORE elect dryer. xlnt astronomical telescope, elec in whlte.-goid aettlng. Ap-manager. Must be able to er "' pmg WANTED. 2 pos1t~ns: Sec. cond, recond motor call aft marine head, truck oF jeep praised this week at $1300. take shorthand & · related experten<'e. rec, & accounting clerk 5 536-123l winch, AC/DC port. combo. Make offr. 548-S9'l9 an. 6 pm secretarial skills. Must be PhGne 89'2-835l salary open, 546-3771 "-=""'"'-------TV radio, fm . & other misc a 1.seu starter w/marketlng STENOGRAPHER. legal of-WAREHOUSE \VASHER, dryer, 0 I der sporting goods. Eves & POOL TABLE exper. Please send resume lice, IBM Executive, short RA N models well maint. $35. wknds, 962-4283. 5 x 8 Gold top. Good con· '--1 or contact Sharon Halsted ~and. N.B. area, 675--1530 T 1 EE * 552-8433 * ALMOST new furnltm'e from dition $250. Heavy. 962·'678. at Ponderosa Homes. nt Lo:o~g for. ~ature alert in-WHIRLPOOL 23 cu/ft gas cannel & Chaffin decorated ATLAS 10 spcl. Bike, brand Business Center Dr .• Irvine *STOCK dt\,dual y,,Jlmg !O. ~earn .& reh·ig. frost free y,•/ice-Baycrest home. O.ub chain, new, $75. Rubber car mats 833-2180. accept respcmsibilily in maker Sll5 556-8516 couches, leather top de'1<, fur Aft\/ car, l"·-lle'Y.' $5. estab. N.B. fjrm involved in · · · _., lM:" SECRETARY/ CLERKS* yachting, backpacking, ski W~er $25, also patio stove v.wl rug, antiqued king Odds & end.S. 552--0129 Rl;_e,EPT. \\'ear textiles. GOod future with oven.6~~16 ~c~d~~t = S~~.· CARPET Special for Ren--'' Fast growing Nat'l sailboat for right person. Gen'l ware. •.ruu .,.....~. tals. 26.5 yards of 3 tone manu!. hiring for head of-house & shipping duties. Call Building Materials 806 ~0Su~~~m~esa. Sat gold. $5.25 per yrd inltalled fice. Good front ott ap-VARIAN DATA MACHINES ~1006. ~="'"-"'=-=",--~-w/pad. 642-2255 or ~8-4654 pearance, mr-.t Exec. typ-the big company in small e Surplus. Building CAR stereo. radio, tape REDUCE exceu fluids with ing, 60/70 wpm, no sh. romputers has several im· !\tATERIAL . lOOO's or NE\V reconler, slim gym, water Fluidex. Lose weight with req'd. 2 Yrs. exp req'd. mediate openings for in· WE HAVE ITEMS! Doors, lumber, ply. cooler, speed reading Dex-a-Diet capsules. The For info call 642-0542 dividuals with prior ex-wood, alum sheeting, mold· course, small appliances, Druggist, HID'ltington Beach Equal Opportunity Employer perience with an electronics GOOD JOBS IN Ing, windows, etc. baby &: misc.h items. F~ L'OFFICIEL 1 uggest 11 SECRETARY firm or will train. Youn1ust BUILDERS SURPLUS Port Barmout, N.B. u'u al'--.. . 'f'· 1 have a sincere desire to AD.MINISTRATION at MacArthur. penon ~ wtne g1 ... or Rapidly growing firm steks learn and be \Villing to work 2400MoSon .. ~~SaStc; .IJ)., 55.A. KARASTAN fringed l"-14 Chrlltrna.s. Order n ow. mareer orient.al indiv. .~....: If t th FOR YOUNG """ "' _, I ood typ. kill & O•=ume. you mee '"' 714 •••• 1031 avocado & turquoise, $175. ==::::..·~-~--w g mg s 1 s avg qualifications and are look· · •l"IQ-10' round fringed orange JA~S. suede coat 11 sh. G•r eat advancement ing for a position with a WOMEN AND Cameras & carpet $45 s sofas & $~. Long dresses, out- potentia.J. Start $550. Call &rowing Orange Count Y MEN Equipment 808 couches s1o' up. New pool fits. sz 9-12. &hoes 7. Uke Sally Hart, 540--6055, Coastal ... t ff 497 1525 Personnel Agency, 2 7 9 0 company uia o ers: vacuum, $25, 673-2004, 120 ;;n:;•W;:_:::.:.·.=::__~-~-1 Harbor Blvd, CM * 12 days per year paid Rurming today's Anny OMEGA B-22 enlarger, XL Pearl Balboa Island & Misc, IBM Exec Ty.pewrlter. NCR va<'ation tak'es a ' ·fol of adntlnis-frame & board, 2 lenses, 2 FAf\.tILY Garage Sate -cash regieeter, A~ d Ing rn-2004 ee ou,_,,. Here The Suit Is News! w. c~ =;., SECRETARY -travel req'd, needing We are looking for a top dependa'ble auto _ guaranteed notch secretary to learn the $175 per wk _ Co. paid ad biz. If you t a k e life & health ins. _ Non shorthand, type fast & ae· contributory prof. sbaring _ curately & \\"Ould like a advanci!ntenl p 0 t e n 1 i a 1 challenge, Reply aassitied un limited. • Our present Ad no. 964 clo Daily Pilot, en1pJoyees avg $250 to $.15() P .0. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, ' * 6 days per year paid 'trative skills. Like ty:n.. 3Smm & 2~ negative car-Power mower, encyclopedia mach, desk, chairs, tile cab, ... riers, cover. XJ nt cond. · 1 •• d 1 h ~·3701• ~1900 sick time ing, stenography, office $1?5 642--0977 set, .c 01.ues, s es. .,,.,.... ~J"" • * 1-loliday shutdown at management and person-· aft 6· furniture & lots 'of odds COLT Singe A ct 1 on s, per wk. A t t i rtl d e , a p-, .,,c!!a!!!l2626'""".'""'""'""'""'""'""" pearancc ' & perlGnnance I ~ a.re the keys to your success w/us. Call (714 1 833-8752 for intervw. SECRETARY Manager of nationally known firm needs indiv. w/good sh & statistical typing. Financial, budgeting or ac· counting koowledge a plus. Salary to $600. Call Helen Mason, 54().6(l55, Co a s t a J Personnel Age ncy, 2 7 9 0 !-!arbor Blvd. CM Christmas nel spieciattles. We'll pay DARK room equipment: like 'n ends. Nov. 3rd & 4th. Wlnchesten;, Navajo rugs, * Major and Basic Medical you a good starting saJ. new bessler e n I a r g e r , 583 Pierpont Dr., CM baskets, .r,:uery. Sal. & Mode f il . I hil 1 ome ........ n ·Jens, timer, etc. 557 ••~ Swtd 546-7827 * m ac 1ties ary w e you earn. Plus e·~ """fUOJ.), ay o y. * Competitive pay 30 days paid vacatiGn ~$250=-',..='-' -'-675;.:5-0070....:.:=·---·' NAUGH 90fa, twih bed, mi!"C.' GOLF clubs $39. Movie pro- Please apply in person or rontact B. T<ra!ka VDM VARIAN DATA MACHINES 272'2 Michelsc>n Drive. lrvlne, Otlif .. ~ (714) 833-2400 and olher excellent bene-1Fc..•::.•;.;•.;;i.;.tu;:.r:.;•:_ ___ .....;8:.;l~O furn, garden equip 10171 jector $28. Movie camera fits. John Day, H.B. Meredith $19. Bar stools $15 each. D [ N I N G t ' o o m s e t , Gardens. 968-2945 11621 Bellmead Dr. H.B. Mahogany. Table, 6 chairs, 9054 buffet, $100. 2 roll-away GARAGE sale, king mat· MARINE officer uniforms WHO WANTS TO WORK? beds $7.50 ea. Small table tress, twn beds, Many other incl like nu bl~ for Marine SIZES J.20 Sea:31>n's:. newest! Crochet DRIVE A CAB! $5. Porch chain $2. ea. items 8331. Haya Circle, HB, Co83111!5,._ ball. Make offer ,,,,-rl1'£.·t...,-rl1'. _,~ thl1s1 miartill suit now! "Have CHOOSE your hours, work 675--4823 96&-9400. -!.-111..._. lllf¥ll" SU -w tl'l!lvel!'' Crochet for ll be Moo.in 1 Meditt furn I SHAKLEE PRODUCTS FOR Chant!l·i~lred suit o I yourse • ~ur own F..JNE quality lrg Oak dining g. ·• I us 8 ALE . Oistributorshlps wonted in easy pattern boss. l.fen or women. Can ·room set, coffee table, com· wa:re, records, 150 Playboys, avallalile 64z..ot96 SEE YOURSELF looking lltitch. Note shell trim. Pat· be .sllghUy handicapped. mods, 8' couch, gold velvet Sat/Sun. tn A 1 ab am a ' · crisply eompi»eid In thla tem 7122: dtrections w.e.• Ne a t~ean Appearance. chair, all xlnt. 673-2483. dwntn HB. OAK wood tabl~. 2 bUtfets. sa!hed, zi~frmt thtrtdrea Sizes 10..20 included.' · Vts, retired. Age 25 tG 70. .,..,....... (JN ALLEY) Nr ~1 H..., ~21 Orange Ave .. C.M. w1•1. i'" ret--A.1 shoulder Supplement your Income'. PER.r ..c.11.o1 fDr H .o 1tday8 "-~u-. .CdM~ Furn~,,. * 642-1.,..~ * llnu1 ,...:::....... IUW\I. bl nd 8EVF.NTY•l'lVI!: CEJrl'l'I Drive a cab 6 hrs or more a Dining rm .set. warm arntBe .... ""°''.!~ ....1... : ......_ e. '""""""""" •bantlln8 e 5' for each pt1;tlem -add 25 Phone 962-8821 • SALES Secretary. V e r ~, sharp Secretary with xlnt typing, S/H, &: good office background, needed to work Tues-Sat, !GI; several young ' salesm~n in a fun, fast mov· ing sailboat o:impany. If YoU . enjoy pressure, variety & hard work, are mature:, responsible, & well organiz- ed. We offer You the best possible future. Ca I I 642-8961 & ask for Ann SECRETARY ror sm a ll An equal opportunity n1anuf. firm. Must be very employer m/J Pecan Condo size $350 a..... uvuJa> ... s STATION Wag., Dodge knit. cents f h tt tor day. Apply in person, A..e A,,.;, ' _.,~CHEAP. ' M-•.,,,~•-Xlnl -nd., new Printed-Pattern 9054 : or eac pa em Yellow Cab-Co.,186 E. 16th ~--. .,,_ -\..V 8 1'1 lf Air Mail and Special-ff.andl; St .• Coe:ta Mesa. SIMMONS beauty l'fSt queen MISC. hc>usehold, bookcase, tires, atr,'$1000. 5CM317. =~~· 20~ •12~~ 34; in~: otherwille thlnl-clul WIRE OPERATOR mattress, spring & triu:ne. motorcycle. 9 to 2 Sat & 1~4 TENT, Incl screened iakes 2 518 yards 6-lneh de Ivery will take thref . . Used one week. New $366. Sun. 123 Apolena, Bal Isle tn section, + canopy, $59, fabric weeks or mOrt. Send to Experience required. Na· Make otter. 675--6563 GARAGE Sale Fri-Sato.Sun camping1refr1g, S9, 962--7898 .. ..,v'-·t••J': CENTS Allct Brooks, the DAILY tional flnn located In the 2994 tt' ke Furn. • -._. .,.,...... PILOJ', 105, Needlecnft good lypisl, have exptr. on dictaphone &. be able to SUPER secrelary wanted. ron1pose efficient letters. Sh NeWJ>Ort Beach publisher h<'lptul, but not req'd. Tap. needs s killful, cheerful pro. matic, Corp. 1851 Ketlering fes.sional girl \Vho enjoys SALESMAN - for nation-St Irvine 979-6080 being a good ~tary. Xlnt ally advertised office equip. · · · saJary &: benefits. Ideal Newport Center. Call for TABLE 4 chalni:, chest of . Mllbro o Ba r. • IBM ~ectrlc typewriter, for each pattt'm -add 25 Dfpt., Box 163, Old Cbellta an appointment. 540-1850. dray,·ers, bookcase, $1 O, Bikes, Misc. ~ec model, met cond. $125. cents for each pal1em for Statlo N York Ny OODWORKERS M each. Sofa $15. TeJ 673-0034 GARAGE Sate. Sat &: Sun 644-2235 , Air Mall and Special Handl· lOOu."Pr1ntifame. Add -t e. Full or Pl·tjme. May SECRETARY \\'Orlting en v Iron men t I w/ywr present <-'Omoat· Sir Speedy Inc. needs sharp w/wonderful people. Apply e line. Great opportunity secretaty for dept. head. tn peraon 3355A Via Lido, ,1t>. Grange Coutrcy. Ctlll: Sh &: typing. Sell motivifed. Newport Beach. ~1 or tend f'KUfne to: $500-$550 & be n e f 1 ts· I .Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,..,.. .. ,.., WHEEU>EX OF ORANGE 64M411!, Naomi. TECHNICIANS CO. 4340 ~ Dr., Scrile SB:RETARY I S t e no . :IOO. -Beodt~ CaJil. Advertising exper. & lite Electronic Tochnlcl1n1 ~. (nta:r Orange U>. Afr. bkkpng helpful for actl~ port), co. tn need of energetic SALES POSITION worker Chri•. 5 4~-4370 Oc-.cidentaJ Ltfe In Newport ,mom==:00'00·~~---­&M:h has A position open SERVICE Sin altendanl full f.ot an enthusllurtlc indiv. ttme. txpcr, v.-ell groomed. .,-/aall?s ex11er. Position of· Apply ln person, .Chevron fers n1anaaerlaJ potenlial, ~!"· 26988 !Jtita:a Highway, J'1f!W .commission oorlt'ract .~n Juan Cllpo, that ll toP: in lndust:ry. SERVICE Station, 6-11 shi[t. tnlllal flne.nCing & dlrtct 6 l)Ays. Arco 19th & maJI ~m. Call ~fr. Newpm1 Blvd. CM ' Freuncll, 6tt 5600. ""I•k• RoQni For, Dadd)'" • • .a DaRy Piiot Oaalltltd . . . clean out the gar~ Ad. ICMl8'f9, ..• tum lhat Junk ln10 cash . " • ' .. Positions &vaJlable for in· dlvidutlls w/mllitary clec- tn:>nlc background -or rol· lege level electronic courtes • or at lea&l 1 year of cl<"Ctronic expe_r . Please Apply DANA 2401 Danipn~ Dr., IrvltK' (Nl'ar O.C. Airport\ £qual Oppor. Employer m/f TYPIST. OXJl'd, lal<e dic- tation, J>411 l,lme onty, 613-1911 ~~turers .ot Mwt~l Jr~: -Corona del Mar. , , . 2431 Duke . Place, Coflta MECHANICS tools $400. _AJt Pll.OT. 442, Pattern Dept., Zip, PIHern 1'utW. mentl'I needs 'trainees: for as-OlNE'ITE Set-Wrought uon Afesa.. Coc:alml prellOf \one HP $170 ~j~~ J:elnktt!:: NEE DLECRAn' '121 sOmblY. tinl$1tlni " worl<-pedeml octagon table, 4 FUN -Garage Sale, Ch<!•p-0 S4M\l41 .,..M or-more. Bind to ~het, ·knt~· •1•· 1N ihop S:.,.m; for interview ntalchtng chair.. I 3 5 • Free 1tutl tool ,6 611 ENOYQ.OPEDIA Mirian Martin, tlta. DAILY =-~ -~ . . 9112474 ' sea!Mre Dr NB Mo>1< BRITANNICA 232 Wnl 11th St., New -h-· ~-""'i: Xln'I Opporlunlly . _ Kl'OCllEN Aide ]!Ori d18hWllh ;LJDO..Jll._s.J. • 't!tlll. ~ $!\() M&-1414 Yark. N.Y. lfJOll. Print tems.' Sl'.Oti"" M~... '* U you oommurucate Wily $100, French Prov. dbl bed eoW antiques wr Iron, 16 OJ ft n:trta Bottom !fAUf-A'.OORNI with· _1.._t rlroew Boolr: .. &: ett~ivtly A are . sue> tram t 1 / c an o PY , 150 aka '417 Via Udo Neid M ---_ ... It n.'.:ut rond ZIP, .U and IUl& l..eam b'-~~-1 Pal· cesituI in your current job, 552--l129 • · ~.-, ~" Ct ..,....... • • NUMB&. ~· you owe it to younelf to MOVING _,,.Je, chrOme nfric 536-2472 " ~ MORE Q a I ck ltml. SJ, I bwestigate e.n out.standing OAK v.-ood table, 2 buffett. $50. TV stand, •l oor rou.. Family Membentdp ~· O.:•,.._ llillul Otft M f career opportunity for a 'l1l1 Orange Ave., C.M. iiolltbtr, etc. m-1lll'i · lnlne Cout GoU It: c.owury ~=·:: rl:: = it {;f" tblD 100 stftl · .. ,.le• trainee. Individual * 642-135.l * GARAGE Sale, Sat I< Sun. Oub 11100. ~ Sorlnr-&lm ..... ~talotr· All ciom,t.11 --• mWl't -be local resident 12' orange sect:iooal. 1100 BOOKS clothes -& much 4 1.ARGE TENT AND TWO shtl' O!Q 50c. J1 oo. w/manltJ{f:rial ability, am· game tabl e & chain: $100. tnore. is46 Tabeco, C.M. -SLEEPING BAGS m INsfANt SEWING D(>OK 11' '1"1 ~ ....... 50c bitlon & self dlsclpl\ne. Avon blmJee. 551-47$6. Antlq'i llonda IOOcc bike eWra&Me · ""~. wear tomom>w. 8otll of u ....._ .... ....: salf!:s or admlnislral\ve BEAtmFUL ~Jeer dining A mi.ic. ZU61 Ambrev..iC: FJBERGl.A.SS b/JhoMr fl, , -. S()e. n1 8. n~gement background l'OOm table. 4 valour chaln. , _ H B N nc tu • INSTANT f' AS H J'() N QaUt llorM 1 .. IS patteme. pref'd p I e a s c Call 545'-. a...ane, · · tw, ~· BOOK -ffund.reda o I 50c, 1 C'°'nk'ow. ~ for a $450. l513. , GARAGE Sale, Sat, Snn. &G-81.n or 96,2..4972 flstdon tacts. fl. --. • , q.at 8M. t • conndentlr.I lnrervil"4'. Coueh & lovtst1t $250. BadCYM'd. 3n J>opuJu FICKIERITTIS ror that hem GnOt!r "°' w., SOn Wbll•..El•phaJtt Oime-A-Une 8 M .. old ~alt 6:30 ~ Beach JNVEN1'0RY r... , a I• at 1111 J>ennY PtncJter, -. i.. _,,, u.i,. . call todaY &t2-5678. ' Clwif:led A~ • •I . 6G567I 'Need a 1"P.ld"t-P1.-ce an>ad! 11• l(lvings; 55T.o926 .~ ' • ·. ' • Plano1/0rg1n1 8.26 lloah/Mlrln• Bo.i., sttest Dock• · 910 i!yde1, BikM Rt<rNtton11 1T:..:'.:."".:.k:..:s'."""-:---:--~-::I:.::.:.:..:...;.:.=.:,:==:-:--·..:.:: • PIANOS _.,..,._. Jl~J Equip. 904 NEWPORT.U for,..,tfor -;;s-t....;;;;;';,:;;;;;;;;;;;;·;;925;; _...;V.;:oh:::;lc::;;l"::...---='.::56. r • ORGANS r.. VHF radio, Cb radio. depth clean boall Jl:,O<\ ~ith us • DUNf;Buny, st. lepl. Ob<~ • • • • • • TOP CASH DATSUN recorder, I~. head, new klr sale, priced to 1eU. Bkr bod¥. xln't eond. Buck. 1t1, USTOM tor clee.n late model can11--..------- FULLERTON MUSIC 852 A ulOd divU\g «l\llJI .. jet 518-2S02 top, Gates Ure•. chrm whll, '73 GMC C and trucks! '70 DATSUN Our NewHI Locollon ----..:...-.:..:..: powered alc!i<b for dlven ORANGE COUNTY full Sincro vw. 1195. DELUXE ¥• TON Howard Chevrolet 18191 Eucild, l'ouotaln Valley SIAMF.sE Bluepoint, 125 8 or for tun. E;wo/wknds [ 5'0-<706. PICKUP MacA~Our •nd Jamborte 510 WAGON l Blk. No. or San Dit'iO Fl'ff. weeks aid, 64$-.3363 a.rtcr 962-4283. TrlnlPOfUtiM l. .... IH 'Ill Truck1 962 V.S, Air Corxl. Automadc, Newport Beach Economy special. Automaiic- u'll.f al.Euclid. 6 plu.s weelCendf, SMALL. .!Ley C11iL1-l.nbrd '-------'-., .. ,,,,"-1.-ol.UZllH~L_ Power Steering, Pow e r 833 trans., radk> ,A~he"a"'t"""'"""'IL--111 557-4136 Pl!'RSfAN ktn .... CFA "'"" marine eoaloo, .,..,, for -*-S'P'EC"Ar:r-Bnllrer,N-;i~7Uil<)ll-==~~~~=='=-t-j vi. n,enta•I$ f,rom t5 150 A up, Xlot. quality. bay or sallboal. 548-3581 IJ L JI{ SALE PRICE $3795 ~:*6P'":l~~~ $1695 O! . ~ .~ -l * 89'J.2970 * 1.S IW MERCUll'Loutboanl. Compen, S.le/Ro.nt 920 (Johns Racing Cycles) _ -MIKE McCARTHY 11 your car-is extra-clean. Jim "SlemoM • Ptono• & Grands ~·. • 854 ~1e~1m5."002':.'i12 111 "' 621,.c~cgooc1* 1qn.K1011· -, per. *Of lhe Week BEA~~~~. & ... "lii'&'in. BUICK 1 New gplnl'IN from $4!15 e PUPPY WORLD .. SEASON l'adar only $2'~. c';inu, sci:x>~ ~:ftifm.fl."Y 0 .C. Newest Suzuk i '71 DATSUN SAN DfECO FR\VY. 292a llarbor Blvd. 1:.~~ 5 style1 and nnlshc!l Engl ish Bull Dog-11: Bi-Tronlcs, 6~ 200'J bll·UiO CoelaMua 979-2500 Neivport Bro.eh \Vurllt21;1• Cmnd Straus11 Ollhuo.huas, Tiny Poodle.IS: Newport Bvd., N.B. ea. Cycles~ Bikes deelir PICKUP & CAMPER • • • 833-0lOO Upright plwlO · • • •••• ·• · $G9 Amer. E.sk . IS p It z) , ~ HP Evlnrude OU.I board, Scoote~ 925 (443BSX) ~· •. • Autos, Imported 97o ENTER ~1{01\1 i\lacARTflUR IV.aver Spinet ........ : 1145 TDorrlbtrman, Pit Bulll, Bull eleet •llu't, eompl reblt $2199 • '72 DATSUN AL.FA ROMEO '67 DATSUN Pluyer pl""" .... from 1999 e er, C.Ckapoo, lr~h mo 6""616 $5 LAYAWAY $5 e XI Crand1 In i;tock._Ncy.•, Sette1'. 100 MIXEJ) PUPS!! Sales. Service. Parts e PICt(UP e ~~ ~ Y:;e~~~!·-~~~ ~dn =~ s.l~~ Breeds. SQ.ts, Power 906 SW1~~~1t! ~'i!n1 '73 clearance on 72 DODGE Super blue with tr\lek tires, '69 ALFA ROMEO PICKUP -1'1'Q:;1n-lfrurilln _ Wur-;:;;;-n,o;;,~=.;:,,=:.:.....-,-DANA POINT AlloY cottetless l'TRnk 1f2 TON PICKUP radSo. heater, long bed. Rt'111. lladlo, Stick, Shift. GOLDEN Retriever puppies (77333L) JA,.._ -1-&: }Oy,o miles. O I WT)' on ttilil one a.nil sa !ltzer -Storey&: aartc -f saJ HARBOR Jtigh preuure tires Suzuki'• & Bult1co1. -.. -............. 175 VELOCE Kawai-Steinway-Cable or e, reg AKC, line of R .V . Sta ats Ya c ht Center pull ,brakes $3299 (~lGBJJ, Nelson -KlncAld -Cable champions. Call Ear I Brokerage. New Unlflites &-LIFETIME GUARANTEE '74 S1m1kf's here. $2395 -Baldwin -Ollckcrlng -Williams, Sua1e Wllliami Ranaer Yllchr... Small or Corona de! Mill' Bike Shop A:.\l·FM radio, nC\V &Uver Sohmet'. :ll~m. 6-U-l.867, day~ Large; Power or Sa.ii. we 3032 E. Coast HlghYi'UY e Organs Have Them All. For · in· 640-0011 100 to choose front BLACK & silver German formation or to make an =,....;LAMB~::C:.:ER""T"TOO'-"'='''-- .,_ .. U--' and T d 1 Shepherd police J>ll(J!;. 7 appl. to !>et! boats in the 1973 SUZUKI ·~ TC '~"' .. • ""1 n.1 e-ns ntnJes, 3 females. SlO. ea. e v e n I n g • p h o n e pl etcly set up=for •tx" '°rs'?: Optlgun ................. s99 64G-7662or64&-4097 aft 10:30 " '" Jla.rnmond v.•/rhythnt .. $695 114/493-5101. ng, or dirt. Xlnt cond. $500 Kimball S\~1inger .•..• , , S79a "•,.m.,,·,,,..~~=---23 F1' ARENACRAF'l' HT, .. 0_,_ho_s_t_o_fr~. 645-62==44.c·-- \Vurlltzer 3 keybo::u'(f .• $1195 l~ WK, AKC Silky Terl'iers. 210 l-1.P ., fnboard!Outboard, NR. new 800 nt! BSA Gold '"""'""'!'!!~~~!!'!!!!'!!! j Lo\vrey llollday ..••..• , s.i9;1 o r I ess/shccllcss. Pl.Ip VllF·RDF, ltydr:iulic 11;n1 star 500 cc single road biki". *'BICYCLES * Conn Caprice .......... $::95 sllot. Champ illoodlines tabs, Holding tank & NonC' liner, $850. 962-5849 CHRIST1'1AS LAYA\VAYS 2255 Harbor Blvd. C.M. (1-Iarbor at \Vllson) '73 MALIBU COUPE 1SU24' '71 FORD % TON CAMPER SPECIAL (221.0'lK) '-1~-~---lbc.-,, m~o12;;;· loremr. ~m Loo W YOLYO 28402 !\-1arguerite Pwic\\'l\Y ~fission Viejo S3t-2lHO • 4!lj..494!l USE AVERY P\\''I. EXIT • • • • • • 1!166 Harhor, C.M. &16-930.1 COT OATSUNI -·· ....... _ ... ,...,, ...... _, ""'° °'"''' ' ..... -. ' " ' ·71 Datsun 2-IOZ. 28,000 m[, auto, n1ags, nir, \vhitea SJIJO. Art 6 pn1 lf31-5.170. FIAT Thomas A-l"8pint>t •.••. $171 968-0012 . chlo1·lnator. halt tank with or 536-6688 $10. l-IOLDS ANY BIKE Hammonct.-Buld11'in-Conn Afo~GllA.'l pups. AK c, pt.Imp, swim step, fresh NOSTALGIA '66 1-1 0 11 d a New Italian 10 sp .••• , $59.95 Ww·lltzer-~rey-l{itnball platinum, black masked. 7 waler 1ysten1. Hold!! 52 Gals CB450 nu eng 6000 nli many Suntour Eq Colol •••• $89.95 Yamo.ha---Gulbrfl nSC'n wks old. 892-7996 wkdays of fuel, 2 burner stove, sink, nu parts $295 F<IRM • Nishild 10 sp •••• from $99.95 $3599 '72 CHEV. 'h TON PICKUP (730321.) '70 CHEVY "'• TON * ALFA ROMEO -. .,-850-. -S-pyd_e_r-. -E-,-.,.,-... 1 PICKUP Best dent a!l\·11ys! Berlinas clea n, $950. l."i ~tPC, FULLERTON MUSIC, aft 6 pm . ice box, Includes tandem 642-7768. 3-5PM Used bikes · •••••• All Types 122 N. Harbor. Fullerton Al<C Gennan Sh e p.h l" rd trailer pr!. ply $ 5 4 II 5 • TRIU~1PH Spitfire MK II Beach Bicycles, 800 E. Balboa $2999 1 Cond from $3195 (Ser. #0288\. 963-4391 eves. V·8. Auto Trans, A· • '72's & '73". Compl'k se· JAGUAR 171·1805 Pups, BTF'L w/Champ. "2~13'°'=:335-'i:=763~7-==~.,,, nu clutch compl. $40. nu Blvd., Balboa 675-7282 hrs; Open Nights 'tll 9 lines. 12 wk& $50 up. ~·SPEED boat, 165 HP, 1/0, Daytona helmet $ 2 s. * BICYCLES * ~1ftE>·PRICED $1895 ~~~n now. Buy or lease ---------! MIKE McCARTHY Jim Parkinson's Terrific Sovings 'iiiiSaiii1.ii·1,.u,.>,.:3D;;;.iisiiuniiii. 12;;i;i.a.,.. 1 561-4710. outriggers, hair tank & 646-8915 18-5) Raleigh Recants .•. $99.$ I' · OLD ~lish Sheepdog pups. radio for ocean fishing, FR E JU S, JO speed, While SUJ>pllea Last PIANOS -'ORGANS Ouunp1on sired, AK c, =fl~~~~ JI: semi-pro, smooth running, other models ~m $64.95. '68 VW CAMPER fXYG877) SJ999 BUICK BEACH BLVD. & '73 Jag. XJ6 ilh·arh j1t11i11111~; New&: U&ed. Great selection. Parents OFA, Shots. Quality some campy equip. $150. Peugeot 1n all sJ.Zes & colors. SAN DIEGO 1'""R\VY. ('.old 1\•ilh 1an interior. I.oed· Competet.ive prices, Open pups. (n4J 962-486() · dream for only $32,IXX>. 642·3186. Ch r lat ma 1 lay -a -way a 531.2450 ro including !ltl'l'l'O. Still ract "'ar?1U1ty ft-·.' " , .. ''"1'"·'1 '~»I•<' •,c•~ bl>f>.\Ot Eves. & Sundays. The best GOLDEN 06'16.S"0-0::'88:0::,,~~~-~-· CYCLE WORKS LTD '73 Jag. Rdtn. GROTH .. ~· ' ..... ·-or 615-6406 drals are aly,•ays at: Retriever Stud DESPERATE! Owner '71 l-IONDA 350. 80CO streel 1882 NeWpOrt Blvd, Costa W II. h M C Service. 2 proven, x-rayed transferred. Fa.mil Cruiser. n1iles. Xlnt rond. $425. Mesa. 548-S78.3 a IC s usic ity studs, top CH. & F1d. CH . 01'.'CllS 11\'in 33' Flagship Phone 846-9671. H.B. CLASSIC '67 Alfa Ro1nro automatic lrans, Ai'1/1"M. '73 GMC Soo I Coo Pl line!f 675-6915 t 1 st aT.a 54().2830 ;-;;,,-,=,,....~-~--1.,./dock. Ex. cond. Loaded! 1973 Harley Sportster Motor Homes Sele/Rent ~· T ea s · I 19 000 01.Jetta Spyder <.'On\'t>l1ible. only 2.12'2 niiles. Burgundy CHEVROLET ·;,,i, · 1oo~:r \0~~~~s,' 311 Th<' I on g, .~I e c k ,. ,1·ith tan inll'rior. ractory · I~~~'""""'"""""",... I AKC Collie, \'Ct)' nice, tri Our Move Is Your Dl'<'1.1n1 1 51 700 FIRM S?.·tAU. eleclric o r gan . n1ale. 3 mo's, shots & Come True? 6Ta-:GS.J. • 940 _, ank 1 hard-to-find 111odcl. Goocl \\'aITanly. giu 1 ' !rans. coo er, xtt·a condition. Regretablr. n1usl foam seat, (lfaul ing shell sell, as 1 can't sup port 1.,..'0 \Vnlnut finish. 37 keys, 40 J)Upers. $50. 536-1271 . 1962 CllRfS Craft 2 8 ·. M3·3691 chords. Vl.'ry good cond. PEi\tBROKE \Vclsl1 Corgi. JI Lap11trake Sea SklH~ fiybr. (2) 10 SPEED bikes, man's, Jnstruclion bboks. inc. $5.5. wits. AKC, radio, covers, hvi.n 185hp, woman's, call bet I P1.t 847..st81 Call 546-4928 new uphol, just overhauled &: aft 6 PM 642-5004 e SALkS e • SERVICE • e RENTALS e also availJ l\'lu.st !i(!I! this 1821 I BEACH BLVD ,.,·eek! 497_1944 days or cars, $500, and lake over NEWPORT IMPORTS FJSHER Baby Grand, GERMAN Shepherd puppies, & painted. Beautiful. $71m. COLD Colombia 5 s pd \Valnut flni.sh, xlnt cond. 6 \\'ks old, weaned, need 548--0223 or 645-4325. Stingray style bieycle, Xlnt 847~7 .Mf.3331 494-58)3 alt G. payments of $78 per 1non lh. HUNTINGTON BEACH'1_::T::.:RA=ILE::....:R::..:..:TO::.W_S_P_E_CW._ ~:e~ed~p~i~~~~ • • • • • • '69 Oiev. % ton carryall, 492-4744, San Cl emente. :noo W. O>a.st Hwy., rte. auto, air,_ P/S, PIB, 3 1971 ALFA, new paint job, 642·9405 $950 or best offer. Please fe nced yard 546-2464 21 1,f,' custom boot. 150 h.p., cond. 552--0093 call 64r3553' alt 7pm or I "=""'"'-c..:c:o..::""--~ IB t h •· -'ed wkcnds BEAGLE puwies, 7 wks, old res wa .... r .......... eng, 360 Y AMARA Enduro, 1972. Al<C Reg., champion sired, head, bait' tank, s/s radio, Mint condition. Low mileage. EXPLORER ., HUNTINGTON BEACH . '-72 GMC SPRINT' :~~i.1g~~i n::., b~~'. overhauled. $.1,500. I -.7~0~J~AG=u~AR~-x-K~E~4-."~. (EL CAMINO) ll'l'lli • 1250. T.O.P. 121 • ..,..3661 ~ LOWERY Organ do u b I e 551-5893. compass & extras. 963-2501, $800. 557-1255. · keyboard, $350. AFCH~ Pups, AKC cAam· 18' 1/0 100 HP Mere Cruiser 1969 BRIDGESfONE 100 TI I-== S."i7-3l(}$ pidn line, JO weeks.. 968-2253 w/1J1er, Ship lihore radio, or fiat track eng · needs "PIANO WANTED eves or wkends. xlnt far water ski & fishing \vork $100. 549-4338 aft s. ~~S~~'t,~~R[' _ 1714) !l9'l-0259 c=17<A>~IP°".-'C,ired==..oo~.F~.A-.-0-ld. 1 gooc1 cond. prt pty. 54~ TRIUMPH . 6511 Bonneville has the nu GMC Motor H'ome 1{1\NABF: Consol f', beaut. English Sheepdogs, 8 \.,.ks 14' BOAT, Trailer & ~lolbr. '69, Sharp. Under 10,000 mi. at Service Olds :P.foblle cond. 19-13. $700. lo 8 mos. $200. up 646-832-1 Bait t~nk & puntp. f\ev• $.\00. terms 6/a-4421. in Long Beach, Wed-Sun, "'' 7239 tires &: battery. Elec. slart. . ,71 H I ' S ,. l" • B 1 PH ...... -AKC Champion sired Black Good cond. $42:i. 847-68()1. , ar ey portster 1~s u-u us ness : Sewing Machines 828 Slandard Poodle Puppies 19. DEEP V A\'--core open I Very nice $1799. 968-6405 i2l3l 5.'\1-2440, Home (741) l~M01 'lf:.f II I, lC •-.I I l!I J';J '<I T( ,•, • I{,( >< Air Cood, Auto -... Vhlyl 27th St .. N.B. 673-3'l72. AUDI Top, Ex1ra Sharp C731l13L) •••••• •1--.....:..:..:.:~-- SALE l!R.ICE $2195 . . '71 AUDJ 100 'LS MIKE McCARTHY ,70 FORD '4 TON BUICK BEACH BLVD. & V-8 PICKUP SAN DIEGO FRWY, Low Mileage, Excellent Con- 531.2450 dition, (1~). •••••• 2-oR Cpe. Air Cond .. Auto Trans, AM IF M ; :Ex- ceptionally Clean, {747crNI . . OCT OATSUN •••• >oOo -~. '' ''• •'•H • ...., 044 ' ·=· .,......, Males, 646-7555 .,..97!H;039 ·c;;;,.=::,-~~---poYt·er boat, 100 H Johnson, '72 TJUU:MPll Bonneville, :-:: SALE PRICE $1895 MIKE McCARTHY BUICK . SHELTIE puppies. AKC reg. Road trier, cvi-s, xtra ful'I hke fi{!\\'. $1100. Call eves, '73 LANDAU . Brand new 25' 1972 CHEV. 1/i TON · Purchased 1973, auto zig zag, Sablf' & white. Champ. tanks, 645-0'l2S {_'\'l":i. S225CI. 536-33M. l.1' o to rhome. Beautifully PICKUP BEACH BLVD. &: Sl~GER · AUSTIN HEALEY ··--' ll •--·· hout background 831-1281 ,70 HON DA equipped. Close out sale. Only ••,ooo r--ful •fi'les. SAN DIEGO FRWY. """" mos., UV<..,. a FOR sale, 14' Outboard w/ , a. 115 set up Reduced o\.<er -$4Cm. Must ""' ......... .., " 531-2450 rvttything! Ewn strefrlly SilJ\Y lelTien - 2 females. trailer, 3.5 HP., needs y,~rk for dirt, good condition $250. sell. Stt at Johnson & Son V·8 engine, cu.stom cab, 3 '67 AUSTIN Healey DX>. pattftns! Sacri!! $61.11 No reasonable offer refU!led. make otter 549-4050 eves 586-4918 Lincoln Mercury. 2 6 2 6 speed transmission, radio, • • • • • • While, wire wheels, Pri. GuarUC. 'D REPAIRS Call 832-9422 or 644-6178. OWENS XL 19. Bimini top, GIRLS 24" Bike, Sears HarOOT' Blvd., Coat& Mesa, beater, heavy duty tin!s, Ply. $1500. 963-6ll5 MTN. pood~. 2 yrs, male. new l'O'leh, lo hotirs. Xl.nt Spider 500, S speed, $30 54().5630, step bumper, many xtras MERCEDES Bem 173 diesel '64 AUSTIN Sprite gtlOd on all maket & models. Col.lie, 1 " yrs, male. Both ~2828f55S.0474 968-8100 e oale's Motor Home Rentals !a.~·~'d O:.~ fromil2631Llh) e truck, ~ls, 5 1p, 3> mpg. cond. Runs great: $400. SPECIAL: Oean, oil & =AK __ c_. "968-,.,.,.u.,..so~--;--.,,-·~ y. •!AffA '73 23-26' M.H. A: Mini• ~ • . $8!fil. ~2'l5ot 84~30 13· OOSTON Whal" w/trail· ~ ~· '71 . 4,000 .ml, $2888 · check from. $5.95 (y,•ith thi~ For Du:i&.tmas. adorable, er. 35hp Evinrude. $850. Call xlnt condition. $400. Free miles 9 1119, 838-0300 '57 FORD PU. Mag whls., BMW 11d $2.!IO cmlil\. Natioou.I silveor num poodk>s, 6 wks, 6'fi.5888. 642·mQ FREE WEEKEND Over 80 Fine .Used Cars to SXM>. Phone 64Z-Si5I. orl ___ _;:;,;::.:;: __ _ ~~ll~~t~71J~m= AKC, reas. 557--5&19 15'8" F'ibttglass boat ••ith 'TI SUZUKI 350. Mint cond. Recreational Vehicle Rental Select F\'Om. 54S-47'57. ORANGE COUNTY'S lions'" the hon,.,, *AKC BOXER PUPS* 70 HP OB. Looks like oew. 3000 ml. Asking SG >O. Bureau. (7141 ll<Z-!1922. Nabers Cadillac Vans 963 OLDES'I' Privale Party 496-ml $1100 call 968-4119 979-1282 anytime. For rent, 27' Pacearrow AUTHORIZED DEALER 0 Sporting Goods 830 I HorMS 856 Boats, Rent/Chart'r 908 SCHWINN Varsity 10 sp. 2 Loaded with xtras. 2600 HARBOR BLVD. '69 FORD VA.i'l' I yrs old. Best offer. call 540-7196 M8-4037 COSfA MESA CONVERSION THE FIRING POINT SYR old Appaloosa gelding, RESPONSIBLE. mature 968--5892 RENT our '7'.l Apollo, 25' ~9100 Open Sunday 6 'cyl, l·l.D. Shocks, 1 Ton Buy, &>Ii & Tradt:· xlnt lst sho'v horse, Good \\'Oman perm. N.B. resident '67 HONDA 160cc, low miles, "steel", 3 aii:_, stereo, 5 KW, • • • • • • 01assis, Camp. Paneled, Guns, Ammo & Accessorif's UisposiUon, 644-1664 '"ishes lo lease docked boat $175. or best ofler. Call every xtra 557-6905 Large 1'ire!i (424HEUJ. Excellent selection of pre. Taki,:U_~~~va\\•ay Cray quarter horse inare, ~~. =2 mo·s for occ 847-1807 Trailers, Travel 945 '69 FORD Y2 TON Gus\T~sON price Dre-EevMaOlua$AtionLEmoclels. M 6 doe II · HONDA 160 '69, ,gd cond, PICKUP Nov.•. on thru Fri 10 am-yrs, 5 very \\'C in Boats, Sall 909 gd transpo-$22S. ·16' Travel trailer, ready & . Lincoln-Mercury SALES.SERVICE-LEASING 9 pm, Sat 9 am-6 pn1, Sun shows. Gentle disposition, 545--lllO clean, nu Ures, xtras, for V..S . ~ne, Beautitul Con. 16800 ~ch at Warner OVERSEAS DELIVERY 10 am-5 pm. 979-2121. Zl07 &14-1211 PERFECI' c on di 11 o n c d sale or trade, for tnJck or dition, (~D). l-lunt111gton Beach ROY CARVER I S. Main St., Santa Ana. CORRAL Ax' rent: 2.>' x 100' Champion Ship, dbl hulled, '70 YA.i\t. 2;.o Enduro, xln't late model wag. Will pay SALE PRICE $1595 842·8&14 * (213) 592-5544 t nc. SKI atuff: Spalding !'lidcral fenced lot aft Goldenwe-st in Schock Racing s a bot =· ~~s. Many xtras. diHerence. Call st&-9538 or Ml KE McCARTHY "Ho1n<' of !he Viking" 2.W E. 17th St. skis w/Nevada bindings. H.B. $50 per mo. Call 5'!0-11·/sails for Ille, med & 842--0480 B\,JICK '72 DODGE !:>portaman Van Costa Mesa 546-4444 Nordlca boots (10%.), Poles 1542 or 546-!HOO. hvy "'-ind.· FIG mas! & ·n SUZUKI 550 Ram Air, FOR the small car &: lite BEACH BLVD. & 3cp18ted~. 2uo00. naeulbodyo r/•b vtp/1d 00 k CREVIER BMW Call Fred evenings 644-MSS srABLE.S -$30 mo. \\le feed , boom + dolly & boat SS.SO &: 'TI Triumph TR6 weight towing U', 13' & SAN DIEGO FR\VY. I nd w--:.,.,,., SsJ e •-.. " WANTED-SKIS you buy, exercise area. CO\'era. Comp! racing gear. SUOO 54S-4317 15' trailers. Mesa Camper s.n 2450 x nt co asn .. ,. --... es .x.n"ice e Leasing Sk' blndi • I l"" 1 ~0 556-7199. 10301 S.V.1• Birch. 640-U26 '71 HONDA 500 Sales, ~36 Harbor, Costa -~ :DR w. lst., S.A. m.l!n c~: s,s7.~~."' po cs . ...,.. j S.A. Hgls. 26' ENDEAVOR 1969 'Class See al Bill Yate:oi Volks Mesa. 646-4002 •••••• 'i2 DODGE. V-8, custom USED BMW'S 9 YR old Bay }.!are, Xlnt Sloop, 5 salla, 6 hp outbrd. Capistrano· '7l llOLIDAY Vacationeer, -pnt. + button luck lnt., '71 BAVARIA ...._ N~~t & ~I~~ eq~ for beginner/int. Jun1ps 4'. ~e.[m Top coll(!. SJ2j(). ·n •I ONDA mini trail 50, 4 mo. old. 22', sleeps fi, '73 FORD l/4 ~2.is stereo, x t ra a 1 '70 2800 CS COUPE I 4 8'peed transmission, air con: difioning, AM/nf radii>, l"l(eelfent condil1on. Witt • \\'heels and radial tire&. C5MBNNJ. • . $4177 ~ l.tW _,OLYO 1966 ~!arbor, c.~t'. 646-9303 JAGUAR XKE 1971 Y eUow Coupe Loaded! $4850 C26X:QT) lll-11 'ii'"' l\1 111111 .. ' ' 1972 JAGUAR ": XJ6 . F'a1v11 bro1rn 1vilh bigquil bt>lge intel'ior & only 18,001 miles. A RQ!ls-Royce trade-• in that's absolutely llaW'lessf (980F'FUl . ROY CARVER, Inc. Rolls-Royce BMW 234 E. 17th Stnet 0Jsta Mesa 546-4444 ·.JAGUAR 420 SEDAN . 1967 White wi!h tulJ factory ' equipment & Joadai. <WIC· 900) , $2191 lll.111)111!• 111111 111'. 111(111 \ )lC. ~ ~" ' ~ ... l-Nt.-11 & y,•knds 962-42R'l. ~~~a ck, shots. $(15, 40' SLOOP DA ,. • ~11~,lor, xlnt cond $2'l5. Bal Jacks. extras 962--0.'\85 TON PICKUP '71 DODGE t '69 2002 ..uo--•w4. , <u:Huy ti) cnnse .~,,. SEARS Tent Trailer. Sleeps con em po , TV, Radio, HIFI, REG. Abhy Gelding, good &>st offer for quick sale. SCH\VlNN Tandent Bike, 4 Good cond $250 or best Air Cond, Radio, Heater, camper van, raised roof, ,69 1600 '67 JAGUAR XKE Type .Ci to Stereo 836 looking, sho\\'S Western & Call aft 5, 673-0120 fulley equipt, brand nu SlOO offer. 841-8038 · 9:.iper t.o-.v Miles, C99851N). full equlpt, sac for baI due, 68 2002 blk 24 000 1 ZENITII, RCA & Sylvania. English, Xlnt jumper $600. HOBIE Cat 16' v.•/trlr, fresh 545-tK.14$ Auto Service, Parts 949 $2890. Ph: 645--0856 '67 2000 CA COUPE ~~M, rac11aJi, ~ TV &. stereos, pr1ced less prl ply, 644--0969 water storage, $1595 or oHcr •70 ItONDA 70, xlnt <.'Ond '72 DODGE Van 1,00 cptd, wires, J eat h er , int. than 1Jie dWcoWlters. \V'ith 3 FEW pipe corrals avail. we 494-4877 $l50. REPLACEMENT & aux· tape deck, mags, lo milea. Bob Mclaren BMW meticulous mait, conoaurw yr. picture tubes. 1 yr parts feed grain & hay: $62.SQ NEW Lido 14 dolly & COV('I' •5.52-8433* iliary gas tanks, pick-ups, $2650 finn. 645-5595 979..o&.55 Inc, ' cond. 673-2468. • & service. All available mo. Laguna 497-2910 for sale. Save $300. 833-8061 1968 Kawasaki st re et 4 whl drives, vans &: motor • • • • • .) '73 CHEVY van, 7,Jn miles, Sales • Service _ Leasing '58 JAG, 4 dr sedan. %: mOOcls in stock & on LEASE beaut. TB ribbon Diane 1-1 reason bl homes. 892-8314 auper condition. 968-fi669 800 North Beach !llvd., liter, auto rtrarul, as is $500. riced W·,nner. ••• mo. ~r. "'Eo .... , ... ,,. a....!.. after 5 pm La Habra pb ·-·~· r 6 P" display. •73 models p ~ """'~ 18' cat, xlnt cond, Sails, O'tO"or~ BRAND NEW · o.>•-.JU.JO a t iq. or to clear. Cash 90 plan or Eng. rider. Info ~69 trailer, $675. Must sell, .73 KAWASAKI, E.nduro, like II A I 72 DODGE Van. All chromei/,~~~(~71~4)~879-5624~~;,,,~!! I wkend. lerm~ to 36 mos. ABC Color HORSE for le•••, Wonderful 64a-0258. Low .1 -· cl Autos for SM GMC TRUCKS uphols. mags & oversize '68 4.2 IJTRE. E tyJ1e TV 9021 All ta or 19046 °""" new. mt eage. ~· 111 ••--18 """" 646-5134 BMW _. ,.-.. Extra cl • an ' "'/children, No bad habits LJOO 14. helmet. 49-t-2859. .. .... ~ AIL SIZES Ul"l:3, mpg. ~· "'"' -· enn, Jaguar. wire whls, air cc:ind. Brookhuni!, l-lunU .. ..ton l\:l.OIUV<>J lR nu-.>:-•-'I':+ mpg •·k ~ •=-s-16 ·~· tack turn, M0-1738 aft 6 p.m. Trailer + dolly. Xlnt cond. UP TO • •'61 C 0 RV A van, 'auJi;l.16, £J • ....,. • _..,.,. -;;i • Beach. 96S-J.'l.29 or 962-5559. ,,c:,:,;,,""'=-~-"-~-'--673-5371 '68 HONDA 305, just reblt A • /Cl I 953 1\-lechanically xlnt, N e w tng $100. over book. Sun =~.=.c-=""'=_,..---, CB BASS set -SBE Trinidad SHE'l'LAND Pony. 3 yeRI'S good running cond. $350 or nt1ques Ill Cl $1200 SAVINGS tires, $700 Ken, 644-8494 1-5, 646-4036. '67 JAGUAR XKE, low ml, 23 d1anne\s . Kris liOO "1ll1 Dapl)le gray, W!U take b<'sl GrvE )'OU~ a beautiful best ofi:o, alt 5, 548-462a. DA SUN Expel. n1cch .t: body cond. - linear -Super ~anner oHer. 54.>-4:ll9. Chinese Junk for Christmas. 360 BULTACO, El Bandito. '28pedFORD 1::i.oa~~~er, cJl?p-MIKE 'McCARTHY '65 DODGE VAN . Rull! good. T 494-Stn7 anylio1e. •1 b'I · ~ ~;2.mG. XI t d $350/~ t -u ' pa•>e ' runn""' BUICK l"'1 or besl ouer: Call JENSEN antenna. "o 1 c unit -u .... 