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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-10-06 - Orange Coast Pilot• • Bro~ze PI·aque Can't Tell 0 ·1d IShipy.ard Story • ,_ BJ HILARY KA YE Ot .. 0.Sly Pl ... Sl•H !bere'i no way the brom.e plaque the Nenort ·Beach Historical Society wW lnsiAll 'l'hW"lldlly oould tell the whole ' · stoey of Cbe old_ South Coast Shi~ yard. The tereinonies • will designate the sfte ,...at Newport Boulevard and 22nd street as a histor- ical landmark. Xnd the plaque will com- memorate 80-plus years d. activity that are now .part or the history of Newport Beach. At )he tum of the century, old Newport Pier near what ls now 22nd Street, was ll stopping off point for large commercial ships and luxury yachts. -sea-weary passengen. !Ollle from the Eastern Seabo@rd, others from Weatern porta, poured from the sbi!"' decks. Some contJ.nued \helr journey Into San- ta Ana and beyond by climbing aboard waiting teams of horse-drawn wagons. Others disembarked &nd spent a few days ~ up sun on the Newport beacbel.P A few yeara lciler, when the horses SUNDAY VO~. '07, NO. 279, 7 SECTIONS, 90 PAGES • -.1·1'1tA\' ~l'ECIAI, • gave way to more . modern transport.a· Uon, travelers who celebrated a ~it too much found themselves in ttie tiny "hoosegow" that rubbed sb!;>ulders with the ahipa. These were the days when early Newport settlers had , visions of the harbor becoming a great commercial seapori. Although their grandiose dreams never materlallied, the waterfront area underwent colorful transformations 1Ull reme1nbt'red by area oldtlmers. The da)'!: ot the "Newport COrral", v.·here horses and mules were fed and tethered. were soon replaCt'CI. b y Newport's firat city yao! and b006<goW. Then, an era of franti c shipbuilding began, spanning the years from 1920 tbrou&h 1964. Owner of the site during its original boat productk>n years was Ben Cope Better Boats, Inc., whictl began shi~ " - bullding and hay dredging operations. Newport Beach Boat Builders look over next When South Coast Shipyard took lhe ttlns ln-1933, pleewre and racing yachts such as Rhodes, Star9, nowbirds 31~ ocean racers were built. During World War II and the Korean War, lbe shipyard devoted Its output to the Navy, turning ·out minesweepen, sub cha!Crs and aircraft rescue boats. Tbe yard flew one of the Navy "E" nag,'! awarded for "o;cellence" based on its production record. Launchings of the Na\'y boats, same of the best atlendOO events i.n t.own, ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA SUNOA Y, OCTOBER 6 1974 "~rt big llOCtal gatherings during tl'le war years. Flags, bands, political 9pt.'4..'Ches - ~very boal l&unclK'Ci "'ti.ii a big '"to do.l'----- 8)' 1964, though. Sooth Coast ccp5Cd produeUon and the site remain¢ mostly Inactive Wltil restoraUon began Inst year. Responsible for the awakening of the ..slumtmh1g shipyard is \\'illlam Bhu::oek, a Newport Beach architect and history bufJ concerned wtth preserving the walerfront area or his youth. As a lad of 10. 8\urock says 00 would staQd before the yach1 sales offi ce. (Ste HISTOR ICAL, Page All TWENTY-FIV s Fir·ms Caricel Grain Sa.le to Russians Shotgun Slayitag Stories Checked In Rape Revenge · By FREDERICK SCllOEMEIIL Of tt11 0111., PUii S!ltf 'One of two men Implicated in the npe of a Long Beach woman who later killed one of her assailants was involved in the 1969 slaying of a Santa Ana Police officer. 1---~•eart-Steve-Nce,-21:--of Santa-An-a wa,, a key witness agajpst Arthur L. League, 20, who was convicted in 1969 of gunning down Officer Nel!OO Sasscer followirig a routine traffic stop. Tice 'today it in police custody for investigation of rape and a murder in what is now called a "rape-revenge" cue. According to 19-year-old Deborah Kan- taeng of U>ng Beach, Tice was one of two men who raped her Wednesday in a Santa Ana Park. A day later, Mrs. Kantaeng apparently · shot and killed Danny Charles Allen. 21 , of Santa Ana , when he and Tice Sunday W eatlier To Copy Saturcla)· 'u you enjoyed Saturday's weather. you should have little problem ac- rommodating today 's. according to v;eathef forecasteri. It'll be the same. lt1oming low clouds are predicted along the coast with an afternoon high under partly cloudy sk.ies of 70 degrees. The overnight low will reach 60. Inland, temperatures will push up to the mid·70s under clear skies. Westerly winds are expected along the coast this afternoon. Surf will run one to three fee.L. Water temperature is 63 de,. aree• The extended weather oullook calls for fair weather ·through Thursday. FUTURE IJESIDENTIAL SITE ~ . Domes on Ratage show~ up at her home. She is in custody while police conduct an in· vesugation of what rould be ruled murder. She told police that she fired a .410 gauge shotgun at Allen as he and ·Tice stood at the doorway Thursday. Tice ned;(JUr tater Si.UfiiiQefOO to police. ?\in. Kantaeng, in statements to police, said she was forced into a car at a Cerritos shopping center, driven to a Santa Ana park and raped by the two men. . .. After threatening her with a hunting knife, Mrs. Kantaeng said the men demanded her lnme..Jelepbone_number and address and warned her not to call police. She claimed the men called her the following evening and said they were roming to her house. Police said when the two knocked on her door, her father, Robert Boyd, 44, opened the door and she opened fire. killing Allen. Tice told police, however, that Allen received a call early Thursday evening from a girl he said lived in U>ng Beach. Tice said Allen phoned the girl back (meaning Mrs. Kantaeng) later ln the evening and was told by her brother that she W891'l hol!le but to come over anyway. Officers saJd Tice told them that when Oley-got to the !louse, a