HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-09-19 - Orange Coast Pilot. ,
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.,THURSDAY, AFTERNOON, SEPTEMBER. 1,; 1974
'IOt.. t1, NO. *-J SllCTIONt. M ,Mii .t
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• • • •
Sought Nixon • Ill Watergate
-
Searchers Failed Lehin~s Big Top
Suspect Seized ..
Riding in Taii
. '
Police from five cities used a
helicopter .and police dogs in a rruiUess
90--minute search for an arined robbery
suspect in Fountain Valley early today,
then captured him two hours later as
he tried_ to flee in a taxi_
George Waldron Pennell, Jr .. 28, of
Santa Ana, was turned over to COsta
Mesa police after he was arrested by
Fountain Valley officers at 5 a.m. today.
Newport Postal
Offices Swamped
In 'Mail Stor11i'
,
He was wanted in connection with
the 12:40 a.m. holdup of a Costa Mesa
gas station at 3006 Harbor Blvd. police
reported.
In addition, polil'e say he is suspected
of robbing a Westminster man at gun-
point, taking bis car and wallet at 12:14
a.m.
The Westminster robbery OCCUITed at
the home 0£ John Vilburn at 13582
Portsmouth Circle, l>olice reported.
The suspect then allegedly went to
Costa Mesa, where he robbed a Mobil
station or $40 at gunpoint. It was the
second Mobil station holdup in Coma
Mesa in as many nights.
In the predawn ·hours Wednesday, a
man entered the station at Harbor
BouJevard and Gisler Avenue and
escaped with $116 before 'Deing captured
later by police. .
By ~A!Yo.~~~~ · Fountain Valley police spotted Pennell
A Newport Beach postal official ad-in the stolen car as he allegedly was
mitted Wednesday 'that an "almost in· fleeing the Costa Mesa robbery and
calculable" number of recent service was speeding across Warner Avenue
complaints resulted in a local "state in Fountain Valley.
of emergency" being declared., Pennell turned off his car lights, pollce
'
, ~Oy "lttl Stiff ,.hit•
As a result, said Dan Phillips, a~t reported, but officers were able to track
90 ,postal clerks were assigned tG-bour him by the occasional flash of his brake
six-day work weeks "until further lights. • notice." · Pennell turned into a hoosing tract
Phillips, who is Brea'• postmaster, has at Newhope Street .am Warner, police
Capistrano Beach's tenacious camper Richard W.
Lebin obviously hasn't capitulated to the foes at the
county seat, as this tent -his new home -attests.
Unem ployed local man lived in old Cadillac camp
car on this spot before county officials ordered it
hauled away. Undaunted, he has found another way oo keep out the damp night air. County legal coun·
sel says tent is illegal and Lebin seems headed for
yet another round in battl~ over squatter's rights.
been assigned interim duty at the reported_, than abandoned the car on
Newport Beach Post Office until a 'rin Moun~in Drive.
replacement for retired · postmaster-Officers aided by the Costa Mesa police
Payne Thayer is named. helicopter, and pollce dogs from
"We've just about dug our way .out Wesbninsteli aM Huntington Beach, as
and plan to end tt Friday," Phillips well as olflcera from Santa Ana and Idaho Indians Declare
said of the emergency situation. Costa Mesa, searched the area for 90
He went on to say the pcll!ltal service minutes then abandoned their e(forts.
•
crisis was touched oft by an unexpected Police notified all·night markets in
deluge of mail hitting"the Newport lleacll the area of Pennell's descrlptiooi,
office over Ute three-day Labor Day A clerk notified. oUic"ers at -about• 5
weekend. -a.m. that a man rQatching Pennell's 'Wµr' in Larul .Dispµte
"Wt;, dm't know where it all came ~ption was,outslde hi!: market. When
from' but sud'"'1ly ;11 "1ts <:llristmas police .arrived, they spotted a 1axicab BONljERS FERRY, Idaho· (UPI)
alll•vel-again,'"§aid 'Phll!ipS: ', '' leaving, , the~'lf<>P.pod It on Newbope A small Indian tribe Ignored a govern· The veteran eostal olflci,al 'l!~tiol!!ld· Sln:et l)Ol'lh_ .._Bou. Avenue. that the iRflaUOo imf)act has "'5tl!Wf · Ol!kers li!pOr!ed Pennell wu amsted ment peace gesture today, vowing to
In manpo""r lludgels be'\nf'"cut 10· the . i°'°!Jt f~rthe~ incident. go ahead wilb its war OYer U million
bare•bones P f · , ~ , , '} ' PO!ice claim they found a .:12 caltber acre& of aboriginal land aelud 120 years
Comeque0t1y: be tAid:,Jii,re w.S na plsto\ ih' bis possession as weff.as about ago. .
ffi!b>powor reMl'fe .U.ndini by to throw $40 4ash. The rn members of the Kootenai tribe
people together .. What we want will
lake congressional action." He added
the "war" wou1d start on schedule.
(See INDIANS, P•ge AZ).
Target Practice
ilj. tbe .llreech' wli<jo the ~ Illy --"----"-~-------said they would set up lour road blocks
mill deluge hJ'~ f:. ' " ~ -and tollict· tolls from those passing B • A
-.A few ~ -· the ~·~1 ·Jl'-4.RIJUA.NA SMf>K-£:-ll1roU1ji.Jlle area starting at midniehtc -· ' nngs rrests Btloh olllce ;, s 1raa~; ~ the 'la1 . • \ . The Kootenais demand that Bureau -
" ~' tlperntl al pn>Cedurcs, inclucli1181 • POLL. (]TED SKIES of Indian Affairs set uide 128,000 ocres JACKSON, Mich. (AP) -·Police say
Ca·rr1er' -·"~s,"·~e 'a'•j.,·t·•,·a...:.-'•••' • ' · ' ' ofthedl puted1-~1 ....... 1o11: w'"'' u ~ .... ,,nu_ s ,.uu or use as a reserva-two men who decided to test their
to Phillips. 1 ' Uon • im:l lite tbem • cash , payment. marksmanship by shooting at flies with "That meant our carriers were in SAN DIEGO (API -The Na'f)I burned They said this would compensate them a ·pistol have been charged with reckless
the process of mastering new ro~s ton~ of marl1uana on at . least two. oc--for the Jana ~en by the government. firing or a gun.
and our clerks were learning new cas!OnS in which alt1>ollution regulations Bureau C cfm m Issi oner Morris Officers said LC. Olney and Dennis
distribution patterns when we were.. hit were Violated, says ~ Diego Ci>unty's 'nlompson. 1M1 ln a telegram to tribal Burger opened ttk fly--shoot at. the
ao hard," Philllps said. health dlrector. Chairman Amelia Trice Wedne3'1a~ that .)luburban Garage Wednesday after hav·
How severo was the cr1sls that touclled Dr. J . .B· Askew, who also la an his agency was reviewing thei sitl&lltlon ing a rouple of drinks.
off declaration o1 the stale of emergency! omce,r ol the ~r Pollution Control and """Id reply · soon, to the tribe's Three garbagemen who had to dodge
"See thal pllone!" Phillips asked •• District, •Id a •ingle<hambor inciJle. demallds. _L nying lead called police.
he noddff l'!"'•rf3 the tele~ •~tlrir ' '\IOI'. 1 North Jsland .Na,.i Alt ·S~tlon I Kootenai spokesman Doug Wheaton Police said there was no Indication
oo his desk, "lt h4s lwo)in~mlng ·ltnes watused·ln.J~. • said the wire "80Unded like the bure$11 that the some io. shots fired during
(See POSTAL. P-qe .. \%) 11 trying to fonnulale a plan and get the epl!Ode broughl 4own any Oies.
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5 Meet Death
As Plane Goes
Down in Flames
,. RIVERSIDE (API -A slnglHngine
plane flying in dense fog crashed in
names today, killing all five persons
aboard, inclu'ding a chi.Id, authorities
&aid.
The Cherokee, en route here from
Las Vegas, slammed into the Santa
Ana River bed, which runs paralle~ to
runways at nearby Riverside Airport but
aNut a mile away -allout nine miles
-south west of Riverside .
Names o( the vtclilps were not im·
mediately known . It spokesman for the
Riverside COunty sheriff's department
said, ''The bodies are so badly burned IL may be many hours before we can
tell who they were."
1"tle s~rlff's ~kesm'an said conditions
were very bad !or visual ·nying -"It
was very foggy and visibility was 'way
down,"
A 8Pokesman for the Federal Aviation
Administration in Los Angeles said the
plane wa on an approach to the airport.
lte said visibility was reported a$ one.
half ~ile In fog.
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Trial
•
Subpoena
Going to
Clemente
\\'.ASmNGTON (UPI) -s p. c I a I
'Vaterga te prosecutor Leon Jaworski has
Subpoenaed former President Nixon as
a prosecution witness in the Watergite
cover-up trial of six fonner Ni;rnd
a~iates. it was announced today.
Nixon has already been subpoenaed
by his former No. 2 aide, John D.
Ehrlichman, to appear as a defense
)Vitness in the trial scheduled to . begin ~t. I. ·
Jaworski's office confirmed that the
subpoena was issued Wednesday night
and will be served on Nixon at his
San Clemente estate by FBI agents.
"He's been subpoenaed tC? testify/'
a spokesman for Jaworski said. •:we
expect him ta.testify."
The Jaworski subpoena calls for Nixon
to appear in U.S. District Judge John
J . Sirica's courtroom Oct. I, even though
he may not be called to the witness
stand for seve'ral days.
A spokesma n for the special prosecutor
said its subpoena will not conflict -with
Ehrlicfunan's subpoena -indicating the
possibility _tlixon might appear both for
the prosecution and defense.
There has been speculation as to whether Nixon will actually comply with
the subpoenas and appear in person
because of reports that he is in poor
health and deeply depressed about his
loss of the presidency.
Juye Nixon Eisenhower said this week
that bet:. father was expected to .be
hospitalized soon for a new flareup of
phlebitis in his ~eft leg. She. Oew to
(See SUBPOENA, Page A%)
Orange (;eaet
Weailler
Friday will be a carbon copy of
today, according to the weather
se~ice, with ovem~ht low ch>ud.s
and fog along the coast cleariog
by. midday to swmy skies. Beach
highs near 70 rising to the mid·
80s inland.
INSWE TODAY
A 79-year-old U1i4D111 R\JISJ}J!
hcu kd 35 affairs since her hus·
batid died 23 year& ag~ '"ne
ages of her mates ranged jrom
15 to 32. See story, Page A12.
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uil Storm, Pu"ts Newpori
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Post Ollic.e •on Alert ~ -
THURSDAY, AFTERNObN, .SEPTEMBER 19, ·"i4
~OL. ,,, HO, W. I SICTIOMS, • PAGIS
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Sought
Searclaers Failed
Suspect s ·eit·e#
• Riding Ill Taxi
Police from five cities used a
helicopter and police dogs in a fruitless
~ 90-minute. search for an armed robbery
suspect in Foontaln Valley early today,
then captured him two hours later as
be tried to nee in a taxi.
George Waldron PennelJ, Jr., "8, of
Santa Ana, was turned ·over to Costa
Mesa police after he was arrested by
Fountain Valley officers at 5 a.m. today.
Neivpo rt Po stal ·
Offices Swam ped
In 'M ail Stor1n"
. /
He was wanted ln conned.ion with
the 12 :40 a.m. holdup of a Costa Mesa
gas .station at 3006 Harbor Blvd. police
reported. /
In addition, police say he Is suspected
of robbtng a Westminster man at gun-
pointr-talting-his car and wallet aJ~12;14
a.m.
The Westminster robbery occuJ'Ted at
.-the home of John Vllbum at 13582
Portsmouth Circle, police reported.
The suspect then allegedly went to
Cmta Mesa, where he robbed a Mobil
station or $40 at gunpoint. It was lhe
secood Mobil station holdup in Costa
Mesa in as many· nights.
In .the predawn hours Wednesday, a
man entered the station at Harbor
Boulevard and Gisler Avenue and
escaped with $116 before being captured
By GARY GRANVn.LE later by pelice.
01 .. 01111 ,.1'°' 11111 Fountain Valley police spotted Pennell
A Newport Beach Postal otflcial ad-in the stolen car as be allegedly was
milted Wednesday that an "almOst in-fleeing ' the Costa Mesa robbery and
calculable" number of recent service was speeding ·across Warner Avenue
complaints resulted in a k>cal "state in Fountain Valley.
of ,emergency" being declared . Pennell turned off his car Ughts, police
A3 a result, said Dan Phillips, about ,reported, but officers were able to track
90 postal clerks were assigned IO-hour him by the occasional flash of hlJ' brake six~ay work weeks "until further lights. ·
·notice." PenDeil turnect·tnto a hoUstng tract
••
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• • • •
• Ill Watergate
Lehin"s Big Top
D•llY l"l .. t Sl11f l"lltto
hauled away. Undaunted, he has found another way
to keep out the damp night air. County legal coun·
sel says tent is illegal and Lebin s~ms headed for
yet another round in battle over squatter's rights.
--..
Trial
Subpoena
·-Going to
'
Clemente
WASHINGTON (qFJJ -Spe c I a f
Watergate prosecutof Leon Jaworski has
Subpoenaed fonner President Nixon as
a prosecution witness in the Watergi'tt.
cover-up trial of sjx fonner Nixon
associates. it was announced today.
Nixon has already been subpoenaed
by his former No. 2 aide. John D.
Ehrlichman,-to appear as a defense
witness in the trial scheduled to begin
Oct. I.
Jaworski's office confinned that the
subpoena was issued Wednesday night
and will be servt'd on Nixon at his
San Clemente estate by FBI agents.
"He's. been subpoenaed io testify,''
a spokesman for JawOrski said. "We
expect him to testify." 'rhe Jaworski subpoena calla for Nixon
to appear in U.S. District Judge John
J. Sirica's courtroom Oct. r, even though
he may not be called to the witness
stand for several days.
A spokesman for the special prosecutor
-said its-subpoena-will no,t conflfct _with
Ehrlictunan's subpoena -indicatiog lhe
PQSSibility Nixon might appear both for
the prosecution and defense. ,
There has been speculation as, to
whether Nixon will actually co~y with
the subpoenas and appear in --pvrson
because or reports that he is in poor
health and deeply depressed about his
loss of the presidency. Phillips, who is Br$'apostmaster, has af Newhope Street and Warner , pollce
been assigned interim duty at the reported, than abandoned the car on
Newport ' Beach Post Office until a Tin MO\Dltain Drive.
replacement for retired postmaster Pfficers aided by the Costa Me!I police
Payne Thayer is named. helicopter, and police dogs from
"We've just about dug our way out Westminster and Huntington Beach, as
and plan to end it Friday," Phillips well as officen from Santa Ana and
Capistrano Beach's tenacious camper Richard W.
Lebin obviously hasn't capitulated to the foes at the
county seat, as this thnt -his new home -attests.
Unemployed local "man lived_ in old Cadillac camp
car on thjs spot before county officials ordered it
Idaho Indians Declare
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5 Meet Death
As P lane Goes
Down in Flames
Julie Nixon Eisenhower said lhis Y:eek
that her father was ex~ted to be
-hospitali7.ed soon for a new nareup of
_ phlebitis in his left leg. She flew to
(See SUBPOENA, Page AZI
said or the emergency situation. Costa Mesa, .searched the .are.a for ao
He went on to say the pcstal service minutes then abandoned their efforts.
crisis was touched off by an unexpected Police notified all-night markets ln 'w ' • L nd D •
deluge of mall hitting the Newpert Beach the aree of Pennell'• description. ar f.~. a· zspute office over the three-day Labor Day A clerk notified officers at about 5 I ft _
weekend . a.m. that a man matching P..ennell's 1 ~ , , ~ 1,
"We doo't know whtire it all came description was outside his market. When 1 rrom bUt suddenly lt was Christmas · Wlice arrived~ they spotted a taxicab BONNERS FERRY, Jdaho (UPI)
II V r g · " Id Phlll' JJaving, then stopped ·lt on Newhope . a o e a a1n, sa 1ps. A small I~ian tribe 1annred a ~vem-The veter1iln postal official mentioned Street oortH=· AvenUe. 'f"' .,.~
that the lnOatioo impact has resulted Officers.re ~ ,Penneli 1'~ .. ar.ruted . ~ ~ g~ture today, vowing to
in manpower budgets bcinJ.· ~·cu{ tg ,Lhe .. , without' furtbe'r--t. .. go •&bead WUb it• war over 1.6 million
people together. What we want llill
take congressional action." He added
the "war'' would start on schedule.
tSee INDIANS, Page AZ)
bare bonea." •. · Polk:e claim 1h<Y' found'• lt"caflher icrea of Jborilll!a\ land I seized 120 years
Conaequently, be said, there Was no pistol In his ~0$ as.1'efi u 'abclllt ago. ~ 4 • ' T p •
manpew.r ~e uncling by to throw 144 cash. . , ' • ' . ' The fl mim6en of the Kootenai tribe 3f2:et l'aCtiCe
in the breech wbe.n the Labor'" D.ay • • said fbey w~d Set up four road blocks '-'
mail dellll' hit. · ' and d>llect Ioli, fro91 those passing B • A ./
A le• ...... before the Newport JllA·Rl/UANA SM~KE l~gh the .e~~i.rting at midnight. . rmgs rrests
Beach office was roCked by' the mail ' • ·1·ne Koo~ 4emand that Bureau
!IOl'lll, operational procedures, lncludiJlg POiLfJTEJ} 'S'N"ES , of liidlan A~ 1et .isffje 128,000 ucru JACKSON, Mich. (AP) -Police say can1er routes, were adjusted, aCCOl'dihf; i · of the diS:puted land tor use as a r~ota· two men who decided to· test their
to Phllli)JI. .s.w OIF.GO <A.Py-'MIO N.;, blnill lion end881d~· tl\en> '!..'.,'sli sa"re~ th'! mad<sman!hlp by sbooling •.t mes with th~~~~~ ~:st::J~~w"~: tom ol .mftjJll!im ,oa at le-' two <oe-~ ltntr~~ u;'~medt. .. -.· ~tf:!/':~~ clwged with r~klets
and our clerks were learning new calrions m 'Which al1"1>')11uticm regulatlolw B\lreau Comm Is s Ione r Morris·· OfQccrs said. L.C. Olney and Dennis
di51.rlbutlon pattern.111 wheri we were hit were vl~lated, 18Y1 San Dieii:o ~nty'• 111ompson said Jn n telegram to tribal B~rger opened tho fly-shoot it !he
90 hard," Phillips Sf!d,... · health director. Chairman Amella 'Trice Wednesday that suburban Garage Wednesday after hav-
llow severe waS t,,e cil\l~:that ~1Ched Or. J ,, "i:\.#_ew. who ajso Is .an . bis agency wu reviewing the situat1on ing a couple of drinks. offdeclar1Uonoltl\CsLat~or'emtrgericyt o~icer ,of trte1 Alrt ~ollutlon Control and would reply soon to the tribe's 1'hrre garbaj:tmen who had to dodge
"Sec <hat plio/iO!''. Phllllps "ked •~ District,. '!lfd\~' •lngle'dlamber I~< cle111andll , flying lead called pellce. •
hr. nodded toworcls"ihc telepbone slttipg • rator at North'lsland Naval AlrStadon · Kootenai spokesman Doug Wheaton Police sald thert wo.a no lndication
on bis d .. k. "It bas two lncomlntit llrm~ .wqs used il!'.-1'!1'· • .. '8kl the wire "'4Unded like th< bur••• that the .Ome 70 shots fired during
(S.e l'OOTA/-, PAge 'All . "' r ' ii trying to formulate a plan and get !he epl!Odc brought down any flies.
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RIVERSI DE (AP) -A si ngle-engine
plane fl ying ln dense fog crashed in
flames today, killing all Cive persons
aboard, including n chlld, aulhorities
said.
The Cherokee, en route here from
Las Vegas, slammed into . the Santa
Ana River bed, which runs parallel to
runways at nearby Riverside Airport bul
about a mile away -about nine miles south west of Riverside.
Names of the vlctimB were not im-
mediately known. A spoki:wnan for the
Riverside County sheriff's depai1men
wid, ''The bodies are so badly burned l~ may be many hours More we can
tell who they were.'' .I
The she.rlrf's spokesman said condltio11s were very bad for visual Oying -"It
was very foggy and visibility was 'way
down.'' .
A .... pokt.'Sman for the Federal Aviatloi\
Administration in l.os Angeles said the
plane wa oo an approach tO th& airport.
lit sa1d vlslbllity was reported as onc-
hail mlle In fog.
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Weath e r ·
Friday will be a carbon copy of
today, aCC(lrding to the v.·eather
ser...,ice. with ovemighL low clouds
and tog along the coast clearing
by midday l() sunny skies. Beactl
highs near 70 rising to ltte mid-
80s inland.
INSIDE TODAY
A 79-year-old 1oidow says she
has had 35 affairs since.her hus-
ba"ft'd di~d 23-l/i!ar! ugo. Tlte
ages of her mates ranged from
15 to BZ. See storv. Page Al2.
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......_.~ 11
A DAIL V PILO'T ST
Rips
Honduras; 200 l(illed
Hurricane Fifi
\
TEGUCIGALPA , Honduras (UPI) -
Hu.rricane Fifi struck the northern coast
of HondUras today witn 13()..mile winds,
S1or1n tides ri nd torrential rains which
left a trail of d('ath and destruction
in the nation's worst storm in a century.
Honduran .:tuthorities sai:I the death
toll is expet·tcd to exceed 200, and that
in the region aroWld the city of La
Ceiba alone, 100 bodies have been
counted. They estimated 100 other
persons died else.where along the coa st
Apparently most of the dt>aths were
caused by drdwning.
1 After smashing through Honduras, Fifi
rumed its full force towards the tiny
caribbean country of Belize and \Vas
expected to hit there this D.fternoon.
)[osl of the damage in Hondurlll!I ~·as
from fioodlng, with property and Cl'QP
damage going into the hundreds ol
,thousands of dollars.
Fifi devastated banana plantations,
rice fields, bridges and highways, mowed
down houses, and buildings of poor con·
slruction which could not withstand the
flooding and the hurricane winds.
Among cities reporting damage \\'ere
San Pedro Su1a, La Cciba , Tela, Puerto
Cortes. Trujillo, Puerto Castilla, Guajaca
and the Bay Island (Islas Bahia) off
the coast.
Honduran g o v e r n m en t authorities
calculated that one4hird of the country
-comprising the nation's richest
agricultural zone -wa s affected by
the stonn, although Fifi's rains covered
Kennedy Candid
W oultl Discuss Personal Tragedy
HOBART, Ind. -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy says that if he de-
cides to run for president he will answer any questions raised about
Chappaquiddick.
The 1t1assachusetts Democrat, here Wednesday for a .$100-a-
plate Democratic fund-raising dinner, sa'id he would "respond to
questions and do the best l could" on the controversy surrounding
the accident.
" • Mary Jo Ko~chne drowned when a car driven by Kennedy
plunged of! a bridge into deep water off Chappaquiddick Island in
July 1969.
He '!aid, "I have indicated it was a very deep personal tragedy.
I have aCcepted full responsi bility for it and full regret for the in·
cident. I would respond to any questions."
Delllonstrators who said they opposed a possible presidential
bid by Kennedy, marched outside when he appeared at a $100-a-plate
fund-raising dinner for Lake County Democratic candidates,
., ,.They also sang "My Country 'Ti s of Thee." while ·Kennedy
spoke. "Nobody Drowned in \Vatergate," one of the signs carried by
.. the demonstrators said. "' ,.,
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~-v~mher Ballot
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~iR<,wlands Not Guessing
.,, --
:·tlutcome of Tax Voting
By TERRY <XlVll.LE
-:f "-~ 01 t11e DlllJ P'lltl St•ff
.~'City Administrator Dave Rowlands .... hll:t· wilUrJg to predict the out.come of
a ~rgCb -·,transfer tax election in Hun· ~~yitr. ~ch until c.fter voters cast ~~ .]iali3t.S on a related issu~ Nov.
· .• 'November is the critical election,"
RowlandS. said in an interview. "lf the
majority Of the people say they favor
a lraab coiled.ion fee and a higher
utility tax , then the council will give
that colisideration. •
"But if the November election turns
the other way {favoring a transfer tax),
the city can use that for its argument
in the March election ."
On Nov. 5. voters will have a choice
between taxes. They can either support
the real estate transfer tax. or advise
the council to drop it and impose a
monthly trash collection fee and increase
the already existing utility tax.
In March, there will be a straight
"yes" or "no'' ballot on which the con-
trove rsial transfer tax could be dipnped
and the city prohibited from ever using
_it withoIJJJkst holding an election.
The November measure is purely ad-
visory and the council is not obligated
to do anything after it, though coun-
cilmen have said they would probably
fol.low the will of the people.
They surprised critics of the transfer
lax Monday night ty giving the go
ahead for the March election, even
ORANGICOAST sr
DAILY PILOT
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Dal~ .. li.t Stiff Plwlt
NO PREDICTIONS
City Aide Rowlands
though they had previously indic::ated
they would not allow such an election
until April, 1976.
Shirley Commons, president of the
11untington Beach-FOWllain Valley Board
of Realtors, said her group, which fought
the transfer ta:r, is quite happy with
the March election.
She said the realtors may not take
any stand on the November issue.
•·rtie board of directors will meet
Tuesday to discuss whether we want
to take any publi c stand on the
November issue," Mrs. Commons said
today. "I'm inclined to ignore it. It
doesn't mean any!hlng -purely ad·
visory."
Rowlands, however. feels L h e
November vote ts critlcal In determining
how the people really feel aboU1. met~
of taxing.
Mked what he would do ln March,
If the people knock out the transfer
tax. Rowlands said he'd rather not tackle
that until he has to face It.
"We t\ave a ti&ht b)Jdgt!l now llnd
I personally wouldn't recommend any
cutbacka. But 1r the city council wanu
to do that, 1111 do whatever they direct ,"
he said.
Meanwhile , aa the debate continues,
so dots tbe tr1n!fe:r ta~,, City Tre~surer
Warrtn Hall !lays the city has so far
collected abOut $80,000 to $90,000 over
the first six weeks It ha!I betn in effect.
The w will be coUecied unlll thl!: oul -
come of the March election Is known.
or councllmen order 1 change.
·-•.
'
Ylrtually the entire country.
Dnergeney relief committees were
rushing aid to affected areas.
At Puerto Cortes, Honduras' only oil
refinery was reported isolated by flood
waters.
V<eathennen said that on IU present
course Fifi's winds will sweep inland
over tbe 900themmost Up of Belize, just
south of Punta Gorda, a city of 7,000
persons. Tbe Belize government ordered
hurricane ')recaution.! throughout the
country, especially in the southern
coastal sector.
Dr. Neil Frank, chief of the National
Hurricane Center in ~tiami, said Fifi
was the "worst hurricane to affect the
north coast of Honduras this ~tury."
Dogs Still
Beating Bush
For Arsonist
Search teams and tracking dogll from
two COWlUes were still beating the brush
in rugged Sanla Ana Canyon today,
hunting for a man suspected of starting
at least one major brush fire in Orange
County last Sunday.
A spokesman for the Orange County
Fire Department said half a dozen expert
trackers with dogs in addition to about
two dozen other officers are prfWling
the mowitains near the Glen Ivyt Boys
Ranch in Riverside County.·
"He was last seen a few days ago
in this vicinity," the spokesman saij:t.
"He apparenUy stole some clothing and
shoes from the ranl'h laundry so we
aren't sure now what he is wearing." •
The ranch is a former resort hotel
now used to house juvenile delinquents.
The only person who bas seen the
suspect up close was a state forest
ranger who fired several rifle shots
at him Sunday and missed.
He is described as a black man about
six feet tall and ·welghiog about 170
pounds, according lo the spokesman.
It was thoughl at first the suspect
was a prison parolee who formerly work-
ed as a county firefighter tu the fire
department spokesman said that lead
ran into a blank wall when the man
was found asleep in bis borne SJ.mday
nighl
The spokesman said the anon suspect
may have been responsible for eetUng
a fire that burned down a meeting
hall at the boys ranch Tuesday night.
The suspect has been sought since
&mday when be was spotted starting
a fire in Holy Jim ·canyon ini Orange
Cowity that burned about 10 ·Beres. He
may also have started a similar blaze
earlier Sunday in Trabuco Canyon, which
also scorched 10 acres.
From Page Al
POSTAL ...
and they ftver stopped ringing."
Pttlllips said be wxlerstood, telephones
tn three Newport Beach branches al!o
"were kept busy" during the service
cnmch.
"Thanks to the efforts of our people
here we were able to keep pace with
priority mail but out of necessity had to give bulk mailings a back seat," he
added.
Phillips said that in the case of a
postmaster vacancy, such as exists in
Newport Beach, an "officer in charge"
is assigned for a maximum ptriod of
120 days. .
"So far, there's been two of us ass.ign-
ed here and tbe 12lklay period has
expired for both ot us," he said.
Thayer retired in mid-November, 1973.
Phillips said he "can only. assume" a
permanent replacement for him will be
named by the postal service's Selection
Advi.50f}' Board in "the •very near
future."
Volcano Spews Lava
• HONOLULU (UPI) I -Halemaumau
crater on the Kilauea volcano erupted
early today, blasting fountains or lava
60 to 80 feet into the sky. Scientists
at the volcano observatory overlooking
the volcano said the violent erwpUon
followed the pattern of a similar eruption
In Septembe.-t97f.
Sen:ate Votes
Pay Raises
WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -The
Senate, by a vote of 64 to 35,
cleared a pay ral9e ror 3.5 mllnon
ctvUlan and military employes t~
day, handing Ptts.ldtnt Ford'•
economic policy Ju• flrst M?tb4Ck
in Congress.
The Senate ,.fused Ford's ,..
quest, backed by a li1t·mlnute
plea, to postpone the pay lncr~
by three months and cut govern-
"""'' spending by 1700 'mllllon . AJ a. result, the 5.52 Percent lncrea~ will co into effect Oct.
l instead o( .fan. l u l>roP<>Sed
by Ford.
"
'Y-
Mesan Faces
P:rison Term
. fu Slayiug
A Costa Mesa gardener bOoked 'on
murder charges arter he ''11.bbed , his
father ,during an argumen! ii.bout the
~ger man's drinking hdblt> b81 plead-
ed BUl!ty to lester -.... . Orang, County sUperlor COurt Judge
Byron K. McPo!Olan1 -llod, the
acbeduled tt1al ot 'Dali!el Rios Rlv.ni.
23, ·ot 2505 Orange Ave., and aCCepted
h!1 plea of BUllly to tllarges o! volunlary
mans!uaghter. .
He !ellt Rivera to the state's Chino
facillty for a pre-sentencing diagnostic
study. Rivera will be sentenced Dec.
16 to w t cOuld be a slate prison term
of one to 15 years. ·
Rlvera was arrested last May 26
shortly after the fatally wounded Ray-
mond Pena Rivera, 50, crawled fron1
the apartment he shared wlth his son
to a neighbor's hom e. He died before
medical aid could reach him.
Police said Rivera told t h e m he
becaine enraged when his fatper u~
braided him for drinking and further
argued with him over their joint use
of the telephone in the apartment.
The llth Com11aan(lnaent
River;. said he drew his pocket knife,
plunged It twice into the older man's
chest and then slumped into a chair
while his mortally wounded father crept
on hands and knees from the apartment.
Tbe owner of this car obviously doesn't believe Jn signs, but this
one, in the parking lot Of a Mt. Clemens, Mich., church, may carry a
heavier penaltf than a $5 parking ticket. But then, let he who is
without a parking space grab the first spot. 1
'-From l'age Al
IND IAN S ...
Approval Near on Measure
To Saf egua1·d Nixon Tapes
At Bol!e, Idah>, Gov. Cecil Andras
warned that he would send state troopers
lo arrest anyone-attempting to set up
a roadblock.
Wheaton said the governor told him
it was his duty to enforce the State's
laws "regardless of the consequences."·
· But the tribe spokesman said the
governor 's decision would not deter the
Indians. ' -·
WASHINGTOl>I (UPI) ~ A Senate
committee' today was expected to ap-
prove a proposal to preven~ fonner
President Nixon from destroying his
Watergate tapes.
The joint resolution by S e n a t e
Democratic leader Mike Mansfield wou1d
negate the agreement between Nixon
and the White House on the tapes and
make them public .
lf signed by President Ford, the resolu-
tion would have lhe full effect of lav.'.
There b strong support in the House
for a similar. proposal.
The Mansfield reaolutloa !s part of
a growing clamor in . Congress for a
full report on Ni.Ion's actions Jn the
Watergate scandal.
The resolution before t1)e Government
Operations Committee provides that all
the White House documents and tapes
compiled during the Nuon years would
become public properly. All would be
made pUblic except those protected by
national security.
Under the agreement between Nis:on
and the White House, the fonner presi-~
dent would get custody of the tapes
in three years, and would be allowed
to destroy them. The agreement provides
that ithe tapes be de.strayed should N"lXon
die sooner. ·
Two of the most vocal critics are
members of the operations committee
-Chainnan Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0-N.C.),
and Sen. Jacob K. Javits (R-N.Y.).
The comnllttee will later consider
legislation by Javits making all presiden-
tial documents public property.
Two-thirds of Nixon's presidential files
have been shipped to San Clemente,
according to White House chief of staff
Alexa nder M. Haig,
Haig said that 11ab9o1utely nonnal
procedures" are being followed, although
a truck ready to carry away some
of Nixon's papers in the week after
hi~ resignation "was held up tempora rily
to make sure no evidentiary material
was being shipped .
"There was nothing spooky about it ,"
Haig said.
In a clarification later, he reported
that the transfer had been stopped at
the request of J. Fred Buzhardt, one
of ·Nixon's Watergate lawyers. until it
could be detennined that none of the
papers was needed for pending legal
suits.
Hajg denied reports that "bum bags"
and ... paper shredd!'!rs were brought in
to dispose or some of the documents.
Fro1n l'age Al
SUBPOENA ...
San Clemente today to be with him.
Should Nixon's lawyer argue that his
health does not pennit him to tesUfy,
Sirica could appoint a doctor lo visit
the former president to detennine
whether he would stand the rigors of
testifying in a long trial. If Nixon were
found fit to testify but failed to appear,
he could be cited for contempt.
Etu;lichmao and five other tormer Nix-
on aides and associates are scheduled
to be tried on charges of covering up
the Watergate scandal. The sa me grand
jury that lndicted them also named
Nixon as an unindicted co-conspirator.
'Nilofrcannot face criminal c h a r g e s
for any role he might have had in
the cover-up because he was pardoned
by President Ford. But the pardon also
removed Nixon's option of pleading the
5th Amendment.
Wheaton said the situation could
become a repeat of the trouble at Wound-
ed Knee, S.D., where Indians were locked
in combaf with the federal government.
The Kootenai said their tribe did
receive some cash payment for the land
several years ago but ~his was not
enoUgh. Tbey said that despite the
reserv~ion and cash payments they
wanted ishing and bunting rights.
Thompson's wire said: "At the request
of the President, thr bureau is in the
process of preparing a reply to the
Sept. 11, 1974, letter 'to the president
of the United Stales. We are currently
reviewtng the material you have sub-
mitted and will respond promptly."
The commissioner al.!IO said the Ju3ttce
Department has been asked to send
a representative to meetings over the
dispute. •
\Vheaton said at the heart or the
issue was the poverty of the Kootenai$
themselves.
"We are about 300 percent below the
poverty level, only about one-fourth of
this once-powerful nation of native
Americans here have-steady jobs -
most of them earn 'quick money' during
the harvest time," tie explained.
The spokesman said there were several
"enterprises" oo the drawing board once
the tribe is given its reservation and ..the~ would provide economic stability
for the members.
Church Name Chai:ige
MACON Ga. (AP) -The General
Assembly 1of the nine-monlh-Old Na tional
Presbyterian Church. voted overwhelm·
ingly Wednesday to change its na!"e
to the Natiooal Reform Presbytenan
Church. The move came aft.er a com·
plaint from the National Presbyterian
Church and Center of Washingtorl, D.C.,
which said the refonn church's previous
name resemble<:!. its own too cl<>ll!:ly. '
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Democracy Shattered?
Sc1ilesing·er Assails Ford Move in Speec 1i
By ALAN DIRKIN
df !tit Otllr Plltt lltff
Author-hlstorinn Arthur Schlesinger Jr,
has, Criticized provisions of the ~5th
amendment which allowed President
Ford and V i c c President-designate
Nelson Rockereller to be appqlnted to
ofllce rather than elected.
On the eve of the blcentcnnlal, he
said Wednesday, the nation is no longer
headed by a democratic government.
Schlesinger, t~llme winner 6f the
Pulitzer Prize and 1 special assistant
to President Kennedy, spoke at Cal State,
Long Beach, at the opening of a sym-
posium on "The State of American Socie-
ty 1974." The symposium marks the
university's 25th ann1vmary.
Schlesinger called for the repeal of
the 25th amendment. and for the enact-
f!lenl or provisions guarantee!ng an elec-
tion to fill a vacated presidential term.
He al!O attacked the vice presidency
and said the office should be abolished .
Schlesinger reeallecl for stu(tents in
the crowded auditorium that in the same
year that President Nixon resigned
President Georges Pompidou of Franoe
died before his term was completed.
But in leS! than two months, the French
had elected a new national leader. · ,
"Whlch govenunent is more
legitimate? Which is more democratic?"
Schlesinger asked. "The French formula
or ours?"
The history professor, whose topic was
"The Condition of American Democracy:
Thoughts After Watergate," noted that
Ford owed his oHice to his predecessor,
former President Nixon, and reminded
the students that Nixon's prefened
choice for vice ptcsiden\ after Spiro
Agnew was former Democrat John
Connally, fncing triul on chargL'S of
ta.king a bribe in the decisioo over
n11lk price supports.
Schlesinger, who holds nn' endowed
chair at the City University of New
York, said tl>erew a!l ahnost nothing
to be satd for the vice presidency. tn
designating Nelson Rockefeller for the
office, Ford "put one of ttle m06t
hyperactive men in the country into
the greatAst ~job In the country."
He noted that some observers felt
Ford may \field power to Rockefeller,
but Schlesinger do\lbted it because no
Presidellt in the past has ever de legated
responsibility to men he cannot hire
and fire. "li they surmount past objections and
do work out a sharing of the burden,
the inescapable fact remains that the
vice president's oitly serious job is to
wait for the President to die -hardly
a basis for a cordial and enduring
friendship'."
Schlesinger preQicted that Rockefeller
was facing frustration if he hoped to
find pcwer in the vice presidency.
The speaker took issue witb those
who advocated adoption of the British
parliamentary fonn o( government as
a method to prevent future abuses of
Presidential power. Schlesinger argued
that the " British parliamentary system
rather than providing a greater check
on the executive by the legislature tended
to strengthen the executive and weaken
tbe legislature.
This could be done by the executive
'
ctt!Ung or threatening to call elections.
tie said that Watergate would not
have been heard of if it had occ:Urred
In Britain and contended that the coverup
of the Britlsh decision to land paratroops
on Suez 20 years ago was still goin&
Oil,
Schlesinger said that the essential
lesson of \Yatergate was that the balance
\\'as lo.st between presidential poWer and
the accountability of lhe president to
Coogress and the natioq.
The way to restore the balance v.•as
with consciousness raising so that the
rwtion y.·ould have a President who would
hold himself accountable to. a Congress
that would discha~e -is responsibility
In holding the President accountable.
Schlesinger sald that pre&.idential
\\'Orship had led to Watergat~ and that
Americans "should never forget that
the President is simply a politiCan
luckier than the rest, one who has made
ll lo the top of the g~sy.pole."
The professor roundly condemried
Ford's pardon Of Nixon, w h i c h he
saw as destroying national confidenL'e
in the U.S. system of even·handed
justice.
Tending that "Mr. Nixon mistakes San
Clemente for Elba" (the island of ltaly
where Napoleon was exiled) Schles.
inger said that Nixon even in his
resignation did not see his presidency
dying of self-inflicted wounds. "He talked
as if he was the victim of a hit and nm driver."
Reminding the students that in a
messag_e to Congress as President, Nixon
had said that the way to att~ck crime
Eeono11iie Attack
,
"
lhnr1d.iy, Stpl,rnbcr 19 1q74 S OAILY PILOT A·J' .
•neally Bi·g".·
'NO LONGER DEMOCRACY'
Histori1n Schlesinger
By JACK CHAPPEtL
OI Ill• 010y lllltt Sl1tt
A 78-year-old star o( stage, screen
and ring retired Jn nn exclusive local
leisure life communily Wednesday.
The retiring luminary Is not your
average star either. She is a really
big star.
She Is Modoc, a 9,180-pound eiephant. •
Modoc will be spending her golden
years td. Lion Country Safari in Irvine.
At-78 the v.·orld's oldest knO\\'n
elephant. ri.lodoc is the fonner center
ring star of the Ringling Brothers
Barnum and Bailey Circus. She. has
performed in hundreds of movies, was
on<:e ridden by Jimmy Stewart, and
starred recently in the television series
"DaktarL''
"She is leav ing show business. We 're
quite excited about tr.:ving he r here,"
Jerry Kobrin, a Lion Country executive,
\Vas without pity, Schlesinger rejected said .
the argument that Nixon had suffer7 Th~ sprawling prese rve-tourist al· -tract100 already has IO elephants -
enough. all of them A(rican. Modoc is an Indian
"The greater the trust, the greater elephant.
the betrayal of trust and thi.s by all Her1owner, Ralplr D. •lelfcr . sa id he
logic calls for greater punishment," the had papers show.ing that !11odoc w~s
speaker said to resoonding cheers from brought to the Uruted States from India
the students. • '
The. greatest good in the pardoning
of Nlxon that Schlesinger could find
was that Ford, by this one act, had
ended the euphoria surrounded him and
the ofri<:e.
"We must treasure thls skepticism of
presidents v.•hich Ford has restored to
us," SchJesinger concluded. ..
-
in 1898 when she was two rprs old.
t he Gulnnes~ Book of fte#dS lst!
the oldest elephant as Jesslca, 11nother
Asian beast who died In •a zoo in
Australia at the agt of 69. She wai
destroyed because sh• had devclopl>d
ab:.-cesses on her feet and found It pain·
ful to walk. ~lost elephants live to be
about 60.
Helfe r said that P.1odoc, who was
known professionall y as "Mighty Mo."
was appearing in tlle cirC\18 in New
England 30 years ago when a tire broke
-out among the cages hogioos, tigers,
and" other wild anima!S.
Modoc v.•as hitched to se ral of th e
cages and pulled the an· • s to safety.
At Lion Country Safari, she will have
an area all her own .separate front
the other elephants. Being of a different
variety and" much younger. they might
attack 1.1odoc l\'ho long ago lost her
tusks, according to Kobrin. _
ln a ceremony at the park . onetime
home of the late lamented Frasier, Ure
sensuous lion, senior citizens from
nearby Leisure \Vorld drove here to
present Modoc with a wreath or sweet
peas, alfalfa and hay which she promptly
ate.
Ctl fl
~eary' s. Son,
Other Figures
Be1·ate Him
Hii1shaw Urges Halting
0£ Aliens In Job Drive
...
From WI~ Services
---.-SAN FRANCISCO -· Dr. Timothy
Leary has been denounced by his · son
and leftist fig'ures who said the former
"high priest of LSD" is lying to in-
crim inate friends in secret grand jury
testimony.
"'M>e government has forced Timothy
Leary to lie and fabricate to get out
of jail," Jerry Rubin, a fonner defendant
in tke Chicago 7 oonspiracy trial, charg-
ed here Wednesday.
Rubin, underground poet -1+. 11 e n
Ginsberg and Leary's son, Jack Leary,
told a news conference that the federal
government may have drugged and ter-
rorb:ed the former Laguna Beach resi-
dent to extract testimony that oould
lead to imprisonment of leftists.
Rubin said the government Is trying
to "take our att~tion off of Watergate
and related matters."
"The people who are today directing
Leary's testimony before a federal grand
jury in Chicago are the same people
who were working under John Mit-
chell and Robert Mardian in the Justice
Department." Rubin said. •
"He's he!plng build the very jails
that he once worked to break down. He's
trying to give his jail cell to someone
else " J8ck Leary, 25, son of ' the former
Harvard University professor, said:
"Timothy has become a government
informer and his actions come as no
surprise to me. Based on past ex·
perit?nce, l can say Timothy can lie
wheo he knows it will benefit him.
"He likes to create fantastic stories
which he gets caught up in and then
can't distinguish from the truth."
Ginsberg, who rose to prominence
during the beatnik era in the 1950s, said
Leary saw himself as "a spiritual presi-
dent clearing the Karma blackboard by
creating a hlppie Watergate."
Ginsberg read a poetic_ "44 temporary
questions about Dr. Leary" which asked,
"Is his head upside down?"
Speakers said the news conference
fears were bolstered by recent California
indictmeiit, based on Leary's testimony,
against George Chula, a Costa Mesa
lawyer who' once represented him for
free.
They also noted that Leary now is
represented by John Doyle, a former
JusUce Department attorney who handl·
ed "witch hunts against New York
radicals In 1971." They said Doyle has
told people names of numerous persons
who may be indicted.
Ken Kelley, former publisher of Sun.
dance magazine, sald the news con-
feren~ was arranged by a 'flew group
called PILL -People Invest~ating
Leary's 'Lies. PILL issued a statement
with 120 signatures, including many of
Armed Recl1tse
Slai11 by Police
LEXIN1'rON, Ky. (UPI) -An ~
year-old man, wtio ~ pParenUy secluded
h!mself ln bis 11partmMt for several
days after he was served with a telfl·
porary eviction noti«!, was shot and
killed he"' during 1 gun b.itlle. with
pollcemcrr. •
Four pollcemcn were injured \Ved·
ncsda)' night durin g tbe shootoul with
lhc mart. Identified as Fr e d
F'eatherstonc, but none was hurt serious-
ly.
'
U"I lltle'"'lt FATHER 'A LIAR'
J1ck L•ary Testifi•s
By WILLIAM SCHREIBER
01 !tit D1Hr PllOI St11f
A million jobs now held by illegal
aliens in the United States could be
opened up through passage or tough.
new laws and a bolStered force of im-
migration officers, Rep . Andrey: Hinsh.aw
(R-Newport Beach) said Wednesday.
Hinshaw said he bas recommended
ln a letter to President Gerald Ford
that a m3.ssive crackdOWn on illegal
alien traffic be launched as part o[
the administration's attack on economic
problems.
The Congressman said be decided on
that course of action after bearing
testimony in his House subcommittee
on legal and monetary affairs by
Leonard Chapman, Conner Marine Corps
Commandant and present head or the raqical federal Immigration and Naturalization
Service (INS).
luminaries of the youth and
cultures. -
The speakers condemned testimon;•
allegedly rendered by Leary in Ch.icago
against underground political groups a'nd
former friends for their alleged role
in his escape from the California Men's
Colony at San Luis Obispo in 1970 where
he was being held oo a drug conviction.
At lbe time be allegedly agreed to
give secret testimony to a grand jury,
Leary was at Folsom prison facing a
possi~le 25--year-jall term for hi.s escape
and for two prior drug convictions, Rubin
said.
U.S. Atty. James Thompson of
Chicago, where it has been reported that
the federal grand jury is meeting, has
denied any knowledge of a grand jury
considering indictment based on tcsti·
mony from Leary.
Leary was last known to be "' at
Tenninal Island federal prison in Los
Angeles and was moved Aug. 2 lo an
"undisclosed location by the state of
California,'' said Warden Jack Wise of
Terminal Island.
The press conference was unusual by
most standards, with musicians playing
flutes and stringed instruments while
Ginsberg began his segment of the con-
ference by chanting a monotone "Ohhm·
mm."
During Rubin's statement, Dr. Eugene
Schoenfeld, who once wrote a counter·
culture medical column, bounce11 up to
the speaker's table clad in a boxing
kangaroo costume and threw a plastic·
covered pig plate in Rubin's face.
Bab Ram Dass , who as Richard Albert
was l.A?ary 's associate and was ousted
along with Leary from a Harvard
teaching post a decade ago. said Leary
always told imaginative tales when it
suited his purpose.
"I can vouch for the fact that Timothy
can't keep a bankbook,'' he said in
reference to a charge L e a r y
.mast~· ded a smuggling ring. "If he
were Ing the hippie Mafia, believe
me, would dot be prolit making."
Nepal I1nports
Snc r.ifi ces
"Chapman says at least one million
jobs each year are held by illegals
~cross the nation of which 135,000 are
lTI the Los Angeles area alone," Hinshaw
said. I
Breaking down the Los Angeles area
figure. Hinshaw said 50,000 are in
service-related jobs. 50.000 in light in-
dustry, 29.000 in heavy industry and
6,000 in agriculture.
Hinshaw said 'Qltlpman's responses to
questions concerru~ the figures led sub-
committee members to believe that
ousting the illegals from the country
and keeping out most new one s', "could
have a dramatic impact on unemploy-
ment."
Hinshaw said about 4.9 million people
are jobless across the nation.
"Even if we could only expect to
get .. 10 percent of those jobs opened.
the impact would be significant,"
Hinshaw said. "But Chapman is certain
lhe one million figure is realistic given
certain factor s."
Hinshaw said the key factors Chapman
said would create an impact on the
illegal alien traffic include :
_ -Quick passage of ~ws like one
pending in the Senate l)y J\ep. Peter
Rodino (D-New Jersey) makin g ii a
re&eral crime for employers to knowingly
hire illegal aliens.
-An additional appropriation of $50
million for the INS to pay for new
personnel and final improvements to
a nelll; border crossing system that is
thought to be "imposter·proof."
-Radical ~hifts.. in existing lNS
personnel that would reduce inland and
farm checks for aliens. decrease the
number of INS men on the Canadian
border and significantly increase the
forces at the Mexican border.
-Tough support £rom the For9
Administration of all l e g i t i m a t e
crackdowns·on the alien problem .
Hinsbaw's subcommittee, part of the
House Committee on Governmental Af-
fairs . has been participating in a probe
o( alleged corruption in the INS ·that
may be contributing to the alien problem.
ln bis testimony, Olapman told the
panel be has been spending nine months
cleaning house and tightening his In-
ternal security.
'"l'tie flood or Illegal entries we are
1<ATMA~U , Nepal (UPI} :-experiencing will becom e a torrent
Nepal wtll unpcrt 10.<KX'I mountrun unless resources and lt:gii1latiQn arc
goats and~shecp from Ttbtr n .... --fortllCOm1ng:""\:hapman told the sub-
mo~th to ~ used for sacrtflret commiUtt Wednesday.
dunng the Hindu festival of Desain. "1 want to en1phasizt to the committee
The anlmals will be offer~ Ip my strong belief that we are possibly
the goddess Durga Bhe.wanl to \-Ct!P on lhe brink of wha t could become
her in good humor. a oalional crisl1 unlcS3 action is taken
For the past rcw years, Tibet 'fery soon," Ch<Wman added.
bas been exporting the. .anhnals. lilns~1w $tlldi "T don1t think Chnfman
'to Nepnl during the ltindll fesllv41l ~'\S overstating the \ll ituation one bi . "
quested could go much farther toward
sol"'.ing national une~ployment than tlfe
$4 billion national public employment
program Ford is oow considering.
"The results would be quick in coming ,
not spaced out over many yea rs,"
Hinshaw said. "l think the key to this
is action by Congress to pass tbe Rodino
legislation and begin this practical solu-
tion Immediately."
Hinshaw said his staff's research into
the problem, along with testimony by
Chapman and others over the past 18
months has yielded / some noteworthy
information, including:
-The supposition that Pfessure on
MeJCicans to immigrate illegally is grow-
ing rapidly. An estimated 40 percent
of the current work force of 20 .million
people in Mexico is either unemployed.
underemployed or empl9yed o n I y
seasqnally, Hinshaw said.
-The fact that INS manpower
shortages have created a backlog or
155,000 unprocessed applications fro~
aliens who want to enter the countfy
legally.
-The fact that more than a third
of the estimated 350,000 fann v.·orkers
employed annually in the San Joaquin
Valley are illegals.
LION COUNTRY WELCOMES OLDEST CAPTIVE PACHYDERM
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Patrolmen used 17 t~ar gas bombs
lo try to nush the mnn out· of the
oparln\ent, "but each time the old m~n
responded with a blusl fro1n Ji!.s
shotGun ," on ornccr said. .-..
-"1hc.n dcmnnd outstrips su_pp1y. Tue COngrl'5Sman mild the '50. mUUon
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1.
... A 4 DAll Y PILOT '
l(i·ssinger Sl\lys Time for Deterite N·ow
P alestiriians
Disavow Act
• ••
,_,___.~ef1!ng High__ B,v Ter1·orists .,
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -Both the
Palestine leadership and the Syrian
government sought today lo disassociate
their guerrilla movement from the
Japanese Red Army terrorists who held
11 persons blstage In the French Em-
bassy in the Netherlands.
I
In Hawaii
~Jo~ IN TUE SKY: Ever wonder
whit happened to the construclion kick
of thro\\i ng up high rise buildings along
our Orange Coast? It almost seems
like. a dead novel!y in these parts.
Man, the builder, has always ·wanted
to construct 110mething just a little bit
tal~r than his neighbor. Put up a l&-foot
. teepee and the nert thing you kno\\',
your neigllbor has built a 20-foot
wigwam.
\Vhen civilization advanced to solid
structures, the same ,sort of thing hap-
pened.
~pr years, our coastline" seemed con·
sigOfd to short, flat beach cottages:
But Newport Beach got on a highrise
kick in the late 1950s and early 60s.
Cosfa Mesa got tall buildings like Bethel
Towers, Civic Center and Southern
California O>llege and then the high rise
kick cooled.
LAGUNA BEACH has a few tall
building! in disguise with struct*es dr~
bled over edges of cliffs -short on the
·highway but tall looking up .from the
beach and shoreline.
Art Colony residents got .so exercised
about all this that they passed an anti-
tall building law a few years back.
'About the last real surge in mul~' le-
stQ.ry construct.ion we've seen in long
our coastline is at the Irvine C:Om y's
Newport Cenler.
Maybe all die Jack of enthusiasm has
come from new strictures ol the coastal
oommi.ss)9n. Or maybe scarcity of
dollars or, who knows?
1f you think man bas given up con-
struction of tall buildings,' however, you
ha~e ~other thing coming.
TALL BUD..DERS aren't dead: they've
js moved to Hawaii. Condominium
apartments are going up everywhere.
'Ibey sell out Hawaiian condominiums
'before tbe foundation pilings are in. wagr!llglest that the Hawaiian state
bird is now the construction crane.
lodeed, the tall spindle-like steel
cr:aoes with long neck.9 and steel cables
liftihg construction material seem lo
loam <Ner every palm tree grove. ,Ill Hooolulu, Oahu. along the famed
walkiki Beach· bllh rise hotels hav~ long
bee,n· a way of lire. Now along Waikiki, t~f are even tearing down' tall buildings
to quake room for talle1' ones.
'11lis ba's resulted in a recent wire
service dispatch from Honolulu wherein
it r~rts tourists are greatly annoyed
by the piledriver just across the street
from Waikiki Beach.
IT BEGINS POUNDING at 8 a.m.
and' continues shaking the waterfront
until 5 p.m. This started in mid;,.June
for construction ()£ twin to-story hotels
to be called the Hemmeter Center.
Tourists have been calling them
something else.
Even if you stay at a hotel ..i.·ay
doWTI by Diamond Head, the distant
Waikiki piledriver can be heard in early
mom.
How would you like to have hocked
the family farm for a "'eek in one
()f Waikiki's plush hotels and be greeted
each morning by a pounding head you
didn't even deserve?
FRUSTRATED HAWADAN authorities
are rushing in sollnd experts to solve
the problem. Maybe they'll Force all
the high rise builders out of the island
stalf!.
Could be. But you can bet the men
who must build tall will fold up their
cranes and pop up el!>e\\·here. ·
i\faybe Alaska is next.
The Paris office or the Palestine
Liberation Organiiatkm sakt the PLO
"never asked the Syrian authorities to
hand over the three men and had nothing
( IN SHORT ..• )
lei do with The Hague affair."
The Syrian government earlier backed
off from an announcement that t~ ter-
rorists were in PLO custody f<ir the
time being.
Observers felt the Syrian and PLO
moves were aimed at keeping the
Palestinian cause from being hurt at
a time when the Palestinians are cam-
paigning for U.N. recognltkm as a libera-
tion movement.
e Sla11ing Suspect
JACKSONVllLE, Fla. (UPI) -Police
have arrested a 27-year-old man on what
they called "oolid evidence• linking
him to the slayings of two white
youths last June, and indicated three
or four more arrests wooJd be made
soon. .
Police arre1led John Jacob Duggan
~ early Wednesday at the home of
a legal secretary on an open . charge
of murder.
The bodies of Stephen Lamont Roberts ,
17, and Stephen S. Orlando, 18, a New
Jresrey police lieutenant's son, were
found with notes pinned to their bodies
boasting" that the youth! were "victims
ol execution" by a group called "The
Blad< Liberalioo Anny."
e Oil Bill Approved
WASIUNGTON (UPI) -By a vote
d. 64 to 23, the Senate has approved
legislation designed to fadlltate "rapid
and responsible" comme r cial ex·
ploitation of oil and gas under the na-
tion 's offsh>re waters.
The bill would direct lhe Sem!lary
of Interior to draw up a program to
make available -with guaranteed en-
vironmental safeguards -leasing of
all Outer Corti-al SheH (OCS) lands
that. show pn>mise of oil or gas.
e Artbts Freed
MOSCOW (UPI) -The last ol live
penom armited on hooliganism t harges
arising from SUnday's abortive attempt
to stage an abstract art show hive
been released, a show organizer said
today.
Artist Alexandel"" Glazer said fellow
artist Alexander Rabin, 2Z, aM photo-
grapher Vladimir Sedlov, 2,8, were freed
about midnight Wednesday by police wbo
told them: "Justice has been dooe -
go home."
Police even gave them the 13-cent
subway fare.
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SERVICE
Delivery of the Daily Pilot
is guaranteed
M«ld&y•FFidJV · It youdonol lw\lt '°'" -·It~ ~·JO II m .• <•II -"°"'' U>llV Wiii l;lf 1>'0"1!114 lo YO<!, C,.1i;ire l<1~tn .. n111 OOp "'·
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"""" <llllY ,.,14 be l><ougM lu you. C•ll• .-e 1• ... n 1mtu1c.,.m,
Telephones
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S..nCl,.,...ntP, (~•-SN en
~n J.,dn C•P'°""'''°· 0..~ Pooni, ~llL•9~n•.l•9<1"'No-I .. ,., •
·'' Rally Around Flag
Antitextbook protesters rally in Charleston, \V. Va., and a number
of them were arrested for violating court order jn flareup of contl'(}-
versy. Protest leader Rev. Ezra Graley was one of those jailed.
Surgery Se1larates Girls; ·
'They'll Be Very Happy'
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Separated by surgery which took 61h hours, Siamese
twin girls from tbe Dominican Republic slept in separate cribs for the first time in
their 13 months ()f life.
"I know of no reason why they won't Jive," Dr. C. Everett Koop said after the
Jong operation carried out on Wednesday by 23 surgeoos and nll£'Ses at Children's
Hospital.
"They \li'ere two heahhy little girls together. We have every reason to believe
they'll be two healthy girls apart," said Kopp. who headed the surgical team.
He said not only are both girls expected to live, but tbat they sOOuld lead very
mrmal lives and even F their own children.
CLARA AND ALTAGRACIA Rodriguez, who had been joined since birth at the
pelvis and abdomen, were given their own complete sets of internal organs during
the sufgical operation. .
In the initial recovery stage. Clara and Altagracia v.·ere placed in tv.·o beds,
but they will be treated in the same bed later to prevent possible psychological
trauma resu1ting from separation iµter living as one being up until now, hospital
spokesman Shirley Boonem said.
She said the tots were doing "extremely well."
Mrs. Faril:ia Rodriguez and her twins came here 11 days ago from a !ann out-
side Santo Domingo. When her daughters were bom on Aug. 12, 1973, Mrs. Rodriguez
said she was told they would die. Other doctors told her they would live into adult-
hood but could never' separated. . . ,
BUT MRS. RODRIGUEZ'S cousin worked for an American woman In Puerto
Rico, who told her sister in Pennsylvania about the Siamese twins. Dianna Zim~
noch of Warrington, Pa .• arranged for the operation and her church raised the
funds . l\lrs. Rodriguez, whose husband remained at home. has three other children.
The operation started at 6: 15 a.m. and the girls were finally separated almost
61~ hours tater, at 12:37 p.m.
Their joint liver ~as divided. This was possible because both had separate
blood supplies to the organ. Their crossed ureters were sorted out to empty into the
correct bladders from the kidneys.
President Ford Tells
Affection for Press
\\1ASRtNGTON (AP) -President Ford
' publicly announced his affection for the
press as he look part in the inauguration
of the first inale president of the 55-year-
old Washington Press Club.
. Lingering at the party for new Presi-
dent Ron Sarro of th~ Washington Star-
New1 amid a crush ol some 50U guests,
Ford said of the news inedia staffers:
"I love them. I even tOve them alter
~londay night,'' a reference to his ne..i.s
t'Onference at which the questioning \Vas
predominantly on his pardon of former·
President Nixon.
"l ENJOY mEIR company. I Jove
the oompetition," Ford said.
As for the neW3 conference sparring,
he sa id, "I really look forward to it.
I hope T give as much as I take.
I don 't feel any animosity to anyone
for asking a quesUon."
The president lighted hi~pipe and
sipped a martini as he and Mrs. Ford ·
sat at an outdoor palio table afler swear-
ing in, Sarro at the Sheraton.earlton
llotel.
Texas Flooding Continues
Jn lhe long history of the Press Club,
five U.S. Presidents have come to speak,
but Ford was the first to take part
in the inauguration.
lie gave a joke-filled speech.
•YOU PF.OPLE sure know how to
hurt a fella,"~ said laughingly, adding
"I have proven beyond a shadow of
a doubt that you don't need a pool
ot tho White House to get into deep
water." Residents i1i Lot.v
Temperaiures
Hlfll Lt•
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Lying Areas Forced to Evacuate
11t.tr nro YltfOltlty In"'"-Ciuadalupe ~u area 01 soumwnt TeKas. F0g 11111 low elol.l(I' mo•t'll onto
Ille C1lllornl1 coett. S(alltrtd tllowtr• Mt Ariton• 1n0
New Mtl!lcO.
E•rty morning ltmperalur1 lf0\11'\d
tre 111lf1110 ••111X'd lrom 30 <ll'i•M• II Houl!on. M.tlnot to Ii ti Fl.
L.-udtrd•I•. Fla, •ncl 81ytM • S. California
1".,tly cloudy I• ll'le wut~r "'IO!"d
l'O!" """'' or ~ C11!fern11 l'"T1d'ly. T!w bf1clltt Incl •!bl Loll A-II'
l•H .IJ'IO\llcr lllVll ft11y '""'Mt14 Oy
mld11ternoo11. IMJf rnovt1llln '''"' t•11 ••fl'(! wlotty K llltred 1flef"nll0ft ll'ICI tYlnf"ICI lrtvnci ..... llD ..... 11.
r"" dfttrts will bt powlly eiouov &rid lll9lltlf COO!ff wtlf I CftHICI
ol fttllnMrstorl'llt.
T"'""l>tf"ll\l!"et moKI pl-Wltl bt •bWI !M Nma or ,il91111y coot ... lftan l(l(llf,
Coastal Weathe r
H•lf llilll\l'tl.,. IO<lly. l.~t Y1rl1blt
wl-"""'' Miii mornlnv l'loun oac-lnt -ttrfy 10 to 11 kl'lllS In •fflf·
-· l'OCl.y and Friday. HIOlt llldlf 10. CtMll• lafnolr•lutlh rlMt ''°'" •l lo
10. lnlatle l~ftirtt ''"" "'°"' ti IO to. Walw ..,,....,,,V,.. ...
Sun. i'loo11. Tides
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S*<-WN ,_,. 0-111. a.a sun 11.., a::it 1 ,.,, $th • J.i o ,..,
MOoo'l l"l*t ,. .• •Ill. "'' t i ll 11 t!I.
His ooth for Sarro included a pledge
to defend the Washington Press Club
''against all forms ol chauv)nism."
Saluting the club "for breaking down·
the barriers of 11exuol discri,mlru\Oon •
t~ord s.iid, "I'm sure you all know
where J•stand on this issue. As I rrove
every morning at breakfast lime. cer-
tainly don't believe that a woman's place
is In the kitchen,"
Sarro, :i&, of Cranston, RJ., an assis-
t8nt national editor of the Washingtcm
Star-News. lakes over as head of the
650-member press club that wns started
In 1919 <U the \Vomen's Naliooal Presa
Club, because the Nationa1 Press Oub
barTf!d \\'Omen from members.hip, In
1971. the club claanged Its name and
admitted quallned male Journalists.
I
Rt>g i111e Recognized
LONDON fAP) -Britain has decided
to reeognl1.e the new fuili!Ary regime
In Ethl<>pta lh1tt depoged Haile Sclasslc
Dl'i en1pcror. tnformed tou.rce1 reported
foda)l'I The Fol'tlgn Ofllce was expected
lo announce the d~81on shor1ly.
.4rn1 Toop
Reductions -
Chief Goals
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sem!lary or
State Henry A. Kissinger Uid today
the Unlted State• wlll lry to reach
agreements with hfoscow Oh nuclear
limitations and troop reduction· bot op-
posed using trade policy to chauge
emigratlm, restrictions on Soviet Jews.
"We face an opportunity that was
not possible 25 years, ()r even a decade
ago." Kissinger said in a statement
prepared for a Se nate Foreign RelaUons
Committee inquiry Into U.S.-U.S.S.R.
detente. "tf that opportunity is lost,
its moment will not quickly come again .
"Indeed, 11 may not come at all."
KISSINGER OIJrLINED . the origin•
and accomplishments of dctente in a
SO-page policy statement.
He also pro1nised to strive in the
coming months to complete negotiations
for strategic arms llmltalions through
1985. finish negotiations on mutual fol'Cf:
reducUons in central Europe, conclude
a conference of European security and
cooperation and. continue efforts to limit
the spread of nuclear Vi'eopons to ad-
ditional countries.
But Kissinger said cold war doctrines
\vould be revived if the United States
tried, to use economic pressure to change
the Soviet system, achieve a military
~;~~::: \'~:n~h~:::ws::::1:
use maxi~l: influence to alleviate
human suff~ring. "But w,e cannot de-
mand that the Soviet Un1on, in effect.
suddenly reverse five decades of Soviet
and centuries or Russian history," he
added.
IN AN APPARENT referen ce to con-
gressional efforts to use trade po 1 i c y
as a wedge for changes in Soviet emigra-
tion policy, Kissinger said "such an
attempt v.·ould be futile and at the
same time hazard all that has been
achieved." "A renewal ()f the cold war
will hardly encourage the Soviet Union
to change its emigration policies or
adopt a more benevolent attitude to-
ward dissent," he s8id.
Kissinger said the Soviets c:ould \\'Teck
detente If they. u9ed it as a rover
lo strengthen their military capacity,
undermine U.S. al~iances or increase
..... -orld tensions through crises.
"If. .. we look for final results before
v:e agree to any results, then we would
be reviving the doctrines or liberation
and massive retaliation of the 1950's ·•
he said. · '
"And we would do so at a time
when Soviet physical pov.·er and influence
on the ..i.·orld are greater than a quarter
century ago when those poUcies were
devised and failed. The futility of such
a course is as certain as Its danger."
He said the goal of the current
strategic arms limitations talks (SALT)
is an agreement for a IO-year period
to set ceilings on strategic forces .
BORDELLO MADAM
CLICKED AT BAR
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -Many
an elector in the state assembly district
of bordello operator Beverly Harrell
hoisted a glass of spirits in her honor
during the recent primary campaign.
Ms. Harrell, who · received the
Democratic Assembly n om I n a t I on ,
disclosed Wednesday that she ran up
$435 in bar tabs in wooing vote's. She
said" she did most of her stumping
at the plank.
In all. she said, her ca~paign fund
was depleted of $2,767.
UPI 1'91""9te
Life Save•I
Air Force Sgt. Carrey Burke
(front) is led from barracks
at Lowry Air Base in Denver
after he barricaded hirnself
for eight hours. lie threatened
to kill self because of broken
marriage.
Gunfire l\1isses
Officer Poste<l
.t\.t Bosto11 School
BOS'l'ON (UPll - A policeman v.·~
shot at but missed as he stood gunrd
outside Jamaica Plain 11igh School today
in the Dorchester section of Boston on
the sixth day of a r.r.urt-ordered plan
to integrate the city's schools.
Detective Thomas M. Smith \vas stan-
ding in front or the school \~hen he
heard a shot. Re was not injured.
It was the first lime a shot had
been fired during U1e tense week the
busing plan has been in effect. Police
recovered a bullet. but it was not known
if the shot was fired from a passing
car. lt also was not immediately lqlown
if it was a rifle or pistol shot.
Jn other developn1ents, a fist fight
and. argument broke out between white
and black youths near \Voodrow \Vilson
High School in Dorchester, and seven
members of the Americ.nn Nazi Party
were ordered out of the city.
Official's said thf're were no injuries
nor ·arrests in the "verbal conrr6ntation
and ...scuffle" near the school just as
classe! were about to begin.
About 100 white students refused to
attend classes at the school following
the fight.
Authorities refused to take seriously
retxrts that members of the Ku Klux:
Klan would show up in force to help
fight the busing. Two persons who con·
tend they are members of the KKK
were known to be in Bostoo. Police
said bolh \Vere under surveillance.
David Duke of Baton Rogue, La.,
seJf.styled grand dragon of the KKK.
said he v.-ould ny to Bo!ston today to
try organizing resistance to busing.
Crusade Fervor •
NY Not tlie Same ~~er R e'v. Moon
NEW YORK (API -The Rev. Sun
Myung Moon's spiritual crusade is
Philadelphia-bound, but hls message and
the retorts of his critics lingered on
here in 11 litter of posters, pamphlets
and flyers. ,
The sell-proclaimed Korean prophet
on \Vedne9day night dfew a capacity
cro\\'tf ol --20.000 to Madl8.'ln Square
r.nrdcn for a frtt rally. Ten thousand
more were tumC!d away.
Moon's op_ponenls, claiming 1 o
reprtsent Mcnnonite1, Baptists, Jews for
Jesus: pcntecostals, and soc I a I i st s ,
gathered outside to picket and distribute
leaflets. They condemned 111oon Rs an
anll-Otrlst. opportunist and a "fa!IClat.
millionaire preacher."
IMPROMPTU RELIGIOUS deb n t e
resulted. So did a mountain of trash
from discarded lcanet9 or all sides.
Moon's Unlflcation Church 1 pent
$ttbo,OOO on an Rdvfrtlslng bllt1 to pro-
mote the Garden revival. The city, Com·
plaining that \he posters and leaflets
made ror meuy ml""1ry, lnucd sum·
mon:!e1 to five Mo6n lollower,s. One
Queens overpAn reportedly w n 1
plasttred with 1,500 likeness ol lhe smil·
ing preacher, who resembles a Buddha
in a business suit.
The Unification Church. a well-financed
and-organized cull, claims 2 milli:m
members worldwide and 25.000 in lhc
United States. Some dcvo!cts bcllcvc
Moon, 55. is the messiah.
POLICE SAID THAT ailliu!A 10,000
\\'Ollld-be spcctntors had to be turned
away from tilt free rnlly when the
Garden's 20.000 scats quickly became
filled. About 300,000 tickets hod been
pa~ out, police added.
Al one point, part of ll'ie disaptKilntf'd
overflow crowd tried lo stampede
through en entr~nce and knocked many
person.'! to the ground. There were no
1erious injuries, police ·satd-. --
In a twl>-hour speeCh. ~1oon said
through an interpreter that God told
him to get the world reltdy for lhe
second CtlminJ: Of the me911Rh who will
establish both a sin-free family nnd God's
heaven on earth . •
'1God asked me 10 declare lhfll thnt
da31 11 ot ·ht1nd." concluded the C'~hau!ltcd
preacM:r. who had lost hnlt of hl!I air
ditncc by 1hc end ot the n1omthnrt
1peech.
•
Pension
Repeal?
'No Way'
SACRAMENTO CAP) -A
special le,Ulatlve session to
repeal the $5.7 million pension
bonus !or lawmakers WGUld
be useless, Gov. Ron a Id
Reagan says, and he \\'ill not
call one.
Despite Reagan's com-
ments, a spokesman for the
author of 'a bill to wipe out
the windlall ror defeated
legislators said efforts to ,1e:ain
aupport for the extra session
will continue.
UP'I Ttltlfltlt
It '"orked
Reinecke
Stay~ H
Pardoned?
SACRAMENTO IAPI
Could Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke
,remain in offlec If he Ls
pardoned before being sen-
ter!C<d?
A.uemblyman Ken Cory, the
Democratic candidate for con-
troller, asked California Atty,
Gen . Evelle Younger for a
formal opinion on the question
Wedn<sday.
Cory, ot Garden Grove,
wrote Younger, "Your <>Pinion
has been that Mr. Reinecke
can continue 10 serve as
Star Cites
'Problem'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
David Carradine, star of
the t.elevision s e r I e s ,
"Kung Fu," is to appear
in Los Angeles A1unicipal
Court Friday on charges
or attempted burglary,
malicious mischief and
tresp3iS.
Police sald Carradine
left a trail or blood rrom
the ransacked hoffie of a
neighbor to hls own house
a half-block away.
The actor was. arrested
Monday at \Varner
Brothers Studios. ll c
reportedly told o!ri<:ers: "I
have a drug problem." ·
-.
Thursday , Stpltmbtr lq, 1974 DAILY PILOT A ."';
Consuine1·s Aslt Milk Price Revamp
From \Vlrt-Servicell
SACHAMENTQ T h e
Department of Consumer Af·
fairs has called on the
legislature to r e v ::i m p
Callforni•l's milk pricing prQ:_
gran1 and come up "'ith la\vS
which Insure fair a n d
reasonable prli:es.
The l'OmmC'nt came 'Rt the
close of a two-day hearing
with consurners asking for a
IJ cent reduction In the price
of a half gallon of milk .
l\l'Ooday hearing -railed by
the Dfparune.nt of Food and
Agriculture -should be In·
eluded In the Jaw.
S)IF. SAID THIS could result
in "a eo herl'nt .find logical
milk stabiliz.ation act which
insures fair and-:-·rcasopablc
prices to consunicrs. while al
the same tin1e maintaining
enough efficient producers and
handlers to guarantee a nee<J..
ed supply of safe, wholesome
milk lo the people of
C1tllfornJ11."
The state, t.ftrough the
Ab'Ticulture Department, sets
all minimum milk prices at
the producer, wholesale and
retail levels. CUrrently, a half
gallon or milk is selling at
CANON POCKETRONIC
•World's only POCkel-slle
•• an average statewide priCt\-'°r
71 cents. .. •
"If the Department <tl
Agriculture) has not been ab~
to conie op with something
subslanliat to alleviate coo·
sumer consternatiorr-Oy-nowf '
fl.ts. Po(ld said, ''then It 8!p-
pean the lawa under which
they operate need severe
reva,mping,''
•
Donna T. Dow, of Sac-
ramento tried unsuc·
cess!ully to get Texaco
credit card under her
name so she applied
again using the name
Don T. Dow. Presto,
next day she go t card.
She's claiming sex dis-
crimination.
)ieutenant governor of ~---------~
A1ilk producers said Wednes·
day they \l'Ould ask the state
for an increase of at least
three cents a half g a 11 o n
in the minimum price of 1nilk
110ld in California. which has
increased 33 percent in the
last 18 months. pr1 nhng calculalor • Easy loading "1 WOULD HAVE been
delighted lo call a special
session," Reagan told a group
o( high school students in the
Capitol Wednesday, "except
that there is no sense in going
through all that cost for a
useless exercise.
"I have checked wllh the legislative leadership to see-----------
if I call a special session
if there was any hope in get~
ting it done now. I was told
there" was none," t h e
Republican chief executive
said. • · .
T1esco Call
Girl Suspect
' Arrested
Ca!ifomia until !!uch tin1e as
sent~ has been passed on
him.·
"Dc,>es it follow therefore,
th;1t. in vou opinion. a pardon
of fl.fr. Reinecke by President
Ford prior to the fomier's
formal sentencing. ~·ould en-
able Mr. Reinecke to serve
the balance of his term?"
Reinecke was convicted in
July Qf' lying to a Scnnte com·
mittcc aboul his C"Onversations
with lhcn·U.S. Ally. Cren. John
l\1itchell on a pledge by
In ternational Telephone &
Telegraph Corp. to underwTite
the 1972 Republican National
Convtnlion In San Diego.
II ell's Angel
Sentenced
ForArnis
SACRAMENTO (UP ti -
The form'er president of the
Vallejo chapter of the i1ell's
Angels Wednesday was given
an eight-year prison term ror
illegal possession of a machine
gun and illegal possession and
sale Or a dynamite homb.
S T A T E AGRICULTURE
director C. B. Christensen ,
\lilo sets minimum milk prices
under Callrornia's s I a t e ·
regulated system, said he
would look at the proposal.
lie said he had seen no merit
in demands by consumet
groups for an immediate
reductio n in milk prices.
Judith Pond. a spokesma n
for the department. told the
200 attending the hearing that
"milk has become a political
football .
''Brickbats and accusations
are being hurled by and at
everyone and anyone who
becomes involved with the
· with tape casselles
• 12.01g1t read-0u1
• Adding mach111e logic
• Ooe<ates on rechargeable
bal!e<y pack or AC
• Ola1n calculators s149ts
MAHY OTHER MODELS AV AILAILE
SI 0 Minimum Trade-In on Any
Optrating Machine
CAL-MART
.... of Coit. Mn• l'tn•
2960A HARBOR 546·4018
COST A. MESA r ..... s.i. t :JO.S:JO
.....
• The remarks came I n
Tesponse to questions from
studenta from three state high
schools during a taping session
of the "Young People's Tele-
vision series which features LOS ANGELES tAP I -A
\Vest Hollywood \VOman who -
reportedly has admiUed sup-
Theodore L. DeWildc was
convicted last month by a
jury of three counts of
violating the Na ti on a I
Fitearms Acl.
issue:" she said. •-----------------------------..
Reagan.
"THE LEGISLATURE had plying call girls to fugitive
. three chances to make these fmancier Robert L. Vesco has changes and they didn't do '
it," Reagan added . . been arrested and booked for
Despite Reagan 's stand, the investigation of pimping and
spokesman for Assemblyman pandering.
Bob lt1cLennan (R·Downey), Betty Alexander, 31, told a said a letter asking for a special session is still being Los Angeles County sheriff's
circulated among legislators. detective she sent call girls
McLennan authored a bill to Costa Rica , where Vesco
-killed during the final days is a fugitive, said Sheriff's of the regular legislative ·session in August _ that Lt. Robert Ciuiik.
would have ended the huse lfe would not. elaborate on
early pension bonuses. the six-month in vesligation of
•
Forced Drug
Sentencing
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
David Marcus was ordered to
return to court ·Oct. 9 for
sentencing after p I e a d I n g
guilty to possessing dangerous
drugs tn connection with the
drugging or a Playboy bunny.
Marcus. 31, reportedly gave
a glass of grape juice spiked
with hallucinogenic MDA to
Joyce WiUlams, 25, and at-
tempted to force her into cer·
taln sex acts.
Miss \V llllams was confined
to a hospital for five weeks foT
psychiatric treatment follow-
ing the incident.
the ~"Oman. who was arrested
late Wednesday. But Ciulik
said the invcstigatlon had
nothing to do with the Vesco
case.
Vesco is wxler federal in·
dictment on charges stem·
ming from a seC'ret $'200.000
contribution to the re-election
campaign of former President
Richard ~ Nixon .
Clulik alleged'""""the WClnan
has supplied more than 25
young women to prominent
bus i nessrfien, professional
men and entertainers in I..os
Angeles County during the
pai>t several y.ears.
She was booked for In·
vestigalion on two counts eac:h
of pimping -deriving income
from activities of prostitutes
-and pandering -soliciting
persons to become prostitules.
Girl Scouts
Picket Due
To Dues
OAKLAND (APl -Cookie ""
and calendar sa les weren't
enough to offset inflation so
the local Girl Scout council
armounced it was boosting
membershi p dues from $2 to
,17.
Outraged sC"Outs and troop
leaders picketed the San Fran-
cisco Bay Girl Scout council
on \Vednesday to protest the
$15 increase in du es, bul they
ca lmed dO"'-TI when informed
the hike was voluntary.
Girt Scout Council officials
said the slack from those who
cOuldn't afford the increase
would be taken up b'y con-
tributions rrom those who can .
the United Bay Area Crusade
and other organiza~ions.
About SO scoots and 600
troop leaders had marched
out.side comulainlng that the
hike could destroy the scout
movement because many girls
and their parents "jus! don't
have the money."
Marianne Arnstein of San
~lateo. president of the 30,0CJO..
member council, explained the
boost was the council 's "at·
tempt to save itself" in the
face of rising program costs.
HEY MOM ... • coming
•
Sx10 full color 99.'.
She said that some of sug-
gested revisions voiced at the
.
"Cak:h this! First a lull lmakC.sl.
Ihen this lllUI Ile!Hluffet:
• '
,
The spirit of Friendship Service. Its catching.
eone /
•
"What a way to fl¥ 10 New York . United in 1he sky, call your Travel Agent. Or call United•!
started me off with a big, hearty breakfasl. And Ihen 537-7521.
followed it with their Deli-Buffet. Nice going, United. Nonstops to New York
I've cau~hl your Spirit:' •. ,.... Arrf~f F.qwlJllMlll Airt>Ort Mulsrb
We I catch you with our morning Deli flight 8:45 ".m: 4:55 p.m. 747 Kennedy Br<akia·& Deli
from Los Angeles to New York. Only United serves 4-SiaLunch you a hearty breakfasI to begin your day and then 12:00 noon 8:t5 p.m. DC-IO Kennedy
follows it With a Deli·Buffel. You can eat as much l:JO p.m. 9:25 p.m. DC-8 Newark •·SI: Dinner
---as you want, \Vhenever')'OU \Yant. Cold cuts, cheeses, P..trtneri In Travel '-Mith West ern I ntenw.tionaJ nte~.
garnishes and more. Th fri dly-1.! f land. For Friendship Service.and Ihe only Deli·Buffct C CD :t11.1CS 0
•
VOU CHOOSE FRriM FINISHED PORTRAITS. ADDITIONAL PORTRAITS JWAllABLE AT
REASONABLE PRICES. LIMITED OFFERt ONE PER SUB:JECT, TWO PER FAMILY. CHI LO
AGE LIMIT: 1 WEEK TO 12 YEARS. GROUPS PHOTOGRAPHED AT AN AOD:ITIONAL 99'
PER SUBJECT,
·ADULT PORTRAITS 2" ~ ,., • .,._ .,...._..,_I .._.., ......
'"*-·~ti otc., ...,, __ "'*'' ... ~ -
PHOTOGRAPHER'S HOURS ,
Deily s.tordav Sund•Y 1aHoon 10•:m.I.' t2Nooo to 1 p.rn. to s p.m. to 4:30 p.m.
· ~Unite<fs 8:45 a.m.Deli-Buflet Flight~ / w ~ork.
.s&Aas, ao111uat 41"0 co.
SHOP AT SEARS
AND SAVE
MONDAY, SEPT. 16 THAU SUlljJJAY, SEPT. 22
BUENA PARK Lf}dUNA HILLS
CERRtTOS ORANGE
COSTA MESA WESTMINSTER ..
·Ill •
unlTEO AIRLlnes
. I ,,
boo
lllo
limo
odl
"" di
JI
4 ,
-
,
,
I
" . A 4 OIJL Y PILOT
KisSinger Says Time for Dete~e Now
~etting High
In Hawaii
.....
£'VE IN TllE SKY: Ever wonder
what ha ppened to the construction kk:k
or thro\l.ing up high rise buildings iUong
our Orange Coast? It almost see.ms
lik! a dead novelty in these parts.
Man, U1e builder, has always wanted
to construct 90mething just a litlle bit
tall~r !han his neighbor. Put up a 16-foot
teepee and the ne,.1 thing you kno\\',
your neighbor has built a 20-foot
\\'igwam.
'Vhen civilization advanced to solid
structW'cs, the same sort of thing ha~
pened.
Fpr years. our coastline seemed con·
signed to short, flat beach cottages:
Butr Newport Beach got on a highrise
kick in the late 1950s and early 60s.
Cosia Mesa got tall buildings like Bethel
Towers, Civic Center ahd Southern
california College and then the high rise
kick cooled.
LAGUNA BEACH has a few tall
OOildiJ!g! in disguise with structures dr.M>
bled over edges of cliffs -short on the
highway but tall looking up from the
beach and shottline. .
Art Colony residents got so e1ercised
about all this that they passed an anti-
taU building law a few years back.
About the last real surge in multiple-
stqry construction we've seen in along
our coastline is at the Irvine Company's
Newport Ceorer.
Maybe aJJ the lack of enthusiasm has
come from new strictures of the coastal
commission. Or maybe scarcity of
dollars or, who knows ?
ff you think man has given up ~
sbuotion of tall buildings; however, you
have another thing coming.
TAIL BUILDERS aren't dead: they've
just moved to Hawaii. Condominium
ape.rtmeuts· are going up everywhere.
'11ley sell out Hawaiian coodominiwm
before the foundation pilings are in.
9{ap siggest that lhe Hawaiian state
bird is now the construction crane.
llldeed, the tall spindle-like steel
cr.anes will! loog necks and steel cables Ii~ construction material seem to
loom over every palm tree grove. .lzi, Hooolulu, Oahu, along the famed
lVaWil Beach· hiih rise hotels have Jong ~-a way ol life. Now along Waikiki, t~,y a~ even tearing down" tall buildings
IQ QUtke room for taller ones.
This has resulted in a recent wire
service dispatch from Honolulu wherein
it reports tourists are greatly annoyed
by the piledriver just across the street
from Waikiki Beach.
1'J3t BEG1NS POlJNDltllG at 8 a.m.
and' continues shaking the waterfront
untiJ 5 p.m. 'Ibis started in mid.June
for construction of twin ~tory hotels
to be called the Hemmeter Center.
Tourists have been callin,g them
something else.
Even if you slay at a hotel way
dov.rn by Diamond Head, the distant·
\Vaikiki piledrh•er can be heard in early
morn.
HoVt' v.:ould you like to have hocked
the family farm for a \\'eek in one
of Waikiki's plush hotels and be greeted
each morning by a pounding head you
didn't even deaerve?
FRUSTRATED HAWAIIAN authorities
are rushing in sound experts to sol\'e
the problem. Maybe Uley'll force all
the high rise builders out of the island
state.
Could be. But you can bet the men
who must build tall will fold up their
cranes and pop up else"·here.
Maybe Alaska is next.
P alestinicins
Disavow Act
B·v Ter1·orists •'
DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) -Both the
Palestine leadership and the Syrian
governmcnt sought today to disassociate
their guerrilla movement from the
Japanese Red Army terrorists who he1d
II persons lmtage in U>e French Em-
bassy in the Netherland!.
The Paris office of -the Pa Jestine
Uberation Organization said the PLO
"never asked the Syrian authorities to
hand over the ,three men and had nothing
( '
IN SHORT ..•
to do with The Hague al'falr."
The Syrian government earlier backed
off from an announcement that the ter·
rorists were in PLO custody for the
time being.
Ollservers !eh the Syrian and PLO
moves were aimed at keeping the
Palestinian cause from being hurt at a time when the Palestinian.s are cam.
paigning for U.N. recognition as a Ubera--
tioo movement.
e Slaglllfl Suspect
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. <UPI) -Police
have arrested a 21·year-old man on what
they called _",.lid evidence" linking
him to the slayings of two white
youths last June.-and , indicated three
Cl' four more arrests would be made
soon.
Police arrested John Jacob Duggan
Jr. early Wednesday at the OOme of
a legal secretary on an open charge
of murder.
The bodies ol Stepheo Lamont Roberts,
17, and Stepheo S. Orlando, 18, a New
Jresey police lieutenant's son, \\-ere
found v.ritb notes pinned to thelz: bodies
boasting that the youths were "victims
cl execution" by a group called "1be
Bladt Liberation Army."
e 011 B~l Approved
WASHINGTON (UPI) -By a vote
d 64 lo 23, the Senate has approved
legislation designed lo facilitate "raPid
and responsible" co m mercial e:x·
ploitation of oil arxl gas under the na·
lion's offsOOre waters. •
The bill would direct the Secn!iary
of Interior to draw up a program to
make available -v.rith guaranteed ~
v\rorunental safeguaros -leasing of
all Outer Continental Sheli (OCS) lan<b
that. show promise ol oil or gas. • e Artists Freed
MOSCOW (UPI) -The last of five
persons arrested on hooliganiml ~arges
arising from Sunday's abortive attempt
to stage an abstract art show have
been rel~ a show organizer said
today. .
Artist Alexarxler Glazer said fellow
artist Alexander Rabin, 22, and photo-
grapher Vladlmlr Sediov, 23, were freed
abcut midnight Wedneoday by police wbo
told tlJem: "Justice has been dooe -
go home."
Police even
subway fare.
gave them the t3<ent
DAILY PILOT
DELIVERY SE RV ICE
Delivery of the Daily Pilot
is guaranteed
MOf>dly.rr~t o It roudonoc 111w• vou• Plllll'• bv ~XI P.M .• <•II -"°"'' COllV '"'"Ill' Ol'P...,,111 IO •r:>u c.11, '''" '" ''" ...,1.1 1 oo p. "'·
'ioilurday •ncl :>uncldy If l"'>U Cl<> l'I01 ,.,,,~ vou•
COl>V by,• m !>ilh,.G.1y, Of 8 •.m Sundity, <~II
ilfld .. <OPY ... 11 b. btOl.ojJlll 1P vw. c .. 1, ,, .. l••tn
unl1! IC.o.m.
Telephones
Most Or~(oun1v.o.,.,.~ ........• ,, ...... l~'ll l
N<it111-'\ "l11111if!Qlllfl fit,;f(ll
-Wt~lm111U"', .•.•.•... , ., ,, . , .,.)oiO.lllO
S.nC:1t..,,..n1r,C""""'lln08N<fl
S..nJ...,ntopi<,I•-. 0-Po•M,
:;.o..itll Loitun1. l•9'J"ol N-1 ••• . • •f}.U10
•
·' ~
.i\rn1 s, Troop
Reductions -;
Chief Goals
WASlllNGTON (UPI) -Secretary or
_.lilale...Heney_..A-Jiluloiet-D!g_,,.od,,,a~-,
the United States will try to readi
ag reements with Moscow on nuclear
lin1itaUons and troop reduction' but oP-
posed ush:ig trade policy to chami;e
emigratloq. restrictions Oft Soviet Jews.
•
• ii .
Ul"I ~H!IOlt
Holly Around Flog
Antitextbook protesters rally in Charleston, \V. Va., and a number
of them were arrested for violating co urt order in flareup of contro-
versy. Protest leader Rev. Ezra Graley was one of those jailed.
Sm·gery Separates Girls;
'They'll Be Very Happy'
PHILADELPHIA (AP) -Separated by surgery which took 61h hours, Siamese
t\\·ln girls from the Dominican Republic slept in separate cribs for the first time in
their 13 months of -life. -
"I know or no reason why t~y won 't live," Dr. C. Everett Koop said after the
long operation carried out on Wednesday by 23 surgeons and nurses at Children's
Hospital.
"They were t\\i> healthy little girts together. \Ve have every reason to believe
they'll be t\\-O healthy girls apart," said Kopp, who headed the surgicaJ team.
He said not only are both girls expected to live , but lhat they should lead very
nonnal Jives and even bear their own children.
CLARA AND ALTAGRACIA Rodriguez, who had been joined since birth at the
pelvis and abdomen, were given their own complete sets of internaJ organs during
the sul-gical operation. .
In the initial recovery stage, Clara and Altagracia \\'ere placed in f\\'O beds,
but they will be treated in the same bed later lo prevent posflib\e psychological
trauma resulting from separation after living as one being up until now, hospital
apokesman Shirley Boonem said.
She said the tots were doing "extremely well."
Mrs. Farida RodrigtlC'l and her twins came here ll days ago from a farm out·
side Santo I>Gmtngo. When her aaughters were born on Aug. 12, 1973, Mrs. Rodriguez
said she was told they would die. Other doctors told her they would live into adult·
0000 but rould never be separated.
BUT MRS. RODRIGUEZ'S cousin worked for an American woman In Puerto
Rico, who told her sister in Penruiylvania about the Siamese twins. Dianna Zim~
noch of Warrington, Pa.. arranged for the operation and her church raised the
funds. Mrs. Rodriguez, whose husband remained at home, has three other children.
The operation started at 6: t5 a.m. and the girls were finally separated almost
61/1 hours later, at 12:37 p.m.
Their joint liver was divided. This was possible because both had separate
blood supplies to the organ. Their crossed ureters were sorted out to empty into the
correct bladders from the kidneys.
President Ford Tells
Affection for Press
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Ford
j)Ublicly announced his ·affection for the
press as he took part in the inauguration
or the first male president of the 55-year·
old Washington Press Club.
Lingering at the party for new Presi-
dent Ron Sarro of the Washington Star·
Newt amid a crush of some 5tll1 guests.
Ford said o{ the nev.·s tnedia staffers:
"I k>ve them. I even love them al1er
11-tonday night." a reference to his ne\\s
conference at which the questioning was
pn!dominant!y on his pardon of former
President Nixon.
"l ENJOY THEIR company. I Jove
the competilion," Ford said.
As for the news conference sparring,
he said, "I really look forward to it.
I hope J give as much as I take.
I don't frel any animosity to anyone
for asking a question ."
The president lighted his pipe and
sipped a martini as he and r-.trs. Ford
sat al an outdoor patio table after swear·
ing in Sarro at the Sheraton-Carlton
Hotel.
"We race an oErtunity that was
not possible 25 yea , even a decade
ago," Kissinger sai _,.in a statement
prepared tor a Senate Foreign Relations
Committee inquiry Into U.S.·U.S.S.R.
detente. "If that opPortunity ls Josi,
its moment will not quickly come agaJn.
"Indeed, it may not come at all."
KISSINGER Otm.INED the origin!!
and accomplishments of detente Jn a
50-page policy statement.
He also promised to st rive in the
coming months to complete negotiations
for strategic anns limHalions through
1985, fini sh negotiations on mutual force
reductions in central Europe, CQnclude
a conference of European security and
cooperation and continue efforts to limit
the spread of nuclear Y.'enpons to ad·
ditional countries.
But Kissinger said cold war doctrines
would be revived lf the United States
tried to use economic pressure to change
the Soviet system, achieve a military
superiority or deny benefits to the Soviet
Union. .
Kissinger said the United States will
use maximwn inOuence to alleviate
human suffering. "But w.e cannot de.
mand that the Soviet Union, in effect,
suddenly reverse five decades of Soviet
and centuries of Russian history," he
added.
IN AN APPARENT rererence to con-
gressional efforts to use trade po I i c y
as a wedge for changes in Soviet em.igra·
tion policy, Kissinger said "such an
attempt would be futile and at the
same time hazard all that has been
achi eved." "A renewal of the cold war
w;n hardly encour3.ge the Soviet Union
to change its emigration policies or
adopt a more benevolent attitude to-
ward dissent," be said.
Kissinger said the Soviets could wreck
detente lf they u9ed it as a cover
to strengthtn their military capacity,
undermine U.S. alliances or increase
world tensions through crises.
"If ... we look for fina l results before
\\.·e agree to any results, then we would
be reviving the doctrines of liberation
and massive retaliatioo of the 1950's,"
he said.
"And we would do so at a time
when Soviet physical power and influence
on the world are greater than a quarter
century ago when those policies were
devised and railed. The futility of such
a course is as certain as Ifs danger."
He said the goal of the curmtt
strategic anns limitations talks (SALT)
--is an agreement for a 10-year period
to set ceilings on strategic forces.
BORDELLO MA.DAM
CLICKED AT BAR
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -Many
an elector in the state assem!ly district
of bordello opera tor Beverly Harrell
hoisted a glass of spirits in her honor
during th~ recent primary campaign.
~1s. Imrrell, w1lo received the
Democratic Assembly n o m i n a t I on ,
disclosed Wednesday that she ran up
$435 in bar tabs In wooing votes. She
said she did most of her stumping
at the plank.
In all, she said, her can;paign rund
was depleted or $2,767.
t
UPI~ Life Sa ved
Air Force Sgt. Carrey Burke
(front) is led from barracks
at Lowry Air Base in Denver
a fter he barricaded himself
for eight hours. J·le threatened
to kill self because of broken
marriage.
Gunfire Misses
Officer Posted
At Boston School
BOSTON (UPI) -A policeman was
shot at but missed as he stood guard
outside Jamaica Plain High School today
in the I>Grchester section of Boston on
the sixth day of a court-ordered plan
to integrate lhe city's schools. -
Detective Thomas 1\.1. Smith \was stan·
ding in front Of the school \Vhen he
heard a shot. fie was not injured.
It was the first time a shol had
been fired during U1e tense week the
bUsing plan has been in effect. Police
recovered a bullet. but it was not kno~'n
i! the shot "'as fired from a passing
car. It also was not immediately known
if it was a rirle or pis1ol shot.
In other developments, a fist fight
and argument broke out between white
and black youths near \Voodrow Wilson
High Sclvlol in Dorchester. and 5el'en
members of the American Naz.i Party
were ordered out or the city.
afficials said there were no injuries
nor arrests in the "verbal confrontation
and scuffle" near the school just as
Qlasses were about to begin.
Aboui 100 white students refused to
attend classes at the s'hoo! following
the-fight.
Authorities refused to take seriously
rep«ts that members of the Ku Klux
Klan would show up in force to hclp
figfitute15usihg. Two persons who con·
tend they are members of the KKK
were known to be in Boston. Police
said both \Vere under surveillance .
David Duke of Baton Rogue, La.,
self-styled grand dragon oC the KKK .
said he \\i>uld ny to Boston today to
try organitlng resistance to busing.
Texas Flooding Continues.
In the long history of the Press Club,
five U.S. Presidents have come to speak.
but Ford was the first to take part
in the inauguration.
He gave a joke-filled !peeCh.
•YOU PEOPLE sure know how to
hurt a fel la," he said laughingly, adding
"I have proven beyond a shadow of
a doubt that you don't need a pool
at the White llouse lo get into deep
wa1er.''
Crusade Fervor
NY Not tlie Sa111e After Rev . Moo1i
-Re;§ide11ts in LouJ Lying Areas Forced to Evacuate
'
d"""9M r>Pl'Mf'IY ""'OvOht\il ,,.. t•tl
1111a111 rlOOd w"nlnctl -• IMUtd
fof ofrfl' ••e11 lft w.~1 T•••• end
p&lltt "' i•ltll'IO••· 'lr.•.1 ••kl' .,, • ., WfA lnl'k INlll'lll r•mov "9 hmlltn
111 tt" " • ._,,,. Hrf of fftt Ci!J.
tllt ••tUl'IO" tltr llfl'll -• \llldlr fl.., ,,.. ol w•r.r.
neor zero vl1IDllllV In ll>e Gutdnh.111t JllSI lrtl Of IOllfrl-1 Tt•t!I. Fog tl!d low cloud1 moved °"'o
lht C1l!lornl1 coesl. Sc1tl«'td t'-trs lllf Ar\lon• •lld Ntw Mulco. E1rly mornl119 ltllll>t••"ll'f t•Ollnd trt n1lfllfl r•nQ~ from JO dtQ•ff' ., tloul!on, Mllf!t IO •s •• Fl.
LllUlll«d11t, Fii . 1"11 8tythf,
S. California
~.,uv ~lwcl,.,1 the WNll!tr ~ for mos! 01 s.outht'rn c111rorn11 Fr1d1r.
Tiie WK ... S ;nc1 !... LOI Ano<e!K 1rt1 11\0vlcl ,....., to1zv SIJnll!I,.. by
mfcHill••-· but ~111n ''''' tffl tl(otel wleltly Kllll ..... llltrnoofl •llCI ewnmg tl!ut!dw•hcrwers. Tiit dnlf'll wire bl Jlllltlly tlollf'I'
ll'ICI sUotott'I' cool..-wltr 1 cll•ftC•• of ll'MJnct.l'llor,..,.,
fl'll'lpef'ltufn most JI!~ wtl! bt •boul l1!t NINI .,,, 11'9nr1r coa1t•
""'" lodt'I'· Coastal Weal.h er
H11y flll\Shfnt !od..,. L1t111 'l'"llblt
wlnh llftM 11\d mornln;i~1 Dl(Ol'l\-
11'0 wt'lttrt'I' 10 to 1t knel\ 111 •flt<'·
-· todlV tnd ""°''· HfVll IO(l1y 1f. Coesttl t-r•lw11 fll'IH fron'I 11 lo
70. lnllll!lll ltn'IPtl'tlllrn ''"°' "1wn 11 10 IO. Wt!" l9'fllllr1111,.. et.
S un, /ti"""· Tid es THUltSOAY
Sfo<Drod 111011 ,,:5' ,,.... '·'
.. «oncl tow •;Q '''"' D.l ,llD'A'f'
llfO'f! "''" •• 12111 p,111. s'
Finl low .. •101 '·""· 1.1 Se<onG low , . 7!" O,l!t. .fl
Su11 rl..s t:,, f .111. Sttt I:'• 11 "'·
MOoll '1!on lf:)I. 11'1. Ith f ;ll p.11'1,
•!is o:i th for Sarro included a pledge
to defend the Washington Press Club
"against all forms ol chauv)nism."
Saluting the club ••for breaking down ·
the barriers of seit:ual discrimination·
Ford snid, "I'm sure you all know
where I stand on this issue. Aa l rrov•
every morning at breakfast time, cer~
tainly don't believe that a 1''0man's place
iLin the. kitchen.··
Sarro. 36, of Cranston, R.J., an assi•
tant na!lonal editor of the Washington
Star-News, t11kcs over as head of the
650-meniber press club that wai started
In 1919 a11 the Women's Natk>nal Press
Club. because the NaUonal Press Club
barred Y."Omen from membership. In
1971. the dub changed its name and
admitled .qualified mat~ journalists.
Ht'gi 111c Recognized
LONDON (AP) '-Drilaln has dedded
to noeognl7.e the new mlli tary --reglme
in Ethiopia that deposed flallc Selassie
0<11 emperor. Informed soured reported
today. The Foreign Office .was txpected
to announce the? decision shortly.
NEW YORK (AP) -The Rev. Sun ing preacher, who resembles a Buddha
Myung Moon's splrifual crusade is in a business suit .
Philadelphia-bound, but his n\essage and The Unification Church . a well-financed
the retorts of his critics li ngered on and organized cull, claims 2 miili:m
here in a litter of posters, pamphlets members worldwide and 25,000 in the
and nyers. Uhited States. Some devotees believe
The self.proclaimed Korean prophet Moon , 55, ii the messiah,
on \Vednesday night di'ew a capacity
cro\vd or 20,000 to J\1adl80n Square...,_ POI~tCE SAID THAT about 10.000
Garden for a free rnlly. Ten thousand would-be. spct:llltors had to be tuined
· more y.•ere turned away. tl\Vay from the free r111ly when thr.
Moon's opponents, claiming to Garden'll 20.000 scnis quickly became
represent Mennonites, Baptists, Je'lo'S ror Olfed. About 300.000 tickets had been
Jesus, penteco1lals, and 1 o c i a 11 s I s, passed out , police added.
gathered outside to picke:t and distribute At one point, part of the diseppolnttd
leaflets. They condemned l\toon 11s an overflow t!rowd tried to stampede
;mti-Ouist. opportunist and a hfascist. through. an entrance a~d knocked many
mlllioMlre preacher." persons to the ground . There were no
IMPROMPTU RELIGIOUS d • b a t •
resulted. So did a mountain of trash
from discarded !(!afietS of all aides.
Moon's Unification Olurch 1 pent
$600,000 on an ltdvertising blitz to pro-
mote the Garden revival. 1'le city, com·
plaining thftl \he posters and leaOets
made ror mes.1y mlnlatry, ls~ued 11um·
moMel to fh•e ltfoon follo\\'tlnl. One
Qu1..ien.s O\lerpa~s rtpof"ledly w 111
plastered with 2,500 like~ of the smll·
eerlous injuries, police said.
In a two-hou r speech. ft.1 oon Slid
through nn Interpreter tha t God told
him to get the world ready for the
secorxl coming oI the mc!Jlllah who wlll
cstabUsh both a sln·frce family and God's
heavtn on earth.
"God asked . me to declare tA11t thaL
day it ~·lulnd," concluded the rxh11usted
-preacher, who had lo!t hrt!f of hLs air ,
dlenoe by tilt Cl'd or the moMlhnn
lpeeth.
•
Pension
Repeal?
'No Way'
SACRAMENTO (AP ) -A
special leg11lat1ve session to
repeal the $5.T mllllon pension
bonus ror lawmaker! would
be useless, Gov. Ron a Id
Reagan says, and he will not
coll one.
Despite Reagan's com·
men!s, a spokesman ror lhe
author of 11 bUI. to wipe out
the wlndlall ror defeated
Jegj1Jalor1 said efforts to ,11ain
support for the extra session
will continue.
•
It lt'orl<ed
Reinecke
Stay.s If
Pardoned?
SACRAMENTO (AP )
Could U . Cov . Ed Reinecke
remain in orflec if he ls
pardoned bcrore being sen-
tenced?
Assembly1nan Ken Cory, !he
Oernocratlc candidate tor con-
troller, asked Callfornla Atty.
Gen. Evelle Younger tor a
formal opinion on the question
\Vednesday.
Cory, of Garden Grove,
wrote Younger, "Your opinion
has been that 'Mr. Reinecke
can continue to serve as
' .
Star Cites
'Probl.em'
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
David Carradine, star of
the televilion s c r i e s ,
"Kung Fu,'' Is to appear
in Los Angeles ~1unicipal
Court Friday on char11es
of attempted burglary,
malicious mischie f and
trespa&s.
Police said Carradine
left a trail of blood from
the ransacked home of a
neighbor to his own house
a half-block away.
The actor was arrested
Monday at Warner
Brothers Studlos. H e
reportedly toJ d officers: "I
have a drug problem."
DAIL V PILOT A ."i
C~11sume1~s Asl{ Milk Price Rev~p
'
F'rom Wlte Serviceti tv.·o--day hearing -<'alled by enough efficient producers and nn average statewide pric(\"or SACftA~1ENTO -The the Ot>purtment of Food and handlers 10 guari.ntee t need-71 cents. •
Department of Conswner Af· Agriculture -should be in-ed supply of sale, whoJesome "If the Ot-pnrtment (ef
fairs has called on the eluded in the law. milk to the peoplt! of Agri culture) hall not been able
legislature to rev a m p Cl:ilifornia." to comt-up with something
CaJUornla's milk pricing pro-SllE SAID TlllS could result Tht! state. through the substantial to alleviate COO·
gran1 and come up with laws in ··a coherent and logical Agriculture Department, sets sumer CilnsternaUon by-now;"
which Insure fair and milk stabiliz.alion act which all minimum milk price! at Ms. Pond said, "then it ap-
reasonable prli::es. insures fair uud rt!asonable the producer, wholesale and pears the laws i.mder which
The comment came -at the prices to consun1crs, while at retail levels. Currently, a half they operate need. severe
close of a two-day hearing the sa111c time_!natnta ining gallon of rnilk is selling at rev8f11ping."
with consumers asking for al~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~r 13 cent reduction in the price ------
of a half gallon of milk.