1 ~~ -:::! .. n · u.:S vuer, gear, Offy tlalhcad, needs Roman, 645-692'1 '70 24QZ LEtFayelle 1\•ith tuner + :t I ..,b~. II.CJ Boats, Slip1/0ock1 910 ~.~ head gasket, SllXX>, 673~. BEACH BLVD. & ,66 DODGE Van, SUnd'•al mic. Co-face anlennns. \Yith -'66 ~ TRIUMPH Bo SAN DIEGO YOUR NEWLY mounts. Contact Terry, MlrlntE.quiprntinl * SLIP nr City Hall for ·Q;N n-Recreatlonal 531.~~J'""RWY. auto, pop top, $1600. 4 ed Eves. 646-1803 rent. \Ylll take up to 28' ncville, good condt2Si Extra Vehicles 956 V'WU 54841145 aft 5 pm ~P\' transmission. 1200· APPOINTED hoal. s4o. mo. Gn-8145 eves. chmme. sax!. !it> · ••• e •• llutos Wentsd 961 BTT1. SAVE JENSEN Boats, General 900 HAVE 35• off shore mooring, 1970 SUZUKI 90. Xlnt concl . VAQUERO Dunc Buggy neat SCA.AM LEJS but no boat! Any ld•as! :;"· 1225 · !W-/2:5' trade for sa!Jhoa! ·~-S&X>UT, 4 wheel drive, TQP HEALEY -. aulo. power brakoa, DOLLAR l . NE R So 11 • You doo'ti need a eun to STEEN-Hodalnr. lOOcc, dirt '68 SCOUT, V...S, 4 Spd, roll bar, hubs, many extras. ft.a..... 11..:_.. pl~er.2 Pionee"; ~ak':se: "Draw F1U1t" when you bike, nr nu, $200 eves (n4) ~~7~1750. Pvt party. Call = ~· $2300. or PAID -lUUA WJIO DEALER 6' Contemporary \Valnut <.'On- sole, am/fm mreo, hea<lsct taping ronncctloo, $125. Like nt."W cond. 661230. conv for auto, plus tapes. ANSWERS place an ad in the Dai!y c~~=------TOYOTA IN NEWPORT BEACH ll!lO aflcr JPM 64!'>-7914 Pilot Want Adal Call now Need a "Pad"! Place an adl '70 DUNE Buggy, VW,·Manx 1970 EL CAMINO. PI S. IMMEDIATELY Fealur!og the Ml lloe of PORT. olc~ 'tceord player. Lineal -°'""""' -LoOon -,,,-,,;64,:2-$78:=:=·~~~~;-;;;Ca;U~G42;;-5679~.~~~;::;;hod~y,~l::IOOO~. G~lJ..&rnl;"'""==;;:; ~%.~ii.:""", .!., "'!!);,, U. ~: FOR ALL 1966 Harbor, C.M. JENSEN HEALEY · Gerrard AT.00 l'hanger + ~us -Sicken -Custom -64&.9300 •eee••· $45. E""' 673-7>17 CMLOUSES eood. $259>. 673-l65S. FOREIGN 'Jl DATSUN JENSEN CA kn TV with 1 When it eomes ID raaMon, CLASSIC 195.5 Font, P.U. CARS INTERCEPTOR R co • n!nlo c I run not ·too obse1vant. For Jo,00 eng, excel cond, nced11 PICKUP control. Works Xlnt. \\'aJnut i•ablnl't. Sl20. 558-l7ll2. / in~tance, I didn't even noficr> paint, $400. fi1m. Call WE ARE IN 4 Spd, Radio, Heater. lnl· Large SelKtion JhRt my \vife was .,...·earing '196-6$9 . DESPERATE NEED I of Colors f.'OR SALE: 19" \\-'ei>l· th08e trighrist, platfonn soles 1969 CHEVY V8 mncu ate Red Be au t y tnghousc color TV y,•/satnd. and heels. 1 just figured her l,-. 1011• • OF GOOD, CLEAN (718BQN) Immediate Delivery Good eond. $100.ph 962-lrl69. CALLOUSES had gotten out 2.°.;,.~~i! ~er~~'. FORE ION CARS FULL SERVICE STEREO. Tape reeorder 0 ~';..oh::oand:='-. -==~-~ >4<Hll'l4 TOP DOLLAR-PAID DEPARTMENT w/rad\o. Desk. BEST OF-16 IT. BOA1' & !railer. '63 CHEVY%. ton Plcltup FOR OR NOTI OCT OATSUN -·· .. . . . .... -. •lO .._,., >' ", • ,, FERS. Call ~-Needs minor "'Ork. As l!'l, •liM "-Il I I l-===-=-o-===- $250. Call 557..J470 e ean~u e -or come " 0 "' u~ 1973 DATSUNS 10' DINGHY .• 11' HP Motur. Bdrn 11 am & all<r9:3D pm ALL. MODELS Good ~~~ '73 CHEVY l'U~P/a, _p/b IN STOCK :a: A/C, t11t , am/tm 8' Dlagby, > bp_motor. xtra nod\o, 16,000 • prL ""1· BARWICK lMPORTS tqUtp. $100. 1 0 am -5 pm • 961-&0't $.3850 or trade. Sal/Sun ONLY -'55 CAMEO pickup. mllll 3IOl' W. ~J!, .. N.B. 33:!75 Camloo Ca~ ,,____'_'" .. =l'ltu~I~ 3 LlnH, 2 Times, $2.00 NEWPORT IMPORTS 3100 W. Coesl ""1·• N.B. --LAMBORGHINI CLOnlES dryer, g a I , whttlpool. Need~ work. 549-t.506 from .t to 9 pm. 9' WOOD Lap type dina acll, $900 or be11t oUer.1-~=~.,_,..,-""C.,,,=o--I~~ ;-:= $50. 963-4108, 9691 TelhM Dr, IMPORTS WANTED '67 LAMBORCHmt 400 CT 613-8848 HB 0ranp County'• '71 DATSUN PU, air, RAH, 2+2 V•12. super clAKit . Beaut, grey/wht shOrt hair Boats; Malnt./ mother A IO week kitten. Service 902 Xlnt w/clilldren 644-5961 -~------- CUTE fluffy pupple1, 1 wk1 IS Your bottom dirty? Rull nld, Tl(>(!(f loY(ng ho me , cleaning for 30c pe.r wat(!I' 64H838 Hoe II. 64$-J.!20 YOUNG mother ~ Siamese BOAT Owncrs, tl~ of hi mixture A kltttn. ·Frre to maJnt. eo11? Refini&blnc 1 A p><t home. Call &ll-8'179: monthly ....nee. 643-U20. ' L I E T E ' CROSSWORP-PUZZLE AN$WEIS '67 CHEVY % T. 4 \\lhcel TOPS BUYER dlltw/."IP;Jar· eampol r slteN II Netdt velv~ work. Serloua I drive with camper $2400. BILL MAXEY TOY~A tirb. & ·~r. r:~~~ ~ i~uirlell only R@uonable:. j ~ H 8';:' B•«\,8.,1• M!-1551 dard shift. 11895 96&-9393 ~ilOr Tony. 615-340f "" '72 l:ttEVY Bltutr, xlnt • WE BUY · '69 D,l.TSUN Picl<-<1p. Good ..;;K;.::,Ac.=Rc:M""A"'N=N:-::G"'H""IA=·1 I cond. ~ed S4UX'.>* rMPOR'l'EO A1JTO$ condition. $8(1[' Call; • ~2367 Bl!ST PRICES PAIDI e675-6332e Don t l!lve llT'. tha ~ ~--L 1 1 -. Th< wtesl draw In the West. "1.Jat" l t \n cl"!•i•kd, _. tw I m,..... •• ....... 11.. -... Co Slae Rooullt! -l8Cl8 HllJ'bo<, C.M. 646-9.10: ' • .a -~ Piiot l'lla[-Ad. f4H678. . ' • \ • '67 KARMAN G!lla sic. & 11. NU_ pa~~'-OU ttm., etr. $850. 64Mi!ll5, ~ • ' . 970 Autos, Imported 9tO MAZDA MERCED!S IENZ S-AAI TOYOTA * SAAi JUST ARRIVED IMPORTS &st deal alway1. Complele '74 TOYOTAS JIM SLEMONS '73 MAZDA RX-2 COUPE •n MAZDA RX03 • ~lE\,JRlt<T • DATSUN MERCEOES-IENZ lclect.1on_now...BU¥ or l<q,c_ -Model• . New-C.k> Al!I'J-IORIZED fn>m SAVE $ ON HEMAlNINC Bl'Qflle wht\ bjack iml'rlor, xlnt. cond $2400 615-2678 au Io ma t I~ tran~ml'5ion, MERCEDES BENZ radio, heater &-radial Urcs."--------{013UllVJ. I" SALES &. SER.VICE Jim Parkinson'• ..... 'lJ's &._ D~fOS '69 MERCEDES 220D Jim Slemons 'i-~---~~-~~,I Automatl~. ~-er stee1·lng, (\l/e're ,!~~.:'for r~ air coodi~mg, recenlly re-us('(( Mercedes Benz.) ~ . bullL engine. (llOAD\\lJ. 001 Quall ~~~~~~:::f . $4377 • N~1~ach i!:l',irh _ilutp11rb +' . ' ' " . , $3195 <-------=-------------------------28402 l\fan:u1·rl c Po.rkway . ENTER FllOM MacARTHUR Facto-Executive Demonstraton 831-21>1-0Mj" 10 ; Viejo •9549'9 9t\ •• .: 111..:• •59 MB 2!0 s E rM-Sl'fCfAL l'UllCHASE • • USE AVERY P\VY. EXIT lllUA "8llO MACULATE, Sunroof, air, TOYOTA ;~gn· power, $4,'150. CLE~~ SALE 51 O's • 4 DOORS $2268 '73 MAZDA RX-2 'T.I SAABS .<TARTING AT ,... Including Air IS66 l·Jarbor, C.M. 646-.9303 MG $2995 7 to choose from! ' .. Automotlel ROTARY 50 SED up lo 24 mil" per gallon , Se" #9032 U '69 MG Midge!, red, A-1 Dick Miiier Motors · PR/CfD fROM ONLY MERCEDES New am/fm rad, clulch & Vinyl lop, 4 s.........i tran ....... is-I Gd 1•-..... _ 120 W, \Varner, S.A. .,._~ ..... op. lreS, I.A ""• seals. 557.2132 •loo, 4.234 miles. Radial ON DISPLA y 40,<XXJ mis. $1.099 firm. ---='==--- tires, radio a~ heal'er. (8/a-S 642-4491. SUBARU cr.:n·i. harp New Car um 250 c AIR, pc)llw \\in· --------$2977 Trade-ins dO\\'S auto inlns. gray, 52.i.'1 Comint1 In Every Dey miles, reg Slemons servlc- Ask About Our Unique ""· $7303 673-:i'ln. · fle ... 1 ... .:. Used Mercedes LHse MGI ., UY\ uum Plans '--------Dick Miller Motors TOYOTA House of lnip '69 i\IGB in \'Cry iooo condi· Sales &: Servlzc lion. Hardlop/Soft<1p/Ton-Visit Us Soon At ,,,;. Harbot·, C.i\I. 6~ "JOO 6862 Manchester, Buena neau. car cover. Chains. 120 11, IV S 1 ~·=====--'-==-.001 un the Santa Ana Frwy 1 '"'g·. racl. New Mid\elln · arner, ·1 • '71 MAZDA 52.1-7250 ~ ·s5i-2132 * "'"'· 37,<XXJ ml, $17UO. CnJI -~=c-:::o==--- Drive A SUBARU CHECK THESE PRICES ON THESE IMMACULATE RESALES! 71 DATSUN 71 YW 71 TOYOTA '70 DATSUN ... WAGON 510 WAGON A feol 1harp, oro1191, 2 dr. bug. 2 dr., -1191, 11H>91, •inyl fop, (919CYQ A. 11ic:1 atono «If\ 1310Cfl'1 U.H, ii.111oc11loN. 12911.$>.J lllar,.. (2120TW) •1799· '17~ •1499 •1899 · '69 -YW. '69 CHEV. I DATSUN ' '68 FORD IUS •WAGON SIG WAGON MUSTAN8 ' 'J)wtl.W ~ TOYOTA 1966 11arbor, C.i\f. 646-9303 -.72 TOYOTA C~. Radio, healer, 4 speed. Under U,l.00 miles. 71HGIV. $1895 Jim Slemons Imports 1301 Quail • Ne\1•1J0rt Beach I x33.9300 EA'JTER l''llOi\I ~lsc1\RTI--IURi TRIUMPH TRG '7l French blue, 1-l/S toµ, AJ.1/Fti-1. Goodyear r:idials, l('l n1i, $3950 caU \\"kdays a t 4 536--0295 '71 TRIU~'IPl-1 500 lmn1ac. IO\\' rnl stock \l'/X--chron1e rbt eng. clean sac $900. Oavt'. 968-5003 1 TR 4 -Customizedl Be;i,u~i!ul ! ! Xlnt in e c h. <..'Ond. Must Sell! Best Offer? IJ.1,;.<;4&I ROTARY * :~ .. M•E~:~D~:~~~~. 6~228M6~Rls .;:~~~:A _ ' ' air eondHlonlng low low Monis Minor 67. Xlnt oond. LANDCRUISER VOLKSWAGEN UH, cl-. (YllJ60t ,. pan., air cond, 111• tlro1. llH, ~orp. H11r<y. (ZDY7'09t (WXK602) 4 speed, radio, low miles. miles 0l\(' o( a kind car U> mileage. Pri. Pty. $675. Trunk rack. (&1S-E?i.1Q) (395CiB) · GT.l-6840. 4 Wheel Drive. All the Ex· ~-------1 $ 1799 ·SAVE OPEL tras, real Low Mileage '72 V\V Adventure Camper. r9Cll thorp. S.r: #1437. •1899 ·•1399 •1399 •1299 Under 20,000 ml. am/(n1 HARBOUR 2 sp•akc"'· pudll•d ""'"""' *'69 OPEL* wal•r. bu lnn• "ove. J) l • U\1/110 ref. Tent, Custon1 I . VW -lllllM Artt1• covered storage, Xlnt gus UIA wiia RALLY[ KADffi ''TOYOTA CELICA mile""'· $3800 or ofl•r. 1sru BE.ACH BL.VD. 842-4435 TOYOTA . 19n \\' -1 sDCC<l. (OJOE,\F) ~.~or \\•kends onJy, I HUNTlNGTON BEACH 1966 Harbor C.M. 646--9300 4 speed, air, radk>, in1· $2675 'M V\V. Reblt engine, Runs * Ma$66zileM'703NRToHtary * 1971 M, ERCEDES maculate, (ZA0-925J good. N""'s minor "'pair. $999 . :m62 Blue Lanlern Dr, Ap1 :l6 MONTHS O?EN LEASE 300 SEL 3,5 HARBOUR 3, Dann.Polnl. ull 6pm. \Viii accept rrade-r.ns Silver \\•ilh black leather in· '71 VW FASTBACK CALL MR. FRY 842-6606 terior. sunroof. air condi· 'll'O TOYOTA Corona Seda·n Au10. air, ne\\' brakes. :<Int HU nt. Beach tioning,.A.i\1/Fl\1 stereo radio vw Nu paint & tires. Good con: buy & (:Otld. Be Io''' & on·ly J0,000 m'iles. A Rolls. . d!Uon 646-3692 whole!'t!.le. Pvt pty. 673-86fJ6 ., 72DATSUN '70 OPEL '71 TOYOTA '72 CHEV 240% sn. CPI. WAGON YlOA CPI. Ail-co nd., 4 1pcl., block •inyl low 111ilt1. !OlJELOl So•t gcu 011 tlti1 ontlll 2 d•. hout. bl111 lini1h. Olllo· ..,, llMl9L jlS$fSMJ Ptictd ligh1 ""' ('JlOECP) 111otic. (212UA) $AYE s;399 '1499 •1995 MANY MORE TO CHOO E FROM! OUR NEW LOCATION 888 DOVE ST. ROY CARVER Inc HUNTlNGTON BEACH cond iti(Uj. 8 track-' tH:pe. ning c.-ond. fi1tdio, mags, MAZDiA Royce trade-in! <603CR!i ). 18nt BEACH BLVD. 842-4435 •i( COROLLA \Vagon Xlnt '70 BUG, Jmn1ac. X1nt run- , Rolls·Royt'e ' 1 B~I\\~: '67 OPEL Good cheap U1ln· $1500 Cash. 548-7t!'I2. -big~lrt.---s. ~lust sen. SJ,395. 23'1 E.:17th Street portat:ion. $-150 . .,.. • t-::1974 -""~~95~··-----ol 17331 Beach'--B~I~, -~"'~·6'=A 1 Costa i\lesa 5'16-4-144 Ca!'! 963-3730 1 .67 SQBK. Disc brla, gd Motor Homes NOW OPEN TOYOTA'S trans, nds cng. \\Tk. Best 940 PORSCHE offer. . ' [===="'."======="""="~~:;~~~~~~~=~~=~;;::~~...'__;s~a~le~/~R•!!"!!.1 ___ ...,!.' Mi11ion Viejo Imports ARE HERE AT ·, 847-74.52 (M ; ~;no *'56 PORSCff[* VII Bu•ll!!&< Rehll mo, '" MERCEDES' BENZ box. cafJine1s, conv. bed, & . cu1·taln&, best ofr. :>36-38T.s' 4 spcecl. jNo. 5.'i'llfil -----FIAT $999. '62 \'\V Bug, runs great nu C ' I • "lak I< F •· d I · l·h1 l..:h, $:~ .. on1Dl'le ::-ales & Service HARBOUR ·,. e oom or ua (y· 644-GSiO Visit Us Soon At · . · clean out lhe garage ~--~----2870t' ~farg1,.1arite Pnrt.·v•ay ... turn tha1 junJ( Into cftllh '62 V\V. Cheap transporta· .\lission ViPjo 495-liOO v wlU1 a Daily Pilot C1asslfled tion. Radio. W.O. Call <USE AVERY P\\'Y .·E~ITI w Id. Call &12-5678. SGS-832S eves. 'ii i\IB, 2'°'6 _c_.Hs Sedan, Orig . ·A~ut~o~s,iil~m~po~rt~ediiiiiiiii9~70iiiiiiA~~iiiiii~Jln~po~rt~ed~iiiiij~970 ' 01\'ner, hart cvPry ~ervice, lSill BE.ACl·I B·LVD. 842-4435 :'I.In! 1:;i,r~L 63,000 frcci.\"U)' HUNTINGTON BEACH NOTHING . AT COURTESY! YOU . JUST SAVE ·MONEY!, NEW 20' MOTORHOME ROADLINER by REDMAN SELF CONTAINED. '/8, auto., P.S., P·di sc brakes. . #S2Q300443 IMMEDIATE ~ELIVtRY $ • NEW FLING MOTORH OME :~OMAN SELF CONTA INED. VB, auto., P.S .. P-di se brakes. #205-2-0818 iMMED!ATF. Dfi ;YtRY $ Brand Ne\·: ALL ST AR VAN j ' CON VERSION. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY LOAOEO WITH CONVEN IENC E EQUIPMENT. ALL REMAINING '73 (20'·24'-28'1 MOTORHOMES NOW ••• '66 OVER ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE -"•ii• fw FREl CREPIT <HECK: '6451321 . • l ' rn~~S.ig. 8.13-8758 '66 911 PORSCHE, ,'67 eng. :\1ERCEDF.S BENZ 2200, ·73 \Vebcr carb!;. Ko n is . n1a1'00n \\'/"·ht inter. }''loor Sempel"et radials, ch rm sl\irt, r.unrf. Art 5, f21J) "·his, am/fin rad. All other .1.}j..&118. options or dome s tic, '61 ~1ERCEDES Benz, 220 Gennan fL Series) $4000. 673--:.JSJ art 6 pm. \\"ilh '64 eng. Body & engine -==="-'-'=---xh>l. Good buy. $1500. '68 PORSCHE 912 5-l:l-2442 xlnt cond, 211.000 n1ile11. niust '63 l\tERCEDF.S Benz 220S see. ~1-2510 or &12-8961 4 dr sd. Nu tires, air cond, 1 '-'J.c.c•ITYc:._ _____ _ am/fn1. $1300. Owner. PORSCHE j6 Coupe 3.'i6A E75·0810 or 645.()303. Oean-reblt .:;9 trans. Ne\V '62 MERCEDES &nz needs c'cclu°'tch"-'Sll=75'--. 6'5-=-7'-'43"1'--. _ work, lf,00. m· "'" olfor. RENAULT ~7 afl ~ Pi\1. ~fERCEDES Benz '611, 280.')E Xln't rond. lD mi's. Pvt party. l\otake ofr. G'f<t-77::.6 MERCEDES, Sacrifice 1970 . J\.fint concl. 280SE Low ml . See lo appreciate. 551-3911 '67 r.m 200D, 34 111pg, auto. R.~H. extra clean. $2595. RENAULT NEW R-12 4 DOOR Auton1atir Transmission SALE $2499' 638-2254. Ha\·e something you want to Dit=k Miller Motors sell? Classified ads do It · W W. \\'arner, S.A. '>''ell -call NOW 642-5678. __ _;55:::'1:c-Zt:::l:::2 __ _ I.llce to trade'!' Our Trader's Need a "Pad'''! PtaOlt an ad! Parr.disc column !!; for you! CaU 642-5673. Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Dick SAAB Miller RENAULT Motors SUBARU '72 HONDA I '72 FIAT 850 ()Ml:AIJ Sl"ID•• 1"2PKSI $1295 $2195 I. '70 SAAi '9E ''64 MGI {St)(CMI llPC11l., lltDUPlSJ $1695 $1295 'H DATSUN 2DO '72 TOYOTA • ...... CMMl ll C .. k.1 U1tlKKI $1695 $2995 Dick Miller Motors 120 W. WAINER ' ' 11/J lhd: Wnt ef ._., SANTA ANA 5S7°21l2 utos, 11)1portec:I JOIN OUR SAVINGS DRIVE! , The Best Sa·ver of. ALL Thre~ GREAT Models I ~ • THE ~LL NEW B ~~O ' IClledt Al Of Ow New Car Tnidnl '69 DATSUN 510 . 4 DOOi SIDAN I •17451 ONLY$,,~ SAW HOlllS Moo.-Scot. f -··' ,,,., Ston. ' ...... ,.. ' l -THI VHY SPOITY 1·210 2·DR. HATCHBACK THI GAS SAYING . 1·210 2-DR. SEDAN 4S, ......... -• siso4· WWte ........ nr... ~ IS.. •IJIJ1l ' THI JO M.P.•. FAMILY CAR 1·210 4·DR SEDAN ......... -..... Wlllte Illa ... Tltwt. tS.... #MJltl SIRY1CI HOURS Moo.1!1-7:30 a.m.·5 p.m. Sot. "7:30 a,m.·N--. ' ' " " I I I • •I - 'j,. " -- -- - ,. , iA~u~to~s,;-iilmnppoOirt;f;oc1ii"....,9v1~o~AAiii,;;:"T.;;::;:::;:::;-..,,,""..,..._...., ____ ....,,,.,,,,..1 ~::-:-;;"-"::----oi;;:~:::::-rr.::7"....,....,-0iiiii':'"""-;r::o:;--t::::::-=:::r....,-..•.,°""~-:-:::'."'.:".'.~-,.;s~u~n4~M~. N~rmbfr4, 197J r.;.-"'-------"'~ utos, lmpor ttd 9 0 Autos, Usoct 990 Autos, U-996 Autos, Usoct ff'6 Aulos, Imported 970Autos, Imported • VOLKSWAGEN VOLkSWAGEN ·--=.;;:...:;;A;.;.;M;....C_-'""' CADILLAC CHEVROLET '71 YW 1-.:.:=.::=.::.........1::::::~::-:-:-:=. * vw '72 JAVEUN' en. '64 Caci De Viii• ;6'!~V1\"!i~~=,;:, Al\f·FM ster-ed radio, mag PEC-ti Leu than 20,000 mile. Auto-ONE O\\INEft.. While with au t omat\c .. Jranamlssk>n, .-1s, ...itat~ (8o5'. ALS---:::1_-..,..de h'anr.JIOI' • wt11teliileHOf. New tlnii. ,.,.. .... ateoffl!Ctlnted g1 ... EAD). · Jllf power brakes, factory air, Tib: "''heel AM/FM electric ron1plete. Strato bucket i" -$1777 . *'68 s uNRooF s1099 2i"11Y. 52995 ~ "'s. 1-09· 51Aaded. ~::.· ·~· ·:.t~'°k.~~ L 4 (~=l6~io...,1.!~talllc Red JI-m Slemo s ~ 1:>00t w b 0 I c s at e • • ~= +'65 VW BUG n NEWPORT IMPORTS .,, Lfili& _,OL~· 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 '69 vw SEDAN Xlnt shapO with new paint, radio, h'qter & ~ apced. (177BSO). $995 """"· Radio, Nmvw5599 Imports 'CAPRI *'71 SUPER BUG 1301 Quall 1613BVD) Ne:wrioti Bee.cit 100% FINANCING99 ENTER rn~':..AR'l'lnJR 9100 w. ~~~wy., N.B. BUICK "·12~CAO~Co~upe'-'-'d"'ec.v=m-.,'-.. ~1• '72 CAPRI 2XllJ A/C, stick, xlnt CODd. am/fm, lo miles, $2600, -· 979-0855 CONTINENTAL AVAILABLr o.A C -~•/wht~ vinyl top, gold I--------- ' , 1973 BUICK REGAL brocade-Int., fully equipped, 1969 CONTINENTAL Dix. CUstom Hardtop Cpe. lo ml., steel belted radial l SEDAN 74'S ·=ARE F'acto"" air conc11ti"nlng tries, top condition! eau F to" Ir condlt' . full i ·J • "' , Wayne Ferrell, ~1397; ac ry a iorung, full power, vinyl top, vinyl 847_700( power, vinyl WP. leather HER interior, tilt wheel, J>O\\'f!r , ' interior, tilt \Vheel, stereo, E AT door locka, J\lt1/FM stereo, 10 ·COUPE . DeVWe. Gold door locks. (XS\\1541) sport wheels, ....,, tow, low w/black top, leolber all $1777 mlle1 &: showroom frelh. extras, Micbelln tires, Must ' HARBOU. R (564HJE) • sell. Will take wholesale o..r 80 .Fine Uoed can to $3,99 --55:1,9656 Select From. Vw o..r 80 Fine Uted can to '13 CAO SDV, like nu. 4500 Naben Cacllllac 28402 Marguerite Parkway SeJect From. ml, fully equip. Pvt. pty AUTHORJZED.., DEALER Ml5slon Viejo Nabers CadlUac $6250/oe otr. 644-13ll eve. 2600 HARBOR BLVD. ,m.2040 e 495-4949 18711 BEACH BLVD 842-4435 673-1010, 1-5. 1 COSTA MESA USE AVERY PWY. EXIT HUNTINGTON BEACH AU11l0RJZEQ DEALER '1970 s.D. Very clean. Load· 5t9-9100 Open Sunday Autos, u-990 '71 VW BUS 2600 !!ARBOR BLVD. ed. Toil medl. ·conc1. Mu.st '70 Contl-..... 1 COSTA MESA &ell. Best otter. 714'.nM. 11W11n1 • 9 PASS, e 540-9100 Open Sunday •n EL DORAD O Coo-Fully luxucyf,<JUip,lncludlng Xtra. clean, AM/FM stereo '72 Buick Riviera vertible, xtnt cond, prlv (actory air, and full power. 1---------radio & only 3.1 ooo mileO' --· ~ llr ""2336 156AEC 1970 Std•n de Ville t297DLl'), " ' · Full power & factory air. l""'"'" 1,m1. 0 O'H-• • • FaclocyalrCO(l<jl!joqjn .. full $2295 J ust bcaulllut. 191DZK, '73 • EI D ORADO . Low $1895 . _.,,, vinyl io1> •• 1t 1co1•" $3J95 mJJ•ase. 1u11Y· equip. $6800. Jim Slemons interior. tilt & telescopic I ~ J. s·--Call 968-8436 . steering, AM/FM '''"'°· ~ 1m ..... ons CAO '72, CDV, loaded, orig Imports power door locks, most all rV"ll 1 a'\• I owner, 15,000 mi, $5500/ofi 1301 Quail the deluxe extras. (666AGB) ~ mports fer 552-8766 1 Newport Beach $28B8 l30l Quail '64 CADILLAC Coupe de 833-9300 New!!!"-9300Bcad1 Ville, $575. ENTER FROM l\.facARTilUR 1969 Coupe CS. Ville 28402 Marguerite P~ay o.:i.:>-492-0139 Factory air.conditioning, lull Mission Viejo ENTER FROM MacARTHUR 1970 CONTINENTAL po\\<er, vinyl top and 831·2CMO e 495-41'.M\ 1970 BUICK RIVIERA '68 .CAD. Sed.de Ville68.~ CPE. I h. t st · I I US :n;, mi. Excel cond $1350. Facto~ a1" ""nd'tlon•ng, full m. a c mg ape ry Ill er.or, E AVERY PWY. EXIT F t I d" · lull • ., '' "'" ' ' 1 &: t le 1 1 ac ory a r con 1tion1ng, 494-4366 power, vinyl top, leather tit e ICOP c s eer ing, '69 vw Pop l p c po,\·er, vinyl top, matching ~I (~er<ODSL,\ twilight nu eng. clutch~ ~:~t tapestry interior , "\\'SW, tilt LADIES ..,72 Eldorado mint lnterk>r, AJllfFM stereo, ~'"""'· V"'-' • ~1:11 r 11r 59•3114 whttt, AM/FP.f stereo . cond., loaded, 20,ooo'mlle1, ~r locka, cruise control, CADILLAC See Vs First! ALL NEW FOR 1974 $1999 ~~. 0 • a: or (529EXC) make offer. 673-0981 tilt \Vheel. Loaded 8c jl15t ' 1970 Codllloc '70 BUG, orig ownr, '""' $2333 '73 CAO CdV, Lo nti, ,pert. like new. (544AUV) Convertible xlnt, very clean. $1400. Over 80 Fine Used Cars to cond. All xtras. C a 11 $2999 ... DATSUN 1·210 Leather interior, full power, 960-1690 Select From ) day/eve, Scher 64G-89jk> Over 80 Fine Used Cars to factory air conditioning, tut ·10 vw Bug, w/rur, xtra. Nabei's Coclfllac '73 CPE. deV. 4500 mi. Teal Select From A telescopic v.•heel, AMIFM $995. Call betwn 10am-5pm u~ :wAvhite top, Stereo~ Nabers Cadillac stereo multiplex, WSW Sat/Sun ONLY. 675-89Cll AUTHORlZED DEALER etc. Like new $6295. 633-3735 AUTHORIZED DEALER tires. etc. 1816BSR) '6'!. vw CAMPER w/pop-up. 2600 ~~RM~tVD· CAMARO 2600 HARBOR BLVD. $2999 New engine, brakes, paint, 540-9100 Open Sunday _....,...., ___ .... ---1 COSfA MESA 1973 C•dlll•c 'tires. Mint cond. GT:>-0319 'Tl CAMARQ spcits Rally. 5-ID-9100 • Open ~unday . Coupe do VIiie , ?9 7 0 V W, Oro nge '70 BUICK Auto, Ah-, P/B, -P/S, '6'! IJNCO'f:N M'ar.·m~alr Bum! !riema / bi""'n \rinyl Squ..,,baok._ Auto. Tra.,, ESTATE WAGON AM/FM $2950. 8-l:HI022. cond., AM/FM stereo, llhr, top / aaddlc leather full R/H. Asking $1400: 675-3408 '70 CAMARO elec wind/seats, xlnt cond. power. factory air i':onct., '69 V.W. Bus. ~ew l800cc ~i11:::;"er &:. ~ctory atR~· -3 spd w/console. Air cond. $3595. 675-8885 ' ' ... 'i4F.-. .. -.. 2 DOOR SEDAN 4 speed, tinted glass &: white sidewall tires •I • '.- ~:' ·. -.• s2474so ~ Pl11s O&H, T1x & Ll(tnst (CLOSED SUNDA"l'I tilt & telescopic wheel, swu1. camper tires, super 523 n. S $1800. Call 9'J9o0969 '71 MARK III, fully equip- 5tereo, door tocks, etc. Xlnt clesn 831-2148 1970 CAMARO PIS P/B ped. $5350. 642--0590, eves : condltion. 5 ( 5 629 9 HD 99 E) VOLVO . 'm Sle air, auto, nevi -t'. 12350'. & wknds 644-4746. 494-3f.61. J . • • Want ad resultb .•.•• 60-5678 Read Daily Pilot Classified 1970 C•dill•c · '74 VOLVO'S ~~~ CHEYROLET Autos, New 980 Coupe do VIiie HERE NOW Newpo"' B«ich ~-· Sauteme / Jlrown vinyl top . _9300 '63 \..fl.C>V .1: wagon. V-8, auto, I r-•· I ••-full · o.w-pwr strhg, R & H. Near nu v.nuuvan eau ... r, Immediate l)flivery ENTER FROM MacARntUR }JO\ver, factory air con· On All ?11odcls U.S. mags, Firestone 500 ditionina, tilt & telescopic SA VE S ON REMAINING '72-lJUIO{ Skylark-yellow 'tiret!:, Mooroe air shocks, 8 wheel, door locks, stereo, _73's & DEMOS PIS, P/B, air, 12 mo old. tracktapedeck,2tonepaint. Jight aentlnel, etc. Xlnt con-~Ull LW• As.king S2800. Call (213) $650. m:: bst otter. 968-2495. dition. (&llHBB) 723-01136 days. Ask for Miki' e '.70 MONTE Carlo, a/c, $3222 or eave name & No. ate p/w, am/fm stereo, wht ¥QLYQ Eves 1714) 673-4003 in N.B. wfblk vinyl top. $2650. 1972 C.dlllac '73 BUICK Sta. Wag. fully ~ eves . . ' ~ &ldorfldo -: 1966 Harbor, C.J\f, · 646-930l'. loaded"; w_llL sell at 1973 IMPAL.,f\ CUstom coupe Ice bltie firemlit, blue vinyl VOLVO ,70 St VI 48 IX)) wholesale Blue Book $4700. Uke new. L<> mileage. top, matching 1nter~r. Full mi, air oond~ a:t!,: RAH 64Z...900> an 7 PM Loaded. Leaving for Orient. ~"'~· factory air con-$2400. 49-1-9679 '65 \VILDCAT Convertible Sacrifice! 499-3702 d1tion1ng, till. le: tefe11COpic ,71 VOLVO 142 5 24 000 . powrr, air, runs great. 0•72='=EL="'c='Al\llN'="=o"', :cofully~-... _,..lp. "·heel, stereo, door locks, . • · mi. 54&-4581 lmmac cond. Cruise control, etc. Llke 5ne5"9" 9(8729 EIA) ~fnd. Orig owner caU J c:,.,O"-RC:l'=VI'=E=RA~.-.. ..,l"d-, -e-x.,...tra Lo mileage. $33'00. 979-3142 --~N~---~9= , . sharp, low miles. Sl395. '67 MALIBU sedan, xlnt 1971 C•dll l1c Autos, ew 80 638.3600 or 833-~. tranapo, bst o!fer Sed•n do VIiie CHEvROLrt * •73-= * An LiqU• gold/Blad< viny\1--------9UICK CASH top/Black lealhcr, f u 11 BRAND NE\Y •74 THROUGH A Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980A,utos, New 980Autos, New I I power. factocy air cond .. EL CAMINO CLASSIC -~r door locks. AM/FM F'AOT08Y PRICE DAILY PILO.T radio, au1Dmi.tlc cru•&e con· $42:84 trol, WSW U..., etc. Low OUR PRICE WANT AD miles, sharp. (li06GBJJ $3784 $3999 Call MacPherson Chevrolot CALL 642-5678 ...__BRAND N~W ·BRAND NEW. __ ;;;;;;;;;;Ii 1974 19n Codllloc 837-21lT" • <!l'l-1157. -~-~-,.---==' ~-,-'--'-7'-'-7'-""-"""'= Coupe-do VIiie Autos, us..i iiillli' 990 Autos, Used Vinyl top. tapestry A: leather interior, full power, factory air condl .... ng. tilt ~ telescopic wheel, AM/flf rad kl, \YSW, low mllrs (603EA!'J $i888 1969 C•dllloi: Eldor•do Factory atr condltionlng, Ml pov.-er, breat h ta k i n g flre'mist fi nish, vinyl top, leather lnterklr, tilt &: telescopic wheel, . sterm, door lock&, new w s w . (5AV304) $2555 1973 C•dllloc FIMtwood BROUGHAM DE . £LE. GANCE. t'ull JIOW'!?', spark]. q: finislt, padded vinyl top, matching tapestry a n d Je.athtT i n terior, dual comfort -1e&11, tilt a: telelCOplc wfleel, 11tereo, door locks. Hu every dlx. xtra lma&lnahle a: vecy low -(Ser. 134513). $68B8 1971 Coupe do VIiie Factory air condltlonlnf, full power, vinyl top, tapestry I: leather Interior., dual comrort 11eat1, tilt' &: telescopic steering, AM/FM stereo, door locks, many ex- ll'lis. (S H99 " 1972 C•dlll•c Sod•n do VIiie Factory aho corxll-. luU power, vinyl top, leather and tapettry lnterk>r. tllt I: telescopic wheel, stereo, -locb, """' -all U.. extras. ('l!i&ELU) • $4699 lfff s.Mn do VIiie hden • VIiie !'IClory aJr --· fllU .....,.., vlrtl'I top,. l•I} luthtr lntcdoro tilt • teletcoplc steer~ng._ AMIJ'M racUo, doors locki, cr1l1t cqntrol, many 'ex t • 1 • <YNE088) S199,9 , Over 80 Fine UllCd Clr1 'lo Select From. • Nabers CadlHac AU'lllORIZED DEALER. 2600 HAR.SOR BLVD. , Cotta Met&. -OD Open S\lnday )'73 LINCOL-111 Continent•! Town Coupe1 1ncuT1n DIMO Fully fectoty Eqwl ppecl, I I STK• 1114) : 1m CADILLAC ELDORADO . --~6~9~8tp....j• .._' l5989P-· COLONY PARK, St•tfon W•1•n, Lff4M, Nie• Car. . tt'lu89 . --l 1974 VENTURA $2781·10 s7866 DOWN s7866 MONTH •1974' FIREBIRD GRAND PRIX-· .$3245 40 t 71.16 h hhl '"' ,.,...1. t71.I• 11 hi.I,,..,...,.... ..... L toe, lie .. $448930 -BUY OR FULL PRiCE . LEASE •• < ... ,;..,....,..... _ .,~ ..... 4;1 lot ....... 0.1 ..... ""''· ,n.o 11161.46 *1.t .. 11<-o.ANHllAL rt•CfNfA6E V.lli 14.Js;:. O&Dfl ~N TOlll CHOICE Ofl COLOlS lOOf.Tf '11 TIANS AM vt, .. '''"· ··•:.. ~Ml .. , ,...... ...... ;..,." ... oho, h,-pl•r•" l nMYLI SAVE '8 IOHE CHAIGEI '!I, ,.-.;;c, M. •1oyl to~. ,.,..,. •+...W.,. ....... ........._ ,.,,., 1>.01.,., UUllCI '950 I Oll8fl 1111 \'OUI CHOIC! Of COloel lOU'I' Alll MCIUTOUR MONEY UCK LIAJIPUN '8 PONTIAC . VENTURA t 0.-. H,T. VI, "'-•tk, 01' ..... ~ •;,.)t .. ,,. P"""'''"'ioot I .... k • ., IZY~o,11 9595 'II GIAND nix YI, ...._,11~. """' .. ,I ....... ........ ,... .. ot~bo~~tl '425 • '17 PONTIAC WAION t ''"· VI, ~. •W, ,.tilt, ~otlo" ~ 11..n.,.ff• • ., .......... IWCZ41JI '•71 GIAND PllX YI. o ..+-tie, ,.41., "'"-'"'• 0:., .lol'f "°'' .;ii -•..r. ,._ "-.... i.. ...... ..._. 1 ......... CAIJllll '2095 .. -- OlOf:l Ml 'l'Ol,ll CHOttll °" COLOlS •OD <l.l ! '10 E~ CAf\llNO "'· ""'-•fl<, ,;, ... ,_, ...... ~ ...... ,.,. .. ~ ... l1l'11fJ • SAVE ' r 'A IATllN PIClllP 4 ........ ,.419, '"'-· i.... •iht ........ i.. .. 1'1'1M5011 $AVE· . . . ( • ' . I · j . ,, I • YOUR FACTORY AUTHORIZED CHEVROLET DEALER SERVING THE ENTIRE H ARBOR AREA FOR .OVER 13 YEARS . . . ~ Try Our Newest at Connell Chevrolet Lease the "CONNELLEASE" Way See Jerry Perkins, Leasing M1n1ger ~~WE'RE LOADED WITH . 74'S - WE'VE CLEARED OUT MOST ALL OF OUR 1973 INVENTORY SO • • • • • WE'RE RECEIVING EXTRA LOADS OF '74'5 FROM THE FACTORY. . ' NO NEED TO . ·ORDER AT CONNELL • • ' • • • • • • • ---II • BRAND NEW '7 4 Chevy Y2 Ton Pickup FINAL 1973 DEMONSTRATOR SALE! VS Engine. i135TI 1110757) $ '68 Buick Sport Wagon VI, t uto., t it, P.S., 47 ,000 mlle1. Cle111n & •tidy. fWlS5S'il $1549 Beil olf1r. No r11111on•bl1 off1 r r1fu11d thi1 w1ek· i nd. ' '72 Mont~ Vi<1yl to o, P.S., •ulo., ,;, cond. A true betuly. I IO•EJBI 2 lo choo11. $3279 '68 Cougar Auto .. P.S .. P.I .• ,;, cond., vinyl top. Sliek & r11dv, (WIA259 J $1599 '68 Camara VI , P.S., .t 1p11td, chrome m'•91 w/wide fir11. Sherp, t79rHFR! $1599 ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY '72 AMC Hornet Sportabout P.S., P.8 .. a uto., roof ,.,~. 21 ,1<!2 mil11. Showroom r1111 dy. ( l57EX Fl $2699 '72 Impala - • Or. Spl. Sed. \linyf roof, •ir cond., P.S., •ulo., P.B .. 2•,000 miles. lmm•eu!•le, 1121DV\l l $2449 '67 Chev. Carryall VI, auto., eir eond., 1tron9. IUUJ7t 7) $1369 '69 Chev. Van J 1eel1r sport v1n. Reel cl11n. I, •1110. IYXR77 1 I Com pl1t1ly ov1rh1ul1d. Hev1 oth1r v•ns I sport v111n1 & truck1. $2139 .. CAPRICE '4295 00 MONT E CARLO '469500 Loaded Electric Sun llool.1108) . (249) (114358) (4 41573) . IMPALA $357800 . IMPALA CUSTOM '359000 Loaded (112) 1103651 1 (257) (115977) Loaded IMPALA 2 DOO R '377265 Loaded (121 ) (104511) '69 Intl. Travelall Wtgon, P.S., 1uto., 150,Sll mile1. Cltt n & 1trong. tlut l ook $2240. $1999 or bill offer, No r1e1on1ble offer refu1ed lhi1 week1nd . '71 Nova 2 Door Sh•'P· Right mil e1. Good v•lue. CJ 12CTP J $1499 '68 Caprice Wagon Air. P.S .. •ulo .. 6 p•11. Roof r•ck. (25•BHIC I $1099 W1gon1 9•lore, '61 lo '72 medel1. littl1 & bi9. Pric1d lo 1eU. No r••1011eble offer refuted this weekend. '68 CadiUac Seden D1Vill1. 19,000' mil11. Power. eir, vinyl top. lmmecuJ 1t1. (WQY506) $1699 I - CAPR ICE 4 DR. \$~20600--Loaded (771 ) 1164.262.1 '68 · Oldsmobil~ Cutlass Sup••rn•. 44,000 miltt, Vi, •uJo .. P.S., t ir candi- lionin9. !VHC7071 '69 Impala\ ll,000 loc•I t own1r miles . 16l2HGI! $775 •• '70 Impala Custom Cpe., VI , •P.S., P.8,. •uto., vinyl ro of. niet '''· 1267AHWl Kelley whole1•le $1'450 OUR PR ICE $1499 ' '70 Chev. Carryall VI, eufo., P.S., $600 roof •ir cond., '•ery cle•rt. I 12'42'4G ) $2669 • - ,., .- 990 Auto•, ""u'"toe1_,..---.990=· PONTIAC '70 F;splrlt Lo 1nlles, full poY.l!t,. air, Ult steering wheel, vinyl top, \\ire \\•heels, top cohd. 675-436.1 67 GRAND PRIX CONV. f'ull PQ\'er. lte\v top, air, l\liche1ins $:;95. 642-3354, GRAND Prix 1969. vinyl top, niag whls, moderate mllet. Xlnt cond. ~tust sell. i1 or offer 6Ta-2696. '73 LE l\CANS Coupe, v.s: auto, pis, p, disc brksJ 9,0CKI 111i w1d11r "·ar., lmmac. ssooo. 8"""874. '65 GTO. 1 spcf, 396 01ev. "nginc, Amerlcon mai;:s, An.sen Sp1•ing astros, Call bef 11 or aft 4, 842--070t '72 PON'l'IAC Grandville Elegant 4 dr. ha rd top loudNI. XJnt rondiLlQn, Belo\v wholesale &~2975 1972 POi'i'TIAC Grand Prix. Exe. cond. All Et~ 213/372~16l2 or n4/t11.HJ1U11 ·r;r FIREBIRD, V-8, stick, good cood .. $500. Call 64>-&l>l '69 PONTIAC Catalina 2 dr hardtop. P/S, P/B, P/\Y, Clean. $1.250. 833--3399 1968 FIREBIRD .J.:.O 11. 0 . Sales &: Sl':vice L()\V mile!i. Olive "rttn. OLDSMOBILE XJnt mnd. ,-,i;.3010_ GMC T R UCKS '64 Pontiac LeAf.ans HONDA CARS Convertible. $150 call 546-075.:l UNIVERSITY OLDS 2850 Harbor Blvd. T·BIRD Costa ~fesa 540·9640 --------- 1910 OLDS "-'· 4 dr lull '72 T·BIRD po\\'er, fa c air, front disc J•'ully Iu.xury equipped. Full brks. i;tcrro lapc deck, po"·er &: faclory alr. 074FND $1975, call nll 6, fo4G-5469 53495 OLDS '73 Toronado, Cranberry \\'/\\'hi vin . Ip. Jim Slemons 1•1,000 n1i's. Loadl'd. Pvt. pty. 14700. 6•2-1~.JO. Imports I '6-f OLDS Station \Vagon, 1301 Quall mag \\.'heels & lircs, $<l50. NC\\''POl"t Boo.t'b Good corid. !>16-1634 aft 5 • 833-9300 ~68~ OLD~ ~. 6 cyl, orig ENTER ffiOl\f ~1aC"ARTHUR o\\ner. good rood. ·$900 or '72 T·BIRO fully loaded: oHcr, 968-157'1. po11·cr !!eats, \\1.nd0\\1', etc. PINTO A.i\I F:\f •sterro, \'inyl top, I , _ rl\dial tires, !-011· n1iles. Cati ~3367. 1 '72 RUNABOl!.J'1 ~ ~1?1:1 . .!lf, o,,--c=-=o=--,-,---., di sc brks, lo milr. xlnt cones. ' -:t.WRO. xlnt cond. j Cusl inl/cxL $%350 551-2006 ~~~!~ ·~~ ~:· ~~3:2 PLYMOUTH >•s-5620 '72 SATELLITE Rei:;:~nl. 9 pass stat. ~"gn. Air. ful l p1\T, 1-1,lm n1i, nu 1'000, . must i;ell. \\'Ill take under y,•holesale-blue b o o k . 552-9656 '64 T-BIRD. full pwr, 1 01vncr, low miles. fjOO Call ~l Ul '62 T-BIRD. VERY 0.EAN! Good condition. S29.>, EVes, 546-UITT. 'fi6 T-Btrd 2 Or. Full po""er, '70 PLYMOUTII Roadrunner, air, whitt' w/blacK int. f'ind shape, auto !rans, Steal at $475. 979-1268 !\~· 96;"-2616. 644-5600 po-; VEGA ·~ PL\' ~Ury,. 4 dr. A/c, j .71 VEGA . GT \Vngon, '73 ~-Rll · \ll'('S: Oean. rn~inc, ne"' clutch. air , s. : 960-UOS ~cs. and cond.," speed, rndl.als.Very l\N>kcnds l·lcan .. SJ.195. 5 3 6 · 6 20 9 1 '6-1 PLY].fOtrn~ Fury in ll.11 -12-12. good rondtion. $250. .-:0-~~~~~--- tl 546 'i2 VEGA \Vgn. New f'n&'., ca -()7"';)3 air, F~f itlcreo, Z7,000 ntl. 1961 PLY].fQlITJ·I Be!\'edcn.'. $1950. 49l-G43.1 4 lh'., $200. 5#-1lli ·~ YE(;A llatchb8L'k, 111i., likt> llC\I'. 11550 . 8000 You'll find l! 1ri Ctasiniie<! Call 347.3253 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 ALLEN OLDSMOBILE CADILLAC Is Offering Great Savings! '73 AUDI 1 OOLS •Door 11d•11, coeo brown with bei91 lnt11ior, euto1t1etic tre1111ni11 io n, 1un roof, l full fectory equipment, Only 14,500 ecluel mil•1l $AVE '70 MERCE ,_ ES 280$E '4 Door 1•d1n, white wHh blue l11ther interior, full ,ow•r end f111cto1r 1ir co1tdltionln9. Only 15,000 ech1•I mil••! $AVE ~73 PORSCHE 914 1.7 Litre, 5 1p•ed, •Poe•t•l'ICI 91oup, •nd'm•9 wh11lt. Only 15 ,670 111el11el 111ileil $AV• I I SPECIAL COUPOff Ufq!ME FOR FREE Fru Cu Wolh Coupon With Any Automol>llo Purch111 ;,,~.. Allen l ij Oldsmobile Son Diogo Fwy · At Avery Pky ~ Cadillac LAGUNA NIGUEL 49s.o800 831-0800 • l l . . \ ' I • • ' ' ; I ' ,. .. Sun~ay, NO\lf'mbff 4, 197) DAILY PILOT D J5 • > • •I-/ti: Explorer .-of Huntington -Beach . announ(es the expansion of their SERVICE DEPT_. to servi(e all mkes and models of Recreation Vehi(les. ,, -. OUR !XPERTS Will BE HAPPY TO SOLVE YOUR 1RV . SERVICE PROBLEMS'-CALL .: NOW! .. I -, . . . , ' . I-• ., ... : '• :'· ' • . . -~). ·:·:~· ·;,.' ' ''!,_f;':J': • •'. . ~:.... , , !-.. l · ' .· . .. ' ' I · , 1. . . , ' ' . ...... _,r. • • ~t! ; •• _ ...... •· . -,-:- " ' .. . .. ~t-~ " . . NEW '7 4 NEWPORTER "' ... ' - ' f. ·-~: SAN SIMEON CONVERSION .r: ,. E'uipped with bubble top, Dodge chaJ;s, V-B; automatic & much more. (Ser. "t 6-4712~350) . · . '4995 $72.38 MONTH for 8A months. 2DY. down. Cash price incl, tax & licerfse 1, $.5277.7.S, Dt4 · ferrtd price ls $7135.47, Annual percentage rote.ls ll~"O•Y •• On approved Crtdlfo ' , I .. ' * .larle$t Selection : r Anywhen I I I. , -" .,. .. ' ~. ,, . ~ : :,~:,'73 EXPLORER 20' ~i;i:. ~-I " . , I~: ...... \ .-._r . ;. .. ..,.~ .. .· . . • ' •. -~~ ... \>; ~· .·~;-~~~§t~S< fULl:Y SELF CONTAINED .;~ ~' . ;~.~.:~.~,m~'; ,· •' ,.; ~ , -.1,~ I• ft -~ ·~ith stove, oven, sho~er,_ toilet, _ti~t~d glass, o~erhead bugfc, win~s~ield curt,~in: on . ~.~: f ~ o 1 Tan Dodge chass1i, hose & comer plus mu'di more. (~4GJV) · ~-.~.~- . ~"' ' .,~ . . ' ' .. , f· -. ' . · · . · · '4:1" •91 7•tt.•0N.-i£ {.: ;,; 'c:. .:, $ .t: . • '" m rn ~~ ... ,.;mt ¥iS°il· · for 8.( months. 20 '/. down, Cash price ind. tax. . . f.. 1'"'.";~,:~:~A & lic•nt• i1 $~773.75. Dtf•rrtd pmt. price ls ~'!~·.:.;.. $9063.~3. Annual perctnfogt rote is 10,6.4%, ; r . .-~ · · On approved crediL ,.. ,. I .-:;.}' . '':~-· • ;:.. -.,.i~ ---. '.· ' . ·""": . ,. . -,-- '• •, ~~ ..,.·... . . ' .. . " " " . -. ; . FULLY SELF CONTAINED. Has range ; oven, dble. sink, dual wheels, on d 1 ton Dodge chassis & much 'l!lore. ·(YBOS) • . ' .. '6295 t90.15 MONTH fot 8.C months. 2oy. down. Cash price Incl. tox & lic1nse ii $66.54.75, o .. ferred pmt! price is $8903,55. Ann1.1al pt~•ntag1 rote 11 10.6<4f,. On approved credit. .EXPLORER -MOTOR ·aoME 'CENTEiS •• i ' * Complete Service Facilities · . --••• , ·. • --· . I " • • -. • • • • • ' • 1 ' .. " .. ·' -:_.,I ,, . . . l :· ! . . . -• " . -~ , . .. ... ·' •. " 'l .. ' ' " . ' ' ' " ' ' ' • ' ' BRAND NEW DART I Ll'ilC4G 1101911 . $2466 s73 DOWN · IMMEDIATE DELIV ERY s73 MONTH . • $7] ;, lot•I dn. pyml. $7] i1 tot1I mo. ,pymt. ind. 11~. lie., & all c1rryin9 ch1r9es on •. appr. credit fer '42 me». D1f1rr1d pyml. p<ie• $3139 incl. lax & lie. ANNUAL f'ER . : CENTAGE RATE 1 0.15';~. . B~A ND NEW . . . 1974 DODGE STATION WAGON OlllDIR TODAY $ .FULL PRICE BRAND NEW $ / '74 B-100 ·VAN FuUy Factory Equipped 1811 A84X02139b l IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $83 DOWN $ 3 MONTH $83 i~ total dn. pymt, $83 i1.tot1I l'llO. pyml. incl.