man said his sister was out but to come in. As Allen started to enter, Tice told police, he was hit in the neck by tbe shotgun blast. ln the 1969 Santa Ana case, officers said, Tice and his friend were stopped by Officer Sasscer while they were returning from a Black Panthers meeting, An argurrient ensued and Sasscer was shot and killed. Fotlowing the incident, '.l'ice testified against League. """. Irvine Ranch cattle obviously don't kno\v they're about to be replaced by ranch style (?) .suburban homes and other residential develop- n1ent even though !iign in their ,pasltLre sl.akes claim on future uses for the land near lnlerseclion or Tu11le Rock and Cecille ln Irvine. • ; ' Nixon Will Rest Up, Wear Hose Richard Nixon , eXhausted after his II-day hospital stay, settled down Satur. day in San Clemente for a lengthy recuperation, wearing new support hose. eating low-fat foods and taking doctors' orders. "He tells me that from now on he will foUow-m im~ion , and he's not a man used to taking instructions." said Nixon's person.al physician, Dr. John Lungren. following the r o r m e r Diel Butz Fo1·cl Mum -WASHING-TON (UPI) -Two major grain companies agreed to President Ford's request to avoid a food "crisis" Saturday and canceled contracts with the Soviet Union for the sale of 3.4 million tons of corn and wheat . "I think we've come out of this crisis in good sha pe," Ford told report erg accompanying him .on a visit to his wife~ recuperating rrom tireist surge'ij at Bethesda Naval ~tedical Center. President's release fro.m Long Beach !\lllll'!fifl ~IJ!.f~l· • •:.-•. it.->l':!:!'"> Nixon, his phlebitis-plagued left leg elevated, was wheeled out of the hospital through a service entrance, the same one he u..Oto enter t5elias~lal Sep[. "l took the necessary action that was needed to protect lhe domestic situation ~ • _apd . •• . to proteet us in our foreign 1 situation." " 23. . This time news1nen were given ad- vance warning, and from a distance or about 50 yards, Nixon was seen being helped out of the wheelchair, taking a few steps without a visible limp. and getting into a limousine for the trip to La Casa Pacifica. Under Lungren's orders, Nixon win follow a strict regimen of physical limitations. For one to three month.!, and possibly longer, Nixon will not be able to sit, · • stand or ride for proloiiged periods, and will rontinue taking anticoagulations drugs for a number of months. Lungren~ backed up by a team of five medical specialists who had ex· amined Nixon, agreed that Nixon should not even give a wriUen deposition in the Watergate coverup trial for "a few weeks." A plane trip to \Vashington, D.C., for a personal appearance at the trial also was ruled out. "I've been in an airplane when we hit an air turbulance, and. all hell breaks opt." said Lungren . He added that Nixon miJst remain in a controlled en- virorunent. "He will also wear a supportive stock- ing on the left leg at all times when (Set NIXON, Page Al) Gold'\'ater Says Nixon Walked, Wouldn't Talk Shortly after resigning, former Presi- dent Richard Nixon opted to •take a walk on his San Clemente e6tate rather than meet with Soo. Barry Goldwater (R·Ariz.). the senator told a group of news executive! Saturday. Goldwater said he called Nixon-from his apartment at the Balboa Bay Club in Newport Beach and asked the.. fo rmer chief executive if they could mee1. "lie said, 'No. I want to take a ,,,aJk,' " Goldwater told executives attending an Associated Press Associa- tion n>eetinr.in Carefree~ Ariz. Goldwater said he had spoken twice by phone with Nixon since the resigns· tton. Qnklwater said Nixon !'sounded g-OQd" on the telephone. Nixon l\alJ been •ylng at La Qasa Pacificat his San Clemente estat'e, since iesignlng as pres\de.nt, ex- ·ctpt for his recent hospital~Uon 1n Loog Beach. The senator saljl he talked to Nixon only once about the Watci~atc scandal. "Ile Is the blggW loner 1 ve ever n111 Into In any-bnstne!I.'' Goldwater· sakl: "You could make !lugge.sUons bu1 it wali IU1e talking to a wall." • " •. ,j r- . -Wllllt Kw-. PMtf ¥1• UPI Betty's Better Proving she is regaining normal use of her right arm just one week after undergoing breast cancer surgery, Betty Ford tosses football (gift from \Vasbington Redskins coach George Allen ) to her husband during President's Friday visit to Bethesda NavaJ Hospital. Photo, released Saturday, is typical of publicity which has focused attention ot nation's women on early detection of breast cancer, subject of to- day's YOU Section cover. Page Bl. 2 National Guardsmen f(illed in County Crash Two California National Guardsmen were killed and a Dana Point \li'Olllan seriously injured in .a collision early The third guardsman. Johnson Eldon. 26. of Safi Pedro. "·as treated at 1~'lissioo Community Hospital and released. Saturday along a desolate stretch of The woman driver "'as admitted to Del Qbic:rn Road in San Juan Capistrano, the hospital with head injurie!I. Hospital ~,,.. aides said her condition is "guarded." Another guardsman was infured. The aecident ocrurrcd at 1:50 a.m. One ol the de3d men was identified near the Intersection of Del Obispo and as David Dingman, 2-1. of Fullerton. Aguacale roads. TIJe name oi the other victim. a re5idenll Sheriffs said the thrl'e nationni of Wyoming, wa.s not Immediately guardsn1en "·ere on ""e<>kend manuevers available. at Camp Pendleton and had borro"·ed Orange County sheriffs officers said Lhe jeep Friday evening to travel to the tv.'O guardsmen were ldUed alter a Dana Harbor restaurant ~r supper. their open top jeep' sideswiP,ed a car, The collision octurrcd "'hlle the trio The White House annoonced tht; c811C't'/Jation by CooUnental Gr;un Co. and-.Coot-Industries, me., scv~raf..hoo~ after Ford n1et