Milk producers said Ylednes-
CANON POCKETRONIC
• 'M:>rld"s on ly pocket-size Donna T. Dow, ol Sac·
ramento tried unsuc-
cessfutlY to gel Texaco
credit card under her
nan1e so she applied
again using the na111e
Don T. Dow. Presto,
next day .:;he go t ca rd.
She's claiming sex: Ois-
crimination.
Jieotenant gov e rnor oI ·-----------'
day they v.·ould ask the state
for an increase of at least
three cents a half g a 11 on
in the minimum price-of milk
sold In California, which has
increased " percent in the
last 18 months. pnnllng calculator
• Easy loading 111 WOULD DAVE been
delighted lo call a special
session," Reagan told a group
or high school students in the
Capitol Wednesday, "except
that !here is no sense In going
through all that cost for a
useless exercise.
"I have checked with the
Califomia until such time as
S.Pntence has been passed on
him.
legislative leade~hlp to see -----------
if I call a special session
IJ there was any hope in get-
ting it done now. I was told
there was none," t h e
Republican chief executive
"Dl?es It follow therefore,
lh1t. in vou opinion. a pardon
of i\1r. Reinecke by President
Ford prior to the fonner's
formal sentencing. \.\1lttld en-
able Mr. Reinecke to serve
the balance of his term?"
said.
1be remarks came I n
response to questions from
studenta from three stale high
schools during a taping session
of lhe "Young People's Tele-
vision series which features
Reagan.
"mE LEGISLATURE had
three chances to make these
changes and they didn't do
It," Reagan added.
Despite Reagan's stand, the
spokesman for Assemblyman
Bob A-1cLennan (R-Downey),
said a letter asking for a
special session is still being
circu lated amoog legislators.
McLennan authored a bill
-killed during the final days
of the regular legislative
session in August -that
would have ended the huge
early pension bonuSe!.
F <?rce11 Dn1g
Sente11ci11g
LOS ANGELES (UP I) -
David Marcus was ordered to
return to court Oct. 9 for
&entenclng after p I e a d I n g
guilty to J>0S3essing dangerous
drugs In connection with the
drugging of a Playboy bunny.
Marcus, 31, reportedly gave
-a glass or grape juice spiked
with hatlucioogenlc MDA to
Joyce Williams, 25, and at-
tempted to force her into cer·
lain sex acts.
Miss \Vllllams was confined
to a hospital for five \\leeii:s for
psychiatric treatment follow-
ing the incident.
Vesco Call
Girl Suspect
Arrested
LOS ANG~LES iAPI -A
West Hollywood wom<l)l v.·ho
reportedly has adlJ1itled sup-
plying call gj_rls to fugitive
financier RobertJ,. Vesco, has
been arrested and booked for
investigation of pimping and
pandering.
Betty Alexander. 31, told a
Los Angeles County shcri!f's
de'!Ctive she sent call girls
to Costa Rica, \vhere Vesco
is a fugitive, said Sheriff's
Lt. Robert Ciuiik.
Reinecke was convicted in
J ulv of Jving to a Senate com-
mil!ce about his conversations
with lilen-U.S. Atty. Gen. John
i\1ilchell on a pledge ·by
ln!ernational Telephone &
Tele.'(raph Corp. to under\vrite
the 1972 Republican National
Convention Jn San Diego.
Girl Scouts
Picket Due
To Dues
OAKLAND (AP l -Cookie
and calendar sales weren't
enough to offset inflation so
the local Girl Scout council
armounced it was boosting
membership dues from $2 to
!17.
Outraged scouts nnd troop
He would not elaborate on Jeudc rs picketed the San Fran-
the six-month investigation of cisco Bay Girl Scout council
the woman, v.·ho was arrested on \Vedncsday to protest ·the
late· Wednesday. But Ciulik $15 incrCase in dues, but they
said the investigation had calmed dov.n when infonned
nothing to do v.rith the Vesco the hike ,, .. as voluntary.
case. Girl 'Scout Council officials
Vesco is wtder federal in· said the slack from those who
dictment on charges stem· · couldn 'I afford the increase
ming from a seCrt't $200.000 would be taken up · b'y co-n-
conlribution to the ~lection tributions from those who can,
campaign of former Pres.ident the United Bay Area Crusade
Richard M. Nixon. and 01her organizations.
Ciulik alleged the wcman About 50 scouts and 600
has supplied more than 25 troop leaders had marched
young women to prominent outside comolainin g th.et the
bus i nessmen, professional hike could destroy the scout
men and enteria.iners in Los movement because many girls
Angeles Coonly during the and their parents "just don't
past several years. have the money."
She was booked for in· Marianne Arnstein of San
vestigation on two counts each l\lateo. president of the 30,000-
of pimping -deriving income member council, explained the
from activities of prostitµtes boost was the council's "at-
-and pandering -soliciting tempt to save itself" in the
persons to becorile prostitutes. face of rising program costs.
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COSTA MESA WESTMINSTER
II ell's Angel
Sentenced
ForArnis
SACRAMENTO (UPIJ -
The fOrm'er president of the
Vallel"o chapter ·of the iicll's
Ange s Wednesday v.•as gWen
an eight-year prison 'lerm for
illegal possession of a machine
gun and illegal possession and
sale of a dynamite homb.
Theodore L. DeWilde \Vas
convicted last month by a
jury of three counts of
violating the N a t i on a I
Firearms Act.
S T A T E AGRICULTURE
director C. B. Christensen,
v.'tlo sets minimum milk prices
under California's state -
regulated system, said be
~·ould took at the proposal.
lie said he had see.n no merit
in demands by consumej
groups for an immediate
reduction in milk prices.
Jud ith Pond, a spokesman
for !he department, told the
200 attending lhc hearing that
"milk has become a political
football.
"Brickbats and accusations
are l)eing hurled by and at
everyone and anyone who
bceomes involved v.•ith the
issue." she said.
She said that some or sug-
gest.t!d revisions voiced al the
-
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'
-A S DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL P AGE
Whose Sandy Bea-ch i
' •
One element in a plan now before the regional
coastal oomnUssion proposes that the California 1£gis-
lature decl&re all sa•dy beaches public property .
In many part's of the world , the idea that natural
sandy beaches are public property would not appear
too startling.
But for Southern California the proposal, attractive
as it may sound, has serio us legal complications.
Here many deeds Of -ownership1 •• drawn up from
original Spanish land grants, set the oceanward boun-
dary of coastal properties at mean high tide line -
which is likely to be located somewhere in the middle
of a sandy beach.
This has resulted in the development of many
so-called "private" beaches, some without any access to
the public, even the publicly owned tidelands. ~ ..
While it might not be too .ififficult to pa ss laws
requiring the establishment of beach access routes, the
question of compensation to owners should all the
sands be declared public would remain.
The growing practice on the part or governmental
attorneys and plahning agencies at all levels of pushing
plans anCI actions which do in fact convert private land
to public use without dealing also with the problem of
proper compensation needs to be sharply questioned.
Th e Do••l>t Remains
President Ford faced the Wa~hington press corps
again this week, in what was anticipated as a n1ore
· mplete explanation of his precipitous action in pardon·
1--..mg former President Nixon. '
Unfortunately, perhaps partly because sharp
~~~§~ough questions were not asked, we know little more now than we did before the conference.
The President was convincingly emphatic in deny-
lng that there had been any "deal'' with l'.1r. Nixon
regarding the pardon.
He said be felt acceptance of the pardon could be
regarded as an admission or guilt, though no specific
admission had beeh sought or made.
He skirted the question of the extent to which
concern for the fo.rmer President's health influenced
his action.
He acknowledged be was surprised-by the intensity
~<LPubliC,,..[lla£li.cmi~-~-__so, the question as O wlly-Pi'es1 efil or" SO SU • ·----1
denly and totally reversed his announced intention to
let the legal process take its course largely remains. Why
he acted so very secretly, without substantial consulta-
tion with the special prosecutor and other key advisors
on such a significant. matter still is a puzzle.
As it stands, while applauding Mr. Ford's willing-
ness to meet the public through the press, we must con-
clude that be has not dispelled the public's feeling that
there was a great deal more behind the sudden pardon
than has yet been revealed. Unhappily, the credibility
of the new administration will suffer accordingly.
The Voter Gap
·Political events o( recent months have sharply re-
duced the traditional Republican voter majority in
Orange County.
Democrats now are registe'ring to vote at a rate
that exceeds Republican registrations by almost 200 a
day. The qop still holds a substantial edge over the
Democrats 1n the county, but this has faUen from 54,707
at the close of registration for the June primary to
. 44,354, a drop ~! mpre than 10:000.
. In short, Orange County is rapidly losing its posi-
tion as one of the nation's most secure Republican
strong~olds. And blame for the widening gap apparently
fal!s . directly on the leadership of the party that bas
en1oyed such staunch local support. ·
r,
•
.....
: ..
. .
(
"llf.LP ! A MONS1Eli' IS ON fllE LOOSE ! " " ~ .. ~.,: r-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--1.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~_J
•
w Truth Device < •
Dear
Gloomy
Gus tects Thoughts
Can I be pardoned for what I am
going to say on next year's lax
return? a people cared as much
about the conduct of public
we do about the conduct
te persons, we might march"
y step towards felicity.
should our curreiit ''mania for
," which is a nice way of saying
, be direct-
,less to Rich· n thous~ Nixon
ld Reagan ::;;,
Joe and Mil-~ ~ ba~:iz~°:Jei. ~· .
Ille technology
Mtection to a
" remarkable
The supposi-
underlying research in this field are
tie·detectors will be able to ease rind-
" lifters, and rip-off artists of vari·
kinds. Why shouldn't these machines
and compgters be applied l o
officeholders before they take office.
and regularly after they do so. when
their conduct appears to ca11 for close
inspection?
·Watergate could have been halted in
its quite early phases if the principal
liars bad been forced to take polygraph
tests. You will say. their la\vyers would
object. anti you ·would be ri ght. But
why is it that nobody else seems to
object to the proliferation of these
nauseous devices? 'The devices have in
common one characteristic: That they
do not work when given to the sociopath.
tole most dangerous common crimi nal
ot all, the man who does not know
tbt difference between right and Wf'Oflg,
a~ cannot be .tested on this.score.
A~PLENDID little device called a
"tru ' verification mold" is now t>t;ing
devel ed, if that Is the word ,-at Kent
State rUveraity, a pl.ace memorable
in the story of civil liberties.
This ·111achlne has been described to
a Ho~ subcomm ittee which has for
four mcths been quietly, almost
secreUy, t.lding hearings about secrecY
and goveJ1'nent invasion into individual
privacy. It is claimed this bit of
equipment cmn tell if a man is lying
even if he fioesn't open his mouth.
A11 be ha!!! to '!> is THINK a falsehood.
The gizmo works by measuring the
response of the human eye to questions
and comments. lt calibrates, with
enormous accuncy, tiny and fitful
changes in the st¥ ot the pupil, retina,
• ·Ttte
HUNDRED
~WAA
, fA!rrONE
(CHARLES McCABE).
and they eye's overall focus.
This admirable number supposedl y can
tell if a drugged or drunk person is
being truthful. It can probe behind the
P.R.
GIMlnr G" tomments .,. subndtt9111· ltr
r•••l"I "'"' ff llOI llKKHrllr r.lle(I "" l'Nwa •I lfMI llllWW<ll_.. S...O rovr• pff
'",. • GIMmr Gus. D1l1Y l'llot
II 01v Much Do
· evasions of someone . claiming th~_
protection of.. the Fifth Amendment. It we l~eally
can drag a comment from the most \.
stoic "no comment." Already men on
Kent's campus police .force have been V'tlu' e Li'fe? screened with this device. (.1 •
lttORE AND more, elsewhere.,
detection devices are being used by
employers against their help. Often these
days job applicants arc warned that
if they do not submit to a company
lie test they will almost certainly not
get the job.
( SYDNEY HARRIS )
We talk glibly about "the value of
life" \vhether on the battlefield or in
the embryo, but how much do we really
care, and what are we willing to give
up to sustain this value?
A Cleveland department store takes .. the deteclion mania to a really
extraordinary length. A job applicant
must sign the following : "I agree to
take a polygrapb test administered by
the Truth Verification Agency regularly
engaged by the company. If I refuse
to take the test I agree that the company
;apply against the shortage any ,moneys
otherwise due to me." '
In English, if you don 't take the test
and there is a shortage in your till,
you pay up the shortage out of your
salary. Jolly good thinking , on the part
of management. One wonders how many
of the store owners would be willing
to put their o~TI honesty on the line
so guilelessly?'
' AND NOBODY seems to care. least
of all the people this rotten people-
watching gets done to. \Ve all have
been so drugged by the law and order
stories on the telly, where every year
is either 19M or beyond, that we cannot
relate these burglaries of our spiri t
to the promises this country was niade
on. •
If lie detectOr tests were aimed, first
and carefully, at elected officials. these
same orticlal!! would be fnr Jess eager
to give official sanction to Peeping Toms
anywhere. Which would be pretty much or all right with those or us who still
·do care. .... · -
Last month the National Safety
Council's board or ·directors passed a
resolution urging Congress "to continue
to support a maximum speed limit of
55 mph throughout the United States."
I don't see how anyone can rationally
oppose this recommendation .
For .the first three months of the
new limit, auto deaths declined by 25
percent from the first three months
of the year before. This gh~es a projected
saving of 8,500 lives annually--0r nearly
230 lives each week -through the
reduction in highway speed.
THE COUNCIL'S decision w a s
influenced by turnpike statistics showing
that reduction in speed, rather than
reduction in amount of travel, is
responsible for the drop in fatalities.
Altllo\)gh travel dropped Only 18 per
cent in the first two months of 1974,
turnpike figures showed a nearly 60
per cent reduction in fatalities. '
As the council said: "Travel reduction
reduces motorists' cbances of having
aecidents. but speed reduction ieduces
the severity of the accidents that do
occur."
tN POINT of fact, the COW'ICi! reports.
the chances of death • or s e r i o u s
injury in a t!"affic accident double for
each 10 mph increase over 50 mph.
Incredibly enough, if you are going· at
55, your chances of getting killed in
1t crash are less than half the chances
if you are going 65. (And this is without
even taking into consideration the fact
1hat at much above 65, the car is
controlllng us, rather than we the car.)
At first, traveling as I do in the
sununer between the country and.Jbc
• city, I fOWld the new limit rather
repressive. But soon I adjusted to it
and four;id it both physically and
psychologically less taxing than clipping
alOlll at a steady 70 ·as I used 10 .•
J now see thlngs I never saw before,
fctl less pressure to "make lime ," and
am not hypnotized into near·sleep by
the scenery slipping by at noshing spoed.
"Wen, l1t'1ju1t 111111 ij,.,ny episod11 '' we can."'
AND. THEN, of course, there are time
8.500 hves a year-a cumulative fipre
that can exceed all our wartime losses.
Nont of us has been spared the tragedy
of a friend or relative prematurely lost
in a traffic accident. Thi~ hf our best
way of paying tribute to thclr klUflles..
and avoidable deaths, by m<1klng it up ta the future -
•
•
First Astronatit See1n·s a l l'i111ae1·
Glenn's Political Sweep
COLUMBUS, Ohio-When Sen. Edward
At Kennedy arrived in Cinciru-.atl to
campaign for Democratic Rep. Thomas
Luken. conspicuously absent from the
platform was ·John GleM, whose
.sweeping popularity in _campaigning for
the U.S. Senate is surprising hard·bitten
political operatives here.
Glerm, the first American in space,
was careful to be elsewhere, 400 nUIQ.5
across the state at
a Democratic clam-
bake in Toledo. In-
deed, the .kind or
"help" that Glenn
mighl want f ro m·
a.ny Democratic par-
ty leader outside the
Buckeye State would
be found last in the
person of Tedd y
Kennedy. .
Now n.uming a phenomenal 2-to-l
ahead of co:Jorless Republican Mayor
Ralph Perk of aeveland, the high-fiyi:i.g
Glenn may become the first statewide
candidate since Lyndon Johnson in 1964
to amass a million-vote plurality. As
one Republican statewide leader here •
told us, "GleM is taking even the
Republican vote away from Perk without
half trying."
THE GLENN phenomenon is unique
in the post-Watergate politics of mass
voter disillusionment: a national hero,
unencwnbered with the I d e o I o g i c a I
• baggage that has fragmented the
Democratic party, who seems eminentl y
acceptable to blue-collar hard-hats and
left-of-center intellectuals. GI en n's
personal constituency today ranges from
deep right-een1er to left-center, a broad
spectrum the Democratic party badly
needs in the embittered search for its
soul.
It is only natural, then,. that Glenn
does not need or . want the kind of
political help which has made Kennedy
an attraction for some other Democratic
candidates this fall. Beyond that, Glenn
will not soon forget that Kennedy cul '"
him dead in his losing I!n'O senatorial ..
primary battle with Howard Melzenbau n1
and in his decisive victory over Sen .
J\1etzenbaum in their return engagement
last !\fay.
What rankled Glenn partisa~ut
that Kennedy snub was the memory
of hawisb, ex-Marine Glenn's atalw:irt
support for Robert Kennedy in hi s 1968
presidential camapign. despite his dovish
position on the Vietnam war. Help from
the Kenned y family whi ch Glenn got
in last spring's primary battle with
!\1etzenbaum ·came not from Ted
Kennedy but from Jacq~eline Onassis,
who taped a television endorsement fo
GleM in the campaign's closing days.
NOW THAT Glenn 16oks like a
glittering \vinr.er ,against Perk in
NovembeJ., Ted Kennedy is not abov~
'vanting a piece or the action. But a
private offer from his scnatprlal , office
to G1eM's headquaners bere suggesting
that Kennedy would be more than glad ·
to give Glenn a helping band on his ~
Ohio visit this week was politely
rejectecl . / That Glenn is being courted by such
national party leaders as KcMedy i~
not surprising. He is likely to emerge
from the senatorial campaign as the
No. I Democrat in the fifth largest
state. U his awesome lead over Perle
holds, (;lenn could become a .major
.facto r · in the party's 1976 presidential
battle-at least a strong possibility for
second place on the ticket.
TIIAT VERY prospect Is v:ie\\"ed darkly
by Gov. John J. Gilligan. running for
reelection against Republican retread
James Rhodes. Afflicted with the usual
liabilities of an incumbent governor,
Gilligan is only marginally ahead of
former C'.ov. Rhodes. Democratic
politicians agree that ii GleM emerges
on Nov. S with a plurality which exceeds
Gilligan's by anything like 500,000
v.otes-a distinct pos.9bility-Gilligan's,
own presidential aspirations will shrivel.
·Th e result would be a strong indication
!hat the national party should move
to the center in 1976,: and away from
the left-liberal ideology of John Gilligan.
Glenn was tr eate d by the
Gilliga1H:OT1trolled state party like a
pariah until his primary win.... He is
now showing the sari'le bleakness for
Gilligan's new courtship as he is for
Kennedy's.
History at San Clemente
WASHINGTON -l'he dramatic events
can now be told, which led to the
pardoning of Richard Nixon.
-The · former President d I d n ' t
participate in the conversations . at San
Clemente but let his loyal aide Ronald
Ziegler do the talking for him.
Not unUI the parleying had been
completed did a t,ut, troubled Nixon
put In an appearance to murmur his
thanks. He 1<1.idn't even mention the
pardon. Nor did he
ask about the fate
of his rormer aides
who race trial on
september 30 for the
alleged crimes that
he no longer can be
prosecuted for.
. In an earler col-
umn, we detailed the
rea~s that Presi-
(JACK.ANDERSON)
On September 5, Becker and Atiller
flew out to San Clemente for the final
negotiations. White House aides say
President F0rd's parting instructions to
Becker were: {l ) he should not ptomise
Nixon a pardon but should Inform him
only that a pardon was passib\e; and
(2) Becker should stress that the
Watergate case was an, "albatross"
which Ford wanted to remove from
around his neck so he COliold conc..-entrate
on solvin~ other problems.
dent Ford granted his predeces.sor a
blanket pardon. The oveniding reason,
according to our White House sources,
was to save Nixon from a possible emo-_
Ilona.I oollapse. ,
The two lawyers arrived at San
Clemente at 11 p.m., California time,
and immediately went into a three-hour
huddle with Ronald Ziegler. Alter the 1 iscussions broke up at 2 a.m., Becker
and Miller drank a couple of bet!rs
:tnd then retired to guest rooms ln
the San Clemente compound.
But the President's lawyers. Philip
Bucften and ..Bellton Becker, wanted a
"contrition liatement'' from N1xon ••
part of the paitton qreemeut.
They were concerned that t>e. might
aggravate the Watergate controVersy by
proclaiming bis Innocence once It was
no longer possible for the cowu to_
e1tabll.sb bis guilt. As one White House
soul'Cfl put it bluntly: "We wanted to
nvold the Ted Agnew bull-or
prolCsti,,; his IMocence all ~vcr the
country.'
11lE QUESTION of contrition was
brought up delicately with Nlxorfs crack
criminal attorney, Herbert ' ' J a c k ' •
~ifiler. They didn1t want to make It
a coodlllon of the p1Jrdon, so they merely
suggested thal a cleansing statement
from Nixon woul~ be hclpl\I!.
BECKER was up at 5:30 t .m. to
, telephone-a progreu rep(irt -to nuclM!:n
at the~ White Jfouse. tater the-tll1ks
re$wnM in Ziegler's orfice. Frequentl y.
. Ziegler and 'Miiier would !!lip out of
fhe room ror whlsJ>'red consultations.
perllapa w)lb the PresJdeut. At one point,..
Becker showed 'Miller an advance dr11ft
of the pardon statement th•t tho
President might Issue.
An undenr:tluKling ultimately WA!
rtaclled that a pardon, if the' President
agreed to It. would be followed by a
statement of contriUon from San
Clef11ente. The t'Ontents, U not the exact
language, or .the statement were
,caref\Jlly worked out.
TIIE DETAILS were also finallicd
for giving Nixon eventt1t1I custody of
his ptcsldentlal tapes and docwncnls,
I
-
"i th safeguards to assure that they
v.-ould be available to tbe"'COUrts.
All the agreements were completed.
before Pres ident Ford's weary r:mlssary
sat down with Nixon 'himself. Before
Becker and Miller were ushered into ,...
Nixon's office, they \Vere cautioned to
keep the meeting lnfonnal.
They found Nixon mentally alert but
terribly tired and distraught. Ziegler
stood at the door while the others sat ...
and talked .
"THANK YOU for 'being fair,'' Nixon
murmur.ed to the 36-year-old Becker.
"You are a fine young man."
Jn a few minutes,. it was over. Ristory
had been made.
OIANe l COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robtrt N. Wted, PubUsMr
TJtomo1 Keevit, Ediior
Barbara Krtibich
Editorial Page Editor
~ ~ltorlal ,page or the O.Hy
Pilot ~ks to inrorm and !':tlmulate
ttadtrs by presenting on this pqe
dlftl'le rcommentary-Oii lollica Of tn-
l""ll by l)'ntlicattd col'wnrilltl: and
carioonl1t1, by providing a forum for
rte.d~n· vfna and by J>('n'tntl11f thla
ne-.npaper'a oplrOOns and t&!u on
airm1t topicL ~ editorial opln'°'1a
of 1htt Dail)' Piiot appear only fn the
«Utortal colwnn at the 1np ot the
• P91t, Opfnklftl ex(>l"Hltd by the ('Of.
umnistl and cartoontst1 and letltr
\lllTftfn are lhclr own a.nd no extorse-
mttlt ol' their v\ewa bY the OaJJy
P\lot .t.:l\Jhi be infft'l'\'ld.
Tl\ursday, September 19, 1974
j
L. lfl. Boyd
Pigeon Racers
Co11 serve.Energy
Football ooaches pace up and down the 1idelinea.
Boxing managers fan their fighters between rounds. Horte
trainers leap up at dawrf to time their animals. Baseball
managers march out to the mound and yell at the umpire.
All ' thls comes to rnlnd because a client averse to labor
wants to know It there's any-partici-
pant sport wherein the participant
need not burn up any energy. Certain-
ly is. Pigeon racing. A shipper will
pick up the birds, deliver them to a
starting JX!int several hundred miles
away, then tum them loose at the
prescribed moment . They fly with hot
hearts 300 miles a day. Back home, ~·, ··•
the sportsman in the rocking chair
may doze, read a little, sip tea, what·
ever.
BIRDBRAIN
liow we ca1ne by that term "birtlbrain" I do not
know. Relati ve to its size, the brain of a bird is enormous.
QUICK, without looking at your watch, which is closer
to the dial, the flOur hand or Lhe minute hand. Odd how
we fail to notice sucb. The hour hand, always.
AN OTllER litlle known fact about poet Watt Whitman
is that altbough he used "I" and "me " in his own wr it·
ings with large ' abandon, he wouldn't read anything writ·
ten in the first person by anyone else.
COCKROACH
Q. "You said the average femaJe cockroach produces
37 little roaches per litter. So how many litters does she
produce?"
A. Seven in the five montM of her life.
, FAVORITE SPORT in the Philippines is cock fight·
ing. Every village has a pit. Law there permits fights only
on Sundays and holidays.
COLUJ\1IlIA UNIVERSITY researchers say they've
proved that men are incllned to get angry at things_, while
y,·omen are more apt to get angry at people.
THIS ONE is told about a New York dress manufac-
turer who invited in 40 buyers to see bis fall line. He
ordered his asfilstant: .. Go down to Lindy's Restaurlnt.
Buy one sandw ich, but make Jure it's the most expensive
one." The assistant asked , "How are you going to feed
40 buyers on one sandwich." The manufacturer snapped,
"Don't back talk me. Take it down to Irving·s Delicates·
sen and get him to knock off 39 copi'es."
Address 111ail to L. M. Boyd, P. 0. Box 1875, New-
port Beach 92660. Copyright 1974 L. J\f. Boyd
•
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• '
' .
• UPI Ttlto11119
Fighls Divo r ce
Beverly McKittrick,
Jacki e Gleason's see·
ond wife, has contested ·
husband's divorce ac·
tion in Fort Lauder·
dale, Fla., and is ap-
parently hoping for
reconciliation.
. '
A ctivist -
Seeking
Damages
OAKLAND (AP ) -Black
activist Angela Davis and a
companion have filed a flS,000
claim against two I a w
agencies and a hosp i t al
contend in g they were
unla\vrully detained, t h e i r
attorney says.
The claims were filed by
attorney Doris Walker who
said Wednesday that Miss
Davis was ''forcibly
handculted and s u s t a i n e d
s ome phys'ical and
psychological injuries" in an
Incident last Thu~y night
al Highland flospita].
TUE CLAU.f WAS riled
agai nst the hospital, Oakland
police and the A I a me d a
County sheriff's office, Mrs.
Walker said.
She said the "'omen had
gone to the hospi tal becau.'ie
Miss Davis had an infected
eye. When they arrived, Miss
......
ANGELA DAVIS
Di!vis' doctor was in surgery
and tbey decided to come back
later, Afrs. Walker said.
~s they returned to the
park\ng lot, they were stopped
by a sheriff's deputy who
detained them y,•hil e he ran
a warrant check, sbe said,
M I SS D AVIS WAS
interrogated for' about 90
minutes beCore she w a s
released, the claim said.
.11utsda~. September 19, 1974 • DAILY PILOT Ji 7
~~~~~~~~~~~~
·~ l
WASHINGTON (AP) --Force provklcd vehicles, for trips ma.de by hi&ti·ranking
HI g h -r a n k 1 n g Pentagon the use . ol merq.bers or officers to restaurants, g::ill
o£ficers f r e q u e n t I y use Coojrt!l8 amf. I.heir ai<les oa;.-courses, florists. cleaners. dependents on nu mer o us offiL'f'.rs' clubs. theaters and
government cars for Improper occasions to res id enc es, ·as <.hrcctcd'," it added.
purposes such as trips to golf airports, country clubs and The.• lt!d{'ral agency said
courses and theaters and mostly 'as directed'," the there had bl'~'" no action taken
commuting to work, a federal report said. against 1he n11su!ie by June .
even thuui.:h th e Defense
audit says. "TllERE WERE ~tANY Departn11"JI WJS ll"'arc ol H
The survey by the General -----------
Accounting Ortice, which was
released this week , a I so
charged tha t the mil itary
improperly offered u.<>e of
sedans to members o f
Congress.
"IT TS J!\'TOLEltABLf:
when so many of our ptt0plc
art sUffering econ o nl i e
hardship and depn vation
~use of inflation that hi~hlv
placed government officials
use sedans purchased with thC'
public's money for person;il
errands," said Sen. John 0.
Pastore, ( D · R . I .), 11'ho
requested the audit.
He asked the GAO to
conduct anot~r investigation
to sho1v the cost of the miausc
to taxpayers.
"The .Army, Navy and Air
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-•
•!f,11•' ,,
l'l•l "')';
l·>l j\h !.
14.2 cu.ft NO-FROST •
REFR IGER AT,OR
with 4.58cu.ft. FREEZER
•Two .ce'n Easy Trays store
up out of the way
• 3'Cabinet Shelm·
• Removable Egg Bin
•Deluxe Dairy Compts.
..
" ' • Full Width Crisper
•Only 28" wide. 6'" high ·~1j
,,,., ' 8308 ' 11 t'•
fCo'nvertlble PotscrubbeP
1-DISHWASHER
• 7 Pu,n11u11on Wnh Cyc!n Pow., Sc'llb'"'
~"0 No,,••al 5.,.1
• Pu1h To-Sl••t Conuol • ~""" '"'"''l•<)tl • R•ll .. A1f! Oo>oMMU
• D~al 0..tt<gtn! o .• ~ ....
si4a~, ,
'
Wt f\11.,. b11ilt Ollf'
bv1i"''' 11n M1ti1:-'W
lied. lo'f'(l:I tllll "'*''· You 1'111tl 1•; ,11ti1'itd or wa'll ~1
1110~1 II good.
,
·'
'
I •· ..
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' ·r
,
.•.
r A I DAILY PILOT * New Drug
Re1nedy ..
for Cold?
•
Thursday, September 19, 1974
Distaff Conunandc1· Leavn1g Se~vice
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The The daughter of an Army !raining school prepare an
first v.·oman ever given a colonel, she majored in muslC average of 33,000 sailors at
mlJor command by the Navy -In 1.'0llese aod attended Officer a time for work ranging trom
Candidate School before the (!Bke deoorait.ng and cooking
said this week. ''It's a big
world out there nnd there are
very many things to do."
says she will become a cillilian N · I ed h I avy comm1Ss on er n to nuclear Power plant weld-Lon!!er Season
* * * * * * * * .. • * * * * * * * * * * * MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan auoelation 1
In two weeks at the a~e of 1954. Fr'!ll1) 1961 to 1963 she ing. ....,
CH (CA Go (AP) 44 and without a job. was secretary . to the chief 1'he ass.ignn1ent came SACRAA1ENTO (AP) -The
University of I I I I 0 0 i 8 "!l's a big "'lrld out there," of ru>val ?perahons and lllter "simply because ( was a commercial crab season oil • "STATEMENT.SAVINGS "· PRESTIGE Cud
says Capt. Robin L. Quigley, senior aide to the deputy qualified naval officer," not the Central Cal\fomla coast ,.
re 1 e 8 r ch e r 1 say an the command er of the Navy's commander of the U.S. Euro--as a woman, she said In an is being extended. Gov. Ronald * BIXBY KJrtOt.LS Mercury Savinzs Bld1, Lo11g l!e•ch Blvd. at Carwn SI.
** *
• .. .. e x P e r I m e n t a 1 d r u g Service Center Command in pean Command. interview. Reagan signed JegislaUon that IUEIA PARK Me1cury S;uinas Bld1., Valle1 View at Lincoln
aignilicaritly Increases t h e San Diego. Her good looks were utlllzed But Capt. Quigley says she extends the season from Apri] * ~RSOft Mercury Savings Bide .. Avalon Blvd at San Oie1n Frwy. *
body's defenses against the ... Before taking the command by the Navy in recruiting in enjoyed training the young 30 to June 30 to the area * HUNTINGTOH BUCH Mercury Stvin1s Bld1., Edina1r at Betel! *
Id #-\.. 16 months ago, 9he was the late 1960s. sailors and is a little sorry between the northern * LA HAlllA·fUW•TON Mucury Savin1s Bld1 .• lmptri1! Hwy. at H11b0f *
common co and may be the • .... assistant chief of n a v a I A staff of nearly 1,000 men to retire. boundary of Monterey County * TUSTIN Mercury Savin1s Bids .. lfYine Blvd. at Newpo11 Ave. *
answer to control of the personnel for women in and women have helped capt. •'l'm-~-leaving·the-Navy-fMld-.--the-southern-bowdarx...of __ _,t ___ !f~!-~~NA ~~~~!~Cil'L!s Ave. ti San Be1n11dino Frwp *
ailmenty CMDR. ROBIN QUIGLEY \V ashington. D.C. Quigley and her San Diego for anything definite," she ~Jendocino County. * * • • • * * * * * * ***'**-*·* * * * *
The Qrug, propanedlamine. ;:::::::::::::::::::=.....::::_~_::::__::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::.;:::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;:::;;;;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::;::~;::;::;......;;,_..;;.~~~~~'-~~~~--;
s.timulates an increase in the
body's natural production of
interferon , a chemical that
derends the body against viral
and other infections.
BECAUSE INTERFERON
is effective against all viruses,,
it has been considered
promising in the control cf
respiratory Infections. such as
the cold.
Devised to organize and clear up the clutter
Cclds are caused by so
many types or viruses that
a vaccine against all of them
is thought impractical.
The scientists at t h e
1 university's medical schOOt in
Chicago said they used 39
young volunteers to study the
effects of propancdiamlne.
WRITLVG IN THE New
England Journal of ~1edicine,
the scientists said the results
of their study make them
opfmistic t h a t ultimately
efftc"tive drugs can be
developed for the common
cold and other v I r a I
respiratory in£ections.
An .editorial in the journal
n<>tes that the limitation on
use cf the drug is that it
must be administered
throughout the period in which
a person mlght catch a cold.
And it notes that the
production or interforon
decreases with r e p e a t e d
stimulation.
FIFTEEN SUBJECTS in the
Illinois experin1ent were given
the new drug via nose drops.
Then they were exposed to
cold-causing viruses.
They developed either no
cold sYmpc:oms or so few that
they v.·ere considered insig-
nificant.
Other subjects not given the
drug were exposed to the
same viruses. They developed
severe· colds.
ft "ft=tT..t
•
Spincle System
Cre•I• y~r own decor•tor 1torage piece•, b•nnl•ter•, Of'
room dlYider• with splndl•• •nd 1hel¥H. Wide selection •I tiny prlce1.
Style Size Unllnl1h&CI
Ear ly American 12 .. 89'
Mediterranean ..... 12-89'
Oriental_ ............ -.12 .. 89'
Scandia .............. .. , 12'' 89'
T1adilional .............. 11· 89'
Base Block ............. 711tn 64'
N;an Finial .......... 1¥on 54'
Bell Finill .......• --·-"l-1•" ·54•
Th<eadod 9' Connector ...........
Pec•n Flnl1hed
1.19
1.19
1.19
1.19
1.19
79'
14'
74'
9'
Q. Pre-Drilled Modular Shelves
~'C·'.'lc,. Pion .................... 14'"''" 4.99 6.99
,,
Rcyn
Sheff ct
"T• ·-· tile ,., •••• ...... -..............
,._. IMl•e It. Te •••w ff•
pla-••· we ....... . ._ ........ ,..
ef power. ere reel, It•
;'1 ai l 1Jil •r-" .,_,,_
With the possible excep-
tion or some degree of in-
rl uen ce over our pre-
.school children and the
·ramily pet~ most or us
hav e n eve r heen
privileged to wield real
power.
Power, .bringing real
pain \0 those who have it
and po~sesst'ng only ii·
lusory pleasures, would
·M!em to be poor choice as
a goal ror ¥nyones''I 1111•
unless it were sought
sale!\' for the go od it
would en.able, bne to do.
Your first call should be.
lo Ill. We are prepared to
a.uist and advise you with
~~lhy 4'nd undcrstan-
~H€FF€R . . moo.nu.lly .
'76 SOlJTH CO/tSf HIGiWAY
• LAGIJN.ti IBoi •
• '494-1535
G1oovl!<I one 4 or both ends ........ 14~.1136.. .99
4.99
6pc. preml.um roller and tr ay
set.
3.99
4 .. polyester br ush designed
for use w1th latex or 011 based pa1n!s.
64'
9x 12' heavy duty plastic drop
cloth. ' ·
1.39
Nu·Kote Silicone Lubricant
$.Qf.llJY. J<.ee.os eJ1erylhlng.lrom
drawers lo zippers sliding
easy.
6.99
..
Glidden Spred ~
latex semi-gloss
enamel
2.99q t.
•et· 3.69 T ougtl scrubba-
ble coverage lor woodw ork,
kitchen or bath 1n colors
lo match Spredo; latex wall
paint. Water cleanup.
Wall shelving
STANDARDS
Fl!i19h 12" 24" 31" 41"
Anochrome ....... •tc 69' ltc 1.11 ·
Ebony Black ...... 5!K 71K IM 1.29
Statu11y Bronze ... ll!K ate 1.11 1.41
Antique English ... 61K 89t 1.11 1.49
White. Orange.
'ime ~r Yellow .... 54' 7K 1.ot/ 1.41
BRACa(ETS Finish 8"
Anochrome ....... •4c Etiony Black ...... S4C Statuary Bronze ... 64C
AnllQue English .•. 64C Wh11e. Orange. Lime, or Yellow .... 4!K
SHELVES
10" 12 ..
49C 54C s;c 64C
6tc 74C
6tc 74$
54C SIC
In wide Jeleclions of colors and welnul grain finish.
8.1124" 2.49 8x48" 4.41
8•36" 3.49 101124 .. 3.19
101136" 4.19 101148" 5.19
12x36" 4.89 12x48" 5.89
Glidden Spred® Latex Satin ,
7.49gal.
R•f· 9.'f9 3000 decora1or colors.
Dries 1n 20 minutes to malle·flat finish .
Completely scrubbable. res1sls dlfl.
Waler cleanup.
T
"
. -.
CMrge It on'°"' JCPfflft•J chllrge card.
JCPerreJ
123 4~6 789 0 9
i.oorii< SMC!'nJ ·-··-·-·-··--CHARGE IT with your JCPenney Charge Card. II you don 't ha~e a charge. jusl see how last we can open up yqur new account.
Glidden Spred® house paint
8.99gal.
Rag . 11.•9 long-las11 ng velvet smoolh
fin ish dr ies in 20 minutes. Blister and
mildew.resistant. Warm water
cleanup.
T
Shelving
Mediterranean style
bookshelf/room dividers.
Featuring dls lre11ed
walnut tone woodgrain
steel shelve1.-anlique
black posts. Choice Of
lhree alzes.
29.99
Reg . 39.H 72 x 65 x 12"
13.44
Reg. 11.11 24x65x12"
NofA•liW:lle .,._.,..rtis~
Prites Effective
Thrv Sat., Sept.
21st, 1974
•
·\'
Glidden Spred®
latex trim
2.99qt.
Ree. J.~t tasy-to-apply,
las! drying. Gives windows,
doo rs and shutters a
medium gloss. Soapy water cleanup.
XPemey
11:t 451 flt 0 I --
•
Prices Effoctlvt
Thrv Sat., Sop!,
2ht, 1974
• SAN CLEMENTE
rsn,NORTHS.~Rw.
92-0100 SNO'A AMA: 3900 so. Bristol-No. of So. Coast Plaza• Open weekdays 10 to 9. Sundays 1010 6. OIAHIH: City Dr. at Garden Grove Blvd.• Open weekdays 10 to 9. Sundays 10 to 6.
IUIHA PARK; Beach at orongeiho.rpe • Open ·wee~days 10 to 9:30. Sundays 10 to 6.
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".-'"""_''·_s"_""-'"_'•·_'•=74 =::::'.*::=="='"_v_•_i_Lo_r~A~D N Q W S H Q P SAT LJ R 0 A'{.• 1 T I L I THE PICK OF Punc~ I /: 7, SU ND A·Y 'TI L 6'
•
"Sorry, lean only rake one at a time.··
Nat l(ing Cole
Was Too Early
Q: ls It true that th e late Nat "King'' Cole started oul
as one of the original Ink Spots, the great singing group·!
-It F. BedS \\'ortb, l)IU!burgh. .
A: No. He began his career in 1936 as a pianist in Lew
Leslie's Negro revue , "Shuffle Along." And launched his
fabulous recording career with a number he co mposed
himself. "Straighten Up and Fly Right." Nat reaJly wop
Caine wilh his recording of "Nature Boy." which sold an in-
'Glad You Asked That'
by Marilyn and Hy Gardner ·
credible half-miUion discs v.·ithin a month. His lifetime
recon:I sales topped 50 million. He y.·as one of the first
black talents to get his own TV show. But it was too early
in the game and il was canceled after the first cycle when
some Southern stations and squeamish sponsors got chicken
about presenting the great black artist.
T~IEY KEEP ASKING:
Were Carol Burnett's mother and faUier ·both alt»
holies'! A: Yes: "I saw enough to know that drinking
is an illness and nothing to be ashamed or," the candid-
comcdlenne c:onfesses.
\Vho did the voice of J\·lickcy l\fouse when Mickey first
went on radio? A: WaU Disney himself.
\Vhy do the two surviving Rill Brothers sign auto-
graphs "The Three Ritz Bros.''? A: To keep their dead
brother's memory alive.
Is it tru e that Oic k Ca\•ett. was once a Shakespearean
actor? A: Yes. He had a one.line part in a summer
· theater company or "The A-1erchant of Venice," starring
Kalharlne Hepburn. (Which may be one reason she
guested on his 1V show.)
Is it true that form er President Nixon had a small
music box on his desk y,·hich played .. Hail to the Chief"?
A: Yes. But today it can hardly be music to his ears.
Are the guest stars in "llollywood Squares" given the
answers to questions they'll be asked once the show goes
on? A: Before the taping, the participants are given an
area of general (not specific) questions to help them to
prepare their ad libs.
Send 'l/O'UT questions lo Hy Gardner. "Glad You
Asked That," care of this newspaper, P.O. Box 1560,
Costa lUesa 92626. Marilyn nnd l·ly Gardner t/Jill an-
stoer as many questions as they can i11 their column.
but the volume of mail niakes personal re plies im.
possible.
Psycl1ic Surgery
Helped-Patient
SEA'l'TLE (AP ! A
California house\•:ife ha s
testified she was satisfied "'ith
the authenticity of psychic
surgery. and pnother witness
from Callfomia sai d he was
happy with UlC rcsults...of such
an operation performed on
him.
"1 AM SUPRE~1EL V happy
with the resuUs," he said.
"I have not had a pa.in in
the knee since then."
Mrs. Sarah Paukert of
Lafayette. said she satisfied
herself about the pra ctice by
inserting her hand into her
own abdomen while th e
psychic surgeon was
oJ5(!r-aUng.
Melvin Howard of San .Jose
testified at a Fe<ICfal Trade
Commission hearing this week
on the controversial "faith
healing." !Je said ~at a
psychic surgeon removed a
loose 'carHlcge from his knee
last February. ·
ANIMAL
.A°'·rl'N <1r11;.r,/i. -r .. -tl:
.. , Wl'S~ SHf'P E.tlT THAT OVER
~E Fl~t4 BOWL.."
"J felt warm, whooshy,
s\vishy material and my hand
appeared to be covered with
my blood," she said. "J
couldn 'I see how they could
fabricate that much tissue."
ST ILL ANOT HER
Californian. Don Westerbeke
of ~1ill Valley, 5aid, "We all
aq:ree that slight of hand takes
place. But nol atways.
"If any one case is not
fr aud , then something there
is a reality that exists."
Marian B"utterfield.
srcrctarv -treasurer of one
of the fhree travel agencies
which conduct tours to the
Philippines. where the self·
styled surgeons operate. 11aid
she never believed in psychic
surgery., But she said she
didtl't see any reason to
inform customers about any
dOubts.
'jl aonft 1hfnk-that Is onr
function.'~ she said. ''\Ve are
a travel agency."
-WANTED-
L
DIAMONDS • GEMSTONES
.......... ..., ....,. ii. ~ .. 41111-1111 ·"" .... ....
~ ... '"'°'9 )Mll'flffel1 ........... C..1111 ........... "''
• ..tvot\9fl Irr -•• ,.., .. Hl~IM.11 "k•1 peilll. (1111 540-to6'
10..t •ii;, S."""1 IM. .._., "*"4, ..._ ._ '*· Dl-'I ,.... .... *·...... .
iewels by· le»seph
IOVT1I COAST l'IAU • :nn lllSTOI. COSTA·MUA • 5*'°'6
(except Downtown L.A. dosed• Sunday)
...
NATURAL PINE ACCEN -T GROUP
choose now from six different pieces to design your favorite room decor
Rustic. Provincial. A distinctive and natural loo k trans,plan1ing .
the easy-go ing influence of the counlry lifcslylc inlo loday's ca-
sual decor. Choose tables, plant Slands. elageres ... rough-hewn
accents to complele lhe natural blend of woods and earlhy col-
ors you've combined in your home. All co~e ready-to-assembJe-
and are layered with puzz le patterned surfaces. Buy one ... or
all to bring sublle warmth to your decor. Zapata Designs.
•
"
a
,
~ ..
' ,. '
• . \-' '
,
'
' •
•
•'
,. f
"
a. e1agere, exhibilS treasu red collectables, measures 30x72x12"
b. ranch tabl e, inlricately designed, measures 16x42x4H"'
89.95
179.95
c Cock1ail table, reclangu lar s1yle,
measures 16x24x48" \ R9.9'
d. plan! sland (or lelephone stand), fd't inventive hallway display 69.95
e. bu nch table, a praclica l lillle space-saver, measures 16x20x20" 39.95
f. end table, perfect for lamps and magazines. measures 19x24x24"59.95
1he "afford.lbles" 1.hop 87
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' . .•.
"
" .. ... J.
' ,,
•
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• •
'i t.;.t iil
W I rif
·~ l ,. .... ;.i e ~ "1\,-.:_
• ·"
...
•, •·. ,.,_. i. .:..·_
.~•. ...
•
Shop daily 10 a.m. to 9:30 ; Saturday, 10 to 7; Sunday, noon to 6
South Coast Pla za • Costa Mesa
3333 Bristol· St.
' -
Westminster Mall
S.D. Frwy. at Golden State
•
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' J 0 OAILV PILOT
Deaths • Elsewhere ·
GENEVA (UPI ) -Edna
Best, 74. stage and movie star
an'd wife or actor flerbert
Marshall, died at a private
clinic \Vcdnesday after a tong
iUness. British-born, she left ·
Brilain in 1939 for the United
States where she becanle a
naturalized citizen.
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Ed\\'llrd Alyu \Varren, 54,
1nanager of the Music Center
operating company, died Tues·
duy o( a hea rl ailment.
Denlh Notices
DIAZ Jfose Ma"e Diaz. Date ot daatn Sei:>· IM\ber 17, 1~14, w~• a reilllenl of Coit<1 Mela. Survived oy 1wo •On1, Armur AtomM ol Co•ta M~•a and Jonn qia1 ot Sun•and: Two ua1,111k!or>, Mrs. Evelyn Slaca, New Vor~ ef\d Helen
Rivera or Co51a Me~.t; r we I v e Qrandcnlldren. Ro•ary Tl\ur5(1ay J:XPM,
Sell Broadway cnape1. M~•• F•l<"1.v O:OO AM, sr. Joocnlm cnurcn. Directors
Bell BtOil<IWilY MOt!uftrl. • BEEll
Snirltvon E". Beebe oJ Covlna: Ca. Date o! uea!h September I&, 191~. Survive<!
oy her <1augn1er, Ru!ti Scnmurt of San·
D•m&.1; >On. James L. Beetle Ill. San
Cim<1si iMrenu, Mr. & Mrs. s. Lotnce
Br1n1le OI Cos1a Ml!sa. Service-3;00
PM hxlily, lhurS<1<1y, September 19th,
Pacllk l/oew Chapel. Interment P<1clflc; Vi~w Mem0<lat Park, "41wPOr! Beach,
Oireclor~, P&eflic View Mortuarv.
llEMMl!TT JaMeS E. Bl!fl!\e11, 16Q89 C~llil St., Fountain Valley, (ft. SurvlveC bV h<>
wife Marilyn BMne!I; lwo •on•. Jaf!ies E<1w•td B1nr>11t1 It arid 6retr ll>Oml>Wf! Bennet1; motl'Hor, Dela L, Par~; bro111er. CnJrl~s L. Bennett; two sl1ler" Marv Ann Holstein and Joanne C'Berry; gran<1!<1Jner, Carson Bennett. Servlc«
will. be held $ft!Urday, Sept<'fnbet 11. 1~.:io AM. Pee-Family co1an111 Fune•al Home.·we•lmln,ter. Tne t<Jmily re<iueS!• oon•tiruu !o !he Fcuntaln Valley J<JyCees or Vl11een1 Scolll Fund. BROOKS . kalnle~n M. flraoki;. Oa!e of <Ma!h
Seplemt:>er 11, !9)4, W<JS 11 reilden! ol Sanl<J An•. Survived by one $Oii,
eern1e C. Brook,. moJn•r. Joanne Cr11ne; tallier. Ira J, ROberts: one brolr>er, TlmolhV L. Robfrls; fi\11,! sisters, Oet>O<'<tll J. lbo!y, Janet Adam~. Tina Shee15,
C~rOI A & Loree • A. Roberts: one h~.lf·!i11er, Michelle HMallc~-Services W•lt be ~d Friday ll;JO AM, H!111ide
Ct1urcn, Rose Hllls Memorial P•r-. Whit·
rier, Ca. Rose Hiits Mortuary, d,ire-cton.
GULICK Mary S. G~lick, ~ldenr ot San Clemen1e,
Dille ol nea!n Sep1embe• J&, !914 •I
Rova1e Corwale1cen1 Ho~. Santa An1
Born January 9, 1880, F!. Ood<1~, Iowa:
Survived by two son1. we. 01101'\ecker
of Anaheim ~nd J.M. CannecKer of
Pueblo, Colorado; Ol'H! d~ugl'lter, Louise
LaFcn:r of Sln (liM>~nte; s r ~
ll"lndchlldren and si~ xgrea1.grandchildr Servitn Friday 1;00 PM, Pierce Bn:i!hers a. Snyder Mor!u<1ry Crapel. lfllllewood.
Ca. Interment l1>9tew00<1 Cemeterv.
SHEELEY JOst'l)hlne A. Shuley, 16913 Park /\venue. Sun~e! Beacn. Ca. Oftte ol de•IM Sep·
temoer 11. 1J7,, Studebaker Community HoSbilal, Norwalk. Ca. Born AUQUSI 19. 181l9, Newbury Park, Ca. AIJI! HS. Survived
by "'" sis!ers, Ida krukenbfrg of Norwalk, M. Fallon of Downey, Berlha HilrP<'!f' ol Weitmin•!er. Rosina Penl\ilJI, Nev .. POrl Beach; oro1ne ... Ar!Mur Gisler or Sd nlil Ana, L""Pold Gi5ler o! Cxn11rd, Allen Gisler, HunlingTon Beach, Ernest Gisler of Hun!i,,gton Beach and Anion
Gi>Jcr ol Brawley, Ca. Mrs SMeet<iY
Wd5 a mernt:>er of Trie Embelm Club, HunHng!on Beach 8nd Pas! Pr!'!laen1
01 Notlve Cd~h!ers of 1ne G<llden W«I, Hun1ington Beach, Rns1ry 1:00
AM Frioav, !.l!p1eme11r 19, Sm•tn•' Chapel. Mais 9'00 AM 5a!urday, Se-c>temwr 21, St. Anne Ca!hollc Chu"h, Seal 8edch. ca. O!tidanT. Father FetlK COl>e<'tr. ln!etmt!nl, M01Jn!aln VI-Mau:.oleum,
Altadena, Ca. Smiths' Mortuary dlrKl<ll's.
BELL
J<lhn R. Bell. Cale ol de~th S!P!emt>er
IB. 19U. R<!"lnen! of 3119 &ermucrn, CO$tl M H.l. Survlv..a by hi• paren15,
Mr, & Mrs. Ronald &•II: 1is1ers, NMllne
<Jnd Colll'<!n 6eU, and n umero v • 9randmo1ners. aunts. uncle~. cousins and
lrl'1'd• ol the \urroundlng """' and C;,nada. Private graveslde i.ervlces IOCl<ty,
S!ptemt>er 19, 191' 11 3:00 PM, Pacmc Vlew Memor;,,1 Par~, Now?Orl Beach.
dilV. Septemo.!r 2hl al 1n:oo AM, Mesa Ve1de United MeM'IOCllsl Crurch. In llW
of flowers all contrloutions may be mllde to The HirbOr Artt~ Baseball pragr•m, Inc or Cos!a Me-1 Junlor All Ameri(;iins F'OOll>llll Club, 6 •111· f!.er9e(on Co:1t~ Mes<J. <11rector5.
ARBUCKLE & SON
WfSTCLIFF MORTUARY
4 27 f. 17th 51., Co~a Me~a
646-4888 -·-BALTZ-BERGERON
FUNERAL HOME
Corona del Mor
Costa Mesa -·-
673·9450
646·2424
BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
I J J Broadway. Col.lo Me so.
642.q150 -·-DILDAY BROTHERS
MORTUARY
l 791 l Beoch Blvd.
Hvn1in9ron &och 842·1771
244 Redondo Ave.
t f.mg Beoch (213) 4J8.t 145 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 l oguna Canyon Rd.
494.9415 -·-McCORMICK
MISSION MORTUARY
:2B'S32 Camino Cop•~lrono
Son Juan Cop1~ira110
495.)776 -·-PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemtrery Morl.iary
Chapel
3500 Po(.lo( Voew Drove
f>lewJ<Oll St:ach, Co!iforrner
'"4.2700 -·-PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
180 L Bobo A""'. We~rm1n~1er
893·3525 -·-SMITHS' MORTUARY
627 Main St.
t"lunt•ngton 8eoc:h
!1364539
WESTMINSTER
MEMORIAL PARK c.,,..~ 11\Qrn.ary
('r~
f480l ~l\lvd
V.'1!11mit>·•~. COl-f<:im0
~31.1 1n
(G ood Deed People)
make the scene
Sundays •
Vo1m1teer
Fire111en
"'\sl{ Raise
SANTA ANA -Orange
County's ·400 volunteer t:ounty
firemen have leveled n sh<irp
protest against federulty·n1<1n·
dated chnnges in their wnge
system.
The County Board of Super·
visors was told Wednesday
that the firemen speci fically
object to the change that sets
their pay at $5 per hour on
dut.v rather than the current
$5 per call.
THE FlRE!\IF.S :a-j !hat
alt hough the system \vould
appear to be tnore benefic:.ial
to !hem in the event of a call
las ting several hours, there
is no provision for full
payment of $5 for the 111ajority
of their calls that last less
than a full hour. r
The federal Fair Labor
Practice Act requires the
county to begin paying the
volunteers an hourly '<Vage as
of Sept. 'l:l. Co u n t y
Administrative Officer Robert
Thomas said the county must
initiate the change before then
or risk breaking the law.
Thomas said the firemen
lvant to delay enactment o(
the oe\v wage law until after
some means of fractional
hourly pay can . be worked
out.
\
ORANGE COUNTY
•
Supervisors Pushing1
General Plan Meets
SANTA ANA -Orange 1n Wednesdny's ac t I on . rich said~ "It may 'vell be the
Coonty Supervisors \Vednes· Diedrich ·~succeeded in get· time limitation will force the
day pressured COWlty plan· tincr the amendment session second and third sessions to ~~ be combined." ners to conclude all three schedule pushed up four
sc heduled g e 0 e r a I p I a n weeks. According to a schedule presented to the board scverol
an1endment sessions by the "I WANTED TO GIVE ntonths ago, Environmental
end of the year. Management.. --Agency . chief
•
Herbert 0. Cherry~ M.D.
announces the establishment of
Family Pracllce offices
at 1901 College Avenue Santa An a
West of Homer Plaza (17th & Bristol) and
adjacent to Doctors Hospilal of Santa Ana
Teleohone: (714) 543·9655
Off -carrt pus
Prograni
Seen at VC I
The board, led by Super\'isor them as much leeway as pos-ll .G. "Geori:c'' ·Osborne was
Ralph Diedrich, said staff Sible to ·get in all three hoping to wind up the sessions
planners and pt an n i n g1_:•~m~e:'.n~dine~~nt:__>se~ss~io)Jln'.:s,~"~D~ied~-_'a~ft~e~r ~th~ec_f~ir~s.t_t ~o!Cl~he~y~e~ar'.:·_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
commissioners have b e e n
dragging their feet in getting
together the data needed to
hold public hearings o n
genera1 plan changes.
UC Irvine a ss ociate
biology professor Patrick L. St.'PERVISORS HASTIL V
Healey has been named to adopted the land plan at the
a six·nlan commission to \'Cry end of 1973 with the idea
develop off-campus degree it could be a1nended under
progran1s fo r the California state law three times during
university and state college the year. So far, no amend-
systems. ment hearings have ta~en
Dr. Healey'" ·is an academic place.
assistant to UC Vice President After nine months of delays,
Durwood Long, also a member supervisors were finally ~ed
of the cotnmission. earlier this month to set the
Other n1embers are Dr. first planning comrrusston
Rosemarv Park of UCLA ; amendme.Ot bearing. It \Viii
Dr. Alex ·shCrriffs, vice chan· take place Tuesday.
cellor for academic affairs If the proposed changes
for the state college co~ lo -the-board Oct. 2
systen1 ; Dr. Leo F'." Cain, unaltered, moie than 7.000
· president of Cal State Don1 acres· or land in the Aliso
Dominguez Hills; and Dr. Creek, Laguna Hills, Chino
president of C a l S t a t e Hills and Santa Ana Canyon
university dean of continuing areas will be opened up for
We've Done Our Homework TodaY ai PIC 'N' SAVEi
* Q. Witll prices of everytbint
cli111bi•r daily It
astr;qmic11 lltifllls, Is there still
any place lift wllere y11 c111 llMJ
botll nerp1y 11ecessities au
11citin1 FUJII THINGS at 11tywMrt
nur SENSIBLE PRICES!
A: YES! At PIC 'N' SAYE. 11 spite of all economic
preuares, PIC 'N' SAYE continues It resist tbe tlflatl11
1N"it1· spiral. Wt'te done DVr homewwk-searclltd ltle
entire uti• tlr superb val11s-ucellent close·Olt SAVE 400l 70% Urfains which we are still able to llri•r to yo11 seven .70 •
da1s a week. Y111 will alwa1s ... PIC 'N' SAVE 40% TO 70%
AND W£ NOW HAYE 31 STOKES TO PRQYE IT! YISIT ONE SQQll! OFTEN EVEN MOREi
3 oz.
SKEIN
DURJNG . DISCUSSION of1-::ed=uc=a=Ii=on:.;.==:::===::::::d=ev=e=lo=p=m:e=n=I.:::==::::::~
the matter. several supen•i·l 1
sors indicafetl they could act
qui ckly to resolve tbe problem
simply by stipulating that the
firemen would be paid a full
$5 for the first hour, or any
part of it. and then on an
hourly basis for the ren1ain·
der of time spent on duty.
But supervisors accepted
Tho1nas' recommendation to
go ahead and enact the Ja\V in
i!s current form and order
staff personnel negotiators lo
sit dO\\'ll \\'ith the firemeu over
the next 30 days and work
out al\ the details or the
protest.
Tf the negotiations are
r e·s olved s atisfar.torly.
Thomas said the law could
be amended .
FBI School
For Gates
SAr-..1TA Al~A -Orange
ColUlty Sheriff-elect Bradley
Gates has left for three
months of ·intensive training
at the 99th national academ\·
of the Federal Bureau Of
Investigation.
OLD FASHIONED
SQUARE DANCE
ON THE MALL
TOMORROW, FRIDAY
_BEGIHHIHG AT 4 P.M.
ALSO SATURDAY 12·5 P.M.
Bring Your Partner and
Join in the Fun!
B• Sure To See Ill< Disploy of
SILVER BULLION
MOW 1M ISL.A.MD HOUSl OM THl·MAU.
FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT CENTER
The FBI academy, ivhich [':====================~ takes place at Quantico,!·
Virginia. provide s top
professiona1 law enforcement
trai ning to career lawm en.·
Gates, elected to succeed
retiring county Sheriff James
Musick, \Viii take office · in
January. He was--appointed
undersheriff in July and has
already taken a major role
in the department.
T,vo Harbor
l\len Named
SANTA ANA -Two men
from the Harbor Area have
been appointed to the board
of the Orange County Chapter
of the ri.farch of Dimes.
Dr. ,\1\an L. Louderback, a
clinical chemist. of Costa
Mesa, joins the board after
serving as a.volunteer lecturer
with the tllarch of Dimes for
three years. He is married
and has ~ix Children.
The other ne\\T director Is
Hugh ~t. Saddington, cf New·
port Beach. A cerUfied publi
accountant. · Saddington is
married rith fou r children.
Sunday is ·
Fl'.ltl&AY-'
• HO~lEI A19 •111011111>~ .lllK~" ltt• llG ~ll•l•UIO•
~ ... •14Gl!Vn 13 ~ lionmi• ~ ...... 1(1111!)
• +<QUL1 ~ ~ It.All
II;! ~ Oii'., •ltlW(lltf
THE: ULTIMATE:
DE:AC-H HOUS€
·rhe best of everyt hing, ri~hl on the ocean in
Coronado. All the pleasure yo.u could e\'er gel
frorn living by the sea, plus all the urba n
touches. A doorman . full·service beach club.
Chan1pionship tennis courts. Sparkling poo ls
and health spa, Golf and marina an easy \valk
from your door. There'll never be another
pluce like ii. so call or visit soon \vhile choice
units arc still ova ilablc.
One. t\vo nnd three bedroom condominiums
fr um 539,900 to $98.900 8'/2~0 interest (8% ~o A.P.R.)
Coronooo Staes
Across the bay from San Diego on the Silver
Strand. P.O. Box 220,
Coronado.Ca lifornia 92118
(7'14) 435·6234
Condom inium·O\\'ner
apartn1en ts no\v availabl~
for lease. One month
roin imu1n. Call or \\·rito
Dick M<Ji1 land at
addrei:;s obuve .
~ fO ...... NOUSli'«l i=.i Ol'f'O"TUMTltl •
A !.OEWS C'.OMfl()MATfON J, II. S:\l'IJEl!t:o ~:NVIMON~1f.r..'T1'1. c:Ot.IMl/NITY
.Utt 201.4l
HOW s1499s
Ilg S.•i"'l•
0. TM F.11
UoeOf
l™ltifquipmonl
~~5ii~1JgveR BOOK SALE A~r.!;m oiocryhc h!ll!r by li'on~lo.
f'etipe! tor ~n1!11n~. oocn~tm~.
1Wed••ng. ;ona m.ic-. Jbch111t
w~f!l.lblt. A ~ersafilt 'ioi"rr DI unlim."d
1101~•b1liher..
Top Qllality close-oots from such gubkshm as RA~OOM HOUSE. ALrRlO A
KNOPf, HARPER &-ROW, e!c. All k1ods of books Iha\ are fun lo rea~. Starla
colletlion today. VALUES TO SI0.00. Ht IOlll YAl.UE 3 G1. ~til 49C PIC 'ff SAVI PllCE OHl Y 59c.
~ -~~ I
'1 11-'Ji. l r:i '
ti -an== ..., .. ' '--'
-. J
SJJ9
l(TAIL
VA1.IJ1
11/2 QT.
OVAL ::-------1 YOtl; 119 2 Of. PIC
ROUND e
KITCHEN GUARD
SPRAY
CLEANER
FAMOUS MAKER
MEN'S SOCKS
Great ~elettoOl'I o1 slylts alrd t11lors. Sflect
rrom ll)lans. 901y~srers, arid orlolls. fancy and
solids.
IETAll VAi.iil$ fltlll 51.25 II 51.51 •••• 5k
oELu~E I 25C 1 I 69Cf== ,. L:::ii;;f~::::::AMS;J
STAPLER
49C
6 PIECE SET
COLORED MARKERS REPORT COVER
flat supporled vinyl fokttf with two imide
pockets 10 hold oape!'S nut. clean. ~ Ml
writikled! Eisy !o Cdl!')'. Jakts up very
li«le room! Daating t11lon.
•
WESTMINSTER
l 4200 llffch Bl•d.
N.F.L NOTEBOOK BINDERS 1,000 STAPLES &
STAPLE REMOVER
flo desl sh!Ju~ be witho-.rl rlll!se!
S!aplt }'DUI repo!ls. no!es, etc. to
keep lllrm nut a~ ordelly. 159cl
M)k! your mar\ in' !fie woild~ And dCI
It 1n ~i• 111onou1 colojs. Make signs, '
maoo. sthool orn1ects. ~l'lft ins1anUy,
FAMOUS MAICER
! ~,~,~.~~.~~~ .... "
be ~tr.out this dutablt molded vmy! case
!~I restrnblts tine feather. Ahrminum
st1ength fot added Strfftg!h. Oividd
iilttilOI' Cllill9¥!Mls for imporUnt PIPlfS,
tic, C~kt o! 0!1Ye or bllet..
l!iGI SIU< VAlll .•...•••• $9.95
COSTA MESA
175E. 171hSt.·
.. "".,.... ll•d.
\
SAMTA ANA
lrl1tol & MacArlhur
MOf"ffl of S.... c ... t rtmr
HUNTINGTON PHOTO SUPPLY OPEN WEEKDA VS 9 TO 9-SUNDA Y 10 TO 7 llllt MAIM s~.11 ~ ""'"'""'C•-•H.I. -141·6411 or 142-tllt
•
•
·-. • •
I
(
r
OC Health
Unit Asks •
For Funds
''IN TERAlS OF
immuni:r.ation program 1
·themselves, ,this grant woii't
change anything," Philp told
supervisors. "The county has
had smne (orm or program
since 1923 when the health
department wu created to
counter an •pidemic of typhoid
fever."
Philp said until passage of
the new state laws, his starr
bas conducted schOOI
lmmunlzatkm clinics. Now,
he has switched to a system
of 29 community clinict: to
reach the chiklren before they
enter 9Choob. ·
According to h e a l t h
department figure!. which
Ftlllp says are s k e-t c h y
becan.l&e' of a lack of hard
data, about 80 percent of the
children In black and white
areas of the county ha\te been
fully lmmunlud, apiDllt such
things u diphtheria. polio,
measles Ind othler ailments.
•
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..
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SANTA ANA -Democratic
candidate Paul B. Carpenter
may have to run for office
Nov. 5 in the newly formed
71!1 Assembly ' District ol
Orange County without the
title of "health p I a n n l n g
director" he allegedly is using
rlght now.
District voters E. boug
Hawkes and Robert A. Bark
have filed an !lction in
Superior Court which charges
Carpenter with using a
misleading title and deceiVing
voters in the area.
Judge Mark Soden will rule
Friday on the demand that
the title be deleted rrom all
ballots and election literature
Bna that actiQg Registrar of
Voters Iiit.J. Mayer a n d
California Secrelary of State
Edmond G. Brown Jr. be
ordered to comply with such
a ruling.
Hawkes and Bark contend
that Carpenter never held the
post of ~h planning
direct.or. •ttanY lime prior
to hia reatgning from the
Orange Coui!IY )I e a It h
Plllllllln& Cciundl lao! Feb. 28.
From Friday, Septel)'lber
20 to Friday, October4, we're
celebrating our 91 years of
I .
banking in Southern California.
it'sgoingto betwoweeksof
Victorian·era fun and you're
. invited to· join in. Here's what . . ' . . , hlyipens when you do:
Just fill out a card and
••
.. .
Thursday, Stptembtr iq, 1C}74 DAILY PILOT A' ) l
COhnty Won't Weaken Dirty Air Standar:d
Thomas. The matter was first dlff~rmce between Orange . According lo Ganiarena, I. think our standards are fair DURlNG TUEJJt dlsawion,
raised Ulree weeks ago. County and U>s A n g e l e s Orange County experiences enough Jn terms of calling sUPfrvisors heard comments
The conflict first arose when C»unty alert levels. only ooe second stage alert alert&," be said . They are by Dale Secord, a spokesman
the ARB ordered all counties Currently, a nrst stage per year oo the average and working welJ and I see no r 1.
in the air basin to draft health alert is called in has never had a third stage reasop to change them." or t"e couniy Environ mental
emergency smog e p Is ode Orange County when ozone alert. But, he said, If either Thoinas told supervisors the Coalition.
plans. In an effort to make levels hit .20 parts per million should come, the air \\.'Ould county should retain its own "\Vhile ii is true we have
all the alert levels unifonn, o( oxygen. Jn Los Angeles, be up to 25 percent dirtier alert levels and not apply the never had a sL<Jgc three alert,
the ARB included a directive the .ttandard is .25 parts per with the Los Ange I es adjustmen t factor mandated neighboring counties have," he
that the standards used by mllUon. standards. by ARB. said. "Pollution does noL
the Los Angeles >eCD be The disparity Is even In the meantime, he sajd, cor:itain itself in a political
adhered to. greater at the more critical SUPERVISOR • RA LP 11 County Health Officer Dr. boundary.''
It was discovered recently second and third stages. Clark y,·as the strongest pro-John Philp and ,.\PCD officer Secord said the county is
that the calibration procedure Orange County's figures are ponent of defiance of ARB H.G. "George" Osborne should acting wisely lo maintain a
used by Los Angeles County's .40 and .60, respectively. l..oti mandates. keep tabs of ongoing ARB system that not only protect.s
ozone monJtoring equipment Angeles levels are .SO and "Y.'e all know how ~moggy studies of the calibralion its own citizens but also those
was different from lhe other . 75. it can get in the county and problem. in other j u r i s d i c .t i o u s .
counties in the basin, all ol ,---------------=------=----'--------------'------
"1lich used the same method.
. ,Jflr. <tCbri~tian~ EXCITING! NEW 1915 RADIO SHACK
CATALOG IS READY NOW! PICK UP YOUR
FREE COPY AT ANY RADIO SHACK STORE!
•
Avast, if il'J dining you like a11Wngst
the relics of fine o/J sailing ships, then
M~ Christian's the JX>rl for you.
TODAY'S FRESH SEAFOODS
t'resh Catalina Bro:ridbill Swordfish.
l.i\ f' l\laine Lobster
f'rt•s ll t'ih·l uf Red Snapper
('omplct.-Dinners From 84,73
lnt•luiling clam cho•·der or !i&lad.
l'i1latn r 11ca rin, carlic bread. aJMI.
fresh chilled grapes ror dessert.
Luncheon From 11:30a,m.
Ftaturln& Businessperson's Burr et at S?.59
Sunday Brunchfro111 IO :OOa.m.
"
Fishes, Meats, Oyster Bar, Noted fVines,
Ales and Spirits ~ "
w..
Entertainment Nightly
Featuring Mark Davidson Trio
From 9:00 p.m. Tue. thruSat.
··~· ilr.<!rqtistian's~· ~
353 E. Coast Highway ~'!
NewponBtach . •
Ru.,,,aUotu (114) 675-5120
enter our drawing. You could
win a fine antique
'
TS FOR HOME & HOBBYISTS:
OVER 2000 EXCLUSIVE PRODU~·COLOR ROTOfJRAVUR(.
JUST PUBLISHED. 164 PAuGsf:lEcTAONICS BUYING GUIDE. AMERICA'S MOST FAMO
FREEi NONE Sf.NT av MAil!
REALISTIC' 35-WATT
AM-FM RECEIVER SALE!
Gel tugh·llC!ehty stefeosound-PLUS incredible
29'-savings! Our Sl A· 188 looks and SOtil\dS Jik.e
mOfe eKpen$1ve model$. Wideband AM.,sens1t1ve
FM luning Full-range tonecpn1rol$. Tape.inputs
and outputs including 1ape monitor swilch for use
with decks. Select main. remote. o r two sets of
SAVE
s4Q
Reg . 139.95
speakers. Stereo/mono and loudness swilches. Headphone jack. And ifs
all in an eleganl warnul vereer case. $24.95 value. There·s only one pt1c1ce
you can find r1~ .. Radio Shi<lck : 31·2049 aiiiirr fi!L
Al 1tM1a Shacll ~
EASY CAEDlf.rEAMS AVAILABLE
~...; MORE UNBEATABLE VALUES DURING OUR CATALOG INVITATION SALE! /...,....~I
Rl;ALISTIC . 3-PIECE 8-TRACK
STEREO PLAYER
BARGAIN!
Reg. 99.95
TWO OUTSTANDING 8-TRACK
SYSTEMS AT SAVINGS Gramophone, with records,
worth $250. And if you ojlien
a checking or savings account -
with $50 or more, you'll
receive a giltcertificate for a
portrait of yourself done in
---1 --REALISTIC' AM-FM
STEREO 8-TRACK •·
"GIVE AWAY"
REALISTIC"
BLANK CASSETTES
30 Minutes Per Side
C·60
.
45 Minutes Per Side
· C·90
old-fashioned sepia tone.
We'd like yqu tci knO\,\I
more about us and our 91·year
banking history. So stop in any
time during the celebration
-and·heFn In-on the fun. -
•
Reg. 12995
SPACE-SAVING
AUTO CASSETTE
STEREO PLA)'ER
A"". 49ss 6495
P1.11 lull·hdelily stereo in your car at a greal savings
price! OesiOned !Of CO:fW'et'l~[ll operalion. Moun11oy
hardware included. 12-1822
Reg. 149 1 49 ea.
2 FOR 44·602
Reg. 199 1 99 ea.
2 FOR ••-<03
4 FOR $10.00
Great stereo recol'd1ngs by lamous
arhsls sold nahonwfde at up 10 56.95'
Nol all selec11ons 1n all stores .
8-Tracks-5t·I004
Cassettes 51·1005
THESE STORES OPEN NIGHTLY 'T~L NINE*
FIMT NATIONAL lllUIK
~ken since 1883. Office• in Orange. Los Angeles and San Diego coonties.
644 N. Pacific Coast Hwy. -
Laguna Beach'
·1so3Newport Blvd .-Costo Mesa
18120 Brookhurst-Fovntoin Vollev
•38535. Bristol-"'"""""sq,
Santo Ano •v"'f~
(behind Coco's , one black South ol MacArthur)
7701 S. Main St.-Sonto Ano
·1443W.17thSt.-SontoAna
HUNJ'lNGTON BEAOI COSTA MESA SAN JUAN_ CAPISTRANO
B899 AdamsPwnue 23J Ea~ J'llhStreet 31971 C.rnnoC.;>strMO
17122 Beach BM!. DANA POINT SEAL BfAOI
NEWPORTBEAOI 246711Al'loz. . J3820S..IBeachllMl
KIJO~ Orm !AGUNA HIU.S ORANGE COUNIY
1666 MacArtoor 01\d. 23511 Poseo d< V..l•ncio AIRPORT
3'.l) Superior Alenoo SAN CLEMENTE 2001 Mchelson
1501 \\Ostdiff 1001 South El C.nilno Roal IMn<!
•
•
(In Fountain Valley Plaz•~
•8941 Adams Ave.-Huntington Beach
·6991 Womer Ave .-Huntington Beach
30232 Crown Volley Pkwy. -.Laguna Beach
MA TANDY CORPORATION COMPANY
Un Honor e1-1
814 S. Camino Real-San Clemente
13024 Newport Blvd .-Tustin ...
• 15389 Brookhurst-Westminster
11Ut I !• l.!~Y VAfl'I' A1 lt'llM\111,)1.\11.L lollJhU.
• ..
' •
•
)
' I
\
I
I
'"· •
A J ! DAIL v PILOT
•
Never Too Late to Mate-She"s 79 Housetvife
Says Slie's
Duke's Ki1t
Qut•p•lum
Forn1er Teamsters Uh·
ion President James R.
Hoffa says that if
\Valcrgate was his re-
sponsibility, he would
have burned the tapes
and said 'lhey are none
oC your buslbess.'
SEATILE (AP) -She S(lid
call her ''.Ms. Something" -
the "Ms." so she would be
moden1; "Something" so
friondl wouldn't know that at
age 79 she's still pursuing an
actjvc sex nre.
So, 1'1s. Something oils in
her apartment and talks about
how her sex life continu.cd
\\.'hen she bccaine a ·widow
al age 56.
Tall and thin. she hris a
healthy glow about her. and
says she's been "struggling.
struggling" about giving in to
lhe pleas or a suitor and
inviting him up lo her
apartment. She's afraid the
neighbor§ "'ill gossip.
IN THE U ·YEARS since
her husband's death, she s11ys
she has had 35 adventures.
son1e !~ting the smaller part
()f an evening. others going
on for 15 years. Her youngest
rnate v<'as only 15. the eldest
82.
Iler n1essagc is don'r give
up sex. And medical students
al the University of
-UP I TtlePho•
SUFFERS STRESS
Mrs. Margaret Trudeau
Fi·ve Mesa
Studentil
Fi1ialisLil
Five studenls al Costa ~lesa
High School have been named
semi -finali sts in the
competition for about 3,400
merit scholarships to be
av•arded in 1975.
The students are Terri
Bergman, Don Brotemarkle,
Paul Edelstein, R o g c r
Engdahl and Donald Wright.
The semifinalists were the
highest scorers in each .state
in two tests -the 1973
preliminary scho lastic
aptitude test and the national
merit scbolarship qualifying
test.
Past records indicate that
90 percent of the semifinalists
become finalists and eligible
for one of the 1,000
s cho l arships awarc!ed
nationwide. The scholarships
are y,·ort.h $1 ,000.
Cattle Bill
SACRAME~'l'O (APJ -An
~mergcncy permit system for
both dairy and beef cattle
shipments has been signed by
Acting Gov. Ed Reinecke to
protect Catifomia·s herds
from brucellosis. The state
Department of Food and
Agriculture said too many
unvaccinnted animals have
sli pp ed through the
under1nanned system lately.
\Vashlngton are v1ewrng a
videotaped interview \•dlh her
to gain a better grasp 011
sexuality and aging.
She is also the star y,·ilness
for Cnroline Preston, a 60·
ycnr-o~d as.sislant professor of
·1~ e r 11'""'9""' 111afe tccis ••t•ly J 5,
1/1e eldest 82.'
psychiatry at the University
ol \Vashington, v.•ho has taught
a class two years on aging
and retirement readine~.
t\1S. PRESTON. \YHO also
prefers the courtesy title
"l.1s .. " lhinks men and "''omen
give up sex years before they
need to, and this she believes
is unhealthy.
"One"s ongoing sexuality has
so much to do with your
vitality and interest in the
here and now, realizing that
the here and now is all you
have."
tits. Something is a n
intelligent 11·omnn ""ho spent Ille most women her age could
her pro!L-ssional life in keep up with?
newspaperin~ advertL'J.ing and
public relations. She ls the
proud mother of loving and
successful children. Prior to
her husband's death at 64,
IT'S DIFIFICIJLT TO Jell,
says Ms: Preston, beeause
there's been little reesnrch on
~ she says they had an at1ive .
sex life. 'llle1wpnnse? 11'hll
sl101dd ·it """" be " AND TllOUGll SllE admits patise•>'
one n1ight be surprised at her a tally of partners from age • .,-.,.,._., ___ .,_.,_,.-.,.,._.,_.,_ .. .,._,._,. __
56 on, she MYS she never sex and aging. Both patient
had difficulty meeting nlen and physician aren't anxious
to talk about it and gives all credit to having And Ats. Something doesn't
a l'ozy fireplace · for her and know either. She bas tried
a t'om1>anion to sit in front to encourage discussion of the
or. subject but her peers are
ti1s. Something shoots down reluctant. But she ·knows an
the idea that menopause is 86-year--0ld couple that
th~ end or sexuality. It should rnarried four years ago and
be viewed as a n o t h e r knows 1wo other oldsters wh>
bt:ginning, says lits. Prest.on. · are living together as lovers.
··ri.1cnopause? Why should it She said she recent I y
even bl.! a pause? \Voruen give watched a prostitute escort
up the risk of having a child an old gentleman to the
late in life. J\lcnopau~ frees elevator of a senior citizens'
them to be more sexually home.
nclive than ever before in ~1s. Prest.on says these
thei r Jives," says Ms. P'reston. experiences knock down tte
Is Ms. Sotnelhing living a old saw: You can't teach an
J. ~-.• BUT SHE SA VS one major
problem is that men die too
In Canada Hos1aita I yoWlg, creating a considerable
surplus of aging women. She
said one solution lo the sexual
dilemma is for th? medical
profession to acce lerate
efforts to prolong the life of
ntales. Trudeau Wife Under Stress
MONTREAL !UPI) y,·ith his wife 2~:i hours later.
Trudeau brushed off
neY.'Smen's questions on
entering and said "I don't
think the press should be in
a hospital."
spokesman for the pri1ne
ntinister's office in Ottawa
said he oould not confirm that
Dr. Bos "-as in attendance.
But until me01eine closes
that gap, l\1s. Prf:ston says
one ansy.·er is communal
living where \\'Omen \l'Otlld
share their men .
That y.·ouJd .also cut living
l\f R S • T R u D E A u • s expenses for those just getting
hn!':ni r · f II ed. by on fixed incomes but "I'm
JI o s p J TA L OFFJCIALS ~-~ta izallon ° ov.· by a not sure that people in my few weeks her return fron1
announces the opening of her
* *NEW OFFICE* *
• ClASSES, daily l p.m. & 8 p.m .
•CONSULTATIONS by appts~ in a.m . & sats·.
• PRAYER THERAPY • ALPHA
CHRIST CIRCLE CENTER
dodlcalod lo tM haclologs of JESUS CHRIST * SUITE 223 in CRESTVIEW CENTER *
488 E. 17th ST. COSTAMESA92627
O~FICE : 642-2320 RES. 979-6644
..
Prime Minister Pierre Elliott
Trudeau's 26-year-old w i f e
Margaret, lvho has been
hospitalized for an unknown
illness since last week, says
she will remainjn the hospital
·~Wlder psychiatric care for
severe emotional stress" for
a while longer.
Mrs. Trudeau, accompanied
by her 54-year-old husband.
spoke briefl y with reporters
\Vednesday before thc·couple
went for a walk on the hospital
grounds.
refu sed to disclose the nature generat ion can achieve that
of the illness suffered by the a private visit to Paris, which kind of submersion of their
26-year--0ld A-trs. Trudeau or _sh_e_v_iSJ_'t_ed_at_o_ne_. ____ ,_·u_g_gc_d_in_di_v_id_ua_J_is_m_.'_' ---'------------------------------
identify any o! her doctors.
Ao Otla\va newsman, Paul
Taylor or News R a d i o .
reported that ooe or Jl;lrs.
Trudeau 's doctors \Vas a
~lontreal psychiatrist, Dr .
C.G . Bos.
~ ... :r."' ~ . ' ,, •"V .. y ~ ~: . . .
SHE SAID. '•I'VE been here Or. Bos could not
fat Royal Victoria Hospital ) reached for conuncnt.
~,~:;!:':, .:_:·: .. :·:·come to
~,-~·Mutual Savin.as for 10 days and I plan to1----------1
be here a while longer.
··J'm under psychiatric care
for severe emotional stress
but I'm recovering."
The prime minister arrived
at the hospital shortly before
I p.m. local time and emerged
Co1u1tv Puts
Prostit1ttio11
011 Ballot
CA RSON CITY. Nev. <UPI )
-A suit seeking to block
Churchill County residents
from voting on the issue or
prostituiton has been
dismissed by the Nevada
Supreme Court.
The suit "'as filed by
Churchill Caunty Commission
Chairman John J. Hanifan;
Timothy \Volf, chairman of
the Committee in Opposition
to Legalized Prostitution i11
Churchill County, and Ernest
H. Haying, district deputy of
the Knights of Columbus.
The Supreme Court said
they failed to file affidavits
as required by law or proof
of service on the defendants
and c-a\le d the suit
''procedurally deficient.··
Residents of Churchill
County gathered more than
600 names on a petition to
chan ge the law to allow
prostitution. The c o u n t y
commission put the question
on the November election
ballot.
Nevada has local option
pNistitution la~'S.
. -.. -__ ,..""'"-"'
' I.'... ·-,, __ PATIO DOOR
• SPECIAL
_· _THIS MOHTH
LET IN LIGHT
WITHOUT HEAT.
GLARE. FALJING
5fJliAR .. ~®
SUH CONTROL FILM
Keeps heat 001.
l eis the view In.
·1y applied to windows i
our home or ofl ice. Cal
today tor free demonstrat estimate.
SOIAR-X of Colilomio
1712 LGr!MJhY A•• .. '"IM\ c ... "-17141 ,7,·352,
.. <
~~ ..
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In coopera,tion with Sue Bee Honey and the
California Honey Advisory .Board, we've gathered
a honeycomb .full of exciting ways to help make
your savings program C~ME ALIVE and our
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s_weetea up your menus when you play our Honey-,
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And while you're here be sure to let us show you
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There are plenty of extra Free ServiCl!S to choose
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THEBIGM.
Long Beach Airport is an easy shot from Orqnge County. And from there, it's
easy going , Two round trips daTiy, Monday lhrough Thursday and Saturday. Three
on Fridays and Sundays. • Cail your travel agent or PSA. They know the way
~~ ~ . '~' i THE BIG M
MUTUAL
SAVINGS -
and loll\ IUOClatlon
• PSA gifts you a Ifft. W1lll;,rn M.Kull. .. '
Manager Corona dot l\IM: 2867 E11t Coat Hlghway/f75-5010 ------
•
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WITH f 1.8 LENS ..
Mamiya /Senkor's Human Englneerlnc .d11ign
puts au the essential camera controls at your
fingertips,· qualify pictures, everytime, with use!
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uspot" Incl "Aw111t:t"
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•
[
THE FAMILY CJRCUS By BU Keane
I/.«/(.., t\t~
''Grandma is very smart. She con knit, talk and
watch TV all at the sOme time."
Moviegoer Sues
-Fil1US 1N o Good
BRIGHTON, DI. (!WI) -Randy Seeger likes to get' his
money's worth. So after he sat through nine hours or what were
advertised as horror films at a nearby drive-in theater and
wasn't scared once. be decided to sue for $100 actual damages
and $1,000 pwlitlve damages. •
Seeger, a §1-year-old legal investigator, said the experience
was a real ripoff.
"It wa:r-·like <tavertising a roller coaster ride and putting
you on a scooter." , .
• Shu1t11 1p11d1 1·1/000 1tc. 59. THE FATEFUL NIGHT WAS back in July. The Starlight
Theatre in Alton ran "about a third ·of a page ad saying such
things as " 'see who .can stay and see these things, they're so
l -------~-----------1 horrible,'" Seeger said. "They said live monsters would come DELUXE EV'READY CASE 16 95 into the audience to scare the people and kidnap the girls."
• ~ ' ' ' ' ' The movies were not horrifying, he said -just plain bor-'
C ~~ra. s rible.
-"They were so fiat, so dull, they were nothing," he said.
"I couldn't even tell you the story of them. They were ~thing." -e. e ra He said he and his wife showed up about 7:30 p.m. and the
theater was packed.
"'"tuti"1 , .o) ... e.',. __ ,, e_ ,, e•-•• "I n<Ver saw anything like It in my life," he said. "That 'i' 7~ c;.~ ....... ""'"' .-o«H4 .-w-K-ad really ·pulled. 'lbere was not even any standing room." . .
South Coast Plaza-Costa Mesa
Bristol at San Diego Frwy , :.... Phont 979.337~
Mon.-Fri. 10-9 P.M. Sat. 10-6 P.M. Sun •. 12 (nbon) S P.M.
TJIEV SHOWED TWO BAD pictures, he said, "then the
management came ·on the loudspeaker and said the real show
wouJd be next, and anyone who wanted to come in to see the
real pictures would have to go o~t and come in and pay again.
That was the real riPoff." ~-------------------. ----------' -The real confusion set in.Ulen.
• ' KIDS Ll~E
"·Traffic was backed up for blocks. You never saw such a
traffic jam in a small town," Seeger said. "The missus wanted
to. go but l told her I wanted to see lt through. So we went To ASK ANDY back through and paid the se<:ond tiine -and the last two pie-
-. tu.res were worse than the first two. People began leaving then,
' I blowing their boma "and Jee.Ying wif.h Uleir 'lights 00."
NARK THE~E ~AYIN8~
Honeywell Pentax ·Es
Honeywell '<
770 Auto Strobonar
•Minimum of 80 flashes
P!!r charge
•Guide number 80 with
ASA 25 film
•Built-in ree~eable
NiCad battery
Our Reg. 109 .95
74.95
fully automat ic electronic eie SLR cameu '·
wilh Takutnar f/f..8 lens
·Honeywell Pentax ·
Automatic 13Smm F3.5
TELEPHOTO LENS
with Super-Mul ti-Coating
• Computer controlled electronic shutter
with speeds from 1/1000 to 8 .seconds
•Flare tamirig Super-Multi-Coated lens
our Rei . 399 .95 319.95 ·· that cuts surface reflection 79 ' so and transmits op to 50%
more light. Our Rei. 109 .95 ~--
General Electric
M840S
PORTABLE DC
CASSETTE
RECORDER
· •Automatic end-of-taPe shut-off
• Slide-e--matic T·bar play/record,
fast.forwar.d,~rewlnd controls-
• Remote control pencil·sty fe dynamic
microphone and sta nd
Qu1 .Re1 . 29.95 24. 95
cameras etcetera -
General Electric
V ~36 WllDCAT
STEREO
PHONOGRAPH
•Twin 6" oval dynamic speakers
•Tone, volume and balance -controls
•Solid state amplifier
•Ceramic cartridge, diamond stylus
)
. Our Ref. 58 .95
49.95
Prices effective througli Sunday, 6eptember22.
~""~ 'Ja.,,<V{ e4ffle'4 a..d SO«Hd St4u
South Coast Plaza-Costa Mesa
Btlstol ~.San Ditgo frwy.-Phone 979-3373
Mon.-'Fri. 11i.~ P.M: Sat. TO-!> P.M: Sun. 12 (noon) 5 r . . . ~ . .~
..
..
• S.OO#l.20ol!I • s:2on J s120.12 $888 fih:
ll J/ll a 1•s11s J)Wlt
-
Thursday, Stplemht r 19, 1974 DAILY PILOf :1 J::.
175/13 ..
175114 ~,
185/1 4 ..
195/14 ..
205/14 ..
155/14
145/12
llJ't .. SI.ti
f"' ""* , .. ,.,...r,.,.
DUNLOP 5P68 RADIALS 299;;..; _ 155113 165/14 0
11 .. 113 ) 115511•1 NOW 2 ° u ...
155115 . 155112 ONLY o. •• :-:: ...
f14S/IS) 155/15 '"
l1cl1•11 c•1ctl1 1 i.
tllMli•I ca•••r, CISltr,
t11 11 11c'11i1r1. 01111
ftii l-JD·l4. Air ctff. l
t1tsl11 ea1 Sll5 extra.
fll.l ~· 95· sizt • U.S.'. ~ . ~'"
CAIS "'" COIJll'OI
• 4 WHllL DIUM •r
2 WNRL DISC IEUNE
• &llC I lllSTAU Llll•S
5.20/13
(135 /13)
8.25 /14 18"
8.25/15 l 8"
3195
• QIJALITT U.UE Llll•G
• CHECl SPltllMS l SEALS ... • CMGk Wiim. CTIJlllllU a • MUUE. •Iller DAUM$ ,.~ ... ~,--
• MIPECT ••sm CTL. . -·:i ,,, ' :::::,' = !:::
•ADD 111.UE FUIO ~-!I! J C:1,; """·"""".,• I .... T.ST ... ' "' < '""'~ '""' ....... "" \ ! .~ .... ,. .. "'''' 2495..,'; ...... ):;1 ,._ l•lll•n !ollrll•f.'01~1111.1.• ~)~ ' .......... .-i t.~116
fOlllltlll · J fell ,_ltd Noolell.JM """"*'
111111 C. ltl .. l & HlllHflC ) lllAI C. k-1 UFtTM Ill.IA,
•'•'•'•' ,•::,•: 1111n CARI -"••"'" •·~· -""' , .... ,,, •• , _ ,.., .. ,_ ... _,M ..l~h~
IOfC •11U JOt i to Utt •f'I I ITf 1 t•• -'""'"· "" ol ··-•' ~ 1•••1 lilt & 11111 un•• .,.,. '~'" ~ -·~·_... '° 1111 t•u111 •111 ,..-1U.UU> ~ .......... i,.,. __ ..,_loo
tUU JClt 189.11 -· i;, 1-., ., wlll -lllo -cn,:~.~r:~1 .. - -.. "'-"" -· 1m•l'\•l1n 1. &II Tlt•s ll1elr.wllls U•ss IHlotttd Ottl•rwlsf, lr1ek1ls tnlklatt Fits.
COSTA MESA
3005 HARBOR BLVD.
tcomer of lo~tr and Hwboll ·
1714) 557-8000
i ARDEH GROVE
14040 lroold!unt
le°"""' W11tlllhntw ................
17141530°3200
~:.t:.:•,\.U~· •
LA HABRA
2000 Wltiffior ll•d.
t~ of 'Whittlff'
-.dlfctelll
674-3666
BUENA PARK
2962 Utte:olo ,1.c1.
lc:«Mf' of LlllC•
Olld l(flOffl
17141826°5550
FULLERTON ORANGE ~
410-Tv•ttn ~ I 3 21 South Euclid
11 blo<ti North of
Rlffnldt ftttowoyl
17141870-0100
.. , ...
17141639-i321
OPEN DAILY 8:30 -9 ... SAT. 8:30 -7 ... SUN. 9·8 _,
..
~~12~~ ~i~.$ 4~
eu• cot1sua•• .....CT ... __ ,.... .... --~--........ _ ---..-··--.. ,.. ...... ... --'°' .r $oo.-(tt..., ... t. .,_ (Jll) UWTI! •• ll•·ltK." •• -......... ,.. ... -...._,.. ... -......... -~ .. ...._,... •
SIRVICI OIPl'S IRI NOi DPIN 11111 SlDRIS ON SUNDAY Pl!ISI Clll flRSl IDR IN IPPDINIMINi
1--. •
..
,
• I\ ! DAil V PILOT
N-ever 'Foo -Lat~ to-Mate-She"s 79
SEATI'LE (AP) -She said
call her 0 Ms. Something11 -
the "Ms." so she would be
modern; "SOmcthing" s o
friends \\'OU\dn'l know that at
age 79 she's still pursuing an
active sex llfc.
•
So, 1\1s. Son1cthing sits in
her apartn1ent and talks abool
how her sex life continued
""hen she became a \\•ldow
at age 56.
·ran and lhin. she has a
healthy glow ubout her, and
says she's been "struggling,
struggling'' about giving in to
the pleas of a suitor and
inviting hin1 up lo her
apartment. She's afraid the
neighbor§ 1vill gossip.
IN THE 23 ''EARS since
her husband's death. she says
she has had 3S adventures.
some lasting the sn1aller part
of an evening. others going
on for 15 yenrs. Her youngest
1nate 1vas only IS. the eldest
82.
I !er n1eSS.'lgc is don't give
up sex. And medical students
at the Univers i ty of
\V!!;shington are viowlng a
videotaped Interview ~'ith her
to gain a better grasp on
sexuality and aging.
She is also the star 1,1,'itness
for Ca roline ~ton, a 6()..
yl!ar-<>ld assisfant professor or
"I# e r yu111•fJe·"'
t11c1te ·te as 011ly 15,
1he e lde•t 82.'
psychiatry at the University
of \\!ashington. 1,1,•ho has taught
a class IYlO years on aging
and relirement readiness.
l\1S. PRESTON, \VllO also
prefers the courtesy title
·•ti.ts .. " thinks men and 1,1,•omen
give up sex years before they
need to, and th.is ghe believes
is unhealthy.
"One·s ongoing sexuality has
so much to do with your
vitality and interest in the
here and now, realizing that
the here and now is all you
have."
fl1s. Something is a n
intelligent Y.'OO\M v.•bo spent life most ""'Omen ber age could
her professional life i n k.eep up wllh?
newspapering, advertL5ing nnd
public relatiom. She is the IT'S DIFIFfCIJ LT TO tell ,
proud nlotber of loving and says Ms. J>reslon, because
successfu l children. Prior to !here's been little reesarch on
her husband·s death at 64, ~ she says they had an active
sex lifr.:. 'Jll e11opo11se? tt'hy
. s l1ould it e ven be u ANI) TllOUGll SllE adm its pa11s .,, .
one might be surprised at her e.
--~ ... _ .. ___ .,_~-~-~ ... _ .. ___ .,_~-~--lally of partners fro1n age
56 an •. she says she never
had difficu lty n1ect ing n1en
and gives all credit to having
a cozy fireplace for lier and
a rompanion to sit in front
of.
!\1s. Something shoots down
the idea that n1cnopause is
tbe eud of sexuality. lt should
be viewed as a noth e r
beginning. says Ms. Preston.
"!\1enop.:1use·~ .why should it
even be a pause? \Voruen give
up the risk of having a child
late in life. !\lcnopause frees
them ·to be mo re '-!isexua\ly
active lhan ever before in
lheir liveli/' says Ms. Er~Jon.
Is Ms. Something living a
sex and aging. Both. patient
and physician aren't anxious
to talk aOOut it.
And !\ls. Something doesn't
know either. She bas tried
to encourage discussion of the
subject but her peers are
reluctant. But she ·knows an
86-year-old couple t bat
1narried four yea.rs ago and
J...110ws t"'O other oldsters who
are living together as lovers.
She said she rece ntl y
watched a prostitute escort
an old gentleman to the
elevator of a senior citizens'
home.
}.fs. Preston says these
experiences--·knock down the
old saw: You can't teach an
BtJl' SHE SA VS one major
In Canada Uospita I
problem is tha·t men die too
yoWlg. creating a considerable
surplus of aging y,·oinen. She
said one solut ion to the sexual
Trudeau Wife Under Stress dilemma is for the medical
profession to acce l e r a t e
efforts to prolong the life of
n1ales. '
MONTREAL (UPI) 1o1•ith his wife 2~¥ hours later.
TnuJeau b r us hed off
ney,'Smen's questions on
entering and said "I don't
think the press should be in
a hospital."
spokesman for the prime
minister's office in Ottawa
said he could not confirm that
Dr. Bos was in attendance.
Put until m_elficine closes
that gap. !\is. Preston says
one answer is communal
Jiving where \\'Omen \l'ou1d
share their men.
That would also cut living
1\1 R S . T R U D E A u • S expenses for those just gelling
hospilalization followed by a by on fixed incomes but "I'm
II O S p J TA L OFFICIAU not sure that people in my f.ew weeks her return fronl
llousewife
Says Sh e's
Duke's Kiri
Ouu,...r.eu
Former Teamsters Un·
ion President James R.
Hoffa says llult' l/
\Valergate was his re-.
sponsibitity, he would
bave burned tbe tapes
and sajd 'th ey are none
of your 'business.'
announces the~ening of her,
* *NEW OFFICE * .*
• ClASSES, daily 1 p.m. & 8 p.m.
•CONSULTATIONS by appts. in a.m . & sots.
• PRAYER THERAPY • ALPHA .
-CHRIST CIRCtE -CENTER
dedicated lo ltio leac:hltNjs of JESUS CHRIST * SUITE 223 in CRESTVIEW CENTER *
488 E. 17th ST. COSTAMESA92627
OFFICE : 642-2320 RES. 979-6644
. ' ..
Prime Minister Pierre Elliott
Trudeau's 26-year-old w i re
~largaret. Y:ho has been
hospita lized for an unknown
illness since last week, says
she will remain in the hospital
"under psychiatric care for
severe emo1ional stress" for
a while lon~r.
Mrs. Tru deau, accompanied
by her 54-year-old husb:ind,
spoke briefly y,•ith reportt'rs
\Vednesday before the couple
went for a walk on the hospital
grounds.
refused to disclose the nature generation can achieve I.hat
of the illness suffered. by the a private visit to Paris, which kind of submersion of their
26-_vcar-old :l'llrs. Trudeau or _sh_e_vis_i_ted __ al_one_. _____ ,.u..:g:=g_cd_in_d_iv_id_u_al_is_m_._" __ :_ _____________ ~---------------
idenlify any of her docf.Ors.
An Ottawa newsman, PauJ
Taylor of News R q. d i o .
reported that one of 1\-lrs.
Trudea u's doctors \Vas a
~rontreal psychiatrist, D r .
C.G. Bos. SUFFERS STRESS
Mrs. Margaret Trudeau
SIJE SA.JD. "l°VE been here Dr. Bos could not
(at Jroya l Victoria Hospital! reached for comment.
for 10 days and I plan toi----------1
Five Mesa
Student:.
Finali st:.
f ive sludents at Costa l\lesa
High School have been named
s emi-f ina l isl s in the
competition for <1bout J,400
n1erit scholarships to be
a\\•ardcd in 1975.
The students arc Terri
be here a while longer.
.. l'n1 under psychiatric care
for seve re emotional stress
but I'm re<.'Overing."
The prime min'ister -arrived
at the hospital shorUy before
1 p.m. loc~ time and emerged
Cou11t"· Puts
Prostittttio11
On Ballot
~~fma~e~~in~rot~m:~k~e~ , CARSON CITY. Nev. 1UPI)
Engdahl and Donald Wright. -A ~uil seeking to .block
The semifi nalists were the Churchill County resi dents
highest scorers in each state'? rrom voting on the issue of
in h\·o tests -the 1973 prosti tu i l on has been
preliminary sch o J as tic dismissed by lhe Nevada
aptitude test and the national Supreme ~w1. .
merit scholarship quaLifying The suit was filed by t.e~1. Churchi ll County Com mission
Past records indicate that Chairman John J. Hanifan;
90 percent of the semifina lists Timothy \yolf, ~hairma~ . of
become finalists and eligible the Committee m Oppos1lion
ror one of the 1 , o o o to Le~alized Prostituti on in
sc h 0 I a r s hi ps awarded Ch ch1!l Cou.nty: and Ernest
nationwide. The scholarships H. ,a~1ng, district deputy of
are v.·orth $1 000. the 1ghts of Columbus. .
' The upre me Court said
· Cattle Bill
SACRAl\fE~'TO (AP l -An
emergency permit system for
both dairy and beef cattle
shii>ffients has been signed by
Actin·c: G<iv. Ed Reinecke to
proti.'Ct California's herd s
from brucellosis. The slate
Department of food and
Agriculture said too IJt:iny
unvaccinated animals have
s lipped through the
undermanned system lately.
L
they failed to fi le affidavits
as required by law or proof
of service on the defendants
and ca 11 e d the suit
•·procedurally deficient."
Residents of C hur chil l
County gathered more than
600 names on a petition to
chan ge the law to allow
prostitut ion. The count y
commission put the question
on the November election
ballot.
Nevada has local option
prostitution laws.
AOWIT ... 1111!"' Now Many Wear
FALSE TEETH
With Little Worrf
Do falae teeth emb..rnu you 'by eomlnl' loo!lc w~n you nt Jau1h. or talk! A dtnt11"" adNsivteU Itel~
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nd estimate.
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THE FAMILY CIRCUS
I .
By Bil Keane
~.
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~.
"Grandma i~ very smart. She (an knit, talk and
watch TV all at the same time."
Moviegoer Sues · ·
-Films No. Good
BRIGIITON, ID. (UPI) -Randy Seeger likes lo· get his
money's worth. So after he sat through nine hours of what were
advertised as horror films at a nearby drive-in theater and
wasn't scared once. be decided to sue for $100 actual damages
and $1 ,000 pwtltive damages.
Seeger, a §I-year.old legal investigator, said the experience
was a real riP?ff .
"It was like advertising a roller coaster ride and put.Ung
you on a scooter," •• ,.,th,...,, ... ""''"'' 15
UnlYe111I thr11d t11ount
•Shiitter 1.,-1ds l·t/Ooo 11c. THE FATEFUL mGHT WAS back In July. '!be Starlight
Theatre in Alton ran "about a third ·of a page ad saying such
things as " 'see who can stay and see theae things, they're so
1------------------l horrible,'" Seeger said. "Tbey said live monsters would come DUUXE EV~READY CASE •••• 16.95 Into the audience to scare the people and kidnap the girls."
The movies were not OOnifying, he said -just plain hor-c r m~ras rible.
"They were so fiat, so dull, they were nothing," he said.
"I couldn't even tell you the story of them. They were nothing." e Ce era . He said he and his wife showed up about 7:30 p.m. and the
theater was packed.
'-'"."'""a...('" n .. .\..e•A _ .. J e . 1 e.... "I never !aw .anything like it in my Ille," he said. "That 'I' ?1 .""1 V'-" ..... "4f«,~ Jw--ad reallyJ>U!Jed: 'Plere was not even any, ~groom." . ;/
South Coast Plaza-Costa Mesa THEY SHOWED TWO BAD pictures, he said, "then the management came on the loudspeaker and said the real show Bristol at Son Diego frwy. -Phone 979-337~ would he next, and anyone who wanted to oome In to see the
Mon..Fri. 10·9 P.M. Sat. 10·6 P.M. Sun. IZ.(noon) S P.M. real pictures would have to go out and come in and pay again . .._ _____ '-'=-·-------·-----.I That was the real ripoff." , The real confusion set in .then.
•
KIDS Ll{iE
"Traffic was backed up for blocks. You never saw such a
traffic j&!Jl in a small town," Seeger said. "The missus wanted
to. go but I told her I wanted to see lt through. So we went To ASK ANDY back through and paid the second time -and the last two pie-
._' • tures were worse than the first two. People began leaving then,
blowing their homs and leaving with their lights oo."
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Prices effective-througl\ Sunday, September 22.
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SIRVICI OIPl'S ARI NOi OPIN Al Ill SfORI! ON SUNDll PllASI £All flRSI 108 AN APPOINIM!Ni ' "~(01 u~~.rru liJ•UA ·
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" l·l OAILY'PILOT • Thursday. September 19, 1974
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'
ifavol . . r . ~wo work.
300,000_ yo . .· -people
believe 'it · • . . 1
~·
·There were times when we, like the .
rest of America, wondered if the Army
would make it without a draft.
Could we meet our total manpower
needs by relying solely on volunteers?
And if so, could we meet those needs
in quality as well as number? On June 30,
197 4, we got the answer. ·
HowtheAr!nY5 doing
without the draft.
~or the period cove~ing July 1, 1973
to June 30, 1974over199,000 young men
and women enlisted in the Army. 'Wqich
meant that we not only reached, but
exceeded our goal. ..
And since the last person was
· drafted, 300,000 young people have
joined. As a result, the Army today is .
•
. I
finding things m the Anny_ they ~ay not
be able to find an~here else.
They'i:e fin~~~meals
isn't all 'We have to offer.
They're finding gogd jops. If they qualify,
they can even take th~ir choice from over
200 job-training courses~ . .
They're finding new people to meet
and new worlds to experience. From · ·
Europe to Texas to Hawaii to Panama.
They're finding a chance to get a
college education. On Army posts, as well
as at ne~by universitie~~ And they're
··imding that the Army not only encotµ"ages
them to further their education, but pays
75% of their tuition costs. . . . .
They're finding a place to gain .. ~...... -
self-confidence and maturity. From the
ruggedness of Basic Training to the at full authorized strength and prepar~d
to do its job. · . · .. everyday discipline of Army life.
Since we've been
asking for volunteers, we've been
getting better soldiers.
The figures-are impressive. But not quite
as impressive as the fact behind them. .
The people who are joining are joining
because they want to, not beeause they
have to. They're better motivated,-eettef~.
prepared to accept discipline, and, there-
fore, better soldiers. · , .
They're joining b~cause they're -
\
For the phone number and ad<;fress of your local Anny Representative,
·Jook in the Yellow Pages under "Recruiting'.' ·
. .
Themost·imporfantthingwe do
. for them is What they do for us.