· t1x, lie., I 111 e1rryin9 eh1r911 on a ppr. er1clit for '42 1'1101. 01f1rr1d pymt. pric1 $3569 incl. t1x I lie. ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE 11 .65 ')'. . ,. ; OVER STOCi<E D WITH NEW ~CAR TRADE-I S .•• CALL ••. YOUR IC r '72 VEGA l'.adio, heater, fully factory equipped. I060EIXI '72 PIN TO Radio, h1ater, fully factory equ ipped. IZRI IX109962 1 '72 DO DGE WAGON VS, a utomatic, air 'cond., power steering, AM-FM radio, cruise control: ( l34EKG J 546 Down 546 Month S46 is tQlal dn. J)ymt. S~6 is total i'no. pymt. incl. tax. lie., &. nH. carrrtnp: charges on appr. credit for 36.mos. Deferred pymt. price !S 702 incl. tax & lie. ANNUAL PElCENTAGE RATE . 17.21 ~-• '70 FORD GALAXIE Automatic, factory air, power steer- ;,g. I 17 8AVL I $8 66 FULL PRICE '69 DODGE POLARA Automatic, fa ctory air, power steer- ;,g. I 178AVLI s7 6 FULL PRICE '71 FORD MAVERICK Automatic, radio, heater. f290FWCI $866 FULL PRICE '69 CHEVY IMPAU\ CPE. V-S, power steering. ·IYCL447 1 s7 FULL PRICE '70 FORD MAVERICK '69 FORD VAN Auto. trans., radio, hea{ar. 1458GITI V-S , radio , he ater. 141 IFF ll 6 FULL PRICE '69 COUGAR -COUPE Automatic, power steefing. IXS B- 462 1 FULL PRICE • 69 PO~TIA.C. FIREBIRD Auto. trans., air conO., power_ steer· ;,g, v.a .• I YVM967 I . 6 .. , FULL PRICE . $ 66 FULL PRICE '67 CHEV. CAMARO S.S. VS, land au roof, radio, heater. IYOY77 1 I FULL PRICE '69 PLYMOUTH BELVEDER.E -Automatic, ra dio, he1ter. l580CBD J 54 66 , FULL PRICE • SUPER '73 CHARGER SPEC IAL I I ·a e • • VS eng ine, automatic transmission, power steering. l2 93HRHI \ $ , • CHARQER . DELIVERY . $. • t 66 '"""";::;., ... 5. DOWN s35 MONTH $85 h tot1I cl)i . P'Pl!f, $85 1h totiil~mo. p'fmt. incl.' t1•, lie., l 111 c11rr.,in9 ch1r91t on 1ppr. cr1dit for '42 mo1. D1f1rr1d p'fmf. pritt $3655 inti. t1x l lie. ANNUAL PER- CENTAGE RATE ll.1 1% BRAND NEW 1974 .B-200 SPORTSMAN YAN VI, 1utom1tic , P.S., tint w1hld, H.0. 1prin91, r11r 111!. IMMEDIATE DELIYERY $3966 l822AE'401 4159 ! ~116 DOW.N Sl 16 MONTH $1.Jl i1 tol1I dn. P'fl'llf. $116 i1 tot1I mo. pymt. incl. t1x, lie., l 111 c1rryin9 eh1r911 on . •Ppr. cr1dit, for 42 mot. D1ferr1cl pymt. pric1 $4988 ind. t1x I lie, ANNUAL PER--. CENTAGE RATE 10.26 1. ., FR EE CRED IT CHECK If you •• new in CoOfornla e If you owe Ofl. your cw • If you are new on your job e If you hove little or 1IO credit e DrJye home today I• the car of your choice. lx· ampl.S of our mo11y ways to fin ance: Crocker lank • U~loll .... k • Security Poclflc • lo~k of America • UoltM c.llforoio .... e Crysle< Cred it e FlrHldo Tllrlft TAKE -vouR CHOICE '71 VEGA Fully fa ctory equipped. 1246CTHI '71 PINTO • Automatic, bucket seats, radio, heater. l 207DIMI '71 PLYMOUTH WAGON $ Automatic, power steering. l990GXll 530 Down 530 Month . . . . . ~$30 ·~' total doWa p)rmt'. $30 Is tolaJ 'monthly on appr. credit J.or. :111os .. DeJeJTed pymt. price pymt. i cl. tax. license, &nd all c Ing charges Is $1110 incl: T&L. ANNUAL PERC ENT• . ... OE llATI U.6'\', . ' I '· -·~ ... • I , -·--· COSTA MESA SADDLEBACK LAGUNA BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY IPVINE SAN CLEMENTE WEEK OF NOV. 4 · NOV. 10 • THE · CARROLL o•c••••R SPECIAL • THREE FOR THE GIRLS .l ' , Sunday, NMmber 4, 11J73 BR A ND NEW DART lll·2JC4G11019 11 IMMEDIATE DELIVERY s73 MONTH : $71 i1 lot~I dn. pvmt . $71 i1 totel mo. pyml. inc.I. la w. lie., & all carry ing (haro11 on • •ppr, c.r1 dit for 42 mai, 01f1rt1d pvmt. price $Jll9 in(I. fax l lie. ANNUAL PER- ; CENTAGE RATE I0 .15S"<:. BRA ND NEW · 1974 DODGE STATION WAGON ORDER TODAY $ FULL PRICE BRAND NEW $ . '74 B-100 ·VA-N Fully Factory . Equipped (81 IA84X021l96) ' IMMEDIATE DELIVERY $83 DOWN S 3 MONTH $83 i~ toi•I dn. pyml. $8 1 '1 tot•I mo. pyml . incl. l•x, lie., & •II earryinlJ (h1ro1• on appr. eredit for 42 mo1. Delerr1d pvmt. priee $35 69 inc l. t11 & Ii(, ANNUAL PERCENTAGE RATE I l.65 Y. ' : OVER ST OC i{E D WITH NEW ~CAR TRADE-I S ..• CA L • • • . • • YOUR '12 VEGA l'.a dio, heater, fully factory equiprJ'ed. _ IObOEIXI '72 PIN TO Radio, heater, fully f.tctory equipped. IZRI IXI099621 '72 DODGE WAGON VB, automatic , air cond., power steering, AM-FM r.td io, cruise co ntrol. ( 134EKG J $46 Down 546 Month S46 is total dn. r)ymt. S46 is tot.8.1 ino. pym t. incl. tax, lie., & all carrvl ng charges on appr. credit for 36.mo>;. OC'fcrrcd pymt. price S1702 incl. tax & lie. ANNUAL PE'RCENTAGE RATE . 17.21 ~. - '70 FORD GALAXIE Automatic, factory air, power steer- ;og. I 178AVLI $ FULL PRICE '69 DODGE POLARA Automatic, factory air, power steer- ;,9. I 178AVL I $ 6 FULL PRIC E '71 FORD MAVERICK Automatic, radio, heater. l290FWCI $ 66 FULL PRICE '69 CHEVY IMPALA CPE. V.8, power steering .. IYCL447 1 $766 FULL PRICE '70 FORD MAVERICK '69 FORD VAN Auto. t rans., radio, heater. (458GIT I V-8, rad io, heater. 1-411 FFll 6 $. 66 FULL PRICE FULL PRICE '69 COUGAR ·coUPE '67 CHEV. CAMARO S.S. Automatic, power steering. (XSB-VS, Landau roo f, radio, heater. 462 1 IYOY771 I FULL PRICE FULL PRICE '69 PONTIAC FIREBIRD '69 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE Auto. tran s., air cond., power steer-Automatic, radio, he~ter. (5SOCB DJ ;,g, V-8. I YVM9b7 l 6 . $ ... FULL PRICE • ZU · ER SPEC IAL '73 CHARGER VS engine, automatic transmission, po.,.er Steering. ~H) ,$ 66 FULL PRICE I I I e • • CH ARGER $ , MONTH $15 i1 tot1I d)I. pymf, $8S it1 totil .mo. p'1mt. incl.' l•x, lie., & 111 e•rr..,in9 ch•r911 on appr. (tedit for '42 11101. D'eferred P'1mt. price $1655 inc.I. tax & lie. ANNUAL PEit'· CENTAGE RATE ll.11% BRAND NEW 1974 B-200 SPORTSMAN YAN · VI, •utom•lic, P.S., tint w1hld, H.D. 1prino1: r11r ,,.,, IM MEDIATE s]966 1122AE40t4159 ! s11& DOWN .s11& MONTH , $1.Jl ii toi1I dn. pymt. $116 ;, fot•I mo. pymt:inel. l•I, lie., & 111 e•rrvin9 ch1r911 on •ppr. credit for 42 mo1. Deferred pymt. price $4981 incl. 111 l tic. ANNUAL PEit CEN.TAGE RATE 10,26 % ~ · FREE CREDIT CHECK If y~ •e new in CGHfornia e If you ow e on yovr car • If you •e new on your job e If you have little or no credit e Drive home today i11 the car of your choice, Ex· arnplft of our many ways to finance: Crocker loak • Uol.. llaok e Security Paclffc e laok of America e Uoltod Cellfanlio lank e Cryslet Credit e Fireside Tllrift ' TAKE YOU R CHO IC E '71 VEGA Fu lly factory eq ui pped. l24bCTHI '71 PINTO Automatic, bucket seats, radio, heater. l207DIMJ '71 PLY MOUTH WA GON $ Automatic, power iteering. l 990GXl l . s30 Down 530 Mon th . . , " -. ::$3'.Q'~total doWn p)rmt: $30 ls total· monthly On appr, cri!'dit . Jor ; mos .. ~erred pymt. price pymt. i~cl. tax. license, and all c Ing charges is $1110 inct: T&L. ANNUAL PERCENT• ·~GE llATE 13.'3% ' ' •' • • -·--· COSTA MESA SADDLEBACK LAGUNA BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY IRVINE SAN CLEMENTE WEEK OF NOV. 4 · NOV. 10 • THE · o•c o • • o R SPECIAL • THREE FOR THE GIRLS tJ:l4:1t*1:•tt•}l•l;f1 Ward S. Lee Inc. 1234 S. Main St., Santa Ana 547:.5826 Roy Carver Inc. 234 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa · 546-4~ Crevier Motors 208 W. 1st St., Santa Ana 83E-317 I · Bauer Buick -2925 Harbor ' Costa Mesa 979-2500 CADILLAC Nabers Cadillac 2600 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9100 - CHEVROLET Connell Chevrolet 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-1200 DATSUN Dot Datsun 18835 Beach Blvd., · Huntington Beach 842-7781 DODGE Courtesy Dodge 2888 Harbor Blvd., 557-9220 FORD Dunton Ford 2240 So. Main St., Santa Ana ' 546-7070 Theodore Robins Ford 2060 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa b-42-0010 Wilson Ford 18255 Beach Blvd., Huntington Beach 842-6611 University Oldsmobile 2850 Harbor Blvd ., Costa Mesa 540-96'40 JAGUAR Bauer Buid -2925 Harbor Costa Mesa · 979-2500 LINCOLN • MERCURY Gustafson Linc/Mere 16800 Bea~h Blvd., Huntington Beach 842-8844 Santa Ana Lincoln-Mercury 130 I No. Tustin, Santa Ana 547-0511 Connell Chevrolet 2828 Harbor 'Blvd., Cos.ta Mesa 546-1200 '--"' OLDSMOBILE University Oldsmobile · 2850 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 540-9640 THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK, NOVEMBER 4, 1973 OPEL Bauer Buid -292 S Harbor Costa Mesa 979-2500 PONTIAC Dave Ron Pontiac 2480 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-8017 PORSCHE · AUDI Chid Iverson Porsch•-Audi 445 E. Coast Hwy. Newport Beach 67 l-0900 ROLLS-ROYCE Roy Carver Inc. 234 E. 17th St. CMta Mesa 546-4_..4 TOYOTA · Dean Lewis Imports 1966 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mes• 646-9303 VOLKSWAGEN Chic~ Iverson V 0Ntswa9en 445 E. Coast Hwy. N 8 673-0900 VOLVO Deen lewis lmp0ri1 1966 Herbor lfvd., Coste Mest 646-9101 • :-- t t t y t t T I t t t t t ' t r t I t I I t I I t t I t I I t -- V;,. IPORTI HltJH//()/ITI .. :· u.. .A· -~~:./ SPORTS HIGHLIGHTS OAM O Q!) Ci) Pro footb•ll OoublehHder L.A. Rams vs. Atlanta Falcons, and S.F. vs. Detroit. O ~(!)®)Pro Footb•ll Cleveland Browns at Minnesota Vikings. I College Footb•ll '73 CV Notre Dame Football 0 Pro Football Giants at Oakland. UCLA Football @ (I) College Footb•ll '73 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5 PM O (i1) (1) Monday Night Pro Football Washington Redskins vs. Pittsburgh Steelers. m N~tre D•me Football WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7 PM O Qj Lakers Basketbtll Lakers vs. Milwaukee Bucks. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8 PM Kings Hockey Kings vs. Philadelphia Fliers @Ice Hockey FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9 PM O @ Lakers Basketball L.A. Lakers vs. Seattle Supersonics. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10 AM 00 NCAA Football o· ~Cl) NBA BHketball Kansas City vs. Miiwaukee. Horse Racing ''The Washington D.C. International" 0 ·1 Srts Special L.A. Invitational Swimming Championships. ~ NCAA Football This Week In Pro Football BC's Wide Wor1d of Sports SC Football Ont.r Fot Younelf er • Fn.nct Mey be used on envelopH •• re+vrn adclNll lahel1. Also very hancly 11 ida ificttion labal1 for markin9 peraontl Items such as l>ooli1, records, photot, •tc.. labels stick Oft glau and may b• used for marking hom• canned foe:d items. All labels .,, prin+•d with 1tyli1h Vogue type on fine quelity wh it• 9umm•d paper. THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 4, 1973 HALLMARK ~·~ ..!695 11 . .\l.l.\1 \RK'S n1·\~' 1·11n<·rpt in modtrn IX'""' nal h;11r 1·;1r<' !'or nwn and wnmrn qn 1h1• ~"or al h11m1• IT -; l1t!hl w:l'rm ancl hrert.,· S1,·linc: ;i nrt 111wh 11p macit· l':iw lhrrahJe · vinyl tr:1\l'I pi11wh II fll' lll':tl l\' tn p11ro.;l'. hn<'f<'llC\!' 11r 111(1' h:1c FEATURES: ft: \Tl 'HES •F11-;1 dri<'" mul poh-;h l111t.~t'rtt' "' 11111, P"l' l'IC' •H11ill-10 Th<'rn111,.t.i1 t<' l'on- 1 ml•hh. h.1nd n1•111 h •opc>r;ll <'' q1111•1 Iv • 110 I :!II·\(' 1110 \\ ;ll h Sec\d Che<lo °' ~ Qfd,.. 10 HOTI IN\IESTME,NT CO P 0 80X 1031 HUNTINGTON BEACH CA 92647 ~ ..... 1" I•• TOTAL OF '7 )t RETUltN POSTAGE INCLUDED AT "THI SMALL CAR EXPIRTS11· FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALES-SERVICE -·PARTS nlSONAUDD UASING -AU MAKIS & MODElS A llllE SELEC11011 OF USED CARS 842-7711 541·0442 S erving _j/.ff B eac/, due~ S MINUTES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY. 11835 IEICH BLVD. IHi~oy HUNTINGTON BEACH \ Page 3 -6:00 iJ 8 Su O Knowl1 m Univer 6:25 O Not lo 6:30 EJ Odysst 6 Dayb11 8 Educa· iO Garner mNewZ 6:45 ffi Comm 7:00 0 26 "' 0 23, '6 '6 me. QGune O Futur O Garne §Bozo's Marke Ses1rr 7:30 0 The G 6 Jeff's ONews (l futu @ Skrp r 8:00 R 19 • ~Jack l 6 leave 0 Ralph a Sunu1 OJ Denni 17 3 p ffi Stock 26 Bozo' ff) Educa 8:30 Q featu '6 1 Ozzie ~~:~s (e.} Gumt 17 3 " 26 The E ffi Yoga 9:00 0 '29 3 ro s ~ 2l( '26 F 6 ) Bent O Brue• IE 1 lov Ttnn 17 ':ft ~ 9:30 0 r29 ~ B 23, Movr m Greer (DRom1 10:00 El 29 J OJ 0 23 r Odds '61 Run m Andy l!)Crtyl fE Stoel 'l6 700 I ffi Educ 10:15 ffi Phyll lo:lo e 29 0 l~f ~Ulr!S O Philt THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 4, 1973 REGULAR DAYTIME PROGRAMS MORNING 6:00 8 Sunrise Semester O Knowledge m University of the Air 6:25 O Not for Women Only 6:30 Odys.sey 6 Dllybreak 8 Educational Features lQ, Garner Ted Armstrong m New Zoo Revue 6:45 El) Commodity Report 1:00 II ® Qcl j) News · lll (A) m Today Show 6 m Cartoons Garner Ted Armstron& Features Garner Ted Armstron1 Bozo's Bi& Top Market Opening : Sesame Street 7:30 Q The Gallery 6 Jeff's Collie ONews 0 Fu tures Q) Skip n' Woofer 8:00 A 129 8' Captain Kangaroo 0 Ju k la Linne l'i) Leave It to Beaver 0 Ralph Story's AM <Tl Sunup Mel Knoepp 6) Dennis the Menace " • 17 13) Public Service m Stock Exchange :ii Bozo's Big Top all Eduu,ional Futuru 8:30 O features (6) Oaie & Harriet I ~:;s, f riends Gumb, New Zoo Revue M The Bible lesson all Yoga for Health 9:00 8 ~ 00 The Joker's Wild (3) ~· Sesame Street I ~ Ci) o m Dinah's Place Feitures Ben Case, Bruce Brown Talks To •.. - I love Luc' Tennusee Tuxedo Movie: See Daytime Movies. 9:30 I CW (8) The $10,000 Pyramid ' · @ CIJ 0 m Baffle Movie: See Daytime Movies Green Acres Romper Room 10:00 8 ~ (i) Gambit (3) 0 Movie: See Daytime Movies. 0 t» ("{) I q m The Wizard of Odds (6) Run for Your life I Andy Griffith City Kids Stock uchange 700 Club all Educational Programmln& 10:15 El) Ph,llis Denny Show 10:3011 ~ O QJ m ~uares O Phllbln & Co. I That 6111 Features ; Stock uchange News/Pandorama dtl Valle 10:50 (l1J (3) Joe Baratta Health Show 11 :00 B ~ Ci) The Youn a & ttle Rest· less i (jJ 00. ®) m Jeopardy The fugitive The Flying Nun Features (3) living Easy m The Electric Company Q) Liars' Club 11:30 O fl91i).se1rch for Tomorrow O lfi@ 0 mwho, Whit, Where Game I Gene Aut..!1_ 1 @ W The Brady Bunch let's Rap Wanderlu st . Mister Ro gen' Neighborhood AFTERNOON 1 '·00 I Noontime . m Three on a Mitch tttovie: See Daytime Movies. 6 Hazel 1 (3) (D Password lore Ila Swill and La~ B_!yde~uest. 8 1 0 m W ai l!J News Q The Real McCoys :l~Tennessee Tuxedo ED Features 129 (i' Ann Gutcher Show 12:30 II ~ 'i As the World Turns 0 l3 @ '@ m Days of Our l ives I Truth or Consequences 1 (3) (D Spli t Second • Make Room for Daddy Movie: See Daytime Movies. Dialing for Dollars 16 Not for Women Only 1:00 I ~ OC The Guiding light · ~ @ O m The Ooctori 6 Ai:hina You Can Do 1 00 (D All My Children • ovie: See Daytime Movies. @ Phil Donahue Show W Educational Pro1ramming · ~ @ (JR) m Another World 6 Mike Dol!f as Show 1:30 I® Cil ~e of Night @@ W let's Make a Deal Galloping Gourmet Commodity Report 2:00 II ei9 (8) New Price Is Rl1ht 0 ~00~®1 mReturn to I on P11ce 1 @ CE The Newfywed Game Petticoat Junction Features 2:30 1 1 (i) M.tch 6ame •73 . 00 @ tfOl m Somerset 1 (I) a> The Girl in My life Features : Educational Programming 2:40 m Ben Hunter Interviews 3:00 I ~ 00 The Secret Storm • Truth or Consequences ii hway Patrol 6 ®Cartoons 1 CV m General Hospital 8 o Movie: See Daytime Movies. O Plunne; Children's Claulc "Treasure lslanf Wed. I Uncle Waldo Ci) Three on a Mateh Mr: Wizard Sube Pelayo Game Show from Mexico. m Cinemll 36 3:301J The Oatlnf Game This week's guests include Susan Tolsky, Bar· bara Werle. Johnny Whitaker, Jeff East and Barbara Sigel. O Mike Oou&Jas Show Tony Curtis is co-host ror the week. i Ouie l Hmiet Dennis the Menace @ (3) CE One Lire to live Banana ~iu E>tcept Wed. m ®, llJ Cartoons 'A @ Movie: See Daytime Movies. I Green Acres features f11ix the Cat 4:00 Movie: See Daytime Movies. .Jhe Rifleman 6 Get Smart @ CV m l ove American Style Grab Bae m Cartoons Los Torres Beveily Hillbillies m Sesame Street Q_9' (i) The Munsters mMI Rival '2) Underdo1 4:30 (])Movie: See Daytime Movies: Youth in the 70s Mon. O Father Knows Best The Flying Nun News Flipper Yogi & Friends Batman 1 @ Butch's Back Alley I love Lucy , 00 Movie: See Daytime Movies. · Wild Wild West Kimb1 4:50 m fashions in Sewing 5:00 · ®l News News; Kines Hockey Thurs. m Gilligan's Island I Ore')m of Jeannie leave It to Beaver The Flintstones @ Green Acres Natacha ~ Star Trek : Mister Rogers' Neighborhood · El Amor Tiene Cari de Mujer • Western Star Theafre · • features · Three Stooges 5:30 "-J News Mon. O Twilight Zone; Jerry West Show/ lakers Warm-Up. Wed. 6 Mayberry RFD 00 In 00 a> News Beverley Hiiibiiiies Bewitched I Dream of Jeannie 1 (])The Wor1d Today : The Electric Company • Don Wilson's Town Tllk Speed Racer YOUR 1.NVITATION TO GRACIOUS LIVING IAYVlfW MANOR -RHidenti•I care center for the active retired BEAUTIFUll Y APPOINTED SUITES l r.out;fully appointe d suites witli b .. lconiu . and private or um1- privale rooms feature d "tinctive color-coordinated c11rpoh and in- terior decor. Every room hat • private bath complete with tub or shower All MEALS AND SNACKS ' "" meals a,,d sndcks dte nu+ril1ously prep1tred a,,d c>lfr4'c ively ser.,.ed by our e"perl d ietdry sf1tff Speci1tl dich for those who ro· ~uire l~em dnd tray ser.,.ice to the room Is provided whe,, the res;. dent is urable to come to the dinincJ room. SERVICES \.entrali1od hec>tin9 and air con· ditionin9. Buutv So rber Shop; P.,tio and ,........,,..--:!.-'.':-":'-,;.-,.-----1~/.-'/-... b.,lcon1es, Pe,.onol la und ry room ·, Intercom • .. _. ____ .. ·'I • '-"-..._ ......._._. ......... l 11 mu~1 c ; Doctor\ on coll; Atlendanh 24-hrs , /~Ji &ii?;t;;·MBROP I 1~:::~=--_r;/ ~· 350 BAY ST 540-7095 CO T Page 5 SUNDAY NOVEMBER 4 MORNING o The S-iint ldi Chr:stopher Close·UP El) Esta Es la Vida 10:30 I NFL Game of the Week Q) The Osmonds a Zoorama I Reverend Ille ( (3)Spring Street USA ~Insight Mideast Analysis 6:15 m The Christophm/The Bible An· €[) Pantllla Dominic.al swers 11:00 0 Q} (6) Om Pro Football 6:30 O lamp Unto My feet Cleveland Browns at Minnesota Vik· 6:45 Cl) Christopher Close·Up ~ingsChurch With a Vision 7:00 O The Hair Bur Bunch Movie: "The Runaround" (dra) 00 Movie: "little Big Horn" (wes) 6-Ella Raines, Rod Cameron. '51-John Ireland. 0 @ G) H.R. Pufnstuf 8} Ru Humbard @ Movie: (C) "Rodan'' (sci-Ii) '57 11g) Inch High, Private Eye -Kenj1 Sawara ~ Unit Two m Movie: "Journey for Margaret" 00 This Is the Lile (dra) '43'"-Margaret O'Brien, Robert Gramblin& College f ootball Young, Laraine Day. 7:30 I Amazing Chan m Church in the Home · The Christophers ~ first Baptist Church Chaplain of Bourbon Street 11:30 8 7 @ Make A Wish • Billy J. Hargis ' • Movie: (C) "Congo Crossing'' to The Addams Family (adv) '56-George Nader, Virginia · 1 Elementary Nton • Mayo. · Sured Hurt/The Christophers i'.6_ Rex Humbard AFTERNOON · This Is the life 12:00 (3' College Football '73 7:45 @ (3' Sacred Heart 8:00 I Dusty's Treehou!e • Rex Humbard I It Is Written (1) It Is Written Vision On a look Up and Live Your Government Today 0 Herald of Truth l!iJ (!J Notre Dame Football 1'0l ~Old Time Gospel Hour '2& Sunday Celebration m Wonderama 12:30 I The Pacesetters Ii) Revival Fires 6 The Rifleman 8:30 1J look Up and Live Q) Directions 0 Only One New York A documen· 8 rro Footb1ll Giants at Oakland. tary about life In New York City. News O Campus Profile · Public Smice (i) lamp Unto My Feet 1:00 (3) trn (3 Directions 0 Meetin' Time at Calvary O 'THE KING IS GOMING' * from Bellflower * Jerusalem·World Capital Dr. H. Frank Collins DR. HOWARD C. ESTEP I Meetin' Time 1t Calvary I The Kinr Is Comine m@ Kathryn Kuhlman Roller Games Rev. Ike/ Joy of Livinr , ffi Issues & Answers Town Hall Meeting Movie: (C) "The Court Jester" 9:00 I Face the Nation (com) '56-Danny Kaye. Q!l m Day of Discovery I Daktari 6 RealESlate Open Houst Here Come the Brides What W6uld You Do? High school Revival Fires students discuss religion with Rev. 1:30 B@ 00 Issues & Answers Charles Anker. The Elplorers I @~ Ci) Oral Roberts Movie: (C) "Beau James" (com) It Is Written '57-Bob Hope. Voice of Calvary ~ Biiiy J. Hargis (fl Revival Fires ~ a') Water World _ Bob Wells Hour ~ 2:00 00 Forum 9:15 CA) f>roblemas Familare~ 0 KNBC Special "Give Me Liberty" 9:30 O Ci! (j) Pro Football Double· Jess Marlow is host for this look at header. Los An1eles Rams vs. At· lhe SO·year history of the American lanta Fatons. and San Francisco vs. Clv1I liber1ies Union (ACLU). Detroit. O Movie: (C) "Chamber ·of Hor· 3 Acclon de la Comunldad rors" (hor) '66-Patrick O'Neal. Oral Roberts Movie: "After the Thin Men" ~~;~!~ Be Light l(~o~) '36-Willlam Powell, Myrna Amalinr Prophecies tlO Lee Trevino's Golf o ~a of Discovery Outer limits 1 CV Old lime Gospel Hour Movie: "Francis Goes to West ~ 6 First Baptist Church Point" (com) '52-Donald O'Connor. Governor and the Students lit (3) Roller Games Musica y Palabras '1 00 Forum _/ 10:00 I Challenge My Sermon ~Faith for Today / Hour of Power m Christopher Close·Up 6 Home Buyers' Guide Cl) Wild Wild West (1) Kid Power 2:30 'Ti It's Your World a TV 8 Looks at learninr I Meet the Preu • Movie: CC) "steel Town" (dra) @ fllm feature '52-Ann Sheridan. John Lund. • Fires of han1elism Page 6 THE OAILV PILOT. TV WEEK, NOVEMBER 4, 1973 m lnsi&ht 3:00 i Youth and the Law · Meet the Press • Movie: (C) "Four for Texas" (com) '63 -Frank Sinatra-, Dean Marlin. (fO) Channel 10 Politi~I Rally ~lier Movie: (C) "Shenandoah" (wes) 65 -James Stewart, Doug McClure ~Tony & Susan Alamo m For the Sake of Honesty a') Pentecostal Temple 3:30 (3) University Dialogue l ~:!~h~n The Virginian Alerta/Greetings From Germ1ny Q Religious Town Hall I Insight A Better World Oral Roberts 4:00 0 Newsmakers (I) Real Estate Report ' John McKay Show UCLA football Bruins vs. Univ. o Washington Huskies. Ci) Movie: "rll Get Tou" (dra) ·53 -George Raft. Sally Gray. 0 1 CV College rootb1ll '73 (i) Victory at Sea I ~!i~eH!r Evaneelism Consultation (JI Safari to Adventure Toros I This Is the Ute Panorama Latino Campus Profile 4:15 @ Movie: (C) "Imitation of Life" (dra) '59-Lana Turner, John Gavin 4:30 ! Guitu Workshop · Sunday 8 Face the Nation m Movie: "R1in" (dra) '32-Joan Crawford, Wallet Huston Korean Variety Hour @ Meet the Press Amazin& Prophecies : Black Elperience (i) Challengin& Su . m Movies Corona Now 5:00 8 World of Su~ival "Kill by Kind· ness" Story of eitermination of a complete herd of elephants so other elephants could live. 0 o Ei)News (i) (;29 (i) Untamed World O The World at War "Banzai" (Dec. 1941-Feb. 1942) The Japanese declare war on the Uniled States with the devastating surprise attack on Pearl Harbor. m Daniel Boone @@ Movie: (C) "Career" (dra) '59 -Shirley MacLaine, Anthony Franciosa. Ill @ Panport to Travel Qi Hour of Deliverance I Wall Street Week Capulina Three stooees 5:30 0 PREMIERE It Takes All Kinds A new series based on lhe premise that ALL people are members of a "m1nority"-in one way or another @ The Avenren 0 "THE PATHFINDER" IN * MORE NEW ADVENTURES ON "RAINBOW SUNDAE" O Rainbow Sundae ''The Pathfind· er" Part 11 Paul Massie. John Abin· eri Jan Francis star 8 News o Movie: (C) "The App1loo11" (wes) '67 -Marlon Brando, John Saxon. I Korean Comedy @ Garner Ted Armstronr Ch1risma Washington Week In Review ~ (jJ let Me T1lk to the Man1ger Chuplrlto Roller Games E VENING 6:00 U KNXT Special "It's A Nice Place" (R) Ralph Story conducts a "tour" of Hearsl Castle. (3) The Virginian 0 m Meet t.he Press 0 THEY 'RE ALL AFRAID * OF 11THE SHUTIERED ROOM!" O Movie: (C) (2hr) ''The Shut· tered Room" (susp) '67-Gig Young, Carol lynley. Bushm1n 0 Movia: (90) "Invasion of the Ani mal feople" (hor) '62 -Jotln Carradine. Barbara Wilson. I Night Gallery Akko.Chan's Secret 00 Dialo&ue Casey Santos Show I Storefront Ci) Mafic Circus News Italian TV Hour 6:30 O The Thrlllseekers 00 World of Survivll O Ouie's Girts Ouie's fatherly 1n· stincls take over when he suspects that the g11ls' dates for the evenin& are campus lotharios. m Movie: (2hr) "Born Yesterday•• (com) '51-Judy Holliday, Wilham Holden, Broderick Crawford. fl) The Sunset l (i) News The Frtnch Chef fanfmia Falcon Wines to Adventure The Rookies 7:00 0 News DMUTUALOFOMAH~S * WILD KINGDOM stars Marlin Perkins O Wild Kin&dom "Miracle in Mo· tton" Marlin utilizes slow-motion and X·ray photos to study animals in mo hon. 00 Outdoor Special "Cougar Coun· t .. Reflecclones 8) Latin Profile Pusport to Travel t (3) Golden Voyaee 16) m Wild Kin&dom 6 Voice of Victory : Los Aneeles Collective t29 (8'· Victory at Sea iI) Kippy Cous a:> Tutro del Domln10 7:30 0 {:it CI) New Perry Muon Mugged in a crowded parking lot by an ex basketball player who once had a million dollar future, Mason turns around and defends the man when he is charged with the mur· der of a prominent sports figure. 0 ID 0 m World Of Disney "King of the Grizzlies" Concl. Mokl follows a cattleman-intent on klll· in2 the giant griuly-into the wil· 8: a derness. and saves his hie when lhe Focus 1s on "Tu11m Est," a drug re - bea r attacks the man. habifltat1on protrarft, 0 THE FBI-NEW SEASON GJ The Bia QueJVon *NEW TIME-NEW CASES 10:001 m or Discovery 0 (j]) (3) (D The FBI Inspector • m News Erskine picks up the trail of a bank i 7 0 Cfub robber who has returned lo his home : Bergman 11 10 "Secrets of Wom· town and is being lionized as a for· en" Three sisters·ln-law share their mer football star and glamor boy amatory experiences, weaving three 0 HE'S ON THE LOOSE different views of love. * THE "PINK PANTHER" al El Encuentro 0 Million $ Movie: (C) (21/zhr) ffi Lou Gordon Show "Pink Panther" (com) '64-David 10:15 m Golf Niven._ Peter Sellers. ~obert Wagner, 10:30 0 The Protectors Tetforists demand Capucine. ransom money for priceless art col- (i) Three Passports to Adventure lection. ED ~~aE~EN WHO MADE Cf torum Discussion of Proposition * THE MOVIES" under· I The Issue Is writ!en by KODAK ~~!1 ~~~~~ouch "The Upper Tontght..-Raoul Walsh . H<lnd" After murdering h1$ wife. a EID DEBUT Me~ Who M_1de Movies w!althy man finds his lile taken ~n 8-part series focu~ing on the over by his maid who is blackmail- llfe a~d work of prominent Ameri· ing him-and each begins to plan can . film directors. The first to be the other's demise. Julie Harris an d profiled 1s "Raoul Walsh " Peter Gwynne star. @E TV MusJcal CJ) At Issue ffi Italian TV Hour 0 'THE KING IS COMING' 8:00 I America "The Huddled Masses" * "EARTH INVADED FROM · Safari to Adventure OUTER SPACE" _ ~!~~0;0:~!'ntaf:O:'s . DR. HOWARD C. ESTEP I EsteJ.!r '73 e T K' I Co · Armenlan TV Hour lie •nr s ming San Dieao fanorama 8:30 O fii ~ Mannix Mannix hunls ! Mission: Impossible for the girlfriend of a Veaas casino ClJ 00 News operator, who disappeared' while en-(3) T.H.E. Cat route to Los Angeles with a famous Iii Cl) Channel 29 Talks To •. • footbzll pl_ayer. m Nnhvllle Mu11t tD 00 COLUMBO'$ Waiting 10:45 EE Japanese Lanauage Proaram * For You on KERO-TV Now 11:00 I o 69 News 0 ~ @) a;, Sunday Mystery Reverend Ike ~olumbo "Candidate for Crime" 6 ~mour Presents Jackie Cooper. Joanne Linville and (81 ~News Tisha Sterling· guest in the story of • Phil Donahue Show a senatori~1 candidate who murders m KATHRYN KUHLMAN his campaign manager and s~ts out * (IN COLOR) to d~u1se the crime as a mistake. · 0 l!1J (3) al ABC Sunday Movie: m Kathryn Kuhlman (~ (211r) "Valdez 11 Comin(' (adv) ~ A Discuulon With ••• '71-Burt Lancaster, Susan Clarl!, w It Is Written John Cypher. Lancaster st2rs as a . deceptively gentle man forced to 11.15 CI) Problemu Famllares fight for his principles and defend Q9 Your Assemblyman Speaks his honor In the post Civil War West. 11:30 I Name of the Game 0) The Lucy Show (lhr) "Lucy · @).Sunday Tonight Show Hunts Uranium" Fred MacMurray Broken Arrow and his wife, June Haver, guest. Movie: (C) "The Devil's An&tls" m I bfCIAL I Bennett 'n' Basie (dra) '67-John Cassavetes. Beverly Tony Ben nett performs with the ~dams. Mimsy Farmer. Count Buie Orchestra In an hour (j) Telepulse ' of pure music. m Movie: ''The Mad ROOtll'' (susp) ffi Movie: (90) "Frisco Kid" (com) '69-Stella Stevens, Shelley Winters. '35-James Cagney. GJ Movie: ''The Devil 1nd Daniel 9:o0 ~The Hapnw Wanderers Webster" (dra) '41-James Craia. • ""' .. L Edward Arnold . . 6 Movl,~. (C) (~hr) Divorte, Ital· @ 00 Movie: "Sierra Baron" (wes) ian_ Styl.e (~m) 62-Marcello Mas-'58-Brian Keith Rick Jason tro1ann1, Daniela Rocca. ft:\ Movie · · I Wandertnr Samurai w The One Way 11:45 ~ (j) Pellcul11 de Mexlto Ma~~erpiece Theatre "Clouds of ll :OO I flramblinr Colleae Football Witness Conclusion • Thriller aJ ~~~::~~~!~ Hour Right On 9:30 12:30 00 New Directions 0 BUDDY EBSEN STARS l :OOI CI)@ News * ~ !A())RNABY JONES! ' ~a~t:~ ~e~o~d ~ ~ Barnaby Jones George • Wanted Dead or Alive Mahans and Albert Sa_lml guest as Movie: "Bir Hou.se USA" (dra) seamen who become_ involved with 'SS-Broderick Crawford. murder after smuggling a treasure out of the Orient. 0 Garner Ted Armstrong m AJtematives Candy Latsen hosts. 1:10 O Movie: "Soldier In the Rajn" (dra) '63 -Jackie Gleason, Steve McQueen. THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, NOVEMBER 4, 1973 JIM COOPER, MODERATOR Cong. Craig Hosmer Cong. Charl es Wiggins Cong. Clair Bu rgener Cong. Andrew Hinshaw Cong. Rich ard T. Hanna Cong. Delw in Clawson ·I J. Orange County•s CONGRESSMEN AIR THEIR VIEWS On Implications of Arab-Israeli War On Change of the Vice President On Drop in Housing Construction Monday, Nov. 5th af 7 :30 p.m . Thursday, Nov. 8th at 6 :00 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 11th at 6 :00 p.m. M ade possible by gran ts from The B urns Famil y Foundation & T he Harry G. S tee le Foundatio n .. THIS WEEK ON CHANNEL 50 KOCE-TV ORANGE COUNTY TELEVISION SATURDAY: NOVEMBER 3rd (P.M.) 3:00 History of Art (C) Lesson 16., (La Consortium) "Japan" l :30 History of Art (C) Lesson 17 (La Consortium) "Hindu Art ol India" 4:00 History of Art (C) Lesson 18 (la Consortium) "Buddhist Art of India" 4:30 The Science i nd Art ol f ootball (C) "Defens.ive Line Play" 5:00 'Til the Butcher Cuts Hfm Down (C) (PBS) 6:00 Ughtnin' Hopkins (C) (PBS) 6:30 As Min 8eh1ves (C) Lesson 11 "Perception" 7:00 DH1nge County Review (C) 7:30 The Oleann1 Trail (C) (PTL) "Michael Cooney & Richard & lee Wilkey" 8:00 Wuhlngton Debrtes (PBS) .,:00 .. 11&11piece Theatre (C) (PBS) · "Clouds of Witness," Part Ill 1'5l1NDAY:. NOVEMBER 4th (P.M.) 3:00 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) Today's show features the letters A and B and the number 10. 4:00 C1rrucolend1 s (C) (PBS) 4:30 Sesame Strut (C) (CTW) Today's show features the letters F and A and the number 11. 5:30 Zoom! (PBS) 6:00 Omnibus 50 (C) 6:30 As Man Behaves (C) Lesson 12 "utra Sensory Perception" 7:00 French Chef (C) (PBS) "lo Stuff A Cabbage" 7:30 The Fred Wiseman Film Festival (C) (PBS) "Law and Order" 9:00 Cop: Man and Myth (C) (PBS) 9:30 Focus Orange County (C) "Tax Initiative" - MONDAY: NOVEMBER 5th (P.M.) 3:00 History of Art (C) Lesson 19 (La Consortium) "Extensions of Indian Art" 3:30 Makh1g Things Grow (C) (PBS) 4:00 As Man Beh1ves (C) lesson 13 "The Mind of Man. Part I" 4;30 Electric Company (C) (C TW) 5:00 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) Today's show features the letters H and F and the number 12. 6:00 The Great Consumer Contest (C) lesson 16 (KABC) "The Great Big Debt Industry" 6:30 Focus Orange County (C) "For· cible Rape in Orange County" 7:00 The Great Con1umer Contest (C) lesson 16 (KABC) 7:30 Omnibus 50 (C) 8:00 'Til The Butcher Cuts Him Down (C) Special (PBS) 9:30 As Min Behaves (C) lesson 13 TUESDAY: NOVEMBER 6th (P.M.) 3:00 As Man Behaves (C) lesson 13 3:30 Chan-ese Way (C) (PBS) 4:00 CarrucolendH (C) (PBS) 4:30 Electric Company (C) 24 7 (CTW) 5:00 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) Today's show features the letter J and H and the number 2. 6:00 Orange County Review (C) 6:30 History of Art (C) Lesson 19 (la Consortium) "utensions of lndlan Art" 7:00 The Great Consumer Contest (C) Lesson 17 (KABC) "Coping With Change" 7:30 As Man Behaves (C) lesson J 3 "The Mind ot Man. Part I" 8:00 Special of the Week (C) (PBS) Page 8 "Wrinkles, Birthdays, and Other Fables" (60) 9:00 Ch•n&ing Other Fables (C) (PBS) 9:30 Book Beet (C) (PBS) "Survive the Savage Sea" WEDNESDAY: NOVEMBER 7th (P.M.) 3:00 History of Art (C) Lesson 20 (la Consortium) "Khmer Empire" 3:30 A Promise Shared (C) Special (PBS) "The Mind of Man, Part II" 4:00 As Man Behaves (C) Lesson 14 {KOCE) 4:30 Electric Company (C) (CTW) 5:00 Sesame street (C) (CTW) Today's show features the letters L and J and the number 3. 6:00 The Gru t Consumer Contest (C) Lesson 17 (KABC) "Coping With Change" 6:30 History of Art (C) (la Consorti· • um) 7:00 The Grut Consumer Contest (C) (KABC) ''Coping With Financial Crisis" . · ~O The Science and,. Art ol Footb1ll (C) "linebackers and Defensive Backs" 8:00 Masterpiece Theatre (C) (PBS) "Clouds of Witness" Part IV 9:00 f olksong Patchwork (C) (PBS) '9:30 As Main Beh1ves (C) THURSDAY: NOVEMBER Ith (P.M.) 3:00 As Main Behaves (C) 3:30 french Chef (C) (PBS) 4:00 Miking Things Grow (C) (PTL) 4:30 Electric Company (C) {CTW) 5:00 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) Today's show features the letters N and l and the number 4. 6:00 Omnibus SO (C) 6:30 History of Ali (C) (la Consorti· um) 7:00 Ora nge County Review (C) 7 :30 As Man Behaves (C) Lesson 14 "The Mind of Man, Part II" 8:00 Focus Orange County (C) For- cible Rape in Orange County'' 1:30 Wom1n (C) (PBS) "The Woman Alcoholic" 9:00 Firing Line (C) (PBS) FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9th (P.M.) 3:00 History of Art (C) Lesson 21 (la Consortium) "Crete and the Peloponnesos" 3:30 Woman (C) 105 (PBS) "The Woman Alcoholic'' 4:00 Curucolendas (C) (PBS) 4:30 Electric Company (C) (CTW) 5:00 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) Today's show features the lellers P and N and the number 5. 6:00 The Great Consumer ContH1 (C) (KABC) "Coping With Financial Crisis" 6:30 Zoom! (C) (PBS) 7:00 Chan-ese Way (C) (PBS) 7:30 A Promise Shared (C) (PBS) 8:00 The Advocates (C) (PBS) 9:00 Folk 1970 (C) (PBS) SATURDAY: NOVEMBER 10th (P.M.) 3:00 History ~f Art (C) 3:30 History of Art (C) 4:00 History of Art (C) 4:30 The Science and Art of f ootball 5:00 Profile In Music: Shir1ey Verrette 6:30 h Man Behaves (C) Lesson 13 7:-00 Orange Coun'1 Review (C) 7:30 The Oleanna Trail (C) (PTL) 8:00 We.shington Debates for the Stv· entles (C) 9:00 Mast.erpiece Theatre (C) (PBS) , THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, NOVEMBER 4, 1973 MONDAY NOVEMBER! For morning and afternoon listlnp, please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 @ (3) "Pantber's Cl1w'' (mys) '42 -Sidney Blaclmer:-Rlck-~allin, 9:30 0 (C> "Perils of l'auline'' (com) '67-Pat Boone, Pamela Austin. 10:00 (jJ "Ph1ntom of the Opera'' (dra) '62-Herbert Lom. Heather Sears. O "The Man From Yesterd1y" (dra) '32-Charles Boyer, Claudelle Col· be rt. 12:00 O "The Bullfiahter" (com) ·4~ Laurel & Hardy. ''Sorrowful Jones" (com) '49-Bob liope, Lucille Ball. 12:30 m "The Strancer Wore 1 Gun" (wes) '53-Randolph Scott. 1 :00 0 "l~ve Wit~ the ProJl!! Stlll}ger". (dra) 64-Steve McQuean, Natalie Wood. • 3:00 "How Green Was My V1lley" Part I (dra) '41-Walter Pidgeon. Maureen O'Hara [Ql (C) "Anael in My Pocket" (com) '69-Andy Griffith, Jerry Van Dyke. J:30 Ii) @J (C) "Charlie Bubbles'' (dra) '68-Albert Finney, Liza M1nnelli 4:00 B (C) "Tarun and the Juncte Boy" (adv) '66-Mike Henry. 