with company represen· tatives who met later with Agriculture Secretary Earl L. Butz and Treasury Secretary William E. Simon. Butz earlier in the day Indicated th,e administration was angry with the Soviet government for lrying to buy up short U.S. grain suppli~ and might have im- pdsed export controls had t h·e businessmen not agreed to cancel the sale of $500 million or grain. Asked whether Butz should be fi red for mismanagement. Fqrd said, "'We'll evaluate any problems we h a v e domestically ... I'm not going to pass judgment at this time." But Sen. HeDf.Y Jackson < D-\\'ash. J announced his invest igaLions sub. committee "·ould hold hearings f\·londay to "focus on why the \Vhite House "'·as not advised of these major sales until afler Continental and C.ook had already signed the contracts." The grain companies first said they \l.'Ould postpone the sale', thereby delaying a grain-drain resulting from a disap- pointing U.S. harvest and threatening to push food prices even higher. But the \Vhite House said Saturday evening lhe contracts "'·ere ca nceled. Bon1b Explodes In Airport Hotel LOS ANGELES (AP) -A restroom in a Sheraton hotel was bombed late Saturday night. tv.·o days after a bomb exploded in a restroom or the SheratOI Pal ace Hotel in San Francisco. police said. No casualties were reported . ·Police said the bomb severely damag· ed t"·o stalls or the women's restroom in the Sheraton Inn at Los Angele' lnl.emational Airport. driven by Helen Ctlfarelli, 21, of 3310'l was returning to the base, sheriffs .said. Christina Drive, Dana Point. The jeep , It was not explained "'hy the men Th.e hbtel manager told police he lkldded 60 feet ana flipped. dllJ'flpl,ng chose to take Del Obisp.'l .to the San rrceived ~ bomb threat shortly before it,s.-.thre&-eccupB11ts-ento--tOO,..pevement~~way.;.r-ather: than tbB-Sbor.1et. the eJ!. !os10n. Detalls of the threat~~ they said. route via Pacific Coast Highway. not ava1 a e. ON THE .. INSIDE ". · · · · ,_ · · · · ·· • BREA&i°' CANCER-lnfonna'tior\' com- piled by the Dally Pilot's People Section staff has been pulled together into s de- finitive ~ on se.Jf exe.miaatlon Q( !he . breast. whiCh women can use to hflp in early detectk>n of possibly dangerous symptoms. Page 81. HOW WE 00 IT -The of1 en-askt'd question Of "who writes !ht cdltorltils" ftlr the Dally Pilot ls an.~v.-ered in a apcclal Editorial Page artkle J'l~ished 8.S j>art of the nt'Wsp11per'5 Ob.~et\'l\nte ol International Newspnper '\'etk See Pago A6, IOCKEi.'S TUltN rtred lgno mlni· ousl,y from his position in the Nixon cabinet as secretary of the interior . . \\'alter IUckel .flpp:trantly wenl home to -'!hlska to wnit for his time to come. U has come and he tel~ An • tnside storl' of President Nixon that Is. to say the least, a rare \•k:w of the very privl!lte person ()f Hlchtlrd Nixon, Page A4 . A~tER.JCAS° ORJ-:Ai\1 -The INK'OOd of 18 31'1k:lc111 rx plOrlng lhe theme, "ln Search or lhi• An1erican Dream" a! pan of a col1tgf'·<:ou r9e-hy·new•papt'J', pub- IWltd in I~ Onily Piiot, Page 83. ' • Inside Sunday AIOMl'fCI" 0 .... 11 Al Ywt St"ICI C1l1Mrn.lt Cl11Jltlff c .. 11...,.. ldlt .... 111 P19'1 E111t!111"mt"1 '"""'' Htll ,.., YM HtttH• .. """ LI-fl N•'"''" Ctusl"l • ... _ GlldWllff ( •J ,.l ~ ... _,_ •1 •'"'" Aj 0.-111tf C1o11111f 01.u p-i. •• llt,1 (lhllt Ao I '\'"" Cllt H'9i. I J '"•ltor •• 1 ..... 1 11 ,_" I ? Wl•!- lf W~olt W111! Al VOii H1Urn1~ M .. .. .. .. , ... " " .. Cl•I .. " .. I 2 DAILY PILOf s11nt, "'tobtr b. 1974 .. Coast Watch ... Top News Stories of the past week from Orange Coast Communities ·. NEl\TPORT BEACH--Tough new building re- "'1iremcnts (stilts , mounds, pilings) designed tiO prevent tidal wave and f lood destruc tion of Wat~rfront p~operty will go into effec t in ~nuary unless 11th hour city appeals a re ac- Cepted by the federal governm ent. Councilmen ~ere stunned with news that f ederal ly con-~rolled loans Would be withheld unless struc- tures are built higher than a nticipated maxi--um surge heights in such catastrophes ..• ;. .· FOUNTAIN VALLEY--Citizens have decided to ~ry to take school boundary decisions out of ~e hands of wh at they call "squabbling" poli- ticians. They have launched a petition drive to get the signatures of 25 percent of the ci-ty' & voters, asking for the creation of a tingle unified school district along the city ~undary lines .•• . COSTA MESA--Reluctantly; City Council last week decided not to move ahead with a massive development program using both private and public money near South Coast Plaza. Th e plan was proposed by c. J. Segerstrom and Sons as owners of the shopping complex and adjacent lands. Councilmen said they need more time to study the proposal ••• LAGUNA BEACH--Former Laguna Beach nar- cotics officer John Saporito was fired from the Tustin Police Department on charges he fired a gun out the window at the Laguna Beach City Hall Annex. Another Tustin policeman was suspended and two Laguna Beach policemen are under investigation in connection with the Sept. 6 incident ••. ~ IRVINE--Conununity service commissioners took a ".first cut11 at a commercial recreation policy which would govern private e_nterprises using up to 50 of the 161 acr es of parks to be developed under a $16 million bond issue. Pr i- ~ary concern wa s that the city won't be "s~uck with a white elephant in the parks" if any of the entrepeneurs Went broke ••• SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO--Sheriff's investi- gators plan to continue their probe this week into the death of a San Juan Capistrano woman and the woun4_i1'!9 q_f her bovfrienc!