And whlle they're finding_fuat the Arnly
is making them better iriruviduals, we're
finding they're .making -us .. a·bettet Army.
For more inf ormatibn, send tl)e
coupon : Or call 800-523-4800 toll free.
In-Pa-. ;-cai-I-Stltl-362;5696.
"
·------~---------------------~ . · · JOin the pOOple !
whdve joined theAmiy. l
Army Gpportunities ·
P.O. Box ?5 10, Philadelphia, PA 19143 I
Please send me more information abou~opportunities in today's Army. I
Name Oat; o!Bihh ' ·1
Addre.ss · City . • I
County_.' State Zip __ Phone . J · -
Educatio · · Soc. Sec. No. 1
1 •
4 (l'kai;eprin1 all infotmJtlon) 2!'1SI' 11)..$·1• I • L--·------------~--------------..J
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A •.• OAILV 0P1LOT lhutsday. September 19, 1974.
•
• , ..
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• • t--•
, 300,000_ yo _ _ _people
believe it · • -
•
There were times when we, like the
rest of Ame~a, ~9ndered if the Army
would mak€ it without a draft.
Could we meet our total manpower
needs by relying solely on volunteers?
Aiid if so, could we .meet those needs
in: quality as well as number? On June 30,
· 197 4, we got the an,swer. · .
HowtheAr!nY5 domg ·
without the draft.
for the period covering July 1, 1973
to June 30, 1974over199,000 young men
and women enlisted in the Army. Which ·
··meant that we not only reached, but ·
. exceeded our goal. · ·
. And since the last person was
drafted, 300,000 young people have
joined. As a· result, the Army today is
-at fu)l authorized strength and prepared
to do its job.
. Since we've been
. asking for volunteers, we've been
. getting better soldiers. · ·
The figures are impressive. But not quite
as impressive as the fact behind them.
The people who are joining are joining ,
, because they want to, 'not because they
have to .. They're better motivated, better . .
prepared to accept discipline, and; there-
fore, better soldiers.
· They're joining b~cause they're
..
For the phone number and address of your local Army Representative,
·Jook in the Yellow Pages under "Recrwtin~' · - -·
. J I
•
finding things m the Army they may not
be able to find an~here else. · . . . .
They're fin~threesquaremeals
. · isn't all we have to offer.
They're finding good jo~s. If they qualify,
they c~n even ~ake their choice from over
200 job-training courses~
they're finding new people to meet ..
and new· worlds to experience. 'From
Europe to Texas to Hawaii to Panama.
· They're finding a chance to get a
college .education. On Army posts, as ,,well
as at nearby universities. And they're
imding that the ·Army"not only encotµ'ages
them to further their education, but pays
75% of their tuition co·sts.
· They're finding a place to gain
self-confidence and maturity. From the
ruggedness_ of B~sic Training_ to the~
everyday discipline of Army life.
Themostimp~tthingwe do
for them is What they do for11s. .
And while they're finding that the Army
is making them better individuals, we're
finding they're making us ·a better Army.
For more information, send the
coupon. Or ca~l 800-523-4800 toll free.
In Pa., call 800-362-5696.
l
. .
r------~~~-----------------~-, I .,... I \... ~ •
I · ~the people
1_-whdve Joined theAnny.
I Army Opportunities • I P.O. Bo~ 5510, Philadelphia, PA 19143
I Please send memorc information about opportunities in today'~Army, I Name Dateofilirt~-·--
1 Address .. · Ciry, __ _
I Co unty__ State Zip Phone _
1
1
Education Sile. Sec. No. __ _
. , (l'lc1!1e prinl 111 inform111on) 2"SI' U1·9·14·11 L-------------~--~-----------~ ..
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Male Bastion lrivaded
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Women Sharing Press Box
, By ROBIN WRIGHT
. OIM..Clltl•lla!ltcltflt•MNI... ,
There I was, sitting In the Red
Sox press box, taking in a game
between Boston and New York
from the best location in lhe'-b.llt
park . And it had all been so easy.
After years or threatening civil
rlghts suits, withstanding fierce
peer opposition, even facing arrest,
l (a female) had walked into the
ball park on a press pass, stood on
the field 'during batt!!lg practice,
sat in the dugout cha\ting with the
players, turned down a free sirloin
~eak in the press room and, now,
was sitting unquestioned, unbar·
·~ssed among a dozen or mor~ ·
male writers.
Hmmmmmmm, I thought as I
sat there, things sure hav.e
changed.
It had been a couple or years
since I last tried tttlS type of thing.
And while women have become
more numero us in tfi.e sports
writing field, I wasn't ready to
believe we had been t<ially accep· ted. .
But throughout the three hours
there wasn't any .teasing, haras·
sing, scorning, or coarse joking
designed to embarass me.
And not one pot-bellied sports
writer walked up. stuck a burning
\.
cigar in my face and quiued me
about my credel)tials.
Nor did they bombard me with
Irick trivia, like what Babe Ruth
hit in 1936 <he had retired by then).
ALONE AT LAST
In !act, the only thing I didn't ex·
pect to happen happened: I WI!' ig·
nored.
Yes, times really have changed.
I concluded. I c uess now I'm
nothing more than a trend.
Al least half the country's self·
respecting newspapers either have
had or how have female 1p:>rt.s
writers on their staffs. Televiaion
stations have liberated one of· the
last strongholds or the IJ\ale empii:e
with women sportscasters. '
That isn't to say it's e~ .for
women writers now. In 99 percent·
or the cases women must edge their
way in as gimmicks or tokens,
·slowly building their way up from
covering junior high school lid·
dleywinks to college or ptofes· .
sional sports. ·
Mi ami's Jane Chastain of WTVJ,
for example, started 13 years ago
as "Co'ach Friday" in a two-minute
predictions show on an Atlanta
st,ation. lt was "a joke, a gimmick.
I was a lictltlous lady football
e
BEA ANDERSON, Editor ...... ,,, ............... ~ .. -rtt, 1tN ....,,,
~~ch with that girl·next·door ap·
peal," she explains.
But she took it serious ly and has
gradually pushed her way into not
only a sportscasting position, but a
regular show that is now syn·
dicated five days a week to more
than 80 stations throughout the
country.
Mary Garber, dean of women
; sportswriters, edged into swtts so
years ago only after the entife Win·
slon·Salem Sentinel sports depari·
ment was drafted into World War
II.
With the precedent.setting exam·
pies of Miss Garber, Mrs. Chastain
and lhe lege,ndary Elinor Kaine -
who gained Came in 1969 after slap·
ping a suCces~ful civil rights suit on
the New York Jets and New York
Giants for refusing to admit her to
the annu al Yale Bowl game -the
road has been smoothed if not
paved for other women.
Comparatively, it's "2,000 per-
cent" eas.ier for women now. ac-
cording to Miss Garber. And some
eve'n argue it's more advanta··
geous to be a woman now.
Spe cific a lly. being female
worked to the advantage or MrS.
Chastain on the day all-star
Planning t~e opening of
a thrift shop to support
· City of Hope research are
(left .to right) H~rriet
Fellows, Dorothy Jean,
Barb Gardner, Beverly Branberg.
Lupus:
Little
Known
Killer··
By ALLISON DE2U
Of .. Deftf '""""' ·Lupus Erythematosl,IS.
-· Nine out of 10 victims of Lupus
are women.
It strikes hardest durlng a
wof\lan's child bearing years.
· Tfte disease is not cootacious, but
cause and cure are unknown. It af.
llicts 2.S million in tKe United
States. .
But perhaps most frustrating to
victims of LE ls that few people
have ever heard or the arructron
that kills .S,000 Americans each
year.
The mos\ promising research
into the cause and a cure is under
way at the City of HoPe. Duarte, by
Dr. R. L. Teplitz, a specialist in
genetics and immunology.
In the past year, the 100.member
Lupus Chapter of Orange County,
an aux'iliary for City of Hope,
raised more than $15,000 for his
research. '
"When you have Lupus," ex·
plained Dorothy Jean, Huntington
Beach , who helped charter the
chapter a year ago, "You have to
change your whole lifestyle."
There are two forms o( LE:
discoid , usually involving only the
skin; and .systemic, which can af·
feet any part of the body.
A scaling, red "butterfly~rash"
across the cheeks and bridge of the ··
nose is a symptom or discoid LE.
MIMICS
· ''Systemic Lupus, however,
mimics m a ny other diseases,"
Mrs. Jean said. "Patients surfer
liom r ashes and photosensitivity,
arthritis and inflammation of the
joints, anemia, pleurisy, fever,
chills, fatigue.
"Others may suffer from poor
circulation in the extremities and
develop kidney, liver and spleen
problems, have damage to the
brain and nervous system, develop
meningitis, strokes, heart disease
or ulcers."
Because of low immunity, "one
· man's cold is an LE vict im's
pneumonia," said Steve Crawford,
Santa Ana, a rather of two in his
30s. .
Treatment with steroids and
other drugs, a moderated lifestyle
receiver Paul \Varfield wa s traded
from Clevel8.nd to P.1iami. He
refused to be interviewed by the
. male reporte r s, but ''couldn't
refuse a woman" and did talk "'ilh
Mrs. Chastain .
FRESH PERSPECTIVE
Whil e mosl • ignore and some
grumble, there are al least a fe\Y
rilen "'ho don't think women are
rl,!ining their racket.
Dave Burgin. sports·turned·city
editor of the Washington Star ·
News . has said about women sports
·writers that they "see things dif·
. ferentlY . They bring a fresh per·
specti ve. a new pointofYiew."
Wh en women "'riters were just
becoming common two years ago.
the New York Post's columnist
Larry l\1 er chant said: "I 'm all for
them . 1'oo many male reporters
consider sports a matter of life and
death. \Vomen look at it with a sort
of bemusea attachment."
. Generally wome n sports writers
feel their only real limitation is the
locker room . But some persistent
women have e\•en found ways
around it.
So move ov.er fellows, 1 guess
we're here to slay.
and avoidance or' caffeine and
ultraviolet light are required for
Lupus patients.
ACTIVITIY REDUCED
Women, who have led active
lives, find living with the disease
frustrating.
"I was diag,osed 20 years ago,"
said Harriet Fellows, Costa Mesa.
''1 had been very active in volun·
teer work, but with Lupus, I could·
n't continue.
"l never know when I 'm not even
going to be able to get out of bed."
Lupus patients by necessity are
••night people."
Barbara Gardner, Fullerton,
was a sun wors hipei-~ always With
a year 'round tan when a trip to
Hawaii resulted in a terrible skin
rash, headaches. head-to-toe pain.
She wasn't diagnosed until she 'd
been to three dermatologists. Now,
like others with the disease, she
must avoid the sun whenever pos·
sible and venture out wearing sun
screen, long sleeves and a large hat
or with an umbrella. _
Even ultraviolet rays reflected
orf the sidewalk and fluorescent
.,
r,Women sports writers
see things differently. They
bring a fresh
perspective, a new. point of
view .' -Dave Burgin, _editor
Washington Star-News
light are dainaging, and "we have
to guard aCainst heal as · Well."
Mrs. J ean said .
Beverly Branberg, Fountain Val·
ley, another member and victim,
said that family support iS' man·
·datory. "l\1 y family has been my
backOOne."
A former nurse who had to leave
her profession and even found
cleri cal work impossible with her
ailment, noted that "you can't
complain eve ry time you hav~ pai n
because you are in constant pain."
DISEASE TRIGGERED
Sh e beli eves her condition was
triggered by her second preg nan-
cy. The m other of t eenage
daughters said, "IL is hard not to
overdo."
They ex pl ained that LE patients
can 't just la ke a nap a nd be
revitali zed. It takes several days in
bed.
All of the women intervic\A:cd
have had major complications: ar·
I thritis, k idney or s pl een i n -
. volveme nt , and all haYe had
pneumonia at lt!a st once.
Eac h is wo rrie d about Lh l'
emotional problem s that come with
' coping with an incurable diseast'
Additionally, L E can attack th~
nervous system and drugs used for
treat ment a lso have emotional sidt
effects.
Another fe~r is that c'hfldreo m a~
suCfer from the ailment. Resear
c h er s b e li e ve t h.a l tt'i i
predisposition to"·ard rheuma.to11
diseases ~an be hereditary,
Trea tme nt cos ts are hi gh
"SIJ ,000 ~Y first year ...
Victi ms often tell people they'r•
"allergic to the s un" to avoi1
longe r expl3nations.
Ex cept for the rash, which is n111
al"'ays present. patients look per
rect ly healthy , they said. <i nd ev<'r:
famili es ca n't under sta nd why the •
<1re unabl e to do as much as the \
once could. ·
The OC Chapter i ~ c urrent!'
planning the opening ,or a volun
teer-manned th rift shop in the Ari
aheim a rea.
Alember s are <:urrcnlly bein i
recruited a nd Ciln contact membe1
ship chairm a n Ali ce !\1oli na. 95fi
2377, for information.· '
Customer Registers Profitable Advice
DEAR ANN LANDERS \ I'm It·
chint-to reply to"' "Vet~ran of
Supermarket· Tanglef . ' Th_at
check·out dam·e had Jots to say
about rude customers: Her list or
complaints waa plenty complete.
I wonder if she Is aware that the
customer may have a ft;w gripes
from the other side of the counter.
Having just come back 'lrtim ttie
s upermarket , they are fresh tn my
mind. Jlere's a little advice on how
to make a shopper 's lift miserable:
I. Rin g up the itOjllno last that
the .cash register sounds like an ad·
·ding machine. It's fun for the shop-
• per to discover, after she gels
home, thal she paid Sl .69 !or a 69·
cent box of cereal. She.then has the
enjoyable task of returning to the
store !or a refund. The walk will be
&ood for her.
z. Throw the canned goods dclwn
;
on the couriter as if )'OV were
bowling. With a U(tle luck you c1n
breaK a few eggs and squash a loaf
of bread.
· 3. Wait. until the 5 o'clock rush to
count your money and change the
cash register tapes. It's a thrlll to
stand in llne and watch yOU t um·
bling around for half an hour.
Every housewife adores shopping
a nd hates to leave the store.
4. Pack everything ln·one big
bag. When the customer ieU out or
the store, the bottom will fall out
and she'll get another good look at
• everything she bouiht It will cl..,
her an opportunity to see lf she bu
everything she needs. Also, it's
wonderful exercise to chase cans
down the street. "
I can think of plenly more, bul
Ibis will do !or no,.. Thanks !or a
chance to speak my piece. -mE
-
-Ann Landers
CUSTOMER HASN'T BEEN
RIGHT SINCE WORLD WAR TWO
DEAJI WORLD.)VAR: Vour lcl·
ter was my laugh for lhe d1y.
Tbanks a b~ap ror putting your.
gripes dow• on piper. It's 1 great
way to anload your hostility, aDd
I'm not kidding.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My
hu~band blames me because we
have no friends. He says 1 am too
qulel and people think I'm •lupld. •
' .
The real r eason we have no
friends is because •rE doesn't shul
his mouth. The man is an authority
on everything. He turns every con ·
v ers ation Into lhc Spa nish
Inquisition. asking questions about
things that are none of hi s business.
He lo\l'eS to get Into people's per·
50nal li ves, a nd Is a bigger gossip
than any woman I know. ·
Whal can I do to gel him to see
lhls?-THE MOUSE
DEAR M: I know th< type. Three
mouths and no ears. I suggest that
you discuss lhe llno rrlends"
problem with a counselor._l f the
counselor Is halfway bright, he'll
get the picture early ind hopefully
get the message across to Mr.
Yacketyack,
DEAR ANN; 1 am six months
pregnant a nd very happy-tltRJut it.
1-ty husband and.I huve been try ln~·
to haYe n baby fo r t\\'O years. The
pr o ble m is th a t we 've been
separated for three months. lte
wa nts a di vorce. We've bce'n
fighting ror over a year. After he
learned J was pregn ant he took off.
l\-1y question is, what should I do
uboul birth announcements ? It
seems like u stup id question. but. I
an1·slumped. l know I'll be hu\·in J!
this baby alone .. Any suggestions·
-MAMA
•
DEAR l\1Al\11\: \Vh y ~nd a1
nouncements? Yo11r close friend:
will know you had the baby and lb.;
others will learn or It eventually. I
have always regarded annonn
cements or any kind as "Invoices.,.
If you insist on sending birth ar ·
nouncements, Ignore the fad th1H
you are-separated. Your husband 1>
lhe baby's father and thal~s Uu
onb' thi.ng Lhat matters.
Discover how to be dute ba1
without ra lll ng h ook, line an1
sinker . Ann Landers' booklet
"Dating Do 's and Don't's" wil
help you be more poised a nd sure ,
yourself on date:s . Send 35 cents t
coin along °"'ilh a long, stampet
self·addressed en\'clopc and )'Ol
rC(1uesL to Ann Landers, P.O. Bo
3.146, 222 W. Bank Dr •• Chicago. JI
60654
-
•
' B2 OAJL y PILOl Tt1ursdar. September 19, ljl74
Femininity No Cop -out
Policewoman Diana
Little smiles as she
prepares to go on
duty in a New York
precinct where she is
assigned .
Ref lect ing her
authgritv are the
uniform and regalia
she wears (left»
However, on off-
duty hoih<s she ap-
parently prefers the
more feminine attire
which she has donned I
for an outing in the
park (right).
Before joining the
police force, the
native New Yorker
wa s a d en tal
tee h no log i s·t and
student nurse.
UPI ltteol'Kllot
•
Horoscope: Aries O~tains Answers
FRI DAY
SE P TEM BER20
BySYDNEYOMARR
ARIES CMa rch 21·April
19): Strive to understand
financial arrangements or
partner, mate. You are due
for ddmestic refreshment,
adjustment. You obtain an·
swers which are both an ad·
vantag_e and a burden.
begin ; bring forth creative
resources. Chips are down
and member or opposite sex
insists on commitme nt.
Some aggressive associates
may go too far.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22):
SCORPIO (Oct. 23·Nov.
21): Your natural qualitieS,
abilities surface -and they
a're appreciated. Timing
improves a nd more persons
become aware, lnlrigued.
You are able to correct past
errors.
SAGl1TARIUS. <Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 l: Be ready for a
variety of experiences~ in·
eluding possible change of
scenery. You could be cal-
led upon to aid in special
club or group activity.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·
Jan. 19): You gel your
wish~ Key now is to make Accent >s o n structure,
justice, ultimate decisions.
Those who are radical are.
jealous or your position. at-
titude. You should assert
views in.direct. independent
and dynamic manner. Myths Attacked
VIRGO (Aug. 23:Sepl. NEW YORK <UPI ) -physical injury cause the
elderly to abstain.
amends to ramily member
for recent misunderstan·
ding. Be a gracious winner.
AQUARIUS <Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Emphasis is on respon·
sibility, an ele.,•ation or your
standing in community
Beware of false flattery -
some now want something
for nothing. ·
PISCES (Feb 19-l'ol arch
20): You can see al a
distance -means you un·
ders'ta nd wh at i s u p·
con;iing. Sense or percep·
lion, direction are shar-
pened . \'ou get n1 cssages.
a ss ignments and yo ur
vie.,~•s .,.,.ill be more widely
distributed.
IF TODAY IS \'OUR Biii·
TllDA \' you are sensitive.
n1oody and , during 1974. you
made signiricant changes,
some involvini:: opposite
sex. .
December "'ill be one or
you r most important mon-
ths of tbe year. Gemini.
Vir'go indi viduals are dra~·n
to you . You ai'c creative,
a nalytical and a natural
reoorter -"'rite r ·teacher.
TAURUS (April 20·May
20 ).: Legal affairs
dominate. The papers, the
nuances, the m eanings and
implication s are
paramount. Here is a mood
or 'anticipation, deception.
clandestine and thick
glamor.
22): Emphasis Is on ideas Mandatory retirement at 65
and how to make them· shouldnotmean.retirement
\li'Ork. Family member may: from sex, loo, says Dr .. "Bones are no{ as brittle ---------------------~
. ~ more conservative lhan1 Robert Butler, a research
imagined. Key is to make· psyc~iatrist and ~eron
concessions without aban· tolog1st from Washington,
as myth ~·ould have it,"
Butler said .
GEMINI (May 21-June·
20): Stick 'to hard facts.
Leave the "soft stuff" for
others or for a nothe r time.
B!lsic issues dominate and
sO do your diet and health.
doning principles. D.C. ,------:
LIBRA (Sept. 23 -0ct. 22}: At an American l'rtedical
CANCER (June 21-July
221: Finis h rather than
Cycle is on upswing; you Association Congress on
have reason to celebrate. Aging, he attacked myths
Financial windfall is not out about sex in later years.
or the picture. Means you Among them is the idea that
get more than you expec· older persons lose their sex
led. Expand hori:ions. drives. Not a lways so.
Weddings
and Engagements
To avoid disapIXJintment. prospective
b1ides are re minded to ha,·e their wedding
stories "'ith black and white glossy
photographs to the Daily Pilot People
Department one \veek ..bef'Ore the wedding.
Pictures recei,·ed after that time \Viii
not be used.
F'or e ng agement a nnouncements it is
impe rative that the story, also accom-
panied by a black and \vhite glossy pi e·
ture, be s ubmitted six \\1eeks or more
before the v.·edding date; other\\·ise it will
not be publi shed.
To help fill requirements on bflth wed·
ding and engagement stories. form s are
available in all Daily Pilot offices. Fur-
ther quest.ions v.·ill be ans"'ered by People
Department staff members at 642-4321 .
FALL NE EDLEPOINT CLASSES
Ta119ht by Bunny Cross~n
FALL SlRliS-Sept.-r 23 throvgh OclolMr 23
)tact~ ~tember 23
10.00 Ch. • 11:00 noon .. Nan -5amolef Untermed11tel
12:30 1.m. • 2 30 p,m Basic Sampler {Beginning)
T_., • s.pte-r 24 12.30 Ln\ • 2·30 p,m. Ribbon Sampler (advanceCI) w--s.,te-25 1o:bo 1m. '. 12·0!> noon Or101nal Irish l•ce Pillow (Inter·
"*"'"I 7:30 pm.. 9·30 pm Ribbon Sampler {Advanced\
MMdcty • October 21
10:30 am.· 3:00 p.m Work&hOP
Classes run four weeks. plus one all·Cfay
workshOp. Fee: $35.00 • 1n¢ludlng ·materials.
Checks. payable to Bunny Crossen, must
accompany apphca11on
Too orten, according to
Dr. Buller. older peisons
believe they no longer are
capable of sexual activity.
As a result, they become
impotent. Often, too, the
pressure of society's at-
titudes and fear of possible
i
@aRA.s:g RINfi
w .... ,,,,.,..~ . ...,.. e NeJ11•11 Wlett e J.1114 SHOl:S ..........
c-..-~
141/2 to 261/2
Ther1 ii nothing Ii•• o
' dr1u to make yo11 fe1I
1v1ry in<h o lady. And
ther1 i1 nothing like
Ello Nor'~ \el1<tion
of 1limming 1tyle1
in oll Vi• becoming
n1w <olors for
Foll 71.. B1.1d91t
mind~rf, IOI).
•• •• e a
Ella NorsHALF-SIZE SHOP ' • ,f\
NEEDLEPOINT.DESIGN -
Z621 L c .. tf tfwf. • Cdtoftt! def M_. • '4 ... 1t0<4
J , I
' I
FULtERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH
1UOr•nttf•irMtlL .. f-4 Hunlif19*1_t.nftr
LAGUNA HILLS COSTA MESA
L"tun• Hilb MIU Ital Ht.,.,.. 11"4.
SH0' SUNDAY 12·S Fullerton, t4unllngton Ctnrtr
U1111 k \uu·ri•·ur d_ •( ,\l 11~11•r t :h11r~··
f
•
SAVE thru SAT.,,SEPT. 21
.CORDUROY
PINWALE
NOWALE
Values to 2.50
T"M:> great favonles -excellen! coJ~r
selection. You can se w a cant suit lor
less than S5.00!! Mix or match a Kn it print
tor a l o pp e r or bl o u s e .
Ma?'ine-washable COtlon. 45" wide,
FGsreo. LOW once 1.98 yd.
KNIT PRINTS
FG has one ol !he besl selectloni 1n
town! Cottons and blends, machine·
washable. Florals. geometrics and
Olhef delightful patterns, 60" wide
FG's reg. LOW pnce 1. 98 yd
Vahllt to 4.00
CHAMBRAY
SHIRTING BLUE
.Great 000tdlnala for Denim out11ts.
Emb,older. appliQue or !ri m with
braid. Perma Press Poly·Collon
bk!OO. 45" wtde. FG s reg. LOW price aac
1.<49.
\'ehlffteJ.00 · yo.
-LAGUNA BEACH
HI-A••· Coen Mon ,Sal. 9-5:30
I.I
NEWPORT BEACH
20felllliftl.._ ·
Ooen Mon.. Fri, to-9:30 P.t.
Sat 1o-a P,M,
Sun. 12·6 PM
'
SOMETHING NEW!
Ask About Our
(EAR RING a UB I
Schroderj
J~OS
211 f . 17th St .. Cotto Me1•
Ne11t 10 Builders Empor1uml
. t<4M1<42 •
Irvine School of-Women's Gymnasfics
--.0 open In The Irvine 11ea in Mid October.
Small Classes -P1olessional lnstrucUon.
c~ tor • .,..,...._ ..i 1111 ........
A
Jlll VIA LIDO•MEWPORT ll.ACH•675-1147
IBetunCI t:Uue Dolphin Res1au1anl)
-~------
HURRY -UP, HAIRDOS:
CUT, BLOW 'NGO!
We st1ow you he>w lo care tor tl'\em step by step. Our
curl coaxing SCISSOR STYLES are all fuss-free anef
functional and are easy to do as just st)ampoo! In-
cluded are lamp cuts, finger tumble culs. curling ifon
cuts. blower cuts. wa sh towel dry. brush ·n fluff cuts
or simple was'1 and wear cuts. Tt)ey are all SCIS·
SORED. take-care-of-yourself styles. Good !or any
age. any tiair. NO teasing, no rollers, no pins. NO
POLLUTING HAIR SPRAYS. ALSO NO SET PER·
MANENT WAVES . YOU MAY NEVER WANT TO
SET YOUR HAIR AGAIN.
•
GREAT
BUY!!!
A SALE OF
LONG-SLEEVE
I 00°/o ANTRON
NYLON BLOUSES
WERE $20
REQUCED TO
$
v
THE PLACE
~-
7 Fa•hion Island, Newport Center
orEH: -TIOL, w..s., n.n ..
Fri. I 0 ...., lo t :JO ,..,
Sat., 101o6-S.... Uto5
• • -. • '
Seminar to Hon~ Skills
How·. can. We c~pe ~Ith weld together their family profit corparation so he cnn
criticism ? . or rive "yours, mine and offer them free to pri sons,
Can arguinents be ours"children,sotheylear-drug centers and ot her in·
eliminated? How ? ned how lo have frank slitutions.
How do we get people to discussions of th eir. goals E>cplaining th at a lot of
feel enthusiastic? and aspirations. time is s pent teaching the
. These are the kinds or J.le haQ found , early on. techniques to prisoners and
questions which will be an· lhal he was interested in 1juveniledelinquents. Brown
swered during a one-day other people's' problems, so said . "We 're people-0rien·
.seminur sponS:Pred by a he · studied to become a ted,not gct-r\choriented."
man who belie"Ves in com· counselor.
munication, N"eil Robert . "So many problef!1S were k Why1 ids there a lack of
Brown. the result of a breakdown in ... now e ge about com·
i
His seminar will help the communications ," Brown municating?
nervoil! wife. 1·ea~n-to-teJI--said;-'-'·It s hould ha-v e -been-
her husband that she has J-le got the idea or trying given the importance of
just blown the budget on a to prevent problems instead reading a nd writing in
new drew dress to fill the of sol \•e them after it was school," Brown believes.
empty nook in her "'ar-loo late, a nd began ex· "Only recently have cour·
drobe, or the new attorn ey Per~ m en ting with ses in commun ication been
di s cover how to ge l techniques. offei-ed. How do yo u learn to
maximum cooperation "I found it worked," be a parent? It's the same
from his witqesscs. Bro\\'n added. . thing."
In short, il is a ''hou·"to'' I-le started building a staff ; ''The real problem is that
course in personal conl · to present seminars, then we aren't accustomed .to municatlon skills. came lo Ca lifornia in late Brown, interested i n 1969toregainafocusonhis confrpntation. ll '~ tooea.sy
counseling since he started life. to escape. But it 's impor·
n t ant that people learn the working in church camp A er making the' mov.e, Viilue or confrontation to
and youth prograrits as a Brown went back to being high school student, also more personally involved in work the bugs out .. ,
has had pract ical ex· the semina rs, feeling that A lack of confrontation,
.pericnce in co mmunicating. they had gotten too big in BrO\\'n revealed , robs a per·
The native New Yorker the east. son of his freedom and puts
and his wife , each married Brown and his staff offer a ''shadow " on his life.
Communicator NeilBrown for the se·cond time, decided their se minars for schools, Brown \\'iii offer his per·
that communieation was businesses a nd the public, ·Sonal communications
the onJy thing which \vouJd and he has created a non· sk i l l s de v e I o pm en t
Golden ~ Date Celebrated
Nine grandchildren and parents who were married
three great.gra nd children in Long Beach.
were among the 250 guests They resided in Garden
who honored hi r. and hf rs. Gro,·e until moving to West·
Rolland Shields Thomas Sr. minster a year ago.
on their 50th wedding an· t.-1rs. Thomas was a home
niversary · economics teacher and her
Mrs. A. Everett Lewis or husband was chairman of l~a yward , Rolland .S. lndustrlal Education al
Thomas Jr. of Tustin and Woodrow Wilson High
Terry Thomas or Garden School and taught drafting
Grove were ass isled by ·at Long Beach City College.
their spouses in hosting the The honorees' hobby is
jubilee celebration ror their genealogy and th ey are well '
known in civic. educational.
cultural and historical
societies.
Thomas has been
president of the Orange
Cou nty Genealogical
Society, Retired Teachers
of Orange County Central
Division and the Dalewood
l\futual Water Association.
In April , he was one or
two men in the state awar-
ded the National Silver ~·
Patriot's Medal by the Sons
of the American
Revolution.
Mrs. Thomas r eceived a
medal or appreciation from
the same group and also has
' ,.
been recognized !or her · _.._.~
leadership in Alpha
1 ,,
I J.
~
i \
t:... ~~'\.~·~ • •' •
< r
• ., .. ,
< ··:z ~ "' ' ~;(!,...,, ,
Gamma Delta, American
Association of University
·Womer. and Samuel Ram-
sey chapter or Daughters of
the American Revolution.
Mr. and Mrs. Rolland Shields
Thomas Sr. marked f ive
decades of marriage at a party.
JEANNISE GILL
Mesons
To Marry
J eanrli sc Gill and Bob
Bernal plan to be married
"'larch . 8, in St. John the
Baptist Calholic Church,
Costa Afesa.
Their parent s are Mr. and
"'1rs. E. C. Gill and the Al
Bernals. all of Costa Mesa.
Th e brid e-to-be
graduated fr om Costa "'1esa
High Sc hool _~nd par·
ticipated in the psychiatric
technician program at
Cypress College while hoer
fianc e attended John A.
Rowland J.Jigh School and
Orange Coast College.
Ideas Merge
How docs a husband and
wife design team operate
without con CU ct?
Bill and Hazel lla o(
Friedricks Sport say, "We
never specify which of us
will design what in a collec-
tion. We just pour our ideas
together, the n simplify,
simplify."
.~ ..... ,
·!JIQe g~igh:
HUNTINGTON
HARBOR ~ ........... .
A
Sl<igh /uU
of the
unwual
for Chrislmo1
• F'ret Clirtstmas
Worlahop Dally
• Mondoy thru Sat.
IOa.m.til 5p.m.
• Oroly 97 Vay•
U"til~
... ~ .. , ................ , C.llMf
NUNTIMOTON ll•CN
1•1 Al00NOUIN"1WAllMllt mt
' J Penney
•,. •Y -. -.. ~
JCPenney \
Pixy
portraits tt .. ...
are enough to make
anyone smile.
• •
Only1.6~
for a 5 x 7 or 4 wallet sizes or same pose
in naturat color.
• Jfo appointment necessary. Come in.
•Age limit: children to 12 years old.
• Choice ol poses lrom as many as 4 or 5.
•Two chlld1en.together, .• only 2.98.
• No hidden charges.
• Mail orders : juat sHghlly mOfe,
II, you ha~e a second or third favorite
pose, lake !hem, too. At these~ecial
priCes, In either aize. '-
'
Your second selection .. , ....................... 1.S9 _
Your lhlrd selection ........ w .................... 1.SS
YouNourlh selection .................... " ...... 1.55
Your flllh selection ''"'''"""""·~ ......... 1.40
-.,__,,.
Plxy IKHlrw: 10 AM lo 1 P"ll end 2 PM to 4 PM, Thurtd1y, Friday and Saturday,
Sepllmber 19, 20 and 21, 11 lht lollowlng 1I0<9t: BUENA PARK COSTA MESA
fULLERTON GARDEN GROVE NEWPORT BEACH ORANGE "THE CITY"
' .
. -•
'
program from 8:30 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. Saturday, Scot.
128 in the Newportei Inn.
Anyone wis hing more inf or·
· mation may call him al
(213) 392-3858.
'Jfu: Gold Piece
-17141
557442)
Custom
Des igning
Engraving
Diamond
Setting
SINCE 1886
ANNA
BANANA
IS IH
TOWN
FRESH FOOD
. COid
JUICE IAI
COMIWATCH us 11111.D
HANDCRAFTED MEXICAN
FURNITURE
HOME DEC.QRATIVI:
IMl'ORTS
THI!
WOGD
Pl!DDlal!R I
' ('*-! Suftcllys) • 557-2837
LOOI! foR THE RAGS
WISHON-HARRELL . . .
STONEWARE
a truly unique
collection of
~andt~rown
pottery.
Olls.ROWH. _ .. .,.,_ ...
-·. ---·r ~'".!'.
COASTPLAU
j Thul'$d1 . Se •ember 19. 1~0~7';;;:;;;:~_,D"A"ll"Y"P~l,,_LO::;T'--'B"'-':f
---FALL-HOLIDAY TRUNK SHOW
•
Review our
exclusive collection
end meet
our Fashion Oirecto1
Friday & Saturday
Se!>tember 20 & 21
Informal modeling
· 1to4 p.m.
· ..
SOUTH COAST PLAZA .
lJppe! level Neor Builocls
557.5734
\\'e Specialize"'
C11ston1 Des1g11 Sert11ci'~
CREATIVE RUGS &
WALL HANGINGS
LEARN "SPEED TUFTING"
IN OUR CLASSES
MAKE YOUR OWN
the west end
SPICIAUllMG It: .ww.-... ~
~....._...cc..... w.11..n ('f'eried PricnJ
• C~ciM hprnlo
Moi;,INM!
~where
the
nicest
c lothes
hang
out
COFFEE TMDE1'. CATEllNGo
SERVICE
WINE& IHI ... -.ricllrd Methrc._.
1557·9,711
1 Happiness is
FUN IDEAS from
•
~ 546 -6340
VILLAGE
S57-7262
\ -rif l I
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Exclusively Sfamps,
Coins, and Supplies
EVERYTH ING FOR STAMP
AND COlN COLLECT~S
n
0 ~ z m
~
556-6850 .'
ACTIVE SPORTS WEAR
FOR MEN AND WOMEN
LOOK FOR THE FLAGS
OVER
60
STORES
[TIME!
LIFE
BOOKS .
AREAYAILA8LEHERE •••
Sirigletitlet orcomplete.wrie.1 '
-without wbscrlption. •
ColM in 11nd ~M
MERCHANT I LE SLOG •
557.3175
MCHIAY THAU ntlil:SDAY
\0 .. t, FllDAY MID
• SATUIDAT 10 .. 10,
Sla40AT 11 .. 5 .
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No Winners
In Name Game
By E RftlA BOMB ECK
I visited. m y friend who
lives in a 320·room-aparl-
ment-complex and with a
few less people it could have
been another Woodstock.
''Boy, I bet you have fl lot
or friends here." I said.·
"Oh yes." she beamed
proudly. "There :.i.re pcopll'
.around all the time."
"'Who's the guy ovl'r thcr~
who looks like Robert Rl·d·
ford?"
''Oh him . he"s thl' 1111t•
,,1ith the li ccnst' µJalt·:-..
'2·MUCH."
"Clever. but dot•s hl· ha \t'
a name'!''
•·who knows. 'rhere's tht•
girl J was te lling you about
who uses a \v eak bleach.
li"er laundry looks like a
mechanic's handkerchief.
"'And here com es 1lie guy
everyone knO\lo'S. ~!e's a
cabb age freak . Cooks it
three or four times a week .
Someone told him it would
make him sexy. I v•ond er
wh.ere He lpless Hanna is"
She calls the super every
lim e she his to turn on a
light s witch. Jus t can 't
seem togetthehangofit ··
"What's her last nam~··
Hanna wha.,?''
''That's not h er real
name. We just call hC'r
t hat."
''Whose we?''
"A gang I see :.ill lhe t1m(·.
A really neat gir l "'ho fell
asleep tn the sauna one day
a nd got her leg caug'ht in the
slats and Wide l~oad, the
only guy in the apa1tmcnt
with a station wagon."
"There's a cute ~i rl.''
"She's a dingy,"' Sili d n1v
P-T Units
Re-gro up
t\N D E R SES P T :\:
Skating party \vith lhrills.
spills and family fun ex·
pericnces will be held fron1
7 to 9;30 p.m . Su nd.~ty, Sc-pl.
22. at the harbor Holl<>r
Rink. Tickets will be sold on
a first come firs! served
basis. Skate rental will ht·
availa ble 11t the roller rink
Mrs. Dan O'Neil 1s chai r-
ma n for the event.
ST. CAT•I ER INE l'l;;
Festival of the llills SJXln
sored by the par~nt 's guild
of St. Calht:_rine and St.
Nicholas Catholic Parish
. Parochial ' School \\'ill I ake
place fro m 7 to 10 p. m.
FriQay. Sept. 27, and fron1 l
to 10 p.m . Saturday and
Sunday Sept. 28 and 29. on
St. Nicholas Churt·h groun-
d s. Carnival type rirtl'-;,
games and rOtJd b15bths "'ill
be featured. Ch'1irm<'n rvr
t~e event are Joe t\1aghone,
HJrold Wrig ht. Jim Lawler
and Doris C;,intlay Pubhc 1s
"·e lcome.
SAN JOAQUIN: Th• l1r<l
meeting-of a p i.1rcnl
orga.nlzotion f or San
Joaquin Ele m cntnry School
v.'ill be' allcd at 7:30 p.m.
1'uesdny. Sept . 24. In thl!
multipurPose room or !he
Los Alisos Sc hool. tlt1!'i!<ion
\'ieJO. The I ~ pe of part.•nl
°''Jl'.anlz.auon ~111 be dbCUS·
• scd and offu:er~ elrctr<l
AT
WIT'S
END
friend . ··Put a hibachi in her
closet one ni ght to keep the
01r conditioner from
·blowing out the fire . That's
the ni ght three engines
<..hov.•ed up. I told you about
hl'r "
··\'nu :-.u1 l'IY ore
~.nit group ··
'".Just like a big fi1mily
... \\'{' ha\'C' some great
times. There's the girl \\'ho
1vcars an aee bandage un·
der her string bikini for sup-
port .... '-\pple Pie. the girl
l\'hO has heard from he r
mother every day for the
last two years ... the Gift
Wrapper, a guy who has
s uch neat looking garbage,
you want Lo a uction it o'rr
... and the J\1oocher. who
said he gave up cigarettes
three years ago but just
gave up buy ing the m .··
··This look s lik e a great
place to have an identity
crisis," I said s hoking my
head.
~
•·Hey. my roommate just
eame home. l >A•ant you to
meet her. She's grcat-15
pounds overweight. cooks.
loves to iron. gets along.
great "·ith my mother.
buys nC'a t records a nd for
the last t"'O years has never
n1tssed payi.ng her rent on
t in1e. Rythe1\•ay,"she said,
turning to her . ··what is
your last name·'"
Semantics
SuspeGted
LOS ANGELES !AP I -
Firemen will be fire fi ghters
and kcanelme n will become
kennel attendants in the
la t es t round of offi cial
"desexing."
T he e ity C ivil Ser vice
Com mission approved the
"dcsexing" of 170 job titles
in an effort to elimina~ex
discrimination. ,
~tale Ji~r ati onists should
be pleased with some or the
changes.
llousemoth c r s hccome
houseparent s and "·ail.res·
. St's become dining room scr·
vers.
Officiol manua ls "'ill be
purged of such sexist desig.
·nations as "manpQwcr. ·· a
spokesman -or s pbkcspcr ·
son -s ays. It's "stafring
requirement'' in the nev.•
lingo.
Pai.nt Spots
Autumn 'orten means a
bit of painting to spruce up ·
the house. ·
A bi-g prob le m : paint
~pattering o n hardware rix·
turcs, do<lr knobs, window
pnncs. (Ind everywhere e lse
il .s houldn't be. You can
pr vent this. Cover all ad·
jacent ~reas with a thin film or petroleum jelly; Then, if
}OU acctdenta lly get Paint
on them. the c6ating·. or
petro leum Jelly makes
rrn10\;.1J <1od rle.inup fa st
~ndMl'l:IPlC-.
Ju.,f ~ipl' 3\\U~
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Proceeds· Pictured
An exhibition and au c tion of
original art works w i ll be presen-·
l ed by Huntington Beac h Junior
Women at 7.p.m . Friday, Se pt. 27 ,
in the Fountain Valley Community
Center. Fund s wi·lf ·benetit the
c l ub's philanthr opies. Ha nging
selections for the show are Mrs.
Fred Sp ea k e r (l eft) a nd Mrs.
David Lopez.
RC~s priced right to keep you in the green
XPemey
Ill 451 111 () t ------· -
Look good at good looking prices.
Sunbeam
llllltt-Stic._ Add "allf.
~Ill and Ill ,.,,;nule• J'O" ,. ,.,cty tor ml1\
Clll'lff!i.(WC1) .
Giiiette
29.97 "Tlnte Machine" hoard
hal ml1t drpr tor long·
1u11ng Mii. (12001)
M••"" hair dryer lor 1111
drying. 500 waits pow4r,
unique comb. (HD 4)
f'rius fffectl•e T""' s ... S1!9t. 21, lt74
Clairol
3·way hairselter permits 1egul11r.
i:oridl\100 or ~leam-ml51 set 20
rollert In 3 si1e1. (I< 420)
ll.84A PAll: Bf!acl'I at OranoetliOrpe •Open weekdays 10 to 11:30. Surlday1 10 10 6. S""'1A AHA: 3900 So Bnst04-No of So Coast Plata • Open weekdays 10 to 9 Sundllys 10 toe.
Cl•""GI: Cily Or. al Gardfln Grove Blvd • Optn waekdavs 10 lo 9 Surldays 10 to 6
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Clubs Active
Along Coast
Miss Lily Peter.
of Marvell, Ark., makes
musical contri but ion to
bicentennial ce lebration.
Poet Produces
Musical Past
MARVELL, Ark. IUPI I
-Life is a ball for l\1iss Lily
Peter of P.t arvell.
She's a poet, author, cot·
ton ginner a nd farm er , and
prooa oJy could oe a can·
dlestick m aker if she so
determined.
She's a continuous smilt·.
and talker when shl' finds
someone inte rested in ht•r
first loves -poeti-y. history
and music.
P.tiss Pete r , the stalr's
t laureate, has an ~ rn •.
e soy bean a nri '
plantatio n in Ai •
P..l issis s ippi R 1 1 111·lt.i
region. She opt>r,11 \'~ l1a lf of
it her self a nd 1 • .,1c:!.'s the
rest. She belicv!.'~ ~he's the
only wom an "'ho operates a
cotto n gin in the slat e ..
which she 's been doing for
48 years. .
Revenues fro m the plun·
t alio n provide h er the
freedom to lavis hly a \lo\V
others the opportunity lo
join in her inte rests. Iler
civic deeds. she sa\'S. have
some of he r n riJZ h hors
thinking she is a sorcer ess.
1nandy to Little !lock for
l\\'n concerts so residents
v.•ould have the opportunity
to hear so1n c '·good music.''
1\l present. her energies
;.i nd obout S200,000 or her
mon~y :.~re t~neQ. in lo the
n at io n s b 1ceht e nnial
celebration.
l\l1ss Pete r has a n an·
t'estral link 'to the nation's
birthday. She said the first
Fourth of July service held
1n this country ""as on July
1. 19BJ. in Salem. N .C. She
id the rel igious service
is a rranged a nd conduc-
ted by her great-great-un·
. cle, J ohn Frederik Peter,
\\'ho "·as d irector of music
for the southe rn province of
the i\·lora·via n Church in
1\mcri c a.
"'1"he ex:1ct program he
g11vc is stil l on record," she
suid. and she is ~iving a
grant to tht:! l\l o ra vian
~l usic FoundiTtlon in \Vin-
s ton ·S;i lem. N .C .. so a
recording ~.an be made.
A A U W
Laun c hin g ano ther
season at 1 :30 p.m. Satur·
day, Sept. 21, will be the San
Clemente -Capis trano Bay
Branch of the American As·
sociation of University
\\'omen. -···-···
· N·ew and pcospcct ivc
members a re invited to the.
gath e ring in th e San
Cl e m e nte Con1 mun.~.t.Y
Clubho use to learn of plans
for the com ing year. In:
terest and study groups also
will be disc ussed.
Wes tw a rd He
\Vcs tward ll o Chapter,
Daughters or the British
Empire has exte nded an in·
vitation to all \vomcn of
.liritish a ncestry to attend a
meeting at noo~ed ·
nesday, Sept-25, ii\ the
Laguna Beach h<raie Or A1rs.
R. \V. Kelteringhan1.
A rt League
J\rtist·teaehe r , Roger Ar-
mstrong will .be the guest.
lecturer at lite next meeting
or the Torana Art League
scheduled at 7:30 p.m. Wed·
nesday, Sepl. 25, in Bowers
Al useu1n .
T he league w ill honor
patrons and introduce new
members during a gourmet
luncheon at noon 1'Tiduy ,
5£pL27,.in Eauline..Fa.lk 's
Santa Ana home.
NB J uniors
Ne,vport Beac h Junior
Ebells will learn about one
of their projects for the year
when ~1r s . N an cy
\\'alsworth discusses the
Sc ho ol Ag e A1oth ers
Prog !:)) R\.v)
TKe groUJ) wiJI meel at 10
a.m. Thursday, Sept. 26, in
the clubhouse.
MGM
The Gifted Children's As·
sociation of Orange County,
a non-profit •o rganization
forl'TK?d to s timulate interest
a nd e nhance ' the develop-
ment or gifted children. \\'ill
launch a new year under the
leadership of 1'-1 rs. Leon
Kor ba.
On Thursday, Sept. 26, at
7:30 p.m ., Dr. W. E. ~'J c
N&lly wi ll pre sent a
progra n1 e nt itled . The
\'lorlds or Science Fiction.
Tuffree Junior High School.
·-
SAVE $2.00 to $3.00 Sq. Yd.
FOi THIS SALE OHLY CARPET TOWH HAS REDUCED THE
l'IUCE OH FOUR OF THIS YEAR'S MOST POPULAR CARPETS!
TllESE ARE ELEGAHT TOP QUALITY FASHIOH CARPETS.
HEVlll IEFORE HAVE WE BEEM ABLE TO OFFER SUCH LUXURT
c.ur£TIHG AT I. OHE LOW PRICE. HURRY FOR IEST SELEC-
TIOHS, SOME COLORS AHO QUAHTITIES LIMITED •
.t. 100% nylon cut & loop
;hag In a brand
l8W patterned
ool<.
~ularly $9.99.
$1.99 ·
Sq. yd.
SPLASH-DYED
·sHAG
A bulky shOrt strand
nylon pile shag
dyed with a new process
to aeate
bright
inJltt<:Olor
cont>inations
Regularly S9.99
$7.99
Sq. yd.
SCULPTURED
SHAG
A continuous l11amen1
nylOO pile hi-lo
"""''" exciting
rrulti-color
(l)l"f'binations.
Regularly S9.99
$7.99
NYLON PLUSH
Art extra thick top~l·the-line -
plush carpet in
brilliant
tone-0n-tooe
colors. Regularly S10.99 -,
$7.99
Sq. yd.
Placentia will be the get·
ting .
The orches tra wi ll
present a concert at 3 p.m.
Sunday. Sept. 29-: in West·
mont School, ll untington
Beach.
Gu il d
\Vestminster Community
1-lospita l Guild will have its
annual m embership tea at
10 a.m . Friday, Sept. 27, in
the hospital.
Con se rvatory
lr\•inc.. Conservatory oC.
Thursday. September 19, 1974
mu s break Registration
\~·ill be taken during the
first sCssions.
The conservatory is spon·
sored by Irvine Excursions.
~ non-profil organization
whi ch organizes group
theuter t rips ror Interested
residents. -~
Conservatory director 1s
Or. Peter S , Odegard with
Dr. Phyllis Glass of the use
Preparatory Conservatory
serving as consultant.
Ho memakers
~·tusi c will open Saturday. Orange County Jl ome
Sept . 21, in \'is.ta Verde ' E c onomi s t s in liome-
.Sehool. n1aking will m eC t J\tonday.
. Sessions are scheduled Sept. 23. in the \\'estmin-
e\•ery Saturday from 9 a.m . ster home of J\I rs. Richard
to 3 p.m . except for Christ· Brunner .
.
DAIL y PILOT BJ
!\otftrics ror Consumers
will be presented by caro1
Bielereld . coo rdinator or
llome t:conomics, Orange
County Departm ent or
Education .
CM Library . .
A fUll·length Co lor fll m.
entitled "Aku Aku " \\'i ll be
shov.'n in the Center Street
Library, Cost11 ~l esa at 7:30
p.m . 1'hurSd ay. Sept. 26.
CM J uniors
~·amily Lal\' \\'i11 be the
topic of Florence llenrutty,
Santa r\na atforn'eY wllen·
~he atlt.lrcsscs· the Costa
~l t:'sa Junior \Vomc n .
:i.lt•rnbers v.·ill meet ;tl
7·30 p.m. 1'hursduy, Sept.
?Ii, in the clubhouse
"I 'm turning soybeans
into poetry a nd n1us ic ~o
that's the reason they call it
sorcery," she laughed.
H e r IO\'e for mu sic
brought her national ••lien·
tion in 1969 when she m or-
tgaged her farm ror S.JS ,000
to bring the Philudc lphia
Orchestra and Eugene Or-
"I thought that.. '¥\'Ould be a
·good gift 10 m usic in the
country and to the history of
our country," she suid. "I
lo\'c history, I love n1y coun·
try and I Jove Ark11nsas. So.
I'm tryi nj?'lo n1ake the con·.
tribution of Arkansas a nd
Phillips County lo the bicen-
tennia l as va luable and
memorable a s I possibly
r;in. ·:
SPECIAL GROUP REDUCED TO CLEAR
CAN ·you FIND
• O>ntinuously renewed ORIGINAL designs
• Q.Jallty maleriats I workmanship
• Minogramlng SERVICE
• Matching ACCE SSORIES
•YOUR CHOICE of fabric, trim, .
pants style, lengttt. etc. at no extra chg,
• QJSTOM FIT or ready to wear
MO, W l'•l MOT EXPIHSIVE! #.· ~~ at 30LOV ~. . &
~ Cu1u11ricr ~or Active Spo1t:1Wtilt
Mesa Verde Cet1ter F·Z.. Tues. U'l,u Sat. 10 1il 6 HarbOr~!!~a~o~!·:; coi-557.·7206 Fri. 'Iii 9
Costa Mesa Closed Mon. '· .
NYLON
MINI-SHAG
Regularly $3.99
$ 88
SQ. YD,
NYLON
TWEED
SHAG
Regularly $3.99
'
$ 44
SQ. YD.
'501' NYLON MEDIUM HEAVY
·HI-LO LENGTH , NYLON
Regularly $4.99 SHAG _ SHAG
Regularly S?-49 Regularly $5.99 ..
$ 88 $ 88 $ 99
SQ. YD. SQ. YD. SQ. YD.
FREE fSTIMATES IN YOUR HOME . EASY cqrn1T fERMS ~V~llAB LE
• L& YOUR BANKAMERICARD OR MASTER (HARGE
291 I SOUTH BRISTOL STR EET
Ju st North of South Coast Pla za
The Largt11t Carpet chain in the Weit SANTA ANA -.Phone 556-8287
Open Evenings 'til 9. Sunday 11 -5
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8 8 DAILY PILOT Thursda1. Stpltmber 19, 1974
, Sere a111it1g Over Supplies
O~ Oil Up
--Sin1on
Over The Counter
. MASO U1Hng1
Detroit E1nhraces
·catal)rtic Gadget ,, WASHINGTON (UPI)
By EDWARD S. LECll'l'ZIN
UPI Auto Wrlllf" DETROIT -The catalytic
convert er is one d e v i c e
Detrojt's auto makers could
ve done witho ut.
l---J"'The muffler·like device that
treats exhaust gases makes
the 1975 models now rolling
orr assem bly lines probably
the m o st pollution·free
automobiles ever produced
with internal combu s t i on
engines.
..
So m e t imes kicking,
sometimes screaming an d
~HIGHGEA~
sometimes getting their way,
Detroit's auto makers have
come up with the catW,ytic
conve rter as thelr answer to
the 1970 government order to
take the car out of the
pollution picture by 1975.
THEY NOT TOO al·
fecUonately refer to the
device as the "Muskie Muf-
fler" in reference to the U.S.
Senator from ?'1aine woo was
most responsible for the 1970
Clean Air Act.
Aside from the technical
developments and the legal
battles, the addition of the
little chemical f u r n a c e
beneath the floorboards of 1975
cars-basically means to the
American motorist:
-Higher prices since the
catalytic muffl er is adding
between $100 and $150 to the
price tags of the '75s.
-Better · f(lileage s I n c e
engineers who for the past five
years have been tun i n g
engines 'to produce fewer
pollutants can now tune for
more get.up-and·go a nd
mileage. General ~1otors is
talking about a 14 percent
improvement over '•74 models
and Chrysler says it has a
general 15 .percent gain.
-Ma n d ator y use of
unleaded gasoline since the
lead additive that controls
knocking also "poisons" the
platitium and palladium
catalyst. There's a n e W ,
smaller gas tank filler pipe
on the '75s that will prevent
anything .but unJ eaded gasoline
-at one or two cenls more
a gaJlon -from being put
into the4Car.
LESS EVIDENT to the
motorist will be the exhaust
0
MASTtR CHARGE
DAILY 10--,
3333 So. Bristol St.
" r
..
comlng out of the tailpipe
containing 00 percent fewer
hydrocarbons th a n 119 6 7
models, 83 percent less carbon
monoxide and 4.6 percent
fewer oxides of nitrogen. In
California , where smog is a
greater proble m, the exhaust
will be even cleaner.
G~1. \vhich was sharply
crilical of the government's
timetable set in 1970, has since
e1nbraced the ca t a 1 y s t
technology more than any o(
its competitors. But that
didn't stop the world's largest
a uto company from going into ·
c ou r.t t o fig h t the'
E n v i ronmental Protection
Agency (EPA) and gai n
. !urtber delays. -r
In Congress, in the courts
and in front of big and small
gro ups. GM spokesmen . told
their side of the clean alr
~Vorld oll production I s
running nearly a million
FINANCE
barrels a day aOOve demand
o:nd there ls the potenti al for
a dally surplus of up lo 5·
million barrels, Trea s ury '---------...L
Secretary William E. Simon
says.
Simon said that, w l t h
storage tanks full a n d
consuming nations looking ror
alternate energy sources, the
Arab oil-producing nations are
fi~ing their market for oil .
dwindling. ·
"The oil producing and
exporting countries (OPEC)
will , in a relatively short
period of time, find their
. market for oil tending sharply
Natio1ial
Stee l Hik~
Tin Pri ces
PITISBURGll (AP )
National Steel Corp., the
nation's third I a r g est
steelmaker, announced it is
raising prices on it,s tin mill
products by an avefagt! of 21/4
percent.
controVersy. They asked for tM.
down,11ard ." Simon told ¥n
investigation subcommittee or
the Senate Gove rnm e nt
Operations Committee.
The meeting, called to
discuss what the United States
can do aOOut oil prices, was
closed, but pa rt i ci pa n ts
released prepared statements.
The increase will become
effective Oct. 21.
A spokesman for National
Steel said that because of the
variety of items involved he
could not immediately give
a dollar figure for t h e
increase.
delays in implemcnling a HERE'S THE MONSTER THAT STIRRED UP DETROIT techno~ogy that no one really GM' 0 Klimisch Shows Off Catalytic Converter understands fully. _ __;_ __ ,_,_· _________________ _
"Catalysts have an aura of
alchemy aOOut them, black
magic. even with chemists."
said Dr. Richard Klimisch.
GM's first res.ident expert in
cata lysis. "The n orm a I
seq uence of research and
development is almost always
turned around in catalytic
teclmology.
''Somebody finds a catalyst
maybe by a cl umsy accident,"
he says. "Then we spend 20
years trying to find out why_
it works. I hesitate to say
this, and I'U probably lose
a lot of fri ends, but we don't
really understood m a n y
catalysts."
THE BASIC principle of the
catalytic converter is that it
speeds up the ch e mi ca l
reaction that conv e rts
unburned hydroc~rbons and
carbon monoxide · caused by .
incomplete combustion in the
engine into harmless carbon
dioxide and water.
\Vhat if you run out of gas
and can't find a ·station sell ing
the unleaded fuel you need
for your '75--model? Or maybe
you don't want to pay the
extra cent or two a gallon ?
If you do manage to get
the leaded gasoline into the
!pecial filler pipe, it won't
harm your engine. In fact .
you'll probably never notice
the difference.
The main effect will be to
rUin the catalyst. There won't
be any effect on the engine's
perfonnance or mileage. But
you'll ruin a device that cost
over $100 and your car will
be bac k in tbe pollution·
producing business.
R. E. IHYESTMEHT
MAH.t.GER
Seeks income properties
Sales, Syndication.
Management
REAi.TOR
I 776-7652 IZ4 l11r1.J
Droz ights, Floodin g
B ring Up Food Cost
United Press International
Food prices are on the
upswing again, nudged in part
by sp ring floods and summer
droughts. Grocers predict they
may reach new heights in the
next six months.
A spot check of 10 cities
from Pittsburg to Seattle and
Los Angeles by United Press
International showed :in
irregular but rather general
upward trend.
''Pric e s have been
rollercoastering jn the past
few months but the trend is
definitely upward on almost
everything," the spo kes man
for one Chicago area grocery
chain said.
you will see meal go up this
fall if we have these grain
shortage s t he y are
predict ing.''
Leon D i l le n berg. a
six>kesman for the Bay Area
Grocers' Association in San
Francism, said he hoped
"most of our big price rises
this year are behind us."
lJE SAID MOST grocers are
sWitching to cheaper products
and 50me grocers have noticed
people are simply eating Jess,
.. Maybe," he added , •·it's the
heavy emphasis on diet as
""ell as rising rood costs."
He noted a grocer in San
Francisco's ChinJtow n re·
ported the price or a 50
"AND THE l\1 A J 0 R pound bag of rice has gone
shortages caused by t h e down from $24 to $U.
drought haven't hit yet. When Bread prices g e nera 11 y
they do , I think we're-itrfor -mo-ved--higher· across the
some really sharp increases." country during the past· sii:
Grocers in Pittsburgh and months, a 1 to u g h they
Siinon said oil production
\Vas 3 million barrels a daY1
above demand during most
of the summer, then \vent
lo 500,000 · barrels a b o v e
demand when some OPEC
count ries cut production.
"Our latest evidence is that
production is slightly up once
again, and that the surplus
may now approach 900,000
barrels per day," Simon said.
''Current production potential
is even higher than current
production , perhaps by as
1nuch as 4·5 million barrels
pe r day.•1
The ma jor use of tin mill
products is in the manufa cture
of beverage and o t h e r
conta iners.
Nation al said the increase
"is necessitated by drastic in-
creases in our costs for basic
raw materials such as ore.
coal and coke ·and increased
transportation and o t her
costs."
Tin mill products account
fM' aOOut 22 percent , of
National's business. U.S. Steel
is the nation's top steelmaker
and Bethlehe1n is second.
55 MPll Li111it Lowers
State Gas Consun1ption
SACRAMENTO (UPI) gasoline to retail outlets in
The 55 mile-an·hour speed J ul y. the eighth straight
limit appears to be reducing month· of d e c r e a s i n g
gasoline-cons umption i n a distribution ·figyres co mpared
California although motorists wi th last year.
seem to be driving as much "California ·s motorists seem
as ever. according to the State to be drivin g as much as
Board of Equalization. two Southern Illinois cities remained stable in some
complained about price bikes cities. increases of about 5
in food proi:lucts rontaining oil , cents a loaf were evident in
such' as margarine, cooking Chi cago, Los Angeles and
and salad oils. Atlanta.
"Prices on these items have
The ooard Tuesday based ever, but the reduced speed
below thal of a yea r ago," MUTlTAL FUNDS the OOard said. skyrocketed during the past
few months and they may
GO hi gher before this ends,"
one Pittsburgh chain store
official said.
its conclusion on a 2.9 percent limit appears to be holding
drop in the distribution of down gasoline consumption I I
n n iiJ n 11 11 rl ~ Revenues from the state .. ____________________ •
.. Groceries are up
margarine. salad dressing,
cook.ing oils -those items
affected by dealings i n
futures," said Mack James,
o\1:ner of supermarkc:ts at
Ca rOOndale J.lld Marion. Ill.
"I think groceries will go up
for six months and then hold
or maybe drop."
J ames also said.
0 DRIAl l-.i'i
1
1 G~ gasoline tax in July also ,.... vor• -f'o1.'0r1•11 E 1.1J 1.1J J P Gwlr. .... ·1.1?v1~t•,. 1.11 1 ... ::t'S!l~I ~· dropped 2.9 percent in July t:'~1, .:1~··1>1'~~ 0~~,.~~s f_':/ 1.20 :!::1.:=11 :::~ ;::~~':!~ " t~ {:: ~-Juli,_..lll,ll .I ~' 1 'N'~.~'1 ('~"1', '\ from the same month in 1973 ui. on Mutu•l Eqtf Fa .Ir) 11 1 JOH,. MANCOCK : lil w•e F •.as '·'' ') Fun115 ts QllOleQ br Ory Lw t .lt 10.M 8ncl Fa l•.IS ll.11 .. lt< Eq S.Tt S.1111
Health Industries, Inc. o( Newport Beach has announc.
ed the election of Norman E. Pessln as presiden t and
chief executive officer.
He has served as president of Holiday Universal. Inc .•
a Baltimore-based health spa chain since 1971.
Benson H. Fine has bee n eJected executive vice presi·
dent of Health Industries.
* Alva L. Cusick has been appointed
area superv isor of Carl's Jr. Restau·
rants, with hiring and training respon·
sibilities for eateries in the north
section or Orange, County.
tie was wi th Gang Wail Com~
nents and Harvey Aluminum prior to
joining Carl Karcher Enterprises. He
and his wife aniJ, four children reside
in Fountain Valley.
CUSICI( * J\1assachusetts l\lutual Life Insurance Company has
promotetl Duane L. Gerke t() district group representative
of its Orange County Group office in Newport Beach.
The Irvine resident was a sales representative for
Northwestern National Life for four years before joining
Massachusetts 1'.1utual.
* Retired president and chief executive officer of'}.fcDon·
nell Doug las Astronautics Company, Wal{er F. Burke,
has been named vi ce president of operation for RecoVery
Systems, Inc. of Irv ine.
He will oversee production of the firm 's 295 oil/water
separation units for a $1.3 million Coast Guard order,
*
-from $63.6 million to $61.7 u.. ""so inc. Drvt LA '·" c.rw1ri '·'' ,,,1 .. 1Ko c J.•s •.» ·11· So ln<rn S.% t .SJ SHJ1WI S.IJ •.l~CUDD!ll FDS: ml !On. w1-.sNy JrCI Cent •. ,I I.IC KE YSTON E: Jnlt lftw •.'2 •.'2
S.pttrnber 11, 1'7' E&E Mu 134 1.1' Cusl Bl 1'S,11lCl e.len< 10 S&10 )'
Burroughs
Adds 4 Ne,v
Computers
Borroughs Co rp. announced
the production of four new
computer systems wi th price
tags ranging fro1n $3,760,000
lo $9.400,000.
a111 AUi E~lt Gr S.1' S.6l Cust Bl 1t 1l 11 l•Cam t.2S •.lS
AGm Gw J_n_ EATON & C.U.I tM 6 't 1.0lioo<.ol llo.10 lt.10 Adm Int 1.'IO ).11HOWAllD: (<Al Kl s.a S'1i.bll Lt~ J S.I l.11 "°"' los 6_ .. 1.n h ill FO 6.6) I.ls Cust Kl l6S '000ECUlllT1' ,OS: Ad~•-J.d J. Gwll'I F S.19 6.13 C<At SI ll 01 '' 1S Equity l JS l.SI Min. FCI ,, .. S,, In<;-•-1>• S.1) ,..,, Sl ..... I.GI lnw11 •.M S.OI
Aetna In 111.M 11. 'ioot<:il F •.lt •.M (uU SJ •.)I S.00 UH•• F t .... ,,10 Al<'lurt S.01 S.Ol Stck FCI 6.11 7.•• CuU S.. l.01 f.1l5ELECTE0 FDS : AGE Fd l .SS J i lEO!E Sp 11.1111.11 Apollo l.SS ll(IArn Stir S.Olo S.Olo Alhlillt t .11 1.2& Egrtl GI l .ll I.I( All•ts 1 01 1.lft Opp Fil S.d S.d Alpf\I Fd 7,,, I. Ell .... T•I t ,S1 ... K;n k kr •. ,, •.M ~ Sl>ri t.ll 'll Amo;•p F l.91 J,JS Emtt9 (r) h i Knkr Giii •.•I •.IJ5orttl1ntl .... 1.16
Am Blrtll •IMllOSS Entr!Y t .IS I.IS l.namrk •.'6 S.10Stotry F t.OI t .Nt
""'0-..•5 s:9s .: F11irl 0 S.11 s ... LO Elli• 10.M 11.61SMAllEI0.0 Giii" ; Arn £qty J.20 l.51 Fm Bure !1! Il l LlX GROUI"; Com,t J.St
AM EXl"llESS Fell RR\ S.Ol •• '. q, Lror 10.•2 11.ss l:.ntrpr 3.11 •.•
FON OS : FIDE\..t TY Grwtll • ~ '·'' Fifi Fd l .U , .• Cilpl•! •.1• •.116 AOUI": Rtwt ll 961 10.SI H11rbt I.t i •.•
ln<om 1>.SO 7,1 BnO Gell 7.)6 l .l6 Liie lnl v 4 01 t.•t lt<Jlll L '·'' •.• ln..-strn s.n •.1 C.ptel 6.3' 6.93 Lll'I( Ciip •.OJ 4.l'I P1<t FO •,% • , ,
SPK! •.10 t .19 COl'ltr• 6.•9 ... \..OOMIS SMIAllSON l"DS :
Moc-'·"" S.1 Cv !.Sec S.•1 SAY\..ES ! A,pp-c 1l.Olt U ,l7 ""' Grltt 3.tO J.n Desi •.H ..• C.p OY 1.60 I.Ml lnc:orn 1'.01 n .JI Am lnsln J.2S J.SS E~~l t .U ... Mutu•I 9.91 t ,tl lo~tt 6.11 1.Sl Am lnY\t J.111 3.10 Enril 7.U l .'1 \..ORO All; SI'! D&•n l,69 1.69 Am Mui 6.21 t .19 Fll<IG 10.•I 11.,S Allil•I · S.01 S.•1Sldl! F11 6.11 6.11
AmNI Gr 1.}I 1.13 P\lrltn I.II 7.IM Arn Bu!I 2.JS 1. SIGMA 'I.IND$: ANCMOll Silt!i'l'I F l .61 2.IJ BnO deb 1.11 'l .4 C.1111 ~r 4.111 ,,)6 for immediate GAOi.ii": TrenO 11.JO 11.l>J LUTMEllAN IRO: Inv 6.11 1,11
Grwlh •.70 S.11 FINANCIAL BfOh FO 1.,4 1.1 l rsl S.tl •.SJ
Avail able
delivery, the systems provide
twice the computing power of
previous ~ 7700 systems,
Burroughs said.
lntorn S.S.I •.01 PROGRAMS: Bro Inc 7.19 I .I 'ltftlur 4 .• 1 S.IG • Rew,.. 10.21 11.1• Fin Oyn 2.~ 2.l>l Bro US 9.11 10.I Srnlln 8 •.II 6.11 SoKtr J,H l .11 Fio lnO 2.71 J,71 MASS CO; SB !&Cir I.IS I.SS F'fld Inv •.ll 1.30 Flo IK 4.5' 4.5' F1eern I.bl t .1 5.o OtoF l .tt l .•1
W• N11tl J.4S 1.16 Veot 2." 1.•6 lndp F S.ll s. Swit Inv •.M s.11
AIJOllJ F ,,}I S.01 h lFO 'I• 1.0I 1.1' Mllu F I.ti '" !tw Inv G J.J2 J.St AXE FIRST MASS f'NCL: So~• 111 7,J2 1.2J
HOUGHTON : INVESTOllS: MIT I l,7l I .• Soklr1 2.77 t.n
Ful'lll A 3.Jl '·°" Oil< fO 2.IM 3.11 MIG 1 1• 1. S&P lnO •.JS •.U Fund e S.7' •.2, Gnn Fd ,,SO •.tl MIO 10.ll 11.0 STATE •MO GllP: Stlld< '·~ •.'6 ll'l(Otn S.tl 6.SO MFO 1.01 I .I Cofl\ FO Cl ) Ct ) ....... Sci l .11 J.,s ·SIOCk F S.•l s.•• MCO I.IS ,,6 Dl ... ,11 C•1 ,,,
B\..C Glh 6 ... 7.lCI ht MuUl •.60 6.IMl M<t "' 1.20 1. ProOr' C1 lt l hlll.Ol'I 1.19 1.lt Flrn 841r 6.)6 6."6 M&lher •,4, '·"SI f'r Gr J.Ot J.Oi e.yroc •. ,. 4.IO FOllUM GAOi.ii": MIO ...... J . .O l .n St Fr Inc 6,•l 6.•s Bilyrk gr l .SI l .90 IOD FnO I . I~ , .. Mol'llf M 1.00 .. , S!;tlt Sir JI.OJ :lt.J.11 --~~-~~· -N ~Ll --MOm o e.1<on i•.t l •.t i C.Otutn 6.ll .. , MS8 Fd I.ti I .ti Arn lnll 2.11 2.12
Btrk!.11• 2.>0 2.U 2S Fi;ncl •.29 •.. Mii ,8t1G '·°' •. ~Ml Fd .n .n Bonlt!.lk 3.2• l .S.I filn Gr ~ l .66 MIF FO S.6' 6.1 tn ... st ... • .. Bos! f'dll ,.n 1.3' f'OUMOE llS MIF Ciro ,.,.., f,61 Cktlll S.37 J.JI
Brown .to l .'6 GROU P; """°" Ill 3.)J J.114 STIEJM flOtE FDS: Bn11\m 7.11 7.1' Grwlll J.72 •.01 MuOrft r11 'IJ I )1 Bil!tni; u II 12 n CA\..lllM FUNOS : ln<om 9.12 10.0I Mu1 Sflrs u :M ,,: ... 00!11 J'.6l s'.u
&ull fd l.61 '·'' F MllOll 6.11 •• 7• MuU trs 1.•1 1.61 Slock 1.s1 I.SI Cdn Fd l,l7 9,16 f' SIM<ll I ... •.U NII INlll 6.Sl 6.SI $1$ GltOU~:
Oov Sttr 1.36 2.St Foursq F S.91 I.t i NAT SEC POS: Gfwlll 4.17 '·'' ,...lwd 6.83 1.'8 Fll:ANX\..IN B.l!lll'lt 6.1' 6.11 lncom S.I) •.•I NY\ltn 7.111.Sl GlllOUP: &ondSr 313,"Srnmll S21Slt
LONG SLEEVE
DRESS SHIRTS
Ward l\1unson , president or J\tunsoo Sporting Goods of
Costa Mesa, has been awarded the "Outstanding Sm3.ll
Businessman of the Yea r" title by the Na tional Council
for Small Business l\1anagepient Development.
The new B 7700s-\11hich may be leased for $80.000 to
$200.000 a, month -are the
largest and most ·powerful of
Burroughs' 700 Sys t e m s
fa m il y. Th ey are
m u It i pro cessor s~ems
designed to handle many jobs
simultaneously and a r e
especially deve l o pe d fo r
handling of on·line networks
a nd th e· a u toma ti c
management of large.scale
data bases, Burroughs says.
Economic
~,"~~ ::U tll g~rhcSr 4'66 !:ll ~~0~tk f~ ~::! ~!.,"';'" ::!: ::r:
0..1 Inv 6.21 6.19 f'r ln(rn t!: I.SS lncom ).61 J,'6 tempi G •.ll 1:00 CHANNING US GY S 9.09 t.tt Stock Sr •.IS J,)(l t r•n (lip S.16 6.31
PUND!i : VU1111t 2.16 3.13 Grwth 3.90 4,2, Tr•YI £q 6,9' ,7.6J
Amtr .U .'6 ~$ C.p •}6 J.11 NEW l NO \..': TUOOr H I So4 I 54 Bl!ntd 1.24 1,tl lb Eqty 2.69 2.t S EQulty . 11.tol lt.0010th CG (72 1:"
•
by. faje, Lener. Rowlond, Pierie Coodite. &cello
• , , . all \.Ill'~, all colors, ~~d,, i1ripes,
.,.,Mi'~ plod>.
BUY TWO SHRTS AT REG.JI.AR
PR.Kl AND RECEIVE A THRO
OF-CHOCE ABSO..UTB.Y •••
FREE!!
ent(f: Ltd.
,
BAHKAMERICAR D
_ SATUIDA Y 10-6
The council is a national organization founded in 1954. 0 *
8nd Fd 7.25 7,92 Fkt LIEci 7.3' 1.02 ~Ill 6.•• J.02 lOlh Cl 1.12 3.ot Eqly GI' •.93 S.J9 FO M! Or> S.14 S.I• lntO"I n .11 13.ll Unllled S.JJ 5.11 Eqty Pr 1,11 1,93 f'UNOS INCi" Siem 111I•11 CM Un tunO S U S 60
F"" Arn ,,97 S.38 GROU P: NEA Ml ):93 s:t1 UN ION s111V1CtE 0
William JJ, Ri chmond has been named national sales :---£"'lttb M eel
manager for Western Digit.al Corporatio n. \..d.
-Grw,~-3.IS 3.t~ Cornn'!_ •. 01 6.S7 Ntu Ctnt l .90 ... GflOUI": !t" , '"',·!~ s3.•,t n~\C •.97 S:•Neuwth s.93 ••• Bi'dS-1¥ 1.~ t.J& ,.,ow n ·-· 1~111 tr I.II' 1.79 Ntwton 1,% t.I~ NllU l11w t .U 4.12 Sl)lcl 1,0I l.1. P1IOI S.•O S.fONw Pllr' 10.1211.13 Un C.pl SU 6'9
He was formerly western region sales manager for
the Newpon Beach-based firm. llis former affiliations in· J off:'} T 0
elude American ~ticrosystems, Fairchil d Semiconducto r fi L Or
and Electronic ?>.1cmories.
V...tur '·" j.07 G.lltewL l.6S 3.tS Ntw Wld l ,(M 1.1' union lo i tO 10'11 °"'' Fd 7,sa l .H GE·.S-,. 1t.t.7.1•.61 Cfll4S 4 ,t l I,,, UNITI D tiuND's : '2!•,,s .. E Gen < •.1111 4 ... Nesi 1vtr U.26 lj.l• Altum •.>O '·" -; GIPI FAm J.16 J.• °"""°" •. n .IJ 8ncl f'd 'l5 ... Ffld Bo\. ol.SI J.(11 Gr11'1 ll'llf 12.Cll ,I. O ,...11 tel 10.4110.tl Conl tw 611 •'77 f'ron (p 2.91 l ,\ Guilrd 11.0317, Ont Wiii 10.u ID.S COl'll Int 6:,, 7'41 511tr I s S.lS S. HAMIL TOM Giii": Ol"l"ENIOill 1'0 : IMAMn 7,'N 1°1
* Allee A. Swaim, a 11-year veter·
ln of First American Title Insurance
Company's Orang~ County title divi·
1k>n, has been promoted to the posl·
!ion of engineering supervisor.
Ancr three years with Western
~1ortgage Company of Los Angeles,
,\trs, Swaim served for two years in
.he callfomla Division of Highways
before joining First American in 1962.
She and he r hl13band li ve in·Santa
The Economic Club or La· Spt<t 3.61 •.01 Furic1 2.u s. Alm Fo •.11 •·• s.c1tn<. •.n 4:,, °""' Fd •.S. 7 .• 1 Grwtll J.IO 4,, Op FflCI •.•s •. V•~ l .ao J '2 guna Beach will meet at the CNA MNG FDS: lh(orTI I.SI s. Nony B .... 10. USA c. S.IS s:rs n-yal SaVJ'nns an' l.oa n I? El Llbrty J..' "s •,.s1 H•rt GUI '·" •. l l""' F . 1.it 3.1 us 1s ~1.n '·°' IW • .., '.I AM\"lf'll ,, • ttMt Lw S.62 s.•101c. S.c ··~ t .H USLIFl l"UNO$:
T I I Se"' 27 Sd!1n. F 4.61 S. Htdllf. •.~ •• Pilrlll'll •.11 S.1 APir• F 2.11 2 t i otO a p.m. L"' ' . $(11;,1 Sp 4.41 •• Htritge ...... P•ul Rtv •.11 4' 8'I l'nO • , ... ,. The program will feature l MR A •.1.1 s.01 tto•K• 11,t s n.n ~· ,, 1.•s r:•1 Com stk ,.,. t '.01
COLDtOAL FIJNDS: lmt:rl Co •.SI 7.1 ,,_."'" Mt 1.11 1,1 llALUE i.INi PDS! the First National City Bank '°"'"'' 1.11 1.11 •mo Gr s.11 s.1 Pltnn Sf! •.ta '· v.i Lne 1.11 ,,l•
Of New York'S tnonlhly lape Ea1,11ly 1.1• 1.90 Inc• Am· 10M II. Piii .. Fo ICA,14 t , 'l•I Int J..Clt 3,JI
l"'und I, .. 1.1'1 ll'IC flo\1 '·'' S. Prlonl• C 6.61 7.2 Liv Giii 3..to-4.21 """"A CA< ... .I of the" F.conomy". Gfwlh J,11 •.OS lnO FAm I,)! "' l"ILC>lllM 01": VII Spc; I.ti 1.0t l llC-'1\1\UIU tnc.om I.•• I .IS lnltQOll 6.0lt 6. f'll l"rm 1.00 ••• V,t,NCIE This is a discussion of vital Vtt11vr '·'' 1.t s 111 1""'" 1i.011•. ~·t 1,,. 1.1 sAM0•11s:
ed b COlum G I.al I.Ill ln.,.rn G C,96 (. lntOIJI 6,11 1,1 1n..,1t 4,91 '"' econonUc issues mode r at y COMMOHWL TH •n• eo A t.11 10.01 Poo Fo i.•s s. vs Qin! '·" s.or ~ Eco I Cl b Ill l TllUST! lrl\I ~Ill •.SI •.S Pint St 1,)0 I. SMC! ··11 '·'' i ne oomc U w mee 468 .11 .n•n••""1e 1.1• ••• Pin tr• ui 1r1 11n0rD1t 2.1
.I ... Commun1'ly Room> ol c ~ 1,03 1.12 !flv 8a\ 1,U .... PIONtEfl l'O: V•nl 1090 .... • . u ru •• , Como or ,,0. '·'' INVIEST Pion Fo 1.21 t .O Vc•l4cl ' 2,4$ 1:,M '\na. John Daly and partlc\pated COmt> co 1.•1 3,,, COUNSE'-Pkw!r u 1.2, '·l' "••no a..-a.•J ~.•s
4 "'"-'-' "' • ~p 8d 6.U 1.00 ~ S.IS t .•I Ptlll'lnd 1.ot I. W.llSt Of' •.JS C.I) * in by the IMll.A s l\ey erononuc eomp iro s.ss 1.01 c..ou •• '·" 1,13 Pt.J 0 1110 1.c1 '· w.~ Mu •·~ '·''
Huntington Beach resident Jnh n ,J. Ca puto ha5 ~bei!n cxccutlvc.s. The discussion will ~·~nw ::;~ ::;1 1 ~./t~f"o.~ll .. ~··1 ~~·,c~'io~'ri 5·1 :.rt:':o;~·~5 6·•s·
promoted to manager of the South Anahelm Bank of <.'Onslder the pos s I b I e ~~,~ J::l ~:t! :~ ~& I~! 1:;i ~= ::tl ~J 0~~: 13.JO 14.1'.4
America. .. directk)ns of a new economic C::1rr c 1.JO 1.•1 •os f'f' i.1s t.3' Nw er• '·'' •·' '"'" s.ot s.)6 r
He was previously, operations oCficer at various Bank policy and why inOalloh boils f:: ~~ ::g; !::! ~~· 1~:~ 1~:!1 :: ,~r :::~ !:! r,'~ :·:: tt~ -f -<111-Arrl<" ·_, ~mm···'I offices I" ;,....,1 .. ,,.,n,, •lmm•r• •n o.au.,' t.• Stlttt 1.00 1.t11 '"'1IYd 0 1 S.)(I 6.0 w.1t11 ,,. •• ... ,-f--1--w IUU "J • ---------'!'ll "-1.V..'qow< ~. ,.. I' O.\lldQ •.SI 4,i1 Vtr P•Y •.M S.OS PrUO $IP •·• •.t. '#.ftllln l;M I~ • lhe back burrier. ils felt OILAW,t,lltl In..-"''· '·" •.•1 ,UTN•M W\1-1.•1 9A OltOUl"I I S I: f'!JNOS: Wlnoy S.Of U. n. Dale Smith, formerly mannRer of The Treasury by the City Bank th a t 0rtc1fl' '·'° '·'' """'" , ... •.11 Conw• 'oo 1.1 w.t1 '"° i.•I '·'''
'lor• i'n Sanla Ana, has ~-named m•--gcr of ,.. I l Ill ~ I II Dt•w ,. •.10 '·" ln<flll'I 3.s1 '·'° fQ1111y i .•1 '·' ~1111 Gr c.ll s.1+ .,_ ~1 ..... uic U~f!1p1oymc~ w u.: n le 0t11• 1 2.11 1 OJ l r.u u1 s .• 1 , , lit«o •.n 10.1 w,~ Mt '·"
(5'1> Diogo Frwy.
"' Bri&tOI ) Costa Mestl -540-1502 ·J .C. Penney Store in lfunllngton Beach Shopplng Center. ·n~lgnoornood of 6 pettenl late =:re. 't:i:'t1 1::;1F= :::r,::'l e:::; :;r, l:l ~~.:i .. ~:N ,_ ..
He had managed the 51ma,~a drvff10n &Ince 1972. __ Uljs year. ODltllCJ 10 .... 1&. 1 ... , '-vnc! ,_.., '·'° '""'' .s ... 6. t-"-'flDM.
•
I
Wednesday's
Closing Prices
New York (fps and Downs
New 1'ork 15 llfolt Acthle
"'I W YOIUC CUl'I) -Tiie II rN'.11 oKlhot t!DC_, trtotd .. lllt l#w .,.,. SMCi fl
ChMft .......... Y
o.w " '" ". ... ... " . '"
'"" ..... .....
""' '"" ~=
Nete t 'ork Sain \'ol11•e
•
... ... • :i "'" ....
~~ "'
•
•
NEW YORI{ STOCK EXCHANGE
-·
Stptember DAILY PILO t 8
Year·s High·Lo"s
Appear E' ery Saturday
Market's Rally
Hits Third Day
NEW YORK (UPI )-fhe stock marltet fin
ding no stimulus lo extend the rally of the
previous two sessions still showed a slight gain
m light lradmg on the New York Stock Exchange
Wednesday which
and
The Dow Jones 1ndustr1al average
gained m ore than 21 points Monda y
1\Jcsday gamed 3 13 poml• to 6S l 91
Declµtcs held a shghl le1td over advances
umong the l 741 issues traded The volume
,1mountcd to 11 760 000 shares compared with
13130 000 traded 1 uesdoy
Prices also were lower 1n light trading on the
1-\mer1ca n Stock Exchange
Gas Offering
LOS ANGELES <U PI) -
The Southern Cahforn1a
Gas Company ahnounced
1t has filed a reg1strat1on
s t ateme nt with th e
Secur1t1cs a nd Exchange
Comm1ss 1on covering a
proposed public ofrenng or
$50 m1lhon of r1r sl mor
tgage bonds
The money will be used
1n the company s construe
Lion progr a m Southern
Callrorrna Gas a wholly
ow ned s ub s 1d1 ary or
Pac1f1r L1g ht1ng Corp
.American
10 /ffo#t l\cth:e
A •erlcan Safes
Volume
•
-.
B •. , DAILY PILOT
SHE WAS BORED
Ingrid Ber9m1n
Thursday, S'Pttmbrt 19, 1974
HE WAS AGREEABLE
Roberto Ro5sellini .
Big in ~ra
'· .'J·u10 Never ]Jf et!. Bing o
· NEW YORK (AP) -Ingrid Bergman says her con-
troversial and torrid love artalr 25 years ago with Italian
. film director Robert.o Ross"ellini began before she ever llim • ~II\ a· McCall's magazine article, she sa~, ''It all
started because I was bored. I had everything a woman
could expect in life, but suddenly l realized there was no
excitement any more. To keep alive I had .to do some-
thing . . . I was exploding inside."
.That prompted the successful Hollywood actress and
wife of Dr. Peter Lindstrom to write a k>ve Jetter to
Rossellini, she says.
,. The letter' Jed to a child by Rossellini \Yhile she was .s~ll 'married to Lindstrom., a divorce, a world~·ide scandal aP<f a seven-year marriage and two more children.
The Swedish actress bas been married to Swedish
theatrical producer Lars Sctunidt since 1958.
~lck Succeeds r. . • · !(idnapers Left ,.
Holding the Bag·
.SAN DIEGO (AP)
~ of a 20-year~ld
'"mah <h-opped him off and
w,?,"I with a bagful of paper
iiiS!ead of $.1,920 promised by . .
his brother, narcotics officers
say.
The victim, identified as
1 Tirliothy James Grunst.ad of
Rialto. near San Bernardino, w~ ~injured in the three-<lay ;., . . .
.ordeal, ...
GRUNSTAD WAS taken
Irons bis apartment Saturoay
n\gbl.· ·by three men anned
\rith pistols.
1be trio were joined later
by sh: men, and investigators
said their victim was held
·in SO'fl:al houses in the San DieflO area in a plqt lo get
$:11920 as repayment for stolen
Diilfijilana.
. By,.~ telephone, Grunstad's
brodler Paul arranged for the
pickup· on condition the
kidnaped man was freed. • ·:r:; AU mORITIES IUDDEN
nearby watched Tuesday night
" d as & car rove up to a pre-
.arrigi8ed spot near · S a n
n;eg9•s Shelter Island pier and
let Grunstad out b e r o r e
leaving with a bag believed
containing the money. Instead,
it "'as filled with paper.
"It's a calCulated rtsk," said
an officer in the San Diego
Tntegrated Narcotics T a s k
Force.
NO A1TEMPT WAS made
at that time to arrest the
kidnappers, he sald, because
thev were considered armed
and Grunstad w.as still in
d<in~er.
The brother was placed in
protective custody by San
Bernardino County authorities
who said they would ask for
arresl oomplaints. Possible
danger to the brother was
considered "in relation to the
danger his brother was in,"
said the -San Diego o£ficer,
adding that "we ha v e
identified se\•eral" or those
being sough!.
Doris Day
r\,vardcd
$22 Million
LOS ANGELES iUPlf -
Actress Doris Day has y..·on
a judgment of more than $22
million from an attorney
accused of defrauding her and
her. late husband, Marty
l\1elcher, in a variety of
business ventures .
Superior Court Judge Lester
E . Olson ruled Wednesday for
l\tiss Day in the culmination
of a five-year court battle that
cost $250.000 and deseribed
attorney Jerome Rosenthal's
relationship with Melcher as
fraudulent.
WEARING A PANTS suit
and a floppy hat. s h e
a1ternately wept and laughed
after the decision w a s
announced.
Olson said Rosenthal was
guilty o! the • • g ros se st
negligerice?' in business which
he said "stinks to hlgh
heaven."
Of the tolal of $22,835.646,
Olson asses.5ed Rosenthal $3
million in punitive damages.
Mi~ Day was in court to
hear the ruling and as
spectators gathered around
her, she sobbed, "I knew that
justice would prevail. Reliving
it all bas desiroyed me. A!
be (Olson) recounted it, It
just.wiped me out."
ROSENTHAL'S
ATTORNEY, Craig Dummit .
indicated he would appeal
sayini:. "This is only the first
round."
Durin~ the trial, it was
testified Rosenthal advised
Miss Day and A1elcher on
speculation in oil wells in
....
-
. 'JUSTICE PREVAILS'
Doris o.,
Texas. 0 k 1 a h.o m a and
Kentucky and in t h e
construction of two lar~e
hotels.
Atiss Day tes tified she had
given ~lcher power o f
attomev and never questioned
his business deals because she
was 1'100 busy" in her acting
jobs to be "-'CU infonncd . ·
-"MY HUSBAND ~ r u Sle d
R~enttlal and I trusted my
hu!Jha od." satd l\1iss Day.
l\1elcher died of h e a rt
trouble In April 1968 at !he
age or 52.
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l hursday, Stptfmbff iq, }q74 DAILY PILOT C J
Valhuena Still ·No. 2, Despite Winning Game
. '·
Hangs 'en• fl p
l .,
Willis Reed, who led the New.
York Knicks to two NBA cham-
pionships, announced his re-
tirement Wedoesday. He's been
plagued by bad knees in re-
cent years.
Angels Split
Doubleheader
~'ith Rangers
ARLINGTON. Teic (API -. Steve
Har~an stopped the California Angels
on three hits and rookie Tom Robson
singled in two runs as the Texas Rangers ·
blanked the California Angels, 2-0,
Wednesday night for a split of their
doubleheader.
Bruce Bocbte end Joe La.houd tagged
23-game winner Ferguson Jenkins for
An1Jeb Slnte
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successive home runs in the ftrst inning
and the Angels went on to a 4-1 victory
in the first game.
Jn the nightcap, Hargan, 12-8. rellred
the first 11 batters he faced before
Bocbte and Charlie Sands nicked him
for two-out-singles In the-fourth:-Hargan
'orked out of that jam , his only one
of, the game, by getting John Balaz
on a line drive to third baseman Lenny
Randle. John Doherty's infield single
in the eighth was Ca,iifomla's only other
hit.
In the opener, Jenkins, 2.1-12, got the
first two men he faced before Bochte
smashed his fifth homer of the season
and Lahoud followed with his 13th.
After the Rangers scored a run in
lhe sea>!ld oo Toby Harrah's rbl single,
C&llfornla can\e back; with two In the
third on a double by sands.
Andy Hassler, 5-11, who worked the
fll'st six innings, was the winner.
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The Detroit Wheels and th• Soothom
Clli!omla SW! are going different
directions the sanie way in the World
Football League.
Fw Southern C.llfomla ~ final
minutes (.'O[lt.inue to epell victory but
Detroit cooUnue5 to Jose in the closing
quarter,
It was a 26-yard touchdown pass from
reserve quatterbacJc" Gary Valbuena-to
Dick Witcher with exactly one minute
to play that gave the Sun a comeback
29-24 victory over the Wheels Wednesday
night after Detroit had come lrom 19
points back to take the lead in the
fourth quart'll". Valbuena prepped at
Fountain Vafiey--.00 also played at
Orange Coast and Tennessee.
Title Fight
Set Oct. 30;
Taylor Dies
NEW YORK -The George Foreman--
Muhammad Ali heavyweight cham-
pionship fight in Kinshasa, Zaire, has
been rescheduled for Oct. 30, promoter
Hank Schwartz said Wednesday. •
That would set fight time at 7 p.m.
Tuesday, Oct. 29, on the west coast.
The government of Zaire had an-
nounced on Tuesday that the fight was
being postponed from Sept. 25 until Oct.
23, or Oct. 22 in the United States.
There was no reason given tor the
additional week's delay, and there was
no immediate confirmation of the date
from Zaire.
Schwartz: said AJI and Foreman, whose
cut above · his right eye ' has caused
the postponemerlt, would remain in 1.aire
IBltil the fight.
e Taylor S ucc11nab1
LOS ANGELES -Brice Taylor, the
first black to win all-American college
fame as a ·single-wing blocking guard
in the 19~ at the University of Southern
Caliromia, is dead at the age or12:.
Taylor, great-great-grandson of the
Shawnee chief, Tecumseh. died Wed-
nesday at Rancho Los Amigos Hospital
in Downey. He received honorable men-
tion. All-American honors for the 1926
season.
Despite the handicap of being l:<>m
without a left hand. Taylor participated
in rooebaH, basketball and trade at
Franklin High School in Seattle. He
woo an athletic scholarship to USC where
he started as a fullback in 1924.
e Richards Dead
Ray Richards a star fOOlbafl playe.r
at Nebraska and a professionaJ player
and coach, died. Wednesday or cancer
in Brea.
Richards, 68. had been ill since June .
He spent more than 30 years in foot·
ball~ retiring rrom the game in 1958
to become general manager and vice
president o{ Pemaco, Inc., .a Los Angeles
flrm dealing in chemical products.
e Topping Dies
PASADENA -Keith Topping, a for-
mer Rose Bowl star, is dead at 62.
Topping became a star on Claude E.
"Tiny" Thornhlll's teams at Stanford
that played in three straight Rose Bowl
games , in 1934 through 1936.
Topping, an end, starred in all three
games. .
fn 19S4, Stanford lost to Columbii
7.0, in 1935 Stanford lost to Alaba~
2S-13, . and in 1936 stanrord defeated
Southern Methodist University 7.0. -.------• King Ad vances
ORLANDO, Fla. -In spite or a painful
toe, U.S. Open champion Billie Jean
King used just 35 minutes to sCore
a 6-0, 6-0 sweep over Sweden's Ingrid
Bent.zer in Wednesday's second round
of a $50,000 stop on the women's pro-
fessional tennis tour. •
In other action Wednesday night,
se<0nd-seeded Rosemary Casals defeated
Janel Newberry, 6-3, ~2 and\hird-seeded
Francoise Durr downed Kathy Kuyken-
dall, 7·6, M .
Czechoslovakian teen-ager Martina
Navratilova upset seventh-seeded Laura
DuPont 1>3, 1;-3.
Favorites Marcie Louie, Ju 1 i e
Heldman, Betty Stove, and 'Tina.-ZwaM .
"" 'advanced to the third round as eipected .
Louie edged Dana Kl ... : 7-3,, 7-5:
Heldman crushed Kathy Harter, &-2, 6-4 :
Stove defeat!d Tory Fretz, 7~. &-0 and
Zwann topped Diane Fromhotz, 7·5, ~2.
e Tef~slon Clah
BIRMINGHAM. Ala. -Tho. new
Shreveport franchise, fonnerly the
Houaton Texans, and the Birmingham
, Amerlc&ns of the World Football League
clash hereJn a naUonalJy:televtsed game
tonight (Channel 9, 6 o'clock).
For the Sun, It was the sfxth tin'le
in eight victories the team has come
!rom behind la~ in the lourth quarw
to win and the third time in the closing
minutes.
fle!rolt coach Danny Boisture shook
hill bead and said, "This is Ule sixth
time we've been leading in the last
two minutes of a game and lo!rt. I can't
fault my-play .... they 've fought back."
the SW\, 8-4, ·1eads the Western
Division and Detroit is last in the Central
Division at 1-Ll.
Running back .Alonz.o Emery plwiged
in from cl09e range twice in the second
quarter as the Sun took a 15-3 halftime
lead.
Quarterback Tooy Adams extended the
lead to 22·3 when he Warned with Dave
Williams lor a 29-yard touchdown In
the third-qwtrter.
· But quarterback BubbaJ\Vyche, helped
by the running of Sam Scarber woo
gained 95 ylll'<b on 17 carries as the
game's top rusher, brought Detroit back.
Wyche bit wide receiver Terry Phillips
on a ~yard scoring pass, dove in
for a score trom one yard out to make
t acore 22:.1.1.__tben_connccted v.ith
Phillips for another touchdown, this one
from 17 yards out, to give Detroit a
24-22 lead with 1:41 to play.
Valbuena then went to work -
throwing passes ol lt and 16 yanls
to Dave Parks before the 26--yard pass
to Witchec at Uie goal line to win
the game.
UPI TJ1111110l1 • CLOSE CALL -St Louis' Larry }!erndon (right) scampers back to
second base as Pittsburgh shortstop Mario Mendoza cuts off a throw
to third from the outfield. Pittsburgh won the game, 4-1, to cut the
Cards' National League· East baseball lead to 11> games.
Pennant Races
Pirates Down Ca1·dinals;
Orioles Crush Yankees
PI'M'SBURGH CAP) -Jim Rooker ~e -triumph gave the Orioles the
hurled a six-hitter and Al Oliver belted first two games or the crucial three-
a tw1>-run double, helping the Pittsburgh game series and was their 17th in the Pirates to a 4-1 victory over St. Louis
\Vednesday night and moving them past 22 games.
within l lh games of the first-place The Orioles' big inning against three
Cardinals in the National League · East pitchers included three walks -two
pennant race. with the bases loaded -three singles
The triumph ended a six-game losing and consecutive two-run doubles by
streflk for the Pirates and the loss Rich Coggins and Bobby Grich.
halted St. Louis' string of consecutive Baltimore sent 12 batters to the plate,
victories at the same number of games . starting with Grich , who drew a walk
The Cardinals led 1--0 into the fourth off Pat Dobson, 16-15, winner of his
when the Pirates scored twice off loser last six decisions and eight of nine
Lynn McGJothen with the help of two since Aug. L Grich raced .to third on
errors by St. Louis shortstop Mike Tyson. Tommy Davis' hit-and-run single and
Oliver opened the Pirates' fourth with scored the go-ahead. run when Boog
a double to left. Willie Stargell then Powell bounced a Single past second
hit a grounder that was -denected-by---baseman sandy Alomar.
McGlothen and fielded by Tyson, ~o Lynn Pnces Bostoll threw wildly past Joe Torre at first,
enabling Oliver to score.
Stargell was thrown out when he tried
to ·take second. However, Dave Parker
followed with a single and took third
on a single by Manny Sanguillen.
Parker then scored when Ed
Kirkpatrick's blooper to short center
was dropped by Tyson for another error,
though Tyson managed_ to throw to
second for a force out on Sahguillen.
McGlothen left the game in the seventh
with runners at first and second. and
Oliver followed with a two-run double
off reliever Rich Folkers.
In the Cardinal fifth, Lou Brock
reached first on a forceout and stole
second for his 1 lOth steal or the year,
extending his season record.
Cue llar Sparkles
NEW YORK -Mike CUellar pitched
Baltimore to within one-half game of
first-place New York in the Ameri ca,n
League East and became a 20-game
winner ror the fourth time as the Orioles
broke a tie with seven run s in the
si~th Inning and crushed the Yankees
JM Tuesday night.
BOSTON -Rookie outfielder Fred
Lynn, formerly of USC, drove in three
runs while collecting four hits Wednesday
night, sparking the Boston Red Sox to
an S-5 victory over the Detroit Tigers.
Winning for only the se venth time
ln the last 24, games, the Red Sox
kept alive their flickering hopes for
the American League East title.
Lynn, starting only his second major
league game since being recalled from
Pawtucket of the Ir\ternational League,
lined a run-scoring single in the fU'St,
tripled off the wall in left center as
Boston went ahead 4-3 in the third
and doubled off the wall in left for
two more rt>i in the fourtl?.
Then he lined a single to right center
and scored on Dick McAuliffe's fifth
homer, a drive into the Boston bullpen
in right center' in the sixth,
Detroit's Al Katine had a honle run,
double and a single, leaving him only
four hits shy of becoming the 12th player
ln hislory to reach the 3,000 mark.
The double was the 497th of his career,
tying him with S.1m Ri ce for 22nd place
on baseball's alJ·time list.
"Yes, I called the play," Sun coach
Tom Fean said of the touchdown lhrow
to Witcher.
"\Ve thought Detroit wa s leaving the
middle open and we decided to try
it."
Fears said even though Valbuena had
quarterbacked the victory, Adamk\_\·ould
stay as the starter. r -,
,;This <loesn't change Gary's status.
Tony .Js_stjll. Jho___filru-ter, he"s gained
a lot of yards for us."
F!nil dowt'ol
ll:u1hft·v••d1
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Padre i; Trip Reds
~amble by Astros
Defeats Dodgers
LOS ANGELES I AP ) -Greg Gross,
Houston's rookie right fielder, took a
ga mble and ... the Los Angeles Dodgers
lost.
Gross played Los Angeles slugger Joe
Ferguson in short right field in the
bottom of the ninth inning with Rick
Auerbach on second base, representing
the potential winning run.
Ferguson drove a single to right. Gross
fielded the ball quickly and fired a
strike to the plate, cutting down
Auerbach.
The Astros, after choking off the
Dodgers Slate
All G•IMI 111 KAI( tnt)
SePI. It Sin DI-ti La1 Aneelrs
s.pj. 20 San Dleoo '' Los Ang~es SeQI. 21 Sen Diego at LOI Angrle1
7:Up.f11
1:25 p.m . 1:10 p.m.
Dodgers' rally, then sCored the winning
run in the top of the 10th inning on
a single by Gross and a pinch double
by Bob Watson to earn a J..2 decision
Wednesday night.
Despite the loss, the Dodgers' second
in three games with the Astros. Los
Angeles retained its 21h-game grasp on
first place in the National League West,
thanks to the San Diego Padres, who
knocked off the second-place Reds two
out or three. San Diego edged Cincinnati,
6-5, Wednesday night.
Tonight San Diego takes on the
Dodgers in the apener of a four game
series in Dodger Stadium while the Reds
go to San Francisco.
Rookie right-hander Dave Freisleben,
9-12, will start for San Diego, against
HOUSTON LOS ANGELE$.
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I 0 0 G
Tolals 36 l 10 1 lot•l1 J1 2 10 2
HOlll!cn 000 000 020 l-s
Los Ang8e1 000 000 002 ~7
E-W. Crawton:I 2. OP-Houston J, ol1 Angloles l.
LOB-Houston f, Los A .. n lD. 28-W. Crtwford, L~, Gn:iss. L. M•y, Cey, W1lwn. HR-McMullen Cl). S-C>lerl(~, Buc-ner, MetJQer, C«lftlO.
Dierker
Cosgrove
K. Forsch (W, 6-1)
"""'""' Mitohall HOU!lli IL. 1-41
Brewer
HBP4¥ Olflktr
,, " .. •• 81 so
8 5 I I 1 5
0 l I I 0 0
240DIG
7•0036
2•2201 I'll 2 , 1 0 0
~00000 tCey). ,.-2:'4. A-:U.,16S.
the Dodgers' Don Sutton, l&-9, who has
won six straight decisions and 10 of
his last ti. ·
The Dodgers had been restricted to
four hits and no runs lor eight innings
by Larry Dierker, who had a 2.0 lead.
But a single by Steve Garvey to open
the ninth brought MJke Cosgrove out
of the bullpen.
"Larry was tiring," Houston manager
Preston Gomez said or his dedslon to
lift Dierker.
Ken McMullen batted for 'tWJJlle
Crawford and rined a drarnatlc ·home
run into the left field pavilion to suddenly
tie the game 2-2. .. •'
Ken· Forsch replaced Cosghive bu1
Ron C-ey shot a double to right and
Auerbach ran for hlm. It was then
that Ferguson singled to right..,
"! thought Ferguson would try and
hit the ball on the grOll'd to ,he right
side and get the. run 1 over," Gross
explai~ later. "Usually, l p 1 a y
Ferguson deep. But in this situation
I decided to move up a couple ,ol steps
instead. I guessed right and eve.rything
"'orked out all !tight."
_Gross ma.de the play on Auerbach,
with a strike to catcher Milt-May,
who easily tagged out Auerbach. Bui
the Dodgers weren't through. ... ~~
Fergu.son had taken seoond on il!o
throw to the plate and Bill Russell
was intentionally walked, putting_nmners
at first and second with only ~-out:
But Forsch got pinch-hitter Von Joshua
to bounce back to the mound and then
Dave Lopes was thrown out by third
baseman Doug Rader.
''The turni ng point in the game was
Gross' throw,'' said Gomez alterward.
NIXON GETS CALLS
F'ROM 'SKINS' ALLEN
Among the telephone calls "to Richard
Nixon wishing him weJJ have been tv.'O
from George Allen, the coach of the
Washington Redskins professional foot-
ball team, it was learned Wednesday.
Nixon was an enthusiastic RedstiM
fan while he was president and was
said to seldom miss a game on ttlivision.
Such was "his Interest that duriilg one
game Nixon telephoned Allen and reach-
ed him on the sidelines, suggesting a
play which the Redskin>! used on lhe
next series.
Cal Poloists Favored
In UC Irvine Tourney \
Defending champion UC Berkeley will
be the favorite again in the ninth annual
UC Irvine water polo tourney, set to
begin Friday.
Two games are scheduled Friday for
the Newport J{arbor High pool with
anoth.er seven S a t u r d a y . The
championship games will be played
Sunday with action getting umder way
at 8:30 a.m.
UCI's Anteaters, under coach :Ed
Newland face USC in the opening game
of the toum<!t Friday at s p.m.
UCI also meets Stanford at 10 Saturday
morning.
The tournament Is made up of three
divisions with the winners of each
division advancing to the championship
bracket Sunday.
Division I Includes UC Berkeley, Cal
State (Fullerton) and Cal State (LB J.
_ In Division JI are UCLA, San Jose
State, UC Davis while UCI, USC and
Stanford make up Division 111 ..
Newland has seven r e turn Ing
lettermen, led by goalie Guy Antley.
Other top returnees include Bret
Bernard, Thomas Baughey, nm Quinn,,
Cllip Rowe, Keith Wall and. Jason
Wheaton. ,. ,
The leading newcomers: lncIUde Gary
Figueroa, a freshman from Sunny Hill!
and Bnice Freund, a JC transfer .front
Fullerton; wbo also prepped al SUnnJ
Hills. •
Emerson Tops · Austin; Lutz Ousted
Three former area stars -Bruct
and Kurt Krumpholz and Garth Berg~
son, all of whom prepped at CoroOI
del Mar wUJ play ln "the tourney lot
UCLA. And Newport Uarbor High ~di
Jim Vouog and Tom Bj!lings competf
for use. ·
UC Irvine Toani<y P1lrilp
Friday
LOS ANGELES -Roy Emeroon o1
Newport Beech won his second match
in the Paclrlc Soo!bwest T • n n I s
tournament at h Loe An,ei .. Tennis
Club Wednesday, defeating Jeff Austin,
7-6, 6-3.
Bob Lutt of San Clemente dropped
bis st'COnd ,e11counter: to Raul ·Ramirez
of Mexico, 7-6, I l. ·
E_mel'!O!l Is • me1dng one of his
ln[requMl appearances ln tournament
-
Jennls and at 38, Is a threat to the
younger stars ln the event. that h3:!1
aeen Stan Smith, among others, losing.