4:30 ~ "Buchan1n Rides Alone" (wes) '58-Randolph Scolt. ' EVENING 6:00 ID mm ml New5 Bon1nz.a 6 Courtship of Eddie'& Father (}) al Mond1y Night Pro Football Washington Redskins vs. Pittsburgh Steelers I The luq Show Q.} @ Qt) 00 News The Fhnbtones Star Trell Slmplement.t M1ri1 Movie: (21u) "Don't Give Up UM Ship" (com) '59-Jeny Lewis. EID Hodcepodge lodge Ef) Three St04&ts 6;30 00 Ho&•n's Heroes (i) l:l'l (i) ~ (i) News I Diel! 'Yin Dyke~ Merv Griffin Show Andy Griffith History of Art living Easy Travel Loa ef} lltt1e RHcals 7:00 ID m New5 Bowling tor Doll11s 6 Movie: (C) (2hr) "Cast A Lona Shldow'' (dra) '66-Audie Murphy. I Wild Wor1d of Anlm1ls What's My Line? I love Lucy Mod Squid Esmerald1 I 00 Dragnet ; Arin lint lfobby Goldsboro Show rn El Primer Amor m Speed Racer 7:30 B W1clly Wor1d of lonatf11n Win- tet1 Wayne Newton, Lynne Ander - son, Joanne Pflug and the Staple Singers guest. ~ Pollet Surgeon Help Th1. Nei&hbor Tlle Thnllsee~trs a Conctntrtlion (iii) Wild Kingdom § Bewitched Ci) The Prk e Is Rlaht (i) Nashville Music ~ Jlmm1 Dean Sllow HollJWOOd Show The Ghoul Gani 1J 9 (() GunalltOtle "A Game ol Death , .. An Act of Love" Part I of two parts. Michael learned (The Wallons) ma~es her second appear· ance ol lhl! season on Gunsmoke as a wltness in a murder trial, with Paul Stevens as lawyer Cicero Wolfe who. alter much deliberation. ac· cepts Matt Dillon's plea to defend an Indian accused ol murdering the wife of vengeful Bear Sanderson (Mor!!n WQ<>dward). D lU CI) llQ) m lotsa Luct Stan swallows a bitter pill when he finds the cause of his insomnia-Arthur -is .llso his cure. 0 FONDA! RYAN~ SHAW! -* "BATTLE OF THE BULGE"-PART I TONIGHT ON KTLA O Movie: (C) (2hr) "Battle ot the 8ul1t " Part I (dra) '66 -Henry Fonda, Robert Ryan. 0 Tonight The Life and * Music of Glen Miller 8:30 O Miiiion S Movie: (C} (2hr) "Tht Glenn Miller Story'' (mus) '54 - James Stewart. June Allyson I The Ghost and Mrs. Muir The Bold Ones La Seftora Jovtn Movie: (C) (2hr) "Dtsperate Mission" (dra) '64-Ricardo Mon· talban. m ... , s"",.""'1""C. .... AL"""l Newport Jau Festival "A Tribute to Louis Armstrong" Highlights from the 1973 Newport JaLZ Festival's A1mstrong Memorial Concert~ 1nclud1ng performances by Ozve Brubeck, [Ila Fillgerald and Dime Gillespie ~ EJ Com1nch1 Mieuelito V1ldts Show Movie: (2hr) "SWlna Your lady" (mus) 'JS-Humphrey Borart 0 NEW COMEDY HIT! * STARRING DIANA RIGG D tl~ 00 (jg) m Dian• ·1 ake My Father. Pluse" Robert Sterling guests as Dr. Steven Green, Holly's father. who becomes Diana's new romantic interest m Merv Griffin Show ml Novela 9:00 B ~ Here's Lucy Joan R111ers guests as Lucy's fellow furor who fea rs her romantic future is ruined when Lucy's vote deadlocks the jury and locks them up for the n1 ht ~ It's Family Night at * The Movies on Channel-23 0 ~ (6) m NBC Mondry Movie: (C) (2hr) "You11, Mine and Oun" (com) '68-Lucille Ball, Henry Fon da. Van Johnson. A widow and a widower with a combined total of 18 children-meet and decide to marry • (6) The Bold Ones 0 The Roolllt1 "Code 261" Ter 9: 9: 10 ry, Wiilie, Mike and Jill befriend a student nurse who can identity the man who attacked her. but is afraid to testlry for fear her assailant's lawyers may succeed in picturin1 her as a w111in1 victim. Mark Slade and Tannis G. Montgomery guest. @) Movie: (C) (2hr) "Tl\e W1r WI&· on" (wes) '67-John Wayne, Kirk Douglas, Howard Keel, Keenan Wynn. ~ Notre Dame Football @ Movie: (C) (2hr) "Caper of t e Golden Bulls" (dra) '67-Yvette Mimieui. Stephen Boyd. EE Roller Games Eil) I 1Plc1ll! Time's Lost Children A poi1nant look at the treatment of autistic children. withdrawn and liv. Ing in a remote world of the ir own. €t) Entre Aml&o (D Movie 9:15 ~News/Sports 9:30 11 Qj CiH'"'s""!"'ic..,.11...,L..,I Carroll O'Con· nor-Three for the Gir1s Carroll O'Connor displays his dramatic, comedic and musical talents in this unique special uaminlng the effect of women on a man's life. Lee Grant l l!ests as hts wife. Joan Blondell as hrs mother ahd Barbara Sharma as his daughter. Nancy Walker an!! T.J. Sulliv!n also guest. • Los Angeles Collective · la Hlena · • Variety 10:00 3 Hoi an's Heroes G mm fjjNews 6 N_iRht Gallery Dlpartment S The death of a man i nd the theft of his body has startlin& repercussions when it is discovered that. despite looking no more than twenty, he had to be over sixty : Wiseman film. festival · • lnternatlonal Variety 10:30 3 Dr111n1t Talk Baell 6 Twiliaht Zone Alamo Christian foundation • Newi/Roller Game · • Amateur Variety ll:OO ~flii ~~~ews Twll~ Zone 6 Peny Mason Phil Donahue' Show To Tell the Truth Get Smart (j)The Medic; Alfred Hitchcock Presents (f) Trails West t1 :30 ~ (f'I CBS late Movie: (C) lass Bottom Boar• (com) '66 - Doris D•Y. Rod Taylor. rn lit.vie: (C) ''The Best of Every. thine"_ (rom) ·59 -Hope Lange. 0 ID CJ) ®.l m Johnn, ea"°n Redd Foxx is host. 0 Movie: "A Taste of Honey" (dra) '62 -Rita Tushingham. 0 Movie: "The Stlnd·ln" (corn) •Jj -Humphrey Bogart. m Alfred Hitchcock Presents m Movlt: (C) "Destination Moon" (sci·fil_ ·so -John Archer. I (}.) Clusic Westem Theatre 12:00 One Step Berond Thriller Movie: (C) "Hangman's Knot" (wes) '52-Randolph Scott. I Phil Donahue Show 1:00 @)@ a;, Tomorrow lil (I) News Wanted Dtad or dive 1:45 Movie: (C) "Joe Dallota" (wes) '57-Jock Mahoney, Luana Patten. 3:10 O Movie: "EJe Witness" (dra) '50 -Robert Montgomery, Leslie Banks. THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, NOVEMBER 4, 1973 FOR O'CONNOR' The eff.ect of women on a man's life is the subject in question when Carroll O'Connor stars in a unique 90-minute The Carroll O 'Connor special ''Three for the Girls," airing Monday at 9:30PM on C BS. The concept behind the special wasn't developed overnight -O'Connor has been working on 1t for years. In the pecial. O 'Connor. who stars as Archie Bunker on All in the Family, displays his virtuosity in a trio of separate and distinct pJays that position a man opposite the three most important women in his life ... his wife, his daughter and his mother. Joining O'Con- nor Of\ t~ special is Lee Grant as h is wife, Joan Blondell as his moth· er, a nd (Barbara Sharm~ as his daughter. Also starring is Nancy Walker and newcomer T. J. Sullivan. The special consists of three one-act plays, each highlighting one of the ladies as she deals with the enigma of the male. O'Connor first dealt with this subject several years ago when he wro te "Ladies of Hanover Tower." One of the plays presented in the special is based on this original work by O'Connor. O'Connor explains his purpose thusly. "I wanted to capture the important influence women have on the meo in their lives. Not just their surface presence as a stable platform for a man to stand on, but the much deeper effect they have o n everything a man does o r feels." O 'Connor furthe r eKplains his concept in the -0pening segment of the special, "It is an old and purely habitual belief that this is a man's world, but the belief is fading fast nowadays. And perhaps the plays you are-about to see will help verify that the belief was never a very sound one." It is not O'Connor's purpose to preach his personal beliefs, only to bring to the forefront-in an entertaining fashion-feelings that may have been unspoken because of society's dictation o f what a man is supposed to and not supposed to express. In the dramatic piece, we see that divorce and separation cannot wipe away the strong bonds formed between a m an and his wife over I 6 years of ma rriage. In the comedy play. a son believes that his devotion to his mother has been based on guilt rather than love. The son has been unable to admit his true feelings. and thusly he has been smothered by his family tie. Jn the musical segment. a father fin ds it almost impossible to admit that his little girl has grown up a nd must now live a life o f her own without his guidance. In all three plays, the men, as well as the wo men, realize what they really mean to each o ther. and how every action and feeling affects each of them. O 'Connor penned the very touching dramatic piece, entitled "Raincheck." The comedy. titled "Sonny Boy." was written by All 1n the Family co-star Rob Reiner and his partner Philip Mishkin. The musical, "Clothes Make the Girl." comes from the team responsible for "Cabaret"-Fred Ebb and John Kander, with Ebb doing the book and lyrics. and Kander the original music. CARROLL O'CONNOR. as a very cUlturbtd fadaer. dllcua.sa bls sh()(k at dbconriQI hit actreu-dauallttt la a au• show wtda tbe wardrobe inistral .(Nucy .W&Uur), wbo allo bas a dllld ha lltt dtow. ORDER YOURS NOW 1974 M'ODELS ALL MAKES CAil OI Ht e GEORGE JOINER e DON CROSB Y [Sears I 1 ~ SALE! HEARING AID BATTERIES Buy 1 Package of BATTERIES at Regular Price and Get the tnd Pkg. FOR ONE CENT <~'!11. J:/;~. ~ ..... J,"'k .. ~·-: .. ~~ ~ ... ·-~··_,·· ··~ .,,,<. ~-' . ::· . ·O i/; • • Sears Batteries Flt All Brands and AU Models Hearing Aids Are Available .at the Following Sears Stores ~ .. , ....... Pl~•''"-"' ,_ S..UI C..11 PlaJa TtrTUtt Vlllley Pa1e 9 I , TUESDAY NOVEMBER 6 For morning and afternoon listings, please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 @ CI) "They Raid by Night" (dra) '42-Lyle Talbot. June Duprez. 9:30 O (C) "Gaby" (dra) '56-leshe Caron, John Kerr. 10:00 (31 (C) "The lively Set" (rom\ '64 -James Damn, Pamela Tiffin. 0 "Men Without Names" (mys) '35-Fred MacMurray, Madge Evans. 12:00 O "King of th e Gamblers" (mys) '48-William Wright. Janet Martin ''Horsefeathers" (com) '32 -The Marx Brothers. 12:30 m (t). "The Brigand" (adv) '52- Anthony Dexter, Anthony Quinn. 1:00 0 (C) "The fa1-C4untq" (adv) '55 ' -JameJ. Stewart, Ruth Roman. 3:00 00 "How Green Was My Valley" Concl laurel & Hardy featurette. @) (C) "Eye of the Cat" (susp) '69 -Michael Sarrazin, Gayle Hunnicutt. 3:1.0 n 00 (C) "Death of A Gunfighter" (wes) '69.....:.Richard Widmark. John Saxon 4:00 0 (C) "The Magnificent Thief" (dra) '67 -Robert Wagner, John Saxon, Susan Saint James. 4;30 (j) Same as lOAM listing ~ (jJ "Framed'' (f!lYS) '47-Glenn Ford. E VfNINC 6:00 ~~Yo?~aJ~~ EE~::: Bonanza Courtship of Eddie's Fither The Lucy Show The Flintstones Star Trek Simplemente Maria ;2 Movie: (2hr) "last Train from Gun Hill" (wes) '59-Kirk Douglas, AnthJllY Quinn. Et) Hodgepodge Lodge m Three Stooges 6:30 (6) Qt (3' Hogan's Heroes 0 Movie: (90) "Anatomy of A Murder" Part I (susp) '59-James Stewart, Lee Remick. Ben Gazzara. 81 i~ (6) ~ [i) News C:J Dick Van Dyke 'fij) Merv Griffin Show m Andy Griffith £E) Human Relations and School Discipline I l iving Easy Usted y .ta Policia Desert Theatre little Rascals 7:00 J!t3' 0 g;} News Bowling for Dollars 6 Movie: (2hr) "Crisis" (adv) '50 -Cary Grant, Jose Ferrer. I Safari to Adventure What's My line? I love Lucy Mod Squad ~ I Dream of Jeannie Esmeralda l2 (6) Dragnet £E) Well of life A study ol the ocean's llfe cycles and mysterious l••t .. lralf Re .. tlellq 1;e•fen OFFICE: 406 32nd ST., NEWPORT BEACH TH E DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. NOVEMBER 4. 1973 d11v1ng forces which continuously I Carmina renew Its resources. Noches flpatlu ll9 (81 Hee Haw 9:30 ~CU Hawkins ''Death and • El Primer Amor the Ma1dt!n" Hawkins defends an · • Club del tJogar heiress accused 1n a triple slaying Speed Ricer that uncovers a shocking mutture 7:30 Treasure Hunt ol family love and hate. Strother 3 Hogan's Heroes Martin, Bonnie Bedella and Kate 9) Hollywood Squares Reid guest. Help Thy Nefghbor eI) La Hlena (81 Dusty's Trail a;) Festival Meilcano I Concentration 10:00 Bewitched [1@ Your Police in Action [3) To Tell the Truth * On Channel-23 Now ll @)Let'sMakeADul 0 ·~'6'iiAl ~Po ll ce Storv Stand Up and Cheer "The Ho Chi Minh Trail" Clifton I Cityw1tchers ~ ~ \LY' Ci:/ 1 Comedy Davis guests as a policeman yanked The Ghoul Ging out ol the academy before gradua 8:00 ()C1 ra) Miude Maude rmdlay is tion to become an undercover nar· havmg the time of her Ille lixing up colics agent. George-Maharis. Herb bltnd dates ror Vivian with every Edelman and Raymond St. Jacques Mailable loser in town. also guest. 0 m CY\ C h "Th 0 0 m ID Q1' News ' Q ~ 0 Ci:/ a 5 e e ( 6) ~ht Gallery DPaler·Wheelers" Capt. Reddick 0 (!7J (3) al Marcus Welby M.D. tries to trick a motorcycle ring of "The Tall Tree" Tony Musante small lime th ieves into making a big purchase ol cocaine from the guests as a psychiatric therapist East. whose own illness compllcat11. his O FONDA! RYAN! SHAW! work with emotionally distiubed children * .. BATTLE Of' THE m I s h CIAl I Bittle of Antieta.m BULGE"-PART II "A View From the Ranks" Historian TONIGHT ON KTLA Wilham Brown takes viewers on a O Movie: (C) (2hr) "Battle of the lour or Anltelam Balt1ef1eld near Bulge" Conti (dra) '66 _ Henry Hagerstown, Maryland .. tor a vivid Fonda. Robert Ryan reconstruction of the C1v1I War bat· 0 (17 3 C£l New Temperatures . lie. Rising ''The Mothers" Dr. Noland's 10.30 0 Talk. Back mother checks into the hospital as (i) T~lltitht Zone Dr. Mercy's mother plans to leave. I Bill Cosby . Isabel Sanford guests Vida~ en Conlllcto O Tonight It's Romance · Music.al Especblcular • • News/Sports * with CARY & INGRID 11:00 O O ~ma> New' 0 Million $ Movie: (C) (2hr) "In· ( 3 (8) (10) EE 121 00 News discreet" (com) 'S8-ln11r1d BerR O Twilight Zone man. Cary Grant. (6) Perry MHon I That Gir1 • Phil Donahue Show The Bold Ones To Tell the Truth l1 Senora loven Get Smart Movie: (C) (2hr) "Desperate l7 r3' The Medic Mission" (dra) '64-Ricardo Mon· ~Alfred Hitchcock Presents talban. £E) Behind the lines m I SPECIAL I "Montserrat'' (R) Lii· ~ (i) Trails West han Hellman's adaptation ol the 11:30 O ~ (i) CBS late Movit: (C) French play about an idealistic "Buckskin" (wes) '68-Barry Sulll· young Spanish officer dunng occu van. Wendell Corey, Joan Caulfield pation of Venezuela 1n 1812. Keir 0 ,2~ (6) [QJ m Johnny Carson Dullea, Rip Torn. Hurd Hatrield and The Carpenters and Jerry Van Dyke Geraldine Page star guest. I El Edilicio de Enlrente O Movie: "Where Bullets fly" Comedy • (dra) '66-Tom Adams. Roller G1mes -0 'ff 3 G) Wide World of En· 8:30 e29 l'"il Hawaii Five·O "Flash of tert1inment ··one Deadly Owner" Color. Flash of Death" Australian Donna Mills and Jeremy Brett star actor Don Knight guests as an opal in this story of the supernatural as smuggler and killer who appears to a series of frightening happenings-- be a repulable gem merchant. duplicating events which occurred 0 'i7' (3) al ABC Tuesday Movie: months before-haunt the new own· (C) (90) "The Girl Most Likely er of c:n automobile. an attractive To •.• " (com /dra) '73-Stockard young model. Channing. Edward Asner, Jim Back-m Alfred Hitchcock Presents us, Joe Flynn. An ugly duckling, m Movie: "Vice Squid'' (dra) '53 dreaming hopelessly of love. be· -Edward G. Rob,inson. comes beaultlul airer plastic sur -12:00 One Step Beyond gery and reenters the ltves of the 0 Thriller men who made her miserable lo m Movie: "Act of Violence" (dra) i·n her hilarious revenge. '49-Van Helfin. Janet Leigh. Merv Griffin ~how '26 Phil Donahue Show Novel' 1:00 (310 (i ) ru@ News 9:00 ~ @ [O m The Magician I !10l ~ m Tomorrow "Ovation tor Murder" Anthony • W1nted Dead or Alive Blake disappears from a linen cart 1:30 Highway Patrol 1n the prts~n ward of a hosp1lal and All-Night Show: "The Burf11r," reappears in an ellort to pull off "Our Mi n In Hanna" an escape plot for a hiend suspect· 1:45 f) Movie: "The W1yw1rd Bus" ed of murder. (dra) '57 -Jayne Mansfield. (j) The Bold Ones 3:10 f) Movie: (C) "love Slaves of the m The Untouchables Amuon'' (dra) '58-0on Taylor. Fo pl B th 9 9 10 12 12 WEDNESDAY NOVEMBER7 For morning and afternoon llstlngs, please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 @ (3) "Just like A Woman" (com) '34-Gertrude Michael, John lodge. 9:30 O "My Cousin Rachel" (dra) '53- 0livla de Havilland, Richard Burton. 10:00 00 "Night Creatutes'' (mys) '62 - Peter Cushlnll. Yvonne Romain. O "Murder by the Clock" (dra) '31 :._Wiiiiam Boyd, Lilyan Tashman. 12:00 O "Border Rangers" (wes) '50- Don Barry. "Chicago Deadline" (mys) '49-Alan Ladd. Oonna Reed. 12:30 m "The Arnello Affair" (mys) '47 -John Hod1ak, Frances Gifford. 1:00 ~ "WNYS So Bad About Feel- ing Good?" (com) '68-George Pep· pard, Mery Tyler Moore m El Primer Amor Aaron Berger Show Speed Racer 7:30 1J The New Dating G1me Fred Williamson guests. 00 Hogan's Heroes O Wait Till Your Father Gets Home "Jamie's Project" Harry helps his son build a model of the Monitor for a school project. i Bobby Goldsboro Show Concentration The New Price Is Rlcht I Bewitched 00 To Tell the Truth @ Hollywood Squares Storefront "Health Problems in L.A.'s Black Community" ~ (j) Police Surgeon m Other People, Other Places m The Ghoul Gang 8:00 1J ~ Cl) Sonny and Cher Comedy Hour Do3tas Fairbanks Jr. guests. o @ C!J [Q).m Adam·l2 "Train- ing Division" Officers Malloy and Reed are troubled by a know·ll·all trainee, but Officer Wells is saddled with him as a partner. D Movie:· (C) (2hr) "Battle of the fillfe" Part I (dra) '66 -Henry Fonda, Robert Ryan. Dana Andrews 3:00 (!) (C) "Promise Her Anythinc" • (com) '66-Warren Beatty, Leslie Caron, 0 @ (J) a> Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice "The Rare lruth ~urts" A nudist couple gets the mistaken idea that Bob, Carol, Ted and Alice are kindred spirits. 11QJ (C) '1he Ballad of Josie" (com) '.68-Doris Day, Peter Graves 3:30@ 00 (C) "Dead Run" (dra) '69 -Peter La,tord. George Geret. 4:00 IJ (C) "Forty Pounds of Trouble" (com) '63 -Tony Curtis. Suzanne Pleshe lie 4:30 (3) Same as lOAM listing. "9 '1he fuller Brush Man" (com) '48-Red Skelton, Janet Blair. EVENING 6:00 ~§' D Ell m ai> G> News 3 (p')(3'Q3(i)(l9(i) News ? lalters Basketball Lakers vs. Milwaukee Bucks. 6 Courtship of Eddie's Father The Lucy Show The Flintstones Star Trek Simplemente M1ri1 : Hodcepodge lodge Three Stooces 6:30 ~ (3) Hogan's Heroes Movie: (90) "Anatomy of A urder" Conct (susp) 59'-James Stewart. Lee Remick. Ben Gazzara, Kath~ Grant '81:,a00 ~ (i ) News O Dick Van Dyke (fii) Merv Griffin Show m Andy Griffith €rn History of Art m llvinc Elsy CiI!) la Hora familiar m Desert Theatre m little Rascals 7:001J 0 m News Ci) Movie: (C) (2hr) '1he fir Country" (wes) '55-James Stewart. Ruth Roman. Journey What's My line? I love Lucy Mod Squad 1 (3) I Dream of Jeannie Esmeralda 00 Dragnet : The French Chef @ World of Survivel O Million S Movie: (C) (2hr) '1hunder Bay" (dra) '53-James Stewart, Joanne Dru. Dan Duryea. I Green Acres The Bold Ones u Seiiora Joven . Movie: (C) (2hr) "Desperate Mission" (dra) '64-Ricardo Mon· tat ban. EID Ni" Place to Visit A satiric view of life in New York City. Ell Championship Wrestling m Japanese lancuage Program 8:30 0 ~ @ (Jg) m NBC Wednesday Mystery-81naeek "If Max Is So Smart, Why Doesn't He Tell Us Where He Is? Anne Baxter guests as a wealthy hypochondriac and owner of a $2.5 million computer, the theft of which Banacek Investigates. 0 @(3) a> ABC Wednesday Movie: (Cf (90) "My Darline Daugh· ters' Anniverury" (com) '73-Rob· ert Young, Darlene Carr, Ruth Hus- sey, Raymond Massey, Judy Strang1s. Sharon Gless. A sequel to the first movie finds Dad ready to re-marry. He plans to tell all his daughters when they arrive home to celebrate their first anniversaries, but com· pltcations c?rise-cauStnll his bride· to.be to call the whole thing off m Merv Griffin Show ai) Novel• 9:00 IJ WM . CONRAD-CANNON * TV'S TOP PVT. EYE! IJ ~ (!)Cannon "Dead Lady's Tears'' The murder of a glamorous model. whose magnetism made her the romantic target for every man she met. brings Cannon into the inner cirtle of her idolaters when he attempts to clear the public rela· lions man charged with killing her W The Bold Ones The Untouchables Papa Corazon 9:30 EI1) Woman "Alternatives to Trad1· tlonal Marriage" (Continued) ~ THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, NOVEMBER 4, 1973 INSIDE ~ the tube OUTSIDE hollywood by Bill Mah•n Watching a film come to lite from the first time you read the script, through the casting and daily shooting schedule is a procedure that all film lovers should have the oppor· tunity to experience. It is totally fascinating to see what talented peop le are ab le to put together in a relatively short time. A MESSAGE TO MY DAUGHTER, an ABC Movie of the Week that should air sometime around the end of the year, is turning out to be a minor classic. If you saw BRIAN 'S SONG and liked )t, then you won't want to mrss DAUGHTER because it has the same flavor. The only difference is that I think the performances in DAUGHTER exceed those of Billy Dee Williams and James Caan in BRIAN'S SONG. Maybe I'm preju- diced, because Martin Sheen has always been a favorite MARTIN SHEEN ·of mine, but I've never seen Bonnie Bedelia.or Kitty Winn ;;~~~~~~~~~~;; before. All that can be said -· =;;;;;;;;;;;; is that they make a sensa· ii tional trio. Martin Sheen has been around for quite some time. No one could say that he isn 't successful. but I wonder why he has never attained the superstar statu re. His performance in THE SUBJECT WAS ROSES opposite Patricia Neal and Jack Albertson was as good, if not better, than anything I've ever seen the superstars do . Maybe DAUGHTER will elevate him some even though it 1s a movie made specifi ca lly for televi· sion. As I said in the first column of this series, the producers and director did a masterful job of casting the lead roles. But. not only are the leads well cast , all the other parts (save one) are equally good. Actors and-actresses whom I've never heard of are jumping off the screen and grabbing you. Rich· ard McMurray. who plays the father of Bonnie Bedelia. acts his role in such a moving fa shion that one wonders if maybe he. too. might not find stardom somewhere around the corner. The film is now completely shot and is being edited from approxim'!'tely 65,000 feet down to 7000. It is well over half edited and should be in first cut within four or five more days. At that point, Bob Lewis, the director, wi ll view it in the pro- jection room, then go into the cutting room with the talented editor. John Link, and they'll put their · heads together to better it. With a little luck they just might better it into an Emmy-the raw material is definitely there. * * * Anne Baxter and George Peppard share a happy moment in a scene from the "If Max Is So Smart, Why Doesn't He Tell Us Where He Is?" episode of Banacek on NBC's W~dnesday Mystery Movie at 8:30PM. Miss Baxter portrays a wealthy headstrong businesswoman whose computer has been stolen. * * * Rock superstar Cat Stevens makes his national American tele- vision debut on ABC's In Concert sflow, which will be seen Fri· day at 11:30PM. Page 11 WEDNESO~Y (Continued) E!)la Hlen1 m Comedy/Sports 10:00 O '9 fl: Koj1k "One for the Morgue" Evidence points conclusive ly to a 11val gangster as be1nc re· spons1ble for the attempted nsas· s1nat1on or a youn1 hood but Ko1ak 1s not sahsl1ed ~ 'T., PUT SOME LOVE IN * YOUR LIFE ON CHAN.·23 0 1» 7t, ~ ED Love Story "Mtr· abelle's Summer" A drama about a sympathetic girl, convinced she 1s 1n love with the boy neit door- even though therr parents fear pity, rather than love, rs the catalyst Pamela Franklin, Martin Sheen and David Hultman star. ~Om(E 'UNews ~ht Callery ~ r3 ) al Owen Marsh II "The Sin of Susan Gentry" Owen Marshall is confronted with a case of archaic Justice when a youna 1trl is com· milted to a mental hospital for be. 1ng promr!.Cuous Elayne Heilveil and Mark Jenkins guest EE (scenario Ell) Bergman • at 10 "Secrets of Women" (R) 10:30 0 Talk Baell fj') Twili1tht Zone I Bill Cosby El Show de Walter Mercado News/Sports 11:00; 0 0 EI) m ffi News 3 00 1Q) f.E ~ Ci.) Ntws Twilight ZAlne 6 Perry Mason I Phil Donahue Show To Tell the Truth Get Sm1rt 17i (3) The Medic ~ Alfred Hltcht0tk Presents ~ Ci) T r1ils West 11:15 @!)Cinema 34 11:300129 J CBS lite Movie : (C) "left':"Handed Gun" (wes) '58-Paul Newman. Lita Milan. ! 23 (i) IW,i ED Johnny Carson Movie: "The Puslonate Thief'' m) ·s2-Ben Gazzara. Anna Mag. nani. 0 U: <3 CD Wide World of En· tertainment "The Murderers" An U · con's new and honest life Is threatened by a former friend who wants $50.000 in blackmail money. Gary Merrill and Eugene Roche star. m Alfred Hitcht0tk Presents (E Movie: "Storm rur'' (susp) '56 -Cornel Wilde, Jean Wa llace. Dan Oury~. 12:00 M One Step Beyond • Thriller Movie: "friendly £ n e m I e s" (dra) '42 -Charles Winninger, Nancy Kelly. ~ Phil Donahue Show l ;00 (3) 0 (ij ~ 00 News 8 ®) ~ m Tomorrow Wantad Dead or Alive 1:45 O Movie: "Elopement" (dra) '51 -Anne Francis. William Lundlgan, Clifton Webb. 2:00 m All·Night Show: "The Gument Jungle," (C) "Decision 1t Sundown," Big Attack 3:10 O Movie: (C) "last of the Bad· men" (wes) '57-George Monti om ery. Pace 12 THURSDAY NOVEMBERS For morning and afternoon llsttn1s. please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 (!1: ']) "EJCU$t My Glove" (com) '39-Len Harvey. Ron Shmer 9:30 0 "Julie" (susp) '56-Dom Day. Louis Joutdan, Barry Sulltvan 10:00 (C) ''The Splr1I Ro1d" Part I (dra) '62-Rock Hudson. Burl Ives 0 ''Roadhouse Nights" (dra) '30- Helen Morgan Clayton Jackson. 12:00 O "Shan1hai" (dra) '35-Charles Boyer, Loretta Young "30 D1y Princus" (com) '34-Cary Grant. Sylvia Sidney.· 12:30 m "Bells 9f St. Trinians" (com) '54-Ali.stair Sim, Joyce Grenfel 1:00 O "Francis Joins the WACS" (com) '54-Donald O'Connor. Chill Wills. l :OO CI. "l.&ura" {mys) '44-Dana An drews. ·Gene Tierney. Clifton Webb 'Jg) (C) "Quentin Durwud" (adv) 'SS-Robert Taylor. Kay Kendall 3:30 l1@ (C) "Deadlock" (dra) '68- Leshe Nielsen, Ha11 Rhodes. Ruby Dee. 4:00 O ''The Interns" (dra) '62-Chtt Robenson. Michael Callan. Nick Adams. 4:30 rn Sime IS lOAM lis1in& ~ ~ "let No Man Write My Epi- taph'' Pan I (dra) '&a-Burl Ives, Shelley Winters. EVENING 6:00 = 0 0 m__m al) lD News 3 ~GXOO~@Qj@ News Kines Hockey Cont'd from 5PM Kings vs Philadelphia f liers. I Courtship of Eddie's father The Lucy Show The Flintstones Stir Trek Simplemente M1ri1 Movie: (C) (2hr) "Quest for love" (dra) '7 1-Joan Collins. Tom Bell. Ell) Hodgepodee Lod1e aJ Three Stooees 6:30 00@ ~ Hoean's Heroes O Movie: (C) (90) '1lle Lady in the C1t With "asses l A Gun" (mys) '71-Samantha Eggar, John McEnery, Oliver Reed. I ~ 00 fn, 00 News Dick Vin Dyke Merv Griffin Show Andy Griffith Human Relations & School Dis· lline • livlne Easy · • Novela little Rascals 7:00 0 CI) B m News 00 Movie: (C) (2hr) "The Devil's Bripde" (dra) '68-William Holden, Cliff Robertson. I lnnerspace Whars MJ line? I love Lucy Mod Squid (1) I Dream of Jeannie THE DAILY PILOT. Tll WEEK, NOllEMBCR 4 , l 91l EE) Esmeralda 2l Or11net m (I Cl & Theon1e 1;9 'i' lassie m El Primer Amor Tele·Revisla . Muslul · Speed Rattr 7:30 O Ors.on Wellu' Great Mysteries "f or Sale-Silence" Blackmail be· gels blackmail rn the contemporary drama about a criminal who seeks an 1lle1a1 fortune and then pays it Jack Cassidy stars. i Ho1an's Heroes The New Price Is Ri1ht Help Thy Nel&hbor 11 You Asked for It D Con'9nt11tion lo Let's Make A Dul Q). Bewitched 0 G1J a> Kun& Fu "fhe Spirit· Helper'' Carne finds himself In the role of the master as he attempts to teach lhe futility of revenae to an Indian boy whose mother has been kidnaped by Comancheros. I HistoriH de Papa J M1m1 Men Who Made Movies (R) V1riedadH Yer&tl 9:30 @I) la Hlena G) Roller Derby 10:00 0 ;l1 10) eD NBC f o II i es Sammy Davis Jr. 1s host to Jonelle Allen, Ernest 8oran1ne and Mary Co~lil QDmmNews 6 Nfftlt G1l11ry 0 THE STREETS Of SAN * FRANCISCO-BIG HIT! I~ ~3" To Tell the t1uth ii <6,; The Thrillseekets 0 @ rn CD s t r e • t s 0 f s a n E1D Accion Chluno franeisco "The Twenty Four Karat 29 'i' Jimmy Dun Show Plaque" A group of poker players m Jonathan Winters decide to play for keeps when they ff) The Ghoul Gan& steal a shipment of radioactive gold B:OO from a university nuclear research 0 THE WALTONS WINNER centerjruck. Vic Morrow, Herb Edel- • man and Anthony Zerbe 1uest, *OF SIX EMMY AWARDS! , lO:JOiTalk Back O '9 'T The Waltons .. The Fawn· 6 Twilifht Zone Erin l1nds a baby deer in the woods Bill Cosbr - and brings rt home 1n the hopes Vidas en Confllcto that she will be allowed to keep ti. : Poetry In BIKk with Nit Sim· When the fawn pull.s all of Grand mons. ma's clean clothes orT the line and eI) Jueves de Gila eats Grandpa's newly sprouted peas, G) Nen/Spor1s the family tells heart·broken Erin that the deer has to go. 11:00 B 0 mm m News ~ f6' IRONSIDE Starts Now Ci) [Q) f.E QJ 00 9 News * ON CHANNEL 23 Twill&ht Zone Perry Mas.on 0 ~:i rt)10) eD Ironside (2hr) Phil Oon1hue Show ··Downhill All the Way" Chief Iron To Tell the Truth side turns rn his badge and poses Get Smart as a sk1drow wino to catch the 3 Tiit Medic killer ol a poltt1c1an's cam paign Trails West manager. David Wayne. Kim Carby and lee H. Montgomery guest. 11:15 eI) Cinema 34 0 Movie: (C) (2hr) "Battle of the Bulge" Concl (dra) '66 -Henry 11:30 fl a ,, CBS l1~e Movie: (C) Fonda, Robert Ryan. Dana Andrews f1d1 In (rom) 68-Burt Rey· erJ '17" (3l G) Torna "Blockhouse nolds, Bafbara Loden. Breakdown" Dave poses as a cop· 0 ~Ci) \1Q) g;, JohnnJ Carson hating misfit and joins a young " Movie: "Bluebe~rd" (dra) '63- snrper barricaded atop a building Michelle Morgan, . Hildegarde Neff. 1n a crowded section of the city. 0 @ ~ a> W~e World ~f ~nter· Jail Michael Vincent guests tifnment This Child Is Mine (R) O Million S Movie: (C) (2hr) A taut courtroom drama evolves "Bend of the River" (adv) '52 -when the adoptive parents of .1 J~mes Stewart. Arthur Kennedy, Julie youn1 boy l11ht attempts by his •A.dams natural mother to re11a1n custody. I Alfred Hitchcock Presents Rosemary Print and Robin Strasser B · F u.a 01 · star oa1ne rom "'"' ympic ~ -.1~ H' .. p LI Sellora Joven " "~ ltcntodc resents ' Ice Hockey Kings vs Phrladel· Movlt: "A Bullet for Joey" phla Fliers (dra) '5>-Georee Raft, Edward G I The Advocates Robinson, Audrey Totter. Los Nuevos Po!ivous 12:00 '6" One Sttp Beyond · Car~vana Mus~al. • , Cl Thriller M~vte: (2hr) W~nter. Meet1~( . GI Movie: (C) "Best foot forw1td" (dra) 48-Bette Davis, Jim Davis. (mus) '43-1.ucille Ball, June Ally· 8:30 m Merv Griffin Show son, Gloria DeHaven. al) Novela ~ Alfred Hitchcock Prtsenb 9:00 0 Q9 (i) CBS Thursday Movie: (C) (2hr) ''The Craduate" (com) '67-Dustin Hoffman, Anne Bancroft, Katharine Ross. A. young man, a re· cent college graduate, is ready for life but is filled with vague mis givrngs about his future. His .degree of innocence 1s challenged by two women-attractive, m1ddle·aged Mrs. Robinson and her daughter Etarne- as he plun11es head·over·heels into adulthood. 00 The Bold Ones 1:0011 I ~@ News · m Tomorrow • anted De1d or Alive 1:3000 News 1:45 O Movie: (C) "Kiss of Evil" (susp) '63-Clifford Evans, Noel Willman. 2:00 m All-Night Show: "The lut Anary Man," "The llntup" 3:10 0 Movie: "Cover Up" (mys) '49 -William Bendix, Dennis O'Keele. 4:3 6: 6: 7: FRIDAY NOVEMBER 9 For morning 1nd afternoon listings, please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 @ CV "Devil on Horseback" (adv) 'S4-John Mccallum. 9:30 Q "My Friend Irma" (com) '49- Marie Wiison, Diana Lynn. 10:00 CV (C) "The S,,lr1I Road'' Concl. (dra) '62-Rock Hudson. Burl Ives. O "lone Cowboy" (wes) '34 - Jackie Cooper, Lila Lee. 12:00 0 "Secrets of A Secret1ry" (dra) '31, and "four Frlfhtened People " (dra) '34-Claudette Colbert, Wll· ham Marshall star in both. 12:30 m "China Se1" (adv) '35-Clark Gable, Jean Harlow 1:00 O "It Grows en Trees'' (com) '52 -Irene. Dunne. · 3:00 Cl) (C) "Roust.bout" (mus) '64- I lvis Presley, Barbara Stanwyck. 119) (C) "The love God .. (com) '69 -Don Knolls. Anne Francis. 3:30 Q) (1) (C) "The Forbln Project" (com) '69-(ric Braeden. 4:00 0 (C) "I'd Rather Be Rich" (com) '64-Sandra Dee, Robert Goulet. 4:30 3 Sime 11 lOAM listlna "let No Man Write MJ EPI· taph" Conc:I., (dra) '60-Burl Ives. EVENING s:oo INcf@~I~ :::: Bon11)za Courtship of Eddie's father The lucy Show The Fllntstones Star Trek Slmplemente M11ia Movie: (C) (2hr) "Morltourl" (dra) '65 -Marlon Brando. Yul Brynner. Eii) Hodeepoclae lodae m Three Stoo1es 6:30 ~ ~ Hoaan's Heroes Movie: (C) (90) "F 11m ·fI1 m 1n" (com) '67-George C. Seott. Michael Sarrazin, Sue Lyon. al 00 Qt, News · Oltll Vin O,ke Merv 5ritfln Show Andy Grlfflttl ; History of Art • livina Elsy · • Novell · Desert Theatre EE Little R1K1ls 7:00 I CI) 0 m News Bowline for Dollars Movie: (2hr) "H I g h Sierra" (dra) '41-Humphrey Bo1art. Animal Wor1d What's My line I love lUCJ Mod Squad CJ) I Dream of Jeannie tlmer1ld1 (i) Drapet • Clitrts In Hie Abyss "The Curse o Caine" A discussion of the word "loneliness,'' as presented in litera· tu re. ~ (I) America THE DAILY' PILOT, TV WEEK. NOVEMBER '4 , 1973 Speed Racer u Crt1d1 Bien Crl1d1 La Revistl de M11ont ~ El Primer Amor I Cine Como en Cine m Get Smart Eventos lltino' Masterpiece Theatre (R) I (3) The Medic 7:30 O Dusty's Trill "Two· of a Kind" Japanese l.ln1u1ge Proa11m Alfred Hi1chcock Presents Dusty mistakes Callahan for a 9:30 00 Trails West wanted outlaw who takes Callahan's (U @ Relax with Brian Keith 11:15 a> Cinema 34 place as wagon boss * On KERO-TV Now 11:30 0 Qi (J) CBS ute Movie: (C) I Horan's Heroes 0 ~ Ci)®') m Brian Keith Show "Where Were You When the Ueflts @ 00 ®l Hollywood Squares Dr. Sean plans 11 day of fishing but Went Outr• (com) '66-Dorls Day, Help Thy Nelahbor is stymied at every turn with such 0 Q) CJ)@') m Johnny C.non Elephant Boy Al K • Concentration problems as Puni getting tossed in ex arras guests. Bewitched ~ Jail. taking over a' Sunday School 0 ~mour Presents 1 r'3' To Tell the Truth class, an~ a parking lot baby de· 0 Q1J (])a> In Concert The en L".J livery tire 90·mlnute show is devoted : W1U Street Week 0 @ @ a> Adam's Rib "For to ~he music of Cat Stevens. • Untamed World Richer, For Poorer" A former girl-(8) The Persuaders • ' (scenario friend of Adam's IS sued for ali· m Alfred Hitchcock Presents The Ghoul Gang mony by her musician-husband, with I!) Movie: ''The Creeplnf Un· 8:00 0 Q!' @ Caluecl's Dept. .Whe~ t~e Amanda handling his case. Re· known" (hor) '56-Brlan Donlevy. money for the an~ual office picnic scheduled from last week. 12:00 (6) Movie: "Fortitn Correspondents" disappears. suspicion and accusa· 1 l• Hltr11 (dra) '49-Joel McCrea, Laraine Day. lions run wild. · • Premier del 40 m Movie: (C) "The Mongols" (adv) 0 ~@ t1Q) g:, ~an ford & Son 10:00 · Qj@®J m De an Mart In '62-Jack Palance, Anita Ekberg. Following the advice ~I Lamont, Show 12:30 (i1 Suspense Theatre Fred donates a collec~1on of ra~e I 0 m m News i Nashville Music jau albums to a mus1.c library in 6 ~t G1lle1J The Prisoner order to get a tu wnte·off, then (UJ (I) a> Love American Style 1:00 . (.10) g:, Midnight Special wants them back when he learns Love and the: ''Persistant Assistant," 3 @ Cl) News they're valued at $500. ''Eats Cafe," :'UllStudy Steady," Movie: ''What Happened at C.m· O @ lakers Basketball l A, l ak "Clinical Problem." po Grande?'' (dra) '67-Eric More· ers vs. Seattle Sup~rsonlcs. : firing Ll"e combe. r U @ CI) a>lhe Brady Bunch 10:30 Talk Back O In Sessioo Phil E'(erly hosts this "Quartert>ac.k Sneak" M•rcia gets Twili(ht Zone recordini session which features a some ~ttent1on from the qua~erba . Consumer Profile conversation with Ted Neeley and on a rival football team who 1s after Bill Cosby music by Poco and Kenny Rankin. Gregg's football play book. News O Movie: "Robot Monster" (hor) O ELVIS IS "WILD · Loco Valdez '~-George Nader, Claudia Barrett. * IN THE COUNTRY'' 11:00 0 0 ~mm Newi 1:45 e Movie: (C) "lloocf on tM Ar· . ,. , 3 Ci) ®) ~ 00 News row" (wes) '64-0ale Robertson. 