_~ a car ~arked on a ·dea -ena Capistrano-Iieacn sfreet. pora Rodriguez, 22, was foUnd dead of a qun- shot wound in her head; J ohn Reyes, 19, was wounded in the shoulder. '· , Newport-Blaz~ = B:l7Imed On Argument; Man Held A heated argument that apparently sparked an $ll.SOO fire in a Newport Beach apartment building resulted in the arrect of a 31-y,ear-old Newpo rt Beadl man early Saturday morning. Nev.-port Beach Police said Thomas Lee Garrett, 3208 ri.1arcus Ave. is being 5 Killed, Many Hurt as Bombs Explode in Pubs GUILDFORD iGPI) -Two bombs ripped through tv.·o pubs filled with male and fem ale British soldiers and other drinkers Saturday night in the type of :i.ttack police attribute to the Irish J~epublican Army. There was almo5t no v.·aTrting. Surrey r...ouniy Chi('r Constable" Peter ~latthev.s ~aid the death toll stood at f1\·e at the Horse and Groom pub. where lh~ hrst of the 11-10 bl;1sts went off. ~1atthews s .. 11d he expected the death ,. toll to rise a.Ii son1e ,·ict!rrui appeared sc,·erely injured nnd firemen v.·ere still ~:fling the rubh!e for ad d it ion a I .:asualLies ThC' La\•em \\3S full or !IO]diers ce!ebratmg their ret11rn from duty in i\ort.hern Ireland "·here tne outlawed lrish Republican 1\!"m:t-has hecn waging a lerronst ramp;i1gn to wrest the pro- held on susp1CJon or arson In lieu or $25.000 bond. Garrett was arrested after he allegedly broke a television set, setling the bedroom of bis apartment on fire. Prior to the early morning incident, police said, Garrett had been arguing with his apartment mate, Fawn Rymal, 25. Police said the f\\'O argued during Friday evening and on into lhe pre-dawn hours Saturday. Firemen responded to the fire call :it 6:33 a.m. and discovered names shoo1ing out of two bedroom windows.' They spent JS minutes quelling the blaze. Structural damage was set at $5.500 \\'hi!e an • estimated $6,000 in contents \\'ere rlestroyed. firemen said. Qy.·ner of the building is Tom Terich, 112 36th. St., Newport Beach. Girl'8 Rody Fonn<l NELSON LANDING . Nev. (UPJ) Searchers have recovered the body of the :l-year-old girl whose father, mother and brother died in a nash flood that destroyed Nelson Landi n!f Sept. 14. The National Park Service said the body of Kt>lly ~lodtin was found about 2.~ miles south of Nelson IAnding. The chi ld WR3 !he daugh ter of park ranger James ~lodlin. New Rocky $86,000 Gift Told \VASlfINGTON (AP) -Nelson A. Rockefeller made a gift of $86,000 in the torm of a cancelled toan tb fonner New York Republican chainnan L. J u d s on Morhduse, a Rockefeller :i:pokesman confirmed Saturday night. Y..1orhouse, who was instrumental in Rockefeller's rim nomination as a GOP gubernatorial candidate in New York state, 'ol'as ronvicted in 1966 of bribery in the granting of state liquor licenses. Rockefelle r pardo'ned him in 1970 on the basis of ill health. Hugh Morrow, a Rockefeller aide, said that in September 1960 Rockefeller loan- ed $100,000 to Y..iorhouse to buy stock in commercial real estate at Babylon, Long Jsland. The loan, ~iorrow said. "stemmed from Y..lr. Rockefeller's CQOCtl'11 that at the time the Republican party .of New , York !Qte did not pay Its chainnan a salary." Morhouse paid back about S14 ,000 of the loan, Morrow said, and last December, "in view of a continuing very serious illness of Mr. Morhouse and overwhelming financial problem!, Mr. Rockefeller returned the remainder of the note marked •cance.ll e.d.' •• Rockefeller al30 paid federal and state ,gift taxes of about $48,000 as a result of the cancelled debt, Morrow said. Y..1orrow also confirmed t h a t Rockefeller made a $.50,000 gift to Secretary of State Henry A. Kissin ger and cancelled loans of an uns~ificd amount to William J. Ronan, a !of.mer Rockefeller aide · woo now is president of the Port AutOOrity of New York and New Jersey. The Kissinger gift was made in 1969 when Kissinger left Rockefeller's staff, wnere be had been a foreign policy adviser, to join the Nixon administration. •·Before accepting · the gift, Dr. Kis- singer discussed the matter with then President~lect Nixon and it was cleared by Edward Morgan, then Mr. Nixon's counsel, as not raising any conflict of interest," Morrow said. He said Kissinger put the $50,000 into trusts for his two children. RockMeller filed a gift tax-return and paid the gift ta:1 on the gift, Morrow said. Fighter Planes Fail to Sink Dynamite Ship GUERNSEY, Channel Islands (UPI) -French fighter planes flew two missions Saturday night against an aban· doned, dynamite-laden cargo ship drift- ing io. !be English <llanne~ buL !ailed to sink it, a French Navy spokesman. said. Because of security measures, the planes had to fire their missiles from too great a distance to hit the small, half-submerged vessel, the spokesman said. The spokesman said the Navy would try again thil morning to sink the 450-ton Cypriot cargo vessel. Ammersee, which carries 150 tons of dynamite and was abandoned br its crew after a fire. The Ammersee 1\as been declared a threat to navigation in the busy ""aterway and all ships were warned to stay away. The French spokesman said that escort vessels wou1d be used in the_ nfxt try. He did not say how Uley would deal with the drifting, fire-ravaged wreck. The French Navy began an all-night "ralch to steer other ships away from the stricken vessel, he added. A-1narked Horse Isn't Grade A , \VASlflNGTON ~AP) -Tn most areas grade A is good. But the Agriculture Department warns that .in horses, at least, il 's bad. A department announcement reported some persons have bou ght horses mark· ed with a brand or lip tattoo "A·• in the belief it was a certified grade A horse. Not so, says 1he department. Thal mark means the horse reacted to a test for equine infectious anemia. or swamp fever. Transport of such horses acr05! state lines is illegal except for slaughter or research. 