Jn olhet match .. Wednesdfl', Jimmy
Connors defeated Brian-Teecher,. 6-1,
6-7, 6-Z. Connon Is top ·-ed .
Arthur Ashe, the No. 3 aeed, was
extended to three. sets before dclcaling
SIU Brown, 4-6, 1>3, Ji.I. F~th seeded
ll<locoe Taoner beat Jurgen F ... bender.
7-.1, 6-a; Tom Gorman, S<eded &ixth, .
downed John Yuill, ~' M and seven[h..
sooded Harol~r'°" e 11 m l n a t e d
Sydn<!Y Ball, 6-0,~t.
Two uns<eded players who had first
roUod u~ts1_ were o~ted Jn the tecord
round.
Erle Van Dillen, who beat second-
seeded Stan Smith, was defeated by •
Bob Kreiss, 7-6, 7!, and Paul Krllnl<.
who eliminated loorth-seeded Marty
Rle.,.n, !ell to Roger DowdeseU, 6-4,
I
•
6-4. ConnOll had a tough Ume with
Teacher, but in tho end just wore down
the UCLA Junior.
The match lasted more than two hours.
"l th.int 1_ ttrl'd ..bi.m.:.out," said Con-
nor..
"I -·1 tlttd ~. l toold have
played all nl~t."
TeachOr, Wbo 1 .. 1 hls serve the first
two um .. he had the bell in the final
set, 01llliirm<d. ho ran wt of sttam,
saying, "I just gol tll'!d."
' ---
5 p.m. -UC lrvine w . USC.
6 p.m.-Cal State (Fullerton) ye. C4
State (LB).
Saturday
8 a.m. -Col (Berkeley) VI. Clll StaU LLB! .
9 -UCLA w. UC-Davtl.
10 -Uet vs. Stan!Qnl.
Tl -UC Berkeley VI. Clll Slate (Ful
l<eon). ,
II -San Jooe State ... UC Drill.
!;15 -USC vs. Stanlord.
2:311 -UCl.A .... San Jooe St.
1.
•
•
•
-
Thursday, September 19, 1974 C 1 DAILY PILOT •
Barons Battle Rugged St. Paul
* * * * * * * * * * \"k * .
Monarchs, Corona del Mar . Claslt
s,vordsmen
Favored
Over FV
FoWltaln Valley High opens
the 1974 football season tooigtrt
by booting the St. Paul lligh
Swor&men on the Orange
C.oast College field w i t h
kickoff at a~o'clock.
St. Paul, one of the ~
season favorites to gain a CIF \
playoff berth, is the toughest.. BRU(f PICKFORD GARY CARR DAVE HOLLAND
opening foe In tbe tnstory or __ u_ndo--'-r-d_og.::_T_o_n...:lg:.h_t_· ___ G_u_id_•_•_Mo-'..t_•_•...:Do:...:..l ___ ......:.s.a:...:...:.K...:ln~p~C:.oe=<h:.:__
Fountain \\'alley football .
''They have a fme footban
team and, we know it," coach
Ikuce Pickford says. "Our
kids ha~ been working well
tn ,.-e and we are In
We'll Have to Conta·in GWC
good fiealth. and 1'But ·size.wise • n
e(ll>erienee,, we could be
somewhat undermanned ."
:pick ford's ch a r g es
fl¢iclpated In a summer ~sing league and dkt well
wll!..awts 00.. at the helm.
·~e wW dart at quarterback r,t' the Barons toalght.
•'.IVhetl>« be Will be able to drow against the vatmted
cfjfeno!ve strenglh or the
9iuldmlen or not, ts a big
qaestlon mark and one tfuit
To Win, Says Bucs' Tucker
• 1f,lll _ be answered wben the
9'al whistle Is blown.
A unique situatim has
developed In the football
rivalry between Golden West
College and Orange Coan
College.
In past years, the game
has been the opener for both
teams and each bas gone Into
the skirmish kn9WiJJg little
about the other e1cept for
films of the previous season
and watching informal
scrimmage sessions •
When the two teams meet
Saturday night at Orange
Coast, Pirates coach Dick
Tucker isn't sure which team
will benefit.
''There are two ways to look
at the situation," he says.
"First, we have a game under
our belts and will have the
advantage of correcting any
mistakes we might have
made.
"'On the other hand, they . ~.·Paul, under coac h
'MM1jon Andch. has alwavs
tiad a toUgh defensive wtit
~d tiil year iS no excention.
"'He elso has a pair of
ciuart"'1>!1cks in F.d Luther
aad Craig JOhna1on who like
~ -the baU and an ~ runner m Tony
~·'.I ~,1200-pounder.
!!l'oinBlg Dove lo the Fountain
~_opening of fensive
~ ere Dilve Kruetzer
Getting Offense in Gear
Cypress' Chief Priority
When does a team not worry
about Jhe squad It's going to
play?
~ tlillllc!I:. Steve '"'°""""" lit fullback and Vince Bienek "When we have to spend
so much time on perfecUng
what we do that we don't
have time left to worry about
the opposition," says Cypress
coach Don L<nt.
........
.. ,bcbon geis the nod
" 8'llt eod and could be the IJ!Y "' .the Barons' passing long with the bacldield To be sure, Lent has bad
the Chargers working on
offensive execution an week,
but one can bet Cypress will
be ·ready for Saddleback when
they clash Saturday night
(7:30) at Mission Viejp High.
is d. concern to
this season with
~ of bis key players goq : both ways lncludlng
(llll~ 'l'ho!llllOOll.
•A r.econd-team choi<.'e at
Ntlback ln the Irvine League
llilt-IM90l'l. Thom050n will
ai,o double at linebacker on
••10u'r offense k>oked eo poor
against Orange Coast I feel
we have to gpend the week
just perfecting what we do \lfrenoe. and not worry about
Saddleback,'' says Lent. "We '~ 11s named our punter, J o h n
~~ ~y, offensive player of
tN 10: the week simply because we
~= didn't have anyone else:"
~:: Trying to fmd a No. l
1u quarterback, U!nt will use
tts Mike Schaub, Greg LaMendola
'" . and John Kindred against the '" 110 Gauchos.. S c h a u b and
~~ La.Mendola played a g a i n s t
11s OCC but both were ~= inconsistent, according to
160 Lent.
"' p 1JO oor field position wa.1 also
a factor in Cypress' poor
offensive showing.
"We'd get . ,a good drive
going and tben1 a penalty or
80mething would stop us, says
Lent. "Our lttack w a s
Inconsistent, but Orange Coast
had pl<nty II> do with i~ they
have a fine defensive club."
The Chargers' defense was
a standout against the Pirates,
whQ managed only two field
goals going Into the final
quarter. Spearheading t be
defensive crew, is standout
middle guard Pau1 lllarlton.
An AJl..SOuthem California
Conference selection 1 a s t
season, he has a great instinct.
for the ball, ls very quick
and likes to hit. He was
named de:fen.sive player of the
week by Lent's staff.
Lent also bad praise !or
linebackers Randy Haughn
and Don Caldwell, end Steve
Brown· tackle Roger Page and
defensive baclc Mike Bodkin.
"We don't know that much
about Saddleback, but I know
they have a great coaching
staff down there," says Lent.
"We expect to meet a well
organized, hard-hitting team,
but we 're more worried about
our team playing our kind
ol game."
have had a dumce to scout
us aod we baveo't been able
IA> do the same with them
under game conditions. I
really doo'l know where the
advantage lies."
Of! what the Orange Qia!I
coach bas seen ln 811· lnlormal
scrimmag~ with Cerritos and
knowing the persoonel ol
Golden West better tlWI most
opposing coaches becauae of
his cloae proximity to the
GWC !Celle, Tuck& says:
"They are a great passing
team and I respect quarter·
back Dan Accomando for his
ability. 'lbel.r entire olf'!nse Is
e!plosive and t:belr defen1e
Is probably as good u ours
so we will have to contain
them to win."
Tucker praised the Orange
Coast defense for Its work
in the opener against Cypress
which the Pirates won, 2G-O.
"I thought our defense
played a grest game bot I
was di.sappotnted In o u r
inability to score when we
were inside the five-yard line.
"We had great field position
but when we got down there,
we didn 't have the scoring
punch."
11ie only 1ineup change
will find freshman Ton y
Accomando, Dan's brother
starling at a halfback spot
for the Pirates. He was
impressive in the Cypress
game and was named the
Bucs' offensive player of the
game.
Feil in Tourney
Btu Feil of Laguna Niguel
Will return to play in the
Queen Mary open g o I !
trurnamenl in Long Btach
Oct. 18-2tl alter futi8hing third
a year ago.
Fell pocketed $1,600 foe his
third place finish In the $22,500
event that will be held at
El Dorado Park or Recreation
Park Golf CourRe this year.
First pri1.e Is $4,600.
ARE YOU LOOKING
FOR A Sl'ORTSCAR7
LOOK AT THESE!
Baseball Standings
'72 VOL VO 1100
Q.. ~ A&H. w. (31S$)
$5077 • '66 VOLVO 1100 =~01trlft. R&H.rMl!ml IW.. WMNm> .. , .. c.., ..
$2477 • '73 D.t.TSUM 240%
$5777
• '72 D.t.nUM 240%
• -AM/FM Ila'~ •• fHlll. , ... ~ -$4377
• '70 FIAT t 24
' $2277 • '70 PORSCHE 911 E t • ~M. """" ,_ !Ifft, ~ .. tCI
.,.,.....~)
SAVE .
• '70 MGI GT
............. .,,ei1ti.. (ill~
$2377 ••
'70 MR •O.t.DSTa a.a.: r..=;· 4 ,.... -~ 111.ai
-$2577
-.L--'''-..
AMERICAN LEAGUE
East Division w L
New York llJ 69
Baltimore llJ 70
Boston 77 71
Cleveland 73 75
Milwaukee 72 78
Detroit 68 81
' West Divl1lon
'Oakland 85 65
Texas' · 00 70
Minnesota 77 74
Chicago 7:1 77
Kamas City 72 78
Angell 61 90
WtfllMlll'f'1 Gamn
&oll'on It Dtrrolt .s
S•lllmor• 10, N9W Yori 4
Cltwllnd •• Mllw111kN )
09kl•lld $, K.,.._1 CltY •
...... .._ TlblK 1·1
Cl'lkllCHI i , MIMHOI• 1
TIM!tftt'I Olmtl
Pel.
.53'1
.533
.520
.493
.480
.456
.567
:~ • 7
.411J
.4CH
GB
\\
21\
61\
81\
12
5
8~4'
12
13
241h:
Delroh . (Rlll'I .. M) 11 loitOfl T1111! 20-111
B1lllM0rt CM<-N•llY 1.f.10) 1t N-York (M1y WI
o.kllnd (11\19 IS.IS) 11 KIMlll Cllr !lr111:1 .. 51 OnlY ..,,,.. tcMdyttd
• ""111'1 Otflltl CflW!tnd et NW Ywk (2 tamll)
81111"'°" If IOllon Delroll 11 Mll'foo.utl"
"""41 11 M!l\(lel01•
01J•1n "' <lflk-.o ICMMt Otv 11 TtllH
I
NATIONAL LEAGUE
East Division
St. Louis w L Pct. GB
80 69 .537
Pittsburgh 78 70 .527 II\
Philadelphia 73 76 .490 7
Montreal 71 78 .477 9
New York fil 8'l .450 13
Chicago 82 86 .419 171\
Well Division
Dodgers 93 56 .624
ancinnati 91 59 .007 21\
AUanta 83 68 .550 1t
Houston 76 74 .5tr7 1711
San Francisco 68 83 .450 2S
San Diego 55 96 .364 39
MD Picked
To Topple
Sea Kings
Mater Del Hlgh's beefy
Mooan:hs and the Ccrona de!
Mar High Sea Klnp clash
tonight at Santa Ana Bowl
In the opeoJng football test
!or bot!! schools._
Kickoff Is at I and the Monarcru of coach Gary carr
are 1lx110int favorites to up
their record to 21·2 In 09"'ing
games.
Mater Del opens with ·an
offensive line ccmisting ol ftve 1 2t»j>ound · plus atllletes· and
It av..-ages 205 u ~
~ coadt Dave Holland's
smaller See Kings.
'!be-Century Le a g u e
representatives from Corona
de! Mar average 182 from
tackle IA> tackle with cenle<
Rllett Tucker and tackle Tony
Roxstrom the big'°"' at 190.
Both teamo U!r.e to pound
the oppooltlon tlnugh the
mlddle-Meter Del w It b
tallbacb Pat McKeoo or
Marijn Sundv and Com>a de!
Mar with dive action from
hal!beclcs Mlriy and Mike
Fen-aro.
Corona del Mar's major
_,pon tJ quarterback Gary Gui..,..., a junior who otarted
for the Sea KJngs as a
sophomore bot """ plagued
by Injury In 19'13.
Gulsness completed 3S ol 54
p&Sle3 !or 4Sll yanls and !our
touchdowns In a five-game
span !or the Sea Kings.
And, wllen Gul!neSS wasn't
throwing, the runners were
gaining yard""' elfectlwly.
Both 'bf the Feml!'OO .,..
effectJve runners and CdM has
another good bade in Bruce
Carnenter.
Holland aaya his team's
major task Is performing
consistently and keep Ing
mistakes to a minimum, along
with a good kicking game. ·
Mater Del's running game
is boosted With the aerial
ability or ouarterllack Jim
Wlgmott, who dl'lllayed a
good arm is scri mm age
warfare at Newoort Harbor.
But while Mater De I ' s
primary concern Is to ~
Gttisness with his pas.sing and
nm.nin1?. Corona's bi!? task is
to hold of! the slan!J of the
tallbaclts nimlng behind the
blocking or Erk: l!«g. Don
Watters and John
LaGrandeur, Who make uu the
lieht side ol the Mooarchs
of£enslve 1ine.
LaGrandeur earned third
team Ail-CIF 4-A henori at
center as a jun\or and Berg
Is a blue cltlp proopect.
c:_ ........ ~
TE ltld' Grertlv 111G
T 1ot1 l•11rn11n 17J
G M1r11 fM•wtn 174
C Jl:Mtt Tud:e!' lfll
G M•rlt o.Mlllt lto
T Ton., 1tmc1trom 190 Wfl 11: ... 111 Part 1..0
WR Rich Htbb 1J!
01 G11rv 011111\fU ltll
ltl MtrTV ,_.."' 1llO
111 Mlk• l'•>Ttr11 170
c-•"'Mw~ OLM Rab Hluort "° OLM M1r1c Mtirwtll ,,,
OLM Tony Ro~1trom 19'0
OLM Mtrk 0.M11141 190
ll ~Slllro IUmlltll 115
Mll A.llltt Tllc:lttr 190
L8 llrt<I GrNly 111G
Cl l(llnf Eu.II 1.0
Cl, S1Tn M1rowlt1 110
11:11¥ !lln Moore 15(1 S Rici'! Nebtt lll -.. -TE Mlb ,..,_,,..., lf'S
l T l1ron Huntw 20G
LCJ Joftfl ChN!tlelll 200 C Jollrt UQrllldtW m
RG Dorl W1tttr• 210
ll:T Erk fllrt 110 S& Pit Pritt\ lSO
QI Jl111 W!glTIOl"ll 17S
Tl Mlrlln Suridy 115
Fl Jim ltldte toO
Fl '" lcci.1 11$ ........ _
De Mite WJ111M>11!.r 175 dT John i..Grtlldtl/r 205
MG Tll'n L'lte 1111
OT Erle l•rw 710 DE Olrk ClllYIW 17$
L9 911''*Y It~ llO
Ll19ob M•c•11!11 ~
H9 lrld Chi(.• 17$ HI J09 Scl'!nildt 1iS I ,,, Mcl(eof'I llO
. S Ortt Fr'Mn\tll 110
This Week's '
.Grid Odds
'
Himtington
Haunted
By Hipple
Huntington Btach Hlgh's
de!...,. will get an early
season add test Friday night
-oooch Roy Brununelt's Oilers inVade Warren in
Downey and the Oilers coach
says Its the corners that will
be under fire.
"We've got IA> get to
Wamtt's quarterback, Erle
Hipple ," says Brummett.
•;He's one of the best we'll
aee this year, especially as
a sprinlout quarterback. lt
puta a lot of pressure on our
oomera and the thing we have
to do is simply get IOme
defenders all over him .
"He can do a lot of things
well and he doesn't seem to
get but. And he can throw
very deep," says Brummett.
Brummett 's own olfense
appears to be In fair shape,
altb:>ugb he'd like to 'see a
better passing game than
provided in last w e e k ' s
acrlmmage.
"If we can throw the ball
effectively and get a n
excellent defensive effort I
believe we have a good shot
at them," says Bnnnmett.
1be Oilers have b e e n
Installed as underdogs. ln their
1974. opener to Warren, a team
whieb boasts an all·veteran
badkfield and a 5-4 recotd
in '73.
Perhaps tbe most pleasant
IRlr'Jlri1e in the Oilers camp
is the lad< or preseaoon Injury,
altllough Toby Boowell might
be held out.
.Ir he gets the doctor's ok
he'll be starting at linebacker.
Bnonmett Ukem warren to
hi> own teem In terms ol
sheer hitting.
Says Plzzlea
Fullerton CPach
Blow.ing Smoke
Fullerton High co'<oach Gtl
Tucker ts moaning that his
Indians · are too slow lo stay
with the Newport Harllor
Sailors Frtday night in the
1974 football opener.
But Newport coach Bill
Plzzlca lso't buying It.
"You've got to be kidding,"
says Piuka when tnrormed
of Tucker's analysis.
"He's just b!OW!ng smol<e.
We watched theii 22>-pound
!Ullbeck, Ron Liapis, run 70
. yard! for a toucbdo..,.,.n against
Anaheim in a scrimmage and
the secondary couldn't catch
him. And Fullerton ootscored
Anaheim, four toudldowns to
one."
Pizzlca also notes
Fullerton's size, which U:
similar to Mater Oei. "They
may be bigger than Mater
Dei and we feel we're in for
a real battle." says Plzzica.
Pizz.lca says his offense
must find a way to move
the ball consistently up the
middl~ against Fullerton in
order to maintain supremacy.
"Fullerton's defense is
different from what we'll see
ln the future. They do a lot
or stunting and run out ol
an odd front It poses ·some
confusion in our offensive-line.
They do a lot of moving
around, bringing t b e I r
linebackers up with red dogs
and sometimes they'll stack
up three linebackers and make
you figure out where they are
going to go," says Pizzi ca.
A.Ji for the Fullerton offense,
Pizzi.ca's worries include such
tactics as an end around pass
play and t>olatlcn action.
111biey like to pick on •
11 .. man. They won't block him
with their lineman, -d
using two blocking becks on
him to give th!ir lineman the
chance to double-team the
ottier defensive llneman.
"Jt11 a power thing and very
effectJve." Kevin Lindsay appeora loet
for , the game due to a knee
Injury • w1tlch has n o t
responded well Jo treatment.
Taking hi! spot at defeiulve
end tJ Jimmy Hellrlch (190),
who looked good In the Sailors'
scrinvnage against. Mater Del.
Dolphins'
Goal: Snap
Wishbone
Brea~ the wishbone has
everybody br<sktng, t be I r
backs al Dana Hills.
'!be Dolphins must race the
c om p Heated, quick-hitting
attack Friday night when they
trek IA> Oiaf!ey High !or an
8 o'clock !oolball game againot
Ontario.
'"Ibey run the wishbone
very wen," says Dana Hills
coach Tony Leon. "They have
quick backs who appear to
know the . system and . their
quarterback keeps the ball
bidden very well."
Eagles' Running Game
""Concern~ Vikes Coach
Reading the "'ys and going
IA> the ball will be the strategy
!or the Dolphins' defensive
game plan. Tacklee J o e
Cameron and Craig F\Jlladooa
will key on the fullback, ends
Arnulfo Malagon and Nick
Yocca will stay with the
quarterback and o u t 1 l d e
backers Ron Kosmala and
Bruce Warrington will key the
option back.
Estancia lngb's r u n n I n a
game has been the biggest
concern in defensive drills for
litarina this week, s a y s
Vikings coacli Mike Henigan.
1be two schools laWlCb the
1974 !oothell ....... Friday
night (I o'clock ) al
Westminster High.
"Estancia uses that run and
shoot ·offeMe which la very
wide open. Wfl're concerned
with their inside running
game. They ran pretty well
against WesUninster in their
tcTimmage last Saturday,"
says Henf~.
"They t&tw the bell well.
also, but the Inside running
game can cause problems,"
he says.
"Ken Kiefer has done a fine
job in straightening Estaocla's
program. 'Ibey play two-
platoon, '° we'll have to be
RAWI DIST!UEIS CO, I. Y.C.
.UUIW 11usn1-1i 1t111. 86 PllODf.
$5.59
4/5 Ot.
PLUS TAX
In real good shape to play
with them."
Henigan also is a bit
concerned about Estancia's
defeMe. "They have a
multiple number of defenses
and ~-e·re inexperienced In the
offensive line. We figure to
have our hands full .
"About tw<>-lhirds of our
people are juniors a n d
inexperienced. We have depth,
but It's with inexperienced
kids."
llenigan says he'll have at
least five and maybe' seven
players going both ways -
especialJy if center Steve
Lewis and fullback Mark
Longnecker are unable to
start because of injuries.
Lewis has a bad knee and
Longnecker is nursing an
injured back. Both have been
working out with the Vikings,
but are not at Ml speed.
IMide linebackers R I c k
Broo"nlng and Bob Spires will
follow the bell wti.ile defensive
backs KerT)' Crabb. Darryl
Howe llJld Orris Watah will
have to keep alive for an
occasjonal Ontario pass.
The loe:s ol llnebacker l\tirk
Bethke, out two more weeU
with a knee problem, really
hurts the Dolphina In a game
like this, says Leoo. He Is
qulclt and tJ the kind of
defensive athlete needed to
stop the wishbone.
One of Dana Hills' big
problems this year ls depth.
Seven players will be forced
to go both ways against
Ontario which oould lmrt the
Dolhpins in the final period
if the game is dose.
It'aautumn. And time £or cider. Only this autumn, it's time Cor the ''Seven 1n Cider.N
Just mix fresh cider with Seagram's 7 Crown,
overplentf oCice. You'l get a crisp, clean taste of what autumn'•
all about.
Scltnlm's 7CrOwn. h'I Amcrka's r-ttc.
' The S.ven 111 Cldtr: To a mus or t.11111.11 tlhld.
wit~ lo., add l~ os. SU&r&n'l'l 7 Cr.own. FUI wUh frnh, 1wfft apple cider ..
• • . ·~
• . ' ,
Thursda1, S~plrmber 19, 1974
I1a Ope1ter
-Mesa Plannh1g
.....--,
Pa s.sing Attacl{
Drawing n team like FooU1lll
ror its first gan\e doesn't help
Costa Mesa 's chances of
having ils first \V i n n I n g
football season ever. The
Mustangs, under ne\V head
coach Tom French, open the
1974 campaign Friday night
at 8 against !he Kni ghts at
Orange Coast College. With
21 lettermen back from a
team which finished high in
the Crestview L e ague
standings last year, Foothill
is a tough initial game
oppooent.
Foothill not only has a host
of athletes back from last
year, but they are all big.
Tile Knights outweigh the
Mustangs about 20.25 pound s
each man. French hopes to
offset the weight disadvantage
with speed and quickness.
Mesa hopes to turn things
around by throwing the ball.
French promises a wide-open
attack. ~spite the f a..c t
Foothill has its en 1 i r c
defensive back£ield returning,
Costa Mesa hopes to win
through the air, says French.
French reports that Mission
Vl~jo was uble lo tlirO\Y
against the Knights in their
scrimmage and figures Mesa
should also. '·\Ve wo1i"t change
oor game plan to try alld
beat Foothill -\li!e'll go with
what we do best,11 adds the
J\·lesa conch .
Although still inexperienced,
quarterback !Wd fo~iggatt is
pertorming very well. 1~ght
eod Keith Josephson i s
developing into a top flight
receiver to go along with
nanker JI.lark Krikorian, says
French.
Mesa 's sma\/ offensive line
might have trouble against the
larger Knight.s, but again
French is hoping qui ckness
11'il\ make up for it. Gary
Baume and Scott Turner \Vii i
start at tackle, Te r r y
Kohlenberg and l\1ark Ncbc ki:r
will open at guard :.ind Ti1n
Mullikin 1vill slart at center.
The ~1ustangs defense. is led
by all-league safety Flgi:,att.
Defensive backs Dave Cooper
and Mark Kennedy along with
lineman Nebeker are also
playing very V.'ell defensively,
says French.
l\Iiss io11 Viejo to Use
110-}ltJUntl Dee11 Bacli
1.tis.sion Viejo High's Diablos ru1m ing backs while at the
will be fielding a relative same tin1e comin g UJ> with
srnall team Friday night \\'hen a mi stake-free offenst>.
they open the 1974 prc11 "\Ve v.·cren 't rc:tl sharp in football season at Santa Ana our scrimmage 1rith F'oothitl.., Bowl against Empire League s:.iys J\turio, "and V.'e'd like
representative Saddleback to establish a bcl!er running
Jligh. game.
Coach John Murio has only ··And our Jack or overall
one 200-pounder in the starting and individual S!)('e<i \\·orries lineup and the d e f e n se me."
includes a 1 J 5 -pound A major set back in •the
comerback and a 110-pound Diablos' cirmor 1s at tackle
safety! ,,·here starters Vance C'o.1ricr ~1ark Andrews, lhc caplain f 1751 and Jeff ~1 cCai·ly (liO 1 of the sophomore team in '73, have _been lost in1efinit ely
is tile might y mite at safety 1, ith 3 knN' and hrQken foot.
11•hile Jeff Hopp will man one Both v.·ere hurt in the first
of the comers. week of pads and taking their
l\furio's chief concern as he place in the forv;ard wall are
takes a Mission Vi ejo team Brad Sil va ~200 1 and Todd
into battle tor the first lime. Sli umskv (165/.
however, i~ a .""ay to stop The Dia!)lo~ also Jost R1'11
Saddleback s nifty set of • Pciga n al t:iilb:iek due to hi ~
El Toro's
Big Key:
Offen se
El Toro·s defense figu res
lo be slrong again this season.
but just how far the Chargers
will go in a tougher C!F
classifi cation this y e a r
depends on how well the
offense develops.
Coach ~lac J\loorc will get
many of the anS\Ycrs Friday
Y.'hcn his Chargers travel to
Brea to open the football
season witb an 8 p.m. contest.
El .Toro shoold be strong
at the skilled positions, but
the offensive line is a big
question mark. Center Keith
Jones and tight end Je!f Green
\Vere startcrsJast season. but
are the only athletes at this
spot with experience.
"Our offe nsive line Is the
big problem with our club
right now." .says Moore. "The
· kids have looked good in
practice, but we won't know
what v.·e bave until we see
them under game conditions.''
IL.. El Toro 's ground game will
~ one of the .keys in the
Brea ga me. The Chargers
hope to establi sh a running
attack with fullback Chuck
Van Liew and tailback Brian
Hea ney doing most or the
work. Van Liew provides the
power in the attack and
Heaney the speed.
1 The Chargers, how ever. will
take to the ri lr if thin gs get
tough on the g r o und.
Quarterback Gary Key threw
two touchdown passes to split
end Joe Carta in the Santa
Ana scrimmage last Saturday
nnd light end Green and
fianker Scott Burghardt CQA
also catch the ball .
De£ensively, El Toro allowed
leS!I than a touchdown a
• coolest in 1974 end with vir~
tually aJI the starters return-
ing, Moore expects more of
the same lhis year.
Green and VM Liew are
nxtures at linebacker, Jones
and Dave Ricker will start
at end, while Tony Lundy and
K ith Mosby will optn nt
lacklo. All ployed last year
for tfie Chargers who mndG
' the Cll' 1-A plny0ffs.
"Brea is a well-coacflcd
tcnm whlch 'llkcs to stay on
UM! grourld.'' says t.1oore.
''They run the bllll right at
you, but we should be oble
to stop them if our defensive
athlcte9 play their kind of
game."
n1oving f() Kansas Ci ty. John
Moo.tgomer)', ho1vever. has
stt'pped in to assume starting
dut v at t.ailback.
"1 rea lly don'! know what
to think until u.·e ge t this £3 me
under our be lt." says ~1urio,
"We only have 12 senit'rs 1•11
the entire squad and "·c
haven't really been tested ."
Bad Ne,vs,
Good News
For U11i
The doctor brought some
good news and some bad lo
Universi tycoach Jerry
Redman this week after thr~
of his top players were injured
in the Trojans scrimniage
against HW11ington B e a c h
Sat urday. •
The good news 1vas thnt
starting fl:llback and !:lrong
safely Jim Green will bt~ able•
to play in University's openin~
football game Frid::iy night i11
8 o'clock ot Tu stin. The bad
news revealed first st ring
wide receiver and free safr ty
Sean Graham and tackle ~1i kc
Hanfield \vould not be ready.
I-laving Green h e a I t h y.
· however. is a big fi.lclor in
the Trojans' chances agai nst
the Tillers. The 6 t, 196·
pounder is inslrumcntal to
both offen se and defense.
Orfensively, his power running
adds balance lo the Troj(lns
ground gan1c and on defense
he is probably the 1nost
jmportant player Redman has.
Tustin's defense against the
run iS very good , but lhe
Tillers have trouble with !he
pass. which is bad nc\vs to
the Trojans who like 10 stay
on the ground . Tustin was
able to contain ru g g l' d
Servite's running game. but
the Friars exploded when they
tOok to the air.
Green is the pawer runner
in the TrojtlnS attack 1vhile
Terry Pfestoo provides most of the speed. When given
protectiOn, Richard Herson
can pass but Redman prc!Cn
staying on the groPnd.
.. , feel our offdnse w,ill get
£"in"!: iC it can jusL hang on
lo lbe ball," SllYS Redman.
"We QIOV<ld thQ ball well I~
our scrimma~c hul fumbl1.'tl
too many tlmcs to b c
effective." .
University wpn four of its.
last live gan1c.~ last season
IU\d Redman Is hoping IC
carq the n10m~ntum IJ1to
~·riday's opener with Tustlrt.
•
•
SALE
STARTS
7:30 A.M. "
•
• I
"
SHARP
EACH DAY We're Clearing Our Warehouse -Hundreds of Tires Must Go
Some Sets -So!lle Pairs -One-of-a-Kind -Buy How & Save
..
Cj)UALITY INDIA TIRES
MANUFACTURED BY GENERAL TIRE
4 PLY NYLON CORD
WHITE WALLS
825xl 5 .. -
B25xl4 ...... $16 885xl5 •••• $18.95
900xl5 •••• $19.95
F:'lus'\2.32 to $2.80 F.E.T.
Gel\era\ White\\ne .
G150M
S\~ £78x\ S
01""""'1'..-$ 1.00 l,eSS
f .e.'.t . $1.98
s
General Jet Air Ill
VW -Blackwalls
560xl5
$
General India
Whitewall
Fiberglass Belted
4 'ly Hylo111 Cord •nd 2
......... ....... A..-7111.hl .....
WIDE 70 SERIE $
F.E.T. $2.54
GENERAl SCRAM~· ER Sctanml '
l.eth:rwhi .,
RBERGUSS
BELTED
F.E.T. ~2.84
'
GENERAL
JUMBO 780
FfBERGU\SS
BB.TED
L-711-15
D-RAHGE
Black s
F.E.T. '3.27
STEEL BEL TED
RADIAL BLEMS
'~ 5 41 ~
BR78-l 3
DR78-14
s4
· GR78-14
GR78-IS
s
JR78-l 5
LR78-IS
i
.
GENERAL INDIA
RBERGLASS
BELTED
Whitewall ·
$
...
J-7814 H-7814
F.E.T. $2.75 to $~.80
We've Green Tagged Our Complete Inventory of
Jet-Air" ID's!
The General Jet-Air ill featu res
four-ply construction: nylon or
polyester cord, General's famous
du al-t read design, and a con-
toured shoulder for easy steering.
Size
6.50·13
lube less
black wall
plus
SI .78
Federal
Fo>;c1sa
1 ,1 l ,
TUBELESS BLACKWALL SALE PRICES .
7.00·13
·Pr us 11 tt Fr<1 r, r.1,
F78-14/15
(7.5017.75-14
6.70{7.75-15) s219s
C78-14
(6.50 6.95-14) s179s
"''" Sl' OT Fed n Tin
G78-14/15
.. (8.00/8.25·1•
7.10/8.25--15) s229s
E78-14
{7.0017.35·14) s1ags
~UJS:P?<I ~e<I E• T..-
H78-14 /15
/8.50/8.55· 14
7.f!O f8.15S-'S'! s259s
plu9 12.41 or S2.'2 F~ e~. Dl\11 It~ oo-fZ.63~. Ea. ply~ S:? n nr S2 82 Fff t~-
T1« dlependlll{I OI\ 1111 Ta~ dt nend!llQ on 1111 T a l de1111nd1119 011 Sil•
PLUS S2.28 lo l~.60 F.E. T. Eac~ Tlr!il -Depending on Size Some •1•1 t VlllllDI• In 4.p1y nylor. or ~·'11'f poly11st1r cord c00111ruc11on cmh. w111-.,..,u, ~1r f2,ff mor. ptr ttr•.
OENERAl
TIRE
Don Swedlund's .
COAST ~· GE EIAL TIRE . '
585 WEST 19th ST., COS'f A MESA
• • ..
-DAILY 7:30 to 6:00-
• \
646-5033 -540.5710
' I
·-
'
. •
C .f DAILY PILOT
PUBLIC l'<OTJCE
, , PUBLIC NOTICE
·= '"or1cE o~ INTENTION Tii
-• Sill AEAL-f'JtO .. lnv-
Nctf)CE IS HEREIY GIVEN lhll
on J_. 2l, 1~1•, lllt BOlrd ot Educ•llon
ol "-NeWpDr'l-Mffa Ul\fned kl'lool Olst,fft ot 0r1119e County, C.llhlrnl•,
aOoplilii • resolution of Intention to ~JI .. ~eel Of rHI Pf'operly of
•P111 •metto1v • ,....., .cm Joc.ted In
Ille • City of Cost• MeQ, Commonly
ktw'JWll as l!wo "T1~ Elotmtntary Sitt'"
Ind l'GOl"I ~rllcul&rly dnctlbtd In Mid ResoMion.
The AftOlutl011 flxtd tM minimum K~lbM bid 11 'Two Hundr9d Shrty.
El11ht Thousand Olll Hvndf't<! Twenly·Twa
1'1CI '50/100 ('261.121.50) Dollars. pay1ble Jn C1$h. ~ T
Ot'lolw!r 11, 1974, .r 3:00 o'clock P.M. has beef! fix..:! •• the time ot
I PVbllc IM•rll'lll wtMch w'lll bl Mid
in !I'll Busi,,.... Qffkt ti 1U7 l"IKWfllll
Avtnut, Cotti Mna, C1Ufornl1, for tM
rtc1lpf, Opff\1"9 tnd dtcl1r1tlan ot written
prQPOMh.. Ortl ~·· WUI 1150 be received 11 that time.
Coples ot the R150lullan Mlllog forth
the i,nm 11111 conditions of ttw sel1
.... IVtlllbll ti lhl 8uslMM Offlct
of rhe k"-' Dlllrlctl 11$7 Pltctrrtlt Ave-. C-lt Mn.a, Ctl fol'lllt.
DATEO: July n, 197.f.
DoNld E. Smtll'MKld
Clerk of ll!t 8oarc1 o' Ed11t•ll011
0 N..,,.,.,. M-_.l.._Unlrled khool D11trfct P~l\lld Drlnot Coe1t Diily Pllot, Sept:: s. u. lt; 1'74 JJ.5'·74
,..., >. PUBIAG NOTICE
~ MnCi JHYITINO llDS
of --,,. Coul CWnmwlty Coll OIJtri~f of Or1!'Qe County,
,
D1ltJ1 ,.iltt Stiff l"lltll
LITILE OLD LADIES MANEUVER FOR ROOM ON STARTING LINE AT NHYC
Class A N1plet DfvitiDn Gets Under Way in First of Three Races
•
·Newport Harl1or Regatta
'LittleOldLadies' Compete
Ninety-three distaff sailors
in five classes of Sabots and
Hobie-lOs swarmed over
Newport Harbo.r Wednesday in
the annual sailing of the Little
Old Ladies Regatta.
Tbe event drew entries from
San Diego to Santa Barbara
with the San Diego gals taking
most of the top honors.
Winner in the Naples Sabot
A division with 25 entries \Yas
Peggy Brown of Mission Bay
Yacht Club; Barbara
Shepardson ·of Balboa Yacht
Club was the winner in Class
B; Nancy Schaffer, San Diego
YC, won Class C.
\\'inner in the Winard Sabot
division was J<"'rcin Martin of
King Harbor Yacht Club and
Sandy Churchill , San Fernan-
do Valley Sailing C1ub was
-the Hobie-JO winner.
Trophy winners:
NAPLES SABOT A L
Peggy Brown , ti1BYC; 2.
Monica Manzer, SOYC; 3.
Phyllis Drayton, NHYC; 4.
Nancy Myer, NHYC; 5. Betty
Barr, SDYC.
NAPLES SABOT B -L
Barbara Shepardson, BYC; 2.
Jean Bennett, NHYC; 3.
Barbara Watry, MBYC; 4.
Bonnie Zillgett, BYC; 5. :fl.1ary
Jane Tyler, BYC.
NAPLES SAROT C -I.
Nancy Schaffer· SO\'C; 2.
r.1ary Jane Nelson, BYC; 3.
Joyce Clary, ·NHYC; 4. Susan
Uccifeni, BYC; 5. Gayle
Gould, SDYC.
WINARD SABOT -Fran
Martin, KHYC; 2. f\farilyn
Galloway, KHYC; 3. Lydia
Jewell, PYC; 4. Na ncy
DuBois, DRYC.
HOBIE-10 -L Sandy
Churchill, SFVSC; 2. Barbara
Bishop, PDYC.
Cup •se~ret Weapon~ "f:'' 11 ......,., given thll 1111 lolord
C1ll L Wiii Neeive iealed bk19 1JP
to ltlll ........ Mind..,., ~""-l(I, lt74....-.r tfw ~dlftl119 Dlpt, of Mid •
sc11ot1 district klclled 1t 1310 Adam• A~ Costa MtM, C.UfOl"QIL 11 whld!
lllTM Mid bids '#Ill be pYbllcly ~
ind ·f'.Sed for:
A1issies Praise Olin. St.epl1.ens' Desig1i
':4udJo.Vlct.o EctulP!l'llflt, AJI• bllM •re 1o be ln 1ecord111t11 wlll\~ lnllructlons •nd CondUlon• 1nd
SPKflatlons ""11kh 1r1 ,_ Gfl fHe
10C1•.,m1y lie ueured In tlw ottl«
of f'I Pvrchull!ll Aoerlf of Mid KhOG( dimlct.
E«tt ~ -' .ubmit Wllh his b!d ~) C1$fll .... 1 Ch9ck, artlfl«I chll;k, ~~r's bend• n;.ci. pty1blt to !Pie or , of thl COlll Camn'll.lnlty College
DI ct lolonf of Trus!MS In 1n lmount not~ HS ll1•n five 1191"1:1<11 (5'1.J of '=tm bid ff I 9\lll'lnlM tllll tht bl wlU enter into tht P"'OPOl9Cf c Kt If the ""-11 aw1rdecl to hi~ In tlw '"""' or flkllH'I to enter In!~ well contract, h praceeds of Ille~ wrn lie forlelled, or In f"-c•si'! of 1 bond, ttw lull sum ttiereof "':ti fOtfef!ed to Mid ICt\oQI d/1lrlcl. bidder mey wlthdr-hl1 bid tor ~ °' of fortV..flve (45) d•P •ll•r 'i" "' .,. tN ......... ,,__._ BOln:I of Trvstus r•stl'Vfl tht
arr 1111 of. rtitclln; lllY Ind •II bids "'" ... ~_o_ nv. •Y frregul1rltles or
ln"'""'llfllf in 1ny bid or In lht
bl·l"D· "• Signed: NORMAN E. WATSOH __,,•, S«f)'. loerd of Trim.ts •n: Scplle;:..,. 30, 1'7• -11:00 11.N
8(19(11: Oct. 2
. ,..,,n.Jied Orlnll• C011! Dilly Piiot, ~ber 12, 19, 1f74 3443-71
,: PUBUC NOTICE f; FICTITIOUS IUSINESS ~. JfAMI! STAT•M•HT
~ lollow!l'jjil P1nan• 1r1 dol111:1 l>l.illtllft;s u: -
t-,A&S CAKE "D ECORAT IN G
[
PLIES, 2100 s. Bristol st .. Sift!• , Cl. '210C
P1trlcl1 D. Sfulrt, 1'2J So. PIClfk.
11 ""'· c.. '2704 . ~ 11....rty G. A1111t1t1, 2402 So. ltll1
.. 1y, Senti Ane, Cl. n?CW
}fll• bull.-11 Conducted by I ttnt,..1 ~ntr•hfp. ... Btvtrty G. A.nnttl1
P1trlcl1 D. Sfullrt
II •llltmeflt Wiii filed With the tv Cltr11: of Ol'll1lll: County on ~wt lf, 1f7.f. • • ... ....,21
-f!t.tbU""9cl 0!'111111 Coe1t Dilly Piiot, ......,ll&r 12. I,, 2', ill!d Octootr 3, 1,74
.,. 3445-74
l -PUllLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS •USINISS
NAMli STAT•Ml'.NT Tfw lolfoWIFl!I Pl"-1r1 doing
tulltnt'l:I Ill:
BAZZ·HOUSTON CO., INC., 12700 Wesltni, Gerden Grow, C11lfotnll '26'111
POC ICE T ·It OC ICE T, .INC.,
fiicarw1ttd In Cllllorni1, l 2 7 o o
w111 ... I\ Ave .. G•rderi Gnwl, C1llfornl1 .....
This buslrwss Is condu(t.d by 1
top)llrlllon.
• POCKET·ROCICET, INC.
~/ JI~ ·E. Bill.-President
T1Q IJlll.,,,.,., Wll ffltd wfllt 1'hl c:;: c~-.. of 0r1nge COUnty on s-•f4.JJ~" =JI' , T1lirnt•WAT, .F·:MtS1
N 6 MORGAN o.c ...... ,..
°'9 Mlndlntw ~.-.. N.. "9 1...,....., C1llfonll1 ... I
..... llstlld Cringe Colst D11ly Piiot, ~btr 1 lt, Ur. and Octatltr 3,
1?! 33G·71
'· PUBLIC NOTICE
FIC1"10UI IUSINl!SS
NA.Me ITAT•MENT folllt'frllng person Is doing b!Jllneu ~UIEO GOMMERCIAL INTl!lllOtlS.
S'-\1111rk Circle, Sull1 HF", lrvl"9,
ornl• '27117
Wf CORPORATIOfl, 1 C1Uf0f'nl1
l por1tlon. MIY 10. ,,,4, l1K! Slcypirll
de, Suite "F", INIM, C•llfornla ' ,., S bullflffl Is tonduc;ltd ti)' I
C01110rallon.
, LWT CORP. DlflnJI M. T1ylor. Pr111denl
S llll'tmlrrt WH .. ffltd wtl'ft the
IY Clerll of Ol'•AO• County on AUDUll ,,.
-t ll':MUa
t'PUbll.iitd Or•1'191 Coe•I Dally Piiot,
frtpttlY!Ow l:Z. ''· '" •rid Ottllber l. 3442-71
~,., ....
........ ,., I I
• ..... C..t.y2erl ,..,. _,... . .., ..........
Cootactllle
LNM lbports al • HARBOUR · vw
. l
'•
' ' NEWPORT, R.l. (AP ) -Gretel ll, even though Britton permitted the class boats to
As long as Olin J. Stephens Chance Jr. took credit for be built of aluminum..
11 is alive and well and design-redesigning the boat, it was
Ing America 's Cl.IP racing still an original Stephens A QUIET .,.~'NEREO
yachts, the chances that design. Stephens, who is a . man ol
America will lose the "auld simplicity ii:nd conviction, said
ml)(' are slight. rtfANY YACHTING experts about Courageous being the
Stephens was dubbed said Chance made Intrepid ultimate in design, "I wouldn't
"America's secret weapon by slower in 1970 and Gretel II go so far as to say that,
an Australian journalist and defeated Intrepid in one race. but she is a good boat."
one Australian crew member When it came time for new When Courageous w a s
said before the first race money to be poured into launched at City Island, N.Y.,
between Courageous a n d alumini um 12-meters for this on May 4 stepbens said,
Southern Cross, "The year's America's Cup races, "Courageous is the fastest 12
Americans aren't going to lose . the Courageous syndicate ob-of the year."
the America's Cup as long tained the services of Olin He wasn't kidding.
-as they have Stephens design-J. Stephens If ·to hopefully -,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j
ing boats." design a faster boat than I
934 Stephe then 25 LEASE A '74 DATSUM In I , ns, , Intrepid,
made bis first appearance in Stephens had already agreed 2601 'I 36 mo. +T•U-0.a.L America's Cup racing as a to redesign Intrepid but drew COSTA MESA DATSlJM..·
crew member aboard one of new plans for the aluminum 2145 HAUOl ILYD .. c.M..
the defense contenders to Courageous. This year the 5404410
meet the British challenger. -~1i;nt~e":'rn~a~t10~· ~na1~_12i::i-me~le~r~r~u~le~~~~~~~~':~:!I 'Ihe J class sloop he sailed
on was not selected as the
defender, but Stephens didn't
drop from America's OJp rac-
ing.
TO MEET "THE British •WESTCLIFF PLAZA •LIDO •FASHION ISL.I.HD •CORONA DU. MM
challenge in 1937 Stephensi ~~·~....,~~ON~S""QU~•.,,.•.,,.• .,,.'•.,,.-!!'!"'•!!'!"'•.,,.H.,,.•.,,.1 •.,,.o"!UTH!!'!"'"!c"!o"!•"!s"!T"!V"!ILLA""!'~M~·"'llli~I joined with W. Starling!..:
Burgess and designed the
fastest J class sloop the
yachting world has ever seen.
Named Ranger, it defeated
England's Endeavour Ill in
four straight races .
The New York Yacht 'CJub
changed the America's Cup
"Deed of Gift" w hi ch
establishes ruJ es for the races
and designated that Interna-
tlooal 12-meter class sloops
would be used for the next
challenge. The J class sloops
were bigger than 12-meter
yachts, with some of them
as long as 135 feet.
It was a Stephens-designed
12-meter that defended the cup
in 1958, the first year the
races were sailed in the 12-
meter class. Columbia
defeated England's Sceptre in
four oonsecutive races.
.
CONSTEU.ATION, another
St<phem -designed 12-meter,
defealed England's Sovereign
in four straight races in 1964.
For the 1967 cup defense
it was Intrepid that dominated
four races ov;er Australia's
~ Pattie with ease.
stephens' design of Intrepid
was oonsi,dered by yachting
experts to be a major
breakthrough in J 2 ·meter
design. ·
Intrepid lived oa as the
dominating U.meter in the
1970 races against Australia's
. . t
Tweeds from England
Pll\ids. Herringbones, Shelle~s.
Harris Tweed1, and olhlr
lnteres!ing woolens
to choose
from.
I .
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le;
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•
Th~ lowdown on hunting gear
r
95.97
MOSBERG 12 GA.
SHOTGUN •
Pump action, holds six 2~"
shells, one in chamber.
Walnut with pistol grip. ·Side
ejection and vented rib. Easy
loading. (#$00).
• 84.97
WINCHESTER 30/30 RIFLE
: 2·6" cold forged Winchester
proof-steel barrel, solid
A•erican walnut stock and
forearin. (#94)
5.97
HUNTING VEST
Rugged cotton with. spill
•proof thell pockets.
Rubberized game bag. Brush
br0wn. S, M, l, XL. .
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1ln Set. s.,t. 21. 1'74
115.97 '
REMINGTON 12 GA.
SHOTGUN
Pump. action, 12 gauQe, .5 shot,
croubGlt safety, 'Plain barrel
equipped with recoil pad.
(#870)
49.97
WINCHESTER 22 RIFLE WITH
SC()PE
Semi-automatic, pittol
walnut finishes ~tock
forearm. 4·pOW<!tr weaver tcope
mounted. Cros1bolt' safety.
(#190)
SNAKE BITE KIT
Self..contai~it contain'
everything you need for
<>n·lh,•·•pol1Qfety •
1.99 Box of 10
Smilh and Wesson 30/30 ammo
2.69 Box of 10
Smith and Wesson 30/06 ammo
69c Box of $0
MK 22 22 LR ammo
· 3.27 Box of 25
MLR-12·6 Duck load
2.97 Box of 2$
MLR-20-6 Duck load
IU94A PAii: Beach al Oran~thorpe •Open -kdays 10 to 9:30. S'undays 10 to 6. ' . '
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Ol'IHGI: City Dr. at Garden Giove Blvd.• Open witekdays 10 to 9. Sundays 10 to 8. ·
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MNrA AMA: 3900 So. SMslol-No. of So. Coast Plaza .'0pen weekdays 10 to 9. Sundays 10 to 6.
• '•
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'Nitaety Day Mistress' 'Rhoda' LeadsNew Shows
Play Ricl_i in Laughs-, BYJAV SllARB UTI' It's wi:iy too early to lell had if not been for its new ror TV showings of the
I "Pelrocell1'" se ries, which mo\' le version s came in NE YORK CAP) -The how any sho w n1rcr in
ral1"ngs for tele vision's prenii ere week 'will rare wu s rated 49th of f.1 11 showi; 31th.
011thcbilltba twt!ek. AB C's ''Paper Moon " "premiere week'' are in over the long h aul. Viewer!4 th
and £BS' ne w "Rhoda" only are sampling now nnd 'There were some surpri-wa s registered at 38 on e
seri es tops the list, with it take:s sevt!ra l weeks st.~~ in ratings fo r ne w popularity scale .•
''The Ninety Day ?.tis.' 1..._._,.._ AT ITS CORE, howe.,-.er, NBC's new •'Chico and the before their channt!l·LUr · programs and ulrt reliables 1'hl' only bloomer
1
n
tress," a sort or ''sleeper" '"Vlni--.... . ···?itislress" is quite so~d. Afan " arriving an unexpec· ning s hows a definite 'pat· ~hk{' .. Cl~s· '·C u~)i i~oke," ABC 's new s how c rop wus ~medy produced only once Tom Titus h1arie Ar'mstro'ng plays the ted third after ces· "All in tern. c~lering its _1_9l~ 1 ~season "l·larry o ... which came in
before on the Orange Coast liberated lady gi\'en toter · the 1'~amily." But ror those who like to without ~11ss Kilt}. slum· 2S th overall. ABC '~ seventh
since its B.roadway debut in ·but the. la ughs arc there minating her arrairs before But there's bad nCws for ·keep track or ope ning-ni~ht IX:d to a ti~ for 29t.~ pl~ce . entry, "Cct Christie Love."
the late 19608, contains , nevertheless. the novelty wears off, aod MENJ ABC: !'~our of seven new receptions, six nev+' scn es with Nl.~.c s new . Police v"asn't gotten by muny. It
some of the f~niest lines Director Beverly Sparks she is quite engaging. \f\ ENTERTAIN series it aired the week of -three on Cl!S, three on Won~an ~cw s_c r1~s based· was ranked at 4lsl in the
lhissideofNeilSimon asits has fashionedanatlraclive near ringer for A\l Sept.9-lS landedinthebot· NRC -were a mong the onh1tmov 1esd1dntdotoo conlpelilion
focuses on a straightfor.' production of J . J. Coyle's MacGraw, s he brings a tom of the A.C. Nielsen nation 's 20 hig hest ·rott ed . "'ell. e1thl•r . NBC's "Born · .
ward young lady who puts modern comedy, though she shining, sincere quality to '---------~ ratings pile. .programs in p r~n:i iert.! t-T ee" can1c 1n 36th overall, Hut slay tungJ·b
1
All 1 ~~~.
herloverson a three-month missesthemarkonsevcral her performance, thou~h Three ABC losers -week. a period 111 whirh 21 \1:/11Jr "Planclo(lhc1\pes" can and 1>r o 3 Y WI
contract. occasions, principally in the she orten neglects to give opening scene when she cm · • • K 0 di a k , • • · •T exas ne"· scril'S were uffrred by pr c· l' '-' d l' d b Y much o change next week .
area of unmotivate d her best lines the proper at· pfoys mi spronunciation as Whee·Je r s' • and "Night thcthrt•e networks pubhclly and lop ratings,·;;::::::::::::;::::::;::::::;::::::;:;:;::;:;;:--Alth S Cl a n a t t e m p t a t e an ementeCom· movement. The av..•kward-tcntion. Stalker", bo~·ed on Friday The top.rated CBSsho~·s. munity Theater, some of ness of the-blocking is more sophistitation. The ir byplay night, a ni ght ABC's "Six in ;iddition to ··Rhoda."
the physical potential of the noticeable on the small flar\'ey D.a bling appears over her Pre g n a·ncy ' P.1illion Dollar ~1an" proved "'ere the "Paul Sand " sho'v Pia• · t d d d · to have bee n made for the ho~·eve r , is v.•cll done . .,. 1s·wa ere own an Cabrillo Playhouse stage a victim of ratin gs and ''J\1;i nhuntt!r ." NRC's
some of its comic finesse is than it "'ould ha ve been-----------Ray Judson gives a cool. deflation. It came in 56th OC>st·ralcd rll'\V shov.·s \1 erc
diluted by inattentiveness, given more playing area. ,. ,;,:,":~:~.0~~.":i~~~!·."° deliberate performance as out or 59 entertainment '"Chico and the J\la1t," ·'Lit
o.t1.,..ioreewr1vsp•r~~.-•ro:1 J\liss Armstro ng's new· shows rated that week. A tl c !louse on the Prair11 .. ··· r---------------,.-----,·
I BIKE BACK I
: TOKHOOL l
: Bring !his ad. 1
1 I Take a ride , I
I .... and get a free backpack. I
I Laguna Kawas~k1 I
I 805 Laguna Canyon Road I I Laguna Beach
I 4g4.ao2a
I
'
Open 7 Days
PREVIEW IPGJ
SATURDAY, SEPT. 20
8:30 P.M.
"Uptown Saturday Night"
WllloShowolofon&.l.ltt<
iN THE WESTMINSTER CENTER
.....,....STW:R AND GOLDEN Wl!ST -
Dragon /4Ke l.Jd. "\lAtl:)>,l!ll<MI~'°""'""' Presents
LAOl[S & G[Nll[M[N
~
----Eic:cltJ&li• ------/,fiij
Or1nge County Engagement
NOW SHOWING .... .,.,.. .. , ....
.. r.&Mlllt.l:tl --1:91 l;tt ~-,.. llllOllGNT IMO'IJ U. T
U"'LIWITIO '1111 r.t.lllll/NC
(I I~• <ARK
f-"'' •IL--' St.
S2S.3SU
BUENA PARK
l~•ln ...... ... ~. •' ·-· 121-&070 ORIVI IN
, ... ' ......
s ... oi.. J"rttW•r •I ·-ltw•l tS..)
KZ·24&1
HARBOR BlVD "·-·'"· -•cto .... ~
OlllVI IN ill-1111
CMAl:lU llOHM* ..... _
COlD SWEAT !MI
DEAD PIGEON ,. -"""' ""' --unu FAUii a 11G HAllY ~
1WO LANE llACKTOP m
'""""""""" -ft-urm FAUi.i a llG HAUY ..
TWO LANI llACKTOP ~
....... ""Of 'JWI --MACON COUNTY l'INf ,.,
HIGH PLAINS DllnEa («!
lWO ""°" """ . --unu IAUSS a 1111 HAISY "' ....,... DOB If HUln"' •111
--.... -COLD SWIAT"'
YALACHI PAl'llS.1 . ..,, --u~ l.l!UllMY NIGH! "" K ,,. ,__,_
LAST l'tcnJll SHOW "
JllUll • ""' MIOtOUOft
IASY llDllN :un:an
•
ll!Jfl\lno Dy GU Jorcs.n, •1•oe "~"*' r d r l h d r 0 11 v b d . h r A BC " ..1o11n Mlloi<ft, prit,•nleo bV 1~~ S•n o Un a Cr, . very a n1g t or . and ''Lucas T anner c:i.m1n1tComm11"'tylN:1terT11Ur~t1a'~ deliv e ring SOffie O£ the
tl'lf"GU4'1 s.tu•o.vs 11n111 s.111. 21 .i 1ne , f . 1. A d THE \VO E DI DN'T ease c.onuoP1•vP1011wi,20JA...en10.c..t.r100. show s unn1est tnes. n h Tll E LA ST T\\'0 NBC s.nc1.m1nie.A1wi•"•';on\•~"°""~· Randy Lund comes on, Saturday when anot er new· 0 IV d d
ABC entry, ''Th e N ew sho"'s a i r e '-' nes a y 1~Ec1<.s1 qui te-properly, like !,'tlng· Land," was last. It was seen night. which · .would have '--· ••• ,,.,, ~•le Arrn..t•Ol>Q b l A . n ' ....,_, " ····· ..• ,,,,, •.• , . .., us £>rs a s an rmen1a bec.n" •ood n1·ghl for Nul O.nn~Ll~•n ..... •·· .... in 6.3 million hom es. com· "'b u
fltly1Us . •• •..•••.• . • 11eKuH<>MI'! lothario with .an unchec ked ·r===;;;;o;;o-:;;:;::===="j ~.'.~,.:·.·,--,·,,·,·,--,·~ ·· ·0or~ssi::~· libido, pi cking up the pace pared lo the 19.t million11 iiiiiH~1u11<;11 . .. R•r.Ju<t~ after some pretty dead watching "Rhoda '' fl.1on · ., •• ,, •. .,~.,~ ,
AlldvA .. •<l•n ... .. Ran11 vL11no 1. 1 . d . l day, according to the ...._ { 1a oi:;uc grin s It o a near
halt. ;e~s~·t~im;a~· l~e~s~. ~~~~~~I role of the Minnesota farm
boy overwhelmed by New
York sophistication, but his
liming comes too close lo
his charactcr'-sJow and
deliberate. He is a n actor
who grows on his audience,
though the process tukes
some time.
Amo ng the more di sap·
pointing clements of the
production is the over·
clothing or the partici1:i,ants
i n the o pe ning boudoir
s renc, which comes off
about as sexy as a Disney
movie , and hence beyond
the realm of believabiHty.
1'11SS SPARKS, doubling
as set designer, does un im·
pressive job of · reshaping
the Cabrillo stage to th e
demands of the script,
\11hich include a bed th<.1t
rolls on and off stage. Gil
IUD BROWNE'S
"GOING
SURFIH'"
'
-.... "'" ""'· , ~ ~o•o~• 01• M.O•
She 'II coax the
blues right out of
your heart.
LUC Y MAM l The weakest member of
the San Clemente cast is
Doris Donka as J\tiss Arm·
strong's approving mother.
l\1iss Donka, quite simply,
does not know he r lines <1.nd
her continual groping on ·
stage takes a heavy toll on
the pace of the overall
production. J ordan's sound and li ghting jb~~~~~;;:;:;;:;;;;::;;:~l I effects are well handled.
"The Ninety oay Mis-,m~-
Tll E Of'FSTA(;E: couple
or fl eidi t111d Les Heide play
a pair of bi ckering friends
quite cffc{'tively, though
fl-'Tiss lJ l'idc 's Performance
is far loo ci rtificial in her
Mow Sllow-,
"1llE HINE LIVES
Of
FmTZ THE CAT" ... ........... w-, .....
"WH.i.Ts-11Ew;·
PllSSVC.l.T?"
IRI ~
tress" will be in residence
for two more \VCckcnds.
Thursdays through Satur·
da,·s . al th e C<.1b rillo
PJ :lyhouse . 202 Avcnida
Cabfillo, San Clemente.
11ncnr111
6.6.HJIUllAW
"'"' 11111(11(1_ ........... .... ,.,., ..,. ....... .....,._.
MANN
THEATRES
IAIG-.+JH PlilCES 'l"IL 2:30
:ADULTS & STUDENTS 51.25
'"W•Di+&
UDDUS•111
1'\AY rT ASAIM. SAM"
T#IL.1'1 CHA•S" .
"TH.I.T'S •
-fHTHTA1NMENT"
o.ly: I Z:J~J:OO
S:lN:~IO;IS
t»'l7T_f"i ~TR;g_AIIDUI ,.._.. 1-.~ ......
.I.LS()
"" mos! jOyous mmanllc
11'1115icil DI 11">1! i!!tl
1 Jolie Andrews ;}
Ma~ Trier Moore
" Carol Channing
: 'Thoroughly
Modem
Mllli'J ~IGI
DAILY
MIUJE AT 7:00
. MAME AT ':JO
SUNOA'f ONLY
fl4Uil AT Z:00.6:45
MAME AT 4:20.f;IO
•• ''WHEl.i. DOES IT HUlr 411
"COLD SWIEA r IP'GI
"Tlif IHTllHICIHE l'tOJECT' Ill
.,.ArlllOH•
·~
.. Rill ..
""1'0WH SA TIJIOA Y HIGHr·
"*>HG l°"G COMMICTIOHM
-,.. MACtMTOSH MA.r l,GI
"'YOY AGE Of SINl.t.o•
"9LUEWATEI. WHITlDEA1H ..
''llG. JAIE .. lf'GJ
"S.P.Y .S." 1rG1
THE WHITE .. ,. DAWN
I 2
• l
,
J .. ~, .... ,.dl
'"THE LJ>ST
PICTURE SHOW"
~AU-St••
"EASY RIDER"
IRI
ARTS FESTIVAL
AN D MUSIC UNDER THE
STARS-SATURDAY
SEPTEMBER 21 , CITY HALL LAWN
FREE
AITS RSTI'fAL 12 to 5 P.M.
Featuring Painting. Drawing.
Music.
Dan c e & Thea lr1 c al
En1erta1nmen1
FREE CONCERT 7:30 P.M. ~
ON CITY HALL LAWN
EVERYONE INVITED
from the producer '.of
"the Godfoth•r"
ond tfiit di<edOr of '
"Lody Sings The &Ives''
You're Going To l ove
ROBERT REDFORD as BIG HALSY ......... ~ ............ ..,\!, .. ROllERTllEDIOllD_....,,.. llCIWllPOWID
LinlefclllSmm&HALSY
ll~t..-..r I mM
. _...._ llmll llU-Y LICIJI-' , _,, ......... r ....... ~·· .-1 ..u.ti. .... Qllltl81Ul9M ......... ,..i_, ~
I I ? tlo-«I "''•N•V·~ll' t..io. b,MOYl:l"-9 > F•·--'-'"'nfl,_.... l .R. llf.STt1cuo :::! 11erutt :~
BAY Se~~s:-:~31 -9988 BROA.DWAY Santa Ana 541-4737 !' ""))
BUENA Bue na Park 511-1816
CINEMA WEST #3 Westminsler 891-4493
CINEMA WEST #4 Westminster 891-4493
CINEMA CE!IIfll#.4 Costa Meu.919-414l----
CINEOOM! 20 Orange 532-3318
FOUNTAIN VALLEY #1 Founlain Va lley 839·150B
FOUMl'Alt4 YALUY Hrn.14
Fountain Valley 527-2223
GROVE #1 Garden Grove 537·6600
LINCOlN Drive-In Cypress 527-2233
SO. COASTlaguna Beach 494-1514 ,
SH.DWC~SE Spring Valley 460-9781 VlllA Oraryg~ li39·0066
.
llOllflT ifMD~ilG HALSY _.,.. .. ,...,~,,.,,,
.......... J.PGWll
linllr....i•ULSY ·-·----~---... -~ ... _,, ........ -, .. -""----i..-~!,!lll' • Ttt'm _.,,,.
CtHIMAI • ,. ................ ., CIMIMAS
. J&4 , ...
Sl~POIJlER BllL~ ' -' !URRY llElARNm'i ~ ........ UPTOWN 8.(J1JRl)4\I
0 NIG\~ ~ .... A
1tCH41D PIYOI: r.wu. llllY
·' -tLUS-
JA.MIS ......... ..
"SKIM GAME"
' • •
•
....
•
•
-
C ·8 DAILY PILOT Thursdl)', St9lfmbtf 19, 1974 f .................. ...,_,, ........... ""-"._.
TONIGHT'S ' ' ' • ' • ,
' ' !
• -
TV IDGIIlJGHTS
' CBS fJ 9:00 -"Support Your Local Gun-
flgllter." James Garner as a runaway groom trapped
Into be<oming a hired gun in this 1971 <omedy
western with Suzanne Plescbette.
NBC O IO:OO -Movin' On. The truckers
attempt to dissuade a friend from hijacking his
own truck to pay of! a gambling debt. Claude
Akins and Frank Converse star, with Richard
Jaeckcl heading the guest cast.
KCET ED I 0:00 -The State of the Democratic
Process. In this episode, "The Crisis of the Con·
temporary Presidency.~· Republican views are pre.
l sented. •
·yv DAILY LOG
Thursday
·Evening
SlPTElllU It
'*~·:.
. .
• '
D World Footblll LAaue * Houtton Ttun1 vs
Birminchlm Americans
• (I) lliil--._ MoultollTlllH&-. ......_.
1-t;~~-=---
Friday
DAYTIME MOVIES
......... -· (WU) 'SZ-wru11m Eliott. t:IOQ(<) ___ h_
lit(' (dnl .............. "'"' f .
JIM M ....,... (i'11) '39--
dlllfT'J. .,,.... r.att
...... (.-) ... ~,. Autiy. "f:•
est INprt' (dr1) '42-fttd MK>
·"""· Clllldlttt COlbtrt.
mlt!_lll .... -,. -~·-"""· ""' '""'· IM 111.,._ ,,_, ~ (*')
Business'
Sets C'leitn
Air Fight
SAC~!ENTO (AP)
Business, labor and local
government is giving Gov.
Ronald Reagan a go-Mead to
fight federal Clean Air pro.
visions that ~·ould reportedly
be disastrous to Calllornia1s
economy.
About 1l representative$ of
tlie three sectors nodded their
• 'genera I approval" Wed-
nesday after being told the
South Coast Basin .. could o~
vlously not survive'' en~
forccment Of the Clean Air
Act's pro,•isions.
Rea'gan called the closed
m eeting to discuss a draft
r eport by his Task Force on
th e Clean Air Act .
Environmenta lists were not
Included.
e Store Klllh1g
. -. -. •.
PIJllUC NOTICE PUBLICN~ PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
,ICTITIOUI IUSUrftt I nf7S M..N4NJ ..._ NOTtc• TO CllOITOltl
NI.Ml ITATblaNT NOTICI TO t••OITOIS IU,11101 COUIT OF TM• IU,11101 C®IT Oii TNI
T1lf follo'WlllO PM'Mlf'lf ,,. llfolftl IUflll!Otl COUIT fW TMI ITATI Of' CALl,OINIA FOa .STATI o• CALl•OlllillA '°l
lllltlntll •11 • ITATI OP c.u..1,oaN1A ,Olt . TMS COUNTY 01' OlllAM•• TMf COUNTY Of' Oll:AN••
AY•&S CE•lllTOS. • LI m It.. TMI COUNTY 01' OltAMt• ........ m "" A.-tll . P1rtMnl\lp, tofJI a~/IVl'lf $!rift, -.. .. ...,,. MOTICI Oii NIAJtlNG , °" ,.llST l!ttllit Of Gt.AOYS M. WHlTI!, HIJMl~<Wt IHd\o C1tlfotl'lll '2.... ltllt• •f lUTH J , Hl!SSL.Elt, AM•NDlb PITITIOfil 'Ol PlOIATI DK .. Wd. 1".0. tOll A. Hllftftftflon llKl'I. QICIUld.. # Oii WILi. AND POI. L•TTlltl NOTICLLS HEllllY GIV(N fO 1111 'C•~1r:~:r*i..ottr1 IUl\,DlltS •• CT:i~!:~' .,,1•n:E!:!Y .!~"!" ..:.O.tt:i ~:,~i--=·}~::sySAMUEL. lt081<ASON. ~':1~ ~-= ~':° ... ~~":~rm d=:
Cllltornll ewpor.Uon, 0.Mfll 1'1rtner, 11111 111 ,,.,.,,_ htYIN,I cl1l111• 1111n1t Dtct1Md. ' lhl .. id d1cedenl l•t r..a1,1lrtd to fllt
20tS1 ltOOIUUKlt '""'· Huvllnoton '"' .... dtttdlfll •rt r.ci11lrlfd to flit NOTICE ll HEllEIY GIVEN 11'111 thtm, with , .... MCHllfY VOll(Nt1, In a11ck. (1Hfomll _.... tMfn with fht llt<'"Nlrf YOlll:lltft In DEIOltAH LYNN lt01£1t$0N Nit fl.IN tilt ofllct of lllt Cltrk llf lhl llMWI
AYllCO l'ftQl"l!:ltTllS, INC., • fM Offttt ti' IN cllrk ot tf1t 1!.ov. llt!tlll 1 1'1"1 """"'"" Pl'flllM fw tn11111fd court, tt to il'ttMfll thln'I. with C1Ufotftl1 corJoOl'l llon. Ll111ltld 1'111Mr. '""'lM covrt " ........ nt ttlMI. with l"roNM " Wiii •nd ,.,. 1,w•llW ol lhl l'lf(ftllty YOlld'Mt. to I h I
'°'s1 l rooktWr" '*""'· Kuritlfll'IQll TM _.rt vour:.11111'• 1o 111 , L•n.n TfllM'ltftl•rv to the pt1111"*'• Wll:Ml'r ,, ,,. 0111cw of hi• '"°""""
lttdl •. Clllfoml• ntM, --· ' • ..14 ... , ..... tM offk't of iwt-1ttwn1r1. m.,.nce ti wlllcti It rMdil tor ""',.'..., •UllTO OAULOIN, TH ~M s&"o'. Tllll butollllt• 11 llt Ill c ...... w... r Q.11.llNll!ltG, IEltNHAltO. WllSS AND p.1rtlcvt1r .. anil Hiit ... llrn1 llld IA NEL&ON, 610 Ntwpott Ctn.... .....
• Limited ,.,,.,.,ll\lp. l(AltMA.. 1..0 Ctnlwv l"lttl: ltP, lllltll of l\Mrlno ..... """ tit• ""II Mt """'°"' a.tell. ClltforC'll•, wlllc' 11 N!~lt.T SHOlltES aUILDEltS UJO. l.ot .t,C'lftl" C.Ufon\11 toou. WPlld'I tor hpttfl\W u. 1'14. •I t ::M 1.rn.. lhl ~· Df tlllllnltl ot , ... l,IC'ldtnlgnN
G.ntrtl l"trft;tO' lt tht plte•"' MIMI.I of !he und..-.IOl'lld 111' 1M c-1r-Of Depertm1r1t No. li'I 111 mtlttrl ,.11tli'llllO lo tilt 111111 Thl1 111111Mlff llltd w111'1 TIM COlll!fV In 1n 111111"1 ptrttlnl"'O to th• ••l•tll i of Mid court, 11 700 c1 ... 1c: C1n11r of s1ld <ltcNtnt, wl1Pd11 tour i'llO!'lll11 Clerk of Ortll(lt county Oi'I AUlllSI •• of Uld dec:ldlnt, wllhlll foUI" l'!IO!\llta Ori .... w.,,. 111 Ille Cl11 of '•nit AIMI, 11111' ti.. 11,.1 pUbllClllOl'I ot rtil1 llOllCt.
ltt•. 1lt1r !hi flrtl PUbllc1tlon ol lhl• llOllCt . C1Ufotnl1. Dtlld SIPl.mblr 11. 1'7• NUM Daltd Al.o011t.l'U, 1r1• Dti.d SlottMbtl" ,, 1'7• WILLIAM It.. WMlTE l"ublltPlld O•lflfl COii! Dt llY l'llol, JACQUELINI M, CAllNEV WIU.IAM •· SI JOHN, E.•te._.tor af IM Wlll
1', •rid hPltfl'lbtl' S. 12, If, l•kV!rl• of tht Wiii C111111ty Cltrll, ot thl tboYI Nl!Md W.tdtnl
·:::_ _________ c"'t::.:.c1•1 • -..... lltt!M4 dlc:ldtnl JAY w. MIND••so111 IUltfON, GAULDIN,
• e1t•INa11t.e, alllllM#JtD, '11 fiMWlllr'I Ctflfitr Of'., Sit. 1111 TMOMION AlllD MILSON Wll~i:: KIJtMA NtwP9" hfKtt. Ctll*"'-"'61 U..,_ IWlll auli.111 lM ,,,. 119', SlllM IUI (1141 ......U '11 Ntw"P«t Ct11 .. r OPlff Sllltt ISM l ----~---,.,-,.,=,.,---1 Lott Allttkl. Clllf«fll t1D11 Attenlft' tN't l'ttlNIMr NtWJlll'I ltlth. CtllfCll'•l1 nut HOTIC• TO CllDITOll AtlWM¥t trw .... ~ l"utllltiMd ~tl!O" CMll OIUy ,!lot. T1h (114) '40>117t
O, IULK TllAlllS,•• Publltllld ~Inge r COltl Olll1 ,ltot, StPltm'-r 12, IJ, lf, lt7• :W0·7• Alt•MYI Mr •x1u1t•
(llC'I. "•1 -'1t1 u.c.C.) AllGIUll tt. tnd hpltmtw s. 12. ,,, Publlthtd Ortll(tl C.0111 Dilly 1'110!, Nollet 11 M,.b1 1lvtn tt t111 Credi!«• 1'14 :rl:'8·7• PUBLIC NOTICE S•Plcmt>f:r 12, It, U, oetoii.r ,, !ti~ ot OLD "ED DISTIUIUTINQ COMPANY 3'11·1'
PIJBUC NOTICE
A Corpor1Hon, Tr-•-· wl'I ••• butll'llll lddf .. I " 5CO Ntw'POl1 Cltftllf PUBLIC NCYl'ICE· l'"tCTITIOUS IUSINISS
DrlY'I, NtwPOl'I l lKll. CMtty et Oflf'IOll, MAM• STATIMINT
511'9 of C.11Mmlt 1 ~t • bulk "'~Ill' I' .,~-. Thi fOllowlnt ,.i'Mlll 11 llOflll bWlntU KOflCI DP PUILIC KI A•INO TD 11 1b011t to bit midi lo 'EDCAL 01!1• ......... ,. 11: t• HILD ST THI OltANOI COUlllTY TRllUTING COMl'ANY, Tr1ntfll' .. , MOTIC• TO CltllDITOltl NOllRI$ ROBERT'S HONO.... U02 l'U.MNIHO C 0 MM I IS I 0 N ON
whoM Mlllltl lddr"' It tt-'Q Trll,llTlpll IUl"llUOlt COUIT OI" TNI Norltl El C1mlne R11l, Sin C1tintnlt, l"llOl"OS•D LAND USI OtUlt\CT
SlrMI, Lo. A11111t1. CDUC'll'i of L.ot ·::re:~~·.·:-.. •·•• N:: CllH0tnll '2612. CHANOllS AnQlltt. Sl1t1 of C1lltoml1. '"' Norrl1 ltobll't't Inc:., 1502 North El Ottt of 1111rlnp: Stpl<>mber 30. 1t7•
Tiit Pl'Ofllttly to M trl'fltftrl'Od 11 Ill .. A...U Ctm!no Riii, Sill Clll'llltftll', Ctlllomlt Tlnll of Ht1rlno: 2:30 p.m .. or 11 IOC•Md II $00 Nr.wport Ctnttr OtlYI. ~''"' of JOHN .ERNEST llDWELl.. tt6n. IOOl'I ,~.,..u.r •• OOH1blt.
Newport hleh. Coun;:r.:I Orti'lltf, $1•11 l lSO knortlft I t JOHN I!. llDWELl.. Tflh bUllHM 11 condllcild bY • LIK1tlort: ll:oom 161, Eng\l'lftrll!O
o1 c111forn111 111d l R1ytntr $1f'....i, Olft1Md. -corwritlon Bullolng, er:i Clvk Ctni.t Orlvt W.s!, Ven Nuya, Counly o1 Af!11111s. Sl1I• NOTICE IS HElltEBV GIVEN to tt\11 Norfll O. ltrlllmll" S111f1 A111, Clllfornlt.
ol C11lfonll•. t!Wltor1 ol .,_ ltlO.,. ntl'l'llCI dlCldltftl Thl1 1tttwment w" Hiid wilt! 111t PROPOSAL:
hid llf'aplrfy 11 dtscrtbtd In IMMl'll tlltt •U ptf'1Clft1 111"1111 cl1ima. ~lnoit County Clvk of Ofll'Ot Cllllfttv ort Chlnge o1 z-CASE NO. J:C t t: Alt S'Otk Ill lrld1, fl•turei; ICWIP-tl'll 111<1 dKIClli'll trt r1q11lr MI ~ 1111 A1i111utl 21, lt14 16-1' Sl!CflONAL OISTIUCT MAl"S rr.1nl Ind OOOd win ol th1t LI~~ llvM-!him, w1tl'I !hi l'llCltll'l' VQU(hlrt. 111 '""' 2• tnd 11+4. to clllnve from 11'11
""' loc1ted II S00 N1wport Cent1r Drlv1, t1'11 office ol b cltrll of !ht l bollt LION Ll£ONIAH Al ISRJ "GtMc'l l Aorlcullurtl ISlcti'I ~""'!.!rfof~f"•~~ ot.:-:-·,~:. 11111111<1 court, Of' ID Pftllllll tht"'° lllllh tto1 Wll1lllr1 llvll, Ne. 601 Rfflf'lctton1J" lo the Ml "L1glil
Vin Nuy .. County ol L• Alltl•ltti Slit• tht t1-11ry vouchtr1. to I h • Lii A111111t. C1lll0t•l1 *J6 tndvs,trl1I" D111Tlcl wrt1ln pn:191rl~ of Ci HfOffllt Undtrsltl'lld II tlw LIW Ottlcl tf Tll 1!1)) n7·71)4 loulfd southe11l1rty of El Toro ROid,
TM b1i1lk ir•t11.fer 111111 bl tOl'IWl'llll'lllld ROIElltTSON, HOWSElt • GAllLAND. P11t1tlshtd Orange C~lt D111v Piiot, on ! .... nartl!lltl 11dl ol Whl11tr Drlv1
Qll OI" 1fttr '"' ltl <lily of l)clobtr, OIQ C•m,~,· .. , .• 80>C' 2rn.,.......... AUQUSI 21, 1nd Slplt111ber s. n, It, IC'I "'* El Toro ,,.. II ,...,.,,!Id
PUBLIC NOTICE
WNG BEACH (UPI)
Dale R. Lentz, 23, a liquor
store c lerk, was shot and kill·
ed \Vednesday after tin·o rob-
bery suspects took $100 from "'°"" lt74 tt 10:00 A.M. 1t Oflk• ol DIY\d lllCll. ti lom •• wh Cl'I ' ICI 1914 UU-711 by M1rg1rtt It. ltowl1C'ld,
G. w111tt, 700 Wlhhtre &olll•verd, Lot of bUlllllll .. the \ll'ldtnl•nld Ml •It c 0 M p L I A N c e w I T tt T H E
UPI T...,.._ AnDelff, county •I LOI Anpl••· s11tt l'!lllllt'"f pert1lnlnt t1 "" "''"' tt PUBLIC NOTICE CALIFORNIA EN VI Ito N M INT A I. the cash register .
Police saJd two men, one
armed with a rifle, entered
Cherry Liquor Store and
demahded money. One man
scooped the money from the
cash register and Lent:r. was
shot as they fled the store.
o1 C1lllatnl1. Slid dectdtfll, 1111111111 twr monlPlt •fl• QUALITY ACT:
So f..,. II k,_lt to 1111 T,..,..,.,.., ... t1r11 publk1tlOl'I of thl4 llOl1c1. Thb protlC"t II•• llltn ~ ..
•II Mlnllt "''"• •nd lddrtlMI ultd Ollld St,11. 10, 1f7L MOTIC• TO Cltl:OITOlll "-YI no tltnlllc1nl ldY11rte lffKI on Carol Fong doesn't look 1w Tr•'"'"°' tor 1t11 ti..-" veKI 1111 HELEN C~AJtLOTTE 1 10WELl.. Of' IUl.k TltAMS,llt tht envtron1Mnt ,1111 r1 prOCIOWd 11 p1st, 1r1: 1•mt. , E~..:utrt• of lh• Wlll Cltct. .. 11 _ ,117 u.c.c.J bf 0•1nttc1 1 11t111nw d1el1r111on.
too happy, does she'. 011111: 11 hpt1mber, 1t1• of thl •boYe ,..meet <1tc10tnt ""' , ·--, 1 ,.. crte111 A COPY of thl ""'u"" de<:l1r1t1Qll FEDCAL 01$TR11UTIN~ ltDll•TSOM, MOWsl• & OAll.AND Cl ' ..... ~ ... I Ytn ° I . ori ..• ,, .. -,,,, '" "" office of
The Hollywood motorl.st ,.. e Dr of fllkll Ol1lrll)ijll"'O companv of ..., ..... COM l"ANY llfttllllll ' C1lltornt1, Tr1n11w«, whOM bullnttt thl County Cl"t, tt 31S NoHtl p U } } e d into the ~~·i:::~ L l lltlarworth ~ Mleh. Ct"llnll acklthl It .SOO '"'*P«I Cltftltr Drlv1. SY<"l lllDi'I Strlfl, S1nl• Anl, Ctllltti'lll,
D t t f SICfl'liry r114) S4f.Mlt Ntw,.t INch. CCN.1111'1' of 01'1"91, Slalt Room 501. e p a T m e Q 0 1UnllWCMl:Tit AND WALL•I A11'1t'111I fW l!QC!ltrl• of C1Htwfll1, lhtl I bulk tr1rufet !1 Any pencn mlY fppttl !ht-pr°"°ttd
Aiotor Vehicles to re-.,.. Wihhl,.. ,..,,,. l"ublbhtd ~"'" Cot•• o.n., 1"110! •tlO!tf 10 bl l!'llde 11 FEDCAL. 11tO•llw llKl•r•tlort by n11111 •n 1PPf:•t
Whoopst
Sul,. ... llClltmbtr 12 lf U. i rid OC~r 3' OtSTRl8UTING COMl"A NY, Tr1n1terff, wlltl !hi County Cl1rk 11rl!ll' to S:OO • 1..,,-T-m new h e r license. S he L• """"" C111"'1111• ... , 1'1• • • :W:W·1-' whau bllllM .. IOOl'hl •• SM Trlurnpft p.m .. Frld1v. Stpltmblf ,,, 1'7•. Afllf' ~ ~· al ull d . . 1m1 Strtel, Liit A119111t., COllfllf of Loi. t~t d-ltll !hi lltl•llYI dtcl•••llon
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The so p e mto a s ign 'ut1111htd Of•nt1• c1111 01111 ,.not, A/1111111. s11t11 of c.uw1111. '*-ott1c111.
and ruined front of s.pi1111btt It, 1t1• ss12.1• PUBUC NOTICE Thi property 10 be 1r1ru:1ar•t<1 11 Alt P'I''°"' 11!11tr 11vor1111 or eppo11no jurors voted against ~eath, 1oc111<1 ., soo Ntwport c"''" D!'lv1, !t!lt propoul ,,, lnviltd to pre .. n1
and the slight, stooped, 57. car. DMV wouldn't let PUBLIC NOTICE PICTITIOUS aus1111•ss Ht WPOrl BNch. County ot Or1no1. Sl•te tlsllr vi• ..... belOl't ..... Pllnnll'l(I
her take test because lllAMI STATIMINT ot C11Llornl11 •lld lSJ.S L• Cleng1, LOI Com111lillon. It It r9Q\lfSlfd Thal Ill)' year-o)d k a r a t t instructor NOTICI TD C•IDITOllS Thi following pw-i r• doing Angel11, C~ ol l..o. A~l1t. ~1111 wr!lllft r""'°l'ltl be tUtHnlllld fO lht
pt then stood d bo ed her car was not in • t1ulln11t 11 . ot c1utomi.. l"i.nn1nc1 c:omrnht1or1 cwior 10 111t 11t1r1""' we ' an w OI'" auLK TIANSFI l"ALMETro .USOCIATl!S. bn Stld ~operty 11 duultied In gt'ltrll <lite. three times -to the jury, proper condition. cs.a '1" -'1t1 u.c.c.J arrc11 s1r..i, N•w-llt<h. c.ntorn11 •i ; AH i.tock In trlCM, ll•llK ... 141ulp. For,..,,,.., 1n1orm1tloi'l1 T1~ l.l<I· Notre. Is i-.b'I' ctlYlft lo ltlt CNd!tor1 -wo ..-' .,,.I'll Ind food wOI of lhcit LI-1)1111. 20SO or eeH 11 lflt tffkt of tt11 OflnQI ~the judge and bis defense at· ti' OXFORO DISTRIBUTING COMPANY '' -loc11M 11 SOD N'....,ort Cenler 01'1¥1, llflnl """"' E '"" I PUBLIC NOTICE A Corpor111on. Tr1n11et'or. wlDI Millfft FOllEST LAWN COMl"ANY, • Newport BMch. County of Or•no•. Sl•I• C-lf ,. no °"" , "' , "" tomey. lddriii 111• SCI) NIWP«f Clllltir Drlvi. Ctllloml• Corpor1tfom, 1n2 Sol/th of c.u1orn111 end 1US L• c1111941, LOI l11lldl111. 11_,, ns. a Clwlc C.nt~r
The Superl'or Court i'ury•s·l--------------IN.wport ... eta. C1111nty "'Or•no•. St111 Gltnd•I• AVlli'l\lt, Gl1ndll1. C..lllofi'lll "•"· County ol Los A(l9fltl. Sl•I• Drive WW, $11'111 Ai'll. C1Utornl1. r• FICTtTIOUS IUSIMESS I I tl20t of CIU10rrt11. feclllll lt <tt.pOlltt. rifer to lC 1...tt.
decision Wednesday means NAM• ITATIMENT ~~· 1~.111··bl thllm~ llut~ ··;~~1( 8 A I.. 0 A ,. Ac IF I c Thi bulk ,,. .... ,.,. will .. COl'Sllltlmlltd Publhhed 0f'9/IOI COIJI Otlfy l"llol,
The followlC'll ptrt0n1 11'1' dOli'lct DI STftllUTING COMl"ANV, TrlflJtlftt, DEVELOPMENT C 0 MP AN V , I Qll or lttlf" IM lit <llY of Oc:tolltr, Stpftfnbt>r 1', '"' )Sl~J' James Mi t 0 s e w i I 1 bullneJI 11: WllOJI bulll!IM .odr11• 11 5'«1 Triumph C1t11om11 Corpor1tlon. 371) BlrcPI 197 ... , 10:00 A.,M. •t Offlu ot Dtvlcl,1-------------
automatically receive a life AYRES VALENCIA. • Llmlll<I strMt. LOs ;&.flOll•" countv ot L•• s''"'• Newpcirt •••ch, c1111orn11 tw0 G. W•lllf', 100 w1111>1,. Boulev1rd, Loa PUBLIC NOTICE 1"1rlntohlp, 2<W51 9rookhur1! SITl'f'I, ""9•111. $!tit of C1Ulotnl9. TPll$ tlllllMU ,, concll.IC'Md b1 I CllM•ll AnltlH, C-ty ol LOii An~··· Sl1l•1-------~~=--,==
prison sentence for his con-Huntl/19ti)n Bltdt. C11lfor>tl1 '2~1 T"' Pf'OPlttr lo bt 1r1ntferr1d ,. Plrtl'lll'lhlP. ot C.Hlornl•. NOTICIE °" IHTINTION TO IEN•AOI viction of the killing of the P.O. Bo• "· Hunllnglon h1d\, lot111d ti 500 Newport C111t1r Orlv•. FOlllEST l.AWH COMl"ANV. so fir Ii t-to tht Tfllllftr". 1111 TKI IAL• Of' ALCOHOLIC C.llfornla tU4I NIWPOl't lllel\, Cot,mty of Or1ng1, $1111 I C1Utorn11 corw••~ 111 tMlntll llti'l'la llld ldilf'llstl llMd •IYllAHI
strawberry king Of the San Fr111~ H. Ayr" a. SOii ContlTllctlon o1 -C1"foml11 lf'ld lUl1 South Slf'1tl, By JIC'l'la A. Arntr'cl'I. by Trltttflrtlt fvl' fllt three '""' 1111 Stottmber II, 1914
G br. l V ll Co ... 1 C1llfotnl1 eonior1tl011, Genetti C•rltol, C-'Y f/11 Lo. ...,,..I.It., Sttll' Viet l"rnkltnt PIS!, 1r1: Flllcll OlttrllMlllno Co., $00 TO WHONI IT MAV CON CERN· a Je a ey. Partner, 20951 Brooli:llurtl Slrfft, Hllf'I. of C1Utoml•. Thl1 tllltnttnf Wit fl it<! Witt! thl Ntwpon Cltftttr Drl:tt, NIWPOl't B1ec:n, $Ubllcf lo l Wti'ICI of thf lltei'lll tlngton 8tlel\, C1llfornl1 92W6 Stld ptOPtrty 11 dtscrlbed In Otllfl'll Ceuntv 0 1rk f!l ~Inge Coui'llY Qll COunlf of Qr1nge, CAI. 11'111 :lSU L.I 1 I t
• '°' c t Frink H. Arm .. Son. I C1IUornl1 •t: All llOCk In "Ide, tldvtn, 111ulp. A11111,11I 26, l97L CJ ..... 1, LOI Anotltt. Counly Cl Loi 1ppll1<1 1«1, llOlk.t It ~ ... •• ~~~< l•W etc en er corpOrttlOl'I, lmtlld P1r1ner, 2C9SI men! Mid aood wUI ot thtl Liquor tvtl· F 3&'90 Ano1IR, CA. lht undtr1 Onld PfOCIOMI "" ' ~""'''
LOS A NGELES (AP) A Brookhllf"ll Slr11t, Huntington 1!111th. nlU loclltd' 11 SOO N1wport Clfflltr Drlvt, IU.LDCk, A.ltllllllCN, MOllllSOlll, DllH: 13 Stplt{'f'lbef, 197• bever1011 II the preml.lt<'1·,,,,"Kcr!~d
. -Californl1 '2d'6 Nlt'NPOl't 9ffctl. Gowtv ot Ql'1ngt, Sti lt eAlltlTT ANO BAILIT Fl!OCAL DtSTll:IBUT1NG II loll-.: 15'2 Newport .. tit " $125 million m:tpplng center Thh toculnt~• •• i.1,.. conctl/'tttd by of C1lltornl11 Ind lf521 South Str11I. 171! '""' ......... A1'111¥1 COMPANY IA"'' C1llfornl1. . I Llmlled Ptrtnll"lhlp Ctrrltol, County of Los AJM;11IR. Sltll OoltMlll, Ctlll9nllt ti• Tr1n1ferte Pursuti'll lo 111tlt ll'llfflllon. !hf Wtth Offices, a rooftop hotel ~ Frtnk H. Avrn •Sort o1 C1lllatnlt. tsot.SlJI II' Mt~lH I v Edw1rd L 8utterwOl'lh ulld~llOl'td 11 1pplylng lo 1111 O~r1rn"1'
d th . f C0ntlrucl1on Co., The bulk tr111Jflf 111111 bl cMIUfTKTllflod PllCJlllM<I Orinot Coal! Diiiy l'tlol .S1cr1t1rr ol Alcohollc BIWfl!lf Control for lnu1nc1
an more an SlX acres 0 ~··L Ptrtnlr Qll or '""" "" 111 dly et Odc:!Gtr. SIPltmOlt 12. 1t " !WI Otlober i. IUTTl!:R'#OllfM ANO WALLE• ot In 1koholk btY'lfl(lt 11("1._ tor
interior sunlit w a I k w a y 5 Thi• 1t•twin•nt 1111<1 wfth nie County nr•. 1t 1o:m A.M. •t Offlct Of 0.¥1<1 itt• ' ' • ,..,, ;:, wt,:_11111 a.vtrt•re "'"' prlfl'll5ts 11 1o11owt: .. ..,.. o N
I k t d I dsc ped' Clerk o1 Or11191 COllnlY on: AUctVll G. Wtllltl', 700 Wllthl,.. &Nltv1rd. Lh LM 1Alllllt1 Ctlllwtll• ,..17 !IALE BEER A WINE iPUILIC a es, s reams an an a 1. 1n•. An~•llt. county ot LOI AnttfH, s11i. PUBUC N011CE • 1m1 PREM1sEs1
afea9 I! -tn -the -"'Ork9 for Ptibllsliltf Orll'IOI Coest OeMy ".Wi:. o15;i~I:"'!:~ to tilt -TtliKlll'lt. Publlsned Or•nve C011I Ollly Piiot, PubllNlld Or~~A~:;.~ 001~Np~:
do\Vlltown L-Os Ange les. A11gu11 29, StPllmber s, 12, 19, 197• 3ll7·7' 111 bua1neu "'""" 1nc1 1cklrH~ lllM PICTmous au11N111 '"1411111111' If, 1974 l509-14 $IJltemW ''· 1974 W»-74
Plans !or the COmpiex Call• bv Tr1n1..1..-er for IM fhr• v11rt 1111 lllAM• STATIMINT PUBLIC NOTICE , PUBLIC NOTICE p1~1. •rt. wrnt. Th• IOllowln• Plf'IOM 1r1 dolr.g PUBLIC NOTICE
ed nie C'.entrum were un-01tt<1: 13 Stpttrnii.r, 1n• bu1ln.u 11: l--~;;;;:;;-;;;;-;;;;;:;;,:;;---1-----=.::=:.:_:::::_::,::=,,.---. -' FICTITIOUS IUSllllES.S FEOU.L DIST•!BUT1NC U.G ENTEltl"fttSES. "'41 Ntccom•. NOTIC• TO c•.•DITOIS MOTICI TO CltlDn'Ol.I Yelled Wednesday by ~iayor NAMI ITAT•MIJllT CO'-\l"ANV Mh•lon v11io. C.111. t»7Ji 0, BULi( TaAHSlll• Of IULJ( T•AMllll!R
•Tom . BnJdley. Ground break·,,'._"' 1011ow1ne PlfSotl 11 dolno bl.lll111ss ~r,•i;::d L. sunerwort11. MJs:'on'"v?e1:~J;:',;i1~"W,J1-· Motl 1~~11:1 I ''" u.c.c .1 is.ea. 1111 -'1t7 u.c .c.1 .
I I Gtor91 a Wfflrorn 2'ol41 Niccornt a 1 • ~ V Yll'I 10 the Crld!lor1 Notice 11 n.ttb'I' Rlvtn to tlll Cred•lorl
ing IS set or ate 1975 and Klltl'I''$ MEDICAL P'LAZA IUTTlll:o~~ AJID WALLlll Ml11lon v110. C1Utotni1, f"WS 'ol WINFl!D OISTRllOTING COMl"ANY. of WINFEO DllffU IUTING COMl"ANY the project fS to be completed PHARMA.CV, 3Cl7 Pllccnllc, Newport J1f WlhM,.. Sl\lllQ,. Tlll l lll11l111S• It Clftd!Kf«I lly I Ofllll'91 A Corp0ri!I011o TrtmflfCll', W'llOll M!il9ll A Corpor11lon. Tr1n1llf'9f, ""'-1Wsl111u
In l ffi . , Bitch, Callf1rrtl1 26'0 f· lvtte ... p1rtnll'1hl~. ldcltH• It SCIO MIW'OOl'I Ctnlll' Dl'IYI, ldclrltlt 11 SOO NllfllPOl'I C11'1111' Ori~
ear y 1978, 0 1c1als said. NEWl"ORT BEACH P'HAR.MACY, ............. C9'"9tnl1 '"''" G. W111frorn N~ Sffdl, County cf Ortnot. Sl•te N...-riorf BNCh. COlinty of Oflflltl, Sltll INC .• 307 Pltcenll1, Newport 8tich. 1m1 lMt 1l1t-nt Wtl t1ttd with tht of C:..lltornl1, 11111 I lllllk lr1n1!9I' II of (•lllornll, the! 1 Wik frlrt9fer 11
• St Stri·~ C11llornl1 '2660 PubU ll'ltcl 0r'""1I COIR Dtl1Y l"!tot Cwnty Clerk of Or1ng1 County an lllOUI '° bl mtdt lo F!:OCAL 1tloolrl to be m1C11 II FEOCAI. etc n.e Tiiis b111l.,.11 It conOUCtld by e Stpl•rnber 1t, 1t7• UIWJ Autii1t 14, ltJot. OISTIUBOTING CDMP'ANY, Trtntlltl'11, DISTRIBUTING COMl"ANY, Tr-f.erfft OAKLA ND ( Up I ) COl'portl!orn "*" wlloM bulln1u 9ddfft.I Ii. 5'«1 TrlurnPh ~ tM.ISlllHI 1e1c1r.U 11 Jf«I Trlumpll
· NEWl'OltT IE.ACM l'llA.ltMACY, PUBUC NOTICE l'ublllllld °""" Coe11 Dt!ly Pilot, StNtt, Lot """""' CCM.llllY of LOI $!,_,, 1.11 ...,....., c.ounty ti LOI Stewardesses and stewards of 1Nc. Auc1111t ?f. StQllmtlll'" s. 11. ''· 1t1• :141·7• ""91111. s111• of C•llfOl'nl•. Anotlff. s11te et c111for ... 1.
H....... Alrwest Alrl"ine wt'lt •'!.,~~~. s J. klll9Y, Thi Pl'9"rlY to bl trtn1t.rrN 11 fflt P'OOll't'I" to be trtntftrred 11 "6-'""' .... ......, NOTICI TO CltlDITOftS PUBIJC NOTICE toe1ttd •t 500 N--1 Centw Drl'tl, loc•lllt i t MO N1wPOrf Cit!"" Orlv1, , g strik F 'd I This ilall'lrllnl WM rltOd with ,.... Ofl' aULK TllANS,111 NtwPOrf a..tl'I. eo..intv o1 OflllQI, Siii• N1"41POrt a.eel! Coun"' ot Or•ftlllll'· SllM o on e n ay un ess ,,. cs-.,,., -,,.,. u .c.c.1 of c1111om111 •nd 3111 l!W ColorlCIO o1 c1111orn111 ~ s10'So111h Mt. Vlfnort
an 11 month contract dispute ~°""'Y 21c1f,~4 of ~'""' County 0" No11c1 Is 111re1>y olven to tt11 crld!lor1 PICTIT1ous SUllHISS Blvd,, l"1Mllfnl. '-'1 et Ch Anvtl", A••. sin B•n•rdlno. count¥ ot s11 . • UctU!. ' . "um ot WINffD DISTltl&UTINO COMP.A.NV ~AMI STATIMINT .Sl•I• oil C1Ufomf1. •-rdlno, 51111 of C1llfort1l1.
lS settled. L!:WITT HAYDIN AND NACltMAN A Corwttlon, Tr.,.lltl'OI", whoil1 tivsin111 Tiii l1llow1,. person 11 doing bulfftKI Slld Pf°""'1' It dlterlbtd li'I (lllltfll S1!d prclllll'ty 11 Mcr1b\t.d 111 •tllll'll --pl 550 A u.w (O•l"OltATIO .cldreu 11 5llO N~ Clnt.,-OrlYI, 11: •t: All •lock ILtrldt, t!llM'•L tqulp. 11r All itoc:t kl tfldl, tll!tl.lr1t, tQlllP' lllC company em O'yS l~ V"'IW llwl fll N ... pOff &Heh, Cllui'llY Df Ortrlfl S!lll MIDWEST DISTltlBIJTOlll, JM Y lrlffll llld oODd wlll ol fl'llt Liq~ b\111-rNflt 1nd oood wlll ol 11111 LIClll« bu1lo
flight attendants including 32 Suitt 1115 ' 1'~ of c1n1orn11, 11111 , bulk trtnd.r 11 1"11<1, L1g11n1 l11e11. c111r. nw ~':' !! ~-NtwpOrt Cll'll ... or1 ..... neu lottted 1t soo N..,.,,i c1111•r 0.1 ... -a] I ~rds ••-F-. EllC!M Clll-tlil• ibout to be midi to FEOCAI. kirk ltlcht rd ZlllC'11kt. »t y l'lt(t, of C..lliw:~ .. , ol Or111111, Slit. N..,..p0rt ... 1c~. Cot,mty of Ortf\11, 51111
m e s ewa • m »a.II ran· T•t· n..2ut I DISTRJl.UJJNG C~l"ANY, Tr•~,.,... LIOllC'll ltlCh, Clllt. tU.SI .tl'(d t :1 ""' 3111 En! Color•do Of C..llPornl11 tM;....Sl'CLSOl.rlb-N.L:••tt-cisco Las Vegas Phoenix and · ••m wt1o11 Ml,.,.. M:frii1 11~s.ll>-T~ ~Tflh-11ua1nn11---t.---C011C1ucttd ~"-'" 5,119• of-r.1::;..~-of-LM-A,...._, Aw.~B"nwd1no, c-~ ot s.~ ' ' · s L •~11 c ... Lot lnd!vid\111 -B-rdfno, Stile ti' C1lllorn10. Seattle 5 l"IJDll'llld Dr1nt1 Cottt D•U1 l"llof. lf'Mt, os ....... L °""'' Of Kl'rti ll Ztll k TM bulk tr1CK1er wtn ii. ~m•tld Tf\t Miik tr1111flr will bl coniumrn11H • · St-pte111Mr 1%. 1r, u, 1JWI Otloblr 3, A"'"'"' SI•" of C1rlfw'lllt. · · "' 1 Qll or lftlf' 11'11 ht dty rtll OClobtr, on or •fllr f11t 111 dly Df Octolltr, 1•14 \974 )1111·7• Thi ~ to bl tr•n.,1rrtd 11 Tl'llt tttllrntnl Wt1 flied wllll lhl 191.t. ti 10~00 A.M. 11 Offlc1 of Dlv1d 11 10 A.M. 1t offkt of OtYld G •
• Fruit Fifes localed 11 soo Ntwport ~., 0r1 ..... ~-tr, 1c1:;~ of Or•no• Cll\lnty on G. W•H•r.1..100 w111t11r1 Boule•1rd, LOI w.11.,, 100 Wllthlr• 1ou1 .... 1rd, Lot PUBUC N1wport &Heh, CO\lnty of .... 1no1, s1111 UQU• • A~ ... l.Olli'ltv of Los Ano11e1 St111 Al'!Qlits Cllllftly of Loa AnRtln r.r1tt SACRAMENTO (AP) _ An. ot c1u1orn11; •lld 3030 H1r11or eoult••rd, ,.uiu ot c1111ornt1. ' o1 ciu.O..n11. ' . . . C01!1 M.-1, c-ty of Ol'•nee. St1l1 o1 l"ubll!Md Or~ Coa1t Dilly Pilot, So fir 11 k-n to lhl Tr•n•l••H So fir 11 known 11 tht Tr1rut1rteo.
Infestation or t he oriental [ru1t llNWll C1lltoml1. Sllltembll' 12, ''· ~. l'ld OClober 3, •II blnl111111 ftl!Mi Mid lddrlMff u~ 111 busll'IH• n•m•• •nd tddrhlt1 """
fl •--been f JllT h id ,..ooerty Is dela'lbed In f11*'11 lft• .J4l1•14 .._, T •-y 1143 ound In San TM tor•-·r 1 •. 1 11. All •tock In trlOI "-""'" equl11>-.. , r1n1 ... or tor !ht ltlrt1 ve•r• lttt b'I Tr1n11eror tor the '"'" yND 1111 • , """ng PlflOfl • 11111 vul Mii · • ,__ pis!, ltl: Mmt. p1.i. Ml: .,...,..
Diego. 11: IMfll •nd ooo<1 """11 ot 1111t L.., ...... b'™· PUBLIC NOTICE Olt9d: tl S..t1rnber, 1n• D1t.d· 13 h~tmbtr. 1t1•
But "-'orry not, they "'ill 11~::AK~~A ~~~uP1t.RcH °h"'~~e~'t.~ ~~'r~.100~~ ~':'~.0t:=r. ~~~~volirR1auT1 NG ~~!~v°1sT111 auT1NG
be t ed to thei d tbs b OPMENT, 1NC .. Sllltll 4500 C•rnou• ti C&Hkltnf11 •1111 JCO:i Mlrbor 8ol.lllv1n1, HOTICEs~:·r::r.DITD•s By l!d'Wltd L l vttlfWorth TtBMfetM ur r ea y Dr., NIWPOl'I •••ch, c.. . Cost• MIMI, CO\lllty of Or11111. Stilt of IU Stctlt•f'I' By EdWtnl L avtter'wofl~ sex and food says the state Cll'rou R•• P1rtln1, No. 31c )900 C&Utort1l1. 1'111~ COUIT 01' Tff• Tr_,.,.. Stcrtt•rv •
t P1rkv!1w L•n• lrvlne • rtUL Tiit lt!.llk trtntfltl' wlll bt Cli'lll.ll!'llTlll" STAT• Of' CALlllOllNIA l'"Oll 1un11tWOftTit ANO WALLllt IUTTCawo•TH AND WALL••
Department of Food and T1111 b\111.,.,,' 11 c~ uCtN b't' •r fr1 •. tt 11 •trroo ':' ._.111 1 d.v ot 0<f-00
1'*t'J TN• cou.,""•-•• 10lANGI n1 Wllf.hlre ....,...,,.. 1111 w111111r1 ......,,,.
A 'cult lncltvld\111 ' • ....,, ~ Offlcl v... • $viii -llllM ... grt ure. C~rroll R. Pt!'klrTt G. W1U1r. 100 Wll•/tlft I OUltvtfd, Lii Elllll ol JOHN ANDllEW •ODN.t.lt., Loi ........... C .. ltnll ,,.17 Lit A""'"-Ctllt.m• The department said the Thi• ''"'"""" fd wllll tht A!llllH, Cllllflly of i.o. A111111n. s1111 Dtc1t1.111. ,.,,,, itm " . . . . .. CllJlllY Cl«k 'of w~ COIJlll tn ot Cll11otn11. NOTICE IS HElll!IY GIVEN ... ... l"ubll1hed Dr•not Cont Dl11'1' 1"1111. ~lthtd Or111119 COllt Diiiy 1'1~
male annilnlation technique, --A-i;oust :H. ,,,... --Y so_ f1t.....11__lf!O'll!'ll to "" Tr'-"'"'"· cttdttor• of 1111 •bctv• 11trnect d1e1111111 StPllmbll' 1t, 1tt• »Ol·7• Stpttmbtt 11, 1•1' 1111).11
In which a sex lure ., used ""™ .u IMlll-"''"" ,,,., _.did,...,..~ 11111 •11 P',_.-fltvl111 cllltms evlh!tl ,
, • 1 Pu1>1l1hfcl 0r1noe oe1t Diiiy ,.not. bY Tr•f'.l.tllrtt for tht lllr" 'ftln ••11 fl'll 111• dieliffnt ••• reQV!Nd to flle PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE
on males, I! m operation. It Auguit 29 1nc1 Stp ber J 12 , 1, p1si. 1r1: Mmt. -lhlm, w1rti 1111 ntee•••rv 'f'OUtfltrt. ln''--------------'--------------
1 rded 197, ' ' lilt J O•tMt 13 kPtlmblr.! l'1• 11\11 offlc. of Ille Cllrk of tht 1&ov1I s rega as one of the . • FEOCAL · OtSTAIBUTING . 1ntltltd court, or to Pl"Mnl lhlm, wlltt O"l'l~IALitttOClaDllllOSOl'TitallOA•DOf'
most efficient a mong all PUBLIC NOTICE iOMPt.!!! tM llK"''"" voue11er1. 1o th• Wl'1av1so111o•o•aN01cou•rT,CAUNR1t•A •
. • r1n1......... undlr1l•llld at tht L1w Of1k 1 of klNDEL St.,.\All,CAH.n.11
measures against insects. ::cr~~~rd L •vt•-th~ ANO ANDER.SON, Im N 0 It TH ... ,.gullr lftlltlftl .. tlM IOlrd et lllPll'YllOrt oil Or-(atnty, CMhrlll•, ...