0 Miiiion $ Movie: (C) Wild In Twilight Zone 2:30 m All-Night Show: "Guns of fort the Country" (mus) '61 -Elvis 6 Perry Mason Petticoat," "I Alm at the Stirs" Presley, Hope Lange. Sherlock HolmH Theatre 3:10 0 Movie: (C) "Slim C.rter" (eom) I Bobby Goldsboro Show To Tell the Truth '58-Jock Mahoney, Barbara Hale. The Bold Ones LI Sel\011 Joven ... Washington Week In Review u Maestri Mendez Japanese llnguare Proer•m 8:30 0 Q!l Cl) I IPlciAC I S u n s h I n e (2 •/2hr) When a 20-year-old wife and mother learns she is suffering from a fatal Illness. she sets about preparing a unique and very per· sonal legacy of love for those she is soon to leave behind. Newcomer Christine Raines stars as the tragic young heroine. and Cliff DeYouna. Meg Foster, Brenda Vaccaro, 8111 Mumy and Corey Fischer co-star. 0 Ql@l1Q) m The Girt With Somethin& Ex1r1 "And Baby Makes Two" Sally's business partner Anne is quite firm in her decision to have a baby despite the I act she is single. 0 THE ODD COUPLE * STARS TONY RANDALL ANO JACK KLUGMAN 0 1 (1) a> The Odd Couple "Fe· lix Directs" .f elix directs his first film with Oscar as "star" in an improvised story built around a sex- pot stewardess. m Merv Griffith Show Citywatchers Novel a 9:00 0 Q)@ Ilg) m Needles and Pins Nathan's Lorelei Fashions is hit by a strike when a small incident snowball~ into a crisis. ~The Bold Ones @(I)a>Room 222 Wa l t tman High buzzes with whispers h n student Tracy Reis (Marjorie Arnold) drops the hint that her widowed father and teacher Alice Johnson had a romantic tryst. IE This Week In Pro Football Oon:t delay! Try one today in \'Our own neigborhood ! • -, •· For an appointment TIDAN, INC. ALPHA DIVISION Choice of <:olor & Sho~ Total Se"'ice Including Decking Page 13 SATURDAY NOVEMBER 10 MORNING O rr 31 CE Ghost Chasers m Movli "The Happy Tlme" (rum) '52-Charles Boyer, Marsha Hunt. ill) Sesame Str!et 10:00 i ~ T Speed Buggy 3 NCAA football I> .ll ~ (@ m Slamund 17 L3J Brady Kids • Movie: "Sil Bridges to Cross" (dra) 'SS-Tony Curtis, Julie Adams. 6:00 @ TV 8 Classroom George Nader_ 6:30 1J 'J" Sunrise Semester @ Gospel Jubilee ;)~ Sewini With Magdilena ;26 Kids for Christ m Alternatives (R) Candy Latsen @I) Roller Games hosts. Focus IS on "Tuum Est." a 10:30 e r;;o '8' Josie & the Pussycats drug rehabrlitatron program. O 'A~ 10' m Pink Panth~r 7:00 'ti9 ~The Flintstones 0-Movie: "Night After N•&ht" · ._,~ l!J 0 m Lidsville (com) J32-George Raft, Mae West 6 . Tennessee Tuxedo 0 'rt (1) Mission: Maeic 0 UT (j) Bugs Bunny ~ Allred Hitchcock Presents (i) TV 8 Classroom m Mister Rogers' Neighborhood 0 Double Feature: (C) "Raw Edge" m Sportscope •73 (dra) '56-ReK Reason, Rory Cal· houn. (C) "Treasure of Lost Can· 11:00 1J ~ ([' Everythin(s Archie yon" (adv) '52 -William Powell. I GO! Julie Adams. G1; (1) ABC Superstar Movie m Brother Buzz News • 7:30 (J ~ '.Tl Bailey's Comets a_~(!) jg m The Jetsons D in 11) m lnch Hlg~. Privat~ ~ The~tre 2& i Eiil Sesame Street Mormon Taberucle Choir 11:30 1J ~ C[ NBA Ba•etbalt 1<.ansas -6 Ultra Man City vs Milwaukee D ~ (3) Yoai's Gan& D The Jetsons ffi))m World of Wonder @ Movie: (C) "Seven Ways from Elementary News Sundown". (wes) '60-Audie Mur Country Music phy, Barry Sullivan. · ~@ m Addams Family @Movie: "Ma & Pa Kettle at 8:00 I ~ (i) Scooby·DOO m Ad Lib John Wayne Theatre Home" (com) '54-Marjorie Main. 6 Movie Percy Kilbride. 0 :_iT. (3) Super Friends ® Ji: (lg m ~O! . ~ VWon On m Championship Wrestling m Movie: (C) "Apa che Territory" (wes) '58-Rory Calhoun, Barbara Bates. AFTERNOON I Voice of Tokyo Sesame Str~et 12:00 D Serendipity Sportscope 73 0 Movie: "The Blue Dahlia" (mys) 8:30 D 53 (I)®) m Emergency + 4 '46-Alan Ladd, Veronica Lake. ID Movie: "Million Dollar Manhunt" 8 (ff, CIJ American Bandstand (mys) '57-Richard Denning, Carole Movie: (C) "Tomahlwk" (wes) Mathews. '51 _Van Heflin. Yvonne Decarlo, I All Pro Breakfast Show Alex Nicol. 9:00 ~ (]) ifavorite Martians ~ San Diego Happenlna ~@ m Butch Cassidy m Horse Racing "The Washin&ton Movie: " s Youni IS You feel" D c lnternatronal," 8 l 'fz·mile In· (com) '51-Monty Woolley, Jean vitational race for 3-year-olds. on Peters. turf from Laurel Race Course. I (17} (V Lassie's Rescue Ranaers 1·@ Education at Work ~n ~~ M~-~~bo~ Mister Roiers' Nel&flborhood Travelure 9:30 eii 00 Jeannie ~@ ®) m Stir Trek 12:30 0 Sports Special Los Angeles In Movie vitational Swimming Championships. POSITIVE WEIGHT LOSS! Our Patients Show It FREE CONSULTATION & INFORMATION FULL MEDICAL SUPERVISION DIAL 673-1182 10 AM to 6:30 PM NEWPORT WEIGHT CLINIC 3355 VIA LIDO , SU,TE 250. NEWPORT A Page 14 THE DAILY PILOT. TV WfEt<, NOVC~BER 4, 1973 0 @ CIJ NCAA football Teams to be announced .- @) lnsiaht ~~ Voice ol Aerlculture m Seume Street m U.S. Navy 1:00 6 Movie: "No Road Bac11" (dra) '57-Sean Connery, Skrp Home1er 10' It Taku A Thief m Soul Train CE Land of the Giants 1:23 (i) f arm Show 56 Roller Games m f'utbol-Soccer m Canadian Adventure 1:30 O Movie: (C) "Gunsmoke" (wes) '53-Audie Murphy, Susan Cabot. i '6' Bakersfield Civic Theatre Eiil Mister Rogers' Neighborhood m A&ricultur~ USA Z:OO 0 e29 fat Albert O On Campus p Movie: "Silver Star" (wes) '55- J1mmy Wakely a International Hour o, Sports Action Pro-file m Combat ·m comedy Classics: Repeat of 11 · JOAM movie. ~ @ Movf: (C) "Charlie Bub· bles" (dra) 6'8-:,6.lbert Finney. Lisa Minnelh. · Eiil Sesame Street m Movies: "Return of Jack Slade" and "Casbah" · 2:30 1J l9 'a"" CBS Children's film F~s· tival "Black Mountain," a joint Soviet·lnd1an production. tells the story of a grant wild elephant, Black Mountain, and his herd, captured by villagers and taught lo work. O Eipression: East/West "Who Is the Korean Community?" @ SpC>rts Special of.the Week 60; NFL Came of the Week m futbol·Soccer 3:00 O Agriculture USA (8 J Sherlock Holmes Theatre O Movie: (C) "40 Guns to Ap"he Pass" (wes) '67 -Audie Murphy. lara1ne Stephens. @) Sci·fi Theall'! m Movie: "Esupe'' (adv) '40 - Robert Taylor. Norma Stiearer §Wrestlin& Mister Roaers' Nei&hborhood Drama 3:30 I Dusty's Treehouse . focus "Los Angeles Free Clinic" Seymour Presents The Vir&inian ~ (jJ Film Feature m first Adventures in lmprovisina ®' 00 Win, Lose or Draw 4:00 IJ Bienvenidos Cl) !if (jJ This Week In Pro fool· ball O lmpacto (jJ Wiid Wild West I Celebrity Bowling (3) Daniel Boone Wilburn Brothers Mr. Wizard Panorama Latino This Week in Pro Football WVolce of Airiculture 4:30 Just Natural Inquiry Sports Challence I Hi&h Chaparral o It Pays to Be l&norant Platea Contlnuld a g @ It Takes A Thief Cl~ Bill Anderson Show m Behind the l ines W Corona Now 5:00 I) Anlm•I World '''Gypsy Horse fair'' ~What's Goin& On Pinbusters l ~mour Presents 0 UZJ Cl) ABC's Wide World of Sports Scheduled 1n the lndianapolls. car Demolition Derby and the Evel Knievel Daredevil Motorcycle Jump, bolh from the Los Angeles Collseum. Also scheduled is the Ladies' Euro- pean Gymnastics Championships from London. England. O Rams' Coach's Show (10 News m Movie: "Sands Of lwo Jima" (dra) '49-John Wayne, Adele Mara, John Agar. · l,!l The Persuaders 126 Nashville Music ~ (i) NFL Game of the Wu~ ~Capulina Roller Games To Be Announced W Vince Lombardi's Science .~ Art of f ootball 5:30 1J Johnny Mann's Stind Up and Cheer Lassie guests @ ; 23 Ci' News Untamed World o Movie: (C) (2hr) '1he l lnb" (susp) '63 -Rod Taylor, Suzanne Pleshette. Trppr Hedren ~6 Porter Waaoner Show Eiil Accion Chicano < R> e2f (i Anlmal Wortd @I) Chespirito fl) Speed Racer EVENING 6:0000 €DmNtws 0 HEE HAW! MO~E * FOR YOUR MONEY! §Hee Haw The Real Don Steele Show Ni&ht Gallery ~ Phtional Ceoirapllk ~'-Jimmy Dean Show I The Advocates (R) CL World at War Tutro del Sabado Three Stooees 6:30 News Sports With Bertlll KNBC News Conference 6 Twlli ht Zone 1 3 Reasoner Report I The Starlost Platea Continuada :26 Bobby Cold1boro Show 18011 de Mexico la$$le Little R1K1ls 7:00 I) Other People, Other Places Peter Graves narrates a film on the Sher· pas, a rugged people who live about trlteen thousand feet above sea level in the Himalayas. 3 Wild Klnadom • The Starlost Bowling for Dollars Other People, Other Places News Rams' Hi.1!11i&hts Q..9 m Lawrence Welk Show It T1kes I Thief (I) The Rookies (6) Wild Wortd of Animals Hee Haw EI1.) Jane Kennedy-To Be Free (R) (D Police Surgeon W Speed Racer 7:30 0 * 8:00 8:30 9: @ * 7:30 IJ Wild World of Anlm1ls Wiiiiam Ell) The Jau Set Conrad narrates a filmed journey al Premier Film of the "[lephant Seals" who travel 9:30 B Qi (j) Bob Newhart Show Bob's from the Antarctic Ocean to Punta decision to meet the rising cost of Norda each year living by raising his rates sets off ; lassie a revolt among members of his lloxin& From the Olympic therapy group. 00 let's Make A Deal ~Alfred Hitchcock Presents The OatinJ Game Minority Community O onite at 8:00 Peter • Hollywood Televlslon Theatre * O'Toole is "Lord Jim" "Montserrat" CR) O Million $ Movie: (C) (2 'fthr) 10:00 B QI 00 Carol Burnett Show Tim "lord Jim" (dra) '65-Peter O'Toole, Conwa~ and Petula Clark guest. James Mason, Curt Jurgens, Jack 0 G..iJ 00 CL) Griff "The Last Bal· Hawkins. lad'' Griff investigates the death of [!gJ Oute's Chis a rock smger following a legal abor· ll_~ (i) Other People, Other Places lion performed by his friend, Or. EE Newport Jau Festival "Tribute Martha Reid. Kim Hunter, William to Louis Armstrong" (R) Windom, Corinne Camacho and Jo· ffi llobby Gold5b0to Show anna Frank star. (fl The Ghoul Gang I ID, News . 8:00 1J Q! 00 All In the flmlly Archie's • • Chinese Vanety Hour Protestant tllood begins to boll when Lou Cordon Show Edith takes to wearing a r.eligious 10:30 I Pepper Rodgers Show medal and allendlng Catholic ser-6 Dr. Irene l<assorla vices. • Philbin & Co. 0 In 00 m Emeraencyl "In· EE News somn1a" Paramedic Gage lust can't 10:40 tl} Japanese Laniuage Program sleep regardless of friends' efforts ll:OO C3l B 0 @ News to help him. • USc Toolball O Suptrstln of Rock Seals · & Marshal Dillon Crofts. Johnnie "Nash, and The Hol· Mi5sion: Impossible hes ~est Rev Leroy Jenkins 0 UT CI) CL) The Partridge fam ily 00 ·Rock Concert Reuben's nephew Alan, encouraged 3 @ NYPD by the Penridees 1n his amb1t1on to 2~ 700 Club become a comedian, has a pro.blem 6' 00 Movie: "let No Man Write . he freezes b~fore an audience My-Epitaph" (dra) '60-Burl Ives. of more than three. Shelley winters m Movie: (2hr) "Sands of lwo Eil Cinema 34. Jlma" (dra) '49 -John Wayne, CI) It Is Written John Aaar. Adele Mara. lMS 14'1 Movie· (C) ''Portrait In Black" m Championship Wrestllna · l.i!J(d ) •60·_ L Turner Anthony eiiil Double Shock Theatre ra ana • I El Show de Rosita Peru Quinn. Teatro del sabado 11:30 1J Fabulous 52! (C) "M1d1me X" Movie: (2hr) "City for Conquest" (dra) '66 . -John Forsythe, Lana (dra) '40-James Cagney, Ann Sher· Turner, Ke1~ Dullea. ldan. 0 90 Ton1~,ht ,, . 1·30 £11 ~ T M•A•s•H In another (1) Movie: Wh~plHh. (dra) 49- • ~ IP u>...J . • Dane Clark Alexis Smith, Eve Arden. colorful communique to his la ther, O M le·' (C) "P J .. (dra) '68- Hawkeye tells how the unit overcame G ov p. d • R~ymond Burr a case of the ''blahs " eorge e.ppar • • ~The Jimmy Dean Show Gayle Hunnicutt Thia Week In Pro football Ci) Star Trek M · 6"0) Rock Concert .. (ft) @ ~AB~ SUspense . oyie m Movie: "My Man Godfrey" (com) Death Race During Romf!iel s re· '3&-w·mam Powell Carole Lom· treat in World War II Africa. two b d 1 • Ameru:_an pilots in an unfliable but ~ (6) Burt Reynolds Late Show operational fighter plane . are pur· Re nolds travels to London where sued acros~ the desert by a German h} g ests are Michael Caine Ed· tank and its crew. Doug McClure. 1 u M d 'Ry n Lloyd Brid&es Roy Thinnes and Eric ward fox. Roger oore an a ' O'Neal Braeden star. 12·00,..,. Movie· ''Thunder on the Hill" HJ Platu Contlnuada • "" • • Colb A Tl • Lost Chlldren (R) (dra) 51 -Claudette ert, nn mt s l!!i'lh, Robert Douglas. 9:00 1J ~ Mary Tyler Moore Sh9w W Movie: "My Son, the Vampire" There's good news and bad news (com) '4&-Sela Lugosi Kitty Mc· from Rhoda. She's in love-but t~e Shane. , ' ma.n she loves owns the store in 12:30 00 Movie: ''The Matchmaker" (rom) which she works and she has no '50 _Shirley Booth. Anthony Per· idea how he feels about her. kins Q) Ci) Buck and the Preacher @ (3J News * Riding Now on Channel-23 1:00 9 Movie: "Accidenr• (dra) '66 -0 0 (6)@) m NBC Saturday Dirk Bogarde, St~nley Baker. Movie· (C) (2hr) "Buck ind the ~It Takes A Thief Preacher'' (com) '72-Sidney Poi· C!) Movie: "Cry . Tough" (dra) '59 tier, Harry Bel11fonte. Ruby Dee. A -John Sax~~· Linda Cristal~ black ex-sergeant and scout (Poi· 1:25 IJ Movie:. The Em• Day' (com) tier). who now uses his knowledge '57 -Richard Basehart, Simone of the West to lead wagon trains Simone. of blacks to new territory, le.ams l :~O Gt A~·~leht Show: ''The Lon! up with a fun-loving, sell·ordatned Haul, 'The Parson & the Outlaw, pr11cher (Belafonte) to aid their "face Behind tlle M11k" "unwelcome brothers." 2:40 IJ Movie: "Born lo Be Loved" .. O Movie: (90) "Dracula" (hor) '31 (~ra) '59-0ick Kallman, Carol Mor· -Bela luiosl, David Manners. ns, Vera Vague. 6:00 6:30 7:30 8:30 11:30 8;00 9:00 11:30 6:30 8:00 8;30 11:30 6:30 8;00 8:30 11;30 6:30 8:00 9;00 11:30 6:30 1 :00 11:30 7:30 8;00 8:30 9:00 11:00 ll!lS 11:30 THI; DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, NOVEMBER 4. 1973 SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 4 S (Cl "The Shuttered Room" (sus~) '67-G•I Young. Carol Lynley 9 "lnvaalon of th• Anlmal People'' (hor) '62-John Carradine 11 "Som YHterday" (com) '51-Judy Holltdey, Wiiiiam Holden. 9 (C} "Pink Panther" (com) '64-David Niven. Peter Sellers, Caouc1ne. 7 17 J (C) "Valdez 11 Coming" Cadvl '71 -Burt Lancaster. Susan Clark. John Cvpher. 7 (C) "The Devil's Angels" (dra) '67 -John Cassavetes. Beverly Adams, Momsy Farmer. l 1 "The Med Room" (susp) '69--Stella Stevens, Shelley Winters 13 "The Oevll end Daniel Webster" (dra) '41 -James Craig. 17 J "Sierra Baron" (wes) "58-Brian Keith, Rick Jason, Rita Gam MONDAY, NOVEMBER S S (C) "Bettle of the Bulge" Part I (dra) '6G-Henry Fond;io Robe1t Ryan. 9 (C) "The Glenn Miller Story" (mus) '54 -James Stewart. June All:tson. 4 23 6 (C) "Yours, Mine and Ou~" (com) '68-Lucille Ball, Henry Fonda. 10 (Cl "The War Wagon" Cwesl '67-John Wayne, Kirk Dougln. 17 3 (C) "Caper of the Golden Bulls" (dra) '67-Stephen Boyd, Yvette Mtmleux. 2 29 8 (C) "Glau Bottom Boat" (com) '66-0ons Day. Rod Taylor 3 (C) "The Best of Everything'' (dra) '59-Hope Lange, Stephen Boyd S (C) "A Taste of Honey' (dra) '62-Rlta Tushingham. 7 "The Stand-In" (com) '37-Humphrey Bogart, Leslie Howard 13 CC) "Destination Moon" (scl·fi) '50-JOhn Archer. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6 7 "Anatomy of • Murder" Part I (susp) '59-James Stewart, Leo Remick. • S (C) "Battle of the Bulge" Concl (dra) '66-Henry Fonda. Robe•t Ryan • • • 9 (C) "Indiscreet" (com) '58~acy Grant. Ingrid Bergman. 7 17 3 (C) "The Glrf M9st Likely To . ". ." ('COm/dra) '73 -Stockard Channtn ... Edward Asner, Jtm Backus. 2 29 8 (C) 'Bucllskln" (wes) '68-Barry Sullivan. Wendell Corev 5 "Where Bullets Fly" (dral '66-Tom Adams. Dawn Addams 13 "Vice Squad" (dra) 'SJ-Edward G. Robi nson, Paulette Goddard WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 7 7 "Anatomy of a Murder" Concl. (susp) '59-James Stewert. S (C) "Battle of the Bulge" Part I (dra) '61j-:Henry Fonda. 9 (C) "Thunder Bay" (dra) '5J-:James Stewart, Joanne Dru. Oan Duryea. • 7 17 3 (C) "My Darling Oaughter1' Annlve,..ery" (com) '73 -Robert Youns. Ruth Hussey. Darlene Can, Raymond Massey, Judy Strangis. 2 29 8 (C) "Left-Handed Gun' .. (wes) '58-Peul Newman. Lita Milan. S "The4 .. Hlonate Thief" Ccom) '62-Ben Gazzara. Anna Magnani lJ "Storm fur" (susp) '56--Cornel Wiide, Jean Wallace, Oen Duryea. THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8 7 (C) "The Lady In the Car With Glasse1 & A Gun" (mys) ·11-Saman tha Eggar, John McEner;y. Oliver Reed. 5 (C) "Bettle of the Bulge Concl. (dra) '66-Henry Fonda. 9 (C) "Bend of the River" (adv) '52-James Stewart, Julie Adams. 2 29 8 (C) "The Graduate" (com) '67-0ustln Hoffman, Anne Bancroft. Katharine Ross. 2 29 8 (C) "fad• In" Crom) '68-Burt Reynolds, Barbare Loden 5 "Bluebeard" (dra) '63-M oc;helle Morgan, Hiidegarde N eff. JJ "A Bullet for Joey" (d ra) '55--George Raft, Edward G. Robinson FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 9 7 (C) "The f llm-flem Men" (com) '67-Gedrge c. Scott, Michael Sar. razln, Sue Lyon. 9 (C) "Wiid In th• Country" (mus) '61-Elvos Presley, Hope Lange. 2 29 8 (C) "Where Were You When the Lights Went Outr" <com) '66- 0oris Dey, Robert Morse. 13 "Th• Creeplnr Unknown" (hor) '56-Brian Oonlevy, Margi• Dean. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 10 9 (C) "L.ord Jim" (dra) '65-Peter O'Toole, James Mason, Cun Jurgen1 11 "Sends of lwo Jlme" (dra) '49-John Wayne. John Asar, Adele Mare. 7 17 3 (C) "Death Race" (susp) '73-0oua McClure. Lloyd Bridaes . 4 23 6 10 (C) "Buck end the Preacher" (com) '72 -Sidney Poitier, Herry Belalonte, Ruby Dee. 5 "Dracula" Chor) '31-Bela Lugosi. 29 8 "Let No Men Write M y Epitaph" (dre) '60-Shelley Winters. Burl lve1. 3 (C) "Portrait In Black" (dra) '60-Lana Turner, Anthony Quinn. 2 CC> "Madame X" (dra) '66-Lana Turner, John Forsythe, Keir Dullea. 7 CC> "P.J." (dra) '68--George Peppard. Raymond Burr, 13 "My Men Godfrey" (com) '36-Wllliam Powell. Carole Lombard. Page 15 • ~ 0 0 u m-- II Iii llJ ~ lfl c 0 "E co ~ ""-.. c co E .. ca .c H ................ E 0 : Bargain Bin: T E R : Records : · : Only 1 • 87 ! : All Units Guaranteed > z 0 en RECEIVERS--AMPS--TUNERS~DECODERS COST NEW SALE! TAPE RECORDER~ASSETTE, REE~~\! 8· 1:~ M SHERWOOD S-8600a 100 Watt (IHFl $125 FM Stereo Rcvr., Walnut Case (T.I.) ...... $300 ~t~~:7R~v·~a~~-~~~~ .~/.FM ........... $320 $110 SONY SQA-200 4 Channel $89 Decoder-Amplifier IDl ................. SlSO MARANTZ 4060 4 Channel $199 Amplifier, 60 Watts (RMS ) (New) ........... $300 SONY STC-7000 Top Quality • $.,ftft *M]PM-Tv,,.,.taraemp.-~ ~ -$1!0 .J:l.J±:::. SONY TA 1130 130 Watt IRMSl $299 Integrated Amplifier ID) . . . . . . . ........... $400 · HARMAN-KARDON 75+ Twin Power Supply AM/FM Stent0-0uad Rc'vr. (New) $400 $299 .....•.. $200 $150 MARANTZ 2010 AM/FM Stereo Receiver ID l . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 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M91ED (DI ·- DUAL 1229 Professional Auto Chang.,. (DI FAIRCHILD 412 wit+. ESL TOMann, Shure Cartridge PE 3012 (Product of Dual) with Walnut ·ease IDl .. sns $81 ........ .,00 $147 S7S $35 $70 $29 $27S $149 Ult $175 S200 $35 SlOO $59 TELEVISION-B&W, COLOR ~~~ SALE! S470 $399 $119 $50 SONY Trinitron KV1710 17", AFT ICust. Ret.l PANASONIC, AN 409T Portable B&W ,. w • u· w . ~ atlantic music stereo <( HOUIS: M., F. 12·f· T., W. TH. 12"6: SAT. 1 0-5: SUN. U-5; -445 E. 17TH, COSTA MESA s~~~~ Ill @PIONEER n~ass '· /I I W . SPORTS EXTRA: . Eleven Top-Ranke.d Defensive Stars Pick the NFL's Most Irresistible Offense . ~ .. . . .· DAILY PILOT ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ,. Are There Hidden Reasons Why People Vote as They Do? .. sk Them Yourself W•nt 10 uk • l•mous person • question? Send the question on • po1turd, to "Ask," Fa':"ily Weeklyih 64t Lexington Ave., New York, N. V. 10022. We'll p•y $5 tor pubhshed questions. Sorry, we cant answer o ers FOR KENNETH O'DONNELL, "PJWi11tmc11ts ~·cc:rdmy to Presidtmt Jolin F. Kennedy As I understand it, you had much the same job w;ih President Kemiedy that H . R. Haldeman hod with President Nixon. Could the men ar0tmd JFK have pulled off a "lVatergate" without hi& knowing about it?-F. X. Sullivan, Atlantic City, N.}. FOR SALLY STRUTllERS of ''All in the Family" What do you think of CarroJI O"Connor? -E. B. S., Fayette, Iowa •He's a beautiful m:rn. He's trnveled all over the world, he's Jmowk·dgenbJe ancl intelligent. Hl;S ulso n gotrrmet. FOR SEN. W ILLIAM PROXMIRE (D-\Vis.) What's got you so riJ~d up about limo~asines for government bigwigs? Ha\'en't they had them for years?-K. Blnke, Great Fnlls, Mont. • First, there has been a massivt' proliferation of these ve- hicles. E\'erybody and J1is brother has one in the executive agendes. Second, the~ cost too much. Jn our hearings. we found chauffeurs arc routinely paid from $14.000 to $17,000 a year. when ov(:rtimc is included. The purchase price and the muintenanc<.· add up to thousands more. FOR PAT MORROW of "Peyton Pince" f\'c read tJ1nt you've studied law and ha\'e trained for poli- ties. Wllat do you think, generally, of actors going into politics?-}. Klein, Grnnd Rapids, Mich. • I resent it. People like Honald Reag;u1. George Murphy and Shirley Temple entered politics on an identification basis. lf they were trained for it, that woul<l be different. But they weren't. e 1 don't ~el· how. l ~Ill'\\ al>oul C\'Ct) thing that was going 011• N11body ncur th<.· Prcs11.k11l coul~ do u11yth~11g w~thout • my k11owi11~ about it, aml 1 l'Oul<ln t d~' 1111yth111g without the Prl·si<lcnt k11owi11g :tf)(1ut it. Ile <1u1zzcd me every day on many 111..tlters, including what the Natiu11JI. Democrntic Committee was doing, how muclJ mo11cy was 111 the Trea- su1·y und how much was bl'ing ~pent iu what areu, an<l su 011. So my :111~\\'l'f is :111 u11c<1uh O<.:l\l NO. FOR Jl-:ltRY LEWIS You and Dean Martin were \'cry good together in the movies. Why did you stop working together?-Cathy Brown, Hershey, Neb. • ... :wd the m:111 said, "Th11Sl' arc beautiful shoes you're wearing .... " Arni the other mm1 uuswere<l: ·"Thanks. hut I'm the only une wh11 knows they hurt!" FOR CHER BONO Does Bob Mackie design your offstage clothes, as well as the clothes you wear onstage? Do you design nny of your own clothes any more?-Karen Smith, Sa!elfite Beach, Fin. • For offstage wear, I have many of Bob Mackie's clothes, but 1 spend !111 little lime offstage that I 'prefer to Wl'nr jc;ins nnd a blouse. Lately I haven't had the time to design any of my own clothes, I'm sorry to soy. • FOR DON RlCKLE~, comedian What do you thinlc •the reaction would be if you had been given a role like that of Archie Bunker in a sericJ?-T. L. Moore, Durham, N .C. • The crowd would huvc come nCter me with p icks and shovels. They wuuldu't have believed I was acting. Two weeks Inter I woulcl have been in the river, clrifting upstream ; with a slab of concrete tied to my back. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-+-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-·~~~~- FOR llELEN GURLEY BROWN What is your magazine, "Cosmopolitan," trying to say to today's young women?-B.M.R., Piscataway, N.J. •That she's a worthwhile and beautiful person, but she will ...... e a far more wondcrf ul life if she works at it, that she should be p.\ssionately interC"stcd in improving her life, her job. her love relationships, herself. Yt.•s, we are very much on the level, ancJ yes. the ndvice we give really does help. FOR NEIL DIAMOND If you hadn't become a singer, what profession would you have followcd?-S.O., Scottsdale, Ariz. • Composing. From about the time I was 16, that's the only professional ambition I had, though I entered college as a premed major, and with a fencing scholarship! I can't imagine that I would he anything but a composer-performer today, even if I hadn't gained any sort of success. I would still be kncx:king my head against the wall of ~ublishing firms. I don't consi der myself a performer first. Im a com- poser who hec:ame a performer. And although I love per- ....J6>rming, and love contact with an audience, and love the freedom of interpreting my material-that material comes first. Composing is at the center of everything for me. Per- forming is an exh·a plus. . Cover Photo by Al•n Papp6 f'OR JERRY TAGGE, quarterback, Grceu Bay Packers In your championship years at Nebraska you wore No. 14 shirt. How come you now wear No. 17 for the Packers when none of the other players has 14?-Tim Hauber, Ridgeway, Iowa • The Packers rl'tire<l the No. 14 in honor of Don Hut~on. the great end who played with the team from 1935 to 194.5. So I wear No. 17, which also happens to be the number l wore when I played high school footbnll in Green Bay. No ... mber 4, 1973 /iiml(V~ The Newtpaper Magazine MORTON FRANK, PrHldent and Publi.ti.r LEONARD S. OAVIDOW, Chairman PATRICK M. LINSKEY, V.P.-Ad Director MORT PERSKY, V.P.-Editor-ln-Chlef Sid Layeflky, Marketing Dir; Gerald S. Wroe, Reynolds Dod90n, Managlno-£dllor Eastern Mgr.; Robert D. Glick, Associate Rlch1td Valdatl, Art Director Eastern Mg,.,; Joe Frazer, Jr., Chicago Mgr.: Richard T. Flynn, Detroit Mgr. PUBLISHER RELATIONS: ROBERT D. CARNEY and LEE EWS, V.P.s and Co-Dlreclors; Robert H. Marriott, Mgr.: Robert J. Chrl•llan, Publisher Services: Joseph G. Arm.lrong, Asst. to Publisher. Newspaper Services: Robert Banker, Promotion; Roulyn Abrevaye, Women's Editor Marilyn HanMn, Food Editor Joen Heivlcben and Hal Landon, Associate Editors; GIOJla Brier, Pictures. Contributing Editors: Pffr J. Oppenheimer, Hollywood: L1rry Bottsteln, Sports. Caryl Eller, Merchandising; Loui. lal'ela, PRODUCTION: Melbourne Zlpprlch, Director. Distribution. Richard Wendi, Mgr.; Roberta Colllna, Makeup Headquartert1: 641 Lexington Ave., N.V., N.Y. 10022 <i>1973 FAMILY WEEKLY, INC. All tights reserved A publlutlon of Downe Co"'l!!Vnlullon1, Inc. EdW•rd "· Do-. Jr., Chltf Encuf/ve O"/ctr John llKk C•rter, Ch•lnn•n ot the Board "oland S. TN!fttlle, Prasldtnt • IN THIS GRIND~EM·OUT. WORLD, . . · . IS THERE SUCH ATHING AS A QUALITY CIGARETTE? If the cigarette is Kent there is. Kent is probably the most quality-tested cigarette made. · We try to get rid of any taste- robbing imperfections before a Kent ever sees the light of a match. (Over 200 different quality checks in the manufacturing end, alone.) But Kent quality goes beyond that. We go to 3 continents, 4 countries and 10 states to find the right kind of tobaccos for the milder Kent blend. To complement this blend, we even invented our own filter, the famous Micronite filter- to smooth the flavor of Kent. Why are we such sticklers about how Kent"is made? Because, that way we can giv~ you the mild, smooth taste that · makes Kent what it is: America's quality cigarette. King Size or Delwce IOO's. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Oan9erous to Your Health • - • ,. . Ho''' I)(, Tl1e'' llf, I-•! • llieting Habits of Some or the \\brld's •• Hardly a week passes these days without the ap- pearance of yet another miracle diet, guaranteed to cause flab to disappear virtually overnight. There are the ooe- food diets (ice cream, grape- fruit, rice). one-food-type diets (low carbohydrates, high pr~ tein), eating-habit diets (skipped meals, four-or-five-times-a-day snacks instead of meals), as well as a variety of other ideas (vege- SOPHIA LOREN Attitude is the most impor- tant thing, says Sophia "Loren. She avoids the normal diet rou- tine by cooking wjth imagina- tion. A lifelong pasta fiend, Sophia at 37 is still beautiful and she's now more slender than when she modeled for the fumttti magazjnes in ltaly-be- ·--Tere Carlo Ponti rescued her and put her in the movies. ' • FAMIL y WEE KL V, No .... mber 4, 1973 -'lost Beautiful Aetress-~lodels By Belen Dorsey "If you have a diet problem, get your imagination, as well as your hands, to work in the kitchen. After all, what is a diet? It is eating little or sticking rigidly to certain foods. Exercise a little will power, but know when to stop. The main thing is not to fall into gloom."-Sophia Loren tarianism, fruitarian1sm). Nutrition experts admit they arc a long way from knowing just exactly how food reacts WILHELMINA Former top model Wilhel- rnioa stresses that many peo- ple's weight problems may be due to a malf uoctioning thy- roid, which sliould be checked by a doctor. "I stress this be- cause f ve gone through peri- ods when I've done everything wrong. Now, I immediately tell my models to go to a doctor aod let him· check out their thy- roids." That was Willie's problem, ''If you have a diet p roblem, get your imagination. as well as your ham.ls, to· work in the kitchen. Aflt:r all. what is a diet? ft is eating little or sticking rig- idly to certain foods. Exercise a little will power, but know when to stop. The main thing is not to fall into gloom. One thing I know is that if you sit down to a bad meal, you leave tbc table fC4!1ing li ke death, and this cre- ates a psychological atmosphere that is a serious threat to your health." T ypically, Sophia brcakf asts lightly on espresso coffee and rolls. lunchc'\ on high protein (cottage cheese when she's in America or a small grilled ~teak }. and .it night c..lines o n pasta. fi.xcd countless ways- often with low-calorie vegeta- bles (to matoes, onio ns. garlic. spinach, mushrooms, eggplant o r arti chokeo;)-and salnds. ~ with the body. But they general- ly agree that because of dif- ferent metabolisms, no ooe diet is right for everyone. A regimen which she found out about wben she failed to lose weight even though her daily diet consisted of black cotf ee or an occasional cup of bouillon, plus a small leao broiled steak every five days. "Finally I went to one doctor who put me on a scale and told me to eat a hamburger. The next day I gained 3V2 pounds. It turned out my thy- roid was low. Every time I went on starvation binges, my motor would stop running." Now, with a well-regulated thyroid and a well-balanced diet, Willie ANNE LOCKHART Anne Lockhart, June Lock- hart's daughter, has no diet regi- men-but she avoids rich des- serts. Anne relies on simple, alrnost-ne><ooking recipes and keeps "full" by drinking-vast quantities of mineral water or fruit juices (also great for the skin). ··1 don't think I could live without my electric blend- er. I'm always making crushed that takes (at off one person may put it on another. There- fore, if you seriously want to diet, you probably should con- i~ able to keep her weight con- stant. She says. "Thac arc so many ·bea utiful diets around that let you eat without starving to death. However, in order to look aod feel well, you must take vitamins and minerals. J'd probably opt for the classic old- f asbiooed diet, where you cou.ot calories and eaL a well-balanced menu of protein, fruits and veg- etables. Too often dieters who follow crash or fad diets for long periods find them self- defearing. Their skin begins to fruit drinks and original con- coctions for 4uick i.n:.ick or mea ls. When I cook. I ~tick to simple foods, mostly 'cgctablcs. One of my favorite dishes is a French recipe for ratutouilk, a kind of vegetable stew made with eggplant, zucchini, car- rots, celery, tom.itocs and any- thing else that hapJ>'!nS to be in my icebox!.. Her condiments have almost no calorics at all : fresh snipped herbs, spices, a few drops o r I rc~h lemon or lime juice, hcrbed vinegar or Worcestershire sauce. Not a strict vegetarian, Anne cuts broiled and baked fish , chicken or lean meut. 'Tm real- ly tiig on fruit .,;\lads made with yogurt and lots of little nuts and c runchy things ·IO surprise you." She relics o n honey to sweeten tea or as a c;ugar suh- stitute in recipes. suit your physician. There is, however, one group of people who have learned how ro stay thin succcssf ully: the young model-actresses, whose careers depend on their looks and wpes. Almost all agree that one ingredjcnt is manda· tory for a succasfuJ diet: plenty of exercise. But beyond this, they offer, predictably, an en- gaging divenity of ways to keep the pounds from building up. -----~ sag, fingernails break off and their hair begins to lose it.s gloss Most models arc very much aware of their diets and spend time findfo.g out exactly what·~ right for t.bcQl. You can't sur- vive in our business unless you have beautiful hair, good finger- nails and teeth, and beautiful skin." Willie's own favorite reduc- ing diet is simple: lean broiled stew and plenliful c risp green salads flavored with lemon in- stead of salt, to combat ftu1d rcteotioo. CYBILL SHEPHERD Our cover girl. Cybill hcr- hcrc.J, s nubs peo ple who inJulgc in fa'd food fashio ns. Sh..: sa) i.: "Many people who an: vcgctar· ians are so for all the wro ng rca· sons-social reasons." She burn' up her caloril-'S doing daily ex· erciscs. "J can never go com- plete ly wirhour meat. I've nl· woys had this probkm in modeling-that the people I Cr>11till/U.0tl 011 (Ul/1t' 7 , ..... ----------------------------------------~~~~~~--~ ... 'A cup regular margarine or butter 1 6·10 oz. package regular marshmallows (about 40) OR 4 cups miniature marshmallows 5 cup$"KELLOGG'S RICE KRISPIES cereal 1. Measure margarine Into 3·quart saucepan; melt over low heat. Add marshmallows and cook, stirring constantly, until marshmallows are melted and mixture Is very syrupy. Remove from heat. 2. Add Rice Krispies cereal; stir until well-coated. 3. Spread warm mixture in buttered 13 x 9 x 2·inch pan. Using waxed paper or buttered spatula press firmly Into an even layer. Cut Into squares when cool. YI ELD: 24 2·inch squares NOTE: For thicker squares, press warm mixture into a but- tered 9 x 9 x 2·1nch pan. Best results are obtained when using fresh marshmallows. About 2 cups marshmallow creme may be substituted for marshmallows. Add to melted margarine and cook over low heat tor about 5 min· utes, stirring constantly. Proceed as directed in step No. 2 above. - All treats shown can be made ~ with the basic Marshmallow Treats red appearing on the side of.every Kellogg's Rice Krispies package. · some en~! Crackle! into a 7C ~for (CUT Al.ONO DOTTED LINE) .... ADVANCE 1974 MODEL 7 ·BAND Round the World • POWERFUL! \ AROUND THE WORLD -· ~ RECEPTION 1 ~ Seven Radios in One AM NEWS AND SPORTS FM BEAUTIFUL ~.'USIC SW Al.'AT [, R HAl.~ SW2 T IJ ~~ ~ I ~~ T '1 E •'• 0 R L 0 AIR AIRCR:..FT WB 'y',f:.TH'P PFPCPTS P~B2 POLICE---FtRE AM WORlD 1i HOUR TIU( Cl'lR! PM PORTABLE RADIO 0 ~ ~~"'----~ ::, \ \l)('.-•V ' • --? _r !·r:·.;· ' ~ . .)- .. '.' .. 