'E' FOR EXCELLENCE -Flags flying, including Beach In 1953. Old bOathouse (building at left) has the wartime "E" for excellence (left, foreground), been restored for office use b)' \Villiarn Blu rock. a mlne~weeper headed for the Korean \Var slides Newport Beach Historical Society broru:e plaque down the ways at South Coast Shipyard in Newport will be installed Thursday at .site of bandstand. ~~~~-'-~~~~~~'-'-~~~-'-~~~~~~- Theater District Loses From Page Al HISTORICAL . • • Dempsey· Restaurant · pressing his nose against the window pane to see the latest yacht oo display. "They wiually showed a Rhodes 33 and all WI kids would stand there looking NE \V YORK (UPI) -Patrons and employes al Jack Dempsey's restaurant ~'ere somber Saturday night because the famed restaurarit, which ba:i: graced Manhattan's theater di.strict for more than 40 years, will close at midnight tod ay. Jack Dempsey, '19, wtklse name became legend when be kayoed Jess \Villard 55 years ago and became world heavyweight champion, opened the original Dempsey's more than 40 years ago across from the <lid Madison Square Garden at Eighth Avenue and 50tb reet...He~Ul Building, 1619 Broadway in 1947. Tonight's closing cllm.ues a lmgthy court battle with the Inch Cclrp.1 which acquired the Brill Building alter the original owners forfeited on t b e mortgage. "I'm heartbroken and I'm disgusted," .Dempsey said. "This.Ls my aeeood. borne and I've lo3t it. But what can you do?" His partner, Jack Amie!, who bandied the business end of the restaurant while Dempsey served as host -personally greeting customers each night -said I s rae l ,Hour1as Zalman Shazar , one of Israel's fou nding fathers and its presi· dent from 1963 to 1973, died Saturday, a day before his 85th birthday. Shazar was also esteemed as a Jewish poet and biblical scholar. they had "a 16-year lease with seven years still left to it." "The Inch Cclrp. cancelled our lease. 'Ibey want twice the rent we've been paying:" He said Ule lease cailed £or $85.IXlO yearly rent, including taxes, but the Inch Corp. asked $130,000 a year, not including tal'.es. "It's a sad thing." Amiel said. "We were the only place left on Broadv.•ay that's 8 good , r10e place with a t9uch of the old time." at the fully-rigged boats," \visUully re- calls the graying, curly-haired archl· tect. Blurock has summered in N"ewport .. Since 1927. He finally moved pennan· ent1y in 1946. Times have changed, buildings have changed and people have changed. But to the man who remembers the Newport of the 20s and 30s, it's still the same town. "Why, there "·ere even trallic jams then .'' the arehittct remarked, telling of tbe tin lizzies hopelessly snarled on the Peninsula just as do today's autos. Blurock began his restcration process ·r ---last year, and in April moved his 00. ffeacllin.e To ay :.r:.:~;.thi!<f!'llttil3b0d, 01d Besides Blurock's new occupancy In For Vote S:gnup the boellx>we, 2300 Newport Blvd. other ~ architectural firms, yacht sales com- panies, ship brokers and other fkm:i: I T ,. B a 1 in the marine industry have also taken -11 .l..JYgunq _e _ c: i up residency at the...ok! _site,_ wltlch eno::mpasses tv.·o and uie-&lf acres and 500 feet of waterfronL Today is the last day to register to vote in the November general election. Lagunans may register at the Laguna Beach Democratic Club, 5 0 0 • B Broadway, from IO a.m. to 6 p.m. First time voters may register now if they will be 18 by Nov. 5. Registered voters who expect to be away from the area during election day, or who for other valid reasons cannot go to the polls may reqtiest an absentee ballot. Deadline for application is Oct. 29 at which time the request for absentee ballot must be ln the Registrar of Voters office. A request, signed exactly as the voter has registered, may be malled to the Registrar of Voters, P.O. Bo:1 11298, Santa Ana, 92711. Medicaid Funds Go to Abortions ~ \\rASlflNGTON (AP) -Medicaid, us- ing federal and state fund s, ia paying up to · $50 millioo each year to finance JTl()tt than 220,000 abortions, a Depart· ment of Heath, F.dueation and Welfare memorandum discloses. Using figures from .seven states, Dr. Louis Hellman, H'EW's deputy aul.st.anl secretary for population i.lfalrs, pn>- jected that Medicaid Is financing between 222,000 and 278,000 abortions aMUally. He said •JlllrOxlmately 800,000 legal abortions were perlonned in 1973 and an estimated 2.S percent involved poor people wlx> used Medicaid to pey for the operations, at an average cost. of 1180 each. * "* * Here's How ' To Get Tickets For Big Event Tickets to the dedication or South Coast 3li.JJYflfd Historical Site are available from the Newport Beach Historical Society. The dedication will include the m- veiling of a bronze plaque plus a tour of the reoovated boathouse bt1ildlng by architect Jl"illiam Blul'll<k and partnen, whose fifm is mponsible for restoration of the s.ite. Ticket& to the dedication are $3.50 and inch.lie two cocktails and a buffet The program will begin at 6 p.m. at 2300 N .. 1>0rt Blvd. Tieki:ts may be purchased at all Newport Beach public libraries, the Newport Beach Chamber of. Commerce or checks may be mailed to Mni. William Ritter, 410 Aliso, Newport Beach, 92660. DAILY PILOT 11'11 Or ..... C..11 O.lly "II(. wltfl wPllcti It <OfMllNd tri. HIWJ·Pr•tt, It pul1U1'1ed lly tri. o....._ Cffll Pvllllltlll"' (O,,,.....y. Slper111 flllll-••• llOollllla!Md. MontSly tllrt<,gh l'rldoly. ,.,.. °"'• Mtw., N•WPOrt 811tll, Hunll"llen k1tl'l/F-11111 \11U1y. ~g<.lfll ltltfl, 1,.,,1Mts.clOltt>Kll tncl $1n O....-l•ISl11 Jwn Ceplllr-. A M~ ,..,S0..1 ICllllofl It puO!llllltel S.h1rd1y11111111 Sunisa\l'I.. TM Pl"IPICIMI pullllllftl1'19 Plllll It II JOO wn! 8ty Stl'"fft, C.O,Ut Mtw,. GIUlonil• ftt2'. Robert N. Wffd Pfffldtlll •1111 '"1111111 ....... Birtli Defects Possil1le? vince fro m Bri tain. NIXON Jack R. Curlev • fJ d t in • K w a lh to! "'° w P\'.