MOTIC• TO C•IDITOllS IUTTi!•WOttTN A.HD WM.Lii BlllOADWAY, SANTA ANA, CAl.IFOlllNIA tlni111•h~...,.otthlOlllritllf1M1rnM..,. ... .__.,"""'"'W1w• e Safe Landing OF IULJC TltANS,111 1" Wltflllr. ......,,,. mm. whlclt •• lhl pl•C•. of b111lneu tllldS 1 I ... , , .. ''"· 11 t 1JOA.M. n. foOowlflO Ni'M'll _,,..... a.IC'll,,...,_l 1111,i
CSIC1 •1t1-•ltf U.C.C.J Slllltl"" ol tht U!'ldll'alflled I" 1n 1111!1tr1 &.o.t,~;ft.W,lllllC'l.Orfid L ....... ,lt.llflf!A.Dlt*kltt1t1Ma.r..
Notk1 l1 hereby' OIYI~ to 11'11 Cl"ldllor1 Lii IJlfllet. C..1119r711• ptr11lnlfll lo ltlt ftlllo of llld dfcldllnl, ~ It ,_.i,,... tit tt-.lllllllr of UM tf OC'llMll li'!lltri'IMIMM .... ..,_.. A.rttr'lt LOS ANGELES (AP) _A of DINCO, A Corpor1tlon, Tr1i'l1f1r01", 17'U wlmt11 lour l!'lonlt!I 111tr !Ml tint ..._.,r:in-.1111 -.....,,.l'llll'tr,1,.~.L..,...Nwri(. .. .,.._bw4I
P A . W Id • WhMI bu1!~s• tddrl'U 11 500 NtwOOf'f l"ubltll!M Ol'Mfl COlll Otll'f l"llot, P\ltlllettlon ot thlt no!let. ~ ~"°' -._.,.wo. CMltrtel tor c.tnllnictlM 111 Cr..._.. CMJell 11094 I an men can or Airways centtr or1v1, Ntwport B•1eh, county st,itmbtt 1,, 1n• 3516-74 D•ffd Auiiutt w. 1'14. ......,.. 11._.. of ••• ,,. ec:uPild "' Mowtton ...,_ • ., ,... 11._ ...,., or1.,.
747 j etliner m ade a safe land· :' ,~'";',~"'~~·~. ~~··~':"1!:' m1::! · ~:~~~.v ofE~r:_u,:1~T; WRIGHT, Slbnlnet of .,.-1111Mlctt1on1 ,., 11111 aNdl. ,. ... k. 11.tcr'Nlli..1 _. Hl••k •
ing here with one or ;ts 18 10 FEDCA L 0 1s1R11 uT1NG COMPAN Y, PUBJJC NOTICE TM 1ttow ri•l'llld d•cldlllt ~~1,'..,'"' .. ~.~ ... " !",lhOr .. :~..,· .-,,,,_• .. ,•.~,nl-'r.,'t,•.,.-' ~~-"'"",,',•" Tr1n1lerH, whOll butl11tu lddrHI Is l(INDIL AND ANDlllSOlll ....... ... .... --.. --landing wheels missing, offi· Jf«I TriUlllPh SltMI, Los Anotles, County su .. a11101 COUllT OP TN• 1• KORTH •1tOAOWAY toPtlQrllllLlll'lll"tDlslrlct.H-lflOllwllot""°""'°ll'"'_dletlOl,Yll~br•t dais report of Les Anoll ... Sl•I• ol C1llfornl1. ITATI Of CALI'° ... , ... ,Oft SANTA ANA. CALlfl'OlllllA nm VllAwor .. "'"""""4!11t "HollMfllt Au11Wlt1 centr~ll•...,...... ,...k ll'""°"mtll
• , , Tiw OfOlllrtY !1 bl tr•nslerrfd 11 TKI C'OUHTY Oft OltAMe• f"•I llf."77 ....... ll'EPI SKUen S •'*""tll I• ......... ~"""9t'IM.,. f.,,...,IC'ltnl M Pan Amencan flight 812 louttd . ,, . JOlli Ntwporl Cent1r Drlv1, Nt, &411•1 A"'""" fw PICUTlllX ,,.....,. A.cl lCETA ), Tll11 II <Mlr•t..11.,.,...... Gli'IVICI ltw~ fHllllll•
from Honolulu lost the wheel ~1om~~~~'T/r;11~~,:~·J~~ "JW',10:.,.~l"~~N°vntf: ::l",'&: ,;::::'s. ~~~~2~"{;i, °'1'Y ~.i :.=:~~0~:::11i!':':1':f,1.!~:'::'.,~~==:'1o1~C:
on takeoff Wednesday but c-~ of Sin DllQO, Slt ft of C1llfornl•. L•TTlftS Tl'STAM•lllTA•T ~ u. := ......... ~--to r.!Mdlr• •lf•-•ll IW cw lll'I llr'kl1 •it
made a normill flight and Jan. .,~'1A11f/ttll'trt'!'U'ti11115 t:C::.r1~1~ •• 9'.::;;~ 111ue~~·t11 T~lt=~Y ~JP~ tt.E:;· 11 e~~ PUBIJC Non CE ::,..:~~~1!:. i:;-;::1';',~:!~:. ~=i'T;:.~
di g ·Ith f th 220 l'lltfll •nd wit! ot !hit LIC!lllll' bus!· Dtc,.Md. . -· -·--$! -P • R ... . n W many 0 e nest Iota t SCIO H1wport C•nler Orlvt, NOTICE IS HElll!l,V GIVEN lhtt ,ICTITtoUS auttttlSI nt ....,,..,.., ttt tMtOii'lltll. AIMn.MMM • tit l'I, ""' terea1 ..... 1 •It
Passengers unaware of the NIWporl BllCh, County of D••110e, Sfl ll BEATlllCE I. WETZEL Mt fll9d Mr•ln MAMI STATIM•lllT ~· fi'KlllU.. Bond ACI, City et or...-. II •,,........:I. 01 ..... c. llcllhrock I
k aid
of C•lllOl'fll•i Ind 17SJ Euclid, Stn t ltOO, • ptllt!on for Probtte of, WUI Ind Tiii toUowlno ptrtOl'll .,. dolna blnlMU ...itMd Mlmlttr 81 ...,.. IO JU'l'llllle .llllllc:I s ..... CommUiM. Pl'IC.lamllllltl 4
emer gency, a spo esm an s . CIKl!ltv at s.n 01..,.,, s111e.o1 c1111orn11. for 111111nCt of Ltll'ln Tttltfl'll!'l1try ••: Mni"1t lnotllll'IOlnel O•• ".,,...,,.., ~t If ~11r1t1....,., 1.,.,.o11un" Thi bulk trenlltr w1U bl tonsll"lmllld to ~ Plflll-r ,...,ll'ICI 10 wl'llcll ll.t.INIOW lt.IDGE. ttl41 COll1 '9tlll, ltMSl•llndAcl,Oty otTlltlllrl,ll ....,.YH.E<-mkCM1•0t•Mrllw~ly l PUBLlt NOTICE on OI" 11t1r 11\t 1•1 dty of Octolier. I• midi off lurlblr ""'11Cu\i,.., ltld El TOl'o, C1rlforttl1 '2UO proc!llnW. AMlwntnt ROii C0tr1<11Mt1f'Wfl't111H . .._.Ullllffr••r•lf'tnlN. Trll '--------~-----IUJ•, If 10:0!) A.M. II Offltt of 01¥1d tti.t 11'11 flmi Ind Pl•(I ol ht•rlllO l(Jr~ EIPPfl', 2'141 CO.II 11.tll, El fnll:lltJll"I .............. E•*'l'-tf IN $9n JUitn Ctoillr-LlltrlrY It-•• ,.. .... •. SL,·745" G. Wtlllf, 100 Wllthlr• IOlltrttrd, l.ol 1111 lll'N hi• bt•n ... tor s.crtemMr Ttrl. Ct llforrtl• ~ ...... """"'.,. • ..,.....,... ......... ""ltl.,. .. "'91Mt .... ,.,....,. Dli!lertlfttf
NOTICI TO c••••T••• Anotlff, Counl'I' of Lot Anoei.t. Sl•I• 2 .. lt7•. II f :30 1,m .. 111 fhl CO!Wlt00111 '"" Dobson. sos •. Ellnl Lllftl, ~lllflSl"O'lld.AerHIMC'llwilfl~•LrWlfldflt-illMlt., ... c;.-.., ot C11llornl1. ot DIPlrlmllll Ho. J ot llld court S11t C11mtn11, Ctillofi'lll Nfy Is 1$11f/fO\'M, ~ •Uh ,,_ &. lllutttll & Sen, I"', trw tc1UI•"*" t1llt11 I
SUl'llt!Oll COUllT Df THE So fw 1i tnawn to !I'll Tr111tl_, 11 700 Civic: Clt!ler Orlw WM! I~ DOI/I MclAod, 24'02 N~ Dr ........... AGl""'*ot w1ll'I A, J, P1-.1n1, flQYlrM •r Ol•itlorl tf L.M111 Ne. UOI, I IT.A.Tl 0, CALl,OltNIA ,.,_ ~II bus!ftHI nll'l'ltl l i'ld ldd1'9t5tJ lllM lhl City of Slllll Ant Clltlomlt ' M111klrt VlllO. C1llfornl1 ....,........ A "'*' tlld c .. o1 ICllM WI 1111 Dts*lmtftl If lllllCUtli 1!11111 SI~
THI COUHTY 01' OltAN•• by Trtnsflfor tor !hi lhttt .,..,. 1111 D1ttd S1 ... .mbll' • '1t7• . Curt Mllllr. "°' Mont• Crl1to. ••rt ......,. .. ~· lteport btlltllOrl•O. ""' ...... """" lw COMINC.11111. • tttrrnortl • l Nt. A .. 1ot7 • . p.11, 1r1: 11m1. "' ' Cttmtftte, C•lltornt1 --·-•••'", ,. , •• ,,. _,,. -·-• E1t•t• of JOHN GEOR'iE ... OfFMAN, Dote:d: 13 "e'-"'· lf7A Wc!~,,tAM,,,',· II .IOHN, Thi• bultnes1 11 COl'IClllCl9d b> o llmllod . --'""'"'""·""'1''llf>-.... ,.,.._,.. tptlla l know • JOHN G HOFI' ...... ' Ci .............. TllO ,,...., .. CMl\p.!llly I•.,,,...,... TIM rnlllltf et ,....1111-. W!ll'l l 1 '° 11 t .• MAH, FE DC A DISTltlBUTING l",t,UL. A. NANN... Plr1Mftlltp UllhW'sltyof atltlrnla, lr'f'IM ter lr.-ilflr of lfll MMlc.tl Ctnt.,-11~10 $tpl. I llSO kl!OWll II JOHN HOFFMAN, lllO COMPANY ... ,...,..., II Uw lt.ltlr ElJtPtr ft,L 1'19 INtttt of 1tl1Cllnt • UMlllUlfll W .. HollUftl E.._. ...... tRO Dtmtll
k-II JACK HOFFMAN. Dlc:'Ntld. Tr•n•llrM .. , 0.Ylf' Df1 ... Suite JI Thh 1l1tuierrt Wit flltd wlfPI "" SC\ldrll<ll'ltlrllt9ll•'""-U, •• , ... TN llftll'\tlf'lllOl'ltll •..MlfMIS.°"""A"ie."'l\tl'• •o,TICE IS HE•IE'BY GIVEN to thl B1 Ectwttd L. lulllrwortll .. ....,.,, ~ c~,.. County Clll'll ef Oflf'l<ll c-ty '" ......__eencfil-lollllr-tt-A-lflrw6flt11".n ..... t111U.l.A'"-'10lt'~ crl'd '°" M IN •bow nalT\ld dec:lllent Stcrlttrt T•h cn4) "'*"'"' ..,....,,btr s. t'7• ' .............. ., .... __,., -..... ,. 11'111 •II "'"°"' "'"'"' cl1lm1 •••Intl BUTTl!:•WOITit ANO WAUI• AlfltM1 ftt1 hmlfiMf' . ......., 11t1t.JtC•tt,.,.,,ltdlottwO+Mnu.t.U0tt11YMlllMhflfl·CM-t.A,......tlwll .tl
"" 11!d d«~tnt ''' requll'ff to 11tt :, w1.,.1t111re '"'".,.. ~llbllll'lltd °''"" CO•tr 01111 Ptlot. l'ubllihl<I Of•no• '°''' Dtltv ,.1'°', lnliltllfilnU Ufllt llMI 11t t11rt11111 _, io1111 00..,.,... O..tt" tin.., It ~rH '° "'
'--------------------------.1'1!1m .... ~1tt _.lhl 11«1111rr YOllCMra .. 1n Lot··-CtllMl'lllt .... , ~mblr IS. 14 If, 1t1• )U6.14 l t,Ottnlblr -S. 12, It, u. lt7• J)M.7( 9itrill'. StttlitlftMI" C0wr1 UM, MDI SrtlllM. Inc. ¥1. °"""*' " ......... Trll'l•ltf'4 !ht ,.,., ·.,, TM cl9rk ti' 1t1t ·~ l1'1t 1 1 ~::.......:~~~ . .::_.:.:,_:_: ___ ....:,::_.~1 :.::::.:.:=...::,c::,.::.:,;;:_c:c:, __ =::.:.:1 ~IMtrftt toprole<l«CWl'lt, °"""" ftlf11 ~Mii. ltMIM. Tllltt~ tro4
tntlnfld court. or fo Pi'fflM tlllm. with .. ri PUBLIC NOTICE ft(l:Ultr OMael.., '''°'"ni...•. Po1111c1t lttf•rn ACI.+: ,,,., 1,,..1..., A propoM KOCE, CHANNEL It'
OrangC CoWJty's UHF television station, KOCE-TV, h.as scht~uled the following special procrams today. Detailed
listings of Cllanntl 50's programs are carried ln the Dally
.Pilot'$ TV Week each Sonday.
fM n1<1t111"1' vouthtrt, to I 11, flubllthff °""" Coli! Diiiy Piiot, P:UDLlC NOTICE ~ a1a•11<11l W tlM Zentne Codi ••ltrldlfll r.llM If .,.... lteM "''Nno dtCl~loouJ lll'lffrslRl'ltd tt !ht L1w Office of IAIRD, hptembll' lt, 1t1• 3511·7• I . flfir'fWto .. l'lllll'tlntCMml....._A~frlMllllWtlfeN°""'._..._,....
IAlllD, wuLl'SBEJtG" WILLIAMS, P'.o. PUBUC NOTICE l'ICTrnOVt •111 Nl11 lllCTITtoUS 1us11r1t1 .,.,,1s;l11M!lmCtl'llrMtiwtari1M1ttt1 ... ra•e-.i1M. ,,.. ... N•~3 9o11 'Tm, 4210 1..ono 1Mc11 11\lf,. 111, 111.t.MI STAT9MINT r,AM1 lf'kTIMINT • WILLIAM E. $T J
A. Long h1cl'I, C1Ufornl1 fOI01, wttrdl ,ICTITIOUS IUSIUSI TM folloWllll Pll'Mllt •re dolnt Thi folow'l1'1 HnOl'IS IN dolflCI · Ci.'1lof1MIMnltf""4t'f'I
.. ""pit« of bllllllttt ot"" lll'llltrtlOlltd NAMI STATIM•NT 11111tnu1 ••: bll•IMl'I ••: Ol'fl'ICIA"'"°'••ouHJ&Ol'TMlllOi\IOOf'
In tH ll'lllltrl Plf'lllnlnt ~ "" ttl•I• Thcl fotlowllll PtnOl'I " '°'"' blnll'lltl THE °'"'tclAI. MOllU: HOMI 0 • p MILLClllEEK ASSOCl~Tl.S, • IUN.ltVllOftSOllOftAlt•ICOUNTY,CALIPO•••a of Hid dtcedlnl, .ttPIJn four tnOrllht •11: I UYElt.S GVIDE, 125 VII )littltr .. • C1Ufwn11 Umlfltd l'•l'fMnl'llP. i6l S.ltl&AM.Ctt""""9
tlllf' ll'lt f!r11 PUtllletlloll of nit. llOll(I. NOttTH W'ESTEllN LANO AND Mtwl*'I lffth. Cttll. ""' Sin MJ111tt . Dftw. Slllle '· NllWPOll ... ~--m.tlfle .. "" 9Nrt If ~.,., If °'""' ~fl catll1rtll .. •Ii
11• OllANGI COUM'TY •IVllW CCI Olltd 1tmn1ber 10. lffL CATTLE COMPANY, nM WUl1rd Tl'lornl• L. si.w .... ''! VII W•tftn. 9eld\. c:.1"°'1'111 ""° ~Oewrlll111 IOlrd ol lhl Olt1riCU.....,......., tt9... If Wfent••.
11111 •OCUI OlANGI COUNT"f IC) MAlllON HOF"~""'' "'"'·· 11 lOl"O. Clllfornll m.30. N.wport ll1c11. c.111. t!MO M. °'"'' . .c.11'(, Otnlr11 ''"""· II, lt14,•t•:JOA.M. f1W191llWllll ~iMfNll'I lllfpl'lttnt; 1111 "AT IC: Htw H• Fir YOllll'l" Admlnlllr•tthrofll'iew!ttll Low.ii I. Skow. ttl•r WUWird ,,....... H. J.-Chtpmtn, ttOI Chltmut A,,..., .. lrnertld &ay, l.tGllll .. h•eti. mM;ll.W.l1tUf1,0.wlfL.hlllr,•.ip11oa.D1••ttuilndtt11tltfk •
..... ..... IUILOI ..... ··-···· of"" lbOYI ntrnld det tOtnt 11-foro. (lltlorn11 '26)11. Ct1t1 ~. C1tlf. ttt.J• Cll!f«fllt ""1 .. ,, .... ______ ~ '"tc'i "llv'of.lo• ,.:.. Ml•• --,"•-•'I aa110. 1.t.1110, WULllS•••• Tiii• tMlnHI It tlnlNct9d II'/ .., Tl't/1 1111:1111111 It conctvct..i Ill' • ...,.,., Tiii• '""''*'It CMCklctecl ., • nmltecl TrlCllNl.,.._.......,... Trlnlt« ,,.,.n-. .... iy _.... ~-,,. ............. ,.. ....... Mn l'O N & Wl"l.I..,_$ lndlvtduil, ptrtlllfllll,_ .,l'fM!'tlll"· d ~-. h .,..,..,..0. Ot'Mtt Olunl• lt1tf'IMIU411f1:1 ..... U, 11 -9 21
Oft•AM MACMlllll iCI Dkll fl'.D. iMlt 7711 Lowlll I, $-0!" Tholt\11 L SllWl'lt <II M. D1vlcf'l(t!IY, ..........., AN911M ..... M·Slre.t ~·"' ~l'ltl t Kl. Nt . IO h =,..,,..,Allen
C.vt" t(wt V011111911! lllif ..:tort ~ UWli 9"dl ., .. ,. Stll, A Till1 1t1ltlMfll Wll flled Wlfll the Tflll 1llltrntnl WJt• fllld wlfll fM OeNfll P'"'1Mf Mllltr W. -.C.IH .. ll'ctlltl<lt Ill' IN C.,,,..M Liltrl,.,. GrMI ""411 t ..... lot Cfo
Hurd Killllld IM VI*• Ulldflf'J ....... 9ffC\. C•ll,..tllt ,...7 COllnty Cltrk ot °""" Ctlllltf Ill C8llflty Clelk of Or~ Counlf on Tiii• ., ... IMlll .... , rri.it Wiii'\ tbt ~ .... #ftO'f'ld, AIMmbl1 1111 Jtll "~ tC'ld AtllfMIY llU J:1U 1• ",• '"*" 1111 canlrlbvlon IO ••2~ m,,-.. ··-···~..... Sttltlmlltf s. "'" A111111t '" lt7L • CWC'lty Cl"I. of Oflfltl CWnt'I Ill '"" ........ ti (_.._..... Vkkle ~II .... nlH " ltlil Mtflll••r C.orf\ t111 focllt on Arnerktn *"lt\lc!U .,..,,,... -m " ,,,...,., .. . PUnt A\llWtt, 1'7'-llrf.llllrOr"*"'lt""""'llCl.cl.ThllMrf..r}MWMl!lfl!Mft'lltrlfJ.Mmen'lllOl'·::r tow•rd reni fl'ublllllld Or·1npt Cotti DllTY P'llot, PllO'ltht4 Ont• Coell OtllY itllol, PvOftsl'!ld 0rtflllll COllf D~l/y l"UOI, • 1'4Ull WILLIAM E. n J
t1JI "!DI V1110tcA•11s j c) s.,tll'llW It: 1J, 2'-Ind Oc"'1er :I. 51Pternt11r 11. 11, 2', lll!d Otlobtr J. 1t7• AllOV'lt tt. lflil Mipt111'1Mr J, 12, Ir. Publl•ftell ow... eout Dell}' '""· • • OIAoftM...,lllot,.,.l: "l"roct51ion" UO m1"1 1f74 i..._1• ins.1t lft• :t2Mo1' hctt-ller j, 12, lt. Ht lf74 JJU.74 "*'Jllllll~<MttO.ltyPCN(._......., ,,,tt,4
)
\ • •• '
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_)
MIXED SING.LES
TUMBLEWEEDS
by Wm. F. Brown and ,Mel Cas59n · ,
/IJ~AT flAPl'lfNf P
t> i.li? .+loon.I~
i.lt ~-[7
1ll0 MUCJ.l
HAllZ ~PIZAV.
by Tom K. Ryan
·DOOLEY'S WORLD
1 ~
•
§§
Thursday. Septernbor 19. 1974 DAii. y PtlOT ("7 '_)
l
f
~
~
by ROCJer Bradfield --4 :-----.
IN 5llOW 81% ~
Wli CAlL 1WiT° "fll~ 616 flt<ISlf
•
'TO GE1 .. TllE O!-D ADRENALIN ASTIR
FOR 1llMORROW5-~AmE, Fl"!.l.OWS1 1 ONCE AGAIN I SAA~L ~EAP.:rliE
111EREU. l?c A WAR PANCE AT l1-_PAN_c_e,,,, A::-N_P ,ONCE AGAIN I WISH
1HAT IF I l]'VE:R CATCH1J1, ... E:___Dr:_,·=S_M-::O:-C=K=:;~::-;-=::-'11rr-::::--::-::::-""'1 .--~~by'.,..--G_eo_nJ~e_Le_mont--._... ~ov wHO .si:NPS ME11!c----so :i: ,.o .. ,,. 11 .. ,,. ,.,.Ke-:i: .,.,.,._._ "" .......
EIGHT O'CL.OCK 1 10 A:JINT OUT ...
11>NIGH1L. •
Co"SA.o..:s .,...., Wl<'f! ,-HA1" WIL-1> HOF!Sf'S KNOW WHf!F!f'
----, " \,7t; •••• WHeN MO,..,,t?AY "fO•PRAG MIS SHe GO'f' 'f'MeM!
N16H1"' F=001"0ALI,.. AWAY FR.OM
'
l ' )
MUTT AND JEFF
IF 'lbl.l DON'T PLEASE
11AY VOUR REl'IT GIVE ME
OUT YOU GO! A LITTLE
O.K. I'LL
GIVE YOU
THREE MORE ' =:\--r-'I MORE TIME,
MS.0LOTZ DAYS! ,
~ijl
,,-.'-'"°"'')\ t~t
;;::-(/\ .... . '•
··O · I ~~
0 ''P, ~· -...,.· -.<'.. '--"=="""""'=-----~--_.-f~ ... o.~,"""'
FIGMENTS ,_ ....... _ .....
NANCY
IT WON'T
COME
OUT
TODAY'S CIDSSIDID PUZILI
---ACfllOSS--43-Htd • _ _
1 Undtfllood thought
wi1houl 45· Sever•I
woids '6 lmp1im11nt
8 finl111ock 48 Printer'• unit
11 801rd'1 49 Chemktl
comp1nlon compound
l4 P1-s>etition SO Averege
15 R1i11 52 lnMCI
pic;1yune 56 F1c111 twitch
ob;.c1ion1 57 Of numll'QI
16 Pitching 1111. d1t1
17 Pr1p1u1 !Of 60 Highel! note
1111· 61 Thething
governm1111 dl1C1.11Hd
19 At 1 diu1nce 62 Mon111al'1
20 Held up Forum
1h1 blll 63 State: Abbr.
21 Copied 64 Sep111t1
22 ..•.. UP shOP 65 A Rootevelt
24 Engll1h river
26 En&h•h
weight units
27 F1uit
30 LIU !WO
movie• word1
32 Locarrty ot
a11l.al
33 S1igm"
34 Ch1pe1111
37 Medical
1ubject:
Abbr ..
38-Kind of
classified ad.
39 Cesa ···-:
Toronto
landmark
-40 Piece of
1111 a111111
41 HM11m1M
42 TIM to
plec111 : 2
WOldl
OOWN
I Young 'uni
2 Help
J Torpor
4 Palm 111d:
2 worcls
S Polic11 l0tce
membe•:
lrilormat
6 End1ngwi1h
!Ind Of Ila
7 fmofion
8 Eager
9 Movie
riicknamo
10 Sent lo
·Cong••••
11 lnc1JJ1ble:
2wo1d1
12 J-wed .
13 Eu1opean•
·18 Nol g1n1rany
f01Jnd
Y11t.11d1·f1 Puzzle Solved:
23 ···Nol: 41 Auimila111
Cambodian food
president 42 Horse-drawn
25 Ending wilh 111hlcle
old 011een 44 Shoulder ···
26 Oisp11ch 45 Sueam
27 Cieom111ic barriers
form 46 loved to
28 Western lllCISI
Unl11d $111111 47 81lot1ging to
city 1he •~is
29 Of the body 48 Ch11g1
JO Straigh11n1d 50 C1~fornia
up v1ll1y
31 Roundof 51 C1u1ing:
1pplau1• Suffix
33 Tibl•, lor one 53 Mad1 1
35 Riv11 of hore ii'! on•
CIWla 54 C01Jr1ge:
J6 Bugle ull Sling
38 W11tfa1. 55 Ac lion In e
man'• wo1d game
39 G9-g1t111; 58 Acme
2 words 59 M1k1 lac•
I'LL TAKJ;:
CHRISTMAS,
HALLOWEEN AND
APRIL FOOLS DAY
by Al Smith
by Ernie Bushmiller
NEVER
GIVE
UP_
~UTS
'
. . .
JUDGE PARKER
SINCE WALT 15 HAVING
A DIFFICULT TIME REPEATING
HI!) SiORY, WHV DON'T YOU
{ELL HIM WHERE YOU WE~
LAST Nl&iT, JUf,TIN ?
MISS PEACH
' i
I
!
-ANO'T'MIS IS oP<li a TME Vlilr~IONS
~ATLAS MOl.OING UP THI! EAlrTM!
DICK TRACY
®
'IOU HAVE TME "SWEETl!ST"
~~VOIC!, PURCle , YQY TALK.
WAS ON 1'V... 'fHIS se-r
ANIMAL CRACKERS . by ROCJer Bolen
---
, • 1 :'=>. t: /
t;z--;~ ~,l !
~ ' "------1---...;,_......:;.. •
by Charies M. Schulz·
,--,---~--.-,
I GOT 1'\lE NEW CAN
OF BALLS OPEN WITHOIJT
CUTTIN6 MYSELF!
by fiarold Le DOUJC
by Mell
• ME Al..WAY5 , Yli. /loAYtfE
Mlf'S ONe OF
"Oi~ £MYS 11t<O
HAS SUCH A
DISliolrUNTLIO
LOOI< ON
HI~ FACE!
VES·OW,'l•S·I C.AN
GIVE 'fOll A READING
AT '2:•s, ves, SIR.
Flfll.S Tl11i
woin.o OWES
HIM A l./VINW •• .'
by Chester Gould
A. MR. SMITM?~-~
-SOUNDED LIKE A
FINE CUL "TURl!D
UENTL.EMAM. Co0t11t
'
11l'm so sorry Mr. Nixon raiaMd-1 Just t••'l Rfl uw:d lo DOt havina
a Pnslcknt to pklt Oft."
DENNIS THE MENACE c----.,....,,
• •
'
-
' '
'· '
" . -.. \
I
' '
DAILY J>lLor
-·-
. .
"" .. , c~ "'~11t!J•t.: ....... 1000·22.?9 'i>•' CL •"1 .,,..Qf91' ,, • .......... 3000·4699
;.i.: 't • .,, • tsusYness, investment & , 1nani:ra1::-, ....... 5000.5049
~.,iJ'.,1 ' ' '• • . •
'Anno~· ""l. ments, Personals, ..• ,... . ,,.,, .J; und ...... 5050-5499
~* Repairs, 6000-6099
. -., . . ...... •• . .. . .
' • The Biggest Marketplace on }he Oranp Coast
DAILY _'-1' Cl ·ClASSIBED_ADS
You Can S~ll It, .Find It, .[ 642 .567S)
Trade It With a Want Ad
' . ' . I '
; One Call Service
· Fast .Credit Approval
, ,. , • · Genoral 'R.l. • · 1002Gener1I R.E. JO!l2 Gonoral R.E. 1002Genora,I R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002Ge110ral R.E. 1002 Genor1l R.E.
Employment & -->
Preparation •••••• 7000·7199 · '·
Merchandise •••••• IJ000.8099
Boats & Mcirine
Equipment •.•.•• • • 9000-9099
Automobiles & other
Transportation .... 9100.9999
1002 Gonoral R.E. 1002
ERRORS: Advertisers I .;;;;:;;;;;:;:::;:::;:::;:;;;::;:;;;::;;;;;;;:;;;:;:;:;;;;,;;I;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;::;:;:;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;:;;;;;;;; ·--t·d~~I~~~-:.:~;.:: GARDEN ROOM DINING BEST PROPERTY "PLUG" WINNER
,l·1».1ri·e,d) a ,to I y. Tho tbA'llJ1 ~Jt0T 1ssume1
1 ll•~lllL .for tho first '~ o "·'1e.1c t insertion
BAY AVE.RTHCOSTA'MESA
'
' ' '
T ..
1only. --. '
. . . in a formal dining..rm., gla ss enclosed
on 3 sides. It's an exciting experience to dine
among the flowers in this lovel y 4 bdrm.,
2¥.. bath home, in a prestige location (Ca. moo Highlands). Property realistically priced
at $125,000.
RETIREMENT HAVEN
1002
NED • -1 ca. 1G1ANT
This r"'!l,IUI· 2 IJ<lrm.-or one huge bdnn. &
convert. d.en home, has charm galore. Prop-
erty located in Irvine Terrace-handy to
beaches, teruus club or lrVine Country Club.
OJ\ly $64,000;>,
DUA "'2:::0::5::0'"' VEAR' . \\rAUf~EAClf. Gial'lt
2. 1ktory. Huge bedrooms
pms·-11w~4lshed area. ,0,rri~I~. ' . :iiuit yaufielf.
mn1l m~ 1'uit. 2 bath.
di'tiirlg roOm. ui lt ·ins. ;Fffyplacf. · P'Afty p a t i o . ~ra'te ~te:d. area fot boat
.or ;tmmper .. '.Need fas t
'p)ssES&ibn' R'ent tiU yours. ?Assume low interest loan.
fteduced to ; $42,500. Call
today 962--55RS'.
BAY AND B .EACH
675-3000
2 407 E. COAST HWV. CORONA DEL MAR
General R.E. 1002·Generol R.E. 1002
BEAUTIFUL LINDA ISLE -$250,000
LuxuriOus 5 BR bayfront home. FR w/wet
bar, lge DR, 41> baths .. Pier/Slip. Wide lot.
S! l 'I Coldwell . Ban~er
":"" .,.-; EXCLUSIVE RETREAT (. '(Ill!' . "\. l' PriVllte,island seclusion in_ the h"3rt o! New-
P.Ort~~·,w~terfront coIJl!Dun1ty._ Five bedroo~ ~!i\so'ril•l!uilt home. Pter & slip. $325,000. '
E. NEED·A GAM E ROOM? .
conditi9n 4 1 bedroom home has a
• m, famlly 0room, 2¥.. baths .and 3
1 car .,,gl!:~ge. Loi:ate<\ across from pool and
, pat!(. p,~,500.
"" ' NEWPORT f.IUGGET
rosoel!tor's ~ream, tlJree bedrooms, tw~
~lus family room . Large backyard. Hfgh ·on the Eastbluff hill. $63,000.
-ii-lcoME UNLTS NE!<R BEACH
)3uJl~uity in sharp corner duplex while
relaxin~ in bonus room over garage. Sell·
ing.irpr1ce includes raoges, re(riger~tors,
wJW)er..& dryer In laundry room. Priced to
sell·at $93,0QO.
t"t •• "
e , .. , OFFERED' WITH PRIDE
. l t's bold. lt'J beautiful. It's Bayc_reft at its
I !)est. 2 Story spanlsh giant on Antigua Way.
~ bedroo·ms, 21'.i batt>s, family room, dining
..J'OOl)l, massjvc playroom. $162,500. .
' '
TWC) STUNNERS
IN BIG CANYON
& ti:~l.~r.·~·e• I' I' I' I' I' I' I' I' l DIA!. 644-1766 .
' 2161 Son Joaquin Hil l• Roi., N.B;
A :OLDWELt. BANKER CO.
Setlh1g anything Wllh • Dally .. UNSCRAM8lr lm!RS J I I I I I I I I Pilot CIRsal!lcd Ad 11 a v fOR' ANSW(J • . . . • • • • • almpie mauer · · · Jlllll -s-c"'RAM....,.~L""E':T-S_A,....._..__._C_l,__i,._f',.....,_l_.8_0_,80__. ' call 642-,-5611! . • n1wer1 In ass 1c1t on
4lunits -$79,500! ' Fl\ffiilY home . 4 BR., lge .
W't•rf•ont Dupltx kitchen/family are a.
Pier/Float, $85,000. Lge. fenced yd., nice
675-7060 trees, quiet street
EASTBLUFF $41 ,950. 642-7491.
Super clean 4 BR. home NEWPORT SHORES
Huge fam./din. tm. 3 Bdrm. 2 ba. Close lo
Newly redec: Owners ocean, pools, tennis.
anxious! $70,500 .. 00). $56.000 -You own the
8484. , land! 556-8800. · ..
IN UNIVERSITY PARK, IRVINE
The scarce Stanford Model -3 bedroom and
family room townhouse next to Green Belt
-(Great !or kids). Attractively landscaped
IB RE•LTORS with .minimum care-. (Great !or parents}. :!-:!·:~~~~~~~~~~~~2~~~~~~~==·~-~· ~~-Another--listing.of Gil.Jde.-lteasonable.priced 4 Local bffices To Serve You at $63,500.
Gononl R.E. . 1002Generil R.E. 1002 UNIQUE HOMES, Realtors, 675-6000 2443 E. Coast Hwy., Coron• dol Mer
. Lind•· Isle Watorfront
Lovely 5 BR., 3 bath custom home:. Large
courtyard. Pier & slip. $225,000.
·custom Spanish Home
5 BR, 5 ba., art studio. Elevator. Pool. 7000
sq. ft. Ramp &1float. $450,000.
70 Linda lslt Drive
Prime 45 It. lagoon.lot -$150,000
For information on All Homes & Lots Call
BI LL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 B:::iy'>1dt' Or1vL· N 8 675 ·6161
1002Generol R.E. 1002
/Jn NIGEl
CAllEY &
ASSOCIATES
LIDO REALTY
t 17~ \,, I .,1. ' 11
*673·7300 *
TWO HOUSES
$22,500 EACH
Must buy both though. l
Bdrm1 + 2 Bdrm on 1
lot. Eastside Costa Mesa.
Orily $8500 dn. Owner will
carcy balance nt 9%%.
l,..Quail l
Owner Transferred Iii IPlac• .
Must s.u Prop•rtin · :
7S2•1920 .
It's very seldom that we tcoo QUAil Sl NlWl"ORT BlACH
MESA VERDE $41 ,500
get a home ottered in Mesa PANORAMIC Verde in this price range.
Great' .enclosed pat Io, OCEAN VIEW beautitW bi·lck tircplace. · Comfortable family Uving. of Blue Paclfk. trom living
Plea11e ask about listing No. ·room, dining ~; kltch.cn. lt'.r>4S nnd 11\1\!tet:.. be d--t.o om .
WALK ER & LEE ,Lovely 8pt\CloU.!1 h9t'fl'f!
locn!.ed high on o hill. lots Real Estate o! privac.yl $69,~. CaU oow 545-9491 to see. It'll vacant and
I 'a"'1""Gc-:o"'v""A"'L~P"'o'"'o=L'"' I ready! 847~10. Aaent.
TWO STORY 1-------
$40,950 Is a tteal tor this $34,900 spaclot1• pool bOmc. lt'a ·a
•wlm·&lze pool loo! Also ho& 4 BR-'FAM ROOM
giganlie family FI es t n 1% ba. sack Ba.v area.
G.onerol R.E. 1002 Genoral R.E. • 1002
FOR THE BUSY ·FAMILY
. .. in the beautiful Blu!fs on Vista Laredo,
overlooking a lovely "greenbelt". 3 Bd.rms.,
21h ba. home. Cozy frp1c . Just a "turnkey"
situation -the maintenance crew takes
care of everything but the patio . Only $74,500.
33& CHERRY TREE LANE
Extra lge. resi dential lot on quiet cul de sac
street in Newport Beach. $25,000,
DUR 25TH VEAR
BAY AND BEACH
675-3000
2407 e:. C ST HWY: CDADNA DEL MAR
General R.E. T002General R.E.
.< i:o. HERITAGE
. . REALTORS
associated
BROKERS -RE AL TORS
1C2S W Bolboc 671 lt.tJ
macnab I lrvlne
realty
·---------
UPPER BAY VIEW
1002
Newl y decorated 4 bedroom, 2¥.. bath cus-
tom built home on quet cul-de.sac. Excel·
lent VIEW. $71,500. Maxine Williams &12-
8235. (P56}
A HOME YOU'LL REMEMBER
4 bedroom cha rmer w /)learned ceilings,
i.valls of brick, oversized fireplace, tile. floors,
wrap around veranda + roon;:t' for pool.
$114,500 tee . Barbara Auoe 642·8235. (P57}
NEW BAYFRoNT LISTING .
Charming 4 bedroom Bayfront w'/pler ~r J>I!' boat + sandy J>each. All .the delightful
extras. $195,000. Lois Miller ~-8235. (P31) . .
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA
Newly listed! Sharp 4 bedroom w/nearly
new shag carpeting. Excellent decor.
HUGE 'LOT. $49,SOj). Helen Ball 644-6200.
(Pl6}
THE BEST OF EVERYTHING
Carpeting, draperies, fixtures, landscaping
& view . 4Bedrooms, 31', baths, 3 fireplaces,
ramily room, pool & central garden room
w/.sllding roof. App't. only. Elaine Svedeen
642-8235. (P29}
Newport Belch, C.lllotnla 92663
tvom. llunt1ngl0n's best buy ~e lol. Nr-Eltnt School
-call now to see 847~10. ,,_!!a:ro:k:•~r~546-::0~Sl~4 ...,!!'!'ll __ ~~~·~~~~~~~~~~~-J Bkr .
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FIVE BIG
BEDROOMS
TWO STORY
Where else? And nothing south or Sea
Ranch's boldness to compare it with.
But then it does defy comparison. Deep
courtyards. balconies and decks
everywhere; spacious. accommodating
1esldences for uncommone1s. WoOO
sheathed. clipped eave. sattbox
arch1tectule. Delles description, must be
walked about lt:t be appteciated. Molof up
Superior Avenue lrom the Pac~c Coast
Highway lo eight smashing models. From
SSJ,000 and wor1h every penny and then
some. Donl snitf at Newport Beach. either:
You might gel a lungful of fresh
sea-borne air!
, .. •• •
&<4--0916
I~
$4590 Down
Luxury-(Hll'd 3 bd.m1 is posi'-
tivelv immaculate. Sits on
an oi.rcrslzed lot \\1ilh plenty
of room for your boat. Has
2 b..1ths. Kitchen buill-ins.
\\'ooli·burnlng 1 l r e p I ac e.
$45.900. Call 540-1720 '
CDM Two Ellstside. sKle-by·sidc. 3 BR. den, 2 frpl c., patio, $68,500. l.rg. deck. vu, wa1k to beach. DUPLEX Winier. $375 Mo.
A roomy 3 BR 2 BA __ ,, U:ttQuai'I ~ NEW dramatic oceanfront, 3 BEDROOM
EXECUTIVE HOME
•••~ Pl•-4M0B_R, 3 be.. \Yrnter. $800.
unit with fireplace and -•
tonnal 4_lning and nearly flr&lli--.&.l'e• " Peg Allen Rltr. 494-7578 (,....] 4 Blocks to ocean;--highly
u p-g l'!lded, professionally
dttar-dled inside and out.
Beautiful free-form pool, +
separate jacuzzi. $55,00J.
Agent. calJ 962-2456 or
531-5800
brand new 2 br garage -r...-• apartment with b·e-a m 752-1920 E~'lERAW BAY ceitµigs and covered patio 1"°° OUAll5f. N1~·a1.a.c...--House v.-ell furnished. 3 Br,
FINAL CLOSEOUT entry only $91.SOO. Call 644-Fourplex Hunt Beach 2 88• ocean view, beach · * l\10DELS * 721l. Fix & Save side. $550. 613-41
69
2955 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa i\olcsn
and Lge 3 bedrm + 3 _ 2 SUNSHINE bright 2 BR 2 * NE\V HOl\1ES * bedrooms, bltns, c 1 0 8 e d Be.. 2 frplcs, beautitul dl!:ck
...... ~O~pe~•~>~E~ve~n~in~·~~-----~~~,1 BIG 4
RARE FIND.I ( Provide. yow-la'!le family
· with plenly of space and
Prire 101\'('red $3500. on thi~ privacy in this Ideally loc-
gorgrous 4 bedrm + fnmliy. 1 ated residence. Just listed,
Situated on huge cul-de-«ac should go fast at only $37,950
Jot. Upgraded I hr u out . 89i·0321
8* '1u Financil"' a\'ail. .,.,.r swim pool In + patio, rec room or large ... &~ •• • come BR, • bl'-lo ~--h .,~
Contemporary, & tastefully HARBOR VIEW tax shelter. "" ....,, uccu; _... designed. Your entrance Is HOMES · Only $59,950 yrly. $350 Wint. 491'·21.41
SPANISH
ol Italian tile, complinlcnted Donalj L. Bren Co. NEW 4-PLEX First P io.f1e•r Really• $395. 2 BR, 2 BA, lovely
by rust ca[1l('ling thruout. 18'.!9 Port Sheffield EACH 2000 SQ. IT. 3 BR 84 .... & unusual. 546 Catalina St,'
TI1is 3 bdrn1., 2~2 bath home Ne\vport Beach 833-0780 +2 BA + OPEN BEAMS 2-.ll nr oce9.n. Adults, no pets.
Owner ~·ill considet· ""Y WALKER & lEE
boast!> 2,440 sq. U., & is +2 DECKS +2 PATIOS. TWO 4-plcxes. xlnt East 499-2302; (213l76!r7975 eve .
truly an Ideal family home. CHARMING CAPE \VALK TO BEACH. ALL. Costa Mesa location. Walk l BR., l"h Blks beach, ul
Jinancing. REAL ESTAT~ Village Real Estate
557-8623 or 963-4067
$79.500 COD RENTED $242,500. to shopping. A sol id pd. & cable $175. mo.,
Balboa Penn Bay Fron! VISION REALTY invo,.ment for beginner 494-5012 or 213-~-
$3000. ·Down Payment
BACK BAY-$39;ff0. AWurPe. 7o/a IBA Loan \\'ith
I 5 Br. 4 ha, lovely garden lnvestol"S. Don't wait. Call o~an entry. Dock for boat. 0\\-net 67";H!GOO ANYTll\fE now for more infonnaUon, L19un1 Niguel 3152
REAL ESTATE will finance' $ 2·40, 000. OCEANFRONT, W Newport, MILLER REAL.TY OPEN HOUSE 1-6pn1 · $3000. 2nd. Total payments 2800 Willo L:.inc aJ)prox. $230. a n1onlh. trot at1nic. buyers terms, 2-2Br, 6424811 3 BR, adult'community
·$129,<XXI. M>ml c v e, OWNER WANTS OFFER. Shoreline view, pool. $450.
3 Bed., 2 batb, sep rumpus Terrillc Condo! 2 ?-.tiles 900 Glenneyi'C St. IN from· ocean! Agent, ·can 494 9473 "'9-0316 rm, irJ: lot. many tnature 962-2"56 or S3I-5800. · "" Condo, ded cpts, 3 BR
wknd.s. 4 Units each w/frplc, choice ,..,_,..::*:,.;':::93-::25::c13:..cAgt:!::.._*===
;ncome Property 2000 Easlside Costa 1-t es a Lido Isle 3156 trees, 2 greenhou.ses, &: 21,~ ba, formal dine & toolshcd, &B-Q. new crpts BLUE LAGOON VILLA fam rm. \Vrap around palio.
,, paint Assumobl'_
1
Ion". REPOSSESSIONS Whie Water View On large green hell, cl""'
$290. taxes. 64 2'°'272 For information and location 3 Br. 3 Ba condo w/luxury to pool & tennis. $75,0XI,
Owncrfbkr. l of these FHA & VA homes, ame n I t i es. Security, by owner, 644-6483
Location. Near 17th St. 2
TRIPLEX, East Cos ta Mesa. 2BR apts & 2 bachelor apts.
3 2-BR. garages. $67,500 Incon1e $690 n10. Vogel
Fortin Co., Rltn. &12-5(0) Company Realtors. 548-9346
I contact • s\vimming pools, ten n I 1 Balboa Peninsula
EASTSIDE BAR IN KASABIAN rourt. '800Y b.ach + ena Vista bayfro"t. pier. 642•4'21.,..dMc.llo<t 3 BR on Big Loi with • A SSUMA BLE .LOAN. .._ ...... ..._,_
centrtil air conditio , in Real Estate "2-6644 $ll5.<XXI. For appt. Neall;~~~:~~~-~Owne~~r =w~/~finanee~~·~~-~~~§;;;;;*;;" ~· ;"~I prime location. Pr! low * $l Vander Ziel. .. t'W.900. Call 556-' 9,900 * TED H. VANDLING ro. SELECT . Deluxe near new La CU..la <714\ 499-2050 or 838-5440 $£11!!K-& FIND" AMERICAN Villn, 3 bedrooms, 2 ba.U1s, EMERALD BAY IE1 CONIFERS
PROPER~ IES all b\tn!!, w/w cpts, drp~. A large fanlily home on the ADLSSIRFIHLA~WCWRRD
DOUAPLAR C KADUHHHAWM
$59,500
FOUR-PLEX
BAfl"RNT 2 hr,% ba,. Winter
rental. Frplc., disbwaaher,
bltn kitchen. 675-4646.
LOVELY VILLA, 314 Br,
2% Ba. yearly or winter.
644--4895 Ol' 548-9470
Newport. Buch 316'
RIGHT ONlll ,
Yes, right ON (reJ)eat, dN),
the best beach ., in the"
harbor area. View right
down the bay &: jetty. 3
B<inns., 3~ ba. 9 mos. "~~~!'l!"~~~~~!! \ 2 car K8l'· Vacant. Broker ocean side of the hwy. 5 ~ E~U)E 2, ON ~fl LOT 714; 998-6300. Bdrms.. family nn. wlth
Cute Spanish ,atyl9 front ATTE T frplc. & wet bar; formal l\C')U!lf?and'l"earlwo 'lie<lrooin N ION!! dining rm. Walk to beach.
unit. Plus lwo Dbl.~· VA BUYERS! Beautiful 3BR It's Enterald &y·s best buy I G I EU C G Q 0 Q ~ RT 0 E A E t G
' RAPIN UJ QOIDDDHR GUO 'lj,Sj~llliaiillll I lease at $1200 n10., incl. U I ganlener & cleaning lady,
Exclusively wilh
Uon\ls room, to BPI • Call pool home on a cul~e-aac. at $139,500. now \von't IasL 6fG. l super .._clean. · TURNER ASSOC. A L A R CW 8 I TU A E U CW MC AT
WALKER & LEE AGT. IM7-3584 1105 N: Coast Hwy., Laguna Roal Estate 494-1177 -N A N I P G I R N D Q G D 0 U D D H H .:r~~T q~~A Ba GOV~~~~~~i~oA... T!!1;!J~~ E~T!"! T 8 .. c I Q E I ET L £ .. I aw E. H 0
condo. Facll. i ; P.ool. 3 & 4 BR homes In ell 3 BR, 3 BA, bulltina, carpets 8 f' 1 A N Po P C P A P I S L E M R R Q
t11llurd room, puUll;lg green, areas. No qu.alifying. For drapes. Security g a t e 1 : & C 0 N I F E R S M E G A T L 0 C K L
loun!l"t &: muc:h mdte:. Enjoy more informauon call BKR., prl\'ate beach, tenrus court country t lub llvlna: at a 846-3377 &. 2 pools, ge De'rou i QNONR·T OF PAR !MON RENM
low. tow price. Have a boat? Or trailer? greenbel t. Firlt: 't \ 'rn e U U U W I T 1 E S R S E C
1
N P A N A E Ml!JL~T'! Sharp 3 bdrm on a big cor-oHered. S125.000 lnclud~ .:..:.:....;::. ner lot wittt boat gate. $3500 furniture. RED CARPE"I', A I q H W R P I N A H tt 0 U Q E I I H
TRADE up -
TO 10
O\\'ller has 10 U N I TS.
Eustsldl! Cost.a l\1esa . Will
'trnde down to 4 or 5 units.
HARBOR
a BR, 3 BA +. ntmpu1. down. btt-lns; dishwshr, frplc RF.ALTO RS 6flHIS'12, I u W T D T ,A M A C K E R J' R S P 0 l
Tr Y $ 5 3, 9 5 0: Al 1'0 2 baths. ~.!XX). bkr. Call C1pe Cod 2 lw I fem rm l BR. TRAILER. rllht repossessions, call Io r I ..,:;8""=.:<;6;:;,;l,....,=_,,,..cc.,..-$75,IXX> Buys you 2 "beths, T A C S D A R E D K C A R ~ M P A T R 1c~;;o;;l•;;;for;; .. ;;;1•;-:;;;;;;,-;;.2l00;;;; I l'lcnM $1. frOm Bay. $WS •&dl;t~ss;s. Agt. ?'146-1739 or_ ASSUME 7'."° VA Io 11 n cedar lined cl~ts, wlllnut a T a I y p R E D E C E T I H W S E W 1• a nK>. Utll. 1ncld. Olll Tlnf ~·~ w1112.ooo. d". 1m mo .. ,, p>nellng. l•l'l!• ,.., yantllla:i!:~~~f::~~r::.~r~~~ PRICE REDUCED 5.1&-0l85 ~~ES~ .. ~OE NI"'°\_ 3 BR. oil. 3 BR. 2 BAI , luxry 1
1
hag. & mnoy frult ~. work '1'111 Md4n fllllliM Ustllll b.aow ,,,_, forwvd, DRIVE BY this JU\-""" R·l 3 BDRM, 2 BA. frple, dbl
" Ot•• am·rm.i i.e R nl hltns, prof dsepd awn. 1'00nl & storage In 00U11r, '1 L 'ad. .,, 4ow&, « dlllO~Y hi di• p1111le. Fiilld •e1' uu.-iu ga~. F'unllshed. Wirlter cf'llinl(. ~unkon bath, fire 010lce H.B. loc. After 6 used brick walks & pl:J,nlers. ...,._..,boKitbluilowt1: lo .. next to 363 EMt 22nd rentul. $375. w. Occiantrob'·
pit. $51,ln>. Owner/Agent. pm, can 846-T319 VISION REALTY St. Qwr r must sell!! Make 646-'rn7l ~ 979-f.134 615-8600 ANYTJ~t'E DOUOLA8 nJl f,ARCH · SPRUCE oUer! Agent, G4&-3255.
3BR \VC!ill!ldc ome, by F:=. ~~~. e:~~~~~~ ORTAFINO ~UOIA ~~~£CEDAR °t"H~~~i~AR : WINTER . uw~r. newly ecorated, tormo:I dln1ng rm. Rest H.B. 3 BR ••• •·th•· •• '~·. 1·,... AmU'SR REDWOOD YEW ... Mobil• Home/
2 N~a·: ~u.~.J:.i Npt Ii .• smttn ya.rd Prl ~Uon •t:O.Mtl. bk Call iJ V" -..y ~ TOMORftOW:"DlSA.STF.RS" • ->-Trlr. Prks. 2300
only, 646-0748 oft 5 ." nc 1
1313 ·' ""'°"""'' r. m\. w/open bt'ftmed ctll., "JI.ht' c Roorn For o.dd;J'' -
1
d' -~1 To OfdH any llf Ill of the expanded "'Sttk ~ FlrKI'. boo~~. 8 .. ,. l"R ~ , •--•
MF.&\ del MAR 4 BR. ..,, c., in. rnl., uivucrn numb.en l 1hruuah 7, tend 60 i:.tnls for c!M'h . m11kln1 ch~kl ~ · y ''--ta "1csa c~ · · • clean out tho $43,!XXI. Ohanu Jt ea I ty ASSUME 7\t~ 3 Br. 2 Bn kitcb. Only $73,j()J. $32,700 abl S T I S ldk 1 Add 111 10x25 cabana. Adults SO. , •• tW'TI U~t Ju.nJl:,~fmo~m;j~ ""rvl'""'. 536-32:24 condo, frpl, bltns, cl11bhse, ~n avail. al 7r;, Int. pay e to ''Sffk & find ." tar· t ra.n111 Y1 ~ t . "'~ o~ onl)'. Good cond. ""1th a DaUy PUot""
.,.;-'""" etc. $26,500. Owner 646-5921 14I::SS:::,:;:10::.N:..::R:::EA:::.:!LTY:..!.-'41ll:::. :..--073l::::;:<_k_111_•"_1n_catt.i,::....•_l lh:.h::....•rw:..;'l':.':.P'_" _________ ,..:&.::~'-"'41:.:..,_' -----•..:•::d.c;C.U:;:::c:-:;:::=:::.· ---
•
•
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(; .J 0 DAil Y PILOT
!Houses urn
N twport 8e1c.h 3169
LUSK HARBOR
VIEW
~uUfu.l four bed.room, pOOI,
vif'W hoA\t'. $62'5.
SHORECLIFFS
C.D.~1'11 flnen. Winter rental
-two bedrooms. prlvat.:
bcarh $650.
WATERFRONT
Uke Mc)W thl'H' bedroom
townhuse -privute botlt 1dip
l500. f'urnlture optlon1d.
. . . . . . ~ •, ·, " y
' ThufidAY. Stpt tmbrr }q, iq74
Houses Un f•Jrnl 1·1.e 11 I .1ou1H Unfurnished Apartments Furnish!,_d Apartment• Furnl~~ AplrtmentJ Un urn.
312.4 Cost1 Me.st 3'2'24 L1gun1 t4 1guel ~~ =B:c•l::bo;:;.;.•..:P..;'..:"-'"..:'-"'-a ~ Newport Beach 3769 Costa Mes.1
DREA!\1hOule,111;y lltf.', loft. 2Blt. 2 bA. Sea Ttrru(.-t BAYrRO:O.'T WINT&!\ RENTALS NO INFLATIONll
uUI pd. l.Br, Sl15. To.,.,nhoUiC. oetinn view, pvl XII f;dgrwHtcr ,11 Cvr111·;;1rill. Slept to !leach ' Ool\'n to l!Arth ranch for
SlNC" .ES, '-tnllleti 2 Sr, fncd grtrdl'n & patk>, beach, 3 Bl'(,!ro.-mt. :! 11 u 1 h • Sin.ill l Br f\lm apt,l pe·rson heavenJ,y Uvlt-. Choo 1 e
}'d, gar. patio, $190. tennla, pool &. clubhouse. fu-eplt&Ct". ~ar:1.1;t.', laun1lr}'. $1&5 Ill $200. Lge furn which ptu1 or out aarden
SING LES, kld.!J, pel, 1..iBt' yd, Sc>cur1ty. \Yater & duel paid pnvntl' bfou<·h uo 11l'ts, tup Oc an View 2 Bt upt. ldeal you v;ant lO live In. *
gar. S195. , ' by owner. $35() pl!r mo. locaUon. v.alk, 10 ~h0p1»n:t. !or couple or 2 1ln1lcs. $325 3 S::, :i Ba. l..arae Room.I
Homtfindtrs * 642-9900 _It~ ~l l-1157. Ubracy S400 1\lso 3 Br. UtU pd. 1111 & lut mo + * ln1lde/Outside 2 Ba. rim. · Clea.nlllg Uep . Call !\tr, Entcrtalnmcnt Attal * Pvt
OPEN hs• Sat & Sun 265 NE\V :1 BR., 2 Bn, Garden Nl'lson ll.ubini.011, Rln· Pa .. 1 • .:.:"'°":2::.l:;or;;;k•~Y;·,;64~2~-3698~:;;·: \ Patio&, tlttp.l~. amp!•
R $365 3 B l 'L llome. Pool, TrMls, Bch . .., ,1.,1,, St. "•lliu<I ij7.t-lll~'!l __ •. 1-... * Pu! ose · r, n Ba, J.J95 ·!\·lo. Avull. 831-1453 Sec. ".... "' ..:a-ii•, Una:. Poot & nu paint. Pool, huge fem GuaJ"d11. BAY \'IE\V, ue-iie~Hr OCEAN ANO BAY VIEW PIU1y Area. In an 646--0147 $200 & S230 ·1 Br $21:l. ft'Un1 sun deck. Stc1>1 to l 11 comp a r a b I e near-
rm Ml11lon Viejo 3267 U-tl1 • Pd "pl~rtparl<lr~. l.leath. Dt!luxc 3 bdr. 2 bnlh. evt'rything location. Oilldren
\VANTED: Non-smokers for adults. J'O:i E. ~dgrwatei· 1\!I nt.J\V rw·nhuro. $350 lill over 14 weloorne-. From
clean 2 bcdrm, fu.lly crpt4 3 OR ho1ne, t1lr \.'Ond., $360 (l)K7l-2Sli6 ttnd lru1t mo. M_ust see to $225.
honlc wilh garage, 9love & mo. Incl water. ----1.111p1't!clate. lli5-!l20" TllE VENOOME
. •'
'
• ..
Af>!rtments Un urn. nfurn. G~u::;•::•~t .:,::o::.m:::•~--;:;41:.::\
L_1guno Nlguol 3852 3869 LOVELY rooms f"' elderly .::;.. __ :::_ __ ...;.c..:...1 ;;::::.::!:z:.:..::::::.;::.;.._.::;:.:;_ larllC9. special cure, 643-
NR. BEACH TENN1s cor.r Vista del Mesa _:!1178~-~---=~I $24().$3-IO pet' mo. No lt'ase R t I to shat ••-ADU' ~ GARDEN llOfl..,,... en 8 1 • .,,,_ new lrx dlx vkiw 2&:3 bdrn1., ...,_ ·~ 2~ BR, 2 poo!lf, central lRVINE AT MESA
air cond, fpl. 2 38 21 Near Newport Blvd, F'rwY Rneeded, 2 BR.
lliUhunt Dr. (OU Crown le lrvlne Indua:trJal U>mplex Apt. Newport
Valley Pkwy.) 2 childr"C"n l BR JlOO 2 BR $D> m I n de d am r:itl eof\lldered. (TI4) D&1 &: Night Security; Pool individual btwn 21 • 2 5 .
49>1760 ottice, lf m 81111wer JaC\ml, Rec. 81 d g •1 _,548-""1M""'9'.....-----·-.1 499-1625 w/Gym, Billlards, Cokr INTERESTED ln tigb!ing in-• TV. };a. Apt . bu n tJon •• re Gf1Ll~ & TENNIS dlaliwuhcr, refria, shag cpt a : .,.1are exptnset1 n.
BEAUTIFUL 2 BR. 2 BA k pvt fiatio or balcony. Ung a hoUMI, \\'On1l"n over \.'Oll<lo. tTplc, 1vet bar, din • M5-48S5 e 40, no snlokef'll. G44·5n9 aft
rm, prl\I patio. gar dr opnr. 2 Br. 1 ba nr WestclUf Phu.a. 6
Adull1' only. l yr Jell.Se. $325. frplc, cpt, di-ps, Adults. no FEMALE R1nm11te needed to
(TI41 400.0992 pets. &12-91MS share 2 br. house w/woman re-frig. Sn1uU encl yn.rd, ~-Call Morning~ 2 BOHJ\I., ~ha!:' i·pt .. Jqis., 1845 Anaheim 515--8628 ~tagnlflccnl Buena Vistu t.'>00. 1110. 6,lli-5855 NeWoort Bt1ch 3269 CllJ1Xlrl, \llt~hrni.. '; \ilk, *STEPS TO OCEAN* Corner Center St . Cotlt& ~ f' bed d ~~---~-~~ ~ to bay or bch. $27.1 n1u. 0 h B --~~!·h. o,!!.,...... roo,,, mnn. ,'"",..: 2 BR house. si~les. families yr. llM!. 1116 \\'. u.,10011 !>elux~ 2000 llQ. fl .. owner ff T e eaten Path
BAYRIONT Lid I I 3856 20.:::..=.:::,"---~= I & child. Call aft 7PM.
·• 1 0 Newport Shores 3872 675-9196. Uoo WATERFRONT DUPLE..'< 3 hr. 2 ba .• 2 s ,:HA~RE~-~~-,,t-or-ho-,..-.-. ~Y~o.-,.-I
3 BR on W"ter. 413 Via lrpla 2 patios dshwshcr or theirs! Call HOME
Udo Soud. A\laU Oct t $650 l 1>1k: to beaeh: S.'US a me}: PA!tTNER. 836-1194, 12-7,
ut:u... ...b., v "V QI{. AlllO Z BR houses THE BLUF'f'S i;pac. 4 Br. 6734526 apt., J br., 2 ba., den. iar ..
• he$1 rental In a ll Newport. N ~ w p o r \ Br n·c h •-3 Bu condo. Nr pool, •und-·k lrpl dahw-•-$850. Iiun!ln~tun Uench .. Agt r~ greenhelt. Lsc, ref1. $525 2 AP1'S .\VAIL YEARLY waih/d~. ¥hUtten. ~L Adults· No Peta OLD CORONA !J7!J.K<l30. 6-11-0782 1 R s·~~1·~)Br ' !""" $350. &ia-ii11 * Luxurious llh!'it carpets
STS IOE I' 2 BR I" or co I" r. at ~· -a .:w. * Blt·ins incl Dllihwuber (»vely thrct bedroo m EA. 3 B .., l BA, • b-111~ .. •.s IHI "5. No l'hild 01• pet:;. JCrJ ~;. OCE;ANFRONT 4 Br, 2\~ Ba, * Lrg Pool & Gas BBQ's
chsrmer. Brlrk firephtcc. Iri>lt•, S1.·1wnt'd pa tk>, c>n(•I. $,195. Also 'J. BR 1.iou.~l!I Bay, 12131 4J9-79571433--!lli:. frp1c, gar, W/D, dshwshr, 1 BDRM $110.
_mo. Appntmt. 675-35.51 + utils. Yr. lse. 642-3814 !\1on. thru Sat.
.\..RC 3br, 2ba, bltins. crpts, Sin Cl•menfe 3876 YOUNG n:spon. womun, aJtt'
drps, l rar Kfl r, Adlls, $400 1.:;.;.;_;.._______ ~/30, wanted to share S27S
lea..se. 675-3967 RESORT livlng, ocean vie\\', 11 n10. beach apt. Cttll aft.
\Valk 10 ~ach. T11•0 full ,>ard. ::00 E. 19th St. $28.). Costa f.h•:.a & llunllngton BALBOA INN nr 1cnn!s courts, Ad1ta, no 3 BDJU.1 Townhouse $250.
balhs. S575. /'\'o jX'ls. 517-6'79l. Beach. Agt. f ee. 919-8430. pets. Winter $600. mo. S7'50. Gas & Wal'"' Pd G•-•c
CaJI 67ft.7ZL $300 mu .. -lbr, 2be., lrg (meed TllE BLUFFS, i; pot l t! i; I§, POOL UTIL 7PAID Yrly. 675-9873 an 5 pm. LA MANCHA _Apfs:" !\1Al.E 29 nrcds Career
yrd, 2 cilr + """P. ;,.is .... J669 barely used; 4 Bit , 3 l>a., $1001$275 t.10. 675-8 40 $~WK UP. l Bdr., 2· Ba. ".!S •~t p•--, C ". ~1 llOM,E&-3AT8MROSPH~O! LARGE I BR. Fr p I c, Fnile. or Exec. Male to •-r •" 1 1~...-i ........,. ~ """' vr. uxe . Rrnl1u c. /dri •hore lg 3 br 2 ba ~ ....
Mew Verd• 3863 hcnted pool. 2 BR, 1 BA. 6P1t1 67g...9284
4!>Hl487 '
." ""'0>·· q ........ '" '""' \ \I JJ·:)·
BE \LI'\
all 6pm &: wkends u1n. ,...,mt', nr. poo • _... BAYVIE\\I, dlx !hr, 2 ba. & Bach. Color TV, maid 645-63l8 dshwshr, wshr er, very · · · '""--=·
0
P _ Pel' 1110 . 640-55ti0 A.gt. pool. sllp avail, udlts, ph serv. pool. nIB P.IESA, 415 HACIENDA DE .. ~..... 3095 Atal.'C Ave. 546-1034. clron. $185. (TI4J ~20 B11lboa Island. 673--903.l
anl oint 3226 BACK BAY AREA, 3 br. 6T:>-3003 N. Newport Bl., N . B . ~·~ _N•wport Btach 3869 NE\V 3 BR; nr ocn; crpt.s, SllARE 2br apt, 1 blk to
2 "· 'f 1 bit•• crpt• ~o lb ,.... "'" ~i • l60 W. Wilson, C.M. , ....... _ r beach lra•'•hl only Al •"-'·• -t'P 11.. ,..,., ·., OCEA!\1' n. NT . r, -""· '"""';JQO • BEAlITIFUL GROUNIX5 drps, w<>.1u, stv; urn t1r , s .. ·
A BERG ENTERPRISES CO BEACH 1-kluse 180 degl'ee drps .. 2 car (:;lir. w/lleau\. \1•int('r, $385. inc I u din g \VINTER .rental 2 bdnll. Adults _No' Pets OCEANFRONT unfum. $325. 492-8988 675-4228 or 968-4<156 & Ive
oc<:an vit>w, 2 br, 2 c;lr gnrdl'n. $325 521-9134 t'l'I' 673-4~2' "' U $350 640--5078 u 11 ir~ 1 ., Steps to beach. Set owner 10 minutes to ocean. Lal.".:e l 2 BR, 2 bu, furn $400 Wntr. Seal Beach 38841 ~""-· ~-~----~ 2 'BR honic, comer lot. dbl
alt. gar., law)(iry, frplc,
Jorn1al din. nrea. Ocl L
(213)943-29"28 oi; Len (714)
~. r ;,ru-de;te~·ineld I NE\VPORT Shores 4 Br, 2 3 BR , '.! bA. frplt, nc\I.'. 2QO on wkn(I. 1035 Vt.'. Balboa BR. $175., Gas & Water me., 2 [. , 2 bu, \\•inlcr. S300 FEMALE Rrnn1atr. 'vnl~I..
.,.i' .. -• poo Ba, lease $375. or lease f!. tu occau. Yrly, $385. Blvd. Urapertes, carpets;-gas STEPS TO BEACH LRG. -3BR 2bft + sngl gill', lo llh.l.tre. 2 hr. apt .. .$00 pcr
& goU, $350. mo .. 64o-50'18 option ut $46.500. Owner. £iJ-37~ 3 DOORS TO BEACH heat, gas stove, air 2 blks to bch. $310 n10. n10. Call: 64!">-7375 4 BR. din nn, fam rm, 532-4543 . or 838-9367 d't' · · 2 BR, 2 bn. \Vinler, $23S 2 1 3 c"2-55U/11'°"1331
bl · Corona del M ar 3722 \ Yr Old, I"·-or ••nf"''"· t'on 1 torung, 8 w 1 ni nt 1 n g CORONA DEL MAR -J:J ~·w--1''EM to shr 'v/Mme, beaut PV. hm~ldo Sands-Furn .3 hns; ivater pd. $395. LliG Bluffs ~ondd. parl. · u... "' " pool, rec. room, ··,rnuhers Wtstcliff 3896 3hr n['lt, overlooking N.B. 521-9550
BR 2 Ip' pool Pr
.,v • 493·9366 * , ... ,, ch•'ldre" p e 1, • 1 4BR S400 ~10, 2 BR $300 !\lo. & dryers 4 BR, unf. houw. Fam. nn, o.. 1115 1 clds "t'I "'"•30" ' • • . .... , .... ;,. 2Q,~ .. rurn.fl.ha, frp .c. ll•l 461h St NB. 528-1010 --. --2ba.$551'.lliroorh;c/opt. l:>lly, n u l.U'IU'" -
Blk to bch. Oc/sidc hwy. El Toro 3232 l nln1ed. 0<."Cup. 752--1430. up~a1rs, ·.yn t10 oceanstde DUPLEX·lAwer, JBR, upper ,NEW 3 BDRM, 2 BATH NEWPORT CREST .. 2BR. 2BA. Nr. \Veiilc!Uf l\IALJ.::, istralght, age 40 to
\Vinter $450 mo. 645-296.1
1
BLUFl''S condo, 3 Br, 21 ~ h1gh1vay, S-15. 547~ 281~ \\'/ocean vieiv. Senior Spacious house size apts with 2 BR, 2 bs. Condo. S525 1hoppi.ng. Sn101l pct & child 60, shllre 2BR apt. $165/mo,
4BR, 3ba. nc..,... ~e Forest Ba. 1r1JI, c:onm1, pool. $"100. 23.lV ·SEAVIE\V: Lrg. 1 BR. Citizens only. Refs l'l'C[. large fenced yard,, frplc, dbl ~~~:2152ll28-42 Rutland Dr. &15-3761 or 646-4336
Houses Unfurnish•.d ~ondo. TennlS, sail, swim, 1no. 673-T252 $225. Jt""Y.•in & J r \VI n , 675--0909 gar, cpls, drps, <tishwashcr. .,.... N1':ED FE1\1ALE roommate,
incld .. $360 mo .. 644--0750 4 BR, 2 BA beach house. Realtors. fi.14~lll BACHELOR y 1 1818 2 children OK Of" all adult Apts Furn/Unfurn 3900 Cdl\1., J Ur, Sl65
O.neril 3202 t1unt1ngton &•ach 3240 winter n;o: Yr rowld $400; rar Y· bldg avail. No pets $32a 67~ &'.,,, IC.:t.:<..;..-'-'------Costa Mesa 3724 \\'l's! Ocea:i!rnt, u t 11 ~675 Elden, CM. 6tl-4oo5 . CHOICE ~ ""'
3 Nice 3 bedroom. 2 bulh (213J~l-:m7 or ~75E__ -hlC'iuded. Sl.55 per n10. CASA VICTOFtlA APTS LAKE FRONT oc,,.aEnAlsN "',",,',-1"'c1ryromo,.!d, malteo
ALA "ENTALS cpts, drp.\. patio, ,vaJk t~ \VALK TO ~EAOI< .~010--4"'0C'29:;·==~=~~ u -.. school and shopping. No fee. 3 BR.; $275/SJ75 yearly Ambassador Inn OCEANFRONT m 1 br Adults. l, ~· 3 fiR wf patios LOCATIONS shar('. $15;-, nXI. 6t5-Tnt
W1!fCW1Zl 1N"ma ~~or.,'l'Tf\Bev ~ Dale Caywood Realty 548-1290 BR.AND NEW \\'~t.er ~enlal. $200 ~r· mo: Frap~tl~ rm, clev~~cts PAR.K NEWPORT VERSAILLES BACllELOFt v.111 s har e , ofM'"· to •~5. Per 3 BR. 2 ba; Back Bay. Avail. $34•50 & Up ut lls. 1ncld. ~8-19JO or Sec. gale. ca~~ & wntei pd APARTMENTS DELUXE ;\PT. \VI san1e.
f fjn MOUSIS mo. Oct 1 LO h1arch 1 . .$400 SINGLE STUDIO APT 673-784~ 525 Victoria, CM, 642-i'.:170 . Bacllclor 1 or 2 Bedrooms ON THE LAKE Clubhsc, pool, etc., 546-f>ol25
SPECIAL \v~LY RATES ...., 1 cps o 1 ·CLEAN · 2BR c At S.. uth Coasc Plat.a. ace S1udenl look ng tor apt.. .1 ' ""..,.'·s. BRAND NEW db: duplex. ta.1o. \vith gardener. 614-7901 2 BR 1 •-t t bay ' .::=-,..:.c:c=::::..:::::::..=.=:.:.. and To1,1,11houses I
3 Br, 2 ba, nil bltns, lndry PIER, Baffront, Pvt Beal'.:h, r..r..n. & ~a~ Frpic. Patio. bbq. ' 9ui(.1.. ' . · pts, Fr. $2'1·1.50 Open % DaUy Pool _ Acapulco Aqua Bar 10 share v.·lfemalc.• .l>1ark.
HIWPOIT a IU.Y,C.M. '42-UU. rm. closed gar. \Valk LO Lt·g 2 or 3 Br Duplex. Will 2:27'7 Harbor Blvd. No pets. Yrly lse. S250. 3Slh drps, btt·i~. ~110· Adults, Spa Pools Telllli! & Jacuui. Spectacular 8 9"19-0398=-==-~~--=~'
MOBILE ho
-• l BR $'~. heh. 522/524-16lh St. $350. furnish. 673-fi6:Kl. Costa ~te.sa 645-4840 St ~ small baby Oh:. No dogs. Across from f'ashion Island ... ~ Lak rr . ~
""" !MJ mo $150 sec Vacant Ca ll • Water & gl.l.s pd. Avail. oo al Jamboree on San Joaquin '"-• .., e w ov.•enng Garages for Rent 4350
DOW 2 Br sm. furn, close M~ Or Ray. 84&-13TI 8kr'. 1-BR., 1 buth. Attached Sl'lS. 1 BR. Parking, or before Oct. 7 . .$18S. llills Road. Fount.II.ins-~ii l\tlllion Dollar
tn ' gal'<ige; .)'a rd. Nea1: El Puerto Mesa sll!l!ps 4. 1 Blk 10 heath. 61&-0791 (714) 644-1900 aubilOOsc, Gym, Sauna,
BEACH bach's $ 1oo /1 SO BIKE to beach, 2 Br house, snopplng. $.1.80 M~ 644-1554 2lJ.696-68ro ..:c:;..:::::::.-----~-......................... .., Total Secur: .. .. EASTSIDE $25MO
6'12-2657 Furn&. utll pd. singles .singles, tamiUes. Also 2 Br N t H I ht 3270 I BR FURN. OCEANFRONT YEARLY e Tropical Pool e Jn1n1ediate Occupancy
NEAT 1 BR house $180 Nr. N~WpOrt Beach & Costa ewpor e 9 5 , $165 All Util •. Paid 3. BR/2 Ba, garage. frplc. 2 BR, crpts, drps, bltns, PROMONTORY POINT ADULTS Office Rental 4400
OCG. util pd, avail. · M sa. Agt. Fee. 979-8430. COTIAGE 2 Br, 1 Ba, big No Children. ~o Per.i; dshwhr. patio. 642-6793 ' spira l staircase, re a 1 APTS &.irry, No Pets
SEVERAL 2 BR house• in 3 BR, 2 ba. frptc, patio. yard & pntio, gar, 1:1.vall Pool & Recrealioo fireplace. refrig, lge patio, lux ury Adult Apts Bachelor, 1, 2 & 3 Br's.
C.M. $175/200. 1''ncd wlgar. No pets. $325. 16642 Rhone Now S'J.65. 1110. 64.Hi625 1959 Maple Ay•., C.M. San Clementt 3n6 gas & water pd. ;,.is-uti!J 1 fo'ron1 $.150 f $175
Kids & pets -singles too. Ln H.B. 833-1103 or N 1 Sh 3272 53 WEE & UP . NEWLY decorated, 2 Br, 200 Proniont(l[')' Dr., \Vest. rom per mo. REALLY 3 BR house $300. 675-20lll. __ •.~por ores 0 K RESORT llvlng, ocean VIC\V, new Cl'pts, gw·age, water Newport Bench. 675-8000 Santa Ana WESTCLIFF BLDG
NEWPORl BEACH Stv C&D lncd & gar •Studio & l BR Apt!., · heated pool. 2 BR. 1 BA. pa.id. $180. 252tl "F" Santa Mod l 9 • 3700 Pl D
FAMn.Y '4. lx 3 Br 2 Ba 3 BR .. ram. rm, 2 ha. 2 •1'..""NJOY the Ocean (steps e TV & ?>.1aid Service Avail 498-0487 Ana Ave. Call between 1'6.'"""'""'"c"•!i!:!!oP";,.," ... .,'°.,'..... GIG r.
$225 Nu ~Int n~ crpts c~r gar.,bltns, fenced yard. 3\\'ayl, tennis, Ulymp. pool • Pho neService -Htd. pool LARGE l BR. Frplc , ~ I' 71o4.55~0466 O• '"" N~'" 1-11 I " '~'' 0o flP"1
& di-pi; • kids OK. No fee. S2891!\1o. & all Newport Shores e Ch!ldren & Pet Se<;Uon dshwshr. wshr/drycr. wry Io=~=~~--~-'-ON THE WATER \:::::::::I " BEAl,ITIFUL 3 BR, 2 Ba Agcnt 842-4421. privg's. in 3 br. 2 b4. dLx. 2376 Ne\\i>Ort Blvd., Ct.I clean. SlSS. \TI41 a4H520 $UO. 1 BR duplex. Quiet New unil never Jived in. 3
$28S' All appfs, f n·c d 3 & 4 Bedroom, 2 bath lO\\'Cr dplx ., tor onl,Y ~.f.15 548-97.)5 or 645-3967 court. Non.smoker s , Br + den, f11>lc, 2 Ba. all
.A••ll•blt llOW -D•h1••
•••c•ll•• afflc1 • All
Call Mr Howard
645 6101 WI.""""" hOmes. $29:' to $305. Ask foll _a mo_. on yrly_. '""-· Gt!-357_3 Ap.1rtm•nts Unf~rn . married couple. No pets ot' .. 1 • 1 ---t.:hiluren 972 .W. 17th, Mll·Ol.il U1tns UlC . lrash t'Ompaclor.
ON water 3 Br. $325 now Barbar'IJ at 531-No fee. 2 STUR\', 4 BR, 2¥.i Ba. B Ibo p · I 3807 lndv. laundry rn1. Beau!. Large deck, singles fine 3BR. 2ba. Ca}jf CJ ic, boat frpl, SJ><.in.i.sh tile. Pool, Beaut. 2 Bl' rum S190. a a eninsu • 1 BR. stove, re!rig, crptS; viev.·. Yrly. $700. mo. 8J3-0.i67
TOO MANY TO 1JS'I' CALL gate, lrg yrd, pa1io. tennis & beach. $450. yrly Lots of bltins. pool, "·alk OCEANl''RONT y EARLY d~. close lo sbopping, or &'il-91112
ALA R.nt.I. ~ a1e<t "~""mo, °'"I-alt 5_.30 "'" '"l lo shopping, 1,~ mi. beach Util pd No pets $'"-· -=~-=----_,_ ..,.,., cnu-'"" .,..,....,.. 931 \V. 19th St. . 3BR, 2BA. fpl, crpl.s, drps, . . · .....,.. DR'S, ATIYS, l"XECS LANDLORDS' 2 BR New Condo. Expensive DUPLEX 3 Ill'. 2 ba., frpl., 548-0492 bltns; lBR. fpl, crpt11, drps, 67"5-5tnl. Ope n daily J(}.5. Plu,;h, ne"'
• decor for O'Al'l'\er, Nr. HH etc. 1 blk. ocean. $J25 bltns, 675-15?.6. Eastbluff 3831 1 Br \•it.'v.' a pt on ba y. t.1ust
Wot Specialize in Newpor:. $250 mo! Bkr. 846-3648. n'IO.-yrly. &12-3361 * ELi\f GARDENS-APTS-SPACIOUS 2 Br. Stove. I see to apprtt. Pool, pvt Beach • Corona del ?>.lar • 3 BR, 2 BA. new paint, )iln Juiln FURN. 2 BR apt in adull blk bch/shops. Adlts, oo e DELUXE e balcony, slip ava il . $425. Apl
-" Laguna. Our Rental Se£. crpt & cl.rps. $325. mo. Capistrano 3278 section. Pool, no pets. 177 pet~. $225, Yrly. 6T:r4172, 102, 310 f'ernondo, Balboa. ~vice i!__F¥E to You! Try 564-301.5 E. Z2 nd St .. C.J\.f. G42-3&1j. 673-1162. 3 BR, 2112 BA apt for lease. tNr. PavJ.lionJ. 615'-7520 or Nu-VieW! .. ,...,,......--h Incld spac. master suite, 6~8551
NU .. Vl!W RENTALS Irvine 3244 '"'c." town ousc near EASTSIDE lge furn. 2 Br 3 BR, 2 ba. frpTc, new, 200 din rm & dbl garage. Auto ~-=~-~-~ I,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;,·;;,\ Murina. Bllns, crpl.5, drps, 1.1t poolside. Bltns. Adults, ft to ocean. \\linter rental door opener avail. Pool & EASTBLL'FT spacious 3 Br, 67:H030 or -194-3243 11 comm. p00l. For lease 00 pets. $200. 642-9520 $375. 67l-3758 Recreation area. Adults 3 B.1, luge fam/mi. frpl,
§INGLES, kld1, pet. UUl. pd. * RENTALS * . re:J.SOnablc. 493-3381 o r l & ".? BR large, $175. & BAYFRON1', exciting view, only, no pets. PH: 644-iKlfi.4 fillt"st bl.~nsbl' c en Ir a 1
.1 Br, $175. Newport ViU1u.-e-1, Univ. Pk 493-8746 $?!5. 'Ideal for bachelors, 3 br. 2 ba .. patio, frpl, e $322 e vacuun1. " gnr w/opnr,
HUNT. Beach 2 Br, $200. 2 BR., 1 bath • .......... $315 3 BR, }'rplc, Brick patio, adults. 1993 Chux'ch 548-9633 dshwshr. S395 673-5TI9 11)5 Amigos Bay, NB ~~~ft~. ~~ s4;};~~~1:
Pool, kid ok, nr. beach. 3 BR.~ 2 balhs .......... $350 2 car ga.r, nr beach & Managed by r:.~.., '"'"" • Cd~f 1 .BR duplex, garage, Village 3, Univ. Pk. ninrlna. $.US. 1no. lease. 1 BEDROOM Backbay, pool, ON TH E lli\Y, big lux. a~t. \Vll..LlAM \VALTERS CO ~NE
util pd, SITS. Applns. 3 BR., 21h ha ........... $425 'l~:.Hl~ $175, 2455 Irvine, Mgr. Apt. wood bcanis. trpL, patio, . , WPORT TOWERS
Homeflnders * 642-9900 3 BR .• 21h ha, bonus •••. S450 "A", 548-7476 4 br. 2 ba. $550673-5TI9 Huntington Beach 3840 ON THE BAY
''RENTERSll'' Deane Homes Hses Purn/Unfurn 3300-LG 2 Br furn. close to Corona del Mar 3822 1J BR 2 00 1 Sll .1 4 BR-, tam, 3 ba ....••• $575 shopping. Adults, 00 pets. 2 STORY, 2 br., condo., full ~ "'"""'., ·• urn. P ava1 ·
You Get All The Rouaes . The Terrace [)c{! Grimes Leasing Agt. Inq. 179':2 Rochester rear. 2 BR-2 BA. S\VEDISH pool & club privl'gs., gar. *""" t-.to/yrly lsc.
availa\Jle for rent in OUR 3 BR., 2 ba ......... $1001425 Laguna Niguel Realty ' · FRPLC & stor., nr. Hunt. Hrb. 646-83l6 642-8931 ~ULL.ETIN UPDATED 3 Gteentree llomes Spc"ciahung In private c."Om· 2 BR., DUP furn., shag cpt~ .. No children or Dogs, Swedish shop'g. ctr. & school. No PAJ{h: NEWPORT. lowly 2
times/wttk. 2 BR, 1 bath , , , .•. , .$.115 nluiu ty rentals on lhe beach. ~~~i. ~~~·~:ts. Sl.50 fTplc. S250 mo. 675-5T.M. pets. (213) 692-2146 an. 5, br/2 ~. exquisite harlx>r
Hom•flnders * 642-9900 Turtlerock ~hiny w/t'xpansive ocean . h 3 WANTED-Quiet bachelor for Sat/SUn days. \-"Y.'. Sundk, spa, pool s, gar.
132 Cabrlllo, C.?>.f. 3 BR .. 2 ba ..••..• $4751\•/gdnr view:;. Short or long term Huntington Beac 740 unique lbr apt. w/frplc, WALK TO BEACH So<:ial activitirs. Security Co!JA;ge Park le r "~""' 1unrds. $379 mo. Days
MESA
GARDEN
Am **Corona del M•r**
2 & 3 &Inns., crpts, dtpl§, Professional Offices nnd/or
ulillties paid. B 11 I n s, f{etail. Deluxe, air con<!.,
lau1xlry facilitit.>S. R ec . aniplt• prkg, jnn. 5el'V., uUI
room \v/pool table, roi1n fld. JOO.:.nxr. Jl"'Y frontage
room, sauna, pool, bbq. & 2nd fir. Rates lrom .48'.
area. Adults only, no pct1. 0\Vlli.'I". 6i:Hi9QO. 2855 .i:;.
~5-6700Briitol, Cort.ta Alesa, Coo11 Highway, Cd.\1
:
::::::::::::::::1·-oFFICEorSTORE \\lcstcliff Drive ground fiOOf'.
Ca rjX'ting, private oflit't'&, ~{11@ 'ft'alnut p1t1l'!ling, 11.ll air
--l.'OnditioncJ, M1ple parking
UOTIMC KEW COftctPT ! front nnd rcnr
IDUll WESIDE UVIMC 642-4353
Ii SM..f..ll ,.,, ACCl,TID PETE Bi\KllET'T l'lEAL T\'
•Bocholon WATERFRONT
•1 8R,2BR NEWPORT BEACH
• 2 BR & Dert Executive offlces
From $175 _ $435 2 Or 3 Hoom suitr ViCI\' of hool.'I & \\'UICI'
M•sa V.rde Ea$t'& Adam' l Stnall oUicc $ls;;
540·1800 Bill G rundy Ritt.
675-6161
fREE FREE
4
BR
2
1\ .ba' ••~" ast.'S. ro1n .wvv. mo. BEAUT furn. apts $165 & some ,oc;t'an vu, $200 pt'l' 1. 2 & 3 Br. cri>I, d.rps, f.3.l·&flJ. Evei; 49+l386. OFFICE SPACi: r OR ·~fessW>na!_ Service •_ ·• , :.i...' i~~·· ..... ~ 496-40-ID 830-5000 Sl75 Spanish style building, mo, utd 1ncld. 67l-079'l Ultins, gar. 221 16th St. or ------~=-RENT. Costa ?>.!cu, llarbor 1-----I liTDl\1·o"'DS,;&;; ~ 3BR T house N S...21,1 ba closed .EART 1 ba. h I S13.; 20.l 15lh St., HWJtingtoo NE\VPORT BAY & .._.,, al Adan15. 13 cu u t i l u 1-"'Jl{'~n.,~ Pl\ JI': 3 BR., 2 ba ............. $.500 z 'own .._~ · 1: L ' pvt et -gar, pool, "'" . pdum N c e or. . Bch. SfT.3957 CATALl;'IA VIEW n;-St y od A. ·
4 BR 2 ~· •""' ca1: gar, .,....1 s 1p r'urn sa1 .ii'., laundry, adlts 17301 Urn 8 . o pets. Call 0 .yf ~-t II S tn 111 er n. 1r, mu .s 1 c , ·
Hom•f1ndtrs * 642-9900 ., ~L ······ ···~;J\J S525 wuurn $450. <>-2'100 Keelson Lane 1 blk West of 675-6737 1 DAY FREE RENT ... ront uun.
5 p. pnc. _''" ·1_'!!".'! ___ janitorial, Class A. \Valker
'
caJlfomia's Largest CAL 552-7500 C nd F 3400 Be;. -oU Slater. 842-7848 A'ITRACTIVE new 2 Br. \\'alk to beach from new li x., nu 2 Br. 2 Ba, terr. "' -· ·--& Lee Bid~. Cull Gene Ifill,
e nnntaJ Service'.• • VISION • o os urn R>ol. Sec. bldg. 2 car gru'. 557.0136 or 642-0""". '""' I BR apt, $135. + util . 1 Two biles to bch. View. 2 & 3 Br plush aptS. C.n.1y, 61:>-8551. 2 BR. TO\l.'11house, frpl c, wv"'---.1
B•lboo l1l1nd 3206
QlARMING 4 BR, South
Bay(ront:-Garden, Pier,
yearly. 213-761-7196 or 714-
CLEAN spac., 3 br, 2 bu. blk from beach. Pool. No SJ50 mo. 6'&JS08 SZT:l/$350. Lio ns Estates, 2 BDTti\'f, newly decori;tcd front $250. l BR, from $1~. * 1 ~10. FREI-.; RENT *
Sing. fir., Hbr. High Dist. pets. ~2746. Costa Mesa 3824 536-2579 1~. 9 .... . Pool, terutis, continental No lease rcq. Dix. oUires ... ~ I ... '°18 ~. mo. on mo. W.SIS. b kf l 0 -f il •• ,. A' rt 11 t I '/C ..-.. mo. sc. o1'tO"""W l Be h 3748 QlEZ ORO APTS Also 3 Bdrm S325. mo. rea as ~parate am· y 1 . trJ>O er o e. '' ,
a red hill company Condos Unfurn. .l425 aguna ac $l70. LARGE 2 BR, single 8234 Allanta ,\vnll. Sept. Tth, 884-1&58 section. Oose to ahopplni full !t'rvlce.s. r·rom $135 rno.
Univ. Park Center, Irvine ROOMS, STUDIOS story, beam ceiling, bit-ins, 1,2 & 3 BR. Priv gar .. pool , bdv.·een &lS wkdays, or & fine beach. &W-26U 2172 DuPont, lloon1 8
HUNTINGTON Beach, 2 BR, & I-BDRM. APTS. crpr, drps, 21lt3 Wallace wisher. dryer. Close to 87S--08.JJ wkend.s. * 8J3..3t.l3 'rli noon *
REALTY
2 Bil. Condo •• , .r.;1Sf mo Lsl' cpls: drps, washer/drye~, \Vinter re n l a J s. Sonic Ave. 64G-9'243 64&-8882 bench. 5J6-.03'36. ~,,~,.-.V-A_T_O_R--bull~d-inc--o n THE EXCITING DEL U X ~ of Ci c e &
Balboa Penint ula 3207 2 BR Condos •..•. 5265 &: $275 re!r1g., R/0, DW, pool pr1· pern1anent. SlOO To $250 a 2br. 2bn. erpts. drps. bllins, EXEC. llving over 40. 2 Bed bc.lch. Pvt b."llconies. Pool, PALM MESA APTS. coinnterclal spuccs uvail.
3 BR Condos •• , .. $265 & S275 vileges, close to school & month. Ocean House. 2 kids/no pr ls. \V/D hkup, rms. Cust crpt, dbl drps, SOOJrily, adull liviOR;. bllins. MINUTES 1'0 NPT. BCH. no,v. Choict.J Laguna Niguel
3 BR HJmeS. S300, $325, $335 :1hopping, $235. n10. Ask for * 494-8541 * gur , pHtio, 181-ll Del Mar, 1\·ash/dry, crptd patio, rec. Boch. 1·2 Bil.. 5515 River Bach, 1 & 2 BR. frorn S157 .~ Mission VJC'jo area. Xlnl
613-7611
OCEANrnc>NT, Charming·
4BR, 2 ba, furn or unfur ..
$900 mo. yrly lease. A\lilil
-Oct-1, xlnt Joe, 675-8702.
3 BR Homes • S360,S375, S395 Sev or Dale 963-4567. 1 BUX:K to Victor Hugo 64~1-9455 $200 facil bcyand compare. $3.:J.5 i\ve. f>.42-ZXiG Adults, No Pets. fwy access. :Ul-1401 8 to
4 BR liomcs ... $335,$395, $425 2 BR condo, 11 ~ Ba, den & Bch. 1 br. 1 ba. Close * ELl\-t GARDEN APTS fT'O. 545-215L 960-1160. l)CJ.'J\.NFRONT 3 Br, 2 ])fl 1561 Mesa Dr. -'~--------1
RANCH REALTY w/\\·ct bat', pool I mi bch. to dwnt¥>'n. Adult only, no Unfurn. :.1 BR apt in fan1i lv LGE l BR. 3 blks from unfurn. Yrly .. fpl, I!'IA ht. (S blks from Newport Blvd.) 1501 WESTCLIFF DR. * 551·2000 * No children or pets. $285. pets Avail 1on $210 a mo. section. Pool. no pct!!. 117 ocean. Util pd. Stovl? .&: Day: 67 5_3 3 021 Eve : 546-9860 NE\VPORT Financial Center RAN~~ALTY 1no. +-clep. liunt. Beach. lse.. 497-1611 or 642-6636 E. 2Znd s t., C.M. 642-36-li rcfrig. S195. nio. 831-9950. 673-3434 FROM $139. 1;, mi to beach L•asing Office Spac•
3 Br. 2 Ba., Fa m. 'rm., din. rukrn REAtTY 962-74.U alt 5 Ei''FICIENCY Apts iron1 $80 2 Br, l'fi ba S!udio. lndrv 2 BU\S. beach; 2 BR., J"" =su~P:li'R~<~b-r-. "'2_,.ba.-w~/b-ay BEAtrrlrULPOLYNESIAN CAIL ON-S ITE t-.1ANAGER
rm., pvt. beach, gardener, * m 51u * • * J BR. 2 BA. C .. !\!. week (<Ith \\"eek free I Pool, fac. Ne .... ·ly derorall!d. Cail bt1 .. Patio, gar., lndry. $225. It tl!ach view & 1 min. • 6 POOLS, TENNIS, PRIV. (711) &l2-31ll ext 246.
Corona del Mir 3222
Cam l" o Highlands, $575. WE HAVE RENTALS GBla~~o.d~~.r~,"'ne527w
0
paint. l\1aid, Ph. Lndry. Vill age !or appl 540-1983 0 r 64;,..J~ 846-Ull walk 10 same. Yrly S<ISO PATIO G~n Apts. Saunas DESK spncc available $50 644-9378 or 415+254-2960, • ...., ...,._ .nor lnn. 4!»-9436. 968-U12. EXTRA ,_ 2 Br, 2 Ba dlx -Fan••'ly pis 61' ·~o jacUT.li, car Pr k 'g · nio. Wllipt'O\'ldc furnlture
4651 \\'ayne Rd. As well as a fine selcclion -T h U I 35,.r "'& ...... ' ~· 846-132.l Huntington Beach of beautiful hom es FOR own ouse n rn ~ OCEANFRONT 1 & 2 BR $275. JBR, 2Yl ba, gas frplc, poolside a1,1 nr bcadi, adults 2 B.R. 2 BA. Upper Duplex. at SS. mo . Answering
NRd. OCEANbl •• ":Sr,be3ba, del~I SALE_ ! Let us sol.ve your B-RAND "''" TOWNHOUSE & 2 BR STUDIO. P<irt. furn. bl·'' in t-rig. Ocean vie"'· only. no pets. $165. 5J6.8362 No child/pell!. $26a. mo. f1l.pdEnSnllbopathm.t.DcaanbalePl1V .. ,uBlilsR :':~~ ~rv~~.ableH. un'Un·' gt"••'
m rm, ""'· am tt , hou eeds \V • Avail. nov.·! 536--0321 cpts/drps. 1130 Victoria. To '1 BR H Year\)'. Newport Shores.
trplc, $475 lse. 673-3477. to ~~e '.:ou! . ere here u'"1~ubantin~10,n H!roarbor&.2baBRk OCEANFRONT 1-2 BR &•1.::',.:::...::c•:::l:..I ::_919-:.::...:5099=::.· ----1 ¥Harbo:.~Adu~; ~.g Ion Aval. 9/16. 548-a912. unrurn S2'20, & BachelOl', Beach. Cli.4.l:l L
$175 UTll. pd. Nice 1 Bdr, BOB PETTIT -: , fip c.. nl . c 2 ,Studios. Part. furn. Avail APT MGR for 14-2 Br. ~1in. 8''6-4360 ,... ........ , BR 2 rutn SlOO. Ph. 49&-0195 or LUXURY office, Newport bltn p Ho CdM pa.llOS, 1 b!k from 1hopp1ng. .,~,,032 t..&...Colw."! 2 1 ha, bltituJ, 960·11'12 Bench, v.'tlnt c on g e n I 11.
' a • RE,ALTOR wtk to beach. Pool, Jn-··-·· now, ....._ l duties. $80. off rent. Pool, 2&3 n....i-n•-ca~t. drapes close to OCt'an, $250 mo S200 UTlL pd lgc bach .. ..._. 1 · ~ 1 u.:uivu · .-.. Room 4000 party, furn or unfurn. $1$. • F~t ":"eslem Bank Bldg. ,r.r, sauna. $350. Ga 11 CpL studio apt. in duplex. b tins, w/w. _ ,-,efcr o der huilt·ins, from Sl!i6 lo $219'. yrly flC. no pets. 218 Cedar. ;.;;;.::;.;;:.1 _____ .::;:;: 645-3700 .~ CHANpaLio, EunlL fropen''· Cd2 MBdr, University Park 552-7000 we e k c.I a y s g: 3 o . 5 , All utll. Priv. yrd, v.·alk to woman. 6~2-9'J20 R-12-03.~. 646-8Vl6 or (213) 332-5176. ROO'IS FOR RENT CLOSE ,::c:::.::=-------1 ~~ DAY NITE d be h 494-5241 RA 3 ..... " PART or t.'nUre 1st fir. of ,gar, boat slip avail Ne-.\'port or 21J...63&.-lOTI cvc:s & 1,1,·ken 5 ac · l:'.:XT ·lg. '"" 2 ba., Laguna Beilch 3848 NEAR l-IOAG . 2 hr. 2 ha., TO $EACH & TOWN. S95 unique C.JM office Bldg.
'240
1
~ \fAl;r, trpl, beams 1 FOR lease exec. 5 Br, 2 ~2 714'"640-1246. Newport Stach 3769 cp~'I., drps., hltns., ehld1'.1. Twnl'mise ivlfplc., patio, each. 1251 Catalina, Lag. llarbor f.1gmt. Co. 675-6000
1 blk ticli, CdM h:i., patio, encl. yd. New • OK. Acr.s. from Cathohc WIDE ocean vie\vs. Close pooL Vacant $300. Ownr., Bch.
$335 3 Bdr, 2 Ba, trpl, palio, crpts & drp~. In Irvi~ S Apartments Furni'shed 3BR. Duplex, 1,2 blk from &hi. 55S-8177 to beach & shopping. Acres 61()...55(1 alt. 7PM or wknds. WANTED a"-ct' c o1FFbelCE ndjuc."enl la1v suite
1 from n d Ir I be h Re '"' 9 r f 11 3 BR 2 °-N pt f -~ b • yng '"" " n out. bid•. 1~·tlgc loc g\r,. house ocean, NB mm. 1 LJ !I 1 a -ac . nw.i mo o u , ca, o es. o gwuens. estate Uvinr>, BAI..BGi\ Bay Club, 1 r. .. -,..," oomple •.::Nl 0 Call M II "'"1596 $lS5 SlOO d p 1 & ·-..,. woman to shr 3br apt at tn N.B. An1plc prt. ... , ~ $4l"i. 4 BDR. 2 Ba. lrpl, Kids, . x. ~· m . . Balboa lslond 3706 year. ca lffi7'" or ep. oo spa. Un u s ua I Funtlure nvaU, Exec. llv-the be h n Rick 0 ~
Recd oo• '"°' 4••2852 Call ,27 r:.riM • .. _ ac ca or ave to o1 her prof oles & b1.1nks. pet! ¥Jelcome, CdM · .,.,.,.......,.,,, ;rr" !' ·OUNU· pnvacy. .-,...parate g U e I I Ing. Gr->-95.'lO aft 5, 673-7596 645-3600
NlJ-VIEW RENTALS CULVERDALE sparkling 4 WlNTER. lovely 3br, 2ba, OCEAN FRONT·Wlnler, dplx, SPACIOUS rlew Ea.stside house. 2 bdrm. Dishwasher. ~BAc:;Y:,F,:,R<::l.::NT:::::~,~B~r-,~2~Ba-o-n l "'C::,,='-~-----1
6734030 or 494-3248 Br, 2 &, cpts, tlrps, blti111, pnho, $350. 321 Sapphire, 2 Br. 1 Ba, gar, Adults, 2br, Jba, gar, laund tac. ~ual ovens. S425. mo. Also . main bony, pvt bch. w/pler "'W1F~~ ~KomEj FOR LEASE-LG. OrFICE
2 BR,
, ti\ •-, p·• -tio. pool club. $350. RED CPT 675-1652 no pets. $250. 67>2TI8 quiet , S225, 54Jh1533 ug.e 2 Br, 2 Ba aplll. High 979-l9.'Z ·. 644.4510 Tw 00 • 1100 · Monarch Bay Plaza
IA< v• .,... n LTRS tA,lenel ~·1351 c:clhngs, formal d in in g 1..::::.:.:::::,..:.:;..::::::..~~-oro area. mo. 1200 ~· ft iter<JI per 'c-ompletely redecorated "' ~ YEARLY 2 br., lg. patio._ NEW \vinter 4 BR. 2 BA 2 BR. cpt11, drps, fenced yd, l E"" 2 b 8311-3784 ~ ''Ell'
4
BR Col I • d . I , . ., S3 • '·-3 BR 2 Ba .,,. d room, \replace & many Y 1u,.LY 2br. a., • n10. V cw, pe.rldng. Call: lndd1na ~. d rps , i• · ., 2 ba., lege new Y ec c .. .,......,, Th. ~ , ..,.,.,. iarage, l l:hll , no pets. othtt amenities. $500. to Newport Shores, 2 blks. NICE room m8'nUleent vu, Jack Godwin 496-4040
Washer, dryer, l blk to J> 11 r k . h v rn j ·~ r p l . . 67",,.fJ666 1Ai blk lo ocean. 675-8038 Rcl.s. 6T.'l-3022 $000. mo. including utilities. ocean. $260 518-8349 pvt bath & balcony. $40. SSc p ER SQ FT \
'beach. Yrb' or v.·intM'. (7141 conimuruty poo · H mo. Bal* Peninsula 3707 WATERFRONT 3 BR. firepl, EXTRA Lrg deluxe 2 Br apt•. Now decorating, choice of UDO "Dn.-...t, trg 3 Br, wk. UUI pd. 2500 Seavlew, 161 7 WESTCLI FF-NB • 673-.l.8S3; nl-244-1653 or (lr 11'1" opt. 645-S916 Duplex. \Vinlcr or yrly, crpts, drps, bltlns, No pet11, colors & papers, Mature ....,,,..,..,.. CdM ,
11
., "•" _
14
. dul "" 2 Bn. will furn, $550.mo. c t d A/C ~ ~
.. ~.-,..,.r;w-v;i • lBR, 2111h.1,. Vill1tge Lil, 2 BR. LGE K 11 ch e n , Dock avail. 67>0169/74l-tJ8.1 Sl90. 646-1181 a ts ..... 1-4653. 673-8886 P 8, rp1, • u._ P"61
3 BR, 2~ Ba, contempor:uy Tenriis l.'Odrts, 'S\\'imming Balcony, nr beach, shops. 3 BH Apl; w/gara~. ~~ Blk LARGE 3 Br, 2 Ba, near 1 BU<. to Viclotia Beach ~~"'=~-.,,-.,--,!rpl= * PENif!ULA ~; SSS. ulll, 10' clnga. Aat 541-5032
homt, patio, gali fi.&Q, pools. S-425 per mo, 552..s23S Ulll lncld. $256. mo. 642-3519 to beach. \Vater pd. 675-9225 OCC, upper, crpts, dr;>s, 0:cean~ .. 2BR, Pft 11 o '. S~ ~ ~Uo~ 1 'Bik bch: ~~·snM>king ~Or ~iJ;;· CORONA DEL MAR
gar, part · furn. Dtt.y!I· Laguna Beach 3248 \VINTER brond nl'W upper or 213-944--1890 bllns. $220. 557--0350 nice. All u1 11. pd. inc. cable. $350. m~ yrly. 645-7054 673-4419 ' • 350 IQ ft ups1alrs, for omee 644-6400 or 640--0767fF.v~: Wllt. 3 Doors to bch. 3 Sr, 2 $JOO -0 BEACH Bl No pets. Thru June IS. $300 or 1bop. on C. Ilwy, crpt, 644-6404 • 1160 ·~L pd lge •·ch full bn .,~ 12131 ~ '191 U . N lBR. Nice, qulcl area. t· mo 49-~ ........ ___ 4911111 I Br., I Ba., 2 Ba., 1 83., ROOMS P> wk up, with drps, adjacent apt. 640-0Ul/ v • • • u. • • .,._... ~ · tll. pd, Kitch & Bath. 673-Ins. New cpl. Spacious. Only · vwut.T -1 kitchen: S30. wk up t\pl. 644-lcr;l
NR. OCEAN •I br, 2 ha, kltch, fncd ~d. pct or child $250 PER 1>10. yrly.. uUL 1241 or 67j.5Q.18 $145. 645-4266 Agt. crpts. drp1, bUJnA, Poo 548-9755 6'5:3961. ..::.:==-------1
' palkf.~kyrdall. $·4·1e. ~·IH,irig .. $:Cjm80~n ,...nd. Big pd., qulc: married~ cpl., no. YEARLY 3 ·br. 2 ba., Steps 2BR. Cpts. Drpll, bit-Ina TOWNHOUSE new 2 br. :fo~:·N •dA~~~.· 2~, 24.& LIVE AT ~ BEAOI COM Of"FtCES .UO' -8e(ll, tum . .. ""' ..,,.........., fncd yd. Child/ I~ pets, no \,:hldrn. 67r;..3.5ll. !Cl Bc:lch. \Vfl.lCf pd. No Stove & patio. Good location ocean \l\cw, walk to bench, .,.... "" $25 4 up a wk. 6'13o(»4(), !7~·,:.· ~11,~~ t~~~;
Cost1 Melt 3224 • ..,,.,., 2 BDR. bl'~. -•ow LO\VER 2 br. occa11fron,t. pets. $3.'.0 n10. 613--0184 $167.50. &16-63.55 art. 4PM ram. rm., wtbo.r., CJ>lA., 'o"Kestcliff area, s .. f!~~t PINE KNOT MOTEL ownr/tltt, s~ "M. ~ '"" ""'" ti WID k a dJ'ps., frpl., lile pat ios., $400 . cnll 642-7152: ~ •-.wv
4 BR. l" Ba. Cov. patio. I .~ie!· ul.;)r"'1· •pddt'Ck. II but I ~r.,Jflr ~ 00-~r ' oc, ~Nf'RONT 3 br. ~·t 2 Br. apt. cpl/drp. No chldrn 294, Zl6 Wave St., 847-4871 DUPLE~'{, 2hr, lba, garage. BAL. ISL. eepat. nn. & bn. C.O.M. 2,400 Sq, Ft/P.C.H.
bttia, cpU! drps 8 3 91..,..,,. "-. sma ti ce • rp1., pnt10, winter tenuu or pets. 4175 646-9280 2257 2 BR. 1 Ba oc:tanviC\\'. bltlns recently redecorated. $290 pvL ent., fem. 675-8137. Sing & Mc./ 2nd ~~looTf $700 . .se.nonao. sMo. tefs.5's--m9 2 ~· ~rpl, So. ~ntt I..ARCE 3 hr. upper, ocnlrnt, $.'li5 u n10 714-4M-7001 Apt. "F" MAple St. S255 &:. $265 walk ~o bclich. 644-6800 or 644-7326 $95. dbl $13.5. mo. or Im.de tor? ~7-3062.