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C T R 0 :--; I C S World time dial Rotating 7 section telescoping antenna fold down cover / / Padded simulated leather cabinet with chrome trim AC /DC control ON/OH volume control J 'f'.;TEH:-.;ATIO:--:AL 210 SOUTH DESPLAINES ST .. CHICAGO. ILLINOIS 60606 MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE I ELECTRONICS INTERNATIONAL, I 21 0 South Dffpleinee StrHt, Chlcego, Ill. 60606 I Gentlemen· Please rush on money.back guarantee I ll 7 BAND WORLD WIDE RADIO. I enclose $34.95 plus $2 00 Postage, H1ndlinc and Insurance. Ship. pre· I paid. n ~nd C.O.D. I enclose $2.00 deposit. I Charge to my Amerrcan Express Acct. No. ___ _ I Master Charce No. Inter Bank No. __ _ I Bank Amerlcard No. Good thru ___ _ NAME--------------~ I ADDRESS, _____________ _ I CITY ______ STATE _____ ZIP_ I f Ill ruldenu pltaM add :;~. SAio Tn 1 ·---------------- Dieting Habits of A ctress-Models Continued /rum pag~ 4 work for wanl a very thin body with no strength. I mean, they want a body that looks like it has wire appendages. But you must have a certain nmount of protein or you're going to die, especially, if you are athletic like I am. .. , only diet in the sense that I avoid fried foods. I love healthy foods like fresh fruits and vegetables. I'm mad about waterc ress and artichokes. Oc- casionally, I go on crazy binges and have three hot-fudge sun- daes. Th;it's fabulous!" ALI MACGRAW Model-slim Ali MacGraw is a real health-food fan . ''l have a craving for salads, fruits and vegetables and eat them all the time, but I'm what you'd call a semi-vegetarian. I breakfast lightly on half a grapcfntit, cof- fee. an Engli'lh muffin or a croissant. For lunch I have iced tc:i. and a tossed salad. At night I cat broiled lean steak or Jamb chops." Ali avoids extra pounds hy shying away from busi- ness lunches. During interview lunches, she often nibbles on watercress or toys with a salad in lieu of ordering a cocktail. JOANNA SHIMKUS Joanna Shimkus. Canadian- born actress-model. discovered the problems of eating in a ~ foreign country the hard way. "When I first arrived in Paris, I weighed I JO. In three months, with all the French bread and great French cooking, I gained 35 pounds. Instead of the usual steaks and vegetables my moth- er always fixed, I was eating all tha t wonderful coq au vin and pepper steak with those glori- ous sauces. They were my un- doing. I still cat a lot now, but I eat simpler things-broiled fish, simple dishes without sauces. I love organically grown vegetables and fruits." GAIL FISHER Gail Fisher. a former model who's now star of ''Mannix,.1• is an on-again, off-again dieter. She likes to joke about the whole diet syndrome. ''My lat- est invention is skinny cam- eras!" she says. But she admits, .. Eating is one of my vices. I have highly cultivated taste buds." Dieting is fairly easy when she's working, but ifs a problem when she isn't. "When I don't wo rk, l like to stay in bed for two weeks, sleep and watch late movies. I like to push buttons and yell, 'Bring on the hot dogs with onions.' " She tries to diet on meat, shellfish and water. "Eight glasses of water a day is a drag," she says, laughing. ''Sometimes I cheat and have a glass of white wine." Gail never found dieting a problem when she was model- ing because, "I didn't have enough money to eat. To tell the truth, though, when rm underweight I don't like me. I'm very irritable and nervous. And I'm high-strung anyway." Actually, G ail would rather forgo diets altogether. "If Shel- ley Winters and Simone Si- gnoret can get away with be- ing a little heavy," she says, "then why can't G ail J1'll Fisher?" lillll FAMILY WEEKLY, November 4, 1973 • 7 ,, > New from Lipton ® Thick, rich Balian e Vegetable Soup. • 1:· n L~p ~Vegetable lt:ahan ~tyh Spagh etti SoL:JP ""'t: 10c0ff Li Balian Style vegetable soup (or any 2·peckage Upton variety) Lipton ltaienStyte~ ~-.___., Mr. Grocer· lhomu J. lrplon. Inc will redeem this cou po11 IOI 10, plus 3, IOI handhna 11 COlld1h011s ol otter llaw been cornplred with by )'Otl and your customtrs ln.orcrs p10¥tn& purclla~ ot suttic1ent stock lo ~' coupo11s presenttd for 1edempt1011 must bt shown UPClfl requtsl Coupon may not be arncntd 01 transtentd Custome1 must pay any salu tu Cash vii~ l/20c Coupon Wiii not bt hono<td 11 presented lflnlll&h out· side aaencies. broken 01 ot1111s who are not relltl dis t11bul01s ol our me1chand1se 01 spec1frcally au1tlol11td by us to prrsent coupons IOI rtdemphon Yotd where p1oll1bll!d, taJPCI 01 mtncted Good only tn 11 SA. its temt0<1es and Pllff1o Rico for rtdemptton ol 'roper ly 1Ke111td and handled couponi. m111to Tr.omn Lipton, Inc .. Bos 1700, Clinton, Iowa !>2732. Good only upon prrsentahon lo 11oce1 on purchase of prodllct dtscrtbed aboYe. Ally otfier u~ 4'0nslltutu fraud. Offtr llllit .. It Ht CM,O• '" Ml. COU'911 ortus Df:CUllEI 31. 1173. .... - .. 232587 .. * 234351 * Columbia Record & Tape CILJb invites you to take 229567 * 228163 HOTMERS ~' t =-=r . • TMESTATl.U~ '----''-=--..J <•-~M-.... r,;_;~;;_;;;_.,_...c.=:::J .... _.-. .. 2301.U * !i •.. I llEASOftl , . ......!.. ""---~---' 222653* 202093+ '211565 215061 * ZDU47 * 230912 232579 * LOVE MUSK ""~"': IC.loo'--·-··~ THE MORMON TABERNACLE CHOIR'S GREATEST HITS ~ IVU YlHlllG YOU Al.WA.YS WMTIOfO ll(UOllllll- -·i.-•C-~,,. ---~ •Wwwt ,;' ........... .. t .. , .. . -· 231357 * / · Hl PdTRID'l raann t"IS$WOllO "1ln1 ·.~, r1 I °"' 0.,,.' ,_ . ...... U Y CONNIFF I iii 230904 * 22706'6* BLOOD, SWEAT lo TEARS ~UHST HITS •S,-"C:"I . ,..,... ... Se \llt(JM-wt ·-... --· 214650 231647* CO.WAYi 1'Wtm ....... ... _..., . """'• -........ ,c;.,.. ·~ ... 23077* .... , .... ,. c..•·· llt ......... ""' ,,_ •... 229136'* ... _ ........ __ -__ ~_l·_nc_~ .... • II """~' 226647* FOCUI MOVING .wlS 230805* GILBERT O'SULLIVAN -·[1 TO ,.°"" -a.. • "= I 227199* U916l* m 230938* II 115141 ~g 224758 * UlAftsT HfTS ...... ,..., ...... -- 187088 223115 * 221184 * 223164 * • -.iiiiliiiilii• ... ______ __, ... 8{_~_~_§_~-$~_::_:_~_ ... ~_~_ .... _~_:_· __ _, 11. • ,...... . ..... , .. . .... ,,,.. .~ .... , .. 226845 * 22Jlll * 227192* it6655 22tl69* 230375 fantasy 231589 or 232561 * 230714 es foronly $ 97 231159 * ALL SELECTION&• ARE AVAILABLE ON ff you Join now end agrff to buJ .. few .. eight Hlectionl (•t regul•r Club pricn) during the coming two 19.,..· ~ 1~ stereo recordl 234211 * 229526 232553 * 2l045I * ii ~ ~ 227371 * 221432 224415 * 211479 21D17IO 226449 * 117112 22931~* :-~ =1! MAHTOYANI TOLOftM l'IUIYWMIM .............. ... 'Miii ,., .,... ·-liiil!:iil 210112 . 232918 * •• 227411 * 221117 * 222679 * 8-track ceabldg• ~ ...... , .. ..,_ ·-~~·· 234336 * 227074 227454 * 224147 * ~ '8peC8Mlltee ~:·=:::> 230581 * II ' 230136* 223222 * 222.406 * = 216820 a COiumbia HoUs8 ___ ..,.. 231145* ~···~ reel·to-reel .. .,.. 229997 * 225162 225931 * 227116 * Just look •t this gr .. t Mlection of recorded enterUllnment -available In your choice of records or tapes! Just mall the handy application form together with your check or money order for $1 .97 to order your 11 stereo tapes or records (be sure to Indicate whether you want cartridges. cassettes, reel tapes or records. In exchange ... You lt9'" to buy just eight more Mlections (•t reguC•r Club price.) In the coming two ye•n . . . and you may cancel your membersHlp at any time after doing so. Your own ch•rge •ccount will be opened upon enrollment ... and the selections you order as a member will be malled and bllled at the regular Club prices: cartridges and cas- settes, $6.98; reel tapes, $7.98; records, $4.98 or $5.98 ... plus processing and postage. (Occasional special selec- tions may be somewhat higher.) You nuty •ccept or reject Mlectlona u follows: every four weeks you will receive a new copy of the Club's music magazine which describes the regular selection for each musical interest ... plus hundreds of alternate selections from every field of music. (Since you'll receive 13 informa- tive magazines a year, you'll aways be up-to-date on the most current hits.) ••• ff rou do not want any selection offered, just mall the response card provided by the date specified (you'll have at least ten days In which to make your decision) ..• If you w•nt only the regular aelection for your musical interest, you need do nothing -It wlll be shipped to you automatically (naturally, you may return the regu- lar selection at our expense and for full credit If you did not have at least ten days In which to decide) ••• ff you w.nt any of the other Mlectiona offered, just order them on the response card and mall It by the date specified ••• and about four tlmft a year, we will also offer some special selections (usually at a discount off regular Club prices), which you may reject by malling special dated form provided ... or accept by doing nothing. You'll be eHglble for the Club'• bonus plan upon com- pleting your enrollment agreement -a plan whl6h enables you to save at leut 33% on ell future purch...._ Act nowt -~-----------------------------, COLUMBIA RECORD 6 TAPE CLUB, Terre H•ute, lndl.na 47808 I am enclosing my check or money order for $1 .97 as pay- ment for the 11 selections listed below. Please accept my membership application under the terms outlined in this ad- vertisement. I agree to buy 8 more selections (at regular Club orlces) during the coming two years -and may cancel mem· berahip any time after doing so. I am lnterMted In the follow- ing type of recorded enteNilnment: 0 l·Tnic:k C.rtrldile• (KS·W) .tGX - 0 Tepe C.•MHff (K6->Q. 0 RHl·to-Rffl Tepea (K7-Y} 0 12~ SteNO R•cords (C3-Z) S.RI t ..... 11 "ledlt11s l J.. --~~--+-~~~-+-~~----cr-f' MY MAIN MUSICAL INTEREST IS (cMdc OM boll ot1lr): (But I •m •lw•ys /ree to choo.e trom any category) O E•r Uetefllftg 2 O r .. 11 Hlta 1 O Claulcal 1 O Co1111try s § 5:;, ............................................................... . (Pt•._.. Ptl"t) ... rat N•m• t"ltial Litt Nam. A4Wtea ................................................................ . ot, ................................................................... . Stett .............................................. 11, c.49 ............ . De Yeu Hove A Tel_,._, (0.edl ene) 0 YES .•••• 0 NO ''""-I I I I I I I I APO, rPO addreau:u: eontc /M ~clol olcr fMO/f71 I L--------------------~--------~~.~ - Speetrum/73 Sports MJnl-Pronle Golfer JOHNNY MILLER: "My Religion Cornes First" Johnny Miller, the tow-headed 26-year-old who won this year's U.S. Open champion- ship, took up golf only because he was too small to qualify for any other sport. Miller, a native of San Francisco, was only 5-2 and weighed 104 pounds when he attended Lincoln High School. Anxious to participate in some phase of athletics, he experi- mented with golf and found he could com- pete on equal terms with bigger. huskier youths. A~er"traving committed himself to a golfing career, he suddenly benefited by a late-blooming physicaJ development and .. " ~ ' , shot up to six feet. Miler won the National Junk>f Golf ChampioMhip in 1914, Md then two years later sought to caddy In the U.S. Open to Nm Iii» for date money. lnetNd of caddyfng, however, he qualified to play and .Urtled the mogut. of the goat .WOftd by posting one of the best .cores In the tourney. Unlike many other pros, Miller doesn't believe in the links game as the be-all and end-all of his existence. "My religion comes first, then my famffy, then golf,'' he NJS. A devout Mormon and a I gradullte of Brigham YC>Wtg UniYersity, he gives ten percent of of his net income to hi9 churdt. His attractive dark-haired wife, t ~ Linda, and two children accompany him on 0 ~ his golfing travels. He earned $100,000 : from golf last year and should do even i better this year.-By Barry Abnlmson ~ Flak1 BY JACK TIPPIT <9fectple a11d \i.:1 .. Why So Many People Have Bad Backs Chronic or recurrent back pain affects people of all ages. Back problems are usually caused by an imbalance In the system of verte- bral bone, spinal mus- cle, spinal ligaments and the intervertebral disk cushion that stabilizes the body at the lower back. sometimes a slight anatomical defect gradually What Grief-Stricken People Really Want to Hear · At a funeral, or when you meet a friend who's suffered a bereave- ment, do you murmur, "I don't know how to tell you how sorry I am," or "What can I say"? While most of us feel sympathy, we are unable to reach out and help effectively. Psychia- trists who've studied grief and mourning give these tips when trying to console the bereaved: Don't keep trying to change the topic and dianct the mourner. As he talks about the deceased, _ wears down this system and pain occurs in later years. Muscles and ligaments weaken with time; muscle spasm can occur with overexertioQ and irritate the joints. Whatever the cause, the ftNscles in the lower back work against the vertebral joints, causing painful pressure. Nerves to the legs, which originate in the spinal column and pass through openings in the vertebral bones in the lower back, may be impinged upon by abnormal joint pressure and disks that "slip" from their normal positions. In most cases, a program of rest, muscle refaunb, anti-inflammatory drugs and other medicines, followed by speciflC exercises "What's a great looking chick like you doing sitting with a guy my age?" the grieving· individual gradually becomes accustomed to the fact of death. The praise he hears of that person, the warm anecdotes, all help him work his way through his grief. Though nowadays it's fashionable in some circles to ask, "What good does a funeral do?", the psychiatrists report that religious rites or other memorMll ....... JObmanshlp Your Weight and Your Career Do you know that being overweight can lower your chances of (1) getting ,.....-a job; (2) winning a promotion; and (3) keeping your job? One national weight-control plan found that one out of three members reported their weiQht caused io~hunting end jo~ 1e • FAUil Y WEEKLY, NOWtnber 4. 1173 prescribed by doctors, is enough to restore the joints and muscles to their normal positions. Even slipped disks may be restored to their correct positions by such a program. -John J. Secondi, M.D. 1e1 fices are very valuable in proYidlng the doe&- ,,... with people that·is essential In •kting • bereaved peraon.-By Shirley SloM Fader retention problems. An international recruiting firm puts It succinctly: "Obesity has damaged careers." Excess weight can c:oet an executive $10,000 a yNr in Nlary, reports an- other personnel agency that ana- lyzed 50,000 executive positions it had filled. The overweight execu- tive finds it harder to win promo- tions. Although .,..,. companies have no clear policy, job-hiring and promotion prejudices against over- weight people are often ewident. Other companies have openty stated policies. A California utility company gave overweight employees six months to reduce or fac·e unemploy- ment An Ohio uti1ity refuses appli- cants who are 20 percent over- weight. The reason: "a higher disa- bility rate." One large Southwestern city is even stricter. tt refuses to hire anyone who is more than 15 percent overweight-By S. R. Redford Celebrity Soapbox Actor RICHARD KILEY: Do We Need More Ralph Naders? "All of us, almost without excep. tion, are ruled by the buck. We have become a totally acquisitive society. This isn't just true of America. It's universal." So says actor Richard Kiley, famed for playing "The Man of La Mancha" onstage. He contin- ues: "Honest men are hard to find, but they do exist. When we come across IMt rare bird, he'a the type we should encourage to go Into politlca, and at every level, became honesty must come from the bottom up. Unless we recognize this, and try lo encourage principled and dedi- cated people to go into government, I'm afraid nothing will change. I'm bloody angry. Everyone talks about wanting more honesty and less hypocrisy in government, but to achieve this we must begin encour- aging the participation of a different breed of public servant. We need to Mell more types along the lines of• Ralph Nader to run our govenwnent, In contrast to the lnftuenc.wletders and tho9e Kemtomed to high upense..account living." Richard Kiley will star in ''The Little Prince," a musical film now in production for Paramount. -Interview bJ WUHam WoH , . - • / ." : .. if flighl be your hearfs desire then fly, fly, fly_ For we must follow our dreams to be truly free." -· WEAR THIS. MAGNIFICENT SILVER FINISH PENDANT/PIN AS YOUR SYMBOL OF SPIRITUAL FREEDOM When at sea, the sight of a gliding gull , lazily r---------------------------· drifting above on the air currents, makes one The Ctackatbaml Dept. GU·251 feet a twinge of jealousy toward the graceful birds. 61 C.bet Street, Wm httJI-. NY 1179' Didn't you eY8' secretly dreom of being among l'teoM Mnd me the Seogull·ln·Flight pen· he nd h h he ff her dont/pin for only $6.00 postpoid. I under· t m a soaring t roug t air, ying W ever stond that if I om not completely delighted, your heart desires? I con return it fOf' o full refund. That spirit of freedom is elegantly captured in 0 SAYIE S2.00: Order two Seogull pen· this magnificent Seagull pen· dont/pins fOf' only SI0.00 postpood. Some dant/pin. Give you~f a lift, IN HANDSOME g uorontff. brighten your spirits ... and GIFT BOX ~is $ __ (Check or Money Order) wear the Seogull·ln·Aight $(> A.W~n• pendant/pin. With matching : city ,. 24" chain and pin bock. · : , .... -_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-z;,.-· Af.t ..... -- ' I NY STATE IHIDIENTS ADO SAUS fAX I .. .. - ... ~ .. Thisyeargive $9.50_~ that won't break, won't wear out, won't shrink, won't rust, won't be the wrong size,and won't need batteries. TAKING TURNS By Siter/ Joseph Wi11rer An original s11ualion. portrayed in a traditional ~tyle. fhe sul>ject a ve1y grown up little girl -Is a gratifving reality to sculptor Winter. the lather of two daughters. A yi ft for anyone who enJOYS children. NA11Vll1' By Calui11 M~· STAR OF WONDER By Marge Viguers. A childli.ke wistlulness and originality make this work delighlful. It lakes a moment to relate the words to the design In each square. And then you find yourself singing the populc1r carol portrayed A gift of imagination. and sentiment Fine a rt in its fullest sense. A mood of roY31ty in a humble setting. This is portraitist Massey's expression of exaltation for the miracle in the manger A gift of inspiration. ONE WORLD. ONE WISH By Viclor Lasuchm A number of art cntics could idc1111fv this work as a Lasuchin. without ~einy th~ signature on 1lw bdck The man who "work~ wonders with calhgraphv" ha.; de~iynl?<.I and sculptured some tl1111y d1flercnl. \,\lt within the "§Chnol" of Lllsuchm y1af)hlQ. An nnpr\'"''Vt! gift for rcnpl<' 14ith a lot of stvle BUILDING TOGETHER By Pierre Lefebvre These children may think the qoal 1s to me1ke some lhing. then say "Look what v;e\•e done .. But their re.:11 reward Is fun and companionship while doing it Sculptor Lefebvre reOects his own buoyant personality in this work A gift of good fellowship. • The First Annual Mount Everest Mint Christtnas Bars. Fine art in.fine silver. New works by.five gifted American artists. Struck in .999 fine silver. (contains 8 o/o more silver per ounce than sterling.) ~ Only one edition of these bars will ever be minted. ~YOU HAVE UNTIL NOVEMBER 10, 1973 TO SPREAD THE WARMTH. E ach of these pure silver bars measures a pproximately 2 " by 1 Vs" -an unusually large d isplay a rea for me da lli c art -and weighs a full Troy o unce. The title and the artist's signature will appear on the back of each bar, along with the issue date (1973), The Mount Everest Mint mintmark and the bar's weight and purity. To achieve that rich look of cameolike frosted sculpture set against a flawless mirror- like background. each bar will be struck with Proof-polished dies. And struck again for extra sharpness of detail. For beauty alone. any one of these works deserves your interest and admiration. Since the bars will be issued in lin:tited edition, their rarity will te nd to a~d to their valu.e over the years. This year, make it a ~ilver Christmas for anyone who deserves an e legant gift. Send us your gift givi ng list with your order. And we will make your Christmas mailing for you -complete with your name on an appro- priate card. Please be sure your order is postmarked by November 10. 1973. The limit of edition will be equal to the nu mber of orders postmarked by that date. r-------------------------------------Moo/ to THE MOUNT EVEREST MINT. INC. 141 Terwood Road Willow Grow. Pennsylvania 19090 (This order must be postmorlced by November 10. 1973.} Please send me. in time for holiday ~ng. lhe first Annual Mount Everest Mint Christmas Bars I specify below. I under· stand that each bar will contain a full Troy ounce of .999 fine silver. and will be packaged in a velour·lined presenta- tion case. __ "Building Together" By Pierre Lefebure @$9.50 each. . . . . . . . . . . . $ ___ _ __ "NatMty" By Caluln Massey @$9.50 each. . . . . . . . . . ... -$ ___ _ __ "One World. One Wish" By Vicror Lasuchin @$9.50 each ..... $ ___ _ __ .. Star of Wonder" By Morge Vrguers "1$9 .50each... . ........ $ ___ _ __ ·'Taking Turns" By Sher/Joseph Winter @$9.50 each . . . . $ ___ _ Total Amount $"===== Pl f.J\Sf l'Rt~ FW Each bar will be packaged in a velour-lined presentatio n case. The bar and its case make a superb gift, or a n enjoyable collector's item for yourself. As works of art, their beauty will last forever. Pennsylvania residents add 6% State Sales Tax $.,._ ___ _ Address ----------------- Total Remittance Enclosed $.==== City _______ State -.-Zip Code---- c 191J !ht Mounl herul Mrnl Inc !ht Moun! EvtrtSI Mint • $ub,od11ry ol publicly·o•nto lllounl Everts! CorPOr.iion '' • P'"''" "'•nl "''h it, o•• Hulotur•nt t•l•IY••I d~ m•~•n& ••rt co••••I IKrhhtt II" not 1ttd11led •~h the U S MHll or •ilh 1ny oll>tr Cover~"''"' •a•ncr ~-----------------------~--------------------------------------------------... - NFL's AU-Star Defense Pieks Its All-Star Offense: 9'These Are the Toughest Me11 to Stop"-Say the Men Who Have to Stop Tl1en1 O. J. Simpson Most fans can rattle off the names of the National#Foot- ball Lcague·s All-Star selec- tions as determined by one group of experts or another. But we didn't want our FAMILY W EEKLY team of NFL offensive All-Stars to be .based on the testimony of disinterested observers. So we went straight to the most in- terested observers of all-the men who star at defensive football in the NFL. Each member of a select group of dcf ensive All-Stars, all pictured on a following page, was asked to name the offensive players be considered the toughc~t for him and his team to op- pose and stop. Though the defensive stars were polled individually, several overall C+?nclusions emerged from their selections. They include the fol- lowing: • Larry Csonka of Miami and 0 . J. Larry Csonka Simpson of ButTalo are the best run- ning backs in pro football right now. • Joe Namath of the New York Jets, although he was injured in the second game of lhc season, is the game·s most foarcd quarterback. • Rayfield Wright of Dall as may be the finest offensive lineman, regard- lcs:. of position, in football. • The tight end, growing in impor- tance in the scheme of most pro teams Co111i1111t•tl 011 paf!t' 16 The r1·11111 n11 11tTf pi.1:•· .. -- ,. Sttcwfs l~xfrn B y Larry Bortste in 0 . J. Simpson of the Buftalo Biiis •nd L•rry Csonka of the Miami Dolphins are the tough- est running backs In the busi- neH, say the men who have to bring them down. But which is. tougher? Joe Greene and Bob Lilly, plenty-tough linemen, give their decision In Larry Bort- stein'• story-where you can read exactly why our panel of star defensemen picked the 11 men on the next page as the NFL'• very best on offense. <. FAMILY WEEKLY. November 4, 1973 •13 • · Nl"L Speelnl con1i11ued ;>.-.. ... . , ... -I The NFL's Most Irresistible Offense Joe Namath, 30, 6-2, 200. from Beaver FaJJs, Pa., changed the face of pro football when be signed with the New York Jets for an estjmated $427,000 in 1965. In seven pro sea- sons . prior to 1972, his chief ac- complishment was leading the 1968 Jets to the 1969 Super Bowl tide over Baltimore, 16-7. A college All-Ameri- ca at University of Alabama. Larry Caonka, 27, 6-3, 235, from Stow, Ohio. In his sixth season with Miami, which drafted him on the first round io 1968. Gained more rhan ~ · 1,000 yards in 1971 and t9J2. Holds all-time career rushing rec:ord at Syra- cuse U~ersity, which bas produced· many fine runners. O.J. Simpeon, 26, 6-1, 206, from San Francisco, Calif. Jn his fifth pro season with Buffalo, Jed entire NFL in 1972 with 1,251 yards, his first 1,000-yard season. Woo Heisruan • Trophy in 1968 for brilliant season as running back at University of Southern California. Led major col- leges in rushing in both of his varsity years at USC. Otis Taylor, 31, 6-3, 215, from Houston, Texas. In bis ninth year Joe Namath, New York Jets Quar1erback Larry c.onu,.M1am1 Running Back O. J. Simpson, Bulfeto Running Beck Olla Teytor, KMNe City Wkle Receiver .... with Kansas City, which drafted him fourth in 1965. Led NFL in receiving yardage in 1971 and consistently among the leaders in other years. Attended Prairie View A&M College. Paul Warfield, 3 I, 6-0, I 88, from Warren, Ohio. Carne to Miami in 1970 and is now in founh year with Dolphins after spending first six pro seasons with Cleveland, which drafted him first in 1964. Led NFL in touch- down catches in J 968 and 197 J, has averaged more than 20 yards per re- ceplion throughout career, an all-time record pace. Attended Ohio State Paul Warfield, Miami WjcM Receiver Raymond Cheater, Baltimore Tight End Bob Brown, Oakland Tackle ~oiversity. •• Ray Chester, 25, 6-3, 220, from Cambridge, Md. I n his fourth pro year but first with Baltimore after three at Oakland. Tbe Raiders drafted him on the first round in 1970 after his brilliant college career at Morgan State CoUege in Baltimore. Bob Brown, 32, 6-4, 275, from Cleveland, Ohio. In his tenth pro sea- son, third with Oak.la nd. Also played for Philadelphfa five years, and Los Angeles for two. Eagles drafted him on first round in 1964 after his AJl- America career at University of Nebraska. ...._...-Larry Little, 28, 6-1, 265, from Groveland, Ga. lo his seventh pro season, fifth with Miami. Spent two --- 1• • FAMILY WEE Kl Y, November '4, 1973 ,.. Larry Lftlle, Miami Guard Forrest Bfue, San Francisco Center Tom Meck, Los Angeles Guard Rayfield Wright, Dallts Tackle seasons with San Diego, after being signed by Chargers as free agent in ~967. Has a bachelor of arts degree in sociology from Bethune-Cookman College in Florida. Forrest Blue, 28, 6-5~, 2SS, from Marfa~ Texas. Now in his sixth pro season with San Francisco. Had All- America college career at Auburn University. Tom Mack, 30, 6-3, 250, from Cleveland, Ohio. In his eighth pro sea- son with Los Angeles, which jl.calted him on the first round in t 966. At- tended University of Michigan and earned an engineering degree from that institution two years after he had origjnally left to join the pros. RJ1yfield Wright, 28, 6-6, 255, from Griffin, Ga. A seventh-round draft choice in I 967, thls is his sev- enth season in pros, aJI with Dallas. Graduated from Fon Valley State College in Georgia. C 0 111/1111ctl ' \ Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 1Bmg'.'tar:'1 .3 mg. nicotine av. percigarene. FTCReponfeb'.73 • Marl~oro Every home a super receiver ELECTRONIC MIRACLE TURNS YOUR HOUSE WIRING INTO A JUMBO TV 0 " i~~i"~os lllTElllll 'N us:1Nos • uses no current • plugs In to any outlet • no special tools ,. -Or additional material required • no more rabbi t ears ••• ugly outside antennas Utilizes all the wiring in your home ..• every room a reception area Do you know that you have one of the greatest TV antennas ever constructed? It's better than any set of rabbit ears, more efficient than complicated external antennas. It's your house. Yes, the wiring in your home constitutes a giant antenna that acts as a super receiver for TV, FM, all kinds of difficult reception. And the secret to using all this reception potential is an amazing little plug-in attachment that utilizes the receptivify of your house wiring without using a .,ingJe bit of electrical power. Yes, you simply attach the adapter easily & quiclcJy ~)Our set . . . plug it in to any wall outlet and immediately your entire electrical system is working for you. No ugly looking rabbit ears, no difficult, dangerous to maintain external antennas, and reception so sharp and clear it will amaze you even in the more difficult areas. Order one for every set in your house, no interference from simultaneously operating sets. Only $1.99. Full instructions included. <.Mr""l?l1l;t•l?i'COM 25 W. Merrldl .. d., DepU ... 221, Fre.port, N.V. 11511 S•~lng S•tl1llH Cu1tom•r1l ltN o~•t 25 Y••fl f -----IUY WITH CONFIDENCE 30-DAY MONEY BACK GUARANTEE ·-----:;, I Jay Norris COfP., 25 w. Merrick Rd. Dept. L·228 Freeport, N.Y. 11520 I I I Please rus Indoor Aotenoa(s) @ only $1.99 plus SO¢ shipping 1 1 and handling, under your money back guarantee. I SA VE! Order lWO Antennas for only $3.SO plus SO¢ shipping and handling. I I SA VE MORE! Order Sit Antennas for only $8.99 plus $1.00 shipping and bandJing. I I Check or money order enclosed for tptal $ (N.Y. residents add I es tax). (please print) I I Name I I Address I I City State Zip I I 01973, Jay Norris Corp. I -,---------------------~---------~ NFL Speelal: ';Joe Nan1atl1 Is Exeellent at Readb1g Defe11ses" -Joe Namath Is hit by Slfflert' Dwight White. ' Quarterback Joe Namath calls signals: hit strength It reading . C 0111i11ueJ I rom pag~ I J with each passing year, mav have more outstanding players than any other _position. Larry Csonka, the powerhouse full- back of the world-champion Dol- phins, is in his sixth season of pro ball, while Simpson, the former Heisman Trophy winner who doubled in foot- baU and sprinting for the track team al the University of Southern Cali- fornia, is a fifth-year pro. Csonka is the epitome of what the fuOback should be, grinding ahead relentlessly for yardage every time he bas the ball. He gained I, I t 7 yards last season. O. J. Simpson, who malces much of his yardage by sweeping around the ends and through tackles, led the entire NFL in J 972 with t ,25 I yards -even though he was operating be- hind a mediocre offensive line. Although both Csonka and Simp- son were hailed by most of the def en- sive stars polled by FAMILY WEEKLY, the two defensive tackles -Joe Greene of Pittsburgh and Bob Lilly of Dallas-agreed that they would rather face a Csonka type than a man like Simpson. "No matter how strong he is," says Lilly, "it's always easier lo stop a man when he's coming IS • FAMllY WEEKlV. Nowmbet 4, 1973 straight at you than when he's running away from you and you have lo chase him." Greene, who weighs 270 pounds, says he prefers "to face men my size or close to it, no matter what position they're playing. When it comes to my strength and size vs. their strength and size, I figure I'm gonna win." Every top defensive man in our poll said that Joe Namath of the Jets was the quarterback they least liked Lo sec across the field. "Joe has an extreme- ly quick release and is excellent at reading defenses," says Miami's strong safety Dick Anderson. "You've got to have good coverage to stop a quarterback who can read as quickly as he does." Will le Brown, Oakland's veteran corner back, a star for many years, says of Namath, ''He throws the ball hard and fast, and on target. These things make him the toughest quarterback around." The Cowboys' splendid tack.le, Rayfteld Wright, was rated most im· movable force on the offensive line. .. Rayfield i.s probably the toughest man I face all year," says Jack Greg- ory, the New York Giants' top de- fensive end. "He's real stron~ and agile. He was a tight end before the C.:ortinued on page 18 71/•" Deluxe Circular Saw Regularly $39.99, this top-quality saw is now specially priced at $34.99. It features a powerful 1 ~ HP roller-bearing motor for long life and a tilting wraparound steel shoe for bevel cuts and finn support, and it adjusts to various cutting depths easily. It'll handle the toughest jobs. If you,'re getting serious about carpentry, this is the saw for you. #7320 . . 34.99 .............. f'H-- (And that\ not alL) -1 Deluxe 2-Speed Jig Saw Kit The 2-speed feature lets you choose the right speed for each particular job-fast for wood. slow for metaJ, plastic and tile. Kit includes a rip fence, 4 assorted blades and a handy carrying/storage case. A S41.43 value if bought separately. #7539. zg99 Solder and Craft Set The perfect craft kit for woodbuming, soldering. leatherwork and hot-knife cutting. A great gift for someone who likes hobbies and crafts. The kit includes a heating unit, various soldering tips. a craft tip. a foil -writing tip and foil. a hot knife and a cooling stand. Double insulated. #7990. 6.99 Finishing Sander A finishing sander makes almost any refinishing project a lot easier. This Black & Decker model is extra-fast -I 0,000 orbits per minute-for faster material removal and smoother finishing. Sands flush to comers. Double insulated. #7404. 12.99 Tw~Speed Jig Saw This saw can cut any line-straight. scroll or curved-and comes with a calibrated tilting shoe for bevel and compound mitre . cuts. The two-speed feature lets you choose the right speed for the job. #7S14. 15.99 ( -' Expect the best from Black & Decker for less than you-d expect. Black&. Decker. For your nearest Black & Decker dealer, call 800-243-6000 FREE, day or night. In Connecticut, call 1-800-882-6500. I\Tf L Spe<~lal I Cn111i1111eJ /rum page 16 Cowboys moved h im to tackle. so you see how quick he is. You just can·t get past him." Even Joe Greene, who as defensive tack le usually opposes the offensive guard and is rarely deployed opposite an offensive tackle, recalls his meet- ings with Wright. 'Tve been lined up in front of him a few times," says Pittsburgh's "'Mean Joe," ·'and he was very tough. I don't know what it would ~ like if I had to face him during a whole game. I'd have to use more than just my strength on him, I know that. He's so quick and agile that you have to work hard to beat hjm." The youngest man who made the squad of offensive g,reats in our poll of defensive stars was Baltimore's 25- year-old tight end, Ray Cheater. Traded to the Colts from the Oakland Raiders before the 1973 season, Ches- ter displayed so much ability and po- tential in h.is three seasons as a regular Conti1111ed on p<1ge 11 -o. J . Simpson sheds opposition tackles. The Panel of Star Defensemen Who Made the Selections ' Jack Gregory, New York Giants End Joe Greene, Pittsburgh Tackle Bob Lilly, DallH Tackle Dave Wilcox, San Francisco Paul Krause, Minnesota Dick Anderson, Miami Strong Safety Linebacker Free Safety £ ' FACTS ABOUT OUR PANELISTS J ack Gregory, 29. 6-5, 245. from Okolona. Miss., is in bjs seventh NPL eason, second with the New York G iants. Played for C leveland fi ve years. traded to New York in summer of 1972. Attended Delta State College in his home slate. Joe Greene, 27. 