>lice :i:.aid the dea d "''ere tnrw men -w • VI<• Prtt10tn1111fld Gtntr•t ~...._ -11::~~~·~-;;;~"::y-N~•7' l\A'a:r1· ma' na---· a~n1..n·g· . . . Tho"'i'.i~eevll =·:1.R~;~:1~~~1~3C~~~1l)Crs of the '-' ll' --rfii J ~· .I. . :-I.a ~--he--lo-upiF"1rr.:""1t~•a1C~",e",.'~lldt.J-Lqren---.--l---Th=o-m"..,-.,.~=:~::;;,=;~-;,"-,[!--;h,-ln-.--..... ---t---ci Less than an hour after thl' f1rs1 bins!, , who will vilit Nixon periodically to adjust Thomas M. McCann ~ second expl0..'1..ion ripped lhrough the hi8 treatment ICbedule.. Sollld.-, loltot Seven Stan Inn about 250 y11rds from \VASHTNGTON (APl -Prellmlnory there was little evidence that lnfrtquent (X'l8Sibl e tid\•ersc experiences," Potlln Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nill the 'HOr!il! and Groom. The man ager had data from a new government study martjuana 1moking was · harmful bul said. "Thls is a chagge _ In that ~ "In addition, the: former Jll'Mideol will Alf<l•taM.MIMOl11Jtllklrl cleared lhat bar on hearing the first ttuit the dangers of )Nta-term use alil\ body of work , plus one or two other be-given -. low cho1estero~ ·diet" ' rillscs the por..~ibility th at marijuana mny ~.., _...... · hi h and "al-"' card ch he wt!! Offices • bon1b go off. ~·ere unknown. areas, have ral:R"U que$1:ion& w c -,..ven a coii.w..u :tJO W••th'fl~I!!' Poltce 1mmed lately closed al! pubs in be n10re harmful than previously The new data raises new questions, before have · not been a matter -of con-cany noUr~ that he It on antlcoagulalion ,....,.~~~.ITT\rJ=:? r::::;"'d Guildford, a thriving university ;uld \igtlt thought , the resoorch director or the Pellin taid. cem." therapy." ~t1:i:11t~jU:11s.,':t'c::"~:' .. d ltldustrial community 30 mllt.'S soulh"'·est f'a!Jonal Jru;titutP of Drug Abuse said The draft report states: "The findings The report said the preliminary data other than phylical exhaustion from o( l.ondoo Saturday. ·r · nd · I hi ........,lal 1 ~ • Nit Telepr.one (714),"42""'J21 · o greatest mtere9t a potenlta "ra ises the possibility that the effects 8 '""¥ Say, .ave on Classlfltd Advertising 64~·5671 Possible effects could rAnge from slgnificance during the past two yea rs of marijuana under 800\e circumstances a favorable blll of heal He said Nlxon. Cigarclles eizcd MEXI 0 CITY (AP \ -Author1tlts ha ve wnnscalOO. more than 600,000 pockap;Cll ol cigarettes lO prevent hoard· ln11 fol lo'l'•lng President UJls Echcvcrria's al'b10Unt'emenl o 11rice conlrols to com· bu t 1nfltition. S lolors ha\e olret1(1y bought qusn11!1e!'i rif o!ht!r produt1s 111- c.-111dlng mUk and bean'!, 11nd salC!f h:ive bc:cn rationed in the ~lexic.'O City area, ' lowering a person·, resiJlance to di~ase have been 11 series of studies lndlcating may be more widesprtad ••• than has had responded wtll to treatment, his ,.,_ ee..u• .,.49.,2':",2'," LIOUN ..... lo b1nh dtfe<:ts. a.a.kl Dr. Wl\llam Pollio. dl!lla·nlne-THC and possibly other marl· been previously thought." tt lists stud.le& leg was leu swollen and the blood ... The 1mpllcatloo1. he said In an In-juana conatituent.s have an effect on which de!crlbo pol!ible advtrte ~ clot in tds lung bad grown Sl'Nller. ll•rv1e" are contained in the draft of certain basic cellular mechanisms in· munologic and genetic impUcaUons.. But the doctot wAmed of compUcaliona a rtpqrt being preper~ for submiMiQn \'olving the uptake of amino acids into "While such posslt>llttles exist," the and the possibility that Nixon would next .Janunry to Congress as requirl'd primary nuclear components, such as rt'pOrt said, "there 11 al yet DO ellnJcat have. to reenter the hospital If ~ by law t a ch year -by the llcpartmenl DNA." evldcnce conflrming them. No human schedule of tttatment and physical of He-alth. Education and Welfare, lhe ONA ls deoxyribonucleic at'ld, th~ r~search has bef!n reported which restricUonl ~ not .1-0llowtd. 1nsi.1tuttt'& parent body .. He se1d the si ructural components of which makf! demci11strates that di8tase resistance ls Travel, for eii;a1npl1, could caUle Nlxon fl'flOrt Is bt'lne reviewed and rt'vislon up lhe sequence that determine in· slgnlflcantly lmpn\red ; stodle:s of possl· to suffer a htmorrhnge. and hemor· i$ possible. divldual herldltary characteristics. ble genetic dam;1ge have thus far shown rhaging also could occur from a reaction 11~\Y reported to O)ngress last yenr "PrH.UnlCJI studies have dtscrtbcd contradictory resulls of marlJ~ana use." to the anticoogulalion treatment. • • • C).pyritPI!, Hit, Ort".. CNlt ~ltfl!llO t,oll'ljlll'ly. ... flt., -'°"""· llh,11tr11._, tdltotltl rflftttr 11" ·1(1'itrtl .. rntflll Plr riill ""'•' R reprc o«H wllfltvl 111ttltl 111rmhtllft 61 CM1•tl1M-t. Stwnd t 4-M '°Jllvt N ld at Colle ,,.W. c.tllor"lllf. Sull•t111111en by c.,-ritr U.00 l'l'IOlllPll'f; t>y m11! M,00 ment~ly; l'l'llllt11y ~llM!leM ll.00 mo'lllll• . -• 20 p d th r M ne r att c Sunday, Octobtt b, iq74 _DAILY PILOT A 3 China Checkers Should. Have isited GWC: < Dean Edward Da uger, 2, Gels Acqua inted With Chairman Mao Tse Tung Walk A~nd W o-rld Ends Brotlier Killed by Bandits, but He Co1npletes Trip WASECA, At.inn. (AP) -David Ku~t finished 8. walk around the world Satur- day, treading the last 10 miles into the hometown be left 4-h: years ago. In town, some 21500 people applauded and shouted and the church bells In the Kunst family parish rang out. But It wasn't the homecoming the town or 6.800 had first planned to end a walk that took Kwist a"CI'OiEis Europe, Asia and Australia and saw a brother who started with him killed by bandits in Afghanistan. Plans for an official v.