I BDRM
... "... ... t drntr. $315 2~Bdr, frpl, !dint bou11e. lcleal for !I ~Ing. girl!§ 2 BR, 1 !l(fu.~ to btnch ,.,ool '"RGE 2 BR near OCC 4.94-2339 2 B ,_ I ft~•1 Furn. PvL en-· 300 SQ fl, crpt/drps. -'"•~ult, t~P I, ·r-• No End ur fain $37!j 642-3850 . ' • """" , ' .,.===~,-~-~~-I r, fl('\I/ cplll/ pl\lnt, ul l'\.VVll "~ ...., no p;;_ts. ~2529 dD.)'!I. s4a) Tti.EF:S P i-t v a. c y , · e11rP01•1, winier or yearly. &--s110pplllfi• $175. + utiL Lagun• Nigu.I 3952 & laxt + SlOO clcliJ'llng. $255 & baU1 + garage. Mr. ~r mo. Call 646--21~ or
646-6273 tiller 6. • rh~rm! White o,11·atl't vloW: S:~t.J.N~~ and A. f:,~ L ~ No :student11. 673-6640 557-8372 ·-rno. yrly. 646--76l6 aft ~. Gates. 640-1460 or 645-5953. i ..:61'l-3=:::1<Y.lc::..· ------I ~SA VERP1';. 3 BR. 2 BA. 2 Bdr, 2 Sa trpl h~. chilfl/ llluminunl ptns and pols. BEJ\CHt'RONT. 2 br, l 'n SliARP'2 BR, Blt·lnS. Pnl.io, 3 ·Br, 2 Ba, Cbndo, C'.olf NEW 3 nn. 2 BA, JC.cps ROQl\1 for rent 1n prlvalt BANK or Co&lll. Meaa Plaza.
$340. pt.r mo. °"'"'M:r pay• • pe! _ TI.cy wUJ b~tcn Uie bu, rum. Blt.ns. \Vlnter Qr F'rplo. Btlktt St near ~ vtew, all cxtro.s, 2 10 <>Ce4n ~SltO · home, ~1c:w Verde area. Off i cc furni11becl. Nice
watl!!r. $tv.JljlilO Bob. $400 lJ'l'IL pd, 3 Jldr, 2 Ba, metal to a 'llJm...ntW" ~at. ST.,.-7777 or 838-1491. Jiarbor. $170. ~ car gar, Call 979-1104 9A,m """"":;-·~615~· !::._!!·~~-~-I ,.!:G:;:•::nt~l<~m2a:O"C-' -:*-=.2095=:;::::;--;;::= recept. area. S9'J. 556-3900.
48R. 2bll irplc, fam nn. dbl bpl.U. h<•Em8, 00' deckNTAL 'Xlndltlon~ Hnvc anYlhJ.nl to '~L'' 2 bt·, 1 hsc •to bc.h. LGS 2 SWrf."I Br, l Y.t Bn, to Gpm, 8~8201 OCE.\N view rt 2 s 1 Br unrum. new crpt, df'P.", 1111vc BOn1elhlnSf )'t)ll want to
tW pr~ d)w, bllln!, bnind N -VI W RE S l'l!llf U• a ·oa.il,v f'lllot S2Z'; 'il'iy Lux 3 llr, 2 bll., lndrY rm, piUO, yard. Encl. Claulfied A<I\ Call 64M67fl I ~ d ' ~~ r, near shops It beach, 519 sell ? Classlfif!tl ads do It
De'S. , ms. 646-9.\21· 873-itm rtr ..,l-?ZU Oa1idfled Ad. Oall 642:-(i67t furn or unfuni. U7S-5085. aar. Jl95. mi>. 846-1103 tod~I 644-67So :f42-309 ::.· Iris, Cdr.,j , &44·'7'13S well ·call NOW 64Hi6'71. J
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Thursday, Septtmber lq, 1974 • DA.ILV PILOT
c.:.:':::.•:...:R:.:e;::n:.:l•:.:1 __ ..;4400;;:: Loil & Found 5300 Carpet ervlce •1 P•l nllng/Peper~-~ Help Wonted, M&F 7100Help Wanled:,_M&F-i1ii100:;,;:::rr.:,eli::p;i;2en:Ot;::ed;;,:..,M;i-&riiF"°i7"iiooiMi":1:Hi:e"-lp;;-WUi.inted,
OFFICE SPACE CAU!'. ANIMAL CONTROL JOHN'S Cupe! & Uphot.tery ~iiiiiiii:~iii;iii.i~i l ~::.:!~~~~~_;_:.:: GIRLS-GIRLS LA CRl!>"TIANITA P,...Scltool
Pl e ••a 11 t surroundings. l~u11t1'!;1on Beach Shelter on Shampoo, (Soil Re· Delivery-Sunday Only t:a1y fun job. Olly or night. nffib qua.JUled, e:cp ou;. etntral l..agunii locatlOn. Krll EdlflOn St. ~l tardllnts. DrJ:reaRr. & CU~TQM PAINTING No. ex.per. ncces.'I. \Ve truln Uan Director. 496-2621
Good '°"'~· GOO Sq. ft. l~ck of ltumane Soclt'ly all color brtahtent•ni &. 1Q EXTERIOR Soeclallsl. State OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE-}'uu. You n1u1iit like pt.'t.lPll' LA.DY l.'Onipan1on. live in $241 rfK'nth, or 486 llQ .tr. ANl!\1Al. ASSIST. LEAGUE mit1ute bleach for ,vhlte Wcen»ed: N'o 2 5 ~ 9 3 1 • B~ &bop. P&kl1 fwcn.Uon, QUJRES THE USE OF A LARGE STA· &. be at leut 18. Appl}' llMhl I~ •'mil. &. cook.
$1!W month. 1uk.11)1iou, spaying ant.I CSJ"pet.¥. save yout money Bonded. UabUJty 1m. Free ~~:l)(.'e &l?'lJ; ap~;. ~~h TION \VAGON ORV AN . CONTACT MR. 8.l\Y ulu1 or C\'c. 2930 \V. no call• a(ler 7 pin. ~ Nola n Real Estate ~ncutcrlll.IC lnlorn1. 96Q..2900 by afl.vlng me extra trlp1. Color Con 1 u It t n It &: tool CUFF'S AUTO Coo.st lilly, N.H. l EGAL SECRETARY
494-85-41 * ANIMALS ll>ll'OUNOED Will clean 11~ nn .. dln!ng E•tlma1 ... LDw Compedrive own L BENTON WILLIAMS 330 WEST BAY GIRL F RIDAY 1-~~.::..;,.:::::.:.,.e_=-1 Sham T<rrlel-, ollil?"). F. '"' Z.-h<ill Sl!I. AD$ rm. Price" Gil-0003. REPAIR, 1747 Anahlem STREET, COSTA MESA. TELEPHONE \l'ltl• '"'"'lion""'· Newport
8u1Kws Ren tal , .A4SO Ph Jlu/l ,,bk, 1'~en1ttle $7.50. (.'OllCh 110. auUr $5.l'l'!~!!!!'J!'l!!!!!!'!!!'!IJ~!!!!!~ _··::;'•;,;•i.· iic.io-'ii'i.' owz.33iiiiioiiii1'li;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; j .,0 ,321 FOD APPOINTMENT. t)l..'edcd 1>:91Yl'31'tlil.: financluJ Bc<il'h llru•nclal Cent e'f. Mixed Shep, black, ren'Htle 15 )'J'I exp. J. what (.'Ountaj~ • V'Uo""I '" n1a•laltt'Oient firm. ~1us1 be 644-4111
Sf{OPI s u It ab I e for 1-tixe(I S001i, brw pup, nl1:1le not method. J do "'Ork C 0 l\t PL ET F. II OU SE AYON inlelllgenf, con&t'ltntiowi, in· cL"VN=""". "",.,-.,-11-,
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Boolaitore, ~fetal Sculp!or, Mlxud Shep pup, bl..-4,:e, male nty11eU. Good rel. 53l~lOI. PAINTING ;o.,..-='-An=;.-.:;E;:q'iue:;Tl;:Oppo;:.;;~rtu..:.;.;.:"-,'!Y'-;;;E.:.m~p,_l"ofy-;.e,r-....._.,..1 dh1tdual \\•ith excellent 1yp-pcnon w/supv. ability tor Aquarium Stoh!, locatOO in Cocker mlxl'CI, black male Custom, Interior, Wealtter Help W•nted, M&F 7100 Help W•ftted, M&F 7100 ing skllJs. Good potentiAI. i\t & t tu t kn It
The Mall at T If E Shep n1ixed. tllk/cre~ni F JtEASON. CIU'J)el, draperies p1<oof. Exterior, AL'OU!lti('11, OFFERS .. • Call MN-Stys. 8:t!·Ol3.1. :fr. Crc':f :i~es w& w be~
FAtroRY, 425 JOq1, N.8. Uo~h: n1L~e<1. brO\vn, fl.?;u1).ic lns1all )'Ourl or in I 11 e F.:stlnu1te1, 'l'im Cermak EXCITINC OPPOR1'UNJTY CAKE leer deoonttor, Apply DENT I\ L. ASSI'IConcrol ClnL FlllDAY. S Da)'11 Mon for ril{ht fJCl'SOn. Acceiitlng
673-9606 ll·5 Jhts two PUIM!, fen1ule 530-S61D Painting. 547-3296 for v.·01nen who ure feelinf. The Cupcake Bakery, 273 N\ll'lll'. Hurd w n r k In S. Uu11 .Fri 2701 \\li:st Co.us! ripp/Jtallorlll at Pork Super·
c.r-.f. Storefront & otrl«c + ~le n1lxcd, Lluck, ntule Ceiling• 6018 A Pal Is Back, you 11upply blah, bored or broke. Sci · E. t?U1 St., between 8 am lnlullli.:cnt, expcr'd, ht1flllY. l-1wy. Nil. Call ti.f2.56<.t{i for lor ~leAlt hcare, J+IS Supt.rial'
1500 sq tt fenced t1re<1. 'l'o1al J. OO<lle 111lxea. lllk·bf'I.\•, ti!. the paint I "'ill paint the In~ pt-estlQ:'.! AVON PltQ. &. 12 noon orgahlzed individual wanlccl uppi. J\\'t'. N.R. 2750 ft. J-fcavy foot 1t·aUic, Shaggy 'l'err\er, utond, male •WJLl.ARD PaJntlnp, New rooni~ $l~. \\'alls only. DUCTS is inh!reiitl"S!, 1nakes -~C'"A""'s"H"J"E"R"'S:;;-----for progressive df·ntnl ofc.1-"""''--,;c"'"LA=zE"R"°" ___ LVN S'·/.··•ui ot RN irAllshift. "·l, 64G-6001: 6"6-1246 Dobc1'n\un. hlk/brw, rcinalc ut."Ousllcal cell, repa~ ~ Ennmel xtra, tree est, ~ IJ'l tcrestlng, & leis 7AJ\f·3P:\t lifon. lhru Jo"rl. . • • "" ""' ~
v COl.itcr, l.Jluck, tcn1alc dt¥'-\'U11, No 281038, ·64Z-577a 540-7046 you b1idge family budget HOSTESSES Costa litesa. ~10 Salw-y Expene~,',, ·~·J"Jn -u n Ion ltellf'f for small conv. l{osp. CORONA DEL MA R Mixed 1k gle h /blk r.t 19 ~=~~---=-gap, Call W).70-il. Xlnt Pay A Fringl Open ......,...... Apply GI c n h n v e n or $-"ii ootlo '"°!'2/o!{!cc for "·b bl k• 'lw
1
• · Cement/Concrt,ft PAINTING & repair 35yrs 1 ,;""""'~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!! B f't . ' GI' Av E y A RD S ti it 1 N~v.part, l55S Superior, NB ...... ,.._. ....., ' &c nlfl. c. v.'Orkmanshlp guar.' Take I: ene I $ DENTAL Assist., Exp'd 3 ~ . lease. $100. 497. 15 Schnauzer, bl«ck, r('oiale LEONlTE CONCRETE. NC. advantage of my exp BABYSITTER, n1y home. E xperienced Prtfer r9d yr3., Expanded ct u i I es. n1itl11~ghl to S Af.t 3 6'16-T70.I l
Industrial Re nta l 4500 i>~le. lite grey, lenu1.l(I concrete •tamp l n & , ~i05G · · Adorable 3 yr old girl. r.ton-Atpli In Peri on Sal.at')' open &: unlimiled. OP'::n111gs. Juck m lhE! Sox, t.VN, p.111. 111ne, for medica·
h·ish Scltt•t, rt'd, fen1alc l.-Ubblestone brlck, t 11 e .l;i=""'=.'=-,.-,-,,,...,~,-.,.-Fti 8um-4pm. CN•n tran11p. 3~1 days a \\-eek. No Snts. 1:.iffi Buker St .. Crn;;la lolesa. tion, l 10 l: PM. Apply
Boxer, bl'O\Vn/bluck, mule (Putlos, driveways, etc.,J PAINTING. Jnt.-Ext. Brush, i=N-''::"""'='=t=, =6<2-=-'26"--15-. ,--~ Al P RTER INN Gener a I Dent Is try, GUARDS i\1esa Venk: Cbnvalesce:nt
NOW LEASING Uo:-.cr, tan/white, 1uule 00>-4349 roll, spray. Very neat, BABYSITI'ER my home, 10 HOTEL pl'e\'cnlive, People orie11lf'1I SEC URITY Ilospi!al, ti61CenterS!., Cos·
Huntington Beach Ca111 CEMENT &: Block Work reliable. Good re!s. 518-6887 mo. old baby, mature lady, (Across From 0.C. Airport) pract~ce. H.B. area. E.xce~. OFFICERS la 1\lesa
NEW M-1 Sh hair ~mesllc, bk/\i.'ht, r . \VaJls, paUoa, sidewalks P les ter/Repalr IJ/111 213 days per \\ic, Cnll aft. CASHIER, EXPER. benefit.II. 962-24.36 full & P1u1 ·T1n1e MACHINIST Long hair dom~1lc, grey, r . .,.,,. ~ "PM 846-6482 HB DENTAL ASSISTAr..'1' 940 Sq. F't. & UP Long hair domestic, bl."•'k, F. etc. By hr. or job. ~15 p A....,...1 PLA~ERING ., PART-TBfE All unllorn1~ ~ l'qlHP turn.
Hami.l!on .l Newland S1. ,..,. c t JI kind ,.,...,,. .,. BABYSITTER. mature, my SILVERWOODS Chalrsi<le. X-ray, Lie. n!<fd. Top pay. J~1pld advan1.--en1'-'nt. ~1970 ::S Kittens, black, labby, tri· El\1ENT \Vork o a s, All t)•pes, ~ estimates hon1e, Balboa Island. 5 1 ;;"°~;;"";'"'°~k;e;;r;N;B;;;6<;;+.;;9'.?l~-;;;;;;';J 'te1 ly officer 111 con1r11rt11d, Pro.IO"(?Ssive O. C'. eleclronics I""!""!~~"':'!!!!~~,,..• I colored Reasonable, tree estimates Call ~ nights, 6 yr orb girl, Refs, No. 45 Fashion Island, NB 1330 E . 171 h, SanlH ,\na liriu noo:lll Lnthc &/or
-Long hall' don1cstli..:, bhu:k, l\I. Cal1. 63!h'.il25 Plumbinn 6071 67~199'2 =~o'See".;.7"Mr=.-'Scan~"'~--l\lun thru r·ti. C'.t'IK'rul l\hu:hlnl:H.s, 1-2 yrs INDUS. Com11ll'x l!XXJ SQ U. Long hair domci.;tic, ncutet'CQ, EXP. Young man will helPI---=•------=o;:,~==~-,~--Cl-WR side assistant, mus! DEPT. STORE t·xiicr. req'd. Ne1v a/c bldg.
lnuned. occupnncy. \V.17th whhl', ti1 homeowner do own concrete L.R. OTIS PLUMBING BABYSITTERN~ed,pe:.m. have 2 yr exp, & Xray l'ULL-TJl\fF: 11AlltSTYL1~'1' \l/C>:put'. ~ln't bencrils. lncludlng St, C.1'.f. Cull Sue Conner, Sh hui1· do1n1.>slic, blk/y,·tit, \\'Ork. 540--09'14 Remodels & Repajrs. \\later l\fy borne. Days. Mature, certificate Call 9 ICl 5 PORTER only. Lots of blow drying . drntnJ. 547
-S
7
Sl. l<lUcn, 1', • CUSl'OJl.1 CEMENT WORK heate.s, disposals, rumace5, Phone e'•es. 549-3558. 673-6443 96:?-TiO:i. Disc Instruments
otC M-A rN~.~crTr.t ENT' Found : Gentle, Jlled. size PATIOS, DRIVES, WALKS d!>hwashrs 642-6263 MIC_ & BABYSIITER my honle, 2 CHE~·tlST BS. Outstanding Apply l\ton Thru Frh!ny l!1\lRDRESSERS 1~%l. $100 I 102 E. Baker St
Uluck shurt haired dug \\•Ith Call Don 642-8514 BIA Complete Plun1bmg yr. old girl, 8:30 to 3:30, oppor in medical testing Personnel DepurltH1."11t \Vk guar~ntecd. 1'cn1. ag~·s C(ist·i l\·Jeaa !m)...[;300
NE\V !\1-1 1·100-2800 K(i fl while chci.;t & pa"'S, vlt:. C t 6021 Servh.:e Lie. 2726$:1 ca11 nft. :iPM 545-5158 products. &G-2127. Betwn lOum & noon & lS-:f.1. Lie. 1~cq'd. St<u·l ! r·:<;unl Oiipol". r:::niploycr shop & oftic~s. 208 3 phase 0.C. Airport. 64>231'1 alter ontrac or * PLUMBING BABYSITTING & Jronin'"'. RE I 2-4prn imn1e..I. JJh: 67:Mi070. TOR
P\\T, trush set''" xlrit I°'· c P n ING ., CHILDCA , 2 schoo boys, llrt\'c 'CUl been a BEELINE MACHINE .OPERA .
nr SD trwy. 646-1252. 6<1•1·2120 . . ADDI'rIONS-REMODEL REPAIRS * Tues & Wed 12-4., $2 hr, 13 & 11. Tues/\Ved/Thurs. THE BROADWAY hostc:s? Try it, you'll . l\k(' Ct•111ed?,ss Gtirnl~r. ~ll1y ~hUI ~'!.·. l"orbcii-0\\'l\t. f'OUN · puppy 3 mo 's, male, Concrete Patios * \Valks 557-4279 2~ IU' sen l-'640-04"'=""!'°'9~==-==-3:30-7pn1. Must drive. Occ. Fashion Islancl, N.B. 111., fii'n s~ b·ec !ushiotis. only. _ Yn;. min JOIJ·'"°··"· Golde llt!triever. vi c Lie 29'.~790 * Free Estimates BACK OFC GIRL . \veekend "'ork. 548-4447, E l o E I .. r rl To" v.at::i" t.1·1 LRG lot, 2600 fl blcl,ing, Haker & B1istol. Days Ai.;k for Joe (714J 638-8155 RAYS PLUMB ING S~R'llCE 642-2233 qua ppot. , n1p ov\·r _c_o_ll _546-3183. ~·~17;1;.' llf~neilts. "0ellronlC
for lease o1· ronsl<lcr Jl•ndr 5-H;..-0724, Eves 979--""k \'"~ Bl'" Co Repairs-Installations \\'Ith exper. for OB Gyn ore. Ol!LD CARE l •t Tues. " HEALT H FOODS Co1·1>. "-··t1> '• ,,,,.,. :-.•" n101. 7i..; \\'. 20th ·St CM. f K J .;,.r.u ...., GER Tt..._.,. & Son, "'t> nil'. 24 hr. service 54~8 Send resume to P. 0. Box "" * DINNER COOi< * '-'-"' " rv-v
642-4610. ·• ' ~~~Y· Add N'mod. St. I.le 81·114321 R ri1od I & R • 6081 3992, Long Beach, Ca 90003. 2nd \\'ed. of ea. nwn. $2 Country club: top l\'fl:;es Hl'spunsiblc yuu1ig n11.-1 n t\l i\Lt.: IS-40, i•Xp in \vindow !-""'-="==~--~-• LO~'T; Hlack n1ulc ~!: Lal>, 673-£0.11. 549-2170 • • epeir pr. hr.. lunch & trans. Call 499-mt ext 117 v.·anted fl~ titne. ApfllY 177J l'lc:inin" ,t, c.:uiJCt. cleaning, L~/fu~~~· N::, :1 ~ i~ ~l ·1·C1~~::~~· ... 1£t S:C~. ~~j Dr aperies 6027 11.:~~. ~~TI?~ ~ &nJc PART TIME P;~~:lc5:i.27~F~ ;D:;:ISH\~;;V;AS;;l~IE;::R;;-~&;:--.:K~·i1;:c;:1~::,,:l,~r:~·~:'C~'!·";'.~:~~..'\~11"::~":,;-:J='".'~f~·o,.-,A"ss";,:::t l ~~~~f; per \11k. S3hr start,
Beach -{i. · 1~1111;1 • 646-2677 or Cris, INSTALLER has fabric and Est's. Financing av a I I. Alert, intelligent woman. helper \Ved thru Sun, hours In Ou1· Pre-School. l-lrs 1 ~===--------!
Stor age 4550 lt6-82a.1 hanhvore at 1..'0SI & A p E x Bo No ED TELLER Interesting work. Must be 4 pm to 11 pm Salary open. J-6pm. Costa ~1esa Area. i ·---------
LOS'l' grey pru1 Persbn 10%, Guaranteed 53().5640 CONTRACTORS. 64G-S073 good w/nunlbets. \Ve \.\'1ll Shark Island Yacht Club Stllrl $2 hr. 546·4531 MANAGER
LINK fl•111ale cat, huge Dlllfy tail, Electrical 6032 Roof' 6081 UNITED train. GT<>-0039 J-10~1E CLEANL~G-Need 1 STORAG~ UNIT S "K" Santa Ana Heights. tng . CALIFORNIA BANK MacGregor Yacht Corp DOCTORS ASSISTANT 111an for p/lin1e day1>. 9-'.),
A pc~nal, business, l'CCl'Ca· _ne"·ard! 5-m-T:>ll ELEc:rRICIAN * 0 Id ltEPAIRS, all types. Reas. 1631 Placenlia, C.lil. YOllllg lady (18-28) to work approx ia hrs f)('r '"k· lion·
tional stor:.li:e. Fron1 $8. J FOUND dark orange cat Jobs-New Job5. Ser\'lce Free est . Lic'd, Ask for M h B I ~ ~"/TYPJ~ as doctors ass Is I ant I est ,{: dt•f)('ndttl>le. 89'2·9440 bo DI I 6 onar c a y P a za '-14:.n.n .,. 1 Ith N Jam ree & San cg o 1 · \1i!h blue <.'Ollar & stones cf!. 11 s Anyti1ne-Anyp ace. WaJt, 836-5020 an)ltim~ S 60\'IPM, drivers lie nee. recepl n hea spa. o1_:•:::":..''=-===~,...,,--,.---,
Freeway. 1~·ith bell. Vic. Victoria & 512-9829. Top Soil 6091 outh Laguna 556-8871 exper .. necess. \Ve train you. HOUSECLEANING ;, days a
Cali 979--0150. f\liner. 5-1$-7281. i"ELLEi<CCTTRRUICJiiANN=i-LL:ii;;cen;n.,.0NNo:o.I.!.~~:'.!..----.::::! Apply m person aftn or eve. "'k 8 hrS. a day, call eves. I -ma! !PO...., 496-1273 CLEA.i'l'-UP & delivery boy, 2112 Harbor Blvd, CM 6 to" JO 6''IS2S OOUBLE car garactc or I !'ND-Smull 1>.•hl poodle type 233108. Small jobs. nt TOP SOIL * CO., "' full time, apply in person, .,
11tora1:C. C.111 CJ$ Real ! fnd approx Sep! 1st Newland &. repairs. 54S-5203 * MULCH * Rf OWOOD Hutchesons, 140 Industrial DISHWASHER HOUSEKEEPER f/tlme for
Estate. 548'-1168. I & Atl<inta, J-1.B. Call 960-10G5 Floors ..r11...1A CALL ~ An Equal Opportunlly Way, O.t &,,.BUSBOY small conv. hospital. flex. 536 1~~'.i """" E1nployer 1 Rentels We nt9d 4600 ,c,;"'o;;;;::,o· 0:0~::0·,...,==="""'""' "i!!i!!i!! ~;;:;~;;;;;;;;;:~'.'.::::::; COCKTAIL/FOOD Apply Surf & Sirloin hrs. Good benefits. Appy 1
LOST IRIS!{ Sen'ER. 21st ~ p 5930 \V. Coast H1\')', NB in person, Glenha\'en of
\VANT 3 Bdm1 or 2 bch·m & Orange. C~1 Black collar, CALlJ for new low price!! In I II.iii BARTENDERESS • over 21, ;:;! Urn~ B~riquets &COining DRAPERY Secrelal'y, expcr. Newpot1, 1$5 Superior Ave, Plus oceanll'Qnl :ipt or ,, .. ,1,. LI .. No. ~"'J. Call nev.· vinyl linoleum & floor 11 .... ,IWIMt C 1 810 \V l!lth St CM m. ea owlark ount?y N B
" ' ~ u·1· aro s, · · · · Cl"b 1~ Graham HB In billing & "'litlng otdlll"!l>1 ,.;:;·~· ====-;:;::;= ~ .•• , Co.,.Je v.·11h x l n I ~1"1081. R"•·••d. u1g. "-'"28'>'> . u•a" , . K B I ' R N--' d
TRAINEES
Full & p/tlme
Intervlc111ing Now for
Positions in Orange Co.
Must be over 21, bondable &
in good physical cond. Have
car & telephone. Go to Tic
Toe Market nearest you or
telephone our orllces ..•
{il·J) 83;)..7417
For Information
,..,...._.,.., .. ,.. J .,._, .. .... E IJiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiliilii: ~ ~ 64°1186 Ask f c I etc. Call en utc \Ct', H OUSEKEEPE t.-.:ue • references. Itea!IOnAble &. LOST-Lge Grey Cat w/wht C. A. PAG 11 ;;ii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• J Sl;s. , or aro 541-:m(). li\'e-in. English speaking. 5
year aJ'9Und. Call eve!'! or un chest. Ans lo "Sa1nbo 27 Yrs in Cosla Mesa Job Wonted, Fm•le 7050 BAXTER'S Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;; DRAPERY SaJesn1an needed. Dtty wk. 962-77ffi ask tor t -----~~---
v.·l't'kend!I &
1
5-0T."1
9
01· San1" \1ic. Bolsa Chica 642-2070 642..aS35 ;;.;;.;;_.;.,;;;c.c'-"_;.;;,.:;.;o.._;.;c Convention•I Loan 11ust be sll'Ong closer. Lots,1 _:C:::cc:::i:::li::u·'===~---,. $ 000 ,&~H~ot~l._<Rc~··~Md~ . .":Sl<>-~1~61~0:::;1 ~::::;:::;:::::::::::::::::;~II N T E L L I GENT , Processing Clerk of leads. 893-U05 HOUSEKEEPfNG personnel, 1 14,
TIC TOC SYSTEMS
Equal Oppor. Employer
I ~ FOUND • \\'hite Samoyed G d I 6045 enthusiastic. Free to travel. STREET Downey Savings & Loan has EARLY am llC\\'Spaper aulo hospital e"p preferred .. San Opportun:.V Z b. CM v· ar en "I C.ood ~·orker. Desi red . _,,·te m· H B, no collecting, Clemente General Hospital. ""J n('ar u 1es, . . ll": 'tio · do tic Hne and openings .In its Hunt. Bcb. ~"" Manage m e nt Tra inee Placl"ttlia & 17th St. 556-3837 *LAWN SERVICES* posi "In . mes ofc. Conventional Loan aµprox 2~2 hr per day, 496-ll22 ext 2"...-1. ' ! 6 or companion. 67.r-8024 N HI" Cl · lo •-o 1:o
1 ' Ya rd Cleanups 1-J'ob.,..-'2,:'--,-c-o""''=-=o= ow • ,ng proc.!ssing b a c kg round $225-$275 n1'D., 847-2300 HOUSEKEEl'>EH. n cc <l c d OliC supen•1s n mr nc Bu.l'nes1 Oppor 5005 Found -Afnhen i\lost areas. Mow & edg!. 1 Wanted, M&F 70.~ HOSTESSES helpful . preferrably exper. Exr-rienced Cook Mon, Tues, 1'hl.Wl5, ~2 days Ycru·. O\\'n Boss after one
• ,., ~.;"" loans f ~ 1 1 5 \\'~• full day yenr. Ret~ll outlet .. Prefer 54G-9i12 New I a"' n s • sprinkl~rs. YG CPL desires to work r ........ _..'6 or Apply to Spaghetti Bender, 833-~3 · .. -.... · retail experience, can meet
PACIFIC t'~D-Med size maJe, orange Hom es/Apts/Commerclal. tom their home 11 le ~i:~ts."1n't pay & 6204 W. Coast Hwy, N.B., , ._,_ T-• the publ.ic, over 25, married.
BUSINESS SAL-ES brcM'Tl shllg~ dog • \Vants Reas Rates. Prompt ! 'cs! ~mbly or saJe$ Open & -·~· EXPERIENCED ~"'I ,. l HOUSEKEEPER. L111U u.ie. desil't's own business. Call ~ 5"..1 3144 SJ4..7117 Call A1r. Ruppe , & ,w une 5 half days. Local ref's. 2052 Newport Bl. Cosla ~tesa his kidli. PleaM! can ~5581 _. ideas. Call aft. 6 pm. 549-3220 saleslady, \\oman s Wear. $50 S'll-9lS9 640-5671 for person al &~1770 or 83l-1J41 FINE EDGE YARD _G<_0._5~235~-------I BUSBOYS Equal 0DtXll'. Employer Top pay, fringe benefits. · . intervlew. e SERVICE STUDENTS Avail . ..for _ft Apply Silverwoods. A 5 HOUSE.KEEPER. ~I!, hte ?.-1GMT tmc zt.30 $150 wk Pick up a list :r beer b .. ·u'!I t'[ ll'1J CGEANUP'S/JfA-m.1NC-ltme enlplymL So. Calif. FasWon Island. See Air Hsckpmg., Shon!elilf Cdbi guarn st. College prf'd,
Ptrsonals RESlD/APTS/lNDUST. College, Cnsta Mesa, Ph: Apply In Person COOK Williams 673-6832 eves. . Mr. Richards, 714/846-5455.
Cock1ail bar 11 5,000 llq s.;ooJ. '!iiiiiiiiiiiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ili! * 548-8625 * 545--1178 EXT. 38 Between Jpm & 5pm Top Wages & Benefits EXPERIENCED waitresses. HOUSEWIVES • $$$ A1 .. \IN 'I' EN AN CE 1.\-tEN Food . Bid l.nnd & Liq l.Jc =~-,.~~,--.,.-..,=~1-",::,.:'°"'="""7~== e BLUE DOLPHIN e CuTO ' & Gift p rtl SM0.000. -+ Uld. Call for Per sonals 5350 EXP. Japanese American_,;.H;.;e~lp:;__:W.:;;•n:.:t:.:ed:.oo•ccM:.:&::.:.F.:7_;1..:.:00 4647 "-cArthur Blvd, 3355 Via Lido N.B Apply 1n pe?'llOn. w s Toy • es \VANTED. Call Pa u I more details. ...;::.:._:;.:::.;;;_ ___ _::.:.o~ I Gardener. Quality Completc1° me • · Restaurant; 620 Pico; SC Glfts 'n Gadgets will train Sanchez 49Hi574 Surf &
e Sl)IRITUAL P.EADER Gardening Service. Bonsai Adm S.Crelary Newport Beach COOK Factory _ inexper. housewives to ~am Sand Hotel 1555 S. Coast
Donut Shop $700>. Full ,JrriCI!, Open 10 AJ\1 10 10 P~t Training. 548-947'9 Req. exper. cheerful person. SaJary acconli.1g to exp. • ASSEMBLERS to $2000 by Dec. 1st Hwy
terms. 1\dvicc on all matters. EUROPEAN GARDENER Heavy detail. Typing & sh Equa1 Oppor. Employer Prefer no students. Exper. demonstrating beaU.tiful l~Mc,A"RK"=ET=~R"E""""S""E'"A.,.-,R'"C=HI • 312 N. El Camino lleal Lands<:aplng-tree servJce exper. Interesting variety I ~~!!!!!~!!!!~!!!!"l"""~ I pref'd., but will train. Apply • PACKERS lines of gifts & toys. No INTERVIEWERS wanled.
Tastle Free-Lt> Gr An $71'00. San Clen1ente, For appt. reasonaWe. 6 4 2-S 3 2 9, \\'Otk load. Benefits. Retail· Bicycle Asnmbler between 2:30-4:30 p.m. . delivering-no collecting-free Experience required. Cidl
mo. S700J. dn lo qu(llifJC'd CnlJ 49'2-~34 492-9136 68&-1425 background helpful. Apply Permanent Employment Hamburger Hamlet, 1545 • LABORERS hostess gilts. Need car. Call Betty 644--8650.
ooyer, Bcuc·h area Location. ""·"". J , PANESE GARDENER In J>(>rson, Backstreet. 655 Call for appt. 645-7030 Adams, CTo.I. Ask for Mr. Skilled & tralnec jobs avail 547-9969 to see line. Gilts MECHANICAL • Orv-ORCE •• B St, Tustin. Hagen. all shlfts. · 'n Gadgets (Our 24tl. Year). E:· "JJCENSED, CLEAN·i;ii;iiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;;;iiii;;; BLUEPRINTING HE L p TECHNICIAN
Wall Paper PHln1 S I orr (Plus Filing Feel 0u,r •• 1~3388estimate, 642-3102 Al TERATION ~ &:Copartronau!~. ~ COOK S.l.S. HOUSEWIVES Good mechanical nbiUty.
llousehold det'()nltions. ne."<I I Completely reliable ., ~ H06 II I Exper pre r. d TEMPORARY JO "l·3PM DAILY. s~ MO ,under st,• n d to -n'
to Supe1" lilkt. JfiOOO. dn +I 518-1053 LA\\'N Servlce Res & Comn1 PERSON . ~•::tart=~-::.:...::7133=-=---I 9:~~ rotating schedule: SERVICE sAL' &. BONUS. To"';licil blueprints. 'Ability to'"d~
small stock. \\'lOO\V , 49, 5'5", 125 lbs. monthly maint, cleanups, btust have e~. lll BOAT EOE Apply in person, Mrs. SANTA ANA for discards, for non-profit some welding and use spray
• ''" 000 Name Joan, seeking wann, hauling ofree.est 5-jS-6142 womens ns well as mens Dunlap, Costa Mes a 1~~4 So. Grand 558-90'11 organization, by teJepbone paint gun. GeneroJ machine Liq Store. Cro .,,..j, mo. a I I c c t ·, o n a t e , s;·--v cuu apparel. "·! rial Hos 1"taJ 3 O I ~·1=• ho 1· sed · · t all s u"'~" ?-.1MW, EDGE & A t\1 SHIP[RECEIVluG •• emo P • or door·to-door . .:Mr....., s p prac lees are u in & growing appni c u gt'nllen>an "P to 60 to date. L,. V"ct · "" 1~~""!'~~'"""!"!~~~ I th" Ian Se" '"-t 10
"' • . P.O.BoxH~G.G.92640 AVERA~;':',:Smo ""f:;,l'~,,.';1.,N~~ CARPENTERS ~;;:;;;:· or women. FACTORY WORKERS JMMED. bpeniitgs-m•n/ ea':: PE.t.no.;;...,~~~i
We have over 150 Listings PREGNM'T? General Services 6046 Call For Appointment Bk1st exp. Top wages. women, p/timc. Production 1 ~"="""="="t.=_,,.-,,.---ot differtnl buslnes!>e!i to Cn Ing, confidential counsel-S<l0-5000, ext 30 Apply ln person. Carrow's 4 Day Work Week depL ?-.ton &. Tues nights MUSICIANS 3 Pc. l:?'OUP
choose from. drop in ror ing & referral. Abortion, J 0 , R CLE AN 1 NG JOSEPH MAGNIN We need exprienced 1t1en who Restaurant; Pico turn-off; 40 H approx 7PAl-6AAf. Also, Mon "·anted, Carols, 810 ,V. 191.h
a List. adoption & keeping. AP· oc SERVICE ls An Equal O P p 0 r • . ::ic~~d~n indel~: powwor:r _San'-'---Cl'-"em_e_n_le ___ ~-rs 12 ooon to 6P~1. Apply St. C.!\I. 646-2823
P izza P e r lour CARE
642
"
4436
APARTI!ENTS FOR RE-Employer sportfishers. ln a company COOK, conv. hosp. Exper. Day or nlte sllltts Pennysac~cr, ~1545 Newport N~R PROOF
G rlOM Yr NEED lady to 60 for com· . ~R~E~N:1:T,!"'6-8581~~-~~or~"'6-0t~~l9~,1~~~~~~t'Ji:~~!!!!!' \.\ith a future. req'd. Xlnt benefits . Ap.ely Jn Person 1...:B::lv:;d::.·.;oo~~==~-MACHINE OPERATOR
Magn9tic Signs'/Natl panionship. Camping out· ;:TIIINGS" I))' Moose. Gen'! Alteration Woman TOP \VAGES &: BENEFITS Newport area. 642-8044.. Edler Industries, Inc:. INSURANCE Full-Time
R I • S I /S 1.· doo~. Trips. Drives camper, carpentry , r e p-'-, Experienced in ladies. fine PACIFICA "'coo"""'K.~-m~a7rure~~&'·-,e"x'"pd', 1 2101 Dove, Newport Bench AGENCY GIRL Exni•r Pref'd, Not Necns e rig a a es e rv1ce 516-1075 eves """ t E uaJ O r E I •-, plumbing elect., 642-5613 ready to wear, 5 day week, BY KIPPER Lunch&: dinner shift, appy q ppo · mpoyer Pcl'BOnal lines exp, w/some BANK OF AMERICA ~bL~~Ns:,o;:U~~~~S ~~~N~~.;: ~~ ~~~ Hauling , 6051 '.::.a~ig~'!n P~~ci~~·,:::~ 928 IV. 17~~fu'"ta Mesa ~-~ sr• ~~'~e;;: GAG & JOKE CO. :;'~~c:::.;~'~ o~ &l6--05l>I
645-4170 SALES 540-0008 first. Call LIFE LINE, 24 *MOVING ANDHAULlNG* ~3-9449 646-4303 Small co mpan y sel l s Near Orange County NEW-,fACTORY .
CLOCK Shop-LoflJ.{ Es I· hni. 541·5522 Local oT distant AREA Distributor wanled. ~~-·~E~!°~~~ 1~1 COOK: \.Vlll train. $326 mo nationwide. Needs efficient Airport, call Fern 833-9480 '3tanch outlets jWlt opei:ung
Trade & Repair Bus. Busy OCC Student needs ride to & 96J.-6452 Oppor. to earn up to $800 Bill -+ tuition assistance. start. GI Bill + tuition billing and general oltice JANITORIAL Jn area needs U1e followwg: traffic location. I 11 n c s s h-on1 Estancia HI· Tl;lurs. nite /t w train Call assistance ca.n Army experienced personnel. Plea-b · Mgmt Ttne $11!5 'vk al R I $Z'>O Othe I sh Call GEN. Hauling-Moving. Tree per mo. P ~23 , Call Army Opportunities, Opportunities, 645-1163. sant \.\'Orking conditions AppllcaUons naw em g Servmcn (2) $3 hr ~r:'Ji:. Ms..~"i1 ' r 6·IO. \Vil pay ca · & shrub trim or removal. for Jntervw · 645-1163'. Golden's J\1agic Wand, s.16 8:ccepted f?I' full & part-SaleSmen Open
B • W 1-• 5010 RRcnESPO~ aaN·S7.ffi31LE81 a!CtP. L5 will s1"t Est. 545-5475. 5o~-8487. ARTIST.~dy-q;erfenffced C~· .,_. ... ~ ...,.... c'I! COUNTER ~~Ldu le W. 17th St., C.~1. Apply 9 to ~e "'llGrkoodm ~e ~ye All bene~ts, career positions. u11ne1s an~ . LOCAL moving & hauling era rea art o set pnnt. Full or part time . .....,." t s 11 AM _ .. a. "<>t> .... , -"""' 494-1065
your house 3-9 mo's. Refs by !!ludent. 1 .... truck, reas. \Vork nt ad agency. No Book.keeper $650 for tresh food & juice bar. · benefits. lnterviev.'S Thurs, \VUL Invest $10,000. Cash avail. 6T~ aft 7 & ..... & freelance. 549-3383 Cust Servlce/G, Ofc $550 Fun atmosphere. ApJlear· Fri &: Mon, 9 am to 12 Ne\4-'l!paper'Carrien:-
to acquire growing busines.,, ...,·kncts _ea~rryiiv~S3*l·rl.235=f-~0~'rr539-ili943S~-j;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Secretary/Bkkpr, Spanish ance 1-portant. Apply in * GARDENER * noon. 818 w. Chapman; BOYS & GIRLS South Coo.st Area. 5-ta.-7361 -.:CP:O:Ao=;L::;M:;/'°'c"'an1-=--=,c:e::a::d;-e;:-;r.:• htOVING &: HAUUNG EDP Helpful 10 $900 person at Anna Banana tn Be )'0'.!1" own boss! Part or Orangt!. 997-9300. l\1'erchants 10 yrs & Older
Mort, T r ust Deeds 5035 ~~'St7:~fo~~n52l-r:3~ Beach ~~'\~stance ASSEMBLER ~~~ga1 ~:= ~~~:!~=~~·=: =e·mc!~U:. ~':ran~~ :.~.~-ding Maintenance. DAILY PILOT
LOANS UP TO 80% Socia l Club s 5400 HouseclHning 605-4 TRAINEES Recept/SecretAry to $650 DAY HELP Wanted. Mainl. Cu>Jom.,,. Earn Now. P"> JANITOR 1 t TD L S Apply in person Pricing Clerk/Elec $625 Sam·lpm. $2.40 to start. D8Y' La5
1!!·7117 5.,3144 Part time eves. above skill S oa ft ALONE?' DATE TOr..'IGIIT! H 0 USEC L EANlNG by VOLT Gal Friday S550 Help, all shifts. Apply -or ,,.... wages, exp Door man. + Call PARTNER. 836-Un reliable, efficient girl. 4 T1mpor1ry Services G. Ofc/lile ins exp SS25 McDonald's 700 W. Coast couplfS. 530-4025 2nd TD Loans ~~1~2~0~·1~7~-~M~on~-~-~~Sa~l.= '\t!~k=~ucJ:· ~~ 3848 ~~~7us41 0rlve =Clerk 10 ~ HW)' N.B. before Spm. GARDENE~ must reside JANITORIAL, p/I, 5 niles ! 12 00 ~ High F··h Sale• $2.50 hr + DELIVERY MAN Laguna Hills area, pei:mabn-1 per wk. Mon thru Fri. H.B. a ter : . (Across h'!?.n\ o .c. Airport) ..., ent employn1cnt ror swta e Cpl or ture pers0n. l owest r•t•1 Ortng• Co. [ ·~ ~ -~ HOUSE CL EANlNG by Majol' Medical Plan ID\1111.JC PERSClNNEl Part time early Ai.'t: home applicant. 830-3321 9-4 ~-968-2244.01a Sattler Mfn, Co. ~--mother "'ilh baby. Honest, No\v Available ll'\.Y II 'fL deUvery of LA Times. Must
• reliable and e f {I c I en t, , SERYICES•J\GENCY have s ma 11 , dependable GENERAL JANITORIAL
Has Routes' Ope n
Dana Point
'4'2·2171 -545-0611 540-8308. \Ve have a complete package 488 E. 17th St. (at Irvine) CM car. over 23. HB Area. Inventory Clerks Experienced only, O\'fil' 21
Semng Harbor atta
24
yrs. Accounting 6001 HOUSE:CLEANJNG Is our of employee benefits. We Su1te 224 642-1470 ~15· 3 Days. We 'need yoo mw. 548-5687 • CALL Mr. Lowder
Car Pool 5150 busln1.,'SS Call Jan Ice 's pay top wages. All office ·~ ·-1 .,,_,. .,.., • zA DELIVERY MAN Irvine area. Call loday! JE\VELRY: Young n1an, ex· 492-4420
Capistrano Beach
San . Juan Capistrano
A'M"ENTJON HOUSEWIVES, Ra cd · Anna 675-6553 & industrial skills are w -• -w for early morning LA Times per. Needed f It i me tor I 7..,--,,..,,-.,..-,-,;==c---I Student needs ride la Saddle-1 will balance your check. gg y · needecf. B o o K K E E p E R J route, No collecting, North 1i(JUI polishin~ .~ sizing-rings. Nt:!Wllpaper Crui1ers: buck I College M-111 eve. book & pay bills. Sn1aU Ma1onry 6070 Equal Oppor. Employu Reeeptloni~t. typing, for sml CM. Gd po,y. 546-11$) or Steve, 8.13-30-IS.
Dave <9'·183< 1 bl 6'2"'~ 1 fir ·r.M t ~· ~"2 "" .,_ 2'11h-o.. GIRLS & BOYS ee-mt y. 'I ..... "" Brick, Block & Stone Assistant Atanager, trainees, aw ni. a ure, ~.JW: =-"""~.;,;:='·=-,,.-=-=,-n
Aapllonce R1pelr 6004 G<&-S266 counler girl•, 1ry cooks. BOYS & GIRLS DEIJVERY Boy, 1Dam-2pm. .If '"""· ""'"' JUNIOR SALESMEN 10 yrs kolder
[ ....., yard bl"· Th DAILY PILOT .. Mon-Fri. PJtime. c n 11 :inan Lett end_f.cKnl N na '1ntl-/Penarfllf 6073 Onyi, grave $.,..,,open e oias rA: neo-, DAILY PILOT -APPL IA CE REPAIR " ... ...~ -'--full & "Pit Apply Jack In routes open .IJ'l COSJ'A Western Union, ~. w .. h ..... orye,.,.Refrlg. p A p ER II ANG ING ' The Box, 385 E. 17th St, MESA, COLLEGE PARK ' :n;:i Newport B. C.M. -Age JQ.15., Earn S21J.$-IO p<r
LOii & Foun d 5300 ,....,..oCal=;l,c;;J•:::ck:::...::!>l"S-Olc.:::=33:.,,;o::; patntln17 21 yrs Harbor Costa l\Icsa. EAST & \VEST COsrA DEL IVERY, Housewives GENERAL "-eek gcorr nlLg ynewPlc stornf~"" 1;:;;::::...;;;..o.,;;.;:.;...;.. ___ ' •· furn .. o._,.. l\tESA. 6U--l32l p/l Split shilt. Dental Lab. !or lh~ A er Babysitting 6008 area. Re:Q, ·no.........._, ASST restaurant bookkeeper. F.quaI Oppor. Employer Call 64&-5008. LABORERS 11ehool and Sat~. You Has routes open In
FOUND: l\ltdc black dog. 642-2356 $550/mo. $ day wk. Werk lmmed. Asalgnments. Top niu~t be out of Rchoo by
Approx. 5 yrs. Smart MOJ\i will babysit, hot PAJNTING: Neat Isl Class wkcnds.. Call Joyce (714) BOYS A GIRLS DENTAL ASSISTANT $$$. Long or short terni. 3;.00 pm 8Jld be able to"' rk
affecllonlttC. 43rd an ti meals, ,fenced beck ynl. \\'ql'k. Res/Comm.' "l'U .t96--e146 Newspaper Carrien&. Min. Chr/side, e:icp'd.. hrs.. 7 to Call 3404450. at leasl 3 days ptr t,1·t'cl(. o CALL M r. Hyct.
Ri'1U, N.B. 673-8470. 8'1"ft?m lifOf)of'rl, 642-7919 beat any reruionabl.e price." AUDITOR/Night. hotel or age 10. Udo l&le, Balboa 3, oo mtokht&-Capobill,ty NEVER A 1-~££ AT TEhtPO dcllveries or ~l~tlng. 492-4420
LOST In Park Newport Apts Ca rP,enter 6015 Coll Ken: 63&-5405 club exp. req'd. Knowledge Perunaula.,. Contact ~tr. f~ top saL & bene 1· TEA1PO Te.mpo1'1'J'Y liclp Tran!lportaUon pr v 1 d ed. I \iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOI
San Clemente
9/17, CARR1£R GIRL'S PAINTING. Int/Ext. Paper-of NCR 4200, Ffr. Contact &ckltrorr '1.t the DAILY 644-2455 CaU 968-4812. ;•
COLLECTlON M Q NEY. BEAJ INFLATION ~-peraoone1· Balboa Bay Cub PILOT or call 6lt1321 & DENTAL RECEPTIONIST GENERAL OFFICE Equ.i Opportwtlty foyer Phone J<'-nirer at 644--0481. hanging. alrltsa spray. U'C'll. "---NB ' leave •""'hcado.'\. · ·• .. r EARN 35% ON_ H.epairs. Atlke m:&J60 1221 W. ~t HWJI., r1• at least l yr expcr. m au Perm. posltloJl tor re.Ua. LABORE RS lMI' S.,. blk chubby female YOUR SAVINGS' PROF. painter, hOnest \\'Ork, AutomotlYe Mac:hln1st Equal Op,eor. Employer phases of dental --mi:mt. Pf!r80n ln busy tL'xtlle tlrm.
doif • ._ l8th A AnalU!im, Interest cheeks paid monthly. Rea.<1, lnt~t., h'ff nUmate. l Man shop, thOroua:hly BR.AKE &. A 11 g nm• n t Saluy open. Cd beneflta. Billlna, lyplna: &: h v y ./General laborers
CM. ftarne-Nlppy Chccse, Mlnin1um $5,0001 year term. l?C[!I. MS-2'.59, 642-3913 cxper'd. App1y In penion, AerVlce. Salnry + comm. Some Sal's. H.B. 846-5S40 phones. Exper. req'd. fnq: /Packers
Lk:. 2346. 645-7558 t714} !m-0987. ::rr Cost ?¥1 A Pnrtl 2165 Newport Tire Cen ter, OENTAL-Onlv.>donUc R.!J:tt. l{ollman CAlllornla Fabrlc..s. i Lfte Assembly
1'"0Ul'91 mk. -male Lab *Wallpaper H•nterif II a 'f' ~o "· 644·8022. Chalraldc .. lrvtne area. Call l45 1\1 c C or ni l ck. Clot Appl" TODAY!
retrl .... vie 17th &. Oth1tol, ~:.~~~~· c"t!!~~n,i. gn:; C. ~bko G4G-2449 nrbol' B' BULLDOZER OPR Wt 11 552-7800. SilQ-3236. \\'ork TCJMOR,ROW!
San• Ana. 5.fl-479-
1. c:onst. 25yrs exp drl\w plans, * 10% DISC'OUNT * AIJTO °"rain. m: mo dirt. Gt fiENTAL Ass:lstnnt, ch!'llrv1., Gf..'NERAL Offlre w/cxp in11 ,.~-------...
LOST-MALE DOBIE ~est, &t.~3439 \Vallp11.pering A Palnttng Car Lot M llJl, ~ust be bUl + tuiUon anlstanoe. 6 mos. cxpe.r. Bene.lits, Inventory c:ontrol, 1tc:ickr. ti O:!l~ta N~ga. Rewnrd call !W8 -'-'""'=~=~""=-===--Ftte Est. Call ~ eXJK'fience<I, prfl'l'_l ly aew Call Anny Opportunl llaa, 1t0me Sat. Jl.S. $46--.'f>:W. levtl1, tr: 11hlpplng & -GrJ l'ENCES & GAT£S •WALLP APE.RING can, stoady JOh, good &t&-U63. I " 51il--0606
2116 or 979-5660 l':xt 61. \VE BUlLO & REPAIR houn:. ApDlY in pcl'llOn ool}·.1..:=.8;:=:;-bo~-C,.---:h-:l---I De"tll A1slst1nt 1-,;'";:,"'"';:,"::;ngf;-'~=''::::-::=:;,ll f'6UND Bil( t..ab/nelrlewr * 548-7637 tves * NO \\'ASTE "MAC" :WS-1#1 ~ PHON·e CALLS. Sec UI y, •s t r s Cha.ltl(l/exritr. &14-21:,,S GENERAL OUlce, t"Xp, ~ rf'!
J yr old ntulc. Jrvtnc nrca. ~A~L~L-'-IJ'PC=,'","b"lr:...::.:;or"ld,_;l_m_al~I. CIA.!lllned aa1 ~ bla Items, Mr. NelJaon ·at Waftre11e1 1 e I e p hone pc~ lty, 11'an
833-2801.. Smull plumblnsr j 0 b 1 , amall ittn1a or any Item. TERR Y BUICK P/Ume. C.11 Jack Low, O&!J¥ Pilot ClusUled Ads JN~,,....~~rr~Ct~n~tc=r~o~I~f~I ':"~':·/, ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;; C Jl.!lsillt'd A~ •.•••• &l3.a6'11. ~16-ltUI Juat call 6U-Q671! 5th &: Walnut, Ill.ant. Beach ?JSl .. J.881, e..?7 dyt &40-4:;.'j)
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'
' NEWP ORT
Personnel Attncy
Newport 8Hch 642~
"
I
£ 12 DAILY PILOT Thursday, Septtmbtr 19, 1974
· Help W1 ntod, M&F 7100 Help W•nl•d. M&F 7100 Help W1ntod, MiF1!2.0 I Help W anted, M&F' 7100Holp W•nlod, M&F 7100 a-1 ' -Jowol!'Y 8070 Mu1lcol lnllrum't • IOl3 Boots, Power 9040
NIGUT AUDITO!l . E»peri· PRECINCT "~1*er" Dennis ROUT!: SALES e PUPPY WORLD e WANTED F.LECTRIC BASE -Dual 22 F~. Super Sport, open en~ NCR -4200. Avliibtble ~liutKe"'. Demo<' r 1t t I c \rUI 'fraln, S;1lary, Conu11 , DEUYERY-SUNDA Y ONLY Bull Terrier, Lab, Welouui1.· •ror CASI! OOLL/\ft PAID plc~p$. Hard 5h~ll cuse. cockpit, 210 HP 0 ).t C
full t\nir after Sc-pt 27. can1paign. $2.00 hr. S~S--ll13 Bon~. \l~hlcli· run1. .\II OF PAIL y PJLOT TO CARRIERS JN EL ner, Bull ~. Peking~. l~R y 0 u It JL'\Vf.'LltY $17a. ~ outrtri,•e. Custnn1 lluill to 4J.1.&l)7. 1-:'\11. Pd. f:!!Utb. bu.... ,'(, TORO ·"ISSI ON (.~lbw.thUM, Tlny Poodleti, ·,vYATCif'~ ART o~ .. ~·crs' 557·1003 ; f I. h )1exlc0. 0 u a. l ]..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiOii !· ---------1 t('rrlt(ll'§· l\led. (.'O\'t.'1'1.IJ!I', • D~ VIEJO.LAGUNA NIGUEL PU Bullil, Cockl\poo, lfll GOLD ·SJ'i.vEn sEi'1V1cE' •BAJUTONE hon1 and Alla C\'e1·ythin.g. Ship ta Share NOTE CLERK R.E. Sales Manager ~~"'~\,,~::'.'1:.~~ 1~',~: AREA. ll.EQULRES THE USE OF A LARGE MIXED PUPs s1u<1 s."'1ce FINE ·~·ur<N & wriQuE.~: s.x. Both x1,,, '"'"'1""'" ~d~ 1~rt'' ,~i~r.si::::
>19-Jl IU, !\h'. 1'ut:ker. 7.gp;i ST~ TION WAGON OR VAN. CONT ACT MR. ~1GStR li~s. Rolla-Cannr-S IS.2'100 _.$1.95.-ea. &~8781 sto,CKXI tnve~tl'd $>199S or
PromiJwnt Re~ ~h1tc ('()., E11ual Op1.10r. l::tn"'t"'"'l'r llARRY Slif,LY, 330 WEST BAY STREET, ic11, cptiles&Turtles.Open LUD"'IG D '-'··t 1\l~t -\\"(' pre~ntiy 1111i.1' u position .....,,, COSTA ~tESA. TELEPHONE 642 ,321 FOR Evct. 531·5027. , Mi1c1lla neou1 8080 n ruin .$ ·• . tie-st oiler 812-.>•.>•· •
0,.-,, In -·r Nole ~pt. Nt>Hl· ht1s posl1lon as l\lg•." or lhcir SJ\IL , ,11 '''""I ,,.01J. ~. ... l'lell Co1nplch• Excel c"""J SSIC 0 ... ~ f ,... vu ......, b ch [JI Co u.i ... .... .>; I .'PPO!NTMENT. SACRIFICE, \', ),ab, '• '.. . ' \ . CLA h""" '--''ll t •K'S» .t llt:i..:uracy 11 muJil , nc1v r<1n, o ~in t'Ona i:utl\Jiij, Jrvlne. ... ~ A t r She herd., 84H701 tlllhOartl\Y Spee<l Boat, 50 r.nL~I like 10 .... ork y,·/tigul'e&. ~\1,1:i~Hr. ni.!!ul:llt.>xpt: 11 ~ ~l'":~..,.C~•~lliii>ID-iii~~·iiii:-""'] ~~~~A,;.n,,..E~q~u~a'!l'!Op~~po~rt,;u~n~lty~~E~m~p;l,;o~y;•~r"""'~"" "
11
ra ian P '
9
wkli, * * * * * * * * SEU1ER Bwldy French ~n1 tph. •lull, dt.'Ck, engine &: Plc1t1K' Cull For Appt r('Sidcntlnl t'C'lllale. 1-:x..,r i.r· lllQle, shots. $20. 675-.8410 *Furniture Auction* Gd. ronj, $300 Qr 1»o""otr. bron1P Uke-new. Cruise (ft'i:~ t C\\'\unll !IB.I. & good ! 0 cc ll Ii" c Sale1 "R1pres1ntative Help W anted, M&F 7100 He lp Wanted, M&F 7100 •Fri 7:30 pm Sept 20• 847-720-1 r . linrbol' In 1-e:U cJru;s or iki.
Bank of America ru~1·i1m. Send t"e.p\lei; to: (Trainee) [ l[I J~EPOS. BANKRUPTCIES. r~uu.. Size RQU1 violin & $2300 lnclurles skis & full
NcY.'1)011 Ccn1er Ortlt'<' ('lugsifil'd ud No. 89, Duily 1~:;11 dh•islon of illllt:e SECRETARY $6SO WAITRESS f~e to You LIQ U I DAT IONS & 'Case, $300. 1..'\>ver. 64!>220()" or 673-3662.' .f;)~hlon l11h1nd J~\101, P.O. Box 1560, Cos1r1 natlonul t'Qri)()ration ha:i 1-;g\3b. fii·ni In Irvine llt!\'rf~ Ex Pe 1· ·e n t" url. Ovrr 21. •-------~ CONSICNME;NTS call aft 5, 833-lSlG 22' CUS'l'Oli.I dic&el, 11port
Call 836-3505 !\tesa. C11lif, 92626 opcnin;.: 10 .. bC' f 111 ~ d . ?..1exlcn/l fOOd & C..'OCktuilf. l'arl Listing tOrllOM'O\V t'ull set Lud\l.•ig IJt'\Ullit. fl!1he1', tunii' tower, fighting l ~~·~:ci~n;<>~I ~0~P~ll0>';;·~£~"~";Pl~o~y•;r~~ I :;,;,:;;;;;:;;;;;;~:;:I in1n1ediutcly ftll' sh 11 r p H \Veil oti;nnizcd isl'C'Y \l'/3-4 Apply daily 10:30 a1n to -..11s MASTERS AUCTION ilfctalilake blue c h ron1 c chulr, t'Oll holden;, bu it ,11 lndlvlfiual intt•rci;ted In 1:1 Yl'S gencl':il oft: cxpcr. !\lull! 11:30 am. & 4:30 pn1 to Free To You ._ 2075"' NeiA'J)Ol'l Blvd .. ~t litUU'e Xlnt $250 or 1 586-9771.l lnnk. outriggers. cu d d y
NURSERYMEN l Rt:
1
AL t:S
1
T A
1
Tf:CBROKER inarkcling C.'ll,l<'l'. ~~-sefltf 1ilur1c1·. Xlu't (l·lrmc 5:30 pm. ~11 CA SA FREE p 833-00Z ~ l'ARISIAN A>nbassador t"'J:; cu.bin ,v/bcad, n1 any
' I\ ( us! I' I.I • on1me1•ci11l, Ability to nltel people. ·~IC I i;, il1E:XJCAN RESTAURAN1'. PU P IES o-9 t(I r: Closed Sun . ext G12 3103
1'-"XJ>C
1
r'd, 1'10IUl'i". \\'ork ~pel'IC(\(,'«t. tl n1us!-. The willln~nci;s to y,•ot·k 11t ull AAMES 100°/o FREE 296E17th. C~I. S!IEPIIBRD & COLDEN **'-"**'***.* Olds & Sou wooden Clarinet rns. -··
\\' p I an IM. 6 D a. Y II 11gh1 appht'unt wiU be levels tunbitlon & a clean-BW't.':'u or LAB. in good cond. SUO. 979-WJS MUST SELL -n1ovln:. 20'
i\-cek/overt ln1e. S3 hr ~ii. u11. L'On,.id4.'re<l for a position ns L'Ul i1Ppc1u·:11u:e r(.'(1uired. En1plo)'1he11t AgCtll.:Y Experienced \VAITRESS See * 979-6362 * TS NOBLE..'T Clarhiet, \\"ooden ull glMll 327 lnbrd Owens.
l.ngunn Hills Nu~ry. El n .11n1·tner 1n a grov.·ing Rapid Adva1K.-e111cnt Costa Mesa SSf>.1100 ~~~vns. ~~lloo ~~~tst ~=~ e YOUNG snlall dog. ti.1l"<ed SCRAM-LE xlnt con<l. ~200.. U$ed to lilih or ski; needs
To1'C>. 83().f16.i3. Irvrne baSftl Brokerage· II Qualified l 2706 llarhor Bl\'U. Suli'e 207 South 'ft-·na " beagle/ten-ier. Loves kids, 91~2838 n1iJ.a1· repair, $1800/best
NURSES AIDES de_vt!~pmcnt Cinn. Coo1· 71416-t!~ Bob Hansen I Anatl('inl 776-fU'.!O '""""" ~ t !"......,. 6ir5030 orter. 49-l·
9
IG5; 493-<>389 full tin1c, 3·1.1 11hiit & p;,u1 ~uss10.ned. ~lust IX" stronf:l'. , 1·5 Ptt1 GOO No. Euclld \\11-10 \\'ANTS TO \VORK? /;E~a c ""'&· • ANSWERS Ofc. Fur n. & Equip.
8085
loFt Cnrrle Craft inilatablr
liine 7.3 shift. For sn1all financ1;,.lly. ,\i.Jle to help TcJL·p1'0n1pter Cable l'V Oi·ui•"e itl1·1'.!'l'.: DRIV!-.; A CAl:! tAN Shepherd. Spuved I -d\ngc.-y. lle n vy duty Co n v. l·I o s p . App I y tlh"\1t't it1exoerien(•t'.ld person-L'G::!l \\I. Coatt H11}' 'I Citr Blvd East no 10:: Ci!OQSlo' ynur hours, ivork 1''en~?.le.:_.All shots to fan.tily SI >I Toni • Pie'" ' 3M Dry Copier-209 , ronstructkln slmlln.r to A\'Ofl
Glcnh.iven of Nci\'flOl1, Jj55 nel. \\'lite BROl\"Ell, P.O. NC\\•po11 Beach, Ca -· " far yourself, IX" your 011·11 ,:'R'/E~E' ~~~· ~3. . T;p:~~~-=._ STl,.OiES ..., -Ga~kil1<:1>..:<J. D"mktc' 01f1..:r. outboard b11tcket, pump,
Superior, NB '~Bo~x~l-;51;;0~7;;,~Sa;;·~n-t•_•_'""_·~·-c._Ji=E=:jqu=ru:::::::O~p~po:':·:Em=:~p=lo=y="~J SECTY/Receptionisl. -,niall boss. !\!en or 1vomcn. Cnn f L"-~lgaru1 Puppies, ask A la,i·ycr 1 knoiv claims he es e ner up 1ca or etc. $3.'iO. ,;.i2-3i.17.
Nu
""!' A'd
11
h'ft 9'l705 bu 0 _ 1 E' 1 fl" be slightl.v haudicappe(! or luua ,_ ho Id~-hi asking $100. ni.ake offc.1". l7' LA""ON y !lull. ~
1 n..:i ~ 1 cs. :1 s 1 s. sy n • .::i ~s nte o 1cc Neut . Clcnn Appcnr..ince. &l2-1S58 r 6-15-6&; ,..,,,,,1'9 a man I\" P'1 ,... s · ''"" w Convnlcscenl Hospi1al. Call REAL E.~"1'ATE Si\LES lacate<l ut O.C. AirPo•'t, Vts .. reUi't'Cl. N,.-e 25 10 70, 0 6 \vlfe's fncc-\ifl, and lhl'n hnf l\ll'. Webb, Gia-8600 anyluue illcl'cury OuHioord, b 11 It 6-l~-O.i93. SALF..SPEOPLE. Why not PAGE BOY l\f1tnaging I Leasing I Selling Supplen1e..,t youi· inronlc. :Fn.EE J(JTIENS. 2 adorable lo hn1•<' 11•11 STITCHES t(lkcn SECY chi's $S/2-l Exec S\\'VI tank. cull nit 3!30 !162-8StS
N u Rs E g A 1 o Es & 11'Ql'k in the hottest a.rea1>, Industrial & Comn1f'rcial Dri\"C a c!l.b 6 bri. Qt n"tOre 11 fc1nales. S wks. 1 Tiger, In his 11·:1llrt. chi's $15/25, Dks fl) u11 11·k1lnys
Ordcrlll's. Call Bell\"n Sani· Hu11H11~to11 Beach/Founljlin Properties' needs sharp gal day Apply in oeiS<ln, l. ~~/wht. 531-8167 Girls hiking boolll. shoe Pierce 867 \\' 19, C~l. CLASS<l~C~~B-a-y~I-,-, -,-n-c~,-,,
<!pm, 5-18-5.'i8S. l\le~a VCJ.>tle V111lcy':' Let us ll'ain you. MATERNITY to work 2:-)-;;.:; Ill's per 11·cek. Yellow Cab r:o., l~ E. 16th ML\'.ED COCh."ER, 6 n10 old i;kntcs, 10 spcct"I bikl' 11·/ &t2-3408 • r'i:-hrbr. dept. boat, 1936
Conv. llosp, 661 Ccnlcr St, Call Phil l\fcNan1ec 963--4567 Personality & nbillty to SL, Costa l\fesa. 1nalc. All shots & lie. lites. Al.SO: slide pt"Oj., ANSAPHONE C Itri s Cr 11 ft , O r f er.
CM \11!\age Real Estate. ]('arn, n101·e important titan ,,:.,.:_=:::.:..:::::::::.____ 1-louscbt'Oken. 548-5993 speak£>rs, tap!! rero1>tlers, us·ed renwte ;..... non-ren1otc. _7~1~4_+~586-&16"'-. =~'------!
II () . F ''-"PCl'icnce. 979-SJ33 {or \VOJ\IAN 11•ho nect'ls $500 + 16 . I Sa . ·1· """'7732 NURSES AIDE All shifts. os pt•nuii; or inten ·lciv. 1110 11f. Sales oriented. ;Jr. f'REE to nice hon1c, Sharp n:'c•ords, min 1nov1c en~. VllJ&S-ernLS·,),)J"" 26' Gl:tAf'l!ON Cru i ser,
Perm. Dcp1'ndrible. 11.B. RECEPTIONIST P /Time Saleslady ""'="'-'.CC=~-~~~ Lyons. 7141816-'.">.135. ~~ Collie, l~ Shepherd 4~~ 1\" 1'1'.'COt'f.litiµ: lapi~. stnnll l\1ETAL Office. De11k & Chr., Crusnflc1· 2!'5. Pvt. pt)'. \\'ill
Olliv Hosp. 18811 l'l"rlda SI, N' A I E , d / SEC'Y LEG;\L. Chrisllrtn, n10 old. 966-1.351 1111plinncr:o:, OB n1olor, 10' 30 .. '. '" .. , $7'·. 'p;r.\I •3000 675-2317 v eve1· Ou I i\·lon1enl! A wper1ence · I YOUNG 'f,·••> IO 11">0
" I>' · I .~"" " ~ HB 8.\7.3;;15 " 111atnl'e, ;urpor arc a. " " " GEi M~ x 14' i:n1·pc1. nusc. e ec. S.16-:::6-!7 ~·a~iety of duties. ": ni~e Respons ible i;J:!-OlOO. eornbined \1'0od & n1ctal U • ' Shepherd. )XU'l inotors and ntore. 12 yrs. 28' fl!ESEI. Cu s Io nt * NURSERY MAN exp'd snule .l'.i: per so n a 11 t y Ji> fashion lslnnd 6.1.1.1729 ---S~E-C_U_R-IT_Y___ rep:lir fnt•ilitic~. l\fUST have Huslt.-y, 4 mo. old n1ulc. !"rec Ul't!lllllUlallon al '"junque" lBl\1 Sclecu·ic II t)'pewritcr. Sportlish<'r. You cun STEAL
or Horticulture background. 11et'llcd. s. Csl J>J117.a 557.::,7~~ 1ncchanlcal uptitucle & be lo gd ho1ne. 968-0017 niu~t 1,":0 bl•lore Sc-pl. 30th. Brand ne...,·. Priced to i>cll. 111 642-1837 c1•es.
Yng: & lndustrious. S.12-8866 Jason Best Agency OFFICERS 1 ~,.~l~in~b~le~. ~-~·16~--0606~~-jjji!~~) 1''0UND-A black & 11·hitc LA~'T OlANCE! G1:H.l~. &15-92:;;.! 1/3 PARTNERSl·llP. '73
OPTICAL LENS Cleaner, 1740J Brookhurst, F. Vly. SALES Ari i 111 crcs1 e d Full & p/tin\e. ·~LI shifts. cat, l~lu11. Beacli Center. SODA FOUNTAIN Pianos & Org_ans ~--I0-9_0 LUllRS. •32•-15, fb, loaded.
trainee. expc:ricnce helpful. Suite 213 963·6175 1nalctfcnialc '!l ,& O\"CI'. Prti~rer1 m1~:136 01·er, ·l:i1 "," I l§] _l~)a~·~·k~. ~··~""'::::'d~Sc='~p:;:t.~9~·~"';~~1~830~· ~IO 1 rl er re s 1n 11 r an 1 -I $8700. Finan 1tvail. s.1;-,......17~1.
Senne 1nechanicul abiltty ~ ............... ~~~~'] Sharp, enci);etic, responsible re !'Cf· -· :u IOU · Men:handise I ~ PUPPIES do bl · 8 • PIANOS ~ _, 971 = Un.ifoin1 furn. Pl10ne &: c:.ir . V • ~ ra e, tu\)', lvpe-Stainless Steel-Cold 1J>\' r11 . 1 • llAITERAS
I
llelpful. 642--l>l46 RECEPTIONisr 10 \\'Ork Sal L'Xlrovcrt ~o 11ork in J.:.ug rcqd. Plant in h'l·ine Indus. v.·ks. al~. in 1~ of i;:()()(J Box & Coin11rcssor. Syrup • ORGANS 42 Spo11 Fisherntan. 20 hrs.
PBX OPERATORS. Experi· & Sun. \Vaterlronl ore. mnking st1011 in So. (;oas1 Coinp\ex. Call Lt. \\":.irren ho111es, 58&-1066 pnnip & c 0 n d I ni en t 645'-J.000 ext 2'.'7
ence pl'l'fci't·ed. \Viii Trdili. ·ryping & lite clerical Village, ?\'lust like retail S33-3000, <'Xl 191, t0ani-2pni ;A;:";;';;iq;•;;•~·~~~~;;;;IOO:;;:;Sq"ECU~<e~G;"~"k~·,~ot~d~p~utp:p~ie:s holdcrs-doublC' sink. Nds sm Rentals fr $5 , Boats, S•ll Muto All slllttJi open, Laguna duties. 1\1arina DWl<'S, 101 selling. F'un atniosphcre. Mon thru \Ved. '\. need a good J)()nie. lo.Jothel' a111t plutnblug 11·ork. Good ... .....,,
•
Be!lch, 831~9090 Bayside Dr. NB &l4--0126 Call Illig Craften; 546-63•W -is part poodle. S.12-7728. bar or playnn iten1. $300
PBX Answering Service RESPONSIBLE 11·001110 to SALESPERSON 1-etail, art & s5~;;?e~ Li~a-ni~~11~~,:~~~ ANTIQUE Furniture 8050 or n1ake otrcr. 67t>-53fi2 Open Nights 'til 9 RF..-\UTIFUL 34· French Alea
assist club director .~ do craft supplies, picture SHOW & SALE WANTED Sat-'11·1 5•30 Sun 12 5 f'i'--,...,.100
• Sloop u· beam Pttlo1e days or eves. Exper. Neat ap""RI'. Also, olf!e1· • • ' • -......... '"' · • lite tvning receptio11isl 11·ork. lran1i1'"• 40 hours ,.,..I' 1v~k. ,-100 Exh•·•,·<o•• • -B 1 <'"NCSIZE "-" *p· & G d * Vol,-d•·e,.•I refr'g •I-7
Pre.f'd. ooi-:. 5-l().lll62 ~,, -e ,,~ i,;ctni retired n1an p/tin\e. .. ....... ng cac1 CLU ""'-"'• nev.·, lillnos ran s v ""·
1
• .... ps · 1\1ust be able to 11·ork 1vith includes \1·eekends & so1ne \1~'''" Dee ... Lo I tt '-'· · TOP CASll DOL' 'R PAID ~ · I Q ··•·1 th h Apply, 2400 Fail'l'ie11-, Cl\! ' ' , an ..: n~ nia 1-ess. "'"'"" springs & ...,. Baid1vi11. Ciblc. Ch1ckl!'l:u1g • i1·111l· ic!ll u ... 1 y roug •
PLANNER
SCHEDULER
·ro plan. schedule &
coordinate p111Q duclion
phases for lite munul. of
small plastic molded &
machincrl pfll·ls. \Vork h"01n
blueprints.
Send Resume To:
Classilied Ad No. 23-1
e/o Daily PllOl
P.O.Box 1560
Costa Mesa. Ca 9'$~'6
Equnl Oppor. Employer
Production Packers
& Production Workers
Innned. openings !or matw'C
pe~ns. SQme factory
txpcr. helpful. 4 Da)·/40 hr
1\-ork 'vk. Solar Laboratories,
Subsidiary of [\·Jerl.'k, Sharp
& Dohn1e, 2990 Redhill, Cill.
Equal Oppor. Employer.
people. S480. per 111onth. nighls, Sttut al $2.2J per Beach Blvd. Sept. 19, 20, lran1c. Still packaged, XO'a ~R Y C! UR JE\VELllY. • Fischer . Ka\\'Si • Kitnbull 0111. Sl('(.'k, fast & s table,
-837-6100 f1'0nt 10 an1 to 5 hour, Apply 1:30 to ;:; pm. SERVICE Station Sales1na11, 21. 2'1. ·n111rs. F'ri, Sut, lirni. SlTa. lY.'OCth $4.."51 \\iATCHES, ART OBJECTS, . Knabe. ti,·Jn:on & Hain''n. loodcd 11"/l'Xll'lls $23,500 or
pm ~1on thJ'U Fri. l ~Kl So. Coast H11}', L.B. esper. preferred. Days & 1-10 p.n1. Sun. 12.G p.111. Queen $15.), Herculon corn~r £?01.!?, .SILVER SERV ICE, i\IuSli<'tt • Sotunet' . Stein· .,,c"'~fe=r_.:·!0=1~··~11=26'------l
Restaurant Chef SALESLADY, lfXPER eves. Full & p-tin1l'. Apply SEJ.;:U LICH PH.ODUCTIONS J,'l'OUP $160. Usuully l10n1e, FINF. FURN .'i: ANTIQUES . '''"'. Sto-v •· Clark . \YiJ~ COLU,mJ,\. '-'-•·1,tl snti•,
Shcll Station, 17th & Il'vine, ~j'i:;:;";~~:::;~A;~:;;';i ~-~1~;~~1;· ~~~~~~·~;;;;;,i;~&f15-~2:.'00~c;r,;;Z"!j;i:"'U.;d. ~ "' Busy rest. in Irvine needs 1'~/tin1c. Lat.lies ready to inc s e ivery o.u-" c1· · \Vu1·litzcr • Yanu1.ha • s:cno:1 , Johnson 6, dclu.'<~
expcr'd chef. $900 per 1110 1vcar. Top pay, 1rirll;e N.B. Orange County Antiques OFFICE Drsk, ~. Linde Nc1\' S(.iu1c1.s ~ •.••...• $.395 , 1rin1. S4000 firn1. 812-851'
"• 1· ii J k Lo "·· f'I ('.?! SERVICE Sta .. 1nen. \l)t MATTR SSES el• l ~ 11 • " + .....,ne Jls. ca ac · vc, uo:ne 1 s. 16.000 st[. ft. or :intiqul's E .,(' """ 'Ai:' ( ci· on •·at' l..11;ed uun1 , ••.• , , •• , .• ~:l!J or :i::G-214:\c ______ 1 551.·lSSl. SILVERWOODS Class. Top ivages + l'01n1n. ~ E. lst St., S11nt<1 A11a. • • • $100. Pipe cutlin~ n1aehine 1~1uy11·s " ·······•·· $.>W iJSE'D-J·lobie 1·1 Red/\\·hlte
No .. J;:; Fashion Island, NB Apply Ray Cai<ey ChCl'l'Oll Open 7 dayi>, 9 to 6 daily ••• MA TIRESSES SZ:-iO_. \\"ould nu1.kc dt•[ll Grands ,, . •·•·• ..... ~it. R • -·' 1 I ,· Station, 6G-1 S. Coasl ll\\"Y, 11·/ngh< person on state O 1~C<' f'Qt11PPL'U. se. o Sec i\tr. Scanc OLD 1 Q Full & ~. · * RGANS* I r l d l t Laguna Belt. \ \\'()()( prin1c1"s type uee.n, • 1>'ln Seis f)lun1bing lie. Ask for Lou, , ~~I! s. ~rOOt con lo n ·
SALES: dr:l\VCl'S. Great fol" dispkiy· PRICED TO ?1'10\'E NO\\'!! 675-381-, &kllvut • Co1u1 • lta.i.uuuuJ • 1_G_ .. ~"~3~:M~l_. -------
Experienced, n1atul"e s.'lles SERVICE Sta. Att·endants. ing s1nall rollcellbles. flO 61&-8686 & s:f3-962j ' '·' 11 . Kuivw · 1~.un. bull .· IA\i'i-.;.·y • 23' PEA"'0.1': Elrct-•. sleops f . . Esper. Resp & respec1Jut. 1..,,,...,...,,,.. .. -,_..,...,,i I BUY I ltod 11 Y al •'-"'l '" Full p.tin1e. 3-rl & 11-i 1ioerson or perm. position Call !or inte1-..•v 645-15.12 ea. 5514736 after 6 p.m. . •• ge1;;-lOOUllt· 11n1 in 4, xlnt t'Ond, slio in Dann
Excellent BeneliL"i in y,·on1e1fsC 1:1~h-lashict11 P.eilly's Arco, I 9 l h & \\'AN'rED -Old overstuffed ALL Itcn1s Xlnt Con d . Good, used turni1ure ,(. . .~' urhtLe1· Gul.l111111scn • Paint l\1rui11;1, Best oner.
Good 11·orkin« t.'Ondilions sports...,·eni-. 11 or appt. ' • C'l easv. chair la curl up'"'' Couch, Culor & Blk/y,·ht app!ian1'eso1·11·i1lgcllfor ~ou ,\:.en. 400-iSGS COS "' S l'ick,,·ick 1-·ashinus, 1-·ashion · eivpoi '· ·· · read in _ Cot one? 6i3-4.:.'66 TVS, desks v.• I c b rs , MASTERS AUCTION ! Upt~ru1 ·:· •·•··••• ....• SI~ I -"-,-D-fV~f~D~U-,-\L-,-,"Ot->l•-1-1-lk-e-to-'
M ~Al MHE A I Lsland, NB 6ll-1301. SER\rICE Sta. At~endunt I :ift . SPl\I 01, morns. drcsS(>r, table + 4 nuuch ~8'86 BJ).9'2S Lo\11 Ly Sp1ne1 ........ ~HO hi .1 !: en1or1a osp1ta SALESPE_R_S0~-N · full & Part-Tune_ .;:.;~::,.:;,.:~,:=c;:::._~-chrs, t\\'in bed. 61,,_14JS ufl or \.urtiuer Sliliict. oew .)4~1 1 1,v <'fllll Y • assun1c nott>
642 2734 EOE ~ E C"'st H,,., NB OR I ENTAL h UGS · aft 6 or Sund''l' 83" .. -, ' •t· J . . .• on a \Tl'11 h1re boat, Z? or
I • i\·lake $200.·l·IOO. \l'k. Trade I "...,., ·. ""-, ' .. · ~ .> p111. ' . """'"'.. ~ arun1on A·lOO •••··•• $u\c J 23' r:•g_IY•w-·k I El
SCHOOLBOY t d I \'·d,.b,·t Bokh·-Tobr•·· \ttEA RUG 1s· 13· * WIN FREE * ·""' "-."~"· ns or n}('r, Show advertising & spucc, . :-> O C 1ve1· 1 -,..,.-.. BEAUT \\"alnut Oi11u1g Sel i • X . greet\ sonie ":l:""rience ~. 171 ,1 rhers. Pref. C.:\t area. Offcrs-Trades-5-18-127·1 Table J, :; chairs $2il0'. font:', rerersiblc. xlnt cond. ORGAN LESSONS FOR SALE lG' Sailbo:it
;,13-0iOO, "it.r. Tylc·r:" .. Tr-tnsp fw,1. early A~f. PORTABLE Parlolll' Pun1p Cus1on1 n1adc sofa S· t!OCI Cost $500. Sc-11 !or $7.). FULLERTON M SIC I \\"/trniler. 11l;u·k & "'hilc :->.J7-2S-19 Oi J d SJOO Oak 4' Buflel chest' tioo.J including pHd. BIRD CACF:, U d:1rkrrom ('(fuip, best off.
l\led·Surg. unit ll·i:30A!\I SALES 2 sharp salesgiJ·ls. -gun. x 111 con · · · dray,·ei'S, 3 dool's • S 1 ,, . 5.'"i" x lS'', JX'rfe<:t for family 18191 t..ucli<l, Fountain ViiJJey jji-3'.??? Rob ------I
shift, rttime. xtn't benefits. needed 10 v.urk flex.ihlc STUDENTS &12-7137 ... ··~ 557 •0 36 -----~
EOE C '
•-J 548-3:166 afl 7pn1 11.,, \'Cr')' dC!COl"dtive S9J. -.v 1!}';9 SAl!.FTSM. 13'. t'-.:c-1.
. ontact '""· enscn, hours 67&-8.UO. 2301 \\'. :: P;)l . 8 P~1 Di\IL\". $200 3 KOREAN CHESTS Ori,.., m ~ I ull I Costa r.tesa ~f e n1 or i a I Ba l ho~ Bl\·d. Ne"' p 0 rt ~ro. SAL. + BONUS. T9 1.'01id. j j.12.j yl's olci. s.100 ~\LL ne .... : 1..'0ueh, $150, stc1ui &.la-5798 · ' · iJ·~l(Ti~~ erton t·ond. S:?Th or heiit oiler.
l-laspital, 301 Victoria. 01 Beach solicit for discards, for ea. 836-(1567. $30. Kinb,'"SZ 111att1'l';;s 1v/ 4 BAH ~'TOOLS • I ~~~11
he sol.I. 9G2-io79
aft.
RN's * CCU'S
RN
642-2134 non-p1"01il organizalian, hy * PAINT & VAllNISH i·e· hox s1n·ngs & frwne $100, S10 II pie<.>e I FREE • -
1 1
-telepllone 01· door-to-door. movul ,,-• _ •netol. Ani•·· 2 twins con1p\, $50 e1t. Other IB~I ELEC TYPE\''"'.~lTf.R Adult Organ Classes I JiOBIE _CAT.. Trailer & •02.-,•-32!.~."" .. ~~~~.~1,10'1 RN & LVN/\\lknd rel>ef. 1 Secretary Ex. ~." 14"n ""'' V' odds & ends. &12-z="~ aft 4 yn old; $25 ~· . . acc~rone11. Top Sh • P• .,_ ---·~.. ,,.,....... "" qucs ow· s""'ci-'•'ly . .,-, ... ~,,. ~,,.,.. .. u1r acceptrn" -ser\'olK>••• \Vknd 01· all 466 Fl h ,.... dJ "" ~ :i S;111 C1cn1enll' . . . '!' '"' ·'· SJGOO r.73--0T.ij '011•~~~, ..... _.. . ags lp rot' corporate. ore or STORE Cl.ERi\, full .i:.: p:u1 A 1· 8010 --* 49':! li785 I G lo ur 1nfol"n1allOll vl\'ISC cal! • --.-.-.-----1 · _ ~ltd, N.B. G-12-SiJ.14. . coinpuler firtn. Jinmt.-<l. time. 3 Pl\1-llPill. !\Iust 1Je pp lances . il!OVING OUT OF STATE. _ __:.::: an 1 pni * -ti-l:!·:lS:11 in Cosui :lcsn, ur ~OP. S,\LF .. lli eustm. ~loop.
opening for cxei:. secretary 18 or 01•er. Apply 7an1-2prn FREIGHT DAl\·IAGE SALE Decorator llcsignctl custau1 SOF'T Dl'ink D i s II e 11 " <' r . !lli3-tii33 in F"uuntai11 \',dlcv. Cnb., hl'ad. sips '..!, trl r &
to V.J>. of 1 e c ii n i ca 1 151;) Gisler. C.l\l. New Hotpoint Rctrigcral<Jl's. fl~ r 1.1 is h i n gs, J a 111 Ji s , l&>0U11cs. S!00.1 F111r1~ Cnfll'l' Our instrul·tor n.'(jtLCi;l s 111;,1 ! cn;::. Xlnt c'On1l. 523-2057 ~~ , opct•atlons. Good ofc skills .c.=-=-="-="----\V 1 pa1n11n;,::s, hous~hokl ih·n1s, · 101 1·11Qt.'Or!1<' 11sJK'lll(,'l'. u11lylhuscsi.t1ee1·clyi111c1L·sl· --KITE N0-591 -
' ~~ req'd. Abilily to inlet·!ace D ~ssh\:~: ii c r~ ~ Y c ~~ .. \~ and 11u1ny 111iSl'. Jtc1ns. 1 n10 old. $3.'.iO. Ki\11·asaki crl in ler.i·niflb" I\) play the Gd. Cond. · 675-7673
. .,.,_Atii,4. I \v/vcndol's a ncx:essity. Xlnt Telephone Sales \\la1·1·anty. Credit. B of A, !i73-S103 I~ Tr:1i!l!C'~ ~Iotorcycle.1 Orgfln sht_Juld tttkc llth·un· -,,,. l·IOBIE CAT N,. I
, _,,; WT~ wz t'O. paid benefits. Call Kathi 3623 \V . \Varner, S<1nta Ana, SUPEllB gold seet.,$350~ S~-GIG-.µU I t.1.i;c' tins free oUer. . · .1
t\\ I;'.0 d
,-;:;,{" A Foster be1i'l.\\'n 9·12 "f' Costa Mesa Area near J{arhor, 97~2921. "'all lamps $50, tbl. lnn111s SUPER ~PF.C'IAL at the Coast Music Service SE1il. OC\I' ngi;nng, Xtrt1. ·~' COHVENIENTSl-IOPPING AND intervie,vs, tTI•U 833-. ' $37, Blue side chr. $·10, Shorei; Intcl'io1'!1, t'lJ yds. --p11r1s. !st gel offer. 400.1421
. CM. ON THE co. ext. 2•13. Work From * * KIRBYS * * student Ency. $35. G<ild Sun Cold Nylon 11hort sha~ PRIVATE .PAH.TY \VANT:; LIDO 1•1, N>. 3722, ~ eond . .,...,..,. ~ BASIC 4 Your Home Demos & Repos * 257ci Off Stereo Cab. Jl'>...5, 556-2989 cpl., 1•10 yds. hvo-toned TO BU"i i:1ANO _FOR Cni·rr. trailer. $122S ~cs K1~~18B'!:__~f-~u11n8ttngton<>A~~~~~ QUALITY "·-toni Sofa, L-~n. Splush. 6 4 2 -2 :! t O CASI-I * :tl7·9K> * ·~·l&-.c...7l.=33o_ _____ _
For en ~d in Wom_an's Wort CORPORATION ~ ~ ~-~ c~ ''-'~ 1 s · M h. I093 -C I Top Commissions shape. Del.ta Lamp, nc11'. ~-1 ewtng ac ines LIDO 14 TIO. 649.
a I Peggy 642·5678, ext. 330 Equal Oppor. Employer * 55S-73ll * C,\SJ·I PAID for v.·orki11g Crill Pitcher, 833-9530 ExL SACR.IFICE, 3pc co r ner Gd cond. Comple1r. f.1ust
Lovable Pappy
7215
Sltell1 pupp7 -a 1111;;~111111•
11t.t to delight & cbllO.
Wltlp vp cliddl)' t11•r•P>' vr
percale, lenT cloH1 <it 0111o·r
(11brie. Embroider e)'tl~~tw~.
atld yarn for nl'I. l'~u•·ro
7!ll'i: tna1Jter, pallet n l1h tt.,,,
l•l!J cUret!IODI.
15 Ct:NTS kw •Itri! palll'rn
l\dd ~ l~llll lor t'Kh ptllcrll
rur nrat.-c:I••• m1il 1nd 1prtc111
h•ndHni: olMotw18P lh1rtl ~-citlt,·cry w\lt t1'lit lhrl'f"
"''ftll'.s or mott. Stild lO Ahcf' Hrmlc~. JO), ·~ 0111) Pikll. 1'\«<fk'("ran o.,.t., Bo~ 1u. 01..i
O!t!btt 51.J11lon. NfW Vort,
NV, 1111111. Print N1mt. Ad ttta-,.zlp,.rautta."lumt:ier
New! I~ mo~t p11put1r
drs1gnJ In our 1174 Nttdl~r11 l'I C.taloil All inlb! THRt:;t;
f"n..r:doirn•ln,ide .... , 15('
Nr•! ~"' + Knit. lkkllt-has Raik!TlhlHIPtU~n •.• SI %5 Naw~ Nffd~P!Jinl Book , SI 00
Nt!W! fk'l..-erCl'O<'l\el lik 11.00 ll.llrjl111C.~ ijook •... 11.0U
li™anl Ctoclld Boolt •••. SI 00
hwt!IM MIK'rut• Bk •••• 11.00
ll'AJU11t .. ~Rout .... 11.on
{'ompk!ttG1fl Book •••••. II 00
('of?lplf!ltAft:llllllllll .. II 00
121'Ti"'"'.lh-lfllf11 ...... lill'
'"'°'"''tQollbll ' ·····* M..-•mQi.nltBovet•? ····* l)Qiollbfvl'Todt.> ~ .• -•·*"
lkdtoflCIJlffY floP , .. __, •• -*:'
5-Star Wardrobe!
() I. ., '···111 · •.,. ·;;,
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Equal Oppor. Employer appliances. Rcfrig, Gas 267 8~30-5, ?.I·F :-;;ection.i.l, 2 couches & !able, EPLlru~dA ~~~tng. Sem11ac~~~. "Al"",· .~t>ll! $600. 842-6Z72
SECY/PUR-CHASING Dryer, Ell'. Free pick-up FO SAL Oleg Cassini ca.shnie re ~ """" for non v."Orki n•>. 557_111:.·.i: R I:: 1 sofa, I SY.'ivel rt 1 42 Ki" • attachments. 4 d r a 'A'<' r LIOO 14, no 30291 good cood.
Rapidly growing sailboat 0 ~ rocker \\'/oltoman & gas !!po S1..'0a · s:i: • ngs1Ze 1,~..i1nut cabinet 586~"112 $1,250. \VIII consider trade
nifg. needs rnalure, ha.I'd TOW Truck Drivcr, exper. Rent W ashers/Dryers log burner. can alt;:; bed, 640-!8j6 8094 _!~on L.'ISl'r or Kile. &f2-4l<f1
1,orki.ng, well on::anizt>d F/lime. Top pay & frin~l' s2.;v~:.!1u2011211n~111. !168-2S73 MATCIHNG-Sch1,·inn l O Sporting Good1 .l'.!' ~tobic ~tono Cat excellent
se<:retary \\'/xJn't t)'piug. Tbcne.fit s. Apply G .~ \V u.xr-~'l!ENCII Prov. Sora, blue SJXr~. illl'n,',s Con!·· Licllc~ INFINITY Surf "··r•I. 1,·,.... t·otKI •"""'-. i\J t ;,,, 'C h 'l'.I. 01v1ng, 17th & Irvine, i-1'.B. Vrsty 19 Z rt B/\\ U'lh1 ~-__,., 1 us cu.,..y Pl ssurc, al FREE P[CKUP-Refs vcl\'ct $95. Antique club · ·• cni 1 · llCY.'. Si;:i. 1-''' Race Tr·.•··J·, 842-3737
11'\JJ'k & l'lniety. l:lackground * TRAINEE * Appl"s & Scrap Metal. chair, while $3;) .i.: n1ore. rml. contl.. All in Xlnt. Tl t .. " I in purchu~ing or stock GEN'L OFC St. $390 c 11 . ti75-4174 oond. l't'ns. 6-16-lll31 1 · + xtras .• S5D. 2 Train 1.100 14 CAPRI mdl., ti1\,,., .
coot.rol desirable, but good No exp. Lite t•mine. Co 11·i!J A ~ anytime 675-5~ . • BEAlJI'IFUl---wfl\.l'n aqu:i sets, $35. 962-7594 trlr.. '74 P l_a I es' $595 t f t ,,,. uct1on 801-! 11"',0VESEAT & Sofa Custom . . 1 '. • • , ' SURFBOARD G' 2··. "''· 6'!2·()j()j or 55i·5437 '·'v· ~en .. o c ~x~r. ni o ~ 1 1rai.n in a varicly of g1!n'l ofc I ,. inadc very <>ct. <iual ne~·cr dr.1pc>S;. .! ." n '1 • 1vxl, ,., , 1n11,'°rta11l. Xln l . f u 1 u 1 c duties. Near Orange Co Air· 1 used, U" .. ail"y "'''· ;.,."7910 hni;i11·nr~ S'l.1. Curtains, $5. ?>nd .. $55. Steu!Jen stiddlc_,] Boats, Slip1(Dock1 9070 \VfYou1~g, ener&';t!~ JX.>oplc. poi1. RETR.6:CTION "'"' ......,..~-h'l'lnc. 7J2-0&:ti Z1cg:frred Pl'rr. 1·are S29;i __ ....;...;....:.....;.::..:.:;;;:..c..:.;:.:1 ~~ Cul! ~11chclc, 64.-5200. ,\rli.,'U~ Go1·don Personnel STATEMENT \V!iIT~ Pl'Ovincial Bedroo1n vox GUIT \R Ail!P SIIJO 5·14-4il2.i I ooa.;: SPACE AVAILABLE "· ., ·, ., .: ,,_,.f!.f,;!!",· WESTSAIL CORP , Agen_cy &12-6720 , o'uE TO CIRCUMST'NCES l'unutw·c, Canopy Bed, H; I". '1 . 110· ,· · Store, Rest., Bar 8095 u11 to 30· boats. Baclt&lor •:' ~· ~ E 1-1 N 1· C'f " dresser, desk. Xlo t t.'Ond. t' 111"11-: c iair · ep. -t<lll 11·/dO<'k al~" 0,.nn '-" -¥s~' SECRETARY· M1uiagement "'~' · it 1 o. J, 1' BEYOND OUR. CONTROL htnf' long i"hn •12· steeves ..... .........._ 'if,'\ C -· $125. 646·3.~. ~ .J'' -1 '· bOTIQUE flxtur~s. aftcr 56i;)-3591or67>2448
" .. onsulting fITTll in Ne1vpcnt -THE SUPER X ·-$7 194-.17::.1 d "I" Be {I ch requires TYPIST/CLERK li~TERIORS Systems \\'all· , , ressra._cks, 11·a.JI bracket11, \\'ANTI.;D: \Vllpaypremhun .":~~ ·.. sccreln.ry/clcrk, for the last. ace 11 r a I e ly.nisl·ii·ill DRUG STORE .~ unit dresser desk chair BUNDI tronibone, get t"!Qnd. inirrors, fire extinguisher, !or boat slip for 42' J)\\T
, "! ii I'-oflice. Varied & challenging train on lBl\1 typesclling fixt11rc20s & equipm<'nt located +. 673-0IJO o1: &~921'.1 &hyl l~l,b l11 mph, h11n1per v.•indo\V displays;-· ct c. ti.oat 'NB :tre/l. Call (213Y , F 1 "" y,·ork. Would prefer .....,uinnient. :ii :i So. Euclid St, S'LIVING gunn, Ja Y c anger, 673-5900aft4:30 7!!6·2143. ColJC'ct, ivkday•. " • .,.d w! 2 ~·· " 1"\naheim \\"ill not be sold Rm t'Ouch. l'rea1n 962-4G06
Salary ronunensuralc on LAY OUT/PASTE UP a pu ic auctiou Sat. Sept ,;ig...2545 aft 4 SACPJFICE autumn ha7.e -beouli£utly l'('gtored classic
)
cai 1 ate th yrs1..-olle;;:e. 1 bl' . & gold. good oond. $8.i.l~ci=~=~---~-1 TV,Radlo,HiFiSt.I098 EXCllANG E use of
•
' ..
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ability .~ qualificatioru;. Call \\'il.h basic typing skills ror 2lst, l!)7-1 . . niink coat lmed lgthl. Appr. SJ'EREO Comp.. BPn}!\llrn 2'2' Chti<1 ri•tllt for use of
675-J.551. small prinl shop. Call ;\Ir.' Bi'cycles · 11.~~EABED Rtviei:a. ~~n-$1200. Perf cond $T"JO, T T 11·/Stnnton c:l11g. $215. doc!! 61'1-(681 SECY /RECEPTIONIST "frCany 5-IS--1164 ~020 ~~~ .. ~~~5~~~~~~br1c, like 6,,/;)-27-10. l.nfinity 200) A.~"T i;pkrs. AC00;\1:-up to 27' poy,-er
TYPIST to $600 I USE:D Rehuilt Bicycles like I DINli'IG SET ii•/breakfronl 9 .. P.1IBf1E Drexel D1 In Rm $430. 540-iSlG. hoot $75 month .
IB'' E 11··11 · f new l..n rx 1 · o · · · · ' · .... c. " ngnavox s ere o, FOUR channel Sanyo eight G7J....S086 Plllt 1in1t• -9 A;\I HJ 3 · • "· 1 ll'llUl nr · 11 ' ~ n~. pr•CT'. G chail'S 3 leaves. s:iOO c: • h Kl RR t tra k P · d k I ~====:..;;.=-~--! Pl\·! Mon thru rn· for r.,e,·11 n1n11ngcn1ent level. Shnlll! 10, !i. ,: ~J)l'ls ·.t· S1ingr;1ys .. 1101ht-rf~1.675-ti530 , m·~,a~1!'t ,. ~g ~:~--=•3 se. c·. ioneer ec fltOORtNG,onshori!. Balboa Fee Rein1b/Also Fl'<' Job~ il·loto-ck>si; t.'<IUiti. & Ueitch~ ~ , . sc a.n 11111"!-I. ,,,,..,-;,..•~ speakers. :\1nt. $50. I~inda.
E.'ltate fin11. ~tus! be WESTCLIFF C111ii;r1~. 1"/f?DF,T;.i'l blue rorm1ca top. RCA COLOn--:-·TV/Re1notc S.16-1438. Island, iv/14' Flbtr,tlasf
matw-e and cupable of Pc••"•"•cl ,\gc•••·." RECYCLED CYCLES t!1_u. ~~!: ..... ~·,1~ blue naug. cont. S!Ji 3 ba nu ~inks, 'D~U~AL,.o-~12°'1~8~Tre~~,b~l~w~-tm-.,~&. bo~I. \\111£1ler type. 673-2431
filing, tclCJ>hone .. ~ gellt!ral ,,,, ., ~ c11rs ~,,.. h' f. t ·d d BOAT SLIP-NE\VPORT olfice Uuties. For appt. Call f:\liu·k III Centcl'' 6'150 \\'.Coast 1-t\\')', N.ij. -· jl:Hn rnl'k, 1 1 rnc lo phono. cartr1 ge & ustcover. 4 \ UP TO 21 ,
!\lt'. Blaek 54~424 . IG;:;l E. Edin~ci-. S.J\. ftlj-R2Si:i I Garage Sale1 8055 51S.!}S.12. m06. Sl.2.5. 641·4307, ,. 675-1453
Secretary/ Receptionist 5'12·S8::SS Cats ' 803$ P1\INT & Supplies Only. F;~r.ly ,:{J~~o; 0so~a e ~ 5 ~ I~,~~:raJ~~:n~~r T $V:i oil~ B~ts, Speed & Ski 901t
l''or ~ tH ;1 11 Architectui·al rYPJST, F:XPER. · Btlo1\' cost. Sat 9/2117·1. $65.80. Jfcathkil metal rle-64(;..8711 Finn, Must be neut, alei1 P/li1ne, your hon1e 01' n1y 11AillPl~ll Youi· cat use Aft 9:Jn1, 2924 Peppcrtrce tector $5fj 494-0508 ..:.;.:...;='-------'6">-14' rt;tl(IS!: llvdra Swift.
and pc1·sonable. Duties will olc. P. O. Box 62,">8, Thl'ice 11•cc.kly CAITA-OOX Ln. CU-1 Call for in fo. _:=:::.:'-':=:·c.co...=:..,,-~ '!!"!!!!!!!!""!!!!!~!""!~')!"!!"!!!. 61"J() ·hler o.b., lit trlr.· XI include typing (50 \Vpnll Anaheim, Ca 92M6. Scl"vlct•. Phone 673-6217 213·358-4951 h1UST sell 1ii •ct. dlomonrl ;. oond S!rJO/or bst 96t-lll3 1-~illng, telephone & general SIAMESE, 1 blue, I Acnl, 1.1 0V I NG 11 rtng $65. Add. nlach. SOO. [ Boel<""' 11·1P1 l~=::...:::::::::.::;c.;::::...::::::.:.o.:::._1
office dutiei;, Call Gary WAITRESSES l.) 11·k.s old. $25, en . cv--.. 1..ing 'si.,..'!'ruS:: b" set Lad\t§ Bu]O\la watch $25. MlriM Equipmllnt 1'..
Sullivan alter 3 pn1 for appl. Af!. 5, call: 518-6S76 '"°''uu · • .,,~ a ine ' 536-799!1 1 ,~· ~iiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiij~ 6~
8
,. bunk beds, planlA, etc.I-"""-'"'" '-~--~--I I~ '·l"' 114· NOi\' Hirin" All Shifti1 P~l.SIANS&MIMALAYANS, :-ii&-8130, 3100 Sumatra, F03 R~!1c,·Bl'igtgse ~traLttl·koen Genera( 9010 T~altoft &.a...
*Sec"ys, Bookkeepers " .__.·A i'i'QislC'rcd killcns. $&o Costa Mesa \v,..,., scoo r •• a. .iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii·imiiil
l·-too t ll I Top Hourly Wage &. un 61"·~'"10 SL'T ,.... ,.,;..., G MW tlccl. holy,•atcr heater .... F'IBE'RGLASS -• Seal, -ve many o s + Good Tips ,,. ......,., "' \..i..v1n.rN , , !iwentcni, $25. 673-5990 aft 4:30 ui -.> Llz Re-lnden Agt?ncy Co p .d Dogs 8040 ~looo;M, ·nu sew g. mttch.,17.'::::.,C:::"7,'.':;;:::...:.;.::0-=,., rory,•ard deck, :'I' beam, C1mper1, S1l1/
4020 Birch St., Suite 104 • ai Benefits & hi5. --books, ete. Fri. on I y. 44 213 YDS nC\\', thick rubber p11dded edges. $125. Rent
Ne·w;>ort Bench 833-8100 Musi Be 21 Or 0\'f!r :? Olfl'STANDING Afghans, 6T;,-5035, 5«i l\t a r lg (l ( d, carpet, nitec gold !lb~. ;6<~"'5981:::;:::::·~~~~-~= 9120
Dial A Job 833-0855 Cocktail cxper preferl'C(i I Gnio fem, Jyr old n1ale, CrlM Reg. J)l.!li. now $9.Ta ~·t i2' Oci11t & Trir. • . .-,
T Bui no1 ne<'<!ss. \YUi train i\IUJilt S.i.rt'lflee, bes! olr, · 1j.Jj.5Sf.5 ..,.., No Charge o You Contacl )lnnagcr, Anytinie &!'> ELEC. dry"'1" l<lve~ents , vrr 'S 1 bulk T !11'.'0n:lfish pole/reel t:t.O,
1971 V\V popCor> camper, rT
sink, ill('hOX. I 0 11 et'
Afll/1'f'.1. 4 ne1v 1ires;
Established 1965 Rhohic Grognn ..-lj60 nft 6pm nintt. selS, tbles.. lnmP". 1\.,nN n · op SSr1. gunrttck $10. ~!ml.
THE GROUND Rou l\llN. Schnauzer AKC. 7 mos, mist. Fri. 6 to 9. Sat. q II n I tot Y • \Vell bPlow B M E 9030 SECJtETARY part 1 i ni e NO nia.h\ cars cropped, all 10 10 5. JM.'\ Platte Dr., 0-t \\1lolesnle. 644-4579, Crog. oats, arrn• q.
~ICl!PM 4 or 5. $3.150.
4!12-12'l2.