6-4. 270, from Temple. Texas. In fifth pro season, Pittsburgh's first-draft choice in 1969. Nickname "Mean Joe." A college All- America at North Texas Slate. _Bob Liiiy, 34, 6-5, 260, from 01-~ ney, Texas. A 13-year pro, selected by Dallas on first round of J 96 l draft. Graduated from Texas Christian Uni-- ... FAMILY WEEl<l Y. November 4, 1973 -- versity as college Ail-America, many times decorated All-Pro in NFL. Sill Stanfill, 26, 6-5, 250, from Cairo, Ga. In his fifth pro season, all with Miami. A college AU-America at University of Georgia. ' Chris Hanburger, 32, 6-2, 218, from Fort Bragg. N .C. Ninth pro sea- son with Washington. Has achieved stardom despite being lowly l 8th- round draft choice in 1965 after col- lege career at University of North Carolina. Andy Russell, 32, 6-2, 225, from Detroi~ Mich. Came to Pittsburgh as 16th-round choice in pro draft. Spent 1964 and 1965 seasons in military service. Now in bis ninth season of pro football. Bill Stanfill, Miami End Chris Hanburger, Andy Ruuell, Pittsburgh Washington linebacker LIMback•r Lem Barney, Detroit Corner Back Willie Brown, Oakland C.mer Back Dave Wilcox, 31, 6-3, 241, from Ontario, Ore., has been with the San Francisco 49ers since 1964. A third- round draft choice from the Uni- venity of Oregon. Paul Krause, 31, 6-3, 200, from Flint, Mich. In bis tedtb pro season, sixth with Minnesota. Spent first four seasons with Washington after being dratted on the second round in l 964. Played college ball at University of Iowa. Ranks high on all-time list of interception leaders. Led NFL in his rookie year of 1964 with 12 inter- ceptions. Dick Anderson, 27, 6-2, 200, from Midland, Mich. A sixth-year pro with Miami, who was drafted on the third round in 1968. Led league twice in interception return yardage, in l 968 and 1970. G raduated ·from the Uni- versity of Colorado. Lem Barney, 28, 6-0, 190, from Gulf pon, Miss. In his seventh season with Detroit, wruch drafted him on second round in 1967. Led NFL with ten interceptions, 232 interception yards, and three touchdowns on inter- ceptions in 1967. Graduated from Jackson State College. Willie Brown, 33, 6-2, l 90, from Yazoo City, Mi.\S. An I I-year pro veteran who has achieved stardom in the last seven years with Oakland. Played first four seasons with Den- ver, with whom he signed as free agent in 1963. Attended Grambling College. People used to join us to get away, to get the girl. Today they alsO join us to get aliead. ,.. \ Thi• Navy potter ortslMlly appeattd In 1917. Tor a frtt rull-color ttproductlon, ttop by your local Navy recruiter'• orflce. No obllsatlon. of courH. You can still join the Navy and see the world. You can even get the girl (or, get the guy if you' re a woman). Getting away, making life-long friendships and leaving the every- day, ordinary routine behind will always be Navy facts of life. But now it's a new Navy and there are more rea- sons for joining than ever before. We've updated all aspects of Navy life. From the opportunity to train for a successful, satisfying career to tailoring our famous bell bottoms into a handsome new uni- form like the one on the sailor at the far right. Now, if you qualify, there are over 300 inter- esting jobs to choose from. Challenging jobs that • • • • • I WAN.Ti - keep your head and your hands really busy. Action jobs like signalman and sea-going engineer. Jobs- like electronics technician-that get you out from behind a desk. And now sailors earn the highest pay in Navy history. $340 a month after just four months. Plus great Navy benefits like one of the best retirement plans in the world. And there's much, much more. Check into the new Navy. Today more than ever before it's a great way to train for the kind of career you want, whether you plan to remain in the Navy or not. If you think you've got what it takes to master the challenge of the new Navy, mail the at- tached coupon or call toll-free 800-841-8000 anytime, day or night. l • I • J Be a success in che new Navy Department of the Navy Washington. D.C. 20390 Official Business Penalty for Private Use. $300 TO: U.S. NAVY Capt. Robert W . Watkins U.S. MAIL 000318 POSTAGE AND fEES PAID DEPARTMLNTOfTHE NAVY FIRST CLASS NAVY OPPORTUNITY INFORMATION CENTER P.O. Box 2000 PC'lham Manor. N. Y. 10803 • • • • • • FAMILY WEEKLY. November 4, 1973 • 19 ... -.-\ .. __ ·-·· ..•.. ··--· .. ·-·- • Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. KING: 19 mg. "tar".1.3 mg. nicotine. SUPER KING: 21mg."tar'',1.5 mg. nicotine. av. per cigarette. FTC Report FEB. '73. ~ ~ ORDERCARO • • • • • • • • 419 Yes. I want to know more about lhe new Navy, especially about: 0 The 70 d1fferen1 career l1elds w11h over 300 skilled 1obs lo r.hoose from and lhe training lhal goes w11h them. 0 Advanced Elcc1ron1cs Program 0 Enlisting now and reporting uo 10 6 mon1hs later 0 Nuclear Power Program II you really don't wanl to wa11, «all 800·841-8000 toll lree (~4 hours a day. seven days a week ) In Georgia, call 800·342·5855 Name _____________ Date of Birth ____ _ Last Grade Completed----------------- Address ____________________ _ C1ly _______________ Phone _____ _ State ______________ Z1p ______ _ L Speelal: lie (~losest R11ee of AU: Larry Caonka of the Miami Ootphlna scores a touchdown one step ahead of the Pittsburgh Steelers' Andy Russell. Tigl1f, E11fl tight l!nu thnt he won the nod in a i:.piritcd battle that drew more nominations for excellence than any other position. The tight ends who were cited, in addition to Chester, were Ted Kwalick of San Francisco, Bob Tucker of the New York G iants, Charlie Sandera of Detroit, Jac:Jde Smith of St. Louis, Jim Mitch- ell of Atlanta, Bo~ Trumpy ·of Cincinnati, Marv Fleming of Miami, anJ Tom Mitchell, a 11:ammarc of C hester's at Ball i- more. But o f all these, C hester drew the most raves. ''He is probably the best all-around tight end," says Miami's Ander- son ... He's a very big guy, he runs pass patterns very well, and be is an excellent blocker." Pittsburgh·s fine outside line- backer. Andy Ruuell, has the opposing tight cod as one of his pri mary def cnsive responsi- bil i1ics. He lists Chester as the best \ight end he's faced. "If you're not really lhinlcing out there," says Russell, "Chester will kill you with his pass pat- terns. He's extremely fast for a big man. You can look very bud if you let him get past you and the ball goes to him." Adds San Francisco linebacker Dave Wilcox: "Chester is a real dutch receiver." Joining Cheste r as pass catchers on our special offen- sive All-Star team are wide re- ceivers Otis T•yfor o( Kansas C:itLJnd Paul Warfield of the world-c a mpion Dolphins. T hese were the names that emerged from interviews with corner backs Lem Berney of Detroit and Wiiiie Brown of Oakland, and Minnesota free safety Paul KrauM. "Otis is extremely tough to handle.'' says Brown, "because he's so big and strong that he just muscles you a round. Paul has tremendous moves and great speed. A few years ago, corner backs would usually have to cover him one-on-one. Now <l lot of teams use zone dcf enses. It's the best present I ever got. A~our house Christmas was roaring fires and red-faced, blue-nosed relatives who came trooping in from the cold with arm- loads of gifts. Aunt Nel always made us kids saue the wrappings. Christmas was me racing coatless through the snow to fetch more of the firewood I'd chopped while pretending to be Abe Lincoln. Paul BU1&yon . . . anyone but me chopping wood all day on the day before Christmas. Not just any chain saw, a McCulloch Mini Mac I (for only $99.95•). Because one chain saw is not just as good as another. And unless you happen to be an expert on chain saws, how do you know which is which? You Jook at the manufacturer. For over a quarter of a century professional Joggers have depended on McCulloch chain saws for their livelihood. Obviously, McCulloch really knows how to build fine chain saws. Mini Mac l is no exception. It's the original lightweight, the power unit only weighs 6.9 pounds. It cuts fast and sure whether firewood, building projects or tree pruning. Even cuts through a 20" log. I remember how Christmas was. How I'd rip, tear, yank open the biggest, most promising.gi#. Only to find a doll for Sue or a tablecloth. lneuita.bly someone got the oords confused. But this year after 38 years of hoping and opening the higg~t gift and finding it meant for somebody flse-this year the biggest gi~ really was for me. How did they know I wanted a McCulloch chain saw? Mini Mac 1 is all the chain saw Dad needs. Why settle for just any chain saw, when you can get a McCulloch for only $99.96~ Give Dad the quality he deserves. Give him a McCulloch this Christmas. Mini Mac 1 only ••• $99.95 · why pay more! 1m· McCulloch McCulloch Corporation, 6101 West Century Blvd., Loa Anaelea, Calif. 90045 •Manulacturcr'a auaeated Uac price. and they take a lot o( pressure off the comer back." and Warfield really make a comer back·s job difficult." ceivers have certain traits in common: "They can cal ch the ball on you short or deep, can muscle past you once they have the ball, and aren't afraid to catch the ball with a lot of defenders around them. The Barney says, ''I've always considered everybody I have to cover tough in different games, depending on who the quarter- back is. But guys like Taylo r Krause, who also cites Gene Waahlngton of San Francisco and Charte1Taylorof Washing- ton as especially talented wide receivers, says the best pa~ re- very best guys, like War6cld. Otis Taylor, C harley Taylor and Gene Washington, are tre- mendous in all these cate- gories." Joining Dallas· Wright Qn the consensus squad of offensive- line stars are Oakland tackle Bob Brown, guards Larry Little of Miami and Tom Mack of Los Angeles, and center For· reat Blue of San Francisco . Of Miami's Lill le, Joe Greene says. "He's big and strong and can hurt you physically. We've come 01.4t just about even the few times we·vc played against each other." BIU Stanfill, Miami's all-pro end on defense, rates Brown along with Kansas C ity's Jim Tyrer a nd Winston Hiii of the New York Jets as the toughest foes he's encountered in the American Conference. "But Art Shell, Oakland's other tackle· and the guy I usually take when we play Oakland, is a real fine young tackle too, .. says Stanfill. Los Angeles' Mack draws s pecial praise from Bob Lilly. who has dealt with many great offensive linemen in his 13 years as a Dallas Cowboy. "Tom's very aggressive, a tough competitor, and always difficult to handle," says lilly. "I'd say he's as tough as any of the guards I've played against since rve been in the league. Jim Parker of Baltimore, who's now in the HaJI of Fame, was probably the toughest, and Gale Gillingham of Green Bay. who's still playing. also rnnk right up there." Though both Chria Han- . burger and Russell mentioned Forrest Blue of San Francisco as the center who is possibly the toughest pivot man in the league lo handle. Blue's own team- mate, linebacker Wilcox. of- fered the most glowing tribute to the 49er middle man. "Even in practice Forrest fires right out on every play," says Wilcox. "and goes after you. Seeing him in practice all these years, I can imagine how tough it must be for the guys who have to face him in games." Continued FAMILY WEEl<L V. November 4, 1973 • 2i \ J 2.25 CARATS SIMULATED DIAMONDS P E RFE C TLY MAT C HED FOR BRILLIAN C E ACTUAL SIZE CROSS AND CHAIN ARE FINISHED IN MAGNIFlCENT PLATINUM-LOOK This is o hond set duplicate of a 510,000. Diamond and platinum cross. Five perfectly matched marquise and four small round Diamonites, all selected for their brilliance. hove been exquisi tely hand crafted to form this lovely cross. A 1/4 carat baguette Di· omonite dongles from o 16" long matching choin to enhance this lovely pendant. The Diomonite Cross is on outstond- ing volueot only ... $<}. IN HANDSOME G IFT CASE (; CllACl(E RllAllREl 1973 r-sATISFACTION GUARA NTEED OR MONEY llACl<- The Crac:kerbanel O•p•.oc-269: 6f CABOT STREET.WEST BABYLON. NY 11704 Please send me (qty ) O.amonite Crass( es) for only $9.00 eoch. First Closs Motl, post poid. I enclose ____ (Check or Money Order) Address -------Apt.# _ City ------------- State Zip SAvt $3. Order 2 Crosses for only 515. Extra Cross makes treosvred 91ft ...... _______________ ._ _____ NY STATE RESIOENTSAOO TAX ------' ' NFL Speelal c'"''i"""d What theDefensive Here's what our panel of ~efensemen said about the offensive stars who were their own personal choices for FAMILY WEEKL v's team. A few of the players they praised didn't make the consensus team, but we thought you'd. want to hear those comments, too. ABOUT JOE NAMATH: , "He has the quickest release of any quarterback I've faced." -Lem Barney "He gets rid of the ball so quickly it's h;ud to get in a good lick without n nag dropping." -Biii Stanfill ABOUT LARRY CSONKA: .. Csonka's one hellacious runne r. You can't gel him down without his hurting you." -Dave Wllco• "He's very tough to bring down. He'll drag you along for a few extra yards before he's fin all y stopped-and even then. you might not have him." -Paul Krause Two great paulng targets-Paul Warfield (above) and Otis Taylor (below). Sap Detroit'• Lem Barney, "Guys llke Taylor and )Yarfleld really make a comer b.ck'• Job dltllculL" "If he gets an open hole and you lry an arm tackle, he's gone for ten yards.'' -Bob Lilly ABOUT 0 . J. SIMPSON "Runners like Simpson. 22 FAMILY WEEKLY, November 4, 1973 Franco Harris of Pinsburgh. Larry Brown of Washington. and Ron Johnson of the Giants tcrtd to give our defense trouble. Our dcfcn~ uses wide space.c; between the linemen . These runners can get outside very quickly, and they also have the ability to ch ange direction on you after you think they're hcaJcd through one hole.·· -Bob Liiiy ABOUT RAY CHESTER: "A tight end can humiliate a linebacker. Chesler can do this more often than any other tight end I've seen:.:..-Andy Ruuell ABOUT BOB BROWN: "You take for granted that an offensive tackle can block for running ph1ys. That's a basic part of his job. The way to compare offensive tackles is how good they are at blocking for the pass. If they can. keep a defenJcr away for three sec- ond<;. the quarterback has a : s a s g a a .. tars Said About the Men They Pieked hance to throw the ball. Brown as always been able to protect is quarterback ubout as well , any m'n who ever Jived." --.iack Gregory HESE MEN ALSO OMMAND RESPECT ••• ABOUT BOB TUCKER: ··He may be the -best tighr end al running with the ball afrcr he cutches it." -Dick Anderson 'Tve faced a lot of great tight ends-men like John Mackey and Mike Ditka, who have retired. Tucker is as good as any of them. His speed is <lcceptive; he's an excellent hlockcr and a great receiver." -Chris Hanburger Charlie S•nder9 ABOUT CHARLIE SANDERS: '·He's very big and a great olockcr as well as an excellent p:iss receiver." -Dick Anderson "He can run over the top of you. Catches the ball any- where." -Paul Krause "When I came into the league, most teams didn't throw much to the tight end. Now some of the best receivers are tight ends-guys like Sanders. Sanders plays on my side when we face Detroit-and I'll tell you, I never look forward to it." -Dave Wilcox .. BobTrumpy ABOUT BOB TRUMPY: "He's very big and quick, and executes very well." -Andy Russell Jackie Smith ABOUT JACKIE SMITH: ''People don't think of tight ends as fast, but he's very fast. He gets most of his yardage after he catches the ball be- cause he outruns the defender." -Chris Hanburger ABOUT RUNNING BACKS: "Marv Hubbard, the Oak- land fullback, is extremely strong and almost in Csonka's class as a power runner. Jess Phillips, who used to be with Cincinnati and now is with New OrJean, is a fantastic blocker. Essex Johnson of Cincinnati is a little guy, but extremely quick off the ball. He's also a great blocker:'-Andy Russell 'Two of the strongest run- ners we face are Walt Garrison of Dallas and Art Malone of Atlanta. Garrison really blocks. He comes at you real strong, whether he's running the ball or blocking you. Malone is ex~ plosive and very strong. He's gonna gain a lot of yardage one of these years."-Dave Wilcox C 0111 i" ued 'AMILY WEEKLY. November 4, 197:? • 23 .. NFL Speelal conri1111ed How Well Do Yo11Know Ollr All-Stars? (AQ1dzforNFLH111s) B y Larry Bortstejn The answer to each of the following questions is the name o f a player on the NFL AJl- Star Offensive Team selected by our team of NFL Defensive AJl- Stars. Match the question to the appropriate name on !he list. 1. Which great offensive-line star came to hi s pro team as a tight end? 2. In J 967 he established an a li- t irne record for pro football by passing for 4,007 yards. Who is he'? 3. Which outstanding pro guard is the son of a former major- league baseball player? 4. Jn the first game of the 1973 pro season, he established a single-game rushing record. Who is he? 5. Which top receiver was traded from one American Con- ference team to another just before the start of the 1973 season? 6. Name the outstanding line stnr who missed only two of his team's plays on offense in 1972. 1. This outstanding wide re- ceiver was a great track man in college. specializing in the long jump. Name him. 8. He is one of the all-time great blockers, and has the same last name as a defensive All-Star player on the same team. Who is he? 9. For the past three seasons he has been voted the outstand- ing offensive lineman in the American Conference by the NFL Players Association. Who is he? 10. Which wide receiver was one or the winning team's stars in Super Bowl JV? 11. This man is called a throw- back to the o ld fullback types. N a me this great runner. 1. Rayfield Wright. now one of the best tackles in football, came to the Dallas Cowboys in 24 • FAMILY WEEKLY, NoYember 4, 1973 1961 as a tight end, the position he played at Fort Valley State College in Georgia. 2. Joe Namath of the New York Jets passed for 4,007 .yards in 1967 to establish an nil-time pro record. He completed 258 of his 49 I passes that season and 26 of his passes went for Jet touch- downs. 3. Tom M ack of the Los An- geles Rams is the son of the late Ray Mack, who played second base for the Cleveland Indians Joe Namath from 1938-46. 4. 0 . J. Simpson of the BuffaJo Bills set a new single-game rush- ing record for pro football when he gained 250 yarJs in leading his team to n season-opening 31-J3 victory over the New England Patriots on September 16, 1973. 5. Raymond Chcster,.~ho es- tablished himself as om: oC the finest tight ends in the game in his first thn:c seasons with the Oakland Raiders, was tradeJ to thc Baltimore Colts before the 197 3 season. Tile Raiders received def en~ive tackle Bubba Smith in exchange for Chester. 6. Forrest Bl ue, Lhc·fioe center or the San Francisco 49er , missed only two of his team's offensivc plays in 1972 despite shoulder and ankle injuries. 1. When he was ul Ohio State. Paul Warfield. the star wide ce- ceiver of the world-champion Miami Dolphins. achieved u long jump of more than 26 feel and ranked among the world's best in th:1t event. 8. Bob Brown. the huge off en· sive tackle o f the Oakland Raid- ers, who has been an NFL star since his rookie year of 1964, has the same Inst name as Oak· land corner bad Willie. The two are not related. 9. Though he was cut by the San D iego Chargers in 1969 and signed by Miami, Larry Little has achieved greatness us a Dolphin offe nsive guard. In 1970, 1971 and 1972, he was voted the top lineman in the AFC by the NFL Players As- sociMion. 10. Otis Taylor of the Kansas City Chiefs played a key role in rheir 23-7 victory over the Minnesota Vikings in the 1970 Super Bowl. He made a sensa- tional catch of a pa.~ from I.en Dawson to complete a 46-yard -.coring play for Kan<;as City's la'it pointc; of the game. 11. Larry Csonka. who stands 6-2 and weighs 237 pounds. :.pccializes in straight-ahead power running as the star full- back for the Miami Dolphins. He ra n for 1,051 yards in 1971 and 1.117 yards in J 972. Cson- ka's style reminds old-timers of Bronko Nagurski, who starred for the Chicago Bears FM in the l 930's. "1.1 ~ Blue Denim ''Durango"· • 60 New Discoveries for Christmas from Greenland Studios BUY-BY-MAIL AND SAVE MONEY I GIAITllFE- SIZE SAITI ONLY @uttlt lour Eng ;'l 1 flikt &anta <!!Jans! .~:::::::-.· HAVE A LIVING CHRISTMAS ORNAMENT IN THE HOUSE use INDOO•• OR OUTSIDE he tallest, frlendllest St. NlcJI •'w Menl Fiii him full Of news. PllS*S •nd m•ke him plump •nd round like • bowl fult Of Jelly. ~ sblnda • bf1 5'9" tall Ind full of Chrfstm.s Cheerf St.Ind him up, sit him down; on roof by the chimney, on porch, l.wn, Inside flreplaiceJ Colorful .i1 weether plastic. UN ••In yqr 1tter ~r. 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(#'12222). .... let Cl)·llM "*' (#'1222J) .. $1M COMPLETE S-PIECE VANADIUM $998 STAINLESS STEEL KNIFE SET ONLY Each IWM .. tndMduany herd9ned, tt.. ~ to • razcw __. and .. ..,,..,.., wttJI the proud Mltm.rtc "VAHAOIUM Sl'AIHLESS S1'££L." rour UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEE that JOU own the flMst knife Mt made and theYll '9meln IO FOREVER! Razor ah•rp on the "PP9' scale of tt.. "Rodcweft HardnftS Test." 0..lsned to perfOfm kltctt.n mlraca..1 There isn't• carvlnc. alldnc. dicinc. mlftclnc. or c~ l>fflS tost JOU can't ,_ perform with .. pertiM and minimum effort. 8Uldes so touct.. IO dUrable, you'U wonder how JOU ~r dkt wtt'-'t these kni¥eal Y•r 4-9'ece knife Mt Includes a fifth mernb.,: •handsome wood rKk. 1Jl10--llnlh lltadl Set ............................ .._. ONLY S698 ~· , COOK'S BEST FRIEND -_,/ IEVEISllll mu. - fillDDlE RIPS OYER FOR FRYING! .... u.f,.. ... w 11 ...-. .. ,......., ftlt arJMo--. tw ...._ ......... ft'Wll ..._ .... ~ ........... ~ .. ,.. ,.,..,, frtMI ....... '= ... 1t 1 .., 1 111~ lllllJ•trWJtalll ....... ..,.....__,ceel....__ 101 ... ... .. .,. ., a ..,. n..., • 1r1 • ,.._. ,_, __ ................... ., ....... .... Personalized Christmas Key \ IMM IN8 An'ACIZ'Un nrs AU. VAalUllSI n .... deep down ... tt.. th~ sMp end~fllJIUty carpets. lpecieJ. ty to flt .n vacuums. Inst of lust ~ .. off surf-dirt and dust 10l.I can now realty ••• down deop. Shap and plle cafl)9ts will last r and looll bettert Hl·lm-molded otestle. 11" ._.. 109-.... ... Mtadl:teanl ......... ..,.,.. Medilerranonn-Look Deanlb-Sl&ves TM authentic spil)d .. doweis and wann fniltwood fini.h are ,_ cffrnenskHls ln ~t dKoratinc. Knkk4rnacks, brk·•·brac become objects d'art on the beJutlfully crafted Mediterranean at)d9 show-plac-. Each easy-to-.ssemb&9 unit has 2.11·· ~and 2·10~ • shefvft 25" ~tall width. JI IMlf .. . .............. $Ue EA. 2/11M9 Now You Can Enjoy A New-Way to Slim Your Waistline At Once Ill Amazing IAISTBRT TRIMS AND FIRMS Wear the new welst·trlm belt nut to your skin while )'OU sit. walk . . . ftonnat body heat and the aentle mas...,. action or the belt helps trim Md firm mid- riff t>utae. Get MnCJne ,.. suits ewn if worn whfle ~ Soft composition rubber with ad~-~ cro dosures ... Comfort. able tn'mmi"I whtle you 10 about nof1'NI .ctivities . . . Gardening, toui"I . . . ewn Watthi"I TV. F"tts stz- es 24 in. to 46 In. 9945-Welst Trim llelt .............. $&• AS'llOllAll'S 10011. .. SlllOll " lllSl W1Jtea Up.-- Slde DO•nl -=·== br • lltu 11tt IM Is .......... brlMSA for .... trlpl! Wrltls .. .., ...... ................ ..,.rr-•• .._ It for ;dolll tlttlr S.0•• tit ........ ms....u ...,, fMrite pmftJoa -Oii .... ftaor. ,,. ... ;AA duces flH, Ht• stroUs ••• ..,,., ...... ot bloUlles.. IM llltl -listsf .... dries ... C89 be .......... ..., .. ,..,, .,...,.., .. .............. 100 JmS! TMs ... clltlfllll,_,...,. ............ ==·~ft8. .. ~~ -~.-a writ~ ~U..r.$t.• 2ISUI 11$1 .. "'HOBO LOOK"' YOU MAY CHARGE EVERYTHING TO MASTER CHARGE . BANKAMERICARD GIANT 1974MEIUll CALENDAR n • An overslztil memo calendar with lots of white space for each day. A su~ cure for a bad rnemory. .Full 6-week achedule shown on each 22x16~. calendar sheet with bold, black letterfn&. Shows 2 weeks of next "}Onth as wen as th• current montti. Throuaf\ 19751 Never •1aln be bothered with ,.. callln1 datff, Just etance at your &l•nt calendar1 1711-4Ment Calendar $1 3/$2.79 TAUi• AllllllA&. MOK. Sounds llkt It's .. Ive. SqYHn tadl brleflt. colOftd ,... tild lltar Cllt dot Nrll. tbt cat "mtoW," tllt ltorM ntl(li •"' the f" (nlflt. Squeeze Ille Wllolt laOoll 1 once llld JOll'rt down °" Ult flr111I Wipe dean! 4013-Al .... lell ................ $1 ALL THE BENEFITS OF A REAL STEAM SAUNA $1291 \'IRRATING BELT HELPS YOU LOOK & fEEL YEARS YOUNGER PERSONALIZED KIDDY SHOE KADD'Y Kids soon leant that neatness can be fun with Jllrsonlllzed multi- color· caddies that talle ttwlt shoes off the floor and into pedets. They ire as much tun to look at as to use. Each Is toooed off by an animal friend; for nifssy there's cuMlnc ,Cassy Cat, for brothen, Dapper Doi. Each holds 3 pair of shoes or slltlpm In 6 lndlvidull pockeb. They will not scr1tch, peel or fide. The sturdy vinyl wipes cllln wlttt a dMlp cloth. £.ldl Is 33 Inches lone. """ NAMt ti • letters. 51111 ~. EACM ••••.••• $1.41 P11111--Dlc P11112-Clt PROJECTOR r-I ENLARGES ~ ~ UPT0200 ~/ · TIMES ' """~~ PROJECT ANY ILLUS. ~ !~ · ntATED MATmlAL UP . ' TO 4 FT. WIDE. Enjoy _;._, .J • coior and detail of SNJ>--- shots, stamps. maps, etc., without film, slides or necatives. Any lmap macnlfled up 10 200 tlmesl u ... 40-wtt bulb. Deluxe uses 60-watt bOth available anywhe,.. 5~.a·. Deluxe is 12x8 inches. l~ ............ $6.tl 2517-DaluDPwollctoi .... $1.tl A GREAT BUY FOR COIN COLLE~RSI The New Lincoln-Ke~nedy Penny ~ i JOHN F. KENNEDY ABRAHAM LINCOLN 1917-1963 1809·1165 This unclrculated Uncoln Head penny Is stamped with a reproduction of John F. Kennedy lookina·•t· Lincoln. This unusual commemorative piece is truly a collector's Item. Uncofn was •l.cted In 1860 Kennedy -s elected In 1960 Each name contalos ..v.n letters Both Presidents werw slain on • frtday Both were slain In th• pr.aence of their wlv" Both wera vitally concerned with CMI Rllhb Kennedts secret•!)' Uncoln warned him not to IO to Dallas Llncoln s Hcretary KenlM(fy war!Md him not to IO to the theater Both of their successors we,. n•"* John.son Andrew Johnson, Lyndon Johnson Os-Id shot Kennedy frorn a wal'9h0use and hid In a theater Booth shot Uncoln In a tllffter and hid In a warehouse ~0ne(T::·g:,~>.::'~--~-~.~-~!.::U:: Stop POP TOP Drinks From Going Flat . s.t of tan plnttc: caps; one for wary sin openfns. They Insert as .... ,Y .. coflla to ..... In ........... flrzte end fulHMMfled flavor. Now~ can put wen half·a-c:an Of any .,.,.,.,.. drink beck Into the ~. and It ..,, spattda Jutt .. Jt did ....,, first opened. Set ol 10. ... 1~111 .......................... '1 USE HANDY ORDER FORM Your Mme. address, or eny S HMS beau- ttfully printed on summed ptiper ... or ctiooee pran-onl Great for mill, chKk•.1 books, etc. Pwtrtt 3 .,_ clearfy, allow " weeb. HANG IT ALL OH VIC'TCNttAH STY~ HAT ANO COAT RACK. There arw 15 hooks on this black cast Iron raproductlonl The orlC· lnat huns In an 1850's formal hall. You ml&ht use It In your bathroom to hold col· orful WW.15. Or by the front door to catch umbrellH, coets and hats. It extends 1 in• from ttall and mHIUl'ff 14• widt . .. 1111-1• ....... ....., ........ 'Iii Nnl ..... ,,.. ............. AO ..as1-m ............. "*" .... . ··-.......... "*''······ 12956-Caat bdl . . . . . P,M MAGNETIC BIKE GARAGE· Swe thoee blcycl• from rain and •ny bed weather. Powerful buitt·ln ~ hold the blhe p,... In place securely wlthout strlnc ot ti... Ratnfo~ plastic to flt all slz .. : moat ~-tool Folds Into sm•ll apace when not In use. Enc:oura1e younp1en to prot9ct belonainf!. 542t .., .. Gar1lp ............. $1.59 2/$2.tl -rlNYIUllLU- MUllCIOX. Two Henllen Dancers ,.,..,.,y .. A a.utlful Pllcl et Ceramic lculPttn- Thts Is a thoroUlhlY unique music box! Not onty does It plaY the IO"I now auocf. at.ct wrth our 50th stm. but it futures two native dancers doina .. their thlna" t::W=J°~ le ICU~ture, .,._ii· an entert1lnment" and I beeut;ful tune. 1JIU-HewallMI Mlllla ....... M.11 POWEIRI. AU10 VIC PUllSlf'fl UClllEI! ONLY ss• 'A All ltlto VICWlll cleaner tt11t r•lly worta, Ind wf~t ettctrlcltrl SI• ply ptic It Into Cllt clprtttt ltpter. Drrt. .dat, clprttt11 llld "'9•. '"" ,,.... dluppear II .. -.1c. ~I .....,. to 1et lllldtr aeats, clatll, ......... COl'llPtrtwlelll Powetfvl ""*"' to ... , rottr ~r'• ltltitrlof r11Uy cl1111I 15' txttMIOll cotd fof '°"I readies. HMmpect f:llStlc. ,..,_,_ ................ .. ORl!BNLAND STUDIOS 481 Greenland Bulldlnc. Mieml, Florida 33059 Please send rM Items listed below. I undenand If I'm not completely satflfied with any Item, I can return It within 10 days for a full and complete refund. How eatatoe Nama of It.In f'rk:e TOTAL Many Number Each . . .,,. POSTAGE AND MANDUNG CHART 1 ...... _ To ffcura: total Ofder, INI UM chart. lndude coned • c:t.az to a"°'«I ... ~ .. a sman ,r:rt of the coat • .._T• . . . pey the reat. , no ltampa. C.0.0.'s. =~--..... er.:: .: .. ; ..... i:, ...... ·11· ..... • • • ...... 11.11 " 11.11. 1.11 =.:-.::.. ..... ,, n.: ..• 1 ..... "r.i ........ TOfM. -·-· --~ ll CU.-IWSI Clla M &-.- 0 ... Cl• J 0 MASTEi CUllE 0 AIUIWI EXPlllS GoM 1MI -1 ,.1-----------0 tAmAmlCMI .._ACC __ • ·-·-----~~,...,,,..,.~__,) IACC.. . I INTERBANK NO. 0 0 0 Cl . ' . GOODTRRU~~~--~--- I I I I I I I I I I I I I ·t I I I I I . I I I ' t ---------------~STAn __________ ~nPCOOE----.. ~ I • • '• '• ~ "'1 ~) ' ' : J f • 1 'I • • ' l l , ', T ~ i • • ' ( l r • •, ' •1;.pr;1t·=·'2fiif9 This week, Food Editer Marilyn Hansen makes a tuna casserole with a new twist: spinach. Says Marilyn: "Did you know that 'Florentine' means 'with spinach'? I think your family will ~njoy this variation of the familiar tuna casserole. Close out the meal with a delightful new pie: Applesauce Custard Cru nch." Florentine Tuna: A Great New Taste MARILYN'S MENU Florentine Tuna-Noodle c..Nrofe• To ... dGNeneand Tomato Saa.ct with S.a&oned Croutont Bre"9tlckl Butter or Marg1rlne Apple11uce Custard Crunch Pi•• Coffee Tea Miik l<c~ipc given FLORENTINE TUNA- NOODLE CASSEROLE Salt 3 qi•. bolling water 4 cups (I ou.) \it -Inch-wide noodln or feltucln• noodles Y.t cup margarine or butter 2 tablespoon• Instant minced onion Y.t cup all-purpoN flour 1 packet Instant chicken bouillon or 1 cu~ ~ tea•poon ground black pepper V• teaspoon ground nutmeg ~ leatpoon paprika 3 cups skim milk or aklmmed evaporated milk, diluted 1 pkg. (10 ort.) froun chopped spinach, cooked •nd well drained 2 cans (6Yl or 7 o~t. H eh) tuna, drained and naked 112 cup grated procffl American or Gruytre cheeM Paprika 1. In 6-8-qt. kettle add I 1abh.:spoon sail to rapidly boiling water. Gradual- 1) aJd noodles so 1hat water con- linucs 10 boil. Cook uncovered 7 minutes, sti rring occasionall y. Drain in colander. 2. Meanwhile make Florentine Sauce: In 2-4t. saucepan slowly melt marga- rine. Remove from he:it. Stir in in- 'l:int minced onion, flour, bouillon, '4 tea poon salt. pepper, nutmeg and paprika until smooth. 3. Gradually stir m milk. Bring to boil • ll\ er medium heat, !>tirring. Reduce heal; si mmer 1 minute. 4. Preheat oven to 375 F. Lightly grca~ a shallow 2-qt. casserole. S. Layer half of noodles nnd all of 'Pinach and 1una in casserole. Top with remaining noodles. Appleuuce Custard Crunch Pie fHture.s two layera: one a eplcy clnnamon·!IJPl ... uc:e layer, the second • cfl1my custard layer topped wllh crunchy brown 1ugar. 6. Pour Florentine Sauce over cas- serole. Poke gently with spoon to al- low sauce to spread. Sprinkle with cheese and paprika. 7. Bake 40-45 minutes, until sauce hubbies and cheese is melted. Makes 4-6 servings APPLESAUCE CUSTARD CRUNCH PIE Yl teaspoon ground cinnamon Y• teH poon ground nutmeg 1 leHpoon unftawored gelalln ¥J cup llght-brown sugar, firmly packed 1 can (16 ou.) appleHuce 2 teaspoons grated lemon rind 1 pkg. (3 ou.) egg-custard mix 2 cups milk 1 (9 Inch) baked putry shell 11> cup finely chopped walnuts 1. Combine cinnamon, nutmeg, gela- 1in and 'l.l cup brown sugar in 2-qt. saucepan. Stir in applesauce and lem- on rind. 2. Heat to boiling, stirring. Reduce heat and simmer 30 minutes. Cool. 3. Prepare egg-custard mix with milk l\s directed on package. 4. Spread cooled applesauce mixture over bottom of pastry shell. Top with hot custard. Refrigerate until set. 5. Sjf1 remaining ~'.' cup brown sugar over custard top. Sprinkle with nuts. 6. Place pie under pre-heated broiler 3-4 inches from heat. Broil 1-2 min- utes. until sugar melts. Refrigerate un- til thoroughly chilled. Makes8 servinns FAMILY WEEKLY. November 4, 1973 .. 29 £ • e • 2 iii ... D 0 0 c a.. •6.99 ~~~~:: .. CASUAL •6.99 •6.99 CAREFREE ~ ,.:~;.!. OFF the f ACE •nu .... orON the FACE 0 ' 0 - 0 lh• ... ~~~~ • .AFlO AMERICAN FREEDOM WIG ... ~,~~ .. FONDA H=~~~~ •• FINEST QUALITY -LOWEST PRICES fabulous wash'N' wear Perrnad- style stretch WIGS Never ';~~~.";· •6.99 Need DARLING NEW YOU setting BUY A VALMOR WIG GET BEST VALUE FOR YOUR MONEY MAIL THIS COUPON NOW ,,,..,.,.. c.o.o.: P•'/ poltm•n on d•ll••rr .,,.011nl plua PO•l•I•· II you send money orde• cornp1n11>•1• e>ost•t•· VALMOlt HAllt STYL[S Dept. 32SS 24U f"Hlrl• An. Chlc•s• ..... MCH 1ltacl tl.t.J ORDER COUPON 7~ 'fAlMOI NAii smu DlJIT.32551 24'1 PlAlall AVl.~.CHICACO, IU. 141111 I "-USC S(NO MC Tl![ fOllOWIHC STYLES: I Stxlr Number Oucrlption Price I : Clltck Ctlot: 0 llKll 0 Off lllCll 0 Dn .,..,,. o M•llh1111 .,..,, o uctit •r1w11 o on .A11111nt I 0 Llctlt U.w11 O M•lllJ llod O ,,, ... 1i.1• I o r11t1"""' o u1111 tr.st•• o on rmt•• I 0 Mi1tll ll1dl l £raf 0 Miid lrtft l $ray O Send C.0.1. I'll pay postm1n amount plus posta11. I O I 111clts1 '1111 a1Muat-tompany p1y1 posta11. I NAM lt1 l '""" ••• I City - -- --S~t -__ Zl' - -;J ;.\. . , ~~~ · uf~<!7~fJ~~ OFFICIAL COMMEMORATIVE INGOT LIMITED EDITION PROOF • STEALING SIL VER ) o" Un~r covrr of Jukntss. tht "lndwn br•ves stHhhily b<Mrdtd tht ships. sluhtd opt>n stvtr•I hundrtd chests of le• and mtthodic•lly dumptd tht·tu into tht ocun ! By ten o "clod. th•t night tht detd was dont. · ' On ht.Hing of the o\Ction 1n Boston h•rbor. John Ad•ms dt- clJrN 1t w•s "tht gr•ndest rvrnt which has rvtr yr t'h•ppt>ned ~inrt th1~ rnntroversy with Brit•1n opt>ntd. · And he .ddtd, "The .. ubhm1ty of 1t ch•rms mt1' Bu\ in England. ominous voices wrre hP•rJ. MtmMrs of tht l al-antt resolvtd th•t "ef- iectu.al sttps l't' 1.1J..rn to S«urt tht DrP,nJencr of the Col- onies on tht MothtJ Country. Tht d1t w•s c•St A b.md of buvt •nd dttrrmantd colorusts. an • single symbolic act. h.ad •lrr.11dy ~un tht strugglt for .,Amrriun 1ndtpt-ndrncr • -~ST01v . DEC ( 16 I AM \ 1973 "-lJ1V Mil . Jo6eph Sm.uh 123 Ma.in StJtee.,t Any.town, U.S. A. 0 12 34 . . ... ~ ...... J 1~~ ---_ ...... ..........," -#' 11 Seventy solid sterling silver ingots depicting the most significant events of the American Revolution. 