·elcome ~·ilh a marching band were cancelled after Kunst gave a newspaper interview three weeks ago In which he said some Wl- oomplimentary things about Waseca and his wife, who sl.ayed behind with his three children during his journey. Mayor Carl Swenson boycotted Saturday's homecoming, but Kunst 's wife, Jan, and the children were there. Kunst had complained in the..intervic\v about "th~ guys who sit with their fists around a glass or beer at the tavern and bitch and moan about their jobs, their wives and their lives." He also said he didn't want to "waste time doing things I don't like anymore, like trying to make a marriage Vr'Ork." TIM! comments set off a tontroversy, but the local Ownber of Commerce went ahead with plans for some ceremony to mark Kunst's arrival. The :!>year-old Kunst, surveying the crowd on the city's main street Saturday, said. "It looks to me like there are a hell of a lot of big people in Waseca." He had walked the last 10 miles from Janesville, where he acquired a new _pair -0f shoes for the occasion. 11is wom-<1ut pair was auctioned off -$150 for the left one and $170 for the right -as part of the homecoming, Overcast skies Saturday matched the weather when on June 20, 1970, Kunst and his brother John set oft Adventure was their inain goal, but they also col\N:ted for the United Nations Intema· tional Children's Emergency Fund. Proceed of Saturday's auction "·ent lo UNICEF, but officials said they· did not know the total amowtt of those proceeds and the money collected during the walk. ~ The KWlSf. brothers lived primarily off dooations of food and lodg{ng as they made their trip. The journey took them from Waseca to New York, where they flew to Portugal. They then walked across Europe and Asia. John. 26, \\'a~ slain and David \\'BS \.\'OUJ1ded in 1972 when robbers in Afghanistan mistakenly thought the Kunst! had UNICEF donations "'ith them. Another brother. Peter. then 28. joined David for a year, mainly for the walk across Australia , and he walked into town with David Saturday. David flew from Australia to California last July. 21 and completed the journey by hlmself. He worked with a county surveyar crew before he started his walk. He says his am bition novr is to write a book and he is looking for a publisher to start him out with a $10,000 advance. Airlines Ca1i Write English, Speaker l1is i.sts Poet Wrote of Death: Did She Kill Herself? SEA1TLE (j\P)..:. Virginla H. ~uer, 1\"ESl'ON, Mass. (AP) -Anne Setton the President's consumer affairs adviser. \\'on a Pulitzer ptiie for her anguished told airline \\'Orkers at a convention poetry about death. Now police are in- htre lbat the guarantees paMengers get vestigating the possibility she committed when tbey buy tickets can, indeed, be suicide. written in plain English. The •~year-old writer, wOO had never " aLde"",..""e.ols-ID"v ""---'ifit1fu: -~ untU .I .,...._..... _,_ s e d a nervous believe that such Information can be breakdown 17 years written in English, but I am con!idcnt ago, was found dead you can find a way." she s..-i.id. f'riday afternoon in "Recently a \av .. yer on my staff spent a car with the motor 20 minutes \\'Ith a young couple in lhe n.um.ing in her gar. Pbiladclptiia airport, helptng th-em to age. police reported. decipher the statement of their rights There was no lm- they received when they were bumped mediate Nling on from a ni ght." U::ic._cause Of death S•XTON She drew an analogy \\'Ith Amcrican by t~ medical examiner Peter Angelo, ~fotors' "Buyer Protection Plan" for Police said there was no eV-ideoce or new car warranties - a 12-month war· foul play. ranty which, she said, Is written in "It was either sWd de or natllral U1l'ff concise sentences. causes," said Detective Lawrtnce Caglnl. \\'hile funeral arrangm'leflls were ln-"There Is no fine print to take away complete. a ramlly friend Sil.Id they would whet is promised In the big print. There probably be private, next Monday or ate no \\'easel 'A'(lrd!I open to different Tuesday, possibly with a memortaI . .mterpretatloos . .:rhcre ere no escupe service tater. clauses to give the company a wny A poet (rlend, ~1rs. ~1axlne Kutnln out or meeting 11.S obligallons, '' she IDld. of nearby Newton. said she had a warm She spoke to delegat~ from 57 nations and genial lunch with Mrs. Sf:1ton only attendlng the World·wlde A I r 11 n o a few hours befora her death was Customer Relations Conference. di9"0vered. ' "I was perhaf$ the last per90n to see her alive," said ,_1rs. Kumin, adding, "There was alloiolutely no warning ... no signs at all." hfrs. Sexton won the 1967 Pulitzer .Prize for poetry tor "Live or Die," a. work 'which centered chiefly on death. ~1rs. Kumin, also a Pulitzer Prize-win· ning poet, said, "Anne was one of the moot vivld mctaphorists ever. She wrote very personal and anguished pootry:• ?.lrs. Sexton \\'M recently divorced from her husband, Alfred r.t Se1tosi, but ,_frs. Kamin said that had not made her despoodent . "It was not him;• she said. "Life had a depressing effect on her." Alr!I. Sexton's firs t book , ''To Bedlam and Part \\1ay Back" was published in 1960, and others that follo11.·ed included •·All P.t y Pretty On~." "Selecte<t Poems,•· TransfonnaUons" and "Love Poems." Jlcr mo:.t recent book, "The Death Notebooks;· suys, "~ty underta ker waits for n1c." And of JOMh, pondering his rate tl!I the wtinte SY.'allowed Him, the poet adds "This is my death . . . and It wlll pront me to understand it.." I , 'The Landlord' and 'The Worker' -Rarelr Exhibited Sculpture Pieces Da ny Pilot Photos By Petrick O'Donnell Friendship.Festival at G-Olden West College Saturday (co-sponsored by Orange County chapter of U.S.