~~~ J~~ \\~P.C~~n~ 2T~~':t~!lvd ~;Q:Clu1n1p. sired, Sl.50, OiURCH RUl\lMACE SAL~~ e PAPEfi Cutter (lnRtJ:nlo! ZODIAC 15' Mark J!f. (:,U.tBORAC shell, Luv, good
&kllh1, JBM Exec. 1'op Eqt•i.J OT'""Or. En1olo"t>r 1.959 Church St. CM lnNtC .l In xlnt. cond. $-15 S800 cond!Uon. S300
salary. Ne-.vport n re ti , " POODLES. 2 n1alC, 2 fem 9 to 4 Sat Sept 21 l,,"C:::al;;1 _:-2;.:.,"";.--.,,--~ Wetkilit~ ~-. ~t !RS 1961 CilEVY
6
J4-'J.839l'
fi7r3m WAITRESSES b I ll c re .l '11 \I c r ' GIA'~ g·~·· sale .• ,·L, NATURAi .. Tourmalin@ Full .. • Ton Truck \l~IMA" "NER 5 "' --~ 1 h Mink •~ f 4llP John, son Oulbpard, 'fi9 t. Cru·~r. l"\I', ••II oft • -SE-CRETARY r. 1 "'' • 1110 • 8:00 am.18282 Hartlund H.B. er1gl 0011.!· lll.'3l or od L T.i "' ........ .6 · Expel'. Neat Appearance 'l4fr--01'12. ~18-3793 Talbert Beach vicinity ovrr $2300. 113-754-6877 ~ n..o:_~~\'~·~ti l\h~stt "':.i::30:...:::002-894::...:::;;:Sc.w<::.:::c'°kday""'::'-
Pltln1C'. J.::xpe.r'd. Top notch.
N . .0.·~·1uthion Island. $4 ()C'C
hr. Join. G14-'IS70.
SECRETARY
P&r1 lime/ Ptrmnnen1
liu.uranc..-c OfClce-trvlne 5!6-"6;S •
SECRETARY-Legal Tnlinec,
tyue 70 \\1IJ~I. lite dicta·
llun. Start Kil) mo. 49.'t-1371
Cia»lined Adi t:ajl 642-9678
1odll)i'!
Apply Surf & Sirloin PUltEBllED Golden Cocker GARAGE SALE. SAT·SUN. -. KEN¥'.0RE dlshw111d1tr. e \VANiTED·. TIO, Iler fllr <'lie Mo5torc1ycles/
J.l:itl \V, Coast Hwy., NB Sponlel. All l!:hotl! 8 ~Ios. C 'll.5 n 9150
\\1AITRESSES I \VAITERS -l~~t ofr. fi57·5t56. 1 156 ~·~~JC~ ~I 6ii·7S·IJ7. 11allb0At,. & cover. Rea.son· coo ers
Cocktail nd f00<I \ I G able. G!16·36l 2 f70 llU...-,V 250, Cl••••· =. a . ' Pl' y Efu't SHEP. B 1110., AKC. Hor••• 8060 PAINT is11ray eQUlpt. Pot. ~l'\ ,,.., ....... 7285 NE\\IPQRT BLVD. malr, exc."l!I. ••/c~'l"ren. "-·t 801t1,PoWtr 9040 KAWASAKI 120, $200 . -· 1999 :1u u -hONe, gun, eotnr.s!!Or. UUU\ ,..,,, '".n.•
r;u· • $100 581-4~7 --"' s1u152 -"~ ~""'"""'--~~~-~1 vE:nY genii mare. nmlly 1..vnu. Jtea@Qn11 e. .,..... _ 9 Ft. Boston \\Thaler Squnll \VAtTRESS. Olnntr hou'c SPRfNGF.H. Sp11.nit1I AKC. we!ftern. Exp ridf'r only. Misc Wanted I081 all fiberglass, inciud" oort '6.IJ llONDA l'75. e.xctl. oond.,
c>xp. prtf~1'td, n1ust I~ 21.
1
i:ihow & pct 9 1~-cek.c; $15. Bred 2. nlO llgO. $400. i\l!IOl:=;::·;;;::;;.;";;;7::;:=;,:;, l..!~:!:3'°!2_!o!:.'~""~ljo!!lf~cr~ll42~.3~737!!·:.. stt'ffl or dirt. JrlO Appl,y: 843 \V. l9th ~t .. C.\1 · 100-2211 ' ' h111n."tcr. 492--8918 l\\1ANTED -Old overstuHcd l----'fl:t:O:l-c.l:::G39=----1
\Vi\lTTtr-;S ~xp·d. for iwt. ! AKC 1''\l':. n\.11~ iuwl r~nu•I<' t-; QUARTEn 1101-se C..11, l!'M)' cn.,,tr to curl up and onn·t ilrop the ban •.• Get 'TI \'Ai\tAl lA %'JO Endum,
club. Full tu1tc'' d;:u.'S. Cd! I ~1 &·iirard~ ;.;o or lx.-i;t 6 mos old, $250. Saddle Sl::.O. t'Cai.1 In -C'rOt onr! 673-4265 a Job v.1lh l\ low-co1tt Onlly 1na11y 1'11m. ?.ftllll 14.1111
for appt. 61M382 olfl'r. ~. 642--2203. ati. 8Pl'.t or morns. Pilot Cluslfied Adl 6'2-M7I $450. &IUi272
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24' TRAILER & Cabana,
furn. view sit!? avllil, SW .
6'5-5617 or 548-4002
1 Auto ~r. & Parts 9400
HIT IN"SIDE; 65 Ooel ::adett
Sta. Wag. 35,000 ml. on
ena;lne. Complete car $150.
Will party lb.at needs engine
please call again.
1 59 TR3 'parts, hard top, or
aeU complete car. 544-3417
Berlina
fdcrno)
Pric9d to Si ll
$4952
(4'2014)
~lrarh Jh11p1111~; p. 1 '<~ ,' ' H,,.,,_,
'l• w'• ''' •' • 1 '"''' . ---.
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'73 Ponti•c Gr•nd 'Prix
8,800 mlle1. Loaded includ·
ing factory air 1.v~Uonin&.
(4llOKFZl
$4675
JOHNSON &: '&>N
Ll.ncoln r.tereury
2626 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa S40--5630
eves.
'60 Pontiac Station ~a.goo
w/rack, xlnt motot, new
tires, Best otter. 54&-1907
Thunderbird '970
'SS T-BlRD
Near perfect body, Cngers,
port hole top, 81,CXX> or1ginaJ
milt's. \'lhite with nice black
interior $Z500, will consider
trnde. M!J.1690
1973 THUNDERBIRD. 15,000
mL ShoW"10fn rond. Crill
624-1!633 anytime.
9974
I
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•
. -, ' ·-
ThurSday, September 19.1974
llULL NICI + ~M.
":E~ '74 DODGE
D-100 SWEPTLIME PICKUP
"SPECIAL" LOADED-Hot Stripped
'318 VB, automatic, increased cooling, H-.0. F&R springs, much· rnore :co14AE..S1361111
Immediate $
Delivery
FULL Pitel + TIL
DODGE
COLT
"SPECIAi."
2 door coupe. Vinyl bucket seata, AM radk>. pin slripes, 1600 c.c:. engiN
plus nu::h more. (6l21 K45:30'4M8) >
lnunediate
Delivery $
FULL Pitel + TIL . . IRAHD HEW a ,,..cou·
318 cu.)n. Y8. automatic, AM/PM, tactcwy lfr conditioning. tli'llld wiNtlhi.~.
pcM9' steering and mud'j more. (B21A£4V0561771 ..
lnnedlate $
l)dl-fery
•
'
•
SALE
• llM:ID MIW,
'74 CHARGER
"fflOlol" LOADIO 'tlot 51r!t!p1d . . •
, ··'*'h Q -.
\ftnw1 .rJf. ,wife .,.._., ~. wide oval tir91, ralty pkg.. power tronl disc
...... IUlomldc. ~ 1tMrint. muaic ~ r~ .. (Wl.21J4G1047~J
$.
M.LNICI +TM.
360 OJ. in. VB, automat ic, cloth & vinyl interior, bumper guards front a rear and
rrore. IDM23J4D218712l
Immediate
Delivery
$-
NJ. NICI + J&L
.• ,. WAIT? . BUY llOWI .··1u11 ·11ow1
I 11lADE YOUR CAR ... PAID: FOR OR NOT -YOUR ' EQUITt .TS"'YOUR DOWN PAYMENT . .
"'
?O J/4 ton Short V•
I owt •• euto. b'lnl.. radio, heah!"· "(13528F) .• -\
Speeial
'
~· OI ,
. ...fUU •1•76 -._,TOU--•••U..,. -·PllCI • _ ..... -. . .
~b)ll-. ... IHl~l'-ull~~·14t.H fftcl f I L Dt~--t117f_ll A.PJ'I.
•
Special 70 Fwd Mrffrick
Automatic transmission. radio. heater, vinyl interior. (ZVH292}
FULL , $876·, .. ~~u $3268 pa PRICE PllfH MOlllH
Or'fW' 13a.M lor 24 moll. •f!tll t2• OOwrL -FUii caafl l)rlDI 11128 !le lfW;I, TI L 0.'9t...i n.y!llell1'tKlcl 110l3 32. A..P.R,
• 21.e!I.
'70 DodcJe Dart ' · ~ AW conditioning, radl<J. heater. (791EMS) ·, . '
-.176---01
If YOU .. --
'70 Ford 500
"'r, automatic. radio, full oower. (901 BFPl
Special
·'. FULL '976 If 3u l'lllCE ,._ t391s:...,. ..
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Capistrano EDITION
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VOL. 67, NO. 262, 3 SOCTIONS, 36 PAGES
• ' ..... ~ '-'
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER .. 19, 1974
Today's Final
N.Y. StoekS
'
TEN CENTS
'
San Juan Mona Pleads·For·Child Safety
. f . .
An emotional plea ror added precau-
tions to protect ~mall children crossing
a busy arterial highway to get to .school
"'as heard Wednesday by San Juan
Capistrano city councilmen.
?\1rs. Pat Lautrop, r e pr es ent i n g
mothers of Del ObisPo School children
a~d principal Robert Elston, told coun-
ci lmen three children were just missed
Tuesday by a speeding veh.icle at the
intersection of Del ObisPo and Del Avion,
in spite of a new· traffic signal.
"We're grateful for the new signal,"
said Mrs. Lautrop. "But the woman
ran a red light and nearly ran over
!he ctuldrerl in the crosswalk."
Councilman Doug Nash said it was
premature to judge the value of the
signal because school has only been
in session a few days. But the council
• •
sent the matter to the Traffic and
Transportation Committee for study.
A1rs. Lautrop asked the city to hire
a crossing guard, a person who could
accompany children across the street,
' holding a stop • sign. She said . It Is
common practite in San Clemente.
Guarda there are supervised by the
San Clemente· Police Department.
"The state requires us 'to send our
children to school dally," the cily rorces
us to send them across a major arterial
highway and yet no governmental body
wishes to be responsible {or their safe-
ty," she said.
"We would hope that the lack of
foresight by governing bodies never
forces .them to erect an overpass in
the name of a dead child. There would
be little consolation to the parents
walchlng a ~ridge grow old lnst .. d
of the child they loved/' she said.
Mrs. Lautrop pointed out that the
speed limit on most of Del Obispo is
50 miles per hour. She said visibility
is good for drivers approaching the
signal from the east-but bad from
the west.
The signal was ·installed as a tem-
porary device about a mon1b ago. City
officials hope to construct. a permanent
signal at the intersection in February.
The traffi c light w.as reqqested by
parents of school children who feared
that youngsters wouldn't be able to sale.
Jy cross Del Obispo.
If approved by the Trafficc..and
TransPortation Committee, the crossing
guard will be a paid employe or the
city. The school di strict, which supports
the concept, does not have funding for
guards. •
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Deeisima Attacked
Doheny Camping
• •
Appeal Readied
Leaders in the South Coast effort to
scotch any state plans for increasing
campsites at Doheny State Park vowed
today to appeal the d~lsion early this
week by regional coastal commissionen
Senate Votes
Pay Raises
WASIUNGTON (UP() -The
Senate, by a vote of 64 to 35,
cleared a pay raise for 3.5 million
civilian and military employes t~
day, handing President Ford's
economic policy its first setback
in Congress.
The Senate rerused Fon!'• re-
quest, backed by a last·minute
plea, to postpone the pay increase
by three months and cut govern-
ment _.fing by $700 million.
As a result lhc_ 5.52 percent
Increase will . go into effect Oct:
t Instead of Jan. t as proposed
by Ford.
Five Meet Death
As Plane Goes
Down in Flames
RIVERSIDE (AP) - A singl ... nginc
plane flying in dense fog crashed in
names today. killing an five persons
aboard, including a child, authorities
said
The Cherok~ en route here from
Las Vegas, slammed into the Santa
Ana River bed, which runs parallel to
runways at nearby IUverSide Airport but
about a mile away -about nine miles
south wes t of Riverside. ·
Names of the victims ·were not im-
mediately known. A spokesman for the
Riverside County sheriff's department
said, "The bodies are so badly burned
it may be many hours before we can
tell who they were."
The sheriff's ~kesman said conditions
. were very bad for visual flying -"It
was very foggy and visibility was •way
I
down." ·
A &pl)kesman for the Federal Aviation.
Admlnl&tration in Los Angeles $81d the
plane wa on· an approach to the airport.
He aaid vlaibllily was reported as one-
hair mile in rog.
However, the pilot was me.king his
approach with navigational aids, he said.
Target P1·actice
Brings Arrests
JACKSON, Mich. (AP) -PoUce SIY
two men who decided 1" tell lhelr
marksmanship by shooting at flies with
a plslol have been charged with rtckless
riling o1 • gun. Olflcen said L.C. Olney and Dennis
Burger opened the ny .. hoot at tho
Suburban Garage W<dne.!day arter hav·
Ing a couple of drtnl<J,
'l'hrce garba gemcn who had lo dodge
Dying lead called police.
Police said there was no Indica tion
that the .. me 70 ahols nre<1 during
the episode brought down any mes.
·-
•
who approved lhe new version of the
controversial projett.
Vauglm Curtiss, a leader or the group
from Capistrano Beach seeking the
retention of the strip of Doheny for
day use, said that the appeal "is a
natural."
Curtiss hopes that history will repeat
itself when the appeal is scheduled 1"
be beard and acted upoo by the state
-.... miaial. "The first time, when they had more
campeil• propoaed 1... the Part, tflO
regional com-•P1J11>Yecl It, tllon
our appeal was upheld at Ille state
level and we won. 1 "One of our main fears right now
ls that the caurornia Department of
Parks and Recreation will break ground
on the project before ow: appeal reaches
the state commissioo," he said.
St.ate park planncn have fought bard
for months to win the crucial permits
to expand the llohefll' beac;hfront cam-
ping area by 175 new spaces.
1bey view the late!t plans as a com-
promise -with -foes -after the loss of
the initial project.
But Curtiss and scores of others,
primarily from Capistrano Beach, il\sist
that day use is a far better fate for
the large beach immediately downcoast
of the existing Doheny camp area.
They insist that use of a wh.ite sand
beach for camping violates the spirit
of the Coastal Initiative.
State officials have argued heavily,
however, that the serious r:eed for more
camping in the area reintorces their
plans. .
Before Monday's vote of the regional
commission yielded approval for the SI
miU ion project, local foes were buoyed,
O.u1iss said, by a strong COITUl'llssion
staff recommendation that the request
be denied. '
Other support for the opposition has
come from the cities of San Juan
Capistrano and San Clemente. Coun-
cilmen in each commwlity unanimously
(See DOHENY, Page A!)
•
UPI~
P•dclll119 On
Larry ,Capune of Balboa Island
pn>pafts to leave Santa Cruz
on the latest leg of his down·
coast paddleboard excursion
from Oregon tJt.San Dieg~ . '
)
,
• DlllJ itlllt Stiff .......
fJin~s Big ·Top
Ca istrano Beach's tenacious camper Richard W. hauled away. Undaunted, he has fOund another way
t<> keep out the damp night air. County legal coun-sel says tent is illegal and Lebin seems headed for
yet another round In batUe orer squatter's rights.
in obviously hasn't capitulated to the foes at the
nty seat, as this tent -bis new home -<1ttests.
.Unemployed ltical man lived i.n old _Cadillac camp
car on this spot before county oflic1als ordered 1t -
Talks to Resume
In Pipefitters'
Strike Oct. 4
By DOUGLAS FRITZSCHE
Of llM DlflJ P'Mlf Stiff
Negot.iatiorui are set to reswne Oct.
4 in a pipefitters •rlke which has
already cost Southern Californians more
than $,25 million in de1ays on a single
project.
More than p.?OO steamfitters and
pipefitters in SoUthem California walked
off their jobs July 1 ln a strike to
retain a 36-hour work week. A wage
and fringe benefit increase of $2.47 an
hofJ.r ,fOr the first yeat'of crnew contract
has already been reaclled by negotiators.
Pipefitters now earn $8.88 an hour
plus-friDge bonefils.
Larry Hamlin, SOuthern California
F.dison Company project manager for
the San Onofre nuclear generating sta-
tion, this morning estimated that .work
sl'!>Ped by the strike bas coot the com-
pany $25 mllllon, a cost which will
ultimately be borne by customers.
Pipefitters picket lines went up at
ihe plant . Aug. 5, Hamlin said, and
other craltJ working oo the staUon stop-
ped work.
'lbe picket lines went doWll this week,
he said, and work, by other tradea has
resumed.
Pipefitters are constructing the water
and cooling systems for the ,.two 1,180
(See STRlll, P~ce 14)
Laguna Hil'ls a Bonanza
For Military Recruiters
By JAN WORTH.
Of IM D•llY Plllt s11n Under the shadow of a huge blue
. jeans emporium in the Wild West Plaza
in Laguna Hills, a recrUiting office for
the U.S. Navy ~d Marine C:Orps is
doing a booming 'oosiness.
The four men who run the office
can't explain the boom fully, but since
they moved from an office in San
Clemente last April, the t\1arines have
had .five times the number of applicants
and the Navy, ten limes.
The Na!}' has recruited ~3 volun·
teers-inc lu dlog three young
women -from the new quarters at
2S272 Mcintyre. It's a marked contrast
from their former quota of one enlist-
. ment per month.
"If you picture a pie with a si:i::
at the bottom and a 12 at the top,
Nixon.' s Dauglit;er
Flies to Coast
've've moved about a third or the way
toward the 1% from the six," said Chief
· Bos'n .Mate Q1u.ck Evans, head Navy
recruiter. -
The recruiting area for both the
Marine; and Navy is the sam~the
sprawting southern half of ·Orange Coun-
ty that includes El Toro, MiSsion Viejo ,
Laguna Beach, Laguna Niguel, Laguna
Hills. San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point,
and San Clemente.
The Marines have recruited 10 yt)Wlg
men, ·and expect to have several more
swOm .. by lite. ead of the moath -
including.,rnore ·&&;n a five-fol~ inctease
for them.,
Marine Gunnery Sgt. Larry Reid said
in general lhe )'Oilths recruited rrom the
south countY ate more affluent, more in-
telligent and more sure of themselves
than the aveJ1!ge recruit.
"They don't 'just wander in (rom the
street looking for a Job," Reid said.
"They come in wlth definite ideas about
what they wan t."
However many have preconleived
negative notions aboot what they could
be getting into Evam: said, which in
his oplnloo are for the roost part false. WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Julie Nixon "They think of the lout or six years
Eisenhower flew to California today to involved being a very long time/' he
tee htt ailing falher for the first time said. "We discuss thl!I wtth them and since he resigned as President. compare. it with their past and with
A spokesman said Ml1:. Eisenhower their future. Being young, many things MARIJUANA SMOKE •nt 1" her parents' home in San like this look insurmouniable.
' Clemente, by commercial airliner and "'l'hey •1"' reel lhat they'll be locked
POLLU'.[E}) SK E , ., lrhnded
1t~S~\1~~~~f~~~ ,~~~ 1~:' .u~=: ~~~·inc1a~
I •':lt' 1~· ·• :t..:.:.i;. lier.~•· · · 1"1/1~'" .. ~prolesslcmal duties SANDIEOO'(Al')'i!.,,_ ~ • , •~ ' *1°tFlhls q,8i "!">~ ., · '.t~lanwi~al.!.\~·!""' .J:ir; . en•l .,";. ly ~~ .. ~'"o'r " • .lhi, kids . .,;;1'/., tesi.d here for _, 'wllldi al. ~ '"" ...., nh ""'' '"' _,,_ Navy 'schools, 8' to iti' percen~ or t~em were •l:i=.pys San Diego Cou.r;"'s • nillf re"tl ~ tla'in )Ill Jell pau with 'flyln("colori," 'Evans said. he~~ ~1. B. ~kel., whq also =I l'n ~g. !ilxon '~'and relumed to !t ~~~~ ~ U:~..=l~I~~~
orrrcer Gt Ille, Alo Polllllion I an ente A~t:' (he l!leenhowero p~ms, he ~IJI'. , Dlstri~. -• lingl~ber deci to +.maii JD ~shlnglon.' Mra." Pll'\ or the ·lhterest, ljoth ainong Jhe
ralor at ~Jsland.~ Jllljlon • · tai!I abe Jiu Jal""' ~ hl;r Marin6 and !lavy ttcr11itees, may lie
was used 1a J'!l1· 1 •• ·.t-'• to . ::,rr~~ :bu a«,~ •. in~ pr~~ ~~{·~Jes
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Appointee
Approved .
ln4-0 .Vote
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of thl Dlily Plitt Stiff
San Clemente Real Estate appraiser
and fledgling plarming Colll:missioner
Charles P. Fox emerged as the fifth
member of the city council early today
aftt!r councilmen wound up three hours
of wrangliog over an appointee.
The 32-y@ar~ld Fox:. a local. resident
since 1970 ::ind planning commissioner
since last Ju1y, won 4-0 approval at
2 a.m. 3rter councilmen in a aometimes
tense public session appeared headed
for a <leadlock. .
'Ibey· fmally gave up a public ·try
at accord and retired to a secret ex-
ecutive session to reach unanimity.
Had they failed to agree, the eoun-
cllmen would have had to work with
one man short until the earliest possible
special election -March of next year.
Fox "'as the strong choice or Coun-
cilman Tony OiGlovanni, and Is a close
neighbor. DiGlovaMi spoke highly o[
the nominee..,early i,n the evening.
But · the remaining three members of
the council jell juSt as strongly about
their nominee,.
Mayor Thomas O'Keefe Jed the break
from the executive se&'Sion tradition \\ith
an aSS3JJ].t on speculative press stories
which he asserted were fed by reports
from abundant executive sessions held
on the appointment matter.
He tenned press reporting o f
executive-session material 1'highly ir-
responsible" and urged that' the council
deliberate publicly to. assure accuracy
in reporting. -....
Then he made his nomina.tlon.
Citing the scarcity of women in city
government, O'Keefe came out strongly
for Ms. Donna Wilkinson. the
chairwoman of the Parks and Recreation
Commission, praising her devotion to
community service.
DiGiovanni lauded Fox!> highly and
stressed that in the eventual winner's
short tenure on the commission, he pfo-
ved his effectiveness. Fox, he said, would
be a "tremendous asset" on the council
because of' expertise in matters of
growth.
Arthur Holmes raised 'the name of
Jong-time fonner councilman and Mayar
Dr. Wade Lower, and wai 1adamant
in his support of the retittil Oral surgeon
who Jost re-election by a· handful of
votes last spring.
Holmes' adamance 9000 would spell
(See ,FOX, Page A%)
Orange Ceast
Weatlaer
Friday \VI.II be a carbo'n · copY of
today, accordJng to the weather
service, with overnight low ck>udt
and fog along the coast clearing
by midday to sunny skies. Beach
highs near 70 rrsmg · to the mid-
80s inland.
INSU,E TODA V
A 79-11ear-old widow snys she
·1;os had 3S affairs sinc1 her h1u~
bond ditd 23 years OQO. The
ages of ltt r -nactts ra ngtd trom
15 to 82. See story, Jme-Al 2.
aetliH C4 lrmt ..,.._. 14
L. M, It¥' .l7
C1llftirWI .U. C•
C1'ltlflltll C .. 14
C•l'l'lkt C7 cm..n CJ
o.1111 Motlett ,lil t
litlttrlll ..... M
E11Htli-.rt Cl
PIM~ ... , Hy 0...., ,t,t
KtrtK.,. II
•
~ :2 D~LY PILOT SC
Fr.9m Page A.I
FO ~:".' . I---"'
doom foi-an 1 Initial public selection 'pro-
cess.
~ Patrick: iliane made two nomina-
tions, one.. which he defended highly,
di.:efpi~e its ramifications.
Ir, said ooe) choice would be former
l!ayor 'and cOuncilman Howard l.1assie. • · j·t make 'no attempt to hide the fact
that he ·is a trusted friend and was
my campaign manager, but I must
emphasize that l am nominating him,
but will cast no votes for him," said
Lane. His second no1nlnee was someone
recommended highly to him, Traffic and
Parking Commissioner William \Vaddell.
Wilb the nomination.! out and the pro-•~l 'O! a· hopelesa deadlock looming,
O'Kecfe suggested a complex number
game on written ballots to ferret out
the top contenders.
II failed.
· After tbe first v()(e, In which Dr.
LoWer emerged as the last choice
Ho1mes put down his pencil and pad
;ind ~id he refused to continue in the ~1':~is~.
'.That ~ure amounted IO each rouncilmaii 'li!lling in order of priority
bis choices.l9f the COWlcil seat.
. The man wj[h the fewest points would
.emerge tops; the nominee with the most
\.. · would fall by the wayside.
... Holmes~ .. backing out and assertions
that be. woUld not yield in his choice
Of Dt'. UiWer chagrined others on the
panel. And at that point, the handful
of press and spectators left the cham-
bers. Two hours later, the councll
reconvened publicly and a swift and
unanimous ballot.gave the term to Fo:s:.
The new councilman, who wi!J serve
the remainder or the term left vacant
by innkeeper Paul Presley, is 32 and
the head of a successful appraisal firm
in San Clemente bearing his name.
The Navy Reserve lieutenant and his
wife, Madeleine, have three ch11dren and
li e in,the Hillcrest colony at 90'1 Avenida b.~" Mrs. Fox serves as an on-call, ~'4]c:oliol tedmician for the cily
piiD-....-t.
Foxliolooeocraduate of San Francisco
State <loli<pJ with a degree in finance.
He and Ids family setUed In San
Clemente; UK 1970 after a tour in the
Navy. '"'"·' DiGioVllUli, wbo must consider the
• otm.ent J:as a major vic tory , MtJM Fox as a "skilled and
SHcisive'-who is not afraid or making
"°1he righl"'ilet:laloo aod slicking by ii,
; even if it popular." • T
""· ~ •..... ..,. ·--. -
• • . . . ' ....
':IS' 2.
Teams,
Still Hunt
:l'Ml-01g Suspect
~ •-i ~ *lill• lilijt" Od lraddag dop from
two c:ounuea were ltill healing the bn11h
ruaed ·Sant>, Ana can,.. !¢al',
for a mali ~ of iWting
least one major brush-fire in Orange
y WI Sunday. ' . . . ' t 1 :l tt t ' •an for the Orange County
t said hill a dozen expert
dQgS in addiUoo IO about
ther .officers are prowling
%die' IDOl"*'*w near the Glen Ivy Boys
... Ranch ~venide County.
"He wlr!ut seen a few days ago
In tbi! viJ:inlty," the spokesrnao_aalff.
"He apparently stole some clothing and
~t ... ~m the-ranch laundry so we a:PP,,r~~~Poft' what be ls wearing."
__ T~be~ ..nmch is a former resort hotel
now used to house juvenile delinquents.
The'. only person who has seen the
suspect up close was a state forest
1 f anger who !ired several rine shots
, ·at hlm Sunday and missed.
He is described as a black man about
six feet tall and weighing about 170
· pounds, according to the spokesman.
' It was thought at first the suspect
was a prison parolee who formerly work-
, _eel as ~a. COUlltX-fil:efigbter but the fire
• department spokesman said fMt lead
ran into a blank wall when the man
was found asleep in his home Sunday
night.
The spokesman said the arson suspect
may ha\'e been responsible for aetting
' ' a fire that burned down a meeting
ball at the boys ranch Tuesday night.
• • •
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Ool•~ H. Lem Ricfod I". Nr;:j
Mo111M11 MltlfQ•"IO E~
Sn Clamkl1 Of'fk•
JOS Nalh a Com.too rt..u
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' Prosecaatiota Witness
. •
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.. N1.xon -Subpoena
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Special
Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworsk.i has
subpoenaed fonner President Nixon as
a prosecution witness in the Watergate
cover-up trial oC six fonner Nixon
associates, It was announced today. .
Nixon has ·already beim subpoenaed
by hla former No. 2 aide , John D. ,
Ehrllchman, to appear as ·a defense
witness in the trial sched uled to begin
Oct. I.
Jaworskl's office confirmed that the
subpoena was issued Wednesday night
and will be served on · 'Nixon at his
San Clemente estate by FBI agent&.
.. He's been su\>poenaed to testify ,"
a spokesman for Jawo\skl said. "We
expeot him to testify."
the Walergate scandal. The same grand
jury that indicted then1 al~ named
Nixon as '° unindlcted co-<.'<>TISPlrator.
Ni~on cannot face criminal ch a r g es
for II'} role he might have had In
the coxer-up because he was pardoned
by Prel1dent Ford. But the pard?n also
removed Nixon's option or pleading the
5th Arirendrncnl.
From Page Al
STRIKE ...
megawatt generators, he sa.id. ~ruc
tion can continue without p1pefttters roe
two to three more months.
Hamlin E!filimated the cost of delays
at about $9 mUlion a week, or a total
of $25 million.
BUSINESS IS BOOMING FOR NEW SOU TH COUNTY MARINE-NAVY RECRUITERS
Merine Staff Sgt. Jim Singer Talks To Jim Kerslake: Ron Herzer of San Juar;t Capistrano
The Jaworski subpoena calls for Ni1on
to appear In U.S. District Judge John
J. Slrlca's courtroom-Oct. 1, even though
he may not be called to the witness
stand for several days.
A spokesman for t~ special Pf9SCCUtor
said its subpoena will not conflict with
Ehrlichman's subpoena -Indicating the
possibility Nixon might appear both tor .
the prose<Utlon and delenae.
h1embers of Local ~ of the Stoo1n·
Refrigerato·r-Air Conditioning and
Plpefitters Union in Gardena \vanl to
keep the reduced \\'Ork \reek they have
had for the 'past four years. Fro11• Page Al
RECRUIT ... Idaho Indians Declare There has been ·speculation as · to
whether Nixon will actually comply with
the subpoenas and appear ln person
because or reports that he is in poor
health and deeply depressed about his
loss or the presidency.
Pipefitters have reportedl y suggested
alternatlng 32 and 40 hour work weeks.
But a management spokesman pro-
tested that "the plpefitten are supported
by operating engineers" t e a m s t e r s •
laborers and other ~'{)rkers. living in the area.
Many of the kids going into the service
from this area are sons and daughters
or military pel'80nnel. In 1nany cases,
the youth is swom into his chosen branch
by his father, Evans said.
'War' in Lcilld Dispute Julie Nixon Eisenhower said this week
that her rather was expected to be
hospitalized soon for a new flareup of
phlebitis in his left leg. She flew to
San Clemente today to be with him.
"The problem is what do 11·c do ~ith
those people when we get to a 32-hour
·week?"
"We have everything ln t h I s
area-brigadier g e n e r a J s • major
generals, commanders, captalns-4he
whole route of ratings. The only branch
of the service we haven't come into
contact with Js the C.oast Guard."
Typicall)t, recruiters for a branch of
the service which has a 16cal base
have moie trouble . than recruiters for
another branch. The same is true or
.the Marines in this area, with, opinion
appa.renUy negiUvely affected by the
nearby El Toro and Camp Pendleton
Marine· bases.
"But we've been doing a lot of ad-
vertising and publicity and it seems
IO be paying off," Sgt. Reid said.
On · the bulletin board in the office
are photos of kids swom In recently
by bolh the Navy and Marines.
Many have long hair and mustaches.
1bey're wearing flannel shirts and look
like tanned surfers, their girlfriends at
their sides.
"The moms and dads around. here
are extremely interested in !heir kids ,"
Evam observed. '~Even ·lf tbey have
Jong hair and smoke pot, the parents
still love them."
· And reflecting on why the recent .
recruiting awroatit may be winning
more response, Evans added, ••Above
all else, we don't lie to the kids. We
don't feed them a bunch or malarkey."
Owner Could11't
llandle 40 Dogs
OAKLAND (AP) -''They've been
breeding !ti> fast I haven't had time
to do anything about them," Francis
Chaudet told pol.ice, who found 40 dogs ·
at his hom e.
Officers investigated Wednesday after
Chaudet's neighbors complained about
stray dogs running loose in the area.
Police round 15 dogs nosing around
in front of Chaudet's t"'·o-bedroom home,
and another 25 inside. including a dead
one sprawled on the floor. Officers said
many of the dogs apparently suffered
rrom distemper and skin infections.
Fro1n Page Al
OOHENY ...
approved a resolution stressing the im-
portance or retention of. the beach for
day-use.
Curtiss said that the sustained can1-
paign to sway coastal commissioners
to the oppositioo polnt or view -one
v.1Uch several weeks ago was pegged on
a massive mailer campaign -will con-
tinue now that the decision has been
made to appeal to the state:
1'\Ve just hope that everything is
repeated and we get the same decision
thls time from the state commission."
be said.
BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (UI'[) -
A small Indian tribe ignored a govern-
ment peace gesture today, vowing to
go ahead with its war over 1.6 million ·
acres or aboriginal land seized 120 years
ago.
The 67 members Or the Kootenai tribe
said they would set up four road blocks
and collect tvlls from those passing
through the area starting at mldnlght.
The Kootenais demand that Bureau
of Indian Affairs !et aside 128,000 acres
of the disputed land for use as a reserva-
' lion and give them a cash payment.
They said this would compensate them
for the land taken by the government. .
Bureau Commissioner Morris
Thompson said in a telegram to tribal
Chairman Amelia Trice Wednesday that
his agency was reviewing the sit uation
and would reply soon to the tribe's
demands.
Kootenai spokesman Doug \Vheaton
said the wire "sounded like the bureau
is trying . to formulate a plan and get
people togettiir. Whit We want will 1 •
take congressional action." He added
the "war" woUld start on scbedule. '
· At Boise, Idaho, ·Gov. Cectl Andrus
warned that he would send state troopers
to arrest anyone attempting to set up
a roadblock.
Wheaton said the governor told him
it was his duty to enforce the state's
laws ''regardless of the cOnsequences."
But the tribe spokesman said the
governor's decision would not deter the
Indians.
\Vheaton said the situation could
become a repeal of the trouble at Wound·
ed Knee , S.O., wh ere Indians were Jocked
in comb~t with the [ederal government.
The Kootenai said their tribe did
receive some cash payment for the land
several years ago but this v.•as not
enough. They said that despite the
reservation and cash payments they
wanted fishing and hunting rights.
Thompson's wire said: "At the request
of the l>resldent, the bureau is in the
process of preparing a reply to the
Sept. II , 1974, letter lo the president
of the. United States. We are currently
rev'lewfng lhe material you have sub-
mitted and will respond promptly."
The commissioner also said the Ju stice
Department has been asked to send
a representative to meetings over the
di spute.
\Vheaton said at the heart of the
Chu1·ch Name Change
MACON, Ga. (AP) -The General
Assembly of the nine-month-old National
Presbyterian Church voted overwhelm-
ingly Wednesday to change its name
to the National Reform Presbyterian
Church. The mo~ can1e after a com-
plaint from the Nationa l Presbyterian
Chl\fCh and Center of Washington, O.C.,
which said the reform chu rch's previous
name resembled its o\vn too closely.
Travel Adventure Film
Tickets Placed on Sale
5ea!IOD tickets , for the IMUal travel
film series sponsored by San Clemente
Rotatrlana went on sale thls week in
advance of opening night Oct. 22.
Tickets selll•g for $8 for adults and
$5 for students will offer admission to
all or the Tuesday ' evening programs
In the Community Clubhouse. Rotary
spokesman Phil Ellsworth said that the
series will o(ter five films, each narrated
p«rsonally by thei r Producers.
San Clemente traveJ film producer Eric
Pav~I organized the fourth aMual
presentation of the series.
The (Ive offerings, In order or ap-
pearance, are: .. ''
-"Europe's ~liniCountrics'' it the
creauo0 of Jeanne Porterfield and will
1'1ghllght scenet of Andorra, Lelctilcn·
•
stein, Smom, Monaco and San Marino.
-''Nepal," pre9ented by Chris Borden,
will be shown Nov. 26.
-"All About Argentina" to be shown
Jan. 14 will focu s On the forests and
moW'ltain peaks of the South American
1country. Clay Francisco Is the producer.
-"Shakespeare's Britain -Today"
will be shown Feb. II by ii• maker,
Eric Pavel.
-The ftnnl of!erlng ot--"Australian
Adventure" will be shown March 11
by Kenneth Richter. .
Tickets for specific m at I n e c
perfurtnance! rnay be of(ered, Ellswor\h
µId, but because ot early sellouts,
season purehascs are recommended. :
Rotarians and downtown businesses
will sell the ,..,.n tlck cls.
I
issue was the poverty of the Kootenais
themselves.
"We &re about 300 percent below th e
poverty level, onl)' about one-fourth of
this once-powerful nation of native
Americans here have steady jobs -
Jnost or them eam ,'quick money' during
the harvest time,'' he explained.
The spokesman said there were several
.. enterprises" on the drawing board once
the tribe is given lts reservation and
these would provide economic stability
for the members.
Should .~i~~·s ~a!y~r argue that his
health does not-. peijptt htm to testify.
Sirica could , 4ppoint ·a dR<;'lor to visit
the former president-to · ~ .. ermine
whelher ~ would sland the r!scn of
testifying In a long trial. U JlnI<iii "l'!ere
found fit to testify but fail~ to appear,
he could be cited for contell1pt:
Ehrllctunan and five otttef'torm~ '-T!x-
on aides andt.uso&tes :are acheduled
to be tried ob charges of covertng up
"hly feeling ," Hamlin said. "is !hat
their working hours should be the same
as others -40 hours a ~·eek."
The reduced week. he said, produces
problems in scheduling 11•ork as v.•ell
as morale in the other trades.
.. '
Volcano Spews Lava
HONOLULU (UPI \ -llalemawnau
crater on the Kilauea volcano erupted
ea rly today, blasting fountains of lava
60 10 80 feef lnlo the sky.
Headed for Onofre
This caravan of flat-bed trucks carrying 19-foot
square components for new nuclear reactors at San
Onofre headed along San Clemente's El~Camino
Real \Vednesday with. police escort. Huge cubes
are called "strainers" and are part of non-nuclear
side of project. They collect large balls which in·
tentionally roU around in steam condensers. Spokes-
men for proj_ect predict many n1ore such parades
along South Coast as construction continues through
decade.
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NEW YORK {U PI) -The stock market ftl
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sclay Wllh one or its bi ggest gain s 111 months 1n
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8 DAILY PILOT
.. ,_.;
SHE WAS BO RED
Ingrid Bergman
Big •
.. .
HE WAS AGREEAB LE
Roberto Rossellini
ID Era
T'!! :,/Veiier Met--Bi rigo
N~W YciRK (AP) -Ingrid Bergman says her con-
troversial and torrid love affair 25 years ago with Italian
film director Roberto Rossellini began befo re she ever
mat <!\ll!l.(" ' • ln a ~McCall's magazine article, she ~ys, "It all
started because 1 was bored. I had everything a woman
could expect in life, but suddenly I realized there was no
excitement any more. To keep alive I bad to do some-
...i th1ng •• ' • I was exploding inside."
' ''lbat prompted the successful Hol\yv;ood actress and
wife of Dr. Peter Lindstrom to write a love letler to
~llini , she says.
The letter led to a child by Rossellini while she was
still married to Lindstrom, a divorce. a worldwide scandal
and ~ seven-yew:. marriage and two more children. , 'fh:9 Swedish actress has been married to Sy.•edish
theatrical producer Lars SChmidt since 1958.
'if• 'J I
·fiick. Sueceeds
. ~ l·L'f(idnapers Left
'• I -
Holding the Bag·
.sAN DIEGO (AP)
Kidnapers' of a 20-year-old
man . dropped him orr and
esc;iJl<d wjlh a bagful of paper
illsteJd o( $3,!l'lO promised by
fiisl•bl'Othefo, narcotics officers
say. 11~1lfr
The victim, identified as
,. lfrr ' "'111 J3mes Grunstad of
l'>f"I ll ,ll , ~. n~ San Bernardino,
arrest romplaints. Possible
danger to the brother was
considered "in relation to the
danger his brother was in,"
said the San Diego orficer,
adding that ••we ha v el
identified severaJ" of those
being sought.
Doris Day
1\.w a1·ded
$22 Million
w~s.µninji.tred in the thr~ay
ordeal!
I
GRUNSTAD WAS taken
" frQl'l\ pis apartment Saturday
night by three men anned
"'ith pistols.
The trio were joined later
,. by-six mert" and investigators
said their victim was held
' in sever~ houses in ,fhe San
'Diegil' ti>a In a plol lo get
I• 1 $319'l0 ps,repayment for stolen
' $J:ijU.ana.
By ·telephone, Grunstaa•s
brother Paul arranged for the
pickup,1 on condition the
ki<lnaped ro;m was freed. . .
, k U THORITIES HIDDEN
nearby wat.Ched Tuesday night
a, ·a car drove up to a pre-
1. f,rra~ged spot near S a n
!>1'~ G_!ego~s Shelter Island pier and
Jet Grunstad out before
leaving with a bag believed
containing the money. Instead,
it was filled. with paper.
"It's a calculated risk," said
an officer in the San Diego
Integrated Narcotics T a s k
Force.
NO ~MPT WAS made
at that time to arrest the
kidnapJM!rs, he said, because
thev "'ere considered armed
and Grunstad was still in
danq-er.
1'he brother 'vas placed in
... . protective custody bv San
~~ Bemardi(J> County authorilie$
Who said lhey \VOOld ask for ' '
'JUSTICE PREVAILS'
Doris Day
-' '
• LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Actress Doris Day has _won
a judgment of more than $22
million from an attorney
accused of defrauding her and
her late husband, Marty
Melcher, in a variety of
business ventures.
Superio r Court Judge Lester
E. Olsbn ruled Wednesday for
h-fiss Day in the culmination
of a five-year court battle that
cost $250,000 and described
attorney Jerome Rosenthal's
relationship with Melcher as
fraudulent.
WEARING A PANTS suit
.Mid a~r_ hat, she
alternately wePt analaughed -
after the decision w.a s
announced.
Olson said Rosenthal was
guilty of the ''gro s sest
negligence" in business which
he said "stinks to high
he~ven."
Of lbe Iol a! or $22 ,8.15.00.
Olson asse5:sed .B£1senthal $3
million in punitive damages.
~fiss Day was in court to
hear the ruling and as
soectators gathered an>UQd
her. she sob~ "1 knew that
just.ice would preva il. Reliving
it ali" has destroyed 'me. As
he (Olson) recounted it, It
just wiped me out." '
ROSEN TH A L 'S
A T!'ORNEY, Craig bumrnil.
indicated he would apoeal
savine. "Th is is only the first
round."
OOnnl{ the trial. it was
testified Rosenthal advised
~tiss Day and ~felcher on
speculation in oU wells in
Texas, Oklahoma and
Kentucky and .in t b e
oonstructlon of two large
hotels.
~Uss Day testified she had
given litelcher 'power 0 r
attomev and never quest ioned
his business deals because she
_was "too busy" In her acting
jobs to be well infonned.
"MV HUSBAND trusted
~ RM<n1hal and I lrusled my
husband,0 sakfMiss Day.
Melchtr died ofn ear t
trouble In April 1968 •l lhc
age of 52.
' •
'
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Wide Angle
1-Way Door Viewer
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Drawer Glides
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Stud Finder
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pirt"frt ....... I k H ll
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59c
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SAif P•CIS •
S::.Tzs
Make Kerm Rima Hardware
Your Headquarters For Quality
~ ......... ~ ••• 4 Paint apd S,,pplies . :
Glidden Spred
Satin Wall Paint
• lat••'-'"'•'•·'""'"' .. ,""''" • l••Y I• wipe cltoft
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La.guna_ Beaeti,.
• EDITIPN
Today's Final .,.
.
N.Y.-Stock-t1
VOL 67, Nd. 262, 3 SECTIONS, 36 PAGES ORANGE-COUNTY, CALIFoRNIA ' THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER , 19, 1974 TEN CENTS • .. ' .
.,
Laws on Density
Okays
Limit
Cabl e TV's
BUI Held
By Laguna
The city or Laguna Beam has put
orr a request by Storer Cable Television
flJr a 15 percent rate Increase pending
a city probe of the firm's finances.
That was the decision of the Laguna
Beach City Council Wednesday lollowlg
a discussion of the' relationship between
the city and the monopoly cable TV
company.
Storer reqtiest.ed a hike in rates from
$6 a month to $6.90 a month for the
first TV hookup. No increase was re-
quested for the '2 additional TV hookups
in homes.
The colincil deferred judgment on the
hikes until Finance Director Tom Meade
can k>ok at the company's financial
records and determine if the rate in-
crease is necessary.
11le COm'lty custom.en ol Storer have
been charged the additional rate for some time. -
W. E. Schiti,r, Stonr vice pnoldent
and general manager, told lbe council
lhe finn would cooperate fully. .
S<hlller said lhe company wu not
intereoted In "ripping o/!0 Lquno oot
onJy wanted a reasonable retum on
Its Investment.
He said the company has invested
more than $2 million in the system.
Storer bought it in 1967.
Schiller answered charges that
Storer dkl not adequately respond to
customer complaints saying that the
rompany received compl.ainl! from 2.S
percent or tts subscribers monthly. Of
those aciually l.S percent of them tum
out to be syittm difficulties, he said .
Re sakf this is below that permitted
the telephone company by the Public
Utilities Commission.
One speaker didn't agree with Schiller.
Resldehl atis Reeske told the council
that although she has complained
rePeatedly, no one has ever responded
to her calls for servict.
She complained or the system dumping
San Diego -television cha.Meis . fore
others which carry Japanese language
movies and reruns of "'The Uttle
Rascals.''
Kennedy Candid
.. -----W ould Di scuss Perso1iaJ Tr agedy
' From Wire S.rvk••
HOBART, Ind. -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy sa.Y" that if he de-
cides to run for president he will answer any questions raised about
Chappaquiddick. •
'!'he Massachusetts Democrat, here Wediiesday for a $Ul0.a-
plate Democratic Cund·raising dinner, said be would "respond to
questions and do the best I could" on the co ntroversy surrounding
th.e accident. -~---·--~
Mary Jo Kopechne drowned when' a car driven by Kennedy
plunged off a bridge into deep water o!f Chappaquiddick Island in
July 1969. He said, "I have indicated it was a very deep personal tragedy.
I have accepted full responsibility for 1t· and full regret for the in-·
cident. I would respond to any questions."
Demonstrators who said they opposed a possible presidential
bid by Kennedy, marched outside when he appeared at a $100.a·plale
fund-raising dinner for Lake County Democratic candidates.
They also sang "My Country 'Tis of Thee," while Kennedy
spoke. "Nobody Drowned in Watergate," one o( the signs carried by
the demonstrators said.
Fullerton Police Sweep
-.
County in Big Dru#Jlaid,.
· ..,,. lllln 'If Flillenall police """*"
descended on Uiguna BeaCb, N~wport
Beach, Fountain Valley and aeveral Olher
Orange County cities Wednesday night
arresting 65 persons alleged to be
narcotics dealers.
Names ol those arrested dwin' the
massive roundup l\·ere not immediately
available.
Of the 65 taken into custody on war-
rants issued Wednesday were 2 1
juveniles. seven females and S8 males.
Fullerton police said ro three-man
teams were dispatched to c i t I e s
throughout the county to make the ar-
rests. More arrests are eipected today
and later· in the week.
Fullerton Police Sgt. Bud Lathrop said
the offenses included sales of a variety
of drugs, including heroin , cocaine, the
psychedelic LSD and marijuana.·
Police said return ol the 107 warrants,
Including 23 secret grand jur)' In-
dictments, followed a four-month in-
vestigation of drug sales activities in
the county.
' .. ~ llfd --ver apnta workiJ\g the caae ~!led up ID 55
pounds of marijuana "from .alleged
de alers during the investigation. Several
purchases of other drugs also were
made. pollce said. ·
Wednesday night's roundup by
Fullerton police marked the loortb major
sweep in Orange County in recent
moo tbs.
QJ6ta Mesa Police.. conducted a major
roundup ol alleged street-level drug
dealers In August: S3n Clemente police
and Orange O>unty Sheriffs deputies
made a series of. arrests also in Au.gum
and Irvtne pplice apprehended JCOres
ol po!nlOllS during a spring roundup. ·
lAI.gu1i q. Council
Lauds Distance .
Champio n Hulst
•si111ilar to Italy ~
'Con sul General Speaks in Laguna
Laguna Beach High School distance
runner Eric Hulst was commended by
the City Council Wednesday night for
his 10,000 meter victory over Soviet
runners in the 1974 Jwlior International
Olympics.
Mayor Roy H~lm . presented the
tousle-haired youth with a resolution
passed unanimo<!sly by the Laguna coun-
cil expressing the city's official pleasure
with Hu1st's victory in compeUtiOo
between the United Statea and USSR.
.,
--. "'"' "" ,,..,.~ ACCEPTS GIF'I' OF BOOK
ll11i1n Consul farlnelll •
•
•
Laguna Beach has a Jot In common
with Italy because both are art and
cultural centers, Vittorio F a r i n e 11 i ,
Italy's Consul General, said Wednesday.
Farinelli, speaking to a group ol aboot
60 Italian-Americans at the Victor Hugo
Inn in' Laguna Beach, said he ~lieves
Italians ffel at home here because of
the similar cultural backgrounds.
"CUiture-and art are what make men
and women great," Farinelli said.
It was his fi rst official visit to Laguna
Beach, to attend a luncheon in his honor
arranged by the newly formed Laguna
Beach Italian-American Cultural Club~
"Aa the ooly luU·blooded Norwegian
bere, I'm proud to welcome you," Mayor
Roy Holm told Ftuinelll. .•
Local artists Matto Massimo S8ssone
·and Grazia Montell, both Italian natives,
preaented samplea o/ their work to the
COMJI.
Another dist.inguised Italian-American
who attendaed the lwx:heon was Giovan-
ni O!<dlettl, c'1airman of the UC Los
Angeles Italian Department.
The Italian·American CUiturai Club,
headed by Maria Price, hopes to raise
scholmhip !und1 (or llalian atudents
and to promote Interest in and knowledge
or 11a11, •
S~andal Upset POW
CLARK AIR BASE, Philippines (AP)
-Emmet James Kay, the tut known
American prilOner of war in lndochlM,
stld today that . be made otattmenll
In favor of the Cotnmunlat Pathet Lao
becauoe he wu upoet 1bollt the
Walergaw llC.tndal. "I am 1 loyal
Ameriun," the 47-yeaM>ld commercial
pilot told 1 news confer•"'(•·
Trustees of the Laguna Beach Uni_fied
Sch>ol District honored Hulst with a
similar action Tuesday.
Councilman John Brand a s k e d
the young rumer -~ was 16 at the
time of the JWle competitions -how
long 10,000 meters is.
"Six and one-quarter miles," Hulst
said. His time was 30 minutes and
for . ..Council .Jnee!ing,' Hulst wore 49~.·· -
a T ' 'bearing 'the message 11Run
. ,
' .
for runt' m the back.
.. ., .
-Se nate ·Vo t.es
Pay Raises .
WASlilNGTON (UPI)· -The
Sena!•, by a vole ol, '4 Jo IS,
clea"\() a pay ral!ie· fol' J.~ mnllolt
civilian and militl!Y· empioY•• to-
day, bandtllg Prelident Ford's
eoonomJe policy ill first aetback
in ooncreaa. •
Tho Senate reluaed Ford's re-
queot, backed by a last-minute
' plea, to poslpone. the pay tncreaae
by thrte :lllOlllhl all(! cut govern-
ment spendlnl by .!700 million.
A> • resul~ tho 5.$2 peroenf
lncreue will .. lnlo e!le<t Oct.
I Instead ol Jan. I •• proposed
by Ford.
Taxpayers
Grll'up Eyes
Lawsuit
By JACK CHAPPELL
Of IM DMIY 'iltl Shit
Over vehement objections, and threat
of a lawsuit the Laguna Beach City
. Council gave fUlal approval Wednesday
to a package of laws limiting future
duplex, apartment and condominium
building in the city.
Councilman Charlton Boyd, who has
opposed the measure since its ap-
pearance berore the city council, con-
tinued to oppose it and pressed for
moderation.
James Yancey, president of the
Laguna Beach Taxpayers Association
(LBTA} told tile council the organization
would take the· city to court on the
density limitations issue.
'Ibe council brushed aside a claim
by opponents of the measure that a
petition said to contain the names of
471 pro~rty owners would require that
a four-fifths vote of the .council affum.
tbe laws. It was approved ~on a 3-l -'. ' ..,. .;,,.,;f;eorge ' . . w!I.
petition pertained only to cl!angea from
ooe zone to another, not changes · in
lbe~Oltheomile .......
The council met with four members.
Bmm1nmmni1n
Councilwoman Phyllis · Sweeney was
out o/ town. Councilman Boyd voted
against the-package. Mayor Roy Holm,
Vice Mayor Carl Johiisoo and Council-
man Joo Brand voted for the measures.
1be laws when taken in total
will reduce the projected building of
apartments, dupleies and coodominums
by hall that permitted under old Jaw ..
These young ladies will set the tone for Laguna Beach High &hool
athletic and other event§ in the coming school year. They're the
school songleaders. From left to rig ht are Priscilla Howard Debbie
Griffin, Terri Hillman, Denise Erdag, Sue Scott and Leisa' Griffen.
Previously laws would have permitted
the number of such units to more L11an
double to · 7 ,300 units from thC existing
3,566 units. The new law will bold the
increase to 5,093, a 43 percent increase.
Idaho Indians Declare
Althougb listed as a public hearing
on the council's agenda, no public
discussion was pennitted. prior to the
council'a vote on each of the five Jaws.
.Opening discus.Wn, Cotmcilrnan Boyd
said he opposes the measures because
there had not been an attempt . to find
a ·"middle groWld" that would satisfy
all concerns.
'War' in Lctnd Dj,Spure
He compared it to the sign ordinances
which were controversial several years
ago, but which Boyd said were worked
out to compromise.
O>uncihnan Boyd criticized poloriza·
tion on the issue and what he called
the rigidity of the ordinance standards.
"My vote will say, 'come on down.
let's give in a litUe, next time'," Boyd
said.
Cooocilrnan Brand disagreed with
Boyd. He said no attempt by tbe op-
ponents had been made to seek a com-
promise. "They just don 't want it at
all." he said.
Brand said that -while some people
IS. DENSITY, Page AZ)
Five Meet Death
As Plane Goes
Down in Flames
RIVERSIDE (AP) - A single-engine
p!ane fl ying in dense fog crashed in
flames today, killing all fi'if:!!.persons
aboard, including a child, authorities
&aid. :C, The Cberok , en route here from
Las Vegas. s ammed into the Santa
Ana..River bed, which runs parallel to
runway1 at nearby JUverside Airport but
about ~ mile · away -about ni'ne miles
eouth -t ol Riverside . • · Names of' the ,ylclimB were not im·
medlatell' -. Jo. ;poltl\6Q!lll for the
Riverside ·c.,..y·s:· r1 departmen1 Said: · .. ;,,.; ~ ... bidly burood
It .,ay -lie m"1Y 1 1>elore we can
BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (Ul'[)
A snlall Indi8n tribe ignored a govern-
ment peace gesture today, vowing to
go .ahead with its "war over 1.6 million
acres of aboriginal land seized 120 years
ago.
The 67 members 0£ the Kootenai tribe
said they would set up four road blocks
and collect tolls from ~hose passing
through the area starting at midnight.
The Kootenais demand that Bureau
of Indian Affairs set aside 128,000 acres
of the disputed land for use as a reserva-
tion and give them a cash payment.
They said this would compensate them
for the land taken by the government.
Bureau Commissioner Mortis
Thompson said ln ~ telegram to tribal
Chairman Amelia Trice Wednesday that
his agency "'as reviewing the situation
and would reply soon to the tribe's
demands. .
Kootenai spokesman Doug Wheaton
sa id the wire "sounded like the bureau
is trying to formulate a plan and get
people together. What we want ~ill
take congressional action." He add ed
the "w.ar" would start on schedule.
At Boise, Idaho, Gov. ieecn Andrus
warned that he would send state troopers
to arrest anyone attempting to set up
a roadblock.
Wheaton said the. governor told hlm
it was his duty to enforce the state's
laws "regardless of the consequences."
But , the tribe spokesman said the
goveroor's decision would not deter the
Jrldians. •
Wheaton said the situation could . ' ~IARIJUA.NA.-8MOKE
'POLiUTED SKIES
tell wbo they wtre.'1 • • The s~ll'• ~sman ~.conditions SAN DIEG,O (AP) -The Nary burned
•re very bad 'IJ* visual ftYtng -"lt tons or marijuana on at least two oc-
wu verr logo at\d lbl(li"lillS •way caslonl In which air-pollution regulations
do'WI\." ~ "" were vlolated, says San Diego County's
A ......... 1Qf f.-.i Aviation health director. · ~ la La-Allf!lee eald the Dr. J . B. Askew, who also is an
• .,,_-·--.._. fhe llli1!0rt . .J ottJctr of lhe Air Pollution Contt<>l
lle seld visibility wu reported as one-1 District, said a slngl..cbamber lncine-
hall mile In fog . rator at Nortk Island Naval Air Stalion
However, the pilot was making his was used 'In July.
approach with navigational aid$, be said. ------~-----
become a repeat of the trouble at Wound-
ed Knee, S.D., wh ere Indians were locked
in combat wi th the federal government.
The Kootenai said their tribe ·did
receive some cash pay ment for the land
several years ago but this was not
enough. They said that despite the
reservation and cash payments they
wanted fishing and hunting rights.
Thompson's wire said: "At the request
of the President, the bureau is in the
process of preparing a reply to the
Sept. JI , 1974, letter io the president
<If . the Uqiled States. We are currently
reviewing the material you have sub-
mitted and will respond promptly."
The commi~oner also said the Justice
Department has been asked to send ·
a representative to meetings over the
dispute.
\Vhcaton said at the heart of tbe
issue was the poverty of the Kootenais
themselves.
"\Ve are about 300 percent below the
(See INDIANS, Page A%1
Or ange Coast
Wea.tiler
Friday will be a carbon ropy of
today, according to the weather
service, with ovemighl low clouds
and log along the coast clearing
by 'midday to sUMy skies. Beech
highs near 70 rising to tbe m.id-
80s inland.
INSIDE TODA l:'
A 79-ytar-old widow 10111 1he
hcis had 35 affairs !hJce her--hus-
band died 23 years ago. The
ages of her -mates ra,1ged from
15 to 82. See s!or11, Page A12.
INlllll C• 11,.,,.. lomllte• 14
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DAILY PILOT LB ThurSday, Stpttmbtr iq, 1974
Presec11tim1 ll'it11ess UC Irvine
J-aworski ISsues Program
N'ixon Subpoena Cu!S Eyed .
,, 'ii
•
WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -spec i a I
W~tergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski has
subpQenaed ·fonner President Nixon as
a ~on witness In the Watergate
cover.up trial , d. all fonner Nii.on
associates , It was announced today.
NIIOD has already beeo subpoenaed
. ~7 ~llage Fair
·Center Nears
Its Debut
· Sbolis fu Vlllag; Fair, a 11 million Laiuna. Beach shopping center plagued
by t.iildlng prob!enu, should begin open-
ing within two weeks, according to pro-
jecy>fficfals.
JJobert McConlbay, project manager,
said Village Fair is 95 percent leased
and that individual sbopa should begin
opening about Oct. !.
!Je said the project's grand opening
will probably take place the flnl two
.weeks In November. Village Fa!J' is
located In 1\1< 111111 block of SOuth Coast
!Dgbway.
The project, originally lcbeduled to
~ July It, nm into trouble In May . \'titn'a ctty building Inspector discovered ,. ~-I I IItlllbl ,... about 10 Inches
abov~ &V• fool height Umlt.
. Ardl!Wf'llonald Goldman said the
mlttae -d cost about $30,000 to correct: .: . ~
Further tniible came wben1. through
a series Qf miJundemanrungs, a ).,t~ifl:,~w~ poured In front of the Jee! · did not cooform lo Ilan-
a~ by the city. . ~~~·!"rlier 'this month the city to permit the add!tlooal
' rs make some correctiCl'll iiij&m-.~iiiiiiiiiii. alao required to )notall
by his former No. 2 aide, John D.
Ehrlicbman, lo appear as a cfefeMO
witness in the trial scheduled to begin
Oct. !. .
Jawor>ld's office confirmed that the
111bpoena WBJ Issued Wedne>day night
and "ill be served on Nixon at hls
San Clemente estate tiy FBI agents.
"He'1 been subpoenaed to testify,"
a spokesman for Jaworski sald. "We
expect him to t..ilfy."
Tbe Jaworski subpoena calls for Nl1on
to appear In U.S. lllllrtct Judge John
J . Sirica'a courtroom Oct. 1, even though
he may not be called lo the wltnesa
ltand for aeveral daya.
A apoi<esman for the special proseculor
said its subpoena will not conlllct with
Ebrllcllman's IUbpoena -lodlcatlng the
poaiblllty NIIon might appear both for
the prosecution and defense.
There bas been apeculatlon as lo whether Mxon will actually comply with
the subpoenu and appear In person
becauae of reports that he la In poor
health and deeply depreaaed about his
loss of the presidency.
Julie Nixon Elaenhower said this week
that her father was expected to be
hospitalized soon for a new flareup of
phlebitis in his left leg. She fiew to
San Clemente today lo be with him.
Should Nixon's lawyer argue that his
health does DOI permit him lo testify,
Slrica collld appoint a doctor lo yisit
the former preJident lo determine
whether he would stand tbe rigors of
t..il!ylng In a long trial. If N!Ion were
found fil to teott!y but failed to appear,
he could be dt.d !or contempt .
Ehrllchman and five other former Nix-
on aides and usoclates are scheduled
to be lried on charge> of covering up
the Watergate scandal. The .same grand
jury tbat Indicted lbem also named
Nixon as an unlndicted co-conspirator.
Nixon cannot face criminal c h a r g e s
for any role be might have bad in
the cover·up becaJ,lSe he was pardoned
by President Ford~ui the pardon also
removed Nizon's option of pleading the
Mb AmeJXfment.
Fro11t Pqe Al
DENSITY ...
UC Irvine would be omltt.d from
a ll1t of campuses olfering post-griduate
Instruction under a scheme proposed
by UC Regent Norton Simon.
In a newspaper interview, Simon said
post-graduate programs should b e
limited to the campUses at Berkeley,
Davis, Los Angeles and San Dlego 1111
a money-saving measure.
UC Irvine Oiancellor Daniel G. Aldrich
said this JTW)rning as he was Jeaving
for a monlbly regents,meeting In Los
Angeles that be sees no baais for Simon'•
suggestions.
"I think there would be a big savings.
That's the way you save money and
beat inflation," Simon said.
Responding to the report, Aldrich said,
"I don't know what the backgrotmd
for Regent Simon's comment Is.
"As far as UCI Is concerned .and
other campuses moving toward combined
LIJldergraduate and graduate status, I
have no basis for understanding his
suggestions.
"He claims that certain economies
take place, I gather, but the master
plan for education In California 4;alls
for the University of California to be
the graduate degree' ~anting and sole
PhD granting institution in the state
and the sole agency for a variety of
professional schools."
The Irvine campus, he aaid, is
necessary to meet Uxiee commitments.
"I bave no idea o! how he will ...,sent
it," Aldrich said. "All I'm aware or
ii the interview and the issues ranged
rather widely.
"How the regent plans to pursue them
and how they will provide a basis for
future discussion, I don't know.
"I'll have to wait lo hear about them
at the reg'ents meeting," he said.
Simon, who has been a regent since
1958, also suggested:
-Converting UCLA to year-round
operaUon "so the enonnous Investment
In physical plant and libraries ts not
wasted in tbe swnmer months."
-Cutting tuition at UC lliverslde to
attract S!Udfnts and solve the problem
of· low. enrollment. · m w-ptures and 15 mature .a.es, al -ol l350 per tree, to
. compennl •: !lit height. >U~d !odaY he ~~ kno\11 wore ~ the Issue to that of ' 9L I ll!u.iOat wort :,;,n lie com-~ Cllltrd, be. felt the two were
-Add more personnel lo the university
treasurer's office to improve the hand!·
Ing of more than JI billion In ln-
Xeslmenla. pf'lliil liir!t moolci be w!tblnl a month. DOI nialed. Brand aaldJ!mlUng cleNlty
llcCmU1ay said that among the of building wu DOI the same thing ,..._,.!11, Village Fd will be two •limiting-population. • ~ bd lewelr\I ~ 1""' lie l8ld town's lllOs zaii1D1 ,wil not .Lagµiµi PoUce
P~~bing Three
More Burglaries
port~ and c!Otblnii ...... ' ',· \ • '• .i>PllCll>le lil 1974. ;~ '
' Some 0t,111e unusual """" Utles will Mayor !Joh!' wbo Initiated ·the Olll\-
be 'Lure o! the Kite (;'kite shop), tro"""'ial demlty meuure m February,
Vibes and Visions (stereos) and Mother's said It was not 90methtng that was -~ (gourmet cookware). "dropped" on the town as Boyd alleged.
~ ., said 60 pen:ent of the sbo~ • Mayor llD!m said tbat the Issue has ·.;:"" ay ol ~-'·-~ tie.o beard at 17 public meetings and by the end ~~ · bas beeo an ll•m o! llgn!licant p<ess Three . ..more burglarie3 have been
reported to Laguna Beach police.
"INillANS ...
povd::'evel, only about one-fourth of
thii once-powerful nation of native
Am:eriean! .-here have steady jobs -
mos ~them earn 'quiet money' during
the .AAfjei( time," he explained. _ nie· kpoke!man saJd there were several
"enterprises" on the drawing board once
the tribe ts given Its reservation and
tlw!.'t' would provide economic stability
!Or the members.
•' \2 From India. Die
l TONOPAH. Nev. (UPI) -An Indian
'army o!f19?r and his' wile, assigned
J to the United Natlom, were killed
J Wednesday· when their a u t o mo bi I e
, _overturned near here. 'nW: Nevada
: Higllway Patrol said Maj. G<n. Ruston
~ Vazifdar, 58, and his wife, Aloo, 50, i were )tilled Vt'hen the car driyen by
1 their.-IOI\ went out of cootrol. on .U.S.
~ 6.
O"AHH COA5T
DAILY PILOT
.. "' Roh.'! N. Weed t ......... ni""""""'
f Joc\lC'*t
tO ......... IAl~M~ •
' '
. '
, I . -.
coverage since it! first Introduction more
than a half year ago.
Last Rites Held
For John Weirick
Memorial services were held today
for John Howard Weirick. a resident
of Laguna Niguel. ~tr. Weirick died
Friday. He was 73.
Mr. Weirick waa active in lhe
beauUfication ·of Pacific Island Village,
was a member of the alumni association
of Pomona College and a life member
of the College of Life Underwriters.
He is survived by his wife, Lsabelle;
son, Robert Weirick; stepoon, Robert
Dickerson of Lakewood, and three
grandchildren.
Private interment was at Pomon~
Cemetery. Memorial services were held
.at Sbeffer Mortuary Chapel In Laguna
Beadl. Arrangements were directed by
Sheffer Laguna Beach Mortuary.
Today, the theft of a king-size bed
and a chair was reported by Keith
H. Earl, -447 Cypress Drive, for a lo.ss
of $.110.
Earl told officers he had been gone
for several days and when he returned,
the bed was. gone.
Grant Nereobauser o! ~1039 Ga\'iota Drive reported the theft Wednesday of
a television set and $40 In cash ap-
parenUy taken !rom the first floor of
his residence while be was In the upper
story.
Nerenhauser's front door had been
unlocked and officers speculate someone
just walked in, grabbed the loot and
!ell.
Nearby, Vincent Capozzlello o! 1273
Gaviota Drive, reported the theft of
a woman's diamond watch and coins
worth $440.
Capouiello to1d officers he discovered
the theft when h' returned hpme and
!Olllld the -I door tmlocked. Police
believe the thief slipped the latch on
a side door, aod then le!t by the -t
door.
Laguna Council Action
Here are the principal actions taken by the Laguna Beach City CcundJ
Wednesday.
BUll.DING LIMIT PASSED -Final approval was given to a 6el of five
ordinances which will cut In half future residential building in the city1s du-
plex, apartment BJ)d condomllUum wnes. A lawsuit against the city was
promised by the Laguna Beach Taxpayers Association. .
ART SCHOOL ANNEX -Prezoning a small ctmnk o! county territory
to Agriculture-RecrYUog, the city council' cleared t~ way fo,r ~ future an-
nexation ol tbe land to the clly and for development near it of the Laguna
Beach School o! Art.
CABLE TV RATIS -An investigation Of the profits earned by Sloru
cable TV wu ordered by the council to detennine il Stom'I request !or a
15 perceat rale inertole ii justlfled. The council also ts studyiJli new 1a ...
regu!alillfl the dty l)'llem.
PAlUDNG LOT APPRAISAL -Poalble purchase of the Lmnberyard
parking lot adjacmt lo city hall for $400,000 was consldeted 804 tho COllllCil
ordered an appraisal of the land as a step preparatory to tho jlur<baae ar-
rqement.
CITY GOLF COUllSK'I -A public Goll Commll\ff WU organized by the
council and charged with lnve>tlgatlnl means of deve!oplnf a munldpal
goll course In Laguna Beach. P•tl"ns inlerested in servln1 on the committee
may contact dty hall.
DIVING REGULATIONS -Preliminary approval WBJ given to a law
rt!trictlng scuba dlvln1 cla"" lo cenaln timea on city beac* during the
summer. The city may a loo probe new controls on. the akin divln1 ~. . .
ALTA LAGUNA t:XTENSION -Action deleting the t>tenlloxt ol Alta> La·
guna Boulevard from Top of'l/'t World to Arch Beach Helibtl wu defmed •
to a f\!!ur• hearing •
• '
•
01llY ,.1 .. 1 Stall P11tl1
Lebln's Big Top ' I
Capistrano Beach's tenacious 'camper Richard'"\V.
Lebin obviously hasn't capitulated to the foes at' the
county seat, as this tent -his new home -attests.
Unemployed Inca! man lived In old _Cadillac camp
car on this spot before county off1c1als ordered 1t
hauled away. Undaunted, he has found another way
to keep out the damp <night air. County legal coun-
sel says tent is illegal and Lebin see1ns he.ade.d for
yet another round in ~attle over squatter s rights.
Laguna Beach Clears Way
For Campus Site Ann~x
Board to View
Park Avenue
Mall Desigri .
The Laguna Beach Cily. COOncll cleared
the way Wednesday for aMexatlon of .
the School cl. Art's future Laguna Canyon
campus.
The coW'lcil declattd its Intention to
zone the land involved, a little less
than an acre, to agriculture-recreational
(A·R).
That was the assurance ·requested by
the Local Agency Formation Commission
(LAFC ) which rules on annexation re-
quests by municlpaliti ...
'The I.AFC held up the request,ed an-
nexation until assurances could be given
by the city that the agricultural pm<rve
statut of the county land inYOlved would
not be disturbed.
'The city agreed.
Anneution , 'fllS naeded ~--jhe 1..Viiie Company required the entire art
scllool parcel of about 3 acres not be
split between the dty of Laguna Beach
and the COll!lly.
'The school plam on developing a
$400,000 campus on the land, about a
Outdoor Painting
Oasses Offered
Classes in outdoor landscape painting
will be offered as a part of the fall
Lag\llla Beach Recreation Department
program. Registration begins at 8 a.m.
Monday at the department, 570 Glen-
neyre St.
Painting lnslroctor is Leonard Scheu,
ao artist and teacher. The course in-
cludes 10 three-hour sessjons from 1
p.m. to 4 p.m. :r.Jondays. Fee is $25.
Students may work in oil, watercolor,
acrylics or drawing. An individual,
creative approach is stressed. .
Further information is available by
calling Scheu at 494-5~7 or the rec
department, 494-ll24.
····-··········-······
.
mile and a hall uj> the Laguna Canyon
Road !rom Coast Highway: ,
Construction will begin jUJt after the
first of the year. unless further red
t8pe"' is encountered.
Hospital . Group
Accepts Pupils
In Stroke Class
·• The ·South Coast !;ommunity IJospital
\ Auillary !J accepttnir studema !or Its
.. Stroke RettJciaUzatloo" coune to begin
Oct. 7 at the hospital.
The 'oo~urse, a six-week series of .
~dU!es, 11 ~deslgned to help the stroke
patient, his friends and relatives during
the reaocializatlon following attack.
"The "training equips the volunteer
to help the convalescent cope with
problems, both physical and mental.
which be may encounter as he leaves
the hospital," Stina Wolf, auxiliary
community services chairwoman, said .
"All too often, without such help, the
stroke vk:tlm as he leaves the hospital
is allowed to become psychologically
homebound, depressed and withdrawn
from the' mainstream of community
life,"· she said.
The student ts taught how to comfort,
EllCOUl'1lge and support the patient while
at the same lime applying the proper
pressure toward improvement and a
prevloua way1 of life, Mrs. Wolf said.
&gistration Information is available
by contacting the hospital's aUilliary
office, or Mrs . Wolf.
Blood111obile Visiis
The design of the controversial ~
posed Par~ Avenue Mall will come up
for review ol the Laguna Beach Board
of Adjustments tonight.
The mall, to be built on the short
segment of Park Avenue between the
library. and Coast High"·ay. "'as opposed
by some downto"'.D merchants because
it wiU eliminate eight parking spaces
and cut oil through traffic.
However, planning commissioners last
month approved plans for the mall.
. which will indude a "meandering brown
cobblestone concrete" walkway with
benches ·and grassy areas.
Public Works Director Stan Scholl
pointed out that t4 parking opaces bad
been picked up in a restriplng of tbe
Glenneyre Stree< parkini lot Ind ~•
spaces ht !he restriping o! Forest
Avenue.
AJao to be considered tonight I• the
design 1il !be p~ completion of
an"alley wit!til Will connect Thalia and
Anita Streets between CO.at Highway
and Glenneyre Street
The alley, nick-named "Secor Alley"
because of efforts by sign painter Earl
Secor to have it completed, is blocked
by Sheffer Mortuary.
Another it'm on tonight's agenda is
a request for a u.day extensioo of
time for the design revtew'Of the Laguna
Beach Lumber Yard.
The board will meet at 7:30 p.m.
in city council chambers.
(
Fall Recl'eation
Sign1tps Monday
RegilltTBtion for the Laguna Beach
Recreation Department's fall classes will
begin Monday at 8 a.m, at the Recreation
Office. 570 Glenneyre St.
Classes will be offered in such fields
An American Red Cross bloodmobile as ,tennis, belly dancing, women's
will be at the Community Presbyterian volleyball, yoga , bridge and guitar.
Church, 415 Forest Ave., LagWl8 Be~ A1oet cla~s meet one or two hours
Oct. 14. . .. a week fo~ eight weeks. Fees range
Blood can be given between 2:30 and fry>m $1.50 to $25.
7 p.m. and reservations are oecessary. Registration will be accepted on a
They may be made by calling 835-5331. first come, firs~ served basis.
The Microwave OVEN of THE FUTURE Now ~
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N.Y. Stocks
. '"' E'D ITION
•
VOl. A7, NO. 262, 3 SECTION S, 36 PAGES THURSDAY, SEPT~BER, 19, 1974 TEN CElif~
• -.. . ...
~guna . · Hills. N~11y ·. Enlistnaents
• ~ f .. ~
Bise -. -
• Dllh' l'lllt '''" .... ,. BUSINESS IS BOOMING FOR NEW SOUTH COUNTY MARINE·NAVY RECROITERS
Marine Stiff Sgt. Jim Slnger:...T1lks To J im Kerslake, Ron Herter of San Juan Capistrano
By JAN WORTH
ot t11e O.llV 1'1111 SMff
Under the shadow of a huge bJue
jeans emporium in the Wild West Plaza
in Laguna Hills, a recruiting office for
the U.S. Navy and Marine Co~ is
doing a booming business.
The four men who run the office
can't explain the boom fUIJy, but since
they moved from an office in San
Clemente last April, the Marines have
had five limes the nwnber Of ·applicants
and the Navy, ten times.
The Navy has recruited 43 volun·
teers -lncluding three young
v:omen -from the new quarters at
2.5272 Mcintyre. It's a marked contrast
from their former quota of one . enlist·
ment per mOOth.
'' U you picture a pie '¥\.ith a six
at the bottom and a 12 at the toP.
we've moved about a third of the way
toward the 12 from the six," said Chief
Bos'n 1tate Chuck Evans, head Navy
. '
recruiter.
The recrui ting area for both the
Marines and Navy is the same-the
sprawling southern half of Orange Coun·
ty that includes El Toro, Mission Viejo,
Laguna ~ach, Laguna Niguel, Laguna
Hills, I.San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point,
and San acmente.
The A-1arines have recruited 10 y()\lllg
men, and expect to have several more
sy;orn in by the end cf the month -
(See RECRUIT, Page Ail
Indian Uprising?
War Vowed Over Idaho Land
BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (UP)) -
A small Indian tribe ignored a-govern-
ment peace gesture today, vowing .,to
go ahead with its war over 1.6 million
acres of aboriginal land seized 120 years
ago.
The 67 members of the Kootenai tribe
said they would set up four road blocks
and collect tails from !hose passing
through the area starting at midnight.
The Kootenai! d~mand that Bureau
of Indian Affairs aet aside 1%8,000 acres
or the disputed land for use as a reserva·
tion and give them a cash payment.
They said this would compensate them
for the land taken by the government.
Bureau Commissioner 1¥1orris
Thompson said in a telegram to tribal
Chairman Amelia Trice Wednesday that
bis agency was reviewing the situation
and would reply soon to the tribe's
demands.
Kootenai spokesman Doug Wheaton
said the wire "sounded like the bureau
is trying to formulate a· plan and get
people together. Wbat we· want will
take congressional $Ction." He added
the "war" Would start on schedule.
At Boise. Idaho, Gov. Cecil Andrus
warnl'd that he would send state troopen
to arrest anyone attempting to set up
a roadblock.
Wheaton said the governor told him
it was his duty to enforce the state's
laws "rega rdl ess of the consequehces."
(See INDIANS, Page ~) ~ •
Irvine Panel Okays Park
Land Cuts for One Area
Se 1iate Votes
Pay Raises
WASffiNGTON (UPI) -The
Senate, by a vote of . 64 to 35,
cleared a pay raise for 3.5 million
Rocky Reveals Net Worth
Fortune , Otlier Asse~ _Total $182 Mill iJm,
Irvine's community services com-
mission has Jet the Irvine Company
cut lbe amount or park land for the
Rancho San Joaquin area, but turned
down a similar request for Turtle Rock.
The city's requirement for park land
dedication of 4.5 acres per t,000 residents
does not apply in the largely adult
Rancho San Joaquin townhouses, the
commis,tjon decided.
Five Meet Death
As Plane Goes
Down in Flames
RIVERSIDE CAP) -A singl...,ngine
piano Oying In dense log crashed in
flames today, killing all five persons
(board, including a child, authorities
said .
The Cherokee, en route here from
Las Vegas. slammed into the Santa
Ana River bed, which runs parallel to
runways al nearby Riverside Airport but
about a mile away -about nine miles
1DUth west oi Riverside.
Names of the victims were not im·
mediately known. A spokMman for the
Riverside County sheriff's department
said. "The bodies are so badly burned
H. may be many hours before we can
tell who they were. '1
The sheriffs spokesman said conditions
were very bad for visual flying -"h
~:as very foggy and visibility was 'way
down.~
A 11pokesman for the Federal Aviation
Administration In Los Angeles said t™:
plane wa.on_an_ appl'O§.@ to tlte alrPQrt.
He said visibility was reported as on~
half mile in fog. · .
However, the pilot was making his
approach with navigali~ ai~. he sai~.
'
. Oruge Coast
~.,
. w..i11er
Frl.i.Y.wtn' be a carbon eopy ol
'today, a<i<Onllng w the ..,alher ,.rnce wllb• overnlgbt low clouds
aild ~ along the coast clearing ·
by mklday' to sunny skies. Beach
highs near 70 rlslaig lo _!.he mid:._
80s Ulland ..
INSIDE TODAY .
A 7911tar-old wiilow ••Y• she
ho.! had 35 •ffafra ainct her hu,i-ban4 die<\ 23 years ago. Tiit
age& of .her mat.es ronged front
lS to 82 . Sit !IOl'l/, Page AU.
... tint " '""'""lllM CJ . "". ·~· .. Mii LaMtn ..
L M.""' .. ,Mo;'tfet CJ -· .. " MlllMt 1'111M1 ..
CllltllftH ""' ............... ..
• Clf!lk:1 . " or-CWlllY '" Cr.tPNrf " ·-•••• 1 DMlll Notlcn ~,. '""' ClJ.
hllflrlM Pitt .. Stott M1rt111 ...
' """1-'"""'111 <• T ......... " ,,_ .... ........ <• .... ..-•• w .. -.. ··-"· w.rill JlllWI .. •
..
A tQtal ,of JO acres_of parks "\\'hich
the lornwla requi<ed ID tbal area was .$
cut to ·two acres. In lieu of the other
.. ._. Ille lrvlne Compony proposed
building a recreation center budgeted
at up to $400,000 for land and con-
structioo, according to Commissioner
!\.1lles Peterson.
The r°equest opens the possibi!. v of
a joint project, he said. which uld
incorporate a senior citizens' cen al
the development. The $16 million park
bond approved in June contains about
$300,000 for such a center, Peter5911
said.
civilian and military employes t~ ,
day, banding 'President Fore!'~ _ IVASl!INGTON ('APJ. ,-.. V.ic~. heir f<>·"!'e o( America's greal 101'.l"!'es, "I shall give a. lranlt and open llate.
·,~, $,~ se •''Ii 11ifl Atli!Cl/ I .fl!elso~#i¥ff!U:lt~a<ll:=,~._lla1 he .. lil_!; "':%· lJ!ellt .ol '!'YU. !Jl!ckgrounc!, my, ~· ~ llr Iii! today Iba! tu. permia1 fcrtune · o Oanr.r = -a my ..usoc;ia ons, my purposes, my
1be Senate refused Ford's ,,,. . _ 5 mllliaii .... that he ~ Jn . menl . 't'llb ' copgressianal COllUl1ltleer fijoapcet, ai>f inylhlng else Ille ·com-quest, backed by a IB!l·minute 11 ~ •, reporting 1111. net. worth lo be $33 million. nilttee and ·Ille Congress quite proper!J
plea, lo postpone the pay mere... addltfoo Income lrom trusts wilb ·tolal At !bat time\ Rockelellcr was said want ' w know," Rockeleller said. ''To
by three molfths and cut govern-assets of $120 million. to be preparing a revi!ed account of kE!ep the record straight in the mean-
ment spending -Oy $700 million. Rockefeller is.sued tliose figures in ad~ his holdings. time, l announce now thit the final
As a result, the 5.52 percent vance of congressknal hearings on his "I am concerned that incomplete and and complete data I am submitting
increase will go into effect Oct. confirmation, saying be wanted to set · therefore misleading data about my show the net worth of my wife and
1 instead of Jan. 1 as proposed the record straight because of misleading personal assets have been leaked to myself to be $62.5 million ...
by Ford. reports of his wealth. • the press before I have had an op-"In addition to my pedsonaI assets,
" •.• Total assets owned outright and portunity . to make an orderly presen-I receive the lncome during my lifetime
in the two trusts amount to a~ talion in connection with my nomination of two trusts with total net asaets of
proximately $182.5 million," Rockefeller to the vice presidency,'' Rockefeller" said. $120 million,'' Rockefeller said.
In the Turtle Rock area. !he conr Irvine's Safety mission Sent the city staff and the
Irvine Company ba ck to the drawing
said in a statement distribu~ to Rockefeller's coniirmation hearings He said the leaked reports "gave a
newsmen •. · are to begin Monday before the Senate doubly erroneous impri!sslon", becaUJt
The fonner New York governor, an Rules Committee. they did not include that informaUon.
board over a proposed reductioo or park Director Field land.
lnclu.ding bot6 neighborhood and com-'
munity'level parks, the Irvine code re-Nai·rowed· to 10 quires a total of 6.5 acres of park
per 1,000 residents.
The proposed modification y,·ould have
cut that total in Turtle Rock. a village
y,•hich will eventually contain 10.669 peo-
ple, to 5.5 acres per 1,000, Peterson
said.
Standards in l he Turtle Rock area
should be maintained, the commission
decided, because it is a family develop-
ment.
.
Searcl1 Teams,
Dogs Still H~
•
'Fiteht1g Suspect
Search teams and tracking dogs from
two countieS were still beating the brush
irf rugged Santa Ana Canyon tod.ay,
hunting for a man suspected of starting
al least one major brush fll'e In Orange
C.Ounty last Sunday:
A spokesman for the Or~nge Cqunty
Fire Department said half a dozen expert
· trackers with dogs 'n addition to about
.... -two dozen other officers are prowling
the ID(lu'ntains nea'r the Glen lvy Boys
·Ranch in Riverside ColDlly.
.. "He was~ ]pt ieen a few days ago
·In this vtclntty,11 the, spokesman said .
•0 He apparenllt stole 90me clothing and
shoes from the ranch laundry so we ' . · aren't sure now •hat he is wearing."
I
The ranch ls a fonner resort hotel
now used to house juvenile delinquents.
~ only pef80n who ha s seen \he
suspect up clo11e was a state forest
ranger who fired seV'eral. rifle shots
at him Silnday and thisl!ed.
Ile Is described aa a bla~ man obOul
six I~ tall and weighi.ig about 170
powlds, a.ccordlng 10' tho spomman.
It was thought al ll'rst the stlspect
was a prison parolee who formerly work·
cd ti a county llrefightcr bul the lira
department spokesman said that lead
ran Into a blank wall when the man
was loond asleep In his home &mday
night.
The spokesman safd the flr90n suspect
may have been .responsible !or oetllng
• !Ire that burned down • meeting
hall al the boys ranch Tuesday nlgl!l.
..
An original field of 152 candidates
for Irvine's new director of public
safety has been narrowed to 10, and City
Manager William Woollett hopes a final
selection will be reached by the end
of Septe1':1ber.
Woollett said he and Administrative
Services Director James Hanington
spent Monday in San Francisco in-
terviewing five candidates for the.job .
He hopes to call a special secret
executive session of the city council
Sept. 30 to interview the five or six
remaining candidates and make a fmal
selection.
The Irvine director of publ.ic safety
will be in charge of police, fire ,·animal
control and emergency trans}lortation
services.
Expenditure OK
For Teen Center
An evaluation of th"e Irvine Teen
Center by-the community services oom-
. missio11. Wednesday led to a reeom-
menda&n· !bat $20,655 be apent w keep
it running unW June. ·
The cehter was a~ved by the city
council·with an inilW bydgel af'$14 ,S3a •
!Or the first lbree manlb& ol operation.
The Sept. 13 mJi ol the evaluallon
period came with expendllures IA>lalling
$12,066. '
Commissioner Miles Petenon. said the
commission recommended the city coim-
cil appropriate $2Q,W) k hire a teen
recreation director, twu feen leaden;
two maintenance workeri and a secwity
guard. • ·
The council I• <@iii~ ·tp , ·iewr •
th e teen center 're<l>m-naalions ..,._' , ,
24 • ... .!.-.' ~~ ' ' i..r.:~ • • "'\ )I: ~ ~ ' ~~ ~
I ' ') ...
Karpov·'Wms Ma tch
0 •
MOSCOW (IJI .,._ ~loly Karpo ,
his a 1--0 leld ~ the llnala ol tho
world chess chllllllfle compeljlloll after J
forci ng lktor Klfthlloi' ·19 :_ttllfl t1a . r.
the 27th mavt rWtdllliilay. ~ l'O!lll
L<ningrader · m.uttt.il i ' CMhlrll! atiact
on lhe king side liter Korchnol cbote
a dragon de.CcnM.
Simon Cites Savings ·
UCI's Post-grad Plan Hit
.
UC Irvine would be omittl'd from
a list of campuses offering post.graduate
instruction under a scheme proposed
by UC Regent Norton Simon .
In a newspaper interview, Simon said
post-graduate programs should b e
limited to the campuses at Berkeley,
Davis, Los Angeles and San Diego as
a money~ving measure.
UC Irvine Olanoellor Daniel G. Ald~ch
said this morning as he was leaving
for a monthly regents meeting in Los
'Angeles that he sees no basis for Simon's
suggestions.
u1 think there would be a big savings.
That's the way , you save money and
beat inflation," Simon said.
Responding to the report , Aldrich said,
"l don't know what the background
for Reg~t SiDDl's comment is.
"As far as UCl Is concerned and
other campuses moving, toward combined
undergraduate and graduate status, I
have no basis for understanding his
suggestions.
"He claims that certain economies
take place, I gather, but the master
plan for education in California calls
for the University of California to be
the graduate degree granting and sole
PhD granting institution in the state
and the sole agency for a variety of
professional schools."·
The Irvine campus, he S{iid, is
necessary to meet those commitments.
"I have no Idea of how he will present
it," Aldrich said. ''All I'm aware of
is the interview and the issues ranged
rather widely.
''How Ute regent plans to pursue them
and bow they will provide a. basis for
future discussion, I don't know.
Kennedy Candid
, . "' Would Disciiss Personal Tragedy
From Wire Services
HOBART, Ind. -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy says that ii he de-cide! !<> run for president be will answer any questions raised about
CbaRPl!Qliiddlck. · · The Massachusetts Democra(. here Wednesday tor a $100.a·
p,late Democratic fun~sing dinner, said h~ wotild "re.spond to :.~~~the.~ l,°o.uidl' .on .t?•. C0?;~~·111';"~~ng
• It>' l(O~~od when 'a '°"''·ddll'I 'J>y .Jte~Y'
lltliliM,etr" ,~.Int<>~ waier oil Chappaquiddick lilind . .lil
uly l~, .. ' t ~ • -+ . • . .., , . r
lie iJ!d, , bnll. lpdlcated It was a very deep personal lrigedy.
I havt ·ICCept,&~•ponsibillty for it •d full regret !or the in·
den&twould to •!l.Y quest!""-"." ,
lleflonip-at . ailil they opposed,: a possible pre.ldtnlial W b:)' !Ce~. llllf9ied oulsiclt when he.1ppeared-¥ a $100+pi.te
~~I~ ...,..~DIOlocratlc cendldat68. , ·_ 1: ~~-11.'!f. a( Thee." whUe Ken~edy ·81!'11~.· e Iii te'rgate, One of the signs carrlea .by
the demonstrators said. ·
-
•
"I'll have to wait to hear about them
a1 the regents meeting," he said.
Simon, who bas been a regent since
1958, also suggested:
-Converting UCLA lo yur·round
operation "so the enormous investment
in physical plafit and libraries is not
wasted in the summer months."
-Cutting tuition at UC Riverskle to
attract students and solve the problem
of low enrollment.
-Add more ~soMel to the uni versity
treasurer'S' office to improve the handl-
?9g of, more than $l bijlion in in-
vestments.
Backing_Claimed _
For Ford Ouster.
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -TWb! l:llllege
profes90rs involved in a ~v.e~to_impeach
President Ford have reported ~wide
response.
They told a riews conference 'wed·
nesday they received som 2$0 leUcrt
plus telephone calls l1Jld telegr-.lcom
persons across the nation since they
&Moo.need their impeachment drive 10
days ago. J
Larry Schwart>;, history pni{cssor at
San Diego City College. l1Jld Arthur M.
Schaller, pro.lessor of juri~ce al
Weotem Slate University ·College o(
Law, said 99 percent ~ the responses
opposed the pardon of l~nncr Pruldent
Nixon. They said most \°' UM! · wrltcn
asked loo inl!'!;DUllion as to •bow w
aot up impeaduneat ~toes.
P ool Saving Carp
.PETALUMA (UPI) -A portable
Sl'l'im(l'ling pool '#1:1 prmed into Ule
Wednelday to save carp whlth were
trsPl'ed because the now ti the
Petalwna ru .. r has receded. The 11th,
tr~Wed ill' lhe low water. """' llylaa oy 111e thousnnds. •
-.
'
. I
\
2_,_,_DAILY PILOT IS Thurulay, Stpttmbtr 19, 11174
Prosecutio•a lfittaess . -
Jaworski Issues
J''l 1•
· ·_Nixon Subpoena
'.' WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Special
\V.at.ers~tC prosecutor Leon Jaworski has
subpoenaed. former President Nixon as
.. a 'prosccutlori witness in the Watergate
cover.up trial of alx former Nixon
· a.ssoc)CJtes, lt was announced today.
··Nixon b8s already been subpoenaed
by his former No. 2 aide, Jolm D.
Ehrlichmfl.n, to appear as a defense
Y.'itness in the trial scheduled to begin
Oct. I.
Jav;orskl's offi<i confirmed that the
subpoena was issued Wednesday night
Senate Bill
On Consumer
·Agency Dies
WASffiNGTON (AP) -The Senate
today rerused to end a two-month
rllibuster that has blocked action on
a bill creating a federal consumer pro-
t~tlon agency, killing the bill for this
session of Congress. -
The 64-31 vote to end the debate and
. bMng the measure to a final vote fell
two short of the required two-thirds.
Sen. ~ J. Ervin (D-N.C.), the
1eader of Ute opposition, said the bill ,...:Js reJl11D3nt to the free enterprise
:r ~~ would create an agency ........,._led aulholity "lo throw
milltll!",._.nches into government ma~
SpolllOl'l>lfald the blll would pass easily
If tilt ftHWiiler could be ended.
'!be . agency ,lo be created by the
blll ·would llave authority to represent
ers 'before any federal court or
cy where a consumer jssue
and will be served on Nixon at his
San Clemente estate by 1'"81 agents.
"He's been subpoenaed to testify."
a spokesman for Jaworsk i said. "We
expect him to testify."
'l'htfJ'aworskJ subpoena cans for Nixon
to appear In U.S. District Judge John
J. Sirica's courtroom Oct. I, even though
he may not be called to the wilneM
stand for several days.
A spokesman for the special prosecutor
said its subpoena will not conflict with
Ehrlldunan's subpoena -lodicatlng the
possibility Nixon might appear both for
the prosecution and defense.
'There has been speculation as to
whether Nixon will actually comply wHh
the subpoenas and appear in person
because or repcrts that he ls in poor
health and deeply depressed about his
Jass or the presidency.
JuJie Nixon Eisenhower said this week
that her rather was expected to be
hospitalized soon for a new flareup or
phlebitis in his left leg. She flew to
San Clemente today to be with him.
Should Nixon's lawyer argue that his
health does not permit him to testiry,
Sirica could appcint a doctor to visit
the former president to determine
whether be would stand the rig9rs or
testifying in a long trial. If Nixon were
found fit to testify but railed to appear'
he could be cited ror contempt.
.Ebrlichman and five other 1ormer Nix·
on aides and associates are scheduled
to be tried on charges of covering up
the Watergate scandal. The same grand
jury that indicted them also named
Nixon as an unindicted co-conspirator.
Nixon cannot face criminal c h a r g e s
for any role he might have had in
the cover-up because he was pardoned
by President Ford. But the pardon also
removed Nixon's option of pleading the
5th AmendmenL
lier at1emp1s 10 close orr Talks to Resume iled by 10, 7 and 4 votes. y, only three attempts to
. lieen i:ed·11~~~· t~~ In Pipefitters'
.dia;'91!1h'J'he Senate leadership bad :~ the latest attempt failed Strik 0 t 4_ ......_.. wouJd-be-deacHorthis-. e c . ........ I'll Co advocate Ralph Nader told
ne v 1P'erence Wednesday that the
9J11 l~iea ~ta Sen& Rusaell
111111' ' ), iMilleti1 JOOoslili "°' La.), Alao ble (o'.Nev,), Howard IL
~er (R-1'.enn.), C.Orge:'ll. ;uJ<en (R-
. • ..!fed 'Stevens (R-Alisk&J. a11
wt¥im opposed the eartler debate-en-
trfes.
~ ~ ;,.,,.-:J.
Offering
Covering
Family Pressure
The latest IMOVation of the YMCA
·tti: 8-COUl'le in tam.Uy life scheduled to~ Oct. 2 at the SaddlebaclfViilley-
23131 Orange Avenue, El Toro.
Calle:! "Family Focus," the course
Is hued on the premise that among
the sltilhl ·people gain in becomiog ad lilts,
the-' skill.! for being a parent are
){eglected,
1 Now, in a time of crisis and pressures
' on the family unit , the YMCA bas 1 develped the family focus program as
: a positive technique for dealing with
being parents.
The COW'5f is taught in six session!! 1 ' using transactional analysis as taught
1: in ltw.,-~lc "I'm OK, You're Ok."
• · Eacb~On will attempt to deaJ with -~1 · bridging the generation gap, discipline,
, • f~ly communicatJon, and improving
11 the 9uality ofllfe in lbe home.
I ,.~_, 91Y5f is set to meet from . 7
; I o fO p.m. at the YMCA. Cost will
... 1 l . be. $40 per couple or $25 per individual.
f, For more inrormation and to register,
11 , call the Y at 830-9622.
By DOUGLAS FRJTZ.SCHE
Of a. Dlltr l"lltt Sllff
Negotiations att set to remme Oct.
·4 .bl-a plpolllten strtb wllicb has
already am• Southern Calliomlans more
than $25 million in delays on a single
project.
More than 2,500 steamfitters and
pipefitters in Southern Calilornia walked
o(_f their jobs July 1. in a strike to
retain a 36-bour work week. A wage
and fringe benefit Increase or $2.47 an
hour for the first year of a new contract
bas already been reached by negoliat=.
Pipefitters now earn $8.88 an hour
plus fringe benefits.
Larry Hamlin, Southern California
F.di.son C.Ompany project manager for
tbe San Onofre nuclear generating sta-
tion, this momlng estimated that work
stopped by the strike has cost the com-
pany $25 million, a cost which will
ultimately be borne by customers.
Pipefitters picket Jines went up at
the plant Aug. 5, Hamlin said , and
other crafts working on the station stop-
ped work.
The picket line! went down this week,
he said, and work by other trades has
resumed.
Pipelitters are constructing the water
and cooling systems for the two 1,180
megawatt generators, he said. Construe·
lion can continUe without pipefitters for
,two to three more months.
Hamlin estimated the cost of delays
at about $9 million a week, or a total
of $25 millioo.
Members of Local 2SO of the Steam·
Refrigerator-Air Conditioning a n d
Pipefitters Union in Gardena want to
keep the reduced work week U~y have
bad for the past four years .
Pipefitters have reportedly suggested
alternating 32 and 40 hour work weekl.
But a management spokesman pro-
tested that "the pipefitters are supported . II :
; 1 ~ Ol.6.MGEC0.6.ST is by operating engineers, t e a m s t e r s ,
DAILY PILOT -~ ---laborers and other workers . . -.,,_ °""°' Co.f l)loJv ND!, ..... -II -.....,,...~ .. ~lly ..... 0..'91"
CWll ~~--..1. tlOdior..,.
... lt!IMI. MOllOly ~h '"°"1· b Co\11 H~ 8udl. '\billrogton S.kM'OUr>-
....... Ug!IM 8-tl. IMN/~ 111(1 I ~ll(S.. ....... Cll)llt .. rio. A ~
' ..... eOtlioll • ~ s.e.....,.,...., s.. ...
,, ...... T)Jit """""* ~..,. 1111 uow..i ~·~ eo ... w-. Ctlttor...., 12$28.
"The problem Is what do we do with
those people when we get to a 32·hour
week?"
"My feeling," Hamlin said, "is that
their working hours should be the same
as others -40 hours a week."
· The reduoed wee!<, he said. produces
problems in scheduling work as well
as morale 1n the other trades.
I •• R.obo<lk w;... , ~--""'*"""' •---~ 1-,_,.__ "'*~""°' Irvine Exchange --
'
•
...
' •
:,'
• ..
• •
-. ...... trldo.-.11....,... _ ..... -l";:" ... A.r
0aJo. H. t-Ridod P. llol .-. ..... ...,....&Men
OlfkH eo.-~ :QCIW.99yS!fW
" -"'"'-' 9Ndl: :J)U ....._, lo\lllMfll .. L8911N 8-:tltVI '°""'".,.._ ... ......,.1111...,.. 11•rsa..c+o .,,,..._..,_, , ~ ':°' &tnC-.rN.~hclrul61C:.-A•
I
I T• .. 1••a 1714164J..4lll
f tl.ltH"11.~ .. 64Z..S47t Jr\ .
.~ .... 1-Cl•..-.AllO.D1,.pa .. llocw., .....
~ 1 T1l11' 492·4410
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~ r ~Ac-;""-1114, 0.W..,. OiM11 .....,_,. c..
~ ............ ....._..,,._.,..
•UIMllWCli,_,.y~i·I all .... .......----~-· ................ ~--~ ......_..,."f"-U00_.....11¥ ....
... ~~-· G.00"'°"'"""' •
Stttd~nts Sought
Irvine Univemty High School •ludents
interested in tsklng part In the American
Field Service student exchange program
have until Friday to return appllcatlons.
Applicants !or the Americans Abroad
Program nwst be American citizens
or legal residents, in excellent health
and In junior or sonlor yeat1 of 11\gb
school.
Three progratns are 1valla1Sle: a
summer program, the 1 o u t t\ e r n
hemisphere program from Janwary 1975
f to January 1976, and the northern
bemispllere program from Septomber
11174 to Se~tember 11175. ,
Applicst•ons are avaU•ble In the high
11Cbool studenL actlvtUt1 omce, the
lorelgn l~nguqe department, b y
contactlM ll!rS: Gary Spencer at 833-
1845.
•
SantaAnan . -~· •
Arrested hi _
Card Theft
I
.. A J1lal\ who' pollct ullcgc tried to -lii1kTSOilth~coast-PJaza clothing-store,--;;;i---1
out of · $47 •worth of casual attire Y.ilh
Lebin's Big Top
a stolen credlt canl ls In custcdy today,
under $!0,000 bond .
John Llewellyn Borden , 24, of Sant..1
Ana faces forgery and posseuk>n or
marijuana charges in addition to Ute
posae!Silxl o! stolen"prnper!y count.
Sgt. Do!lald Casey said Borden and
another yrung tnale entered the Rtbel
Shop on the ptaza's lower level about
8:30 p.m. Wedneoday and asked to ,..
some matching outfits 1n the $45 to
$50. range.
After selecting a $17.70 combination.
Borden gave a major credit card to
a clerk who asked to see some other
JdenUfication .
Aoconllng to Casey, Botden told the
clerk be could only show her some
other credit c•nls and that he had
no driver's licen:te. The clerk then called
the credit card com~y for verificaUon
and was told the card had been reported
stolen 'fa rlier the. same day.
Capistrano Beach's tenacious can1per Richard W.
Lebin obviously hasn't capitulated to the foes al the
county seat, as this tent -his new home -attests.
Unemployed local man Jived in old Cadillac camp
car on this spot before county officials ordered it
hauled away. Undaunted, he has found another way
to keep out the damp night air. County legal c:Oim-
sel says tent is illegal and Lebin seems headed for
yet another round In battle over 'squaller's rights.
Borden's accomplice, casey said, left
the store With the clothes. Borden was
detained by the clerk until police arrived,
Casey said.
Duttng a search of his· person, police
said they discovered a small cylindrical
metal container holding four grams of
all~ed marijuana and a wallet con-
taining lJ) olber majc5r credit cards be>
Fron• Page Al
RECRUIT ...
Frona Page Al
INDIANS ...
But the tribe spokesman said the
governor's decision would not deter ,the
Indians.
Wheaton said the situation could
become a~repeat oft~ trouble ~t Wound-
ed. Knee, S.D., where lndians were locked
in combat with the federal government.
The Kootenai said their tribe did
receive some cash payment for the land
several ~ars ago but this wlls not
enough. They said thaL despite tlle
reservation and ~s'1 ~payments they
wantld fishing •nd hunting rlghtL
Thomp!On's wire said: "At the request
of the President, the bureau ls In the
process or preparing a reJt)y • ta the
Sept. 11, 1974, letter to the president
of the United .Statet. We arc currently
revie wing the materlal you have sub-
. m!Ued and will respond promplly."
The commissioner aJ!O said the Justice
Depart!ll.ent has be«I asked to send
a represcntaUve to meetings over the
dispute.
Fullerton Police S~eep ~ ~ a Robert Rhodes.
Hurricane Rips
11~.to Hondur_as;
Toll. Over 20<)
. ----
County in Big Drug~aid
More than 75 Fullerton police officers
descended on Lagtma Beach, Newport
Beach, Fountain Valley and several other
Orange County cities Wedneoday night
arret'Jling 65 pe1'80Ds alleged to be
narcotics dealen.
Names or those arrested during the
massive roondup were DOt inunediately
available.
or the 65 taken into custody on v"ar--
rants issued Wednesday were 2 1
juveniles, seven females and 58 males.
Fullerton police said 20 three-man
teams Y.'ete dispatched to c i t I e s
· lbtolfgliOut lite oounly to make the ar-
rests. More arrests are expected today
and later in the week.
Fullerton Police Sgt. Bud Lathnlp said
the offenses Included sales of a variety
ci drugs. Including heroin, ·cocaine, the
psychedelle UD and marijuana .
Police said return of the 107. warrants,
Including 23 secret grand : Ju,Y in-
dictments, followed a fout-monUJ in·
vestigatJm of drug sales activities in
the county:
They said that . undercover agents
working the case purchased up to SS
pounds of marljuana rrom alleged
deal~rs during the investigation. Several
purcha ses of other drugs also y.·ere
made. police said.
Wedne>day ntght 's roundup b y
FUiierton )i>lice marked the-fourth major
_sweep in Orange County in recent
months .
Costa Mesa Police oonducted '1:i major
roundup of alleged street-level drug
dealen in August; San Clemen~ police
and Orange County Sherlif's deputies
made a series of arrests also in August
and Irvine police apprehended scores
of persons during a spring roundup.
. .
TEGUcfGALPA, Hondura1 (UPI)
HWTicane Fifi struck lhe northern coast
of Honduras today wtth 1.10-mile winds,
storm tide!I and torrential r.ains· which.
left a trail of death and destruction
in the nation's worst stonn in a century.
Honduran authorities sa:i the dealh
toll is expected to exceed 200. and that
in tbe region around the city or La
Celba alone, 100 bodies have bOen
counted. Thev estimated 100 other
persons died eisewhere along the coast .
Apparently most or the dfatM were
caused by drowning.
After smashing through Honduras , Fifi
turned ils full force toward.$ the tiny
Caribbean country or Belize and v.·as
expected to hit there this afternoon.
Most or the damaie In Hondaraa was
rrom fi/IOding; with property· aod crop
duNlge-going Into the hundreds ol
thbll..n<is or dollm.
. Fifi de'vastated banana ~ plantations,
nee fields, bridg<s and highwa)'I, mowed
dowtr houses. and blll.ldlngs of pOOr con·
struction which could not witmtand Ute
flooding and the hurricane winds.
Among cities reporting damage y.·ere
San Pedro Sula, La Cciba, Tela, P\lerto
Cortes, Trujillo. Puerto Castilla. Guajaca
and the Bay Island (Islas Bahia ) or(
the coast.
Irvine's Mayor
Talks on Women
The Microwave OVEN of THE FUTURE Now at
•
lktltd-ln c:•11111tc: lhtll
1975 LITION MICROWAVE ()YEN
With Y ARI COOK CONTROL ·
Advance features that set the LITIOH Ml ...... fer®
Model 416 apart from"other .MICROWAVE OVENS
IOoll!lflV\I MICro-l111111•• 'I. .._.. .-
Oltll .. C0111ro1 COOK D!PROIT YAR1•COOK I OYIN CONTROL
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Mtw WOt10 . ol Mlc:ro-·-.c~ llOlll Lii· 1on"i.• • • • ' .