11 Each ingot encased in an individual cachet, personali7.ed with the name and address of the subscriber. • Each cachet postmarked on the 200th anniversary of the event~ at the post oflice serving the site of that event. • Issued in a strictly limited edition. -~---~~·t-.>~~~~~~ Limit: One Proof Set per Subscriber Subscription Rolls Close: November 30, 1973 ------~ On December 16, 1773, a small band of American colopists-ang~ by an unjust British tax on tea-disguised themselves as Mohawk Indians and turned the tide of history. "The Boston Tea F~ fired the Baihes of freedom and ignited the struggle that was to win us our independence. - On December 16, 1973-200 years later to the day-a solid sterling silver ingot will be issued to commemorate that event: the 6rst OfficiaJ Ingot of the Bicentennial Council of the Thirteen Original States, the authoritative congress of delegates representing the Bicentennial Com- missions of each of the thirteen original states. nus will be the beginning of a series of ster- ling silver ingots of exceptional importance- of6cially commemorating the Bicentennial of each of the most significant events of the Ameri- can Revolution. Each ingot wtl1 be issued pr~ly on the 200th annfvenary of the event it commemorates. F.adl will be of proof quality and halhnarked. Moreover, each ingot will be enclosed in _a_s~ cial envelope-cachet persooa1i7.ed with the name and address of the subscrtber. The cachet will be postmarbd at the post ofBce serving the site of the event commemorated, on the 200th anniver- sary of the event-to the very day. 70 Great Historic Events Following the issuance of the first ingot on December 16, 1973, there will be seven signifi- cant events corrunemorated during 197 4. The series will then continue throughout the Bicen- tennial era, with each ingot issued on the 200th _ annivenary of the event commemorated. The final ingot, to be issued on October 19, 1981, will portray the British surrender at Y or1ctown. The entire series of seventy Official Bicenten- nial Ingots will _thus niaeate the whole dramatic history ol the American Revolution and appro- priately commemorate this great era. Each Ingot a Work of Art Each ingot will depict a historically-authen- tic scene in finely-detailed bas relief, vividly cap- turing the drama of the event commemorated. Each ingot will be a true work of art designed and sculpted by a skilled American armt. The ingots will be individually struck by The Franklin Mint, the world's foremost private mint, and the total collection will contain over 60,000 · grains of solid sterling silver. To house and display The Official Bicenten- nial Ingots in their cachets, a custom-made col- lector's album will be included with each sub- scription. This album will permit the subscriber to display both sides of each ingot and cachet, including historical ref erenoe infonnation on each event commemorated. Subscribets will thus be able to study and enjoy their collection. as it is ~g acquired. Issue Price Guaranteed The ofticiaJ issue price for each sterling silver Bicentennial Ingot. including the specially-post- marlced ca~, will be $19.50. This price is guaranteed by the minter for the entire series, regardless of any increases in the cost of silver during that time. To make this guarantee pos- sible, The Franklin Mint bas agreed to purchase, at current prices, a sufticient am0tmt of silver to cover the complete series of seventy ingots for each subscriber. The number of subsaiptions accepted will .be strictly limited to the number of orden post- marked by November 30, 1973. This is the only edition of these OfBcial Bicentennial Ingots which will ever be produced. Once the proof ingots have been struck forsubscn'ben, no others will ever be minted. A Truly Unique Heirloom The arrival of each Bicentennial Ingot-in a cachet specially·postmarbd at the place where the historic event C>t'CUITed-will give to Ameri- can families a deeper understanding of the great events surrounding our nation• s bbth. As each ingot is collected, as each cad>et is studied, families will be reminded anew of the principles pd ideals for which the Revolution was fought. From Concord. w).-e they 6red the shot heard 'round the world..:.to London, where the colonists' ""Olive Branch" petition was re- jected by the Icing-to-PtltW. where treaties of alliaDM with the French were signed-to York- toum. where the British aurrendered-eac great event will be portrayed in a unique way and commemorated 200 yeen later to the day. The BicentenDial Council is poud to issue these historic ingots-creating an important co&. lectioo that will have meaning for every Ameri- can and is certain to become a permanent family beirlocm for future generatiooa. This is the only time a subscription may be en~ for these otBdal Bicentmnial Ingots. All bscripdon applications must be mailed by N ber30, 1973. Ott1'N SUBSCRIPTION APPLICATION 20-os Mall to: The Franklin MiDt Fruklin Center, Pennsylvania 19063 PleMe eater lllY lbblc:riptioo Em a Proof Set of. TM Oflc"" B~ ,...,,. conliltinl of K!'Yenty Itel'- • liq lilver inaota in spec:ially-polblaarkecl penoaalbed cacbets, iauecl by the Biceak:Dnial Council of. the 'l'hUteaD OrisiDal Stata. I eocloee '19.50• •~for the &nt iQ&ut md I Ill!" to pq '°' ach IQblequent in90t .. it ii blued. ~ ahoukl be ..... ~ to The Frmklia Mbat. Mr. Mn. .,......_ ........... Addnlll~~~~~~~~~~~­ City~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sienature~~~~~~~~~~~- lf you WW. ,._ cadieb ~ 1fidl • dilttnt .,._ nd addrw ,_ ~. primt "' t:YPe droir penoee>betjoe )'OU ...... -• ...,.,.... .... uid aee.dl It to du.~- SublcriptionRollsClose: NoVember30, 1973 limit: One Proof Set per Subscriber n4 ,_.. _, .. TI4I ~ lMIGGT-Aft~ rT .. llOT ~TIO '#!TM TI4I u,,t, WfT Of' Nl'I OTHIR QOYfl!NMQtf AGllHCY 1-----------------------------------------------------------------.-.J ENO DENTURE MISERY IUIJS lllllllU IUITlf1llY Mir~cle plucic OF.NTURITE rtfiu loost dtnlur~s in fin min. u1es. This "Cushion of Comfori" eases sore f'Um~. You eat anythinit. l :a111th. 1:alk, cvtn sneeze wi1hou1 e mbarnssmtnl. No more food p:arcicles under places. OF.NTURITE lam for months. READ TINY PRINT INST ANTl Y ! F.nJs J:aily hothtr of powder, p:aslC or cushions. Jusl remove when refit is ntcdtJ. Tu!Cltu. OJorltH. M onty hack g11aran1cc. Ar :ill tlr111t counters. Please allow up to four weeks for delivery on items ordered from companies that advertise in Family Weekly. Sometimes unintentional delays occur. If they do, just write: Lynn Headley. Family Weekly, 641 _!:============W Lexington Ave., New York, NY HERB GARDEN ••• s1 se 10022. Trailing IVY GERANIUM •.• For Lack of Cont rol IE SUU WITH "lVll -SAF("I "EVER·SAFl" is Cool, UndetKteble, Comfortable & Effective. Weic;itu only 7 oz. Novel "fluid barriers" with heat-Wt!lded seams enclo1ing absorbent launderable l1ner1 in soft vinyl, prevent escape of •riv moisture. Clotkft, bedd1nc;1 stay dry. Use 2 sers of liners for full niohts sleep without ch•nge. Moneyback. Qu•r. Sizes for all -oes, adults & children. Olll>fll IY WAIST SIU! Complete with liners, S6.95; extr• liners, $2.95/~t; 50 dlspowble liners, $6.95. RALCO MFG. CO., Dept. 166 153.C E. EdinQer, Santa AA•, Calif. 92705 Weekend Shopper By Lynn ~adk-)· CATALOG of over 1 000 spe- cialty products puts you in the wholesale busi- n ess. M ake profits whole- saling it ems such as an automobile spotlight that sells for S 1.98, costs you only 55¢. Hundreds of bar- gains available to start a spare-or full-time business from home. No previo us experience necessary. Product supplier will show. you COMPU Tl WITH -S200 MANCINI IASIET l.iiii~9iiiiiiiiiiiiiiw~~iiiiiiiii1 how to make profits. For free in- Healthy, extra.double young geraniums. already growing in 2'' peat pot. Com· plete with 8" hanging basket. Startling bright pink flowers, long trailing vines. Only $2.00 plus 40c handling and post· age. Satisfaction or replacement free. Michiran Bulb, Dept. TG· 1460, Grand Rapids, Michiran 49550. At home i1 lllinutes Fast, easy to use. W o rk<1 r vN v timC'. QUIK-FIX · or your ni1.111:\' hnC'I.. Dt"t111tll1pai1K11 formation: Specialty Mt!rchandise Corp., FW I 0, 606 I De Soto A vc., Woodland Hills, CA 91364. Wt-e-ktnd Shopper iln11H nre NOT fui· verli1in11. If product.• nrC' >iol n11nil. 111 .. tort,., ordfr from Hn urce11 li11ttd. A Pap er Sculpture Delight to Br ighten Your Holld•y ~ NATI VITY SCt:N£ -P'apcr ~ulpture ol the M:c11c 111 Belhlchcm inc:luJo all the l)icc:n shown here. The fl11urc of Joseph i) 16" tall. and the overall hei1Jht of 1hc ~ccnc Is 23'/l". Educational and run, particularly for children. Kh IS ra~ily .. ~,cm bled. Just SI.SO. ' ~tant jf tbe jf oot ~anta C!Claus ~--- Paper sculpture is great fun, a nd 1he whole family will enjoy pulling up this big, jolly fellow wilh his brigbl red outfit, flowing bea rd and cheerful smile. He's sure to spar· kJe cheer in your home, in a clubhouse or hos· pital, or as a fealure al a holiday bazaar or party . . . every year for years 10 come. Enchanling .S-foot 3-dimcnsion· al Sanla comes in kit containing die· cul pieces of stur· Jy paper, easily as~mblcd by DI\ ingenious ~ystcm o f in1erlocking slil s a nd labs. Makes a won· derful gifl. Just $1. GREENLAND STUDIOS, 4781 GIMnland Bulldlna. Miami, Fla. 33059 Please rush Paper Sculptures indicated below on full money·back guanintee if I •m not completely delighted. Enclosed is check or m.o. for ----- .Giant 5-Foot Santas ( 17306) @ $1 Enchanting Nativity Scenes (17308) 0 $1.50 _Cheerful 3~·Foot "M". Santes" (not shown) (17307) $1 (Please add 25• postage each) NAME~--------------------------­ AOORESS ---------------------~ t y s s g I 0 g n r- Y I\ l g s. I . m People Quii Some Rt-,asons PeQple \Ote the WayThey Do By Jolua E. Glllsoa . TRUE OF FALSE? 1. People tend to be prejudiced in favor of candidates whose height is similar to their own . 2. If your political beliefs differ radi- cally from your boss's, it will be hard for him 10 overlook the fact when you ask for a raise or special favors. 3. Youthful voters are the most cyni- cal about government and the most skeptical of poliricians.' 4. You can tell a lot about the way people in your ocigbborbood feel abou t various issues-and how they arc likely to vote o n them -just by scaucring "lost letten .. arount!. 5. The older yo4 get, the more likely you are to vote Republican. ANSWERS 1. '/'rut. Since research •bas shown thal people tend "to choose friends d oser to themselves in height than would have been expected by chance," a team of behavioral scientists inter- viewed hundreds of voters in a metro- poliran mayorality election to deter- mine the extent to which a candidate's height might influence a voter's pref- erence. The subjects were questioned on rheir own height, occupation and hackground, favored candid4te and perception of the height of each can- didate. Findings: '1be hypothesis of the study, that people tend to vote for cand idates of relatively similar height, was generall y supported by the data." Jr was also noted that taller people pref erred the taller candidate by more than three to one. 2. Tmt -as shown by findings of a un iversity study o f the effect of politi- cal views on personal behavior. The investigators found that a person is nor only "less favorably perceived" by another when bis political views differ appreciably, but that the other person i' ofrcn not at all adverse to infl icting discomfort or embarrassment upon him when circumstances offer a rea- ~onable excuse for doing so. 3. Fals~-as indicated by a recent sur- vey conducted by the Center for Poli- lical Studies, a unit of the University of Michigan's Institute for Social Re- 'carch. The study findings show "that ii is not the younge,r but rather the older age groups that are the most politically cynical.'' People over 50, rhe researchers found, have been the True or False: People tend t-0 be prejudiced in fuvor of. candidates whose height is similar to their own. (See number I ) most politically estranged in each election year in the last 15 years. 4. Tm~. What psychologists term the "lost letter" technique bas proved a most intriguing -and sometimes re- markably accurate -method of deter- mining how people rcaJly feel about, and intend to vo·e on. various ques- tions. The technique is described as follows: "It consists of dispersing in city streets (and other locations} a large number of unmailed letters, en- cl~d in envelopes that have ad- dresses and stamps oo them. When a person comes across one of these en- velopes. it appears to have been lost. Thus be has a choice of mailing, dis- regarding or destroying the letter. By varying the name of the organization (political or otherwise) to which the letter is addressed, it is possible to ob- tain a return rate specific to the or- ganization.'' The percentage of letters returned provides an index of popu- larity or disfavor. 5. Falu-according to a study of the political-attitude pattern of American adults over a 24-year period, spon- sored by the National Science Founda- tion and the University of Texas Re- search fnstitute. The conclusion of the investigators: There is no evidence for the popularly held belief that "the process of aging leads to Republican party identification." On the contrary, the findings strongly suggest that as individuals grow older, they generally become less conservative in their attitudes. FAMILY WEEKLY, November 4, 1973 • » A Valuable Gift for Collectors and Investors too. Produced in a Strictly Limited Edition - When These Are Gone There Wtll Be No More! --- 1973NO ROC L:IMFFED EDFfl0N Pl::AT=E N orman Rockwell, America's best loved artist, has brought joy to millions for ovC'r 50 years wirh his famous SarurdJy Evening Post covers and illusmitions. Now Joy's brings Norman Rockwell to you with chis charming "Butter Girl"Limited Edition Plate. Made of the finest china with hand painted and hand rubbed gold rims, it bcurs the famous Norman Rockwell signature. A MARVELOUS DECORATION AND EXCELLENT INVESTMENT TOO! This lovely plate is su re to be soJJ out fast . A 1970 Norman Rockwell Limited Edition silver plate priced at $1 25. sold out immediately, and now sells for about $700. (when you can find one). The Norman Rockwell name is certainlr magic to collectors (and smart investors!). la recent years, more and more Ameri~ns :ire starting to collect limired edition plates and we've sold many limired issues thar have increased in price, many by ovc·r 500%. And don't forget, this is also a marvelous Christmas gifr thJt will be rcnwm- bercd. Quanricies arc srrictly limir{'d, so please orJcr c-arl)1• r----JoN1i:1/" f1t?;;;./1 f'~1h;· .1>-;;·111 I LIMIT: 2 PLATES PER COLLECTOR -~~~ I JOY'S LJMITEO EDITIONS I Merchandise Man Plaza, Dept. 3393 Chiogo. Illinois 60654 I Please rush me my --Norman Rockwell's I "Buner Girl" Plates at SI '1.9~ c.ch. I under· s1aod 1har ir i$ solJ on a I 0-dar money back AJdrcs1 ___________ _ CitY------------- I I I I I I I IUJ:iranttt if I'm nllf dcli~h1c,I 3nd 1hai Joy's will pay full posra~ and handling. Enclosed is I check or M.O. for S f llllnnla HAld....ta add ll"llo ..... la•. S!~IC-j.,.._ ___ _ L----------------------~ ~- ---------------------------------------·~·---­• <9What in the World! SEN. FRANK CHURCH Erosion of a godMnd Medicare may have been a godMnd for the elderty, but they're still paying more than before for their health care, according to a study by the Senate Committee on Aging. "Perhaps the most significant finding," says Sen. Frank Church (D-Idaho), chairman of the committee, "is that the elderly, on a per capita basis, now pay more for medical care than in the year before Medicare became law. ln fiscal 1966 they paid $234 from their own re- sources. By fiscal 1972, that figure had risen to $276, or 18 percent higher than in 1966 .... Valuable as it is , Medi- care still only covers about 42 percent of health-care costs of the elderly. This figure, however, represents a decline when compared with fiscal 1969. At that time, Medicare covered almost 46 INFANT ASIDE ~ Babies should be allowed a certain amount of crying. It is good for devel- opment of their lungs and throat. -New1 ltem When they've the need, by day or night, Let babies cry with aU their might. Of course attend them-they may hunger- " • FAMILY WEEKLY. NO#ITll>er 4, 1973 percent of the aged 's medical expendi- tures. However, inflationary pressures and gaps in coverage have steadily eroded this covemge.,. "Chlldr~n have unique patterns-Le., they differ from each other from birth. ... The child is not inlinitely malleable day to be pushed and pulled according to t.he unsympathetic demands of un- uccepting parents. Rather, the child hns a drive to live and do things his own way. When the parents support, guide, educate, and correct in a warm, kindly way, the child Oourishes .... When, however, the parents and RODDY McDOWAll Aping lan't easy ••• ls It eaay to play an ape? Actor Roddy McDowall, who has played an ape in four of t.he five "Planet of the Apes" pictures, answers: "It takes 3JS hours to be made up every morning. That means that by noon I've had a full day behind me. And when the makeup is on, I can't eat and I can't talk, which means I am very irritable. My voice has to be dubbed when the film is completed. Even t.hen I have to wear a gimio to make it sound lilce I am talJcjng like an ape. Nourishment? Fruit juice is all I can take while I havemakeup on. But if I didn't enjoy playing t.he part I sure wouldn't go through all that trouble!" Quips & Quotes But let their lungs grow while they're younger. Yes, check to see if they are dry, But stiffe not that strident cry. The food they ate may make them siclc, An opened safety pin may prick. But on the other hand, or throat, They may wish merely to emote. So fo11 the sake of their developing, Just let them h ave their ti.me of yelloping, And know, when they've grown big and strong, You helped those little lungs along. My wife really doesn't know much nbout politics. We went down to vote i11 the primary and someone asked her which party she was affiliated with. She said, "Tupperware." -Robert Orbeu A visitor to the city had Jost his way nnd stopped to ask a police officer for directions. "Take the first tum to your left. You'U 6nd you're on a one-way ~trcct going the wrong way. But Clon't let that bother you-you're doing thnt now." -Lucille /. Goodyear THROUGH A CHILD'S EYES Kids see life differently. Send orlglnal contributlon1 to "Child," Famlly Weekly, 641 Lexington Ave., N.Y .. N.Y. 10022. S10 if used-none returned. While driving around one Sun- day af temoon, my children and I stopped at an old cemetery. We all got out of the car and walk- ed around, checking the dates on t.he worn markers. I was en· grossed in an old tombstone, very beautifully carved, when sud- deoly my eight- and ten-year-old daughters came running to me, their eyes wide with fright. My ten-year-old tugged frantically on my arm and said breathlessly. "Let's gol" She turned and pointed to n grave: "See that grave over there? The sign by it says, 'She is not dead-she is only asleep.' Let's leave right now!" -Carol Ho/laud North Little Rock, Ark. schools try to mold the child to fit the preconceived notions of how he should act, when they shove here, press there, shape over yonder, then the child re· ~pnn<ls with resistance, compliance, and unhappiness." From "Emotional Common SenSe," by Rolland S. Parker, Ph.D. (Harper and Row, $6.95.) ANNIVERSARIES: Richard Nixon was reelected President one year ago Wednesday. The Mnrine Corps was established 198 years ago Saturday. BIRTHDAYS (all Scorpio) : Sunday- ~alter Cronkite 57; Art Camey 55; Cig Young 56. Monday-Will Durant 88; Hoy Rogers 61. Tuesday-Mike Nichols 42. Wednelday-Billy Graham 55; Al Hirt 51. Thurlday-Patti Page 46; Katharine Hepburn 64. Friday- Spiro T. Agnew 55; Sargent Shriver 58. Saturday-Richard Burton 48. BIRTHDAY PEOPLE: Spiro Agnew and Sargent Shriver By Fr•nk B~ln1kl LITTLE EMILY "What • lousy movie! I'll never •ne•k In here •a•lnl" Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. A Tiil CAT AMO Tiil FIDDLH by Jacky Jeterl Ill. by Lionel Kalish. c.clt. iWlrJ Wwtth "enjoyable" Pub. prrce $4. 50 HI, All YOU UlllTS by Carl Memlin1, Ill. by Myra McGee. IUrtua antew1: "Breezy .•• pert ••• "Pub. price $4.50 Nf:VH TEASE A WUHL by J. Soule, Ill. by D. Hampson. 11111n antews: "Brfahtty colored ... " Pub. price $4.50 J DDMIEY·IOtllEY bl, Ro1er Duvolsln. Pldlllsllen W'"1J: " •.. one of Mr. Ouvolsln's best •.. " Pub. price $4.50 HOW FLETCHER WAS HATUEOI by W. & H. Devlin, llllnrJ ......,, " ... centre humor ..• " Pub. prfce $4.50 '• . : .. . ~ ~ • t THE TALE Of KTH WllT 811trix Potter's f1111ous little story, colorfully lllustrlted. Pub. price $1.95 fh:>st mothers and fathers frankly acknowl- edge that they haven't either the time or the perspective to choose precisely the right books for children not yet ready to read or who are just beginning to read. That is why parents are happily turning this problem over to the highly qualified editors of Parents' Magazine, who unreservedly approve all the books shown on this page, from which you can now safely choose any five tor your child with complete confidence. At the same time we send the five books of your choice, we will enroll your child in the Read Aloud and Easy Reading Program and arrange to send to your home each month another outstanding, carefully selected book which you may read to or along with your little one. Each book will charm and capti- vate your c hild-from Its bright, colorful cover through Its gaily Illustrated pages, with a story appealing and understandable to even the youngest mind. llA .. IOLD IHDEN 4-3 fl· mous rhymes with 1 Kite Greenaway llfustntton on every Piii· Pub. price $4.95 llllS IVlY by Mlrf1111 YCMl'.'f, ill. by Arnold Lobel. II •. °Tl•• 1: "Recommended." Pub. prfce $4.50 CUNIHllY THAMKHIVllll by Wende & Harry Devlin. Grandma'' recipe rs stolenl Pub. price $4.50 Tiil PIU Pll'U OF IWlfllll Robert Brownlll('a Immortal tale with Kate Greenaway Illustrations. Pub. price $5.95 Ill AMO llY RYINC MACHINE by M. I M, Mayer. Sclll. UIW. Jntl.: " ... loveable cha.r· acters" Pub. price $4.50 • 11 I l'i t" l I i ' r ' • ,, ~ lh. 1 \. '" h .\.A MIL!\E __._._. __ .,._,. 'N~fPUf' Tiil f'OOH STORY 1001 ?y A. A. Miine, ill. by /ii. Shepard. Three 1reat its. Pub. price $4.50 SAVE UP TO 64%-AND M Besides the assurance of goo entertain- ment, and the wonderful read-gather ses- sions each selection provid for you and your child, you will be please by the savings on every book. Member's Ice is only $1.59 each (plus small mailing charge) for books regularly priced up to $4.50 and even more. Fill IN POSTAG AID FOLD-OVER COUPON AT RIGHT ND MAIL TODAY.FOR YOUR 5 INTRODU ORY BOOKS FOR ONLY $1.59 ... PLUS E FREE BOOK RACK! If your child is1 of "beginning readern or "read to me~" ge, enroll your youngster now -and recelv an introductory package of the 5 books of our choice-all 5 for only $1.59, plus small ailing charge. You must be con- vinced the pleasure and be nefits this highly alsed Program offers your child-or you m y return the books in 10 days and owe noth) g. The book rack is free in any event. I A CMAIUl ...... ClllllTMAI br. Chll'ln M, Sdullz. Chlf1Je Brown seeks th• mt111l111 of Chr11tmls. Pub. P<lct·$2.95 ..... FOR YOUR CHILD IF YOU ACT NOW! This charmlnc BOOK RACK lbsolutely free for your child with trial enrollment. Holds up to 20 books. Absolutely free, even If you decide not to continue your chlld as a member. YOU'l£ Ill LOVf, Clllllll llOWN by Chlt1fl M. Sehulr. Amuslnc ldvlnturea of loveslck Chll'lle Brown. Pub. price $2.95 Ill's YOUa HI, CMltllf llOWll by Charles M. Scflulz. Charlie Brown dlsclpllnu his dot Sno0py, Pub. price $2.95 All Olatllo --. t0UNMd ,._,..,. IFM.._ .. , lac. -----~------~--~ Tiiis fold4vlr Coapan ltequlrea No f'ost11e. Fiii 111, c.t A!Olll DottM Linet, f'old, Sell I Mall SEND NO MONEY! Parents' Magazine'• READ ALOtfD AND EASY READING PROGRAM, Dept. FHI P.O. Box 161, Bergenfield, N.J. 07621 PIN" enroll the dtlld named 1>91ow u a rMmb9r. In eccordance with your olter, eend the ,,.. Book Rack and ae en lntroch1etory pecka91., the tlw boob I haw circled below: ABCDEFGHIJKLMNO Biii 1ne Oflly sue plue am.ell melllng cha~ for all 5 book&. If not ttlo'°"fllly plMMd, I may return the boob within 10 dlya and owe nothl119. OtherwlM, you will tend a new book NCfl month • the 1Mml>9r'e price Of Oflly St.58 each plua lfnlll malling charge, Tiie Book Rack II iny chlld'e to keep 111 eny .-it. I may cane.I l'Hmberalllp any time after the c:Nld hM rec»IYed tour lllOMtlly ..i.ctlona • ChllcteHMll State Signature of Pe'9flt or Donor 0 Boy 0 Girt Zip Code Canedlen onte11 wlll be ehlpped from Canada et a ellgf'IUy tllghlf price. If you wlah a half·prlce &-month Introductory eullecrfptlon to PARENTS' MAGAZINE for SUI (regularly S3.te), Nftd no money now ••. you wlll b9 blllad liter. Juat check h•re O NI FOLi OVH MUI t NM'T CUTI JU$T SUl (P•te, ...... r.,..). t •o STAMP ..UOlD BUSINESS REPLY MAIL No postlft st.., neceswy if INlltd in the U.S. POSTAGE W1ll BE PAID BY P11renta'. Magazine'• READ ALOUD AND EASY READING PROGRAM P.O. Box 181 BERGENFIELD, NEW JERSEY 07821 f IRST Ct.ASS rmerr "°· 113 IERGEWflflO. ft J. ·-'--------~--------------------- • J • • • • • . Orange Coast NANCY ·* * .. FINAL ·SPORTS HERE COMES THE LAST LEAF OFF THAT TREE IUNDAY, NOVIMln 4, 197:1 -- Tm. Re.;:. U.S. i:'1t C!t .-.411 Pihl~ rese:1.e'1 Cl 19"3 by United Feati.;n•: Syod1c.1I!. Jnc. IT SEEMS TO ·BE FOLLOWING ME GOOD -BYE NOW ---I'M GOING TO MISS YOU ____ ,: .. ' ' . LOCAL WANT ADS :t ·..-.-- • THIN6S LIKE THAT COULD RUIN SPECTATOR Sf'O~TS ... Bv Ernie Bushmiller THAT'S 5 0 C UTE . ' I --~ . . I •• ' I -•. ,... ,I • -l • ' • I O", BC:TTER:: YET, YOVI All'Ef MY' [l&HTHOLA'Se , Hfi.LPIN& MF!: ro :STeei<: MY EMOTIONAL. · 'HIP. PA<ST -'fHE ROCK'>•~=-=::::: AND SHOA 1..$ OF" OKAY L.IFSO ! I ! ~ i \ I I I I ~ ' . : ''':.) :!-• . -<-• I·-) KNOCK IT Of:F ! ' ·' -- . ' I 1.1 I"' .... ' . .,. -·:· :.;)J -. -. c;;J · • e:vercyeooy THINKS OF Me i'HAT WAY! 600DNE'SS, AFrTHU~, 1 HAVE: MY OWN PR:081..EM'7, MY OWN l!'.e'SPON?ll!llLITIE'71 WITHOUT HAVING TO SH/Nia FOIZ THE WHOl.E. ~EST OF THe VVOR:L.O Al..1.. THI< TIM!!! ' - r FleANCINE1 YOIA Alel!. THE . · GvflDIN& L,.1(;1:-lT OF MY 1.IFE : OKA'/1 Wl!'l..L- C.OMPFrOMl~E ... IN F'AGT, 1: ~l!I! YOtA A+ A E'EACON, , -SHO,WIN6,tf11' , 'f'i4.-WllN 1'H~Ol.Ac!iH "f'HE DAl'K Nl6H1 OF ~IF!!!. ,1'./' .... .,: I>. 'U---. ' .. "' """" . -. • -T"HC. NE)(T TIMI< YOV( ciross TH~ S'T"l5T OF L.IFE, 'IOI..{ C.AN Tl-llNK OF ME A? A 81.INK- ING-"WAL.K -DON'T WAL.Ii'" -SIGN. l!IUT "THAT'~ Al.L.1 Al!:'THIAll:, " .... ·~-1 ~IMPl.."Y /.IAVEN'T GOT ENOl..\GH CUIC:"ENT F"Olt ,._YE'ftYl!IODY .... !y Hank Ketcham . Jri; ,AN INVI TAT ION , Nar E>V'\C'T IY -fTS . COMETH I NG SPECIAL Is c;Hi:c ~M HAVIN'A ·~3 '·~ p~~T~? , r. ::- ' • HE ACCEPTS WITH J jt.J<;;') /'CCEF'r. • • 1 s ·91-11" MAl<IN ' FUDGE OR COO~IES '. . . " ., . • '°'IJDGE PARKER SAM. AREN 'T YOU I'VE GOT TO GO SEE SOMEONE, STAYING FOR DINNER? :<' ABBEY! I 'LL CALL YOU LATER! I 'M NOT AT ALL 5URE I 'LL BE HERE, MR. DRIYER! WHY ARE YOU CALLING, ROBERTS? DID ,YOUR LAWYER TELL YOU I . DON 'T DO BUSINESS WITH I ... I JUST WANTED YOU TO KNOW ... I 'M READ Y TO GO INTO THAT INVE STME NT DEAL WITH YOU! GIYE ME A CALL WHEN YOU· GET J---.. BACK IN TOWN AND WE 'LL DISCUSS THE DETAILS! AND YOU DON 'T HAVE TO WORRY ABOUT A THING! GO PLAY A GOOD GAME SUNDAY.' ANYONE_ EXCEPT DIRECTLY? SAM DRIVER 'S OUT FRONT, !!>055 ,,, 5AY5 HE WANTS TO SEE YOU RIEiHT AWAY! \ • TELL HIM I 'M NOT INTERESTED IN SEEING HIM! ' \ . .. • • .. ~ " ., MUTT and JEFF® .. I i'HEY HAVE . MILLIONS OF APPLES JN T.HIS ORCHARD.I THEY WON'T MISS IHIS ONE.' i.· T,.4t Mli,k letf•t•;.4 . THE AW 'SHUCKS. POWERS I)M SURE THE ABOVE Sf-Y ; POWERS 'ABOVE THATS . I. WILL STEALING! OVERLOOK ONE LITTLE -.. APPL.E .' • · A McN•wtht Sy•ullc•t•. '••111,• .· ' • ' I • "SALLY BANANAS" f./JJGIH'M Tex(NeV~oa)JoNes . BH'O laK' You ··ToMeeT~~~ /\tlaH Hoss • . ' Cot-.lBoYs Do R1oe DUcKs?U ~ .. -_,.,.. ·~/. • • ' ! . . • • ,, ' ~- " . • • UNTIDY .. TAN<iLEI> ... 08VlotJsLY 'THI: ·l.J TT~f> FSJ..J..OW WAS . · JNVOJ..VSi.> IN SOME SORT OF HIGH·L5VEL.. DECEPTION·· . . ., , ~ .... ~ ,. ' . ·-"' KNoc K IT oFF, • TeX. IM a DUcK. .~aLL ,aHM SoRRY,Ol/ e.oY. You Beel\l a GoOD ClN ' FaJTHFUL Hoss, BUT CIH GoT To F11\\D a ... ' ' ' •.. • ., • By Al Smith CAN You IMAGINE T HAI.' • ·- 1..ooK Ar THESs ANTS RUNNING ,AROUND IN CIRCLES. c~i:A1<1..Y ANrs HAVe A · soc1i::rY ALMOST AS · OR<!i.ANIZ!:D AS OUR QWN.M by Charles Barsotti GooD 1oea, ace-. • • ' ..... - • r • 'i .. -. . ,, ' . 'c r - • T"O"M:SLE~::E::E:CS b Tom K. Ryan t---~---:-~-------i E.VfR SINCE 'iOU FOUND ME, WHE N I . . . · . KNOW WHAT, WAS A LONELY ORPHAN IN TJ.ff; PES ERT, ·MAY I CAL L YOU -SURE ~AN1 f:CHO " COW~OY ?... l'Vf: SORTA IHOUGHT OF YOU AS FAM ILY. YOU ''UNCLE''? ;_, I " ,,.;. . o" < ·' L/11/01 l1.111ale!f'. . flif' fl/f li!~!rlf' /I {Ill' S<fff' b f'Cl'llll'.\ Vt'(f rlo,<,e ... . - ·' . V (0Ar sVJ ~ • . YOU'RE A GOOD EG-G-1 UNCL E IUM~L fWEfl75! ~~~ GUESS WHAi, AUNI HILllEG-ARD? .... I ACCEPT! ( A1uscle ;l1ouse /ear11s fto111 a11 1nf01mt'r tl!af fl711>vrs are 011 fht>;i Wcif to 1 ob ,.111 ex1 /usive jewt'lt.f sfo1r -becorHes ... ' -.. .: ---.. 0 11-f -----~~ ./ . ~_;~ '• !(y111q ,1t /i1r1 eifible . . 'f'r.ed, he g ets 1'o !Iii' sfo1t'! /lcfo1r. //1ero/Jfi1Yf. .. • . -.. ... • • . -a11rl c/evf'14' lock~· . . /11il!Sf'/f 1i1sidl'. f/,r safe frj ,\'111p1 ;;,e, .. ~e1>1. _ ~ 11 ·rA\.:'.£S SOM r.:: RO BBfR~ /l>RE VC-1' To FIG URr.::' OrJ l" · A COMB,I NATION . • . , : .. ... . . . . I • ' -. ' ' •• • C1A.N' '"(OU T_RUST YOU~ EYES! There arr 11 le1 st six differ- enct1 in dr1win1 det1ils belween top and bollom pantls. How quickly Can you find them? Check 1nswers with lhose below. ·A1dwt " 1•01 ·1 ·1u•1•JJIP " 1•11::>•f • ._ ·1u•J•JllP. •! 11ooq1•11::>0.-•t ·~ru.i ",.~l••A 'C ·1u•1•111p " nz ·z: .,.,,,,.fW '! IJW.L · 1 ;••::>UIJIJJla 1 , • ---Ila/ Kaufman :C - @R ® OARD ----- WHAT .:nines up Jll U~I corne 1lnwn. .:orrcl·I".' Hu! nol nl"fl'~Sitri ly in !he s.1n1c plarC". a~ 1l1·n11111~1ra1 rd h1·rr. Plal·c a l1ghtv.1•1gh1 •hair alop a ---BULLETLN • CAUG l·rr NAPPING? An tnelisbm.an , wbo ,..ent tn bed on Sept. 12. 17 52 i nd h1d a good nltht's sleep, awo ke on Sept. 14. Wh y w1s lh1t? '•IPUltl-3 u•,..ul•J!) •141 p.11dnp• ll~l ll 'll •Ill A•p l•lll uo ''"" 11 • Whir h letter or lhP alphabet is 8 bird1 An in~ecl'! A body o r wa!Pr? Ansv.•f'r quk-kly. . . e S itn at 11 balky rlev1tor: TAKE l F CAN"r YOU A STAIRS 1·•1E ~OKE TAKF.. Un scramb le words to make sense. e !ma llumrlum n1med Snow"WhilP's pals, the SP.Ven rlwarrs, as (ollows: Nifty, Shifty, Swifty, Duffy, Tuffy, Doc itnrl Bashful. Which names ate wro n~~ •(A:•dnn 'Adt;tfS '.tdwrun 'Jiltd"J! 'Jict•AUS) aAy ts~ "llJ. !<hret or nc w~rarl'r . .-------,:------,..-r-~-----, ~~~rc'r:q ,~' :~1;,~e \~~11; I ~ .9 7 & 1 I j 9• .., •• 'i . chai r ovrr thl' papt'r J• • ~/, -~~~~~I l<d from th• 31~"1 i." ., 1 ;:."" ~ ., ,.., No w. ~li r !ht• r alrn o f •10 "!,0 "' _ .. your i.lrnnge'I hantl 1111 -t'i • ·• ~ ~ tier a 1ilde c~e or lht • ·12 .:hai r\ S<tdl, anU chat- . lcni;c your ;idvrr~a rirs • 11 20 .. 17 • t o push !he .:h.:iir Un111n-. w;,anJ on to the new~­ papl'r. • This might stl'rn riJic-. JS ulou~l y ~i1nplE , except • ' th;al as they attempt In h d d ·16· .!B .21 o pus o wnwar . you ). exert slight prrssurc ~-~~----'"'~------------' sidew;a y~ .. ~wingi ng the SOCK-EROO! Jt's obvioui who•1 t1k.inc it on the chin aboYe, chair out of line . but who'1 dolinc out the punishment? Connect dots to rind out. (C 1973 Kini :Fir.• turir.1 Syndic1te, lnc.) f / • ""f A 13·13 TIE! IF ONLY WE'D HAD TIME F'RTM' •IELD GOAL! WE'D MAVE BEAT TM ' 4Q'fRS! DOH 'T RE·PLAY THE GAME IN THE LOCKER ROOM . LET 'S GRAB A SHOWER !'IND GO TO DINNER 1 AH 'M SCARED ABOUT 'TOMORROW, JOCK! AMBLER HAS RETURNED TO HOME 91'\SE, AND THE FOOTBALL GAME HAS . ENDED IN A TIE.,. •. ---u-·----- • • 7 3 MILKY WAY! Add lheSf' eolor~ neatly rnr a surprise piclwe •· hove: 1-Red . 2-U . bluP. 3-Yellow. 4-U . brnwn, 5-0k. brown ~ 6-U .. gref?n . 7-Dk. blue. Leave unnumbered Sf!tments unmlored. SPElLBINDER! SCORE 10 points for using all the Jetter1 in the word below to form t""1 romplete words: MEDITATE .... -. -. -. TON tc0re 2 point.a ucb ,or all --:-----. . • wordl of ·four letters-or more found amonc Ot.e litten. -1'r7 lo 1ton: at least se P•lnta. . ·•wn "•1•0 :w•Ow• .,q1•0tf "0 . You've BEEN THRO\JGMIT BEFORE.' YOU 'RE COMIN' win~ ME L ll<E YOU PROMISED, RIGHT?'YOIJ PROM ISED, .:roc1<! , ··~ ~ ... "'">' .~ ' ' ' ,....... . .. . . AH 'M SCARED oi:"n; BUT I NEED TH ' LOOT.1 AH'.M . RETIRll<I' AFTER THIS 12 YE ARS IN THe LE AGue . 3 TIMES ALL PRO. NOTA BAD RECORD TO RETIRE ON 1 SEASON I CINDY HERE, BOSS ! YOU'vE AN /\PPOINTMEl<JT AT_C.C. D., AND 0 1 AT TEN A.M. TOMORROW . ... MY FIRST OAY BACK IN TOWN, AND I HAVE ro FACE A C.C.D.,ANDO'CREATIVE ' CONl'ERENCE .' ARCIHllllE THIS S OLVES THE FUcL CRIS IS , BUT WHERE 'S 1 HE HORSE? NO HORSE! I PUTAN ELECTRIC MOTOR IN IT/ ·:s // @[1!)'£ :_ . .f7'EAV.t'# ..... · I ' : .. I .. I'M MOVING.'. ' • YOU JUST PULL O N T HE REINS TO START IT / THE HARDER YOU PULL, THE. FASTER IT GOES .' COOL .1 PAl<..K IT IN FRONT O F THE SCHOOL. IT'S A C INCH NO ONE WILL STEAL IT/ WHOA! WlfQA,TH6~El ~,,,, l!lf'JI' tnl\Mn" ,, .. \ . BoB WELL, I DECLARE! WHAT'S THIS LOVELY OLD BUGGY DOING HERE? MY •.• TH IS TAKES ME BA CK TO WHEN I WAS A GIRL! GIDOAP, I NA POI.EON. 'e,u1 YOUR G LASSES ARE OKAY/ I TELL '(()U I COULDN'T E VEN SEE A HORSI.' ' I , f VOU MEAN VOU MUST l-IAVE r=OQGOTTEN IT . ~ '7 Tl-l15 WAS ON Tl-IE F LOOR: 01" SM ELTS SUBMEQGEO CAQ . - -.,)!' , ~< I \ '" ~/ \. .. . . ~-·0 ., \ . \ .,) 'lou call th is a spr inkle: / , , Af'J C' 11,\;\ L.AT'e FO!<: A.IJ APPO l/.J T- Mr::NTf • ... ' AND Tl-l lS I S SMELT's GUN , R EGI STERED IN 1-1 15 NAM E. FOU ND ON Tl-IE CAR S£A.T. IT BOR:E NO FING PRINTS. I'd li ke to play, I ~~~-the weather ~cast is bad ' I S WE:At<.! ' ... '' .. ·-··· -··-' - ... Wl-l l T~ Sl-l1J:2TS A"2f:: SJ...OOMIN' CHIL.1 MAGNETS! * I 1' -" YOU KILLED SMELT W ITl-I 1-llS OWN GUN . If 1t ra in s, we II , wish we had staved home and wat ched the qame, ----~ Fracas . £VER'/ Tl-I ING !-IE EA T:5-e.C'E 5 TO /.-11:3 STC'A1AC H1 C'!v2 WAY OR ANc1T/./E=.R' • Theres a TV in the clubhouse. We can watch it in there. 1/ The power is off so \ • ( Wl-IY, o~ COURSE , \' By 0 1-1 , NO~ AMO l'VE I 8E£N T R Y INC.. I TO LOCl\.TE UIM , "') ~}-.) '::,;.~ ' ~...Q. ,) ~ ;.:;br I ' - Oh -oh 1 Just as I thouqht f Relax' Its ~ · just a little sprinkle. .:11 11 ------- Gus Arriola . . , I , .. 7 ~ " • • • • • • • St 'Hel1 re lea loll•. ')'est 1He !WY, ~m aDd t ~d. t.Neit st., Garci flve . 30, a tern, ;Au liken Siltur iiolat' !Iii '"' ·e.• t mater sia<u .•. of.111 san •• . ,. ' I ' • 1.