Special lnlrCIMtory l'rlc• lllclldes
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FREE • JO PC. COOIWAIE llT ·
• Mlc;l<inMP THHMOMITll
! MICIQ llOWllH Giii.i.
•COOll IOOI
90 DAYS CASH
WITH APPROVED CRIDIT
1815 NEWPORT Bl VD~
DawnlDwn Costa Mesa -Pllone 548·7788 . ' Wheaton said st the_ heart ol the .
1,.ue was the poverty of the Koolcnal1 [l~ia1111111111s:mmi:ii
themsel ....
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Fountain'~V alley
T~day's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 67, NO. 262, 3 S6CTIONS, 36 PAGES • ORANGE C(>U~: GALIFORNIA THURSDAY, S~PTEMBER, 19, 197'4 TEN CENTS
Rowlands: No Prediction on Realty . Electio·n . '
By TERRY COVJ!J.E
ot Ille Dlllr Pi..t Sllltt
City Administrator Oave Rowlaads
iin't willing to predict the outcome of
a March 4 tr11nsfer tax election in Hun·
tiogton Beach until L.fter voters cast •
their baUots on a related Issue Noy.
5.
"November is the critical el:ectiori'"/'
Rowlands said Jn an lnte'rvlew. "If the
majority of the people say they favor
a trash collection fee and-.. a higher
Seaarelaers Failed
utility 'tal,. then the <:O\meil will give
lhat consi~tk>n.
"But U the November election turns
the1otber wa)'· (favoring a transfer taX'),
th! city ..n use tliat for its araumerit
in the Mardi election." . pn N~v. 5, 1voters ,u1 have a .choice
between taxes. They can either support
the real estate trarWer tax, or advise
the council to drop it and impose a
monthly trash collection fee and increase
the already existirtg utility tax·.
Suspect .Seized
• Riding Ill Taxi
Police from rive Cities used a
helicopter and ·police dogs in a fruitless
£IO.minute search for an armed robbery ·
suspect in Fountain Valley early today,
then captW'td blJn two hours later a1
he tried to nee in a taxi.
George Waldron Pennell, Jr .• 23, ol
Santa Ana, was turned over to Costa
Mesa police after he was arrested by
Fountaln Valley officers at$ a.m. today.
He was wanted in connecUon with'
the 12 :40 a.m. holdup or a·eosta Mesa
gas station at 3006 Harbor Blvd., police
reported.
W estmin.ster
Police Nab
TivoGunmen
Two armed robbery suspects who
threatened to "blow away" a policeman
gave up without firing a shot early
this morning in the parking lot of a
Westminster restaurant.
The suspects gave up When a second
officer they hadn't seen cocked bis
shotgun and told them to "h'eeie," ac-,
conling to Weslminster Detective Sgt.
Richard Grodt.
Both i.nen. Bob Allen Bratton, 25, who
!isled his home as Camarillo, and John
EdwanLP.lcdrello, lj, Lakewood. were
boOked into Orange County ~Jail aoo
charged with suspicion of armed robbery
and attempted murder 1 police said.
They allegedly took about 11,000 from
the bar at the Fireside Restaurant, 13950
Spring4ale St., ahoot 2 a.m.
Sgt. Grodt said the "face olr' took
place in the parking lot at the Fireside
ISee TENSE, Page AZ)
Jn addition, poHce say he is suspected
of robbing · a Westminster man at gun-
point, taking his car and wallet at 12:14
a.m.
The Westmin!ter robbery occurred at
the home of John Vilbum at 13582
Portsmouth Circle, police rePorted.
The suspect then allegedly Went to
eo.,ta 1i1esa, where he robbed a Mobil
staUon of $40 at gunpoint. It was the
second Mobil station holdup in Costa
1itesa in u many nights.
Jn the predawn ,hours Wednesday, a
man enlered the stalion at Harbor
Boulevard aod Gisler Avenue and
excaped with $116 before being captured
later by police.
FOWJtaln Valley police spotted Pennell
in the stolen ~ as be allegedly was fi"1ni the Coota 11... robber)' and w• 9llt<dlnr """"" Warner Avenue
in Fowitaln Valley.
l'eamll IUrned Off his .... lflbis. Police
rtiibr!ei!, but olllcers "'"' able to track hinl by the orcMkml Dub ol his brake lights. -.
Pennell turned into a hooslng tract
at Newhope Street and Warner, police
reported, than abandoned the car on
Tin Mountain Drive.
'Olficen aided by lbe Costa Mesa police
helicopter, and police dogs f r om
Westminster and Huntington Beach, as
well as officers from Santa Ana and
Costa, Mesa, searebed the area for ilo
minutes then abandoned their efforts.
Pollce notified all-night market> In
t~ area of Pennell'• description.
A clerk notified officers at about 5
a.m. 'that ~a ·man matching PenneU's
de9Crlpllon was outside bis market. When.-
police /.arrived, they s)i>tted a· taxicab
leaving, then stopped it on Newbope
Street north ol. Bolsa Avenue\
Officers reported Pennell was arrested
without further incident.
Police claim they found · a .22 Caliber
piitol in bis possession as well a1 about
$4-0 cash.
•
' In March, there will be a slratiht
11yes" or~"no'' ballot on which the oon-
trovet1ial transfer tu coold be duinped
aod the:dty Jl"'hibited from ever using
it wlthoUf first boldlJig an electk>n.
The November measure is purely ad-
visory and tile cooncll is not obligated
to do anything after It, thoogb coun-
cilmen bave sald··theY would probably
follow the will of the people.
They surprised critics of the transrer
tax Monday night l y giving the go
U,I~
Pllflflllng On
Larey Capune of Balboa· lsfll!d
prepares to leave Santa . Cruz
,011 the lat.a·-Ill: bis ~ coast paddlebi>anl excursion
from Oregan to ~ Diego.
Trash Collection
Truck Crushes
Suicide Victim·
A 57-year-Okt woman apparently com-
mitted su.icide in Hup.tington Beach
Wednesday by crawling beneath the
wheels of a trash collection truck.
H1mtingtoo Beacb police reported
Muriel Canfield, of 1552 Operetta Drive
was dead oo arrival at Huntington
Intercommunity Hospital. The .. Qnuige
COUnty coroner ruled her death a suicide.
Police reported Toribio Robles of
Midway City, a 'drJ\'.er for Rainbow
Dispooal. spotred the victim lying beneath
his truck as he worked on Operetta
Drive.
He pulled her out, then drove on
to his next ooUection, police said, where
be stopped and picked up additional
trash.
Not realizing the woman had followed
him_. Robles started the truck again,
crushing Mn. cannerci beneath u tlie
wheels, police said.
A neighbor spotted the incident aod
tried to run_oot.side to· stop the truck
but was unable to do so in time , officers
reported.
Funeral servtces will be held at 11
a.m. Monday-at B. W. Coon Funeral
Home in Long Beach, with burial there.
Mrs . &nfield is survived by a son,
Robert.
Pool Saving Carp
PETALUMA IUPI) -A portable
swtmming poOl was pressed into use
Wednesday to . ·save carp which were
trapped because the flow of the
Petaluma River ha•· receded.
ahead for the March election, even
though they had previously lndic8ted
1 they would not allow such an election
until April; 1976."
Shirley Commons, president ot the
Huntington Beacb-Fount.ain Valley Board
of Realtors, said Her ~hlch fought
the transfer tax, is quite happy with
the March election.
She said the realtors may not take
any stand on the November issue.
"'Ille boo,,of directors will meet
Tuesday to discuss whether '~·e want
to take any public s~d on the
November issue"' Mrs. Commons said
today. "I'm inclined to ignore it. It
doe sn't mean anything -purely nd·
visory."
Rowlands, however, . feels t h e
November vote is critical in determining
how the people really feel about method'i
of taxing.
Asked what he v:ould do in ~larch,
if the people knock out the transfer
tax, Rowlands said he'd rather oot tackle
that until he has to face it.
"\Ve have a tight budget now and
I personally wouldn't recommend any
cutbacks. But if the city council wants
to do that, 1'11 do v•hatever they direct,"
he said.
~1eanwhile. as the debate continues,
so does the tra nsfer tax. City Treasurer
\\'arren Hall says the city has so far
(See REAL TY, Page AZ) c -
Indian Uprising?
~
War Vowed Over Idaho Land
'BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (UPI) -
A sman Indian tribe ignored a govern-
ment peace gesture today, vowing to
go ahead with its war over 1.6 million
acres of aboriginal land seized 120 years
ago.
111.e 67 members of the Kootenai tribe
said they would set up four road blocks
and collect tolls from !!lose passing
through the area starting at midnight.
The Kootenais demand that Bureau
or Indian Affairs set aside 128,~ acres
or the disputed land for use as a reserva-
tion and give them a Cash payment.
'{'hey said thls would compensate them
fon the land taken by the government.
Bureau Commis sioner P.1orris
Thompson said in a telegram to tribal
Chairman Amelia Trice Wednesday that
hls .. g:engr was reviewing ·th!e situation
~ would reply soon !!>· }!;<_ tribe's • • s; t· ~ . . ~,. .
Kootenai spokesnao ~ ,Wbestoo
salcl the wire "llOCIDded lift the bureau
is lr7inr to formulate a plan Ond ret
people tcgelher. Wbal W. want .. ru take congressional . a~iob/' He added
the "war" would start on schedule.
At Boise, Jdabo, Gov. Cecil Andrus
warned that be would send state troopers ·
to arrest anyone attempting to set up
a roadblock.
Wheaton said the governor told him
it was his duty to enforce the state's
Jaws "reiardJw of the consequences."
But the tribe spokesman said the
governor's decision would not deter the
Indians.
Wheaton said the situation could
become a i:epeat of the trouble at Wowld-
ed .Knee, S.D., where Indians were locked
in combat with the federal government.
'!'be KooteyJc said -their .tribe -did
receive some l85h payment for the land
several years ago but this was not
enough. They said lhat despite the
reservation and cash payments they
wanted fishing and hunting rights.
'Thompson's wire said : "At the request
Se1iate Votes
f!ay Raises
WASlilNGTON (UPI) -The
Senate, by a vote of 64 to 35,
cleared a pay raise for 3.~ million
civilian and mllitary employes tg..
day, banding 'President Ford's
economic policy its first setback
!JuCongress. .
The Senate refused Ford's re-
quest, backed by a last.minute
plea, to postpone the pay increase
by three months and cut govern-
ment spending by $700 million.
~ a reslllt, the .5.S2 percent
increase will go into effect Oct.
1 ,instead of Jan. 1 a& proposed
by Ford. '
or the President, the bureau is in the
process of preparing a reply to the
Sept. 11, 1974, lelter to the president
of the United States. We are currently
reviewing the material you have sub-
mitted and will respond promptly.'1
The commissioner also said the Justice
Department has been"' asked to send
a representative to meetings over the
dispute.
Wheaton said at the heart of the
issue was the poverty of the Kootenais
themselves.
"\Ve are about 300 percent below the
poverty level, only about one-fourth of
this once-powerful nation of native
Americans here have steady ·jobs -
most of them earn 'quick money' during
the harvest time," he explained.
The spokesman said there were several
"enterprises" on the drawing board once
the tribe is given its reservation and
these would provide economic stability
for the members. I •
Prosecution Witness '
Nixon Called to Testify
In 'Watergate Six' Trial
WASHINGTON WP!) S p e c I a I
Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski has
subpoenaed former President Nixon as
a prosecution witness in the Watergate
cover·UP trial of six former Nixon
associates , it was announced today.
Nixon has already been subi>oenaed
by his former No. 2 aide , John D.
EhrlicbmaD, to appE!ar as a defense
witness in the trial scheduled to begin
Oct. I.
Jaworslti's office cooflrmed that the
subpoena was issued Wednesday night
and will be served on Nixon at his
San Clemente estate by FBI agents .
•.'He's been . subpoenaed _to . testify,'~
a spokesman for Jaworski said. uwe
expect hiril to testify."
'the Jaworski subpoena cans for Nixon
to appear in U.S. District Judge John
J . Sirica's courtroom Oct. l, even-though
he may not be called to the witness
stand. for several days.
A spokesman for the special prosecutor
sai4 its subpoena will not conflict with
Ehrlichman's subpoena -indicating the
posfilbility Nixon might appear both for
the ~tion and defense.
There has been specuTutiOn 3s to
whether Nixon will actually comply with
the subpoenas and appear in person
because of reports that he is in poor
health aod deeply depresSed about his
loss of the presidency.
Julie Mioo Elsenhower said this week
that . her father was expected to be
hospitalized soon for a new flareup or
phJebitis in his left leg. She flew to
San Clemente today to be with him.
Should Nixon's lawyer argue that his
healUt does not permit him to testify,
Sirica could appoint a doctor to visit
the (ormer president to determine
whether be woold stand the rigors of
testifying in a lon'g trial. If Nixon were
found flt to lestify but failed to appear,
he could be cited for contempt.
E}l_rlichman and five-other torrner Nix-
on aides and associates are scheduled
to be tried on charges of covertn.g up
the Watergate scandal. The same grand
jury that indicted them also named
Nixon as an unindicted co-conspirator.
Nixon cannot face criminal ch a r g es for any role he might have had in
tbe cover·up because he was pardoned
by President Ford.~ut the p~don also
removed Nixon's option of pleading the
5th Amendment. ·
Plane Sets Down
· On, H untingtq1,f ~ -
Beach; None. Hurt
A light, single-engine plane made an
emergency landing on Huntington Gity
Beach Wednesday evening aftt>r the pilol
reparted his radio and navigational
equipment went dead . .
A Hwitington Beach police officer on
patrol spotted the landing and in·
vesligated. -
He reported the pilot, ~lichael Akylas
Caloyannides of Placentia, and his
passengers were not injured and the
plane was not damaged.
Police said Caloyannides rented the
plane in Fullerton and was '15th in
line to land there when an app·arent
battery failure caused his equipment
to stop functioning. ·
Unaware of any other nearby airport,
police reported, be landed on the beacb,
nea r Lake street and Pacific O:>ast
Highway. ·
The plane's owner, Tozp. Adlµm of
Hayward, said he would try to fly the
plane off the beach today.
Rocky, Reveals Net Worth
- ---
WeUl&er
Friday wlll be a carbon copy of
today, act"Ordiog to the weather
Fortune , Other Assets Total $1 82 Million
-service, with ov-emlgbt-iow-clOO<ts
and fog along the coast clearing
by midday to sunny skies. Beach
highs near 71> rising to tbe mi<l-
80s inland.
WASHINGTON (AP) Vice heir to, one of America's great fortunes, 0 1 shaU give a frank and open state-,.
Presldenkles!gnale Nelson A. RD<tetel-• sold he ·~ lho • .t.otemD bocouse · ment of '!'Y. backgrowid. my career. i INSIDE TODAY
. )
-i==;n;;;c;;i'T<·arhl If -~tba! ho! OJ!ld!.i i4ate. my_associatioos, my ll!IQl9fil. Y a JliOf"OM .,onuno 'ment 'lltth COlllJ'elllooOI . ..,.unlttees finances, and anything else the com:--A 79-ll<•N>ld,-widounaurrhe-l---1
II 112.s_ tnlllloo, and that he retel,.. lo ~irl8·ht• Ml·wolth IO he "'3 ti\Ullon. • mlttee and the Congress quile p~perly llos had .35 aff1Urr 11nce her h..,..
... -
The owner of thls c~r obviously doean't believe in signs, btil this
one, in the .P•rklng lot of a Mt. Cletn~ns ~ic)l2, ~hurch, may carry .•
-heavier penalty than a '5 parlilng ltcliel Bat then, let be whO 11
without a parking space grab the first spot. _
' ..
addition lna>me !roin trusts with total .Af tbat Urne, Rockelellct wul•sald wan( to know," Rockefeller said. "To band died 23 years ngo. The
asaeis ff fUO million. . Io be preparing a nmsed fCCOU!\I of keep the record straight in the mean-ages of her mates ronged frOfl\
Rocl<elelltr issued those figures !JI ad· his holdings. ', ' ~ time, I annoWJce now that lhe . final 15 to 82. See sto111, Page AU.
vance ot congreuional beattnp on his .. I arn conctrned that inco~ ind · and complete data I am submttting •Ntlltt c• '""""lffltll cs
confirmation, sayjng h8 wanted to kt theref~ m..-iead ti\g •data a&Mar-my iSl't<>w the; net worth ·.of my wife and .,._ 1--.ai •• ~ Lw.n 11
the record straJgbt because of misleading pertOlill ams hate beiE Jilllllld to myself to be $62.5 million . . • ~ .. :tni':'• AA ~: = ,.,..... ~ reports of hla wealth. ~ U\e ~ beftire f ... bavl bad • Gp-"In additlon to my pedsonal aSMtS, C1a1t1llM et-le it.,.._.I ,..... A4
0 ••• Total aueUI owned wtright and port-tirf -* • 'ol~1l-: ~ I niceive the Income during my li!~lme ~=" g = CMltt ~'.;
tn ~ two trusts amount lo •P" ~ ~ 1:9r ~ (J{ two trusts with total net assets of =:,:~':. "l: ~=.'....,.. ~i~
pnWm.ately ,Ia.! mllllon," Rock<felier · to lhe vice pres! ency,• liocufeller said. $120 million," Rockefeller said . .....,._ o ,..,._ a
said In a statement distributed to Rockefeller'• conflrmatlon bearings lie .uJd the leaked report,.I •jgave a :~Ni::., tt.: == · ~
newsmen. are to begin Monday before tbe Senate doubly erroneous impression" because ....,..,.. u w.rw, ,._ ""'
The former New York governor, ao Rules Commlltee. Ibey did not includ e lbal information.
)
I
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•••
. OAILV PILOT H Thundi}', Stptlmbff 19, iq74 \
Hurricane Fifi ' Rips
•
!JOnduras; ·. 200 Killed
· TEGUCIGALPA. Honduras (UPI) -
Hurricane Fin struck the oorthe;'ll coast
of Hondur~ today with 130-mile winds,
storm Udes and torrential rains which
left a trail or deatb and destruction
in the nation's worst storm in a century.
•., llonduran authoritle.a: saiJ the death
u1n· 1s' expttted to exceed 200, and that
i p # ttie region around the city of La
• ~lt>a· 'blonc, 100 bodies have been
c.'owited: They estimated 100 other
persons died elsewhere along the coast.
• ApparerlUy most of the d(:aths were
c'aused by drowning. Afie~ smashing through Honduras, Fifi
turned its full force towards the tiny
·Caribbean country of Belize and was
~ted to hit there this afternoon.
' ·•J\1ost ot the damage in Honduras was
from flooding, with property and crop
damage •going into Jhe hundred-of
-~~o~d-~ ·ot dollars.
;' ~ilj1 Cfevastated banana plantations, ~-ne)ds,..,}trldges and highways, mowed
~wn holtses, and buildings of poor con·
struCflon which could not withstand the
flooding and the hurricane winds.
Among cities reporting damage were
San Pedro Sula. \.a Ceiba, Tela, Puerto
Cortes, Trujillo, ~rto Castilla, Guajaca
and the Bay lslilnd (llllas Bahia) oU
the coast.
Honduran g o v er n m e n t authOritles
calculated, that one-third of the countey
-comprising the nation's richest
agricultural zone -was affe<::ted by
the stonn1 although Fifi's rains covered
virtually lbe eotlre country.
t.
DellY ...... , ... ,... : :Ill' PREDICTIONS "C"Jti Aide Rowlands
~ _f!j• Page Al
JlE.AlTY ...
COliMM &bout $80,CXXI to $901000 over
the~fJttW;iJ; )Veeks it has been in effect.
1be-t.-Wilit be collected until the out·
--eome--Of-lthe March election is known,
or couqciWn order a change.
'/ ,,:·
.~1centennial Group
!Postpones Party
A fund raising party scheduled Satur·
day ~I by the Huntington Beach
I Bicentennial Commission has · b e e n
t j:>ostponed; with no new date set for t It. • •
; • Residents who have already purchased
• iicke~ for the party will be contacted
11,y lb~ person wllo sold the Uckets j I'"<! aJt""pey will be refunded. ac-
~ to .a bicentennial spokesman.
: J-nSUfficlent backing was given as t.be
1 pason for the postp;onement.
'1 OIAHCH COAST "' DAILY PILOT ..
w..o .... Coest Olilr Nol .... " -·-..... ~ ,._...__" ~.,..,. 0....,. ~~"""ea..-~--~. Ml>'IOQ' llwouO~ ftidl1. flJr Coll•
MIM; ..._. Btldl. Ho/lltlflg!Oll e.-..-
~ \lillll!ll'< U9UN &.ICI\ _,.,.,..,..,._ ... SllJ ~~•IS... .ir-~"'°"-A .... •iliii•"'"-.. ~ ~ ltlld Su~
o.,os:~~~-11330~
811 ~ ~. *"-. Cllifor-9Mll.
•r
I ·-1
Rot.IN. WMd
r ~...i~
'
I
,
t Jod R. W'.cy
Y4'P'r.,....Wld~o1M .......
Thomen K.w ... I •
·~· ~,~"-~
MoN91f19EOllor
Ooles Jl~\ l!ictod P. Noll AM<61•"'~Eattcn
l.iy(~
iw11o-;i.~r1Mor
·•
'
Erne~ relief committees were
rushing aid to allected areas.
At Puerto O>rtes, Honduras' only oil
refi nery was reported Isolated by flood
waters.
Weathermen said that on its present
course Fifi's winds will sweep Inland
over the sOOthernmost pp of Belize, just
Senate Bill
On Consumer
Agency Dies
WASHINGTON (AP ) -The Senate
today refused to end . a two-month
filibuster that has blocked action on
a bill creating a federal consumer pro-
tection agency, killing Ute bill for this
session of Congress.
The M-34 vote to end the debate and
bring the measure to a final vote fell
two short of the required two-thirds.
Sen. Sam J. Ervin (D-N.C.), the
leader of llie opposition, said the bill
"is repugnant to the free enterprise
system" and would create an agency
with unllmlted authority "to throw
monkey wrenches into government
machinery,"
aouth of 'Punta Gorda, a city of 7,000
pe....,.. The Bellte government ordere<I
. hurricane precautiooo throughout the .
couniry, especially, in the 11111tllem •
coastal sector. '
Dr. N~U Frank, chief of the National
HurrlcaM Center in MlamJ, said Fifi
was the ''w<irtt huriicane to affect the
north coast of Hooduias this century."
.MARIJUANA. SMOKE
POLL UTED SKIES
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The Navy burned
tons of marijuana on at least two oc-
casions in which all'1J011ution regulatloos
were violated, says San Diego County'1
health director.
Dr. J. B. Askew, who also_ Js an
officer of the Air Pollution -Control
Dlstrtct, said a single-chamber Incine-
rator at North I~lana Naval Air Station
was used in July.
Area Jaycee
'Critical'
After Crash
Sport$0rs said the bill \\'ould pass easily II the filibuster could be ended. VinC<nt Scotti of ,the Fountain Valley
11l:e agency to be created by the Jaycees remained m "stable but sUll
bill would have authority to represent aiUcal" condition at Orange ·Qrunty
consumers before any federal court or Medical Cell,__~ today after a Tueeday
federal agency where a consumer Issue car crash ~lied two other Ja)'cees.
is at stake. Scottl, 41, of 307 S. Newhope St.,
Three earlier attempts to close off Santa Ana, J1 sUll beln,g treated in
the debate faUed by 10, 7 and I votes. the hospital lnten!lve cve unit.
Traditionally, only three attempts to Jaycee President Jamel Edward Ben-
break a filibuster are allowed. A fourth nett, 33,. of 16089 Shasta St., FoWttain
effort bad been tried only twice ln Va11ey, died early Wedneada>'._ of P,jurles
the past. The Senate leadership had .. .suffered in the crash. ·
said that if the latest attempt failed A th1rd club member, Aubrey Wayne
the measure would be dead for this ' "Bronco11 Helphlnstein, 31, of 2881 Bristol year. St. Apt. 302, Costa Mesa, wu dead
Consumer advocate Ralph Nader told on arrlval at the hospital alter the
a news conference Wednesday that the accldent.
key swing votea belonged to Sens. Rmsell The acddent took place a1 the men
Long (0.La.), J. Bennett J-((). were returning from a Jaycee uchange
La.), Alan Bible (().Nev.). Howard H. visit to a club In San Dlmaa. lbeir
Baker (R-Tenn.), George o. Aiken (R· car wu struck heodon by a van driving
Vt.). and Ted Stevens (R·Alalb), all 1n lhe wrong dir.ctlon m ~ NeWJ>Ort
·of whom oppooed the earlier debate-en. Freeway in Orange, ~ to the diol· lrlea. Callfomla m,tiway Patrol,
Animal Board
Members Sought
For Huntington
Huntington Beach is looking for
volunteers for Its new seven·member
Animal Care and Cootrol Commission.
Applications are available at city hall,
or prospective volunteen can plmoe 536-
5201 ind ask for an application to be
malled.
The city cOuncil wants the commission
to be composed of: a veterinarian, a
non·animal owner, a representative of
the California coalition of Animal
Owners, an Animal Assistance League
member, two non-affiliated an i ma l
owners, and a breeder.
Otherwise, the only requirement ii
residency ln the city.
1be city council will appoint in·
dividuals to the commission, posslbly
at the couocll 's Oct. 1 meeting.
Primary functions of the commission
will include the revision of the clty'1
animal control laws , serving as an ap-
peals board on pet fines , and serving
as an overseer of animal control within
NY Geyser Erupts
NEW YORK (UPI) -A h~ge water
main burst early today on tlle upper
East Side, rupturing a giant oteem main
and sending a 1eyeer of steam 15 stories
high. · The exploolon tell lwo gaping
crateui in the street, llhatte....i windows
in nearby buildlnga and flooded the PeM
Centnl lunnel tmdel' Part Avenue.
.
Driver of the ... Georp llloma•
Ne1-28, of Sanla Ana, ala> WIS
injured In Jhe crash. He 11 being held
on charges of felony drunken drtvlng
and vehicular manslaughter.
Funeral aervtcos for Bennett will be
at 10:30 a.m. saturday at Peek Family
COlonial Funeral Home, Westminster.
The family uk.s that donations be
made to the FountaJn Valley Jay<:ffs
or to the Vincent SCOtU fund, being
collected to help the Scotti famil y during
his recovery. ·Donations may be malled
to Bo1 1527 in Fountain Valley.
Survivors Include Bennett's wile,
Marilyn, of 1he l'IOirne; -two sons,· James
Edward lfI and Brett 'lllomr-Bennett,
hls mother, two sisters, a brother and
·his gra'ndfather.
Blaze Victim
Remains Critical
Katherine Driver, 23, of 9411 Daytona
Circle, Huntington Beach~ was atilt listed
In critical condition today In the burn
ward at Oranie County Medical Center.
H06Jlltal authorities said there bas been
no change In her cooditlon since lhe
was brought In following the fire that
destroyed her borne Sunday morning.
She suffered second degree burns over
60 perctnl of her body and third degree
bums oyer 10 percent, according to
Hun~ Beach firemen.
She was pulled from a downstairs
bedroom by firemen who bad to break
thrO\llh a back door to reach her.
Kennedy · Candid . .
W ouM Discuss Perso1ial . Traged y
.. From Wire $ervlce1
HOBART, Ind. -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy says that if he de-
cides to run tor president he will answer any questions raised about
Chappaquiddick. · ,
The MassachUi<!lls Democrat, here Wednesday for a $100-a·
plate Democratic fund-ral!lng dinner, said he would "respond to
-qu~Uol!rlnd'llo"thrbest-I-could''-on tlln:ontrovers~rrounding
tlle accident.
Mary Jo Kopechne drowned when a car driven by Kennedy
plunged oll a bridge flllo deep water off Chappaquiddick laland in
July 1969.
He.said, "I have Indicated ft was a very deep personal tragedy.
I have accepted full responsfblllty .!or ft and full regret for the In··
cldent. I would respond to any questions."
. Demonstrators who ufd they opposed a possible presidential
bid by Kennedy, marched outside when he appeared at a •IOO.a·plate , fund·~.Ing dinner for Lake Co11nty Democratic canclldates.
The¥ ~lso sang "My Country 'Tis ol Thee," whl1e Kennedy
spoke. "Nobody Drowned Jn Watergate," one of the 1!1111 carried by
the demonstrators safcl.
\ ..
Lebin's Big Top
Capistrano ~each's tenacious camper Richard \V.
Lebin obviously ha~n·t capitulated to the foes at the
county seat, as this tent -his new h·ome -attests.
Unemployed, local man lived in old Cadillac camp
car on this spot before county officials ordered 1t
hauled away. Undaunted. be has:iound anothe r way
to l<eep ouLtbe damp night air. County legal coun·
sel says tent is illegal 'µd Lebin seems beaded for
yet another round In oiltle' over '.squatler's rights.
From Page AI
TENSE ..•
just u the two men were Jeavlng the
re!ltaurant
"Officers Jim Lancasler and Gary
~Ju: had BITived and were In the parking
lot. questionina: someone outside, wbf.n
the suspects walked out tbe door," Grodt
said.
"Max bad nothing to shield him and
one of the men yelled 'I'm going to·
blow you away,•" .Grodt said. "Mai:
leaped over a nearby car and Lancaster
pulled his shotgun and yelled. They ap-
parently hadn't seen Lancaster who was
safely behind hill patrol car."
Grodi said both men surrendered when
Lancaster yelled.
According to pollct reporta, the men
had entettd tbe bar section of lhe
restaurant and sat down for about 15
minutes.
Then at closing time they stood up
and ordered everyone to De oo the
floor while they cleaned out the cash
regiJter.
Fullerton Police· Swe~p
Co~~#.p Big I)wgBai~ . --~ '""""' .... More tbail 7S Fullerton~~ctrs
desoended on Laguna ~K: lf!!li. rt
Beach. Fountain Valley and .. ~. er
Orange COunly cities W~f . ght
arre!ling 65 persons allel'd 41. be
narcotics dealers. • ....
Na mes of those arrested during' the
massive rounOup were not imni~~tely
available. •
Of the 65 taken into custody on. war·
rants i.ssued Wednesday wenf 2 1
juveniles, seven females and 58 ~
• Fullerton police said 20 tJiret:.man teams were dispatched to ~CU i e s
throughout the cowity to make the. ar·
rests. More arTests are eipected today
atid later in the week. :';
·Fullerton Pl>lict Sgt;.Bu4 Latbrop'lllid
the offemes included sales of 1 variety !" drugs, Including heroin, cocaln~ the
psychedelic LSD-iiid marijuana. 4
Poitw Ai.u.iu.:n of ibe wi wirtants,
including 23 · secret grand jury In·
dlctments, folldwed a four-month i~
vestigatlon of ,d(ug la~ IC!iTftrti in
the county. "
They said that under_cover agents
working the case purchaJed up to SS
po~ of marijuana from alleged
dealers during the investigation. Several
purchases of other drugs also were
made. polire said .
\Vedne!Jday night's l'Olmdup b y
F\lllerton police ma rked the fourth major
sweep ln Orange County in recent
months. • . .·
Approval Seen on Measure
To Safeguard Nixon Tapes
CooUr Mell Pollce"Clll\Cl\Jcted a major
roundllP ·or ane;eci stteer-1M>1· l!rug
dealers in August; ·San'CJetnfent6~ponoe
and Orange COunty Sheriff's deputies
made a·series· of arrests also in Aagu.tt
and irvtn .. ·poJH% ·~ <S<'llr<S
of ~ during-.a ljlrtng'roandup. . ..
Talks· to Resum'e
In Pipefitters'
Strike Oct. 4
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A Senate
committee Friday is expected to ap-
prove a proposal to prevent former
President Nixon from destroying his
Watergate tapes.
'The joint resolution by S e n a t e
Democratic leader Mike Mansfield would
negate the agreement between Nixon
and the ·White ·House· on the tapes ·and
make them public.
If signed by President Ford, the resolu·
tion would have the full effect of law.
There is strong support In the House
for a similar proposal.
'The Mansfield resolution Is part ~
a growing clamor in Congress for a
fuU report on Nixon's actions in the
Watergate scandal.
1be resolution before the Government
Operations Committee provides that all
the White House doctiments and tapes
compiled during the Nixon years would
become pubUc property. All would be
made public except those protected by
national security.
Under the agreement between Nixon
and the White House, the fonner presi-
dent would get custody or the tapes
in three years, and would be anowed
to destroy them. The agreement provides
that the tapes be destroyed should Nixon
die sooner.
Two o( the most vocal critics are
·members ot~the operati-Ons COmmitlee
-Chait1Illln Sam J. Ervin Jr. (0.N.C.),
and Sen. Jacob K. Jav!ts (1\-N.Y.).
The committee will la ter consider
legislation by Javits making all presiden·
tial docwnents public property,
Two-thirds of Nixon's presidential files
have been shipped to San Clemente.
according to White House chief of staff
Alexander M, Haig.
Haig said that "absolutely normal
procedures" are being folknved , although
a truck ready to carry away aome
of Nixon's papers in the week after
his resignation "was held up temporarily
to make sure no evldentiary material
was being .shipped.
Negotiations are set to resume Oct.
4 In a pipe!itters strike which has
already COit Southern Cal~omianl more ..
than S25 million In delays on a· 11ngle
project. .
More than 2,~ .steamfitters and
p\pefitten in southern Ce,lifofnJa walked
off their jobs July I in a strike to
retain .a 3&-bour work week. A wage
and frin ge benefit inc:rea.se of '2.4.7 an
hour tor ·the first year of a new cantract
has alreadY. been reached by neeotiators.
Pipef)t~ei:1 now earn $8.88 an hour
plus fringe benefits.
Larry Hamlin. Southern California
Edison Company project manager for
the San Onofre nuclear generating 1ta-
Uon, this· morning estimated. tbat work
stopped by the..irike has cost the com-
pruiy 125 mJJU.O. · a COii which wlll
ultimlltely:l>e home-by CUl!omers.
• •
The Microwave OVEN of '(HE FUTURE N~ ~·:. -• " ..
. ' . . . . . .
1975 LITIOH MICROWAVE ~OYEN .
. With VARI COOK CONTRO~ •
Advance features that set the a;moH Mll• .. •w~ter®
Model 416 apart from olher 'MICllOWAYE OYENS
.ttf'.=~~:!.ro-Tl11tr'• . COOK DIFROIT VMl-COOK
• . OVP CONTllOL
,ttlttl f!llO POWl'll cooklNI (IOI' IKIDll c""t1Jnd kl YoUr i;:oetll-
bOOll -"M E•tlllllf N..., Wlfi'lcl of Micro-••~ C~n9 f'°'11 L"· ton"), ..
--~.1 ... i,~ ~ctory Pr!QJMl~.L• _
• 20 l'C:. COOllWAll m ·
i MCllOTIMP THllMOMITR
• MICIO MOWMll HIU • ci:>olt IOoll
90 DAYS CASH ·
WITH AP,llOYID
CREDIT
1815 NEWPORT BLVD.,
Downt11n Costa Mesa -Pane 548·7788
'
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co
of
90 ••
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Qrande Coast · · e EDITIQN
Today's Find
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'
VOL. 67, NO. 262, 3 SDCTIONS, 36 PAGES . •
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"
N.\'. Stocks ·
•
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER, 19, 197-4 N
-·~ Newport Postal Officials Cite Mail
" " 'Storm'
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of IM Dinr ""'' •••ff ..
A Newport Bea~ postal olfictaf ad-
mitted Wednesda)"-ttµlt an "almost in-
calculable0 number of recent service
complaints resulted in a local "state
of emergeney" be~ declared.
As a reSUlt, said Dan Phillips, about
90 J)Ollal cleru were assigned JG-hour
SIX-day work weeks "until further
noUce.'•
P.hlllips, who ls Brea'• postmaster has
been ,. "!85igned .interim duty at '\the
$,,_8_2.S MfUfon
Newport Beach ' Post • O!hce unUI a
replacement for retired postmaster
Payne ~yer·Js named.
0 We've just about dug our way out
and 'plan lo end it Friday," Phillips
said of the1 emergency situation. .
He went mi to say the' postal service
crisis' was toocbed .off by an, unexpected d~luge or mall bi Uii& lhe Newport lleach ·
office over ',the thfte.day• Laboi-;Dcty .
weekend. • ·
"We doo't know· where it all cime
l
ASsets Listed -. --..
~ .._ -~ By Rock.eleller
WASllJNGTON (AP) -Vice
Presideot-detlgnate Nelson A, llockelei-·
ler said loday that his perolnal fortwJe,
ls 162.5 million, and that he 'receives in
1ddillon Income rrom trusts with total
assels or $120 millioo. ,
Sniall Tribe
' l!Ocktreller -those llg\lres In ad-
vance of co-oqgreslionaJ hea..U.gs on hit·
cyin.firmation, saying be wanted to set
the record slrajght because or misleading
reports of bis wealth.
" ... Total asselll owned outright and
in the two trusts amount to ap-
proximalely fi82.5 mlllioo," Rockefeller
said in a stalement dJstributed to
newsmen.
The fonner New York governor, an
I U S he!r to one of America 's great fortunes, wnores S81d .be -the staiem<nt because t; • • or earlier reports that be med a itai..
... -ment with congressional committees
Peace Move' reporting bis net worlh lo be f33 million.
At that time, Rockefeller was said
. to be preparing a revised account or
his l»ldll!gs,
BONNERS FERRY, Idaho (l\PI) -"J-am c.nc.a..i thal incomplele and
A m:au lndlan tribe lln«ed~, . ~-· • ::t'f 'lnC Ula -"'"'1 IDf men! .,._ ..,_ tadlJ, to · penanaJ -a have 'beeft leaked to
ams of aboriginal land IJeiJed . :pean r -.....,, ve an J>P' IO ahead with lls war ove:l.6 llllon the -LJ-1 ha had
ago. • _ . ~11 to.~ .. ~r..:
The 61 members or fbe ' tribe tatlcm bi coniledlGn "!!!' ID1
said they would aet up four ri>ad 'blocks lo the vice presidency, Roclrerel~ llald. , . Rockefeller's confinnaUon bearings and aillecl tolls rrom .!tolJe _.g are to begin Moaday before the Smale
through the area starting at ~idnitht. Rules C.onunittee.. ~
The Kootenais demand that Jlureau .. sh . of Indian Attain set aslde"128000'acres 1 all give~ frank and open state.
of the disputed land for use as a reserva· meot of my_ b&ckground, my career,
lion and give them a cash pe)llnent. my auoclatiOOI, J!IY purposes, my
They said this would compensate !hem f"!ances, and anything else the com-
lor the land taken by !he govenuJH!llt. :.:;ee and the,,Congresa qulle ~ro~ly
Bureau Commission.er Morris t to know, ~efell.er said. To
Thompson sald in a telegram to tribal keep the record stra1ght m the mean·
chairman Amelia Trice Wedneaday' that time, I aMCIUJlCC now that the final
his agency was reviewing Lbe situition and_ complete data I am su~mittlng
and would reply soon to the tribe's show the net wortl;t .of my wtfe ~
demands. . m~.self lo ~ $62.5 nuU1on . . • :
Kootenai 1pokesman Doug whe9ton In addillOll to my ~nional a-.i,
said the wlrt "sounded like the bllieau I receive the Income durmg my·IUetlme
is trying to formulate a plan and get of two t.ru~~ w1tb. total n~t a~sets of
people togelher. What we want will $120 millJOD, Rocke(eller said. "
take congressional action.'' He added He said the· le•~ed reP;>rt~. gave . a
the "war" woukt start on IChedule doubly erroneous unpress1on because
At Boise Idaho Gov Cecil Andrus they did oot Include that lnfonnatioo.
"'.3JT1ed that be w..ild,1end stale troopers llockeleller said the difr.,.,.,. belween
!See JNDIANS; P•IO AZ) (See ROCKY, Pal" AZ)
Tile Jlt lt Cot11mat1dnaent
' The owner of· this car obviously d'*1t't belleve In signs, but this·
, one, In the parking Jot o! a Mt. Clemens, Mich ., church, may carry a
avier penalty than a •~ parking ticket. But then, let be who Is
without a parking 1pace grab the first sp<>t.
, \
' from but suddenly it was Chritbas
all over again," laid Phlllipr.
, The veteran postf,l official m.entioned
that the lnflatioo impact has resulted
·in manpower budgets being "cut -to the
bare bones." ·
C.onsequently, he said, there was no
~anpower reserve standing b_r to thro'v m the breech wben !he Labor Day
mall deluge bit.
A few weeks before the Newport
Beach office was rocked by the mail
storm, operat ional procedures, including
carrier routes, were adjusted, according
Io Phillips,
"That meant our carriers were in
'the process of mastering new routes
and our clerkS were learning new
distribution patterns when we were hit
so hard," Phillips said.
How severe was the crisis that touched
off declaration of the state of emergency?
"See that phone?" Phillips !ISked as
he nodded towards the telephone sitting
on his desk. "It has t\\'0 incoming lines
and they never stopped ringing."
Phillips said he WMlerstood telephone:.
in , three Newport Beai;tt branches also
"were kept busy" during the service
crunch.
"Thanks to the efforts of our people
here we were able to keep pace with
priority mail but out of necessity hnd
to give bulk mailings a back seat," he
added.
Phillips said that in the case or a
postmaster vacancy, such as exists in
Newport Beach, an "officer in chalge"
is assigned for a maximum period of
120 days .
"So far, there's been two of us· assign-
ed here and lhe 120-day period ·has
expired for both of us,'' be said.
Thayer retired in mid-November, 1973.
Phillips said he "can only assunie" a
permanent replacement for him will be
named by the postal service's Selection
Advisory Board in "the very near
future."
'
~ . • • Boos for Greenspan
'
Advis er Says Broker s llul"ti1ig tlie Worst
Paddllq On
Larry Capun0 of Balboa Island
prepce$ .lo Jtave Santa Cruz
on lbe lalelt~ 01 his dowa-ci>ast paddleliOird excursion
from Oregon. to Sin Diego.
Drive to (<)IJect
Old Newspapers
Called Success
. Early Newport Beach efforts lo collect
residents' newspapers for recycling were
hailed as a success by city officials
Wedoe'l'fay night.
Prompting that as.<essment of lhe
newspaper recycling program started
Sept. 9 was the announcement that
"between 40 and 43 tQl}S" were collected
during what, in effect, was the program's
first month of oper~tion. ·
Mayor Pro Tern Milan Dostal said ..
the early results "indicate we are ac-
complishing something worthwhile in im·
proving our environment by conserving
forests."
General Services Director J a c o b
. Mynderse said if newspaper collections
don't drop off the city will earn $12.000
beyond~ "our or pocket'-expenses ·during
the program's frrst year_..
He noted that the city effort will
not be hurt by the recent plunge in
used newspaper prices.
"Our .contract gives us a minimum
base price ol $25 a ton no 'matter
what the market does ," said Mynderse.
Both he and Dostal praised the role
played by Citizens to Recycle Usable_
Dillcat:ds (CRUD), a Newport.COsta
Meaa environmental coalition, a n d
Valerie Murley in getting the program
under waY.
A note of warning was sounded at
the ~ meeting of civic leaden
when a paper company official said
t'1e ooce-a-rnonth pick up program could
have an adverse effect on newspaper
collections.
WASHINGTON . (AP) -The new
chainnan of President Ford's Council
of Economic Advisers suggested tOOay
that inflation was hurting Wall Street
brokers proportionately more than the
nation's poor.
The statement by Ala~ Greenspan
drew jeers and boos from many of
the 180 delegates to a government·
sponsored mini-summit conference on
health, education and welfare inflation.
There were few positive solutions to
inflatfon offered at the conference.
_ Greenspan was asked by trade
unlonists in the" audience whether the
Ford administration wasn't making the
poor suffer "a bit more" to make life
easier for manufacturers and the upper
class.
"Everybody is hurt by inflation,''
Greenspan declared. ·
"If you really want to e~amine who,
percentage-wise, is really liart. most in
tpese illicomes, lt'f Wall SMJet brokers,"
hie , ..... P'fth!Wll their'krr•· isaye gone down e most." ~ · ·
Mall)I ol U..-.lelegal6 joiinpod,to their
feet In lhe Department or Healtll, Educa-
tion and Welfare auditorium, voicing
catcalls, boos, jeers and hisses.
"That's the whole trouble with this
administration -Wall Street brokers "
shouted an unidentified ma'.n in the ba~k
of tbe audience.
At the conclusion of his address,
Greenspan was applauded.
But after the delegates broke up into
smaller sessions, Greenspari's remarks
were criticized again. .
"'This incredjble man who heads the
oouncil equates that some Wall Street
financiers eat less 'steak and" drink less
champagne than poor people who, ha ve
lo. eat dog food and fmally Ille dog," sai<t Joseph E. Lowery of fEe' Southern
Chri,,Uan Leadership Conference.
"When stockbrokers' income drops
from $60,000 to $25,000, they don't go
hungry," added Rhoda Karpatkin oi the
Consumers Union.
Greensp;m painted a dreary picture
Se 1iate Votes
Pay Raises
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The
Senate, by a vote of 64 to 35,
cleared a pay raise for 3.5 million
civilian and military employes to-
day, handiJlg President Ford's
economic policy its first setback
in Congress.
The Seoate refused Ford's re-
quest, backed by a last.minute
plea, to postpone the pay increase
by three months and cut govem-
J!lCnt ~Ing by 1700 million.
As a result, Jhe 5.52 percent
increase will go into effect Oct.
1 lnstead of Jan. 1 as proposed
by Ford.
or the sfate of the nation's economy.
saying that be knows no one "who
looks on lhe outlook over lhe ,next six or
nine .months with any degree of optim·
ism.
"We're all essentially saying that the
outlook for the economy is very dull
and sluggish, going nowhere," he said.
The delegates represented about IO
major national organizations.
Prosecution Witness
Nixon Culled to Testify
In 'Watergate Six' Trial
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Spec i a I
Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski has
subpoenaed former President Nixon as
a prosecution witness in the Watergate
cover-up trial of six former Nixon
~ Jt, Was annoaaCeid. today.~ .
N't1on has already been suhl>o.enaed
by his former No. 2 aide: JO}in D.-
Ehrlicbman, to appear as a defense
witness in lhe trial scheduled to begin
Oct. !.
Jaworsk.i's office conflnned that the
subpoena was issued Wednesday night
and will be served on Nixon at his
San Clemente estate by FBI agents.
"He's been subpoenaed to testify,"
a spokesman for Jaworski said. "We
expect him to testlry."
The Jaworski subpoena calls for Nixon
to appear iI\ U.S. District Judge John
J. Sirica's courtroom Oct. 1, even though
he may not be called to the witness
.stand for several days.
A spokesman for the special prosecutor
said its subpoena will oot conflict with
Ehrlichman's subpoena -indicating the
possibility Nixon might appear both for
the prosecutioo and defense.
There has been speculation as to
\Vhether Nixon will actually comply with
the subpoenas and appear in person
because of reports that he is in poor
health and deeply depressed about his
loss of the presidency.
Julie Nixon Eisenhower said this week
that her father was expected to be
hospitalized soon for a new flareup . of
phlebitis in his left leg. She flew to
San Clemente tOOay to be with him.
Should Nixon's lawyer argue that his
health does not permit him ,to testify,
Sirica could appoint a doctor to 1visit
the former president to determine
\vbether be would stand the rigors of
testifying in a long trial. If Nixon were
found fit to testify but failed to appear,
he could be cited for contempt.
Ehrlichman and five other iormer Nix·
Pool Saving Carp .
PETALUMA (UP!) -A portable
swimming pool was pressed into use
Wednesday to save carp which were
trapped because the flow of the'
fetalwna River has receded .
on aides and asSOclates ·are scheduled
to be tried on charges or coveri ng up
the \Vatergate scandal. The same grand
jury that indicted them also named
Nixon as an unindicted Co.conspirator.
Nlxoo cannot race criminal ch ~-r--1-1,,
for aoy role ii!! 1J1lgbl-,Jlav1 ~ In
the """'"'"P 'boia ... be l\V .....,._ by Presklenl Ford.-Bot lli<"JIOtdoll a1 ..
removed Nixon's option or pleading the
51h Amendment.
Police Nab 65
Drug Suspects
' In, Coast Cities
More than 75 Fullerton police officers
descended on Laguna Beach, Newport
Beach, Fountain Valley and several other
Orange County cities Wednesday night
arresting 65 persons alle'ged to be
narcotics dealers.
Names of those arrested during the
massive roundup were not immediately
available.
or the ~ taken into custody on war·
rants issued Wednesday were 2 l
juveniles, seven females and' 58 males.
Fullerton police said 20 three-man.
teams were dispatched to c i t i e s
throughout the county to make the ar·
. rests. M~re an-ests are expected today
• and later in the Week.
Fullertoo Police Sgt. Bud Lathrop said
the offenses included sales of 8 variety
of drugs. includin heroin, cocaine. the
psychedelic LSD marijuana.
Police said ret m of the 107 warrants,
including 23 grand jury in·
dictments. folio ed a four-month in-
vestigation or rug sales activities in
the county.
They said that undercover agents
wMking the case purchased up to 55
pounds of marijuana from alleged
dealers during the investigation. Severa]
p1,1rchases_ of other drugs also were
' (See Rm>' Page-.Ul
Orange <:out
Peninsula Battle Vowed •
-.,,We!Ulter~
Lid() ~eside1its to Fi glit Propo sed <;an1ie ry -Vi llage
-·I
A group of Lillo ~lnsula naidenla ' m.nt uni!! 1977.
•vowed Wednesday IQ !WJ>OIO ~ • ''6o,r .Biiney say., "most .of us made
ol the proposed tieJaneyfs cannery ln~ts in our trailer sites that .
1 Vlllate on .the peninsula ••evetJ step _-ere "DOt mova le and that we can't
ol the way." 1 , bopi to' r.ecover now."
'llltlr oppositloo to the propoled $U HI (! .. argues that "moro than 35 mUUOn project will lira be heard It • per -...~ of the people :ving here arc
the Newport Bea<h Pllllllil'C Commiss1-on riiM 11>come and cannot afford a
mMtlQrln Cll1 Hall. taal&bt· trailer move. or the purchase of • new
MoS .......... ~ ...... '
oltlCe compld atlllli IN' • = "loMt 'll10dem trailer parlc.! woo '! let
home ownera who wlll lie dlllll"'*' " ......,... 1n If lhelr tr.Om minore
development of the . marlne-rc<reotlon thin a year old,'' according to anolher
ari<ote<I ceo~. Lido Parlt Village r<sldcnt, Lee Slone. Atcordlnc .. one. or the residenls, Rcsldento or the mobile home park
Jim Bttney, most the mobile home ort on a monlh-lo--lh lease basis
dwellers 1 llvinc at Lido Park Village hilt, according Ip Newport Beach en·
..,.~,. by tlle !railer park's inatra1e--vtronmental coonllnelor BUI Foloy, .111e-
menl they would be "sarc" from develo1>-developer has indicstcd he will give • •
them six months to relocate if the
project 'ill approved.
Beyond !he pllghl of those who would
be dislocaled by the development, its
opponents attacked effects on the en-
vironment. • •
"No mailer wbat tbey uy, tbal kind
of a development. on two acres will
cause parking and traffic problems that
can't be 90Jved1" says S.tene.
Both he and Bltney say other peninsula
residents, including apartment and con-....
dominium dwellers, share their concern
over the environmental consequences of
the proposed devclopment.
Opposed to their view Is • city stair
report that says O.laney's Cannery
VIilage !La suitable we or the land
(Stt UDO, P11e A!)
•
Friday will be a carbon copy of
today, according to the weather
servtce. with overnight Jow cktud.s
and fog along the coast clearing
by midday to sunny Skies. Beach
highs near 70 rising to the mid·
80s Inland.
INSm E TODAY
A 79-yoar-<>ld widow aavs she
has had 35 affairs since her h!A.t--
boud died ·23 yoors (l{]O. The
agts of her males 1"CIMped. from
15 to 82. See story, Page A12.
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~A: DAILY PM.OT N
UGlrvine
•
Pr.Qgram
·cutsE ed
Thursday, StpttmMr 1q, 1974
UC Irvine would be omitted from
"dist of: campuses offering post-graduate
instruction under a scheme proposed
,.by UC R<!genl Norton Simon.
in a ne\\'spaper interview, Simon said
post-graduate programs should be
limited to the campuses at Berkeley,
... Davis, Los Angeles and San Diego as
a n10ney-savlng measure. . ~ . UC Irv~ Chancellor Daniel G. Aldr;ch said th'is morning as he was leaving
, for a monthly regent! meeting in Los
~eJ~s that ~e sees no basis for Simon's
• sqggeit\ons, :·1 \lljnk there would be a big savings.
:I'bat.'s.. ~ wa y you save money and
beat inflation,'' Simon said.
ResJlOlldlng to the report, Aldrich said,
"I ·don't -know what the background
for Regent Simon's comment is.
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OCC .F111ad Bait ed
Career · Center
• Faces Problem ' .,
By lllLARY KA YE
Of Ill• Diii., Pli.t Sttff
'lbe year-old career 'Development
Center at Orange Coasl College is ill
jeopardy iollowi{tg' a (leClsloo ·Jlednesd~y
to stop Ill /widing by tlle Oalilom!a
Ooilege Board ot Govemol)I: '
"However, o!!lclalJ •t the local Coast
Community College District said today
they will attempt to ·secure funds needed
to continue operation of the c~ter from
within the dlstrlc\.
.. We will do . everything we can-to
finance the most important aspects of
the center, since it was so successful
the first year," said John Buller, vice
chancellor for vocatlt>nal education.
Educators from the !late ln!onned
Buller that the request should have been
made under another section of the alloca~
tions. The vice chancellor said the
district will probably rcS\lbmit the ~
quest, under the other section, later
this Y~·
Senate Bill
On Consumer
Agency Dies "It's obvious, ttiough, ·that ·without
state funds we: can't have the total
program "'•had before." he aad04: WASlllNGTON (AP) _ The Senate
The dlstrtct reque!led $161,258 from the "disadvantaged student" section of today refused to end a two-month
... As far as UCI is concerned and
ot?er'tampuses moving toward combined
. Ubderghiduate and graduate status, I
have no b3sis for understanding his
suggestion~.
• ' BUSINESS IS BOOMING FOR NEW SOUTH COUNTY MARINE·NAVY RECRUIT ERS
Marine Staff Sgt. J im Singer T;tl ks To J im K erslake, Ron Hernrof San Juan Capistrano
the vocational education allocations· for filibuster that has blocked action on
1974·75. The requtsf; was turned down, a bill creating a federal conJUmer pro--
along with 47 requests from other tection agency, killing Uie bill for this
"He claims that certain economies
take place, I gather, but the master
plan for education in calilornia calls
for the University of callfom!a to be
the graduate degree granting and sole
PhD granting institution in th1 -state·
and the sole agency for a variety of
proresslonal schools."
The .Jrvine 'campus, be said, is
necessary to meet those commitments .
"l have no idea of how he will present
it," Aldrich said. "All I'm aware o{
..9 lbt..<IDlerriew and the issues ranged ·
mtbe<wtdely.
-lhe regent plans to purlUe them an~--will provide a basis for
future-.-a1on, I don 't know.
0 1'11 fia\ieito wait to hear about them
at· the~ meeting," he said.
Simoo, wM has been a regent since
1958, also muested: '
-Convertlh.,a UCLA to year-round
ratio 0 99,. the enormou~ investment
}>!ant and libraries is not
summer months." , ·uon at UC Riverside to
. -ts. and solve the problem
. low~ept . -Add more personnel to the university
treasurer'sJ!lfice to improve the handl·
.!.DI! of· -than 11 billion in in-
lmm
.... ""i ---. • • ;11
:pageAJ
Y·. JI • • •
. • .5 milll net "'"' ~ be ~ ~ $33 ·1n1nlm ·~ :;Je;-~;-other sour~is taf,ety .-..,led !or by the fact that the leaked
~ clld not Include the value ol art
,Md.real 'll!te I have already pledged
: to be givtt .away for public use and
l enjoymebt.1Nter my death ... " He
<Pid Iha! ~ was shown in his original :Jlla!l:I ~Ionl!I committees. .,. .... ~s _,... alone accounts for $20.5
millDI fll..• tibe differences," Rockefeller
aakt ~'Tbe~remaiOOer is accoUnted for
by updlited appralsals ol art and real
estate which were not available at the
ttme fl' mt· inJUal !Ubmissions of data,
pla --subotanUve changes." Hia statement did not ·give details
of tbo50 "cballges.
J. ·-ii';/' From Page Al
iRAID ...
;\nade, poijce said.
: ~ \!ednesday night's roundup by ~ ':ruuerton police marked the fourth major
1 ~ In Orange County in re<ent
~. !mooths. " , Costa Mes& Police conducted a major
· up of alleged street·level dru g
i ers in August ; 5an Clemente police
o ,and Qi;ange County SherUrs deputies
r made a,.iu of arrests also in August
I and Irvine police apprehended '"'"" I ol pmons during a spring roundup.
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OIANMCOAST
DAILY PILOT
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Laguna Hills a Bonanza
For Military Recruiters
By JAN WORTH °' tfl• 0111Y Pllo't s11n
Under the shadow of a huge blue
fean.5 emporium in the Wild \Vest Plaza
in Laguna Hills, a recruiting office for
the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps is
doing a booming business.
The four men who run th e office
can't explain the boom, fully , but since
they · moved from an office in San
Clemente last April , the ~larines have
had live times the number of applicants
and the Navy, ten times.
The Navy has recruited 43 volun·
teers-including three young
women -from the new quarters at
25272 Mcintyre. It's a marked contrast
from their former quota of one enlist·
ment per month.
"If you picture a pie with a six:
at the bottom and a 12 at the top,
we've moved' about a third of the way
toward the 12 from the six," said Chief
Bos'n Mate ChU:ck Evans, head Navy
recruiter.
' 'Ille: n!Cfllllillg area for both the
Mari.net ~ Navy is the sanle-the
"'"'wllng southern ball of Orange Coon-
. ty lbat incl'*5 El Toro, Miasioq· Viejo,
LiguDa Beech, Laguna Niguel, Laguna
lnlls, San Juan Capistrano, Dana Point,
and San Clemente. ,
The Marines have recruited 10 young
men, and expect to have several more
sworn in by the ·end cf the moo th -
including more than a five-fold increase
fl>r tbem.
. Marine GIJll)Jery Sgt. Larry Reid sa id
m general the youths recruifed from the
south county are more affluent, more in-
telligent and more sure of themselves
than the average recruit.
"They don't just wander in from the
street looking for a job,'' Reid said.
"They come in with definite ideas about
"what they want."
HOwever many have preconieived
negaUve notions about what they could
be getting into Evans said, which in
his opin)on are for the most part false.
"They think of the four or six years
involved being a very long time," he
saJd. uwe discuss this with them and
compare it with their past and with
their ruture. Being young, many things
like this look insunnountable.
"They also feel that they'll be locked
in with no fr~ time . We e:tplaln to
them that it's a regular work day.
plus the specialized professional duties
that :you choose.
"Of the kids we've tested here for
Navy schools, 85 to 90 percent of them
pass with flying colors," Evans: said.
Ten percent of those qua1ify for the
elite nliclear and advanced electronics
programs, he said.
Part of the interest, both among the
!'farlne and Navy recruitees. may lie
1n the preponderance of military families
living in the area.
Many of the kids going into the service
from this area are sons and daughters
of military personnel. In many cases,
the youth is sworn into his chosen branch
by his father, Evans said. <-
11We have everything in t h l s
area-brigadier ge neral s, major
generals, commanders, captains-the
\Vhole route of ratings. The only branch
of the service we haven't come Into
corrt~ct with is the Cioast Guard,''
Typically, recruiters for a branch of
the service which ha s a local base
have more trouble than recruiters ror
another branch. The same is true of
the Marines in this area, \vifh opinion
Bicyclist 'Fair'
After Accident
apparently negatively affected by the
nearby El Toro and Camp Pendleton
Marine bases.
"But we've been doing a lot of ad·
vertising and publicity and it seems
to be paying ,off/' Sgt. Reid said.
On the bu11etin board in the 'office
are photos of kids sworn in recently
by both the Navy and Marines.
Many have long hair and mustaches .
They're wearing flannel shirts and look
like tanned surfers, their girlfriends at
their sides.
"The moms and dads around\ here
are extremely interested in their kids,"
Evans observed. "Even if they have
long hair and smoke pot, the parents
still love them."
And renecting on why the recent
recruiting approach may be winning
more response, Evans added, "Above
all else, we don't lie to the kid!. We
don't feed them a bunch o( malarkey."
Talks to Resume
In Pipefitters'
Strike Oct. 4 ·
By DOUGLAS FRIT~CllE
Of flM D•ll't ~lit! Sl•ff
Negotiations are set to resume Ott.
4 in a pipefitters strike which has
already cost Southern: Californians more
than $25 million in delays on a single
project.
More than 2,500 steamfitters and
pipefitters in Southern California walked
ore their jobs July 1 in a strike to
retain a 36-hour work week. A wage
and fringe benefit increasl of $2.47 an
hour for the first year of a new contract
has already been reached by negotiators.
Pipefitters now earn $8.88 an hour
plus fringe benefits.
Larry Ham1in, Southern California
Edison Company project manager for
the San Onotre nuclear generating sta·
tion, this mornlng estimated that work
stopped by the strike bas cost the com·
pany $25 million, a cost wlUch "'·ill
ultimately be borne by customers.
. Pipefitters picket lines went up at
the plant Aug. 5, Hamlin said, and '
other crafts working on the station stoir
ped work.
The picket Jlnes went down this week
he said, and work by other trades ha.S
resumed.
Pipefitters are constructing the water
and cooling systems for the two 1 180
megawatt generators, he said. Constr'-uc.
Uon can continue without pipefitters for
two to three more months.
Hamlin eetimated the cost of delays
at about $9 mUlion a week, or a total
or $25 million.
Members of IJ>Cal 250 or the Steam·
Refrigerator-Air Conditioning and ,
Pipefitters Union in GarClena want to
keep the rec1Uce<1 work week they have
had for the past rour years.
Pi.Pefi tters have repOriedly suggested
alternating 32 and 40 hour work 'veeks.
B~ a management spokesman pr~
tested that "the piJ>efitters are supported
by Qperating engineers, t e a m s t e r s ,
laborers and other workers.
"The problem is what do we do with
those people wben we get to a li-hoor
week!''
"My feeling," Hamlin said. "is that
their working hours should be the srune
as others -40 hours a week."
The reduced week, he said, produces
problems in achedullng work as well
., monile In the o<her trades.
Prom Page 'Al . A Newport Bea·ch bicyclist injured '" a \Vednesdiy afternoon traffic accident
In Costa Mesa was rtported in fair ·~""1dlU and -~gressing well !Oday at esa Memorial Hosp!1at LIOO .1 ••
DaVid Lewis Klein, 21 , of 912 carnation
Ave., colJided . with a car driven by
• 'Jiiiliih Ellsworth Lally, 35, of 2036 Port
Ram$gate Place, Newport Beach while bi~U.ng down M>Jn Slrett near the
interfeetion of SunfJower Avenue.
Klein wflered a bn>kco lea and deep
llcial laceraUOIUI, hoGPital aid<:s said.
• • • and thal the planned community dcvelot>'
ment complle:s With the land use element
or tho city'• general plan. .
The ~rr report coocedca thot the
proje<t will attract additional trnlflc
but should not overburden surrounding
, wface 11treets.
From Page A l
INDIANS •.•
to arrest anyone attempting to set up
a roadblock.
Wheaton said· the governor told bim
it was his duty to enforce the state's
laws "regardless of the consequences."
But the tribe spokesman said the
governor's decl$ion would ngt .deter .the
Indians.
Wheaton said the situation could
become a repeat of the trouble at Wotmd·
ed Knee, S.D., ·wht°re Indians were locked
in combat with the federal government.
The Kootenai said their tribe did
receive. some cub payment for the land
several years ago but this was not
enough. They said that despite the
reservation and -cash payments they
wanted fishing and bunting rights.
ThomP'QD'~ wire said: "At the request
or tbe Ptesident, the bureau i1 in the
process of preparing a reply to the
Sept. 11, 1974, letter to the president
of the Unit~ States. We are currently
reviewing the material you have sub-
milted and wilJ respoll\I pn>mptly."
The cximmissioner also said tbe Justice
Department has been asked to send
a representative to meetingS-over ' the
dispute. ·
Wbeaton said at the heart of the
issue was the poverty of the Kootenais
themselves. •
districts at Wednesday 's Board of session o( Congress.
Governor's bi-monthly meeting at the Airporter Inn in Irvine'. The 64-34 vote to end the de~te and
The money was to be used to continue bring the measure to a rtna1 vote fell
operating the Costa Mesi! college's tv•o short of the required two-thirds.
center, which assists students in iden-Sen. Sam J. Ervin (D-N.C.}, the
~uryillg-air<tporsaln~cholcesc·~-~==~•• · "The board appar,ently wanted' to fund eacter ~ lhli opposlUon, 181<1-the-bill-
new program$ this year, not existing "is repugnant to the free enterprise
ones," Buller said. system" and would create an agency
"Last year, they were excited about with 'unJiritlted authority ''to throw
career centers. This year, they're D<ft," monkey wrenches into government
he added. maci.1..-. •. " • Buller and: other district officials will ~~., • prepare a proposal for .. Iocal f1n1dlng Spo11!10rs said.the bill would pass.easily
Of the centei' .to prdent ~-district if Ute filibusier cotild be en&ed.
tnlStees, who are ·et~• .to make The agency to be created by the
a clecision·lfdore Nov. 1,: -• · • bill woul~ ba"' authority to ropresent ~ 'lbe center is open ~.;t>OYt. ~!Dge consumen before any federal court or Coast College students ,in<F;J!O(~_{ial students. It offen careet: gujdf.nce federal agency where a consumer issue
material!, vocational coumelin&, work is at stake. experience, coordinationr /in31lciaJ. aid Three ear.lier attempt! to close orr
Officers and other help for students seek· the debate failed by 10. 7 and 4 votes .
{ng careers. Traditionally, only three auempts to ~ "We'll try not to cut baCk major break a filibuster are allowed . A fourth ~ces of the ~er. PerhiP, we errort bad been tried only twice in
can figure out a way to· do. tbi'pgs the past. T11e Senate leadership had
·mare efficiently and .less costly~ .Also, said that if the latest ·attempt failed we may find we can only 8etR9 ,()CC the measure \\'Ould be dead for thiS
students, not potential studenta,":'BUller year. · "'kl. · ~--: : ·: Consumer advocate Ralph Nader told
·A eecond•request by the dielricti;rrom a news conference Wednesday thal the
.Golden west ·College ,ii!. 'Jiunt~on key swiol voles belonge<j to Seo& Rus,.n
Beech, !or 16,750, wu·al9o \urned do!(n. LongLa ) Al(~.), J. Bennett Johnston . (0. ·..:The request Involved train Ip g · • an Bible (J>.Nev.) • .Howard H.
·-kshopa !or blgb scbcol counaelors Baker (l!:Tean.). George. I). AWn (R·
'fo aaslst '""1ors in the transition from Vt.), and Ted StevenJ (l\·Alaska). all
high school to Golden West's vocaUonal ol whom 9i>Jl0iled the earlier deba!HD·
progr1D15. ding llja.
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Kennedy· Can.did Hurricane Rips
Into Honduras;
Toll Over 200 Would Discuss Personal Traged y
from Wire Services
. HOBART, Ind. -Sen. Edward M. Kennedy says that if he de-
cides to run for presi dent he will answer any questions raised about
Chappaquiddick.
The Massachusetts Democrat, here Wednesday for a $100.a·
plate. Democratic fund-raising dinner, said he would "respond to questio~s and do the best I could" on the controversy surrqunding
the accident. ·
Mary Jo Kopechne drowned when a car driven by Kennedy
plunged olf a bridge into deep water off Chappaquiddick Island in
July 1969.
He said, "I have indicated it was a very deep personal tragedy.
I have accepted full responsibility for it and full regret for the. in·
cident. I would respond to any questions." .
Demonstrators who aald · they opposed a possible presidential
bid fiy Ken nedy, marched outside when he appeared at a $10.0·a·plate
fund·raismg dinner !or Lake County Democratic candidates.
They alao sang "My Country 'Tis of Thee.'! while Kennedy
spoke. "Nobody Drowned in Watergate," one of the •igns carried by
the demonstrators said.
TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (UPI) -
Hurricane Fifi stnick the northem coo!!
of Honduras today with 1SO..mlle winds,
storm Udes and torrential rains which
ten a trail of death and destruction
in the nation's v.-orst storm in a century.
Honduran authorlties a&JJ the death
toll ls eipectod to exceed 200, and that
in the region around the city of La
Ceilia alone, 100 bodles have beec
counted. They estimated 100 other
perllODI died eJ.sewbere along the coast.
Apparently . most of. U.e dtatha were
cau.wd by drowning.
After smalhlng through Hondura& Fili tu~ed its full force t&wards the' tiny
canbbean country of Belize and v.·as
expected to hit there thfs afternoon.
Most·af ·the damage in Honduras v.1as
from flooding, with property and crop
damage IDilli Into the. hunctredc of tho~• ,°rdollars. •
1
The Microwave OVEN of THE FUTURE NoW at · ' . . •
1975 LITIOH MICROWAVE OVEN
With VARI COOk -COHTROL ·
AdYance features that Ht the LITTON ........... fer®
Model 416 apart frolft other MICROWA YE 'OYENS
St•led·ln c1r1mle ,11,11
EJ:tr•·lltOt 11111r1or-
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• ... CIOTIMP THllMOMnml
• MICIO •OWi.iii MIU.
•COOICIOOK
90DAYSCASH
WITH APPROV I D-CREDIT
1815 NEWPOiT BLVD~ •• Dtlwntown Costa Mesa -Phone 548-7788
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Orange (;~!!t T oday's Final
N.Y .. Stocks·
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VOL. 67, NO. 262: 3 SBCTIONS. 36 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY, <:::ALIFORNIA THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER, 19, 1974 c TEN CENTS •
-
$182 Million-That's, What Worth -
WASHINGTON (AP) VI c e
President-designate Nelson A. Rockefel-
ler saki t.oday that bis personal .fortune
is $62.5 mjllion, and that be receives in
addiUon income from trusts with total
assets of 1120 million.
Rockefeller Issued thos~ flgur~ in ad·
vance 1of congressional hearings on his
confin,nation, saying he wanted to set
the record straight because of misleading
reports of his wealth. ,
" •.• Total assets owned outright and ·
~ the ' two trusts amount to ap-
Searelters Failed
pro:dmately 1132.S million," Rockefeller
said in ·a statement distributed to
newsmen~ The former N~W. Yor,k governor, an
heir to ooe of A..ui«ica's great fortunes ,
' c ' • said bit lAlied the statement 'because
of earlier' repoits' ,that he · filed a state-
ment' wlt'h cOngr'essional committees
reporting his net Worth to be P3 million.
At that time, Rockefeller was' said
to · be pree_aring' a revised account' of
his holdi!lgs.
. usp~ct-Seize·d~
• ·Riding ID Taxi
Police from five cities used a
helicopter and police clogs In a fruitless
90-minutc starch for"an anned robbery
suspect In Fountain Valley early today,
Sniall Tribe
Ignores ·u.s ;
Peace Move
then captw'ed him . two boun later as
be tried to nee In a taxi.
-George Waldn>n Pennell, )r., 211, of
Santr •Anao was ,turned over to COSla
Mesa police ,after be was arrested by
Fountain· Valley Officers at 5 a.In. today.
He was wanted in connection with
the 12 :40 a.m. holdup oI a Costa Mesa
gas station at -Harbor Blvd., police
reported.
In addition, police say he is suspected
of robbing a Westminster man at gun-
point, taking hia'car, and wallet at 12:14
a.m.
The Westminstel" robbery occurred,, at
the home ol Jolm Vllbum ·at ,135112
Portsmoolh ~. pollce reported. . The 8Ul(iect lbeo allegedly wenl to
111 am ·coDcern"1 that incomplete and
therefore misleading data about m~
personal assets tiave been leaked to
the press before I have had iln OJr
portunitY to rnak& an orderly pr.esen--
taUon in connection with my nomination
to the vice presidency," Rockefeller·said. Rock~eller's confi.fmaUon pearings
are to begin Monday before the Senate
Rules committee. ...
"I shall give a frank and open state--
meirt of my background, my career,
my associations, my purposes, my
finances, and anything else the com-
mittee and the Congress quite properly
want to know," Rockefeller said. "To
kee p the record straight in the mean-
time, l announce now that the final
an d complete data l am submitting
show, the net worth or my wife and
myself to be $62.5 million ...
"In addition to my personal assets,
l receive the Income during my Ufethne
or two .trusts with total net assets or
$120 million," Roc kefeller said.
He said the le~ked reports "gave a
doubly erroneous impression·· because
they did not include that information.
Rockefeller said the difference between
the $62.S million net worth fi gu re he
repo rted and the $33 million reported
earlier by other sources "is largely
aC<.'Ounted for by the fact that the leaked
figure did not include the~ value of art.
and real estate I have already pledged,
to be given away for public use and
enjoyment after my death •.. " He
said that fact was shown in rus original
report to congressional committees.
"This factor alone accounts ror $'l0.S
million of Jhe differences," Rockefeller
said. "The remainder is accounted for
by updated appraisals ot ~rt and real
estate which were not available at the
time of my initial submissions of data,
plus some minor substantive ~hanges. ''. ~Iis statement dld not give details
of th~se changes.
Boos for Greenspan
_4 dviser Sqys B rokers Ilu.1·ti1ig the Wor st
WAS!IlNGTON (AP) -The ·new
chainnan of President Ford's COuncil
or Economic' Advisers suggested today
that inflation was hurting Wall Street
brokers proportionately more than the
nation's poor.
The statement by Alan Greenspan
drew jeers and boos ·from· many of
the 180 delegates to a government-
sponsored mini-summit conference on
health, education and welfare inflation.
There were few positive solutions to .
Inflation offered at the conference.
Greenspan was asked by trade
unionists in the audience whether the
Ford administration wasn 't making the
poor suffer "a bit more" to make life
easier for manufacturers and .the upper
class. ·
"Everybody is hurt by inflation,"
Greenspan declared.
C:OOsumers Union.
Greenspan painted a dreary picture
of the state of the nation's economy,
saying that he knows no one "who
looks on the ou\look over the next six or
nine months with any degree o[ optim·
ism. "We're an essentiaUy saying that the • ....
outlook for the economy is very dull
and sluggish, going nowhere," he said.
The delegates represented about to
major national organizations.
Proseetitiota ll'itness
Nixon Called to Te~tify
In 'Watergate Six' Trial -
WASHINGTON (UPI) -spe c i a I for any role he mlght have had In
Watergate prosecutor Leon Jaworski has the cov4:r-up becaU.9e he was pardoned . by President Ford. But the pardon elm BONNERS )'ERRY, lclgbo (UPI) -
A mall Indian tribe ilJIOl'<d a govm>-
ment peace ....... -1 ...... lo go ahead wltb its war ....,. I.I mtnion
acres of aboriginal land ~ Ill _..
ago.
~~r~:..~:-....... MoliK . station holdup In ~Costa
'"Ii you really want to examip~ wh!:>, "'°""~':;'ii .really.c ~'tmosf ii} t.
these incomes, it's Wall Street brokers,"
he. said. "I mean their-tncarnes have gone down tbe 'molt... .
sub~ed former President ~~~on as removed Nixon's option of plea!linl the
a ~on witness In the Watmate r.::;.1> ~--
cover-up trial of six former Ni%00 l • J ~ .~ \~' ··~
The 67 members of the Koota>al lribe
&aid they would set up four road blocks
and coli.ct tollo from ~'1ose passing
through the area starting at mldnlghl
1be Kootenais demand that Bureiu
of Indian Affairs set aside 12S,Ollll acm
of the disputed land for use as a reatrva·
lion and a:ive them a cash payment.
They lftid this would compensate. them
for the laud taken by the government.
Bureau Commissioner Morris
Thompocin said In a telegram to tribal
Chairman Amelia Trice Wednetday that
bis agency was reviewing the aituatioo
and would · reply soon to the tribe's
demands.
Kootenai •pokemian poug Wheaton
said the wire "90Unded like the bureau
is trying to formulate a plan and get
~pie together. What we want trill
take congressional actlon." He added
the "war" would start on schedule.
At Boise, Idaho, Gov. Cecil Andrus
warned that he would send state troopers
(See JNDIANS, Page AJ)
In lliO ' ·liJun "~ ... -· 'Eitrt/Oll. man -red llatlm al "Harbor
Boulevard and Gisler Avenue and
eteaped with Ill& be!ore being captured
later by poUce. .
Fountain Valley poUce spotted Pennell
In the ltolen car as he allegedly waa
fleeing the Colla Mesa robbery and
wu speeding, across wariier Avenue
In Fowttaln Valley.
Pennell:lumed off bis ear lights, police
repor;.d, bul olfic:en were able to trac:k
him by the occasional flash of bis brake
ligbls.
Pennell l1lnled Into a housing Ira!'!
at Newbope Street and Warner, police
reported, than abandoned the car on
Tin Mountain Drive.
Officei:s aided by the Costa Mesa police
bellcopler, and poUce clogs f r o m
Westminster· and Huntington Beach, as
well as officers from Santa Ana and
Costa Mesa, searched the area for 90
ml1111tes then abandoned their efforts.
Police notified all·night markets in
(See CAPl'URE, Page AJ)
The owner of lhls car obvlou~y doe•n't bell~ye in signs, but this
one In the parking lot ol a M't. Clemens, Mlcli, churcll, may carry a hea~ier penalty than a $5 parking Uciet. But then, let he who Is
without a parking space grab the first spot.
~
WHO WILL REPLACE HER?
Misty LH, Miss Costa Mesa
More Candidates
For Queen Title
Sough tjn Mesa
The Costa Mesa Chamber of Com-
merce wants to ihcrease the-number or
women seeking the title of .Miss COsta
Mesa during the upcoming Fiesta de
COSta A1esa.
A contestant for the-title must be
between the ages of 17 and 22, a resident
of Costa Mesa, single and never married,
be willing to serve as queen for one
year and register by Sept. 30.
Application forms are available at the
chambe< office, 583 W. 19th St.
According to the chamber's Cliff
Wesdorf, only three contestants have
signed up so far. The chamber would
like to have 15 to 20 contestants, said
maoagr Nick Ziener.
The winner of the contest will be
selected Oct. 13 during the fiesta. She
will receive $1;000 in prizes.
Contestants will be judged on voice
and 1 personality, gracefulness,· facial
beauty, posture, make up and com-
plexion, and figure. " '·
Many of the delegates jumped to their
feet in the Department of Health, Educa-
tion and Welfare auditorium, voicing
catcalls, boos, jeers and hisses.
"That's the whole trouble' with this
adminislration -Wall Street brokers,''
shouted an unidentified man in the back
of the audience.
At the conclusion of his address,
Greenspan was applauded .
B\lt after the delegates broke up into
smaller sessions, Greenspan's remarks
were criticized again.
"This incredible man who heads the
council equates that some Wall Street
financiers eat less steak and. drink less
champagne than poor people who have
to eat clog food and finally the dog,"
said Joseph E. Lowery of the Southern
Christian Leadership Conference.
"When stockbrokers' income drops
from $60,000 to $25,000, they don't go
hungry," added Rhoda Karpatkin of the
Se1tate Vote s
Pa y Raises
WASHINGTON !UPI) -The
Senate, by a vote of 64 te? 35,
cleared a pay raise for 3.5 million
civilian and military employes to-
day , banding Prtsident Ford's
economic policy its first setback
in Congress.
The Senate refused Ford's re-
guest, backed by a last-minUte
Plea, to postpone the pay increa~
by three months and. cut govern·
ment spending by $700 million.
As a result, the 5.52 percent
increase will go into effect Oct.
1 instead of Jan. 1 as proposed
by Ford .
-associates, Jt was announced today. -~ •
Nixon has already been subpoenaed Doctor Clairrts
by his former No. 2 aide, John D.
Ehrlichm.an, to appear as a defense Murder Suspect
witness 1n the trial scheduled to .begin Oct. t. . .
Jawprsld's office confirmed that the
· subpoeia was issued Wednesday riight
and will be served on Nixon at his
San Clemente estate by FBl agents.
"He's been subpoenaed to testify,"
a spokesman for Jaworski said: "We
expect him to testify."
The Jaworski subpoena calls for NLJ:on
to appear in U.S. District Judge John
J. Sirica's courtroom Oct. I, even though
he may not be called to the witness
stand for several days.
A spokesman for the special prosecutor
said its subpoena will not conflict with
Ehrlichman's subpoena -indicating the
possibility Nixon might appear both for
the prosecution and defense.
There has been speculation as to
whether Nixon will actually, com ply with
the subpoenas and appear in person
because of reports that he is in poor
health and deeply depressed about his
loss of the presidency.
Julie Nixon EiS(jnhower said this week
that her father was expected to be
hospitalized soon for a new flareup or
phlebitis in his left leg. She flew to
San Clemente today to be with him .
Should Nixon's lawyer argue U~t hls
health does not permit him to testify,
Sirica could appoint a doctor to visit
the former president to determine"
whether he would stand the rigors of
testifying in a long trial. If Nixon were
found fit to testify but failed to appear,
he could be cited for contempt.
Ehrllchman and five pther lormer Nix-
on aides and associates are scheduled
to be tried on charges of covering up
the Watergate sca ndal. The same grand
jury that indicted them also named
Nixon as an un lndicted co-conspirator ..
Nixon cannot face criminal ch a r g es
Tried Suicide
By TOM BARLEX
Of tlte DlllY f'l•r SI•"
A psychiatrist called by lhe defense,
testified today that Helen JeaMlne
J\fajr was mentally incapable of forming
an intent to kill when she shot her
23-year-Old boarder in her ~a Mesa
home last June 11 .
Dr. Hennan Romm testified as the
triaJ of Mrs. P..tay, 45, of 138.1 Shannon •
Lane, moved into its final hours U)at I he has diagnosed her as suicidal and
that murder is completely remote from .
her type of character.
· Mrs. May is being tried for murder
in Orange County Superior Cwrt follow·
ing the shooting of jazz drummer Venice
Hernando Willis.
Defense attDmey Donald McCartin has
withdrawn rus plea of innocent by reason
of insanity and asked Judge Walter
E. Smith!"irule in the non-jury trial'
that Mrs. ay was of "diminished
capacity" when she 'killed her
boarder. '
· Dr. Romm today agreed that Mrs,
h-1ay was sane when she got a .22-caliber
pistol from her bedroom , walked to
the dining room and shot Willis through
the head.
She broke down several times on the
Vt'itness stand during heT" testimony but
repeatedly told 1McCartin and prosecutor
Pat Brian that she did not intend to
fire the weapon. ·
"I couldn't believe it \vent o{f," she ·
sobbed. "I knelt do"" and put my
(See SHoorING, Page AJI
Orange Coast
Be~ru~1ing Offi~e Boo~~ing Weatlle r
Lagun,a Hi lls N_avy, Ma rine Corp s 0.ffi<;~ Bu,sy
' By JAN WORTll we've moved about a third of the way
°'IM o.ur "'"' ''•" toward the 12 from the six," said Chief
Under the shadow or a huge blue . Bos'n Mate Chuck Evans, head Navy
jeans emporium in the Wild West Plaza recruiter:
in Laguna Hills a recruiting office for The · recruiting area for both the
the U.S. Navy ' and ~1arine Corps is Marines and Navy is the same-the
doing a booming business. sprawling southern ball of Orange Cooir
Tha four men who run the ofrice ty that includes El Toro, •f\.tjssion Viejo,
can't explain too boom fully, but since Lagullll Beach, Legun• NI'l!\IOI, 'Laguna
they moved from an office In SM ·Hllls, Siln ~uan CllpiSlr'!""1 D'\"a Poln!,
Clemente last April,, t&.'ll!arines lulve1 llld ~ Clcm<nt&. , , • ••
hid flv.'l. times tlle'll\llllber· of applfcanlf 'rbe,Mar!nes hava recrul\f!d 10 young
and tliiNavy, Im . , •menr and ex~ to cljave-.~eraWllOre
Tbc Navy hal recniltcd 13 volun-, .. ,,. In ~y tbt emf ((, ~ monl~ -
t • e "~ t n ol •1' l n g !hr~ young lncl~g mor<. than a QVe-lolC! Increase
women _ from 1111 oeW quarters at tor thtm. ~ . . / 1$172 Mcintyre. 11'1 1 ~cd contrast Mailn Gunnery Sgl Llrr1 Reid said
from their fonnff .,.ia ol one trtllsl· In general tlio yoUihi r«:nllld f~th!o
menl per month. ' • .,.;fu.i!Ount)'~ -"'1l"'111t, "IP"' 11>-
"lf you picdn-• pie ~ ""'. 11111•• ,,,... ....., al ~·
at the bottom ~ a It ff U# '-'*"81
•) -
"They don't just wander in from the
street looking for a job," Reid said.
"They come In with definite ideas about
what they want.'' .
Ho"·ever many have preconle1ved
negative notions about what they could
be getting into E;yan! laid. which in
his opinion are fQV'lhe most part _false.
· "'They thlnk 4'f the four or SJX years
Involved bcPlt e very long time," he
said. "We discuss this with them a~d compar~,. it w\(h their past and with
their fU(ure. Being yoimg, many thlngs
like this look insurmountable .
"'They ,,,. feel that they'll be locked
in with no free time. We explain to
them that It's a regular )"O!~ day.
plus Ibo spe<lallzcd profes&IOhal duties
!hat you choose.
•·Of the kids \\"-e've tested he.re for
(See RECRUIT. Page AJ)
•
Friday will be a carbon copy of
today, according to the "-eather
service, with overnight lo\v clouds
and fog along the coast clearing
by midday to swmy skies. Bea~h
highs near 70 ri sing to the lllld-
80s inland.
INSIDE TODAY
A 19-year-old Widow .1a11s she
.l1as had 35 affair• 1ince-her hus~
band died 23 years ago. The
ages of her mates ranged fro1rr
15 to 82. S« story, Page Al2,
lo.II~ Ct
l!nnt1 IMllllU 14
L. M. IGYcl AP
C•llforlll1 Af! t• Cltinlfl~ Cf.14
CM1k1 C' c ....... n1 '' DM!tl NtllUI All
l!cllttrltl f'tn M ,...,.ti""""' ct ,,Nflft ... ,
Hy 0........ At
".,...... 11
..
Ulltrml1iltl CJ Mn L.11W1trt II
Mtvlt'l CS
M11t111I ,mU •• H........,IN ... l.t
Ort111M ,c:-ty All ....... ,, ...
Sfllt'h Cl.J
St.ck M........ 16·1
TtMYI.. <• "'"''*' <• WNflrlW M _,. ......
'
,
' .
•
r
•
IA DAILY PILOT c ThursdQ', Srpttmber 19, 1974
, State Funds·
•
CutatOCC
Career U11it
Kennedy ~anilif:l
Would Discuss Perso~ Tragedy
From Wirt Servicll ' ..
HOBART, Ind. -Sen. Edward 14. ~ lafl ljllt i! ~· d•
cldes to run for prealdent he will alll\l'tr 1"11 lllfllliW raised tbo4t
Chappaquiddick. 'i' • ,
'Fifi' Hits
· 200 Killed · ·
The Massachusetts Democrat, here WICID••Y for a llOO.• '
By HILARY KAVE' plate Democratic fund-raising dinner, said ll'e would "'respond fo TEGl!CIGALPA, Hondurai (UPI) :-
ot iM a.,.., ,11,1 si•o questions and do the best 1 could" on the controversy surrounding Hurricane Flft stnict the noWbe."11 ~
The year-old Career Development the accident. , , or Honduras today with l»mlle winds,
-lttary Jo Kopechne drowned wheti ,a <:a:r. driven J:>y Kenntt~ storm Udes and torrential rains · which
Cenler •I Orange Coast College is in plunged off a bridge inlo deep water off Chappaquiddick Island ID left a trall of dealh and destruction
jeopardy following a decision Wednesday July 1969. . . . . . in the nation's worst storm in a century .•
la stop its funding by lhe california He said, "I have Indicated, l.t was a vefy deep,pe~6pal_ lrlJ~Y· Honduran authorities sail the death
Cotleg• Board of Governors. I have accepted full responsi b1lily lo~ It and full regret loi' llie Jl!• Jail is expected la exceed 200, and lhat
t;owevft"',. officials at the local Coast cident. I would respond to any questions/• ·\ . . in the region around the. city of La
Community College District said today Demonstrators who said they opposed a possible freSidl!lUal C.eiba alone, 100 bodies have been
l bid by Kennedy, marched outside whelf he appeared at a 100-a·plate counted. They esUmaled 100 other they will at empt to secure funds needed died I he al b st. fund-raising dinner for Lake County .Democratic. capdidates!. persons e sew re ong t e coa to contin,ue operation of the center from They also· sang "My Country 1Tis of Thee," while Kennedy Apparently· moat of. the dtaths were
1'itla the-dlslrict. · spoke. "Nobody Drowned in Watergate," one of the signs carried by caused by drowning.
' 11We · will do everything we can to the demonstrators said. After smashing through Honduras, Fifi
finanoe the most important aspects of turned its full force toward!I the tiny
the center, since it was so suctessful Csribbtan country of Belize and was
the first year," said John Buller, vice \ expected to hit there this afternoon.
chancellor for vocational education. s M Most of the damage in Honduras was
"It's obvious. though. that . wilhoul Ap· proval een on easure fn>m flooding. wilh pnl!>eri)" and crop state . funds we can't have the total damage goine· into the · hundred:. of Jfrograin we had before,'' he added. thousands of dollari.
The 4l!trlct requested $104,258 from Fifi devastated banana planfations,
the l
4disa4vantaged !tudent" section of s f d N T rice fields, bridges and hJghways, mowed
•he vocaliOjla] educalton allocations for To a egua~ 1• xon· ·.· apes down houses. and building• of poor con· 1974-76. ·. 'J'.be ·request was turned down, ..=. structlon which ca.ild not withstand the
along with 47 requests from other flooding and the hurricane winds.
districts al \\l'ednesday's Board or Among cities reporting damage Vt'tre
~vemor's bi-monthly meeting at the WASHINGTON (UPI) -A Senate The .resolution before the Government San Pedro ~ula, La Ceiba, Tela, Puerto
U'I~ Padclllng On
Larry Capune of Balboa Island
prepares to leave San\a Cruz
on the !4teit leg 91 his do~n· coast Pf,ddleboard excursion
from Oregon to San Diego.
From .. ag~ AI
RECRUIT ...
Airporter 1nn In lrvlae. ltt Frida Is ted t Operations Commiltee ~ that all Cortes, Trujillo, Puerto Castilla, GW1ja.ca The money was -tQ ~~ la continue comm ee y expec o al" the White Houae document& and ta and the Bay Island (Illas Bahia) off Navy schools, 85 to 90 percent of lhem
operating the Costa Mes8 COllege•s -prove-a--propMal to prevent former--compllOO dW'fi1g'thTNixon ean~-the-coalt.-~.......___._. _ pass with flying colors," Evans said.
c.en!er, which a~ists students . in iden-President Nixon from destroying his become public property. ~ would be Honduran government authorities Ten pe~centOf thOse q\lflify for the
tifying and pursumg career cbcuces. Watergate tapes. made public except those protected by calculated ,that me-third of the country elite nuclfar and advanced electronics
. uThe board app~ently wanted to f~nd The joint resolution by sen 8 t e national security. -compnslng the nation's richest
new .~rograms .this year' not existing · Democratic leader Mike Mansfield would Under the agreement between Nixon agricultural zone -w,as affected by on~s. Buller said. . negate the agreement bet'A--een Nixon and the White House the former presi-the storm, although Fifi s rains covered ··Last YeJr they were excit~ a~~ dent would get cusiooy of the tapes virtually the entire country.
_ /.-weer c~ers. nus year, they re not, and the White House on the tapes and in three years, and would be allowed Emergency relief committees were
t.Jdd~ . . . . . make them public. to destroy them . The agreement provides rushing aid to af(~ areu.
:-. Bulleri ad other district off1c1als will If signed by President Ford, the resolu-that the tapes be destroyed should Nixon At Puerto 0n1es Honduras' ooly oil
Pl P l"'VA AR>posal for local fWldlng 11 ould ha tb full effect f I di ·-• of tW..-..er to pre,,ent to district on w ve e o aw. e ........ ner. re.finery was reported 19olated by flood lnllteet',~ are e~ to make There is strong support in the House Two of the most vocal crltlcs. are water!.
a decisiorfbt~re Nov. 1. . for a similar proposal. members or the operat~on.s committee Weathermen said that on its present
'lbe center· ls open to both Orange The Mansfield resolution is part of -Chairman Sam J . Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.), course · Fifi's winds wm sweep inland ~~?>Ueg1 ~
11
students and polential a growing clamor In Congress for a ·~~·~=It~ J~ts l~:·Y ~der over tile -bermnooc tip of Belize, juat BWUICl~l.:I'. t • o . ers career guidance full report on Nixon's actions in the legislaUon by Javits making all Presiden-south of Punta Gorda, a city of 7,000
, ter; Is l'pC8ti~a1 counseling: wo~k Watergate scandal. tial documents public property. persons. nie Beli2e government ordered ~atlon, financial aid 'J\vi>lhlrds of Nl•on's pmidentlal files hurricane precautions. lltroughout the
help for students seek-Frona Page Al have been shipped to San Clemente country, especially in the aouthem
rdi t Whil H cblef of staff, coastal sector. acco ng o . e ouse Dr. Neil Frank, ctdef of the National
-Fountain Valley vs.
St Paul, r:xx; Stadium, 8 p.m.
OCX LECTURE ..:... "lnvesbnents,"
Edw~ McNary lecturer, LilUe Thfater,
Q!M·Wgh>School, 7:30 p.m.
--t1CJ LECl'URE -"Television and
the World of Sports," Science Lecture
Hall, 7:30 p.m.
"GODSPELL" -South Coast
Repertory Theater, through Sun. 8 p.m.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 20
FOOTBALL-Costa Mesa vs. FoothJIJ, Pee Stadium, 8...,,:p.m. Estancia vs.
Marina at Westmi!ister, 8 p.m. Newport
flarbor vs. Fullerton, Davidson Field,
8 p.m.
OCC LECTURES -"Wonderful World
SHOOTING •..
hands under Verllce's head and said
please don't be hurt, please be all righl."
Mrs. May testified lhat she then made
two attempts to take her own life with
the same weopon but lhat the pislol
went off before obe was ready la aim
ii Oil bOth OCCOliODs.
· The weeping widow testified Iha! she
ly brought the -· from the -to ....,,. W'lllJI' iller her
-bad amounced ~ hilirillilil ci raping her. .
Dr. Romm testified today that he
accepts Mrs. May's statement that she
had made four unwccessful N.cide at-
tempts.in recent years.
He said a big factor in that frame
of mind was the death of ber 'bulband
la!I spring.
Romm conceded ln.at Gusta Mesa Fire
Captain· Lawrence May had been
separated from his wife for nearly two
years when he died of leukemia. But
the psychiatrist noted that lbere bad
been other separations in the 23-year
marriage wtth eventual reconciliations.
The knowledge lhat she coold oo longer
tum to her husband at all was certainly
responsible for much of her deep
depressioo, Romm teatified.
He said bis examination reveaJed that
Mrs. May coold not ha,. borne any
malice towards Willis or anyone at the
time of the killing despite the fact
that her boarder cheated her, repeatedly
abused her and spanked her across his
kn<e with his bell.
~Mrs. May broke (town in court late
Wednesday as she told prosecutor Brian:
"Ven.ice was' like a son to me. I tried
la help him all I coold."
Alexander M. Haig. H . Cent . '"·ml said Fill Haig said that • .. absolutely normal · urr1cam;, er in -•
procedures" are being followed altbou•h was lhe worst hurrtcane to affect the
a truck ready to carry-aWay--som.€-nOrth.s.9l.S!.9J.~uru this century."
of Nixon's papen in the week after
his resignatioo "was be.Id up temporarily
to make sure no evidenliary material
was helng shipped.
"1bere was nothing spooky about it,"
Haig said.
In a clarl!ieallon later, be ref>orled
that the transfer bad beeo stopped at
the req11<st ci J. 1)ed Buzblnlt, tme
of N1>on's W•lergate lawyers, until It
could be determined that none of the
papers was needed for pending legal
SI.tits.
Haig denied reports that 11bum hags"
and paper shredders were brotlght In
to dlspo.oe of some of the docwnents.
From Pflfle Al
INDIANS .•.
to arrest anyone attempting lo set up
a roadblock.
Wheaton said the governor told him
it was hi!: duty to enforee the state's
Jaws "regardless of the consequences."
But the tribe spokesman said the
governor's decision would not deter the
Jndians.
Wheaton said the l'lituation could
become a repeat of the trouble at Wound-
ed Knee, S.D., where Indians were locked
in combat with the federal government.
Mesan _Changes
Pka to Guihy·
In Dad's Death .
A Colla Mesa gardener booted m
murder cbargea after be llllbbed his
falher during an llll\lintlll abtait tlie
younger man's drinklna habits bas plead-
ed gullly to lesser charBes.
Orange County SUperlor Court Judge
Byron K. McMill\ID , cancelled . the
scheduled trial of Doniel Rios Rinn,
23, of 25()6 0rlll18" Ave., and a~pted
his plea of gullty to charges ol voluotary
mansluaghter. . He sent Rivera to the state's Chino
facility for a pre-sentencing diagnostic
study. Rivera . will be sentenced Dec.
16 to what could be a state prison term
of one to 15 )'fM'S.
Rivera was arrested last lltay 26
shortly after the fatally wounded Ray·
mond Pena Rivera. SO. crawled from
the apartment he shared with""-bis son
to a neighbor's home. He died,before
medical aid could reach him.
Police said Rivera told th e m he
became enrag~ when his father up-
, !raided him for drinking and further
argued wtlh him over their joint Ult!
of the telephone in the apartment.
programs, he said.
Part or the interest, both among the
}rfarine and ~ recrui~ees, may .. ue
in the pre~ce of plilltary farrulies
living in the area.
Many of the kid$ goi!li. tnl!! the service
from this area are soni and daughters
of military persoMel. 0Jn-in411yC.CJS'S,
lbe youth Is sworn Into his clliieen~branch
by bis fat.her, Evans said. • ' ;
11We have eve~11 ..... ln ~ 1t 1 s
area-brigadier gen e-rjl' 1, .major
generals, commanders, ·.~ap\aizt9.....tbe
whole route of ratings. The only branch
of the · service "e haven't come into contact with is the Coast Guard." ,.
Typically, recruiters for a branch. of
the service which has a local '.:base
have more trouble than recruit.en for
another branch. The same ·is true.' of
the· Marines in this area, wl:th opinion
apparentty negalively affected ·by the
ntarny El Toro and Camp Pendl.elon
Marine bases. ; .,..
"But we've been doing a Jot of ad·
vertistng and publicity and ti ......
la be paying off," Sgt. Reid said.
Q:i the bulletin board ia the Dlfice
-photos of kida sworn In recently by both the Navy and Marines.
Many have long hair and muslaches.
They're wearing flannel shirts and look
like tanned surfers, their girlfriends at
their sides.
0 The moms and dads around here
are extremely interested in their kids."
Evans observed. "Even Ir they have
long hair and smokt! pot, the pan!nt.s
still love them." .
And reflecting on why the recent
recruiting approach may be wiMlng
more response, Evans added, "Above
all else, we don't lie to the kids. We
doo't reed them a bunch of malarkey."
From Pflfle Al
CAPTURE ..•
the area of Pennell's description.
A clerk notified officer! at about 5
a.m. th.at a man matching Pennell's
de3Cription was outside his market. When
police arrived, they spotted a taxicab
leaving, then stopped it on Newhope
Street north ol Bolsa Avenue.
Officers reported Pennell was arrested
•Witlmut further incident.
'
SantaA11an
Krrestedin
'Card Theft
A man who police allege tried to
bilk a Sooth Coast Plaza clothing store
out . of $4.7 worth or casual ottlr~ .,.,;th
a stolen credit card is In custody lodey,
undtr lt0,000 bohd.
Jiihn Uewellyn Borden, 14. of Santa
Ana faces forgery and possession of
marijuana charges in addition to the
posseS!lon of stolen property count
Sgt. Donald Casey said Borden and
another youag male entered the Rebel
Shop 00 the 1)r.:Ui's lower level aboot
8:30 p.m. Wednesday and asked lo see
some matching outfits in the $4S to
$50 range. After selecting a $47.70 combination,
Bordeil gave a major credit card to
a clerk who asked to .see some 9t.her
identification. · Ac<O!'ding to Casey, Borden told the
clerk he could only show her Some
other credit cards and lhat he had
no driver'a license. The clerk then called
the credit card company for verification
and was told the card had been reported
stolen earlier the same day.
Borden's accomplice. Casey said, left
the store wllh the clothes. Bonlen w"
detained by the clerk untll poJice arrived,
Casey said. ' .
Durjng ,;t search of his per~: ~ice
-smd-tbey-dt9covered-a-smalLcy.lindnc.fil__
metal contalntr holding four gratll§ of
alleged marijuilll8 and a v.·allct con-
taining 10 other major credit cards be-
looging to a Robert Rhodes.
Talks to Resume
In Pipefitters'
Strike Oct. 4
By DOUGLAS FJ\Tl1,SCHE
Of tlll D.ilr ,lie! Si.ff
Negotiations are set to reswne Oct.
4 in a ··pjpeflttec:s strike which ha!
aJreadf cmt Southern Californians nlore
than S25 million in delays on a single
project.
!\fore than ' 2,500 steamfitters and
plpefitters in Southern California walked
off their jobs July I in a strike to
retain a 36-hour v.wk \li'eek. A v.'8ge
and fringe benefit increase of $2.4:7 an
hoUt for the firlt year of a new eoptract
has· already been reached by negotiators.
Pipefitlers now earn SS.88 an hour
pllll fringe benelllt.
Larry ""1nlin, Southern Ca!Uornia
Edi"'1 C.mpony project Ol8!Ulger for
the San Onotre nucl~r generating sta-
tion , tllil momJng estimated I.hat v.-ork
stopped by the strike bas -the com·
pany 12$ mllllon, a cost which will
ultimately be home by customers.
Pipelltters picket llnel! W"11 up at
the plant Aug. 5, Hamlin said, and
other crafts working oo the station stop-
ped work.
The picket lines went down this "'ttk,
be said, and work by other trades hu
resumed.
Pipefitters are constructing the water
and cooling systems for the tv.·o J,180
megawatt ge.neraton. he said. Construe·
lion can axltlnue without pipefilters ror
tv.'O to three more months.
Hamlin estimated the co,,t of dtlays
at about $9 mlllion a week, or a tot.al
of 12$ million.
Members of lDcal 250 of !be Steam
Refrigerator-Air CondiUoning a nd
Plpefttten Union in Gardena wan t to
keep the reduced work week they have
had for the past four yean.
PiperitterS have . reportedly suggCsted
alternating 32 and 40 hour v.·ork weeks.
of Organ Music," Orville Foster, lecturer,
' ~ence Hall, 7:30 p.m. "The I as t
:1 1Enemy, Inquiry Into Meaning of Life
.,Jnd Death," Dr. Richan! W. Doss leo-
11 l'lrer, Science Lecture 1, 7:30 p.m.
Saturday Trip
To Park Planned
The Kootenai said their tribe did
receive some cash payment for the land
several year! ago but this was not
enough. They said that despite the
reservation and cash payments they
wanted fishing and hunting rights.
Thompson's wire said: "At the request
or the President, the bureau is in the
process of preparing 4 reply to the
Sept. JI, 197!, letter to the president
of the United States. We are currently
Rivera said be drew his pocket knife,
plunged it twice into the older man 's
chest and then slumped Into a chair
while his mortally wounded father mr. on hands and knees from the apartmen .
Police claim they fOtllld a .22 caliber
pistol in hi! possession as well u about
l!O cm
But a management spokesman pro-
tested that "the pipefitters are supported
by 'operatlng engineers, teamsters,
laborers and other worien.
•
'I MOTORCYCLE SPEEDWAY RACING 1-Fairgrounds, 8:1S p.m.
!
,.
01.lMfH COAST ,.
DAILY PILOT
l'-Ot ...... Ceo!! Oall\I Piioj .., ""<ii • -........ "-.f'lftl. ·~Dy n.. °'-
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....... ~ 9-ar;ll -"'Ill°" 8t4Clllf....,.
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611'1 T"' ,...,..;IN! ~ 1Mn1 11o 11 3JCI W9'1
91yalrM.COM9~~.tH16
l!.obfitr N' Wied . ""'--"""""-
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•
A trip to Irvine Park Saturday will
mark the fall beginning of the City
or Costa Mesa's \Veekend re<:reation
program for the blind , · d e a f ,
educationally handicapped and mentally
retarded. A, .bus will leave at 9:30 a.in. from
the west gale of Orange fumty
Fairgrounds for the excursion and return
from the perk at 3:30 p.rn. Registration
for persons who have not participated
In the program will he held al 9 a.m.
Upcoming activities include games,
hikes, arts and crafts and cookouts.
Funher lnfonnation may be obtained
by calling the Department of Leisurt
Services, SS6-5300.
Store Owner Loses
$640 in Checkbook
The owner of a Costa M™ stalionery
store t• OU\ 1841> today, he told police,
because he mlstaUnly left a checkbook
containing the cub oo a counter when
he left the llore Wednesday.
Milner S. Bailard Jr. lold polict 111>
111<00• lifted lhe checkbook con~ning
si• $50 bills and 17 $20 bills.1pe1ect1v,.
are inveotigall:>g the theft.
Volcano Spews Lava\
HONOLULU (UPI) -l!alemRUl11JlU
cr1ter on the Kilauea volcano erupted
"!l'IY loday, blasting fountains of lava
• to 10 feet Into the sky.
1 reviewing the material you Jtave sub-
mitted and will ~pond promptly."
The oommlssioner allO said the Ju'1ice Department bas been aaked lo send
a repreaentative to meetings over the
dispute.
Wi1e4lon said at the heart of the
Issue was the poverty of the Koolen&il
themselves.
"We are about 300 percent below the
poverty level, only about one-fourth of
this once-powerful nation of native
Americani bere ha,.. steady jobs -
moot .of them earn 'quick money' during
lhe harvest time," he elpiained. -
The spokesman said there were several
"enterprises'• on the drawing board once
lhe 1ribe Is glnn ii• ·mervation and
lhese would provide economic liability
for the member!.
Bicyclist 'Fair'
After Accident
A Newport Beach bicyclist lnjurod In
a Wedneoday al-traffic acofdent
in Colta Mesa wu re~ In fa~
condition and proar•ssin« ~ell todoy
at Colla M• Memortal lfospatal.
David 1.ew1s Klein, it, ot m Camotion
Ave., collided wtlh a cir driven by
Judith Ellsworth Lolly, 35, ci 2038-Porl
Ranugate Place, Newport lleoch, while
blcyclfng doY.Ti Mall --r lhe lnlOl'leOllon ct Sunllo\m' Aveooe.
Klein '"'"'"" a broken leg and deop facial locerauons, haopital aldal aald.
'
The Microwave OVEN of THE FUTURE Now at
1975 LITION MICROWAVE OVEN
With VARI COOK CONTROL .
Achane• hahre1 that Ht the UnOH Mlliutttnaster®
MCMW 416 apart from othff MICROWA YE OYENS ~lllvlt Mlt,..n..t11 • ~ "
Dlot1111 C01111o1 COOK · DEl'ROIT VNU.COOK OVEN CONT1!0L
•
90· DAYS CASH
WI'" APPRoYIO CREDIT
·1115 NEWPORT 9LYD~
Dlwlitlwn Costa ,_ _ l'lla11e 548 ·7788
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