· China P~le's Friendship Associa· tlon and Oi.e college) offered.Orange Coast visitors to campus a varied view of China's culture, film s, food and entertainment. Sponsors said it was nonpolitical. Sl;en~s r~e_d from Z.year-0ld Hllntington Beach lad getting his first look at a Mao poster (upper left) to first display in this hemisphere of a pair of rare p~l949 Cultural Revolution sculp- tures depicting the struggle be-- tween classes (above) and a realistic kung fu session (right) matching in- structor Ron Van Brownjng, Foun- tain Vall er third degree black belt, with Manna lligh School student Jeff Joy, one of his proteges. ., Battin Seeks Ban On Neighborl1ood Parking by Rigs G>unty Supervisor David Baker said he \\'ill ask his fel low board n1embers 1\1esday to enact a rounty la\\' P'.°" hibitlng parlting of large commercial vehicles on netghborhood streets. "These huge rigs are. more than just an eyesore that det racts from the esutetic value o( a neighborhood." Baker said. . "The v.·eight of the tnicks is greatl':r than the design capacity of the streets and the size of the truck and its load clearly limit the \~slon of a drive r pulling in and out of a dri\'cv.•ay or crossing an intersection." he added. Baker"s actio n v•as triggered by an infonnal petition sen t to him in July by 250 residents of Rossmoor com· plaining that ov.Tiers of l\\'o 16,000.pound truck-trailers habitually park them on a street in their neighborhood . Baker said no la1v currently on the .county's books prohibits the praclice .. "This is not just a prohle1n in Ross.moor," Baker sa irl. "Similar com· plalnls have been voiced in other (Jaris of the county and to dare nothing has l)(>en done to correct the problem.'' Baker said the county prob.-ibly has some legal precedent to go on in hanning such vehlrlcs from residen1Ja1 &reel parking because a number of cities ha\'c alreOOy done so. "Huntington BeAch prohibits the park· ing of any commercial ''Chicles for longer than tv.·o hours except \o\'ht>n they are performing o !ipeciric ser,ice in the hnnlcdlAte arrn." Baker s.1!d. "The .!!13!(' \'('tlicle t'Orll' ~~ no t !p('{'ifle<ill\' authori1e !ht limiting Df such a prohihiiion to t>0111n1errlal vehicle~ but slnct It ls nn! n1lt'd ouf, t feel ~·e nrc oo soun<I leqAI footing in calling a halt to this unrnlll'd for abu9e of ou r rt>S'ldcntlfll areas.'' h(! s a Id . Kung Fu, Fountain Volley Style FBI Believes SLA Ring Has Nine More Members CHICAGO (L'PI I -FBT a,i:cnts believe that there are ni ne more mt>mbcrs of the Symbionese Liberation Anny, ~c of v.1lom may be :issisling fugitives Patricia Harst and \Vill iam and F.mily lla.rris in eluding authorities. the Chie1>- go Tribune reporl~ Saturday. In )ts ea rly Sunday editions. the Tribune reporte<I tha t in the last t\\'G CAMILLA HALL ART SHOW CANCELLED, PAGE AS \\'eeks a confidt'ntial meino \\1lS dehvcr· ed to all FBI agents in California appris-- ing thern of a list of nine secre! SL,\ rode na 1nes -includin~ a \\'On1an n:unro "SMah" \\'ho n1ay be the SLA '.!i finanl'i:il backer. Until recenlly, the FBI h:id ro11,.idcred i\1!ss HP.arst 2G-ycar-olrl ht'ires_q 10 ne1\·sp.1per publisher \\'ilha1n rtan<lo!ph Hears!, and her tv.·o rontradPs in hir!in•! to be lflc last 5l1r1;hing l!ltnlhc"s "r- the radical organ1za1ion, lh(• 1'.1bun\! soi<I The SLA leadl·r,. rJonald IJcFrr('7(', and five otht>r mcrnl>Crs died i\t:iy 17 In a fire follo .... 1ng 11 police shootout at their hidcoul In Lo~ Angeles. But the nine Olher names \\'ert disco1·ercd in dP1a:1lcd analysis by 1he FB I of lhtM1Mnd~ of docu moots seized from pas1 SLA hideouts. the Trlbunr ~id. 11 ~:iid !hf' code n..'lm~ were found on a h~t in l'X'Frttze's h.a.ndwr!Un.i: Brhln<l the nrunto .. Sarah,'' \\'tre ~vPr:il rC'fcrC'ntt's to nlf1ney. 1 t~ repor! AA id, including 11 dol111r sign and the notallon ·•.111nw1ry nwncy.·· The Tribunr said the other eight code naint's Included Shago. Sodium. Alkla, 7.Qlla, Seara, Aro>, brotht'r JU and 1\1.E. • •. The Tribune quoted a source close !u the investigation as sayin!! the other SJ.A menibcrs \.\'E're "one or the main f;ictors"' in J\tiss Hearst and her com. panions' sureess in slipping through a police dragnet. Cirl Bicvclist 1~cn1aii1s C1itical A J~year-<1ld Cosla ~lesa girl sel't'rt>ly iniarl·d in a traffic accident five days El,l!Q hiis sho\.\'n some impro1·cm('n! but remains in critical condition today at to~ta i\1<'sa J\1emorial l·tospital. l!Qsplta l aides late Saturd:.iy night sa id f\;H't•n :'llOl'l!cr. li81 Bahama P1 '1ct. had n1ade i;Jir~ht 11npl'\"JV{'men1. Sh<> had t•atlll·r bt.'<'11 li$trd in "\'Cr)'. l'cry l:'l'tl"1!: (1)11duton .\.ii;.-; :'l\0t,llf'r ~uffc~r<.'d niajor head In· Junes Tue~l11y \\hf'll $hC" \\.'IS st ruck bro:id<>idf' h~· :1 r:1r "'hilf' apparently rrossini;; ;1 hu:-y !'trl'f'I \.\·1rh her bic~cle ag;11n~1 "' r1'<1 lilrtlt Tht> c!r i\1·· f1f ttlt r.1r ,1 J9-~C'ar-<1ld llunt1n<.ito11 Bt>nrh 1nan. \.\'B.S 001 (·11rd follo\\·in~ 1~ ('(lfh~ion :ii Iii<' interStX!lton of Ada11ls .\l'l·nue and Roral Palm Drive. Arivo,hi" f.eb Nod •• 110 :-.0Ll'Ll' ·\P1 -Aninf: \rO\'. Gt"Orr,t' R Ari~·oc:hi 1vf111 t!W" [)('1nocr11lic n-0min1111on S.11u1't\111 fo,r ~ovc•n1or of llav.:111 . thc>rth~ A11n11? hhn •1 C'hanc. .. to I)(> rh~ f11':'t .\n,eri1-.u1 cov~·rnor cl. J3pllnt'!'t' nnt"r~r1 \ • I I , \ ·I DAILY PILOT Pilot LOflbOok W ~1ves of Skepticis111 Follow Tidal Ale1·ts Dy ARTHUR VINSl::L 01 IM 01Uy ,1111 $l1tt Snorts, guffaws and ya i,1'Jl.S s"·ept t~ afv.'sroom. v.'it h ne·.rs of a tidal 11·ave alert following hot on the heels of disco\•ery of 500 dead cats in San1a Ana. !\line "'as one of the yav.ns.. Ne\'erthele5:1i1 it brought memories or v.-ork at another ne11·spaper, another tidal wave alert. and the night I gained fout - ~ . .., hours' O\·ertime and lost a girlfriend to one. The 19&6 Alaskan earthquake had trans-Pacific v.·alls of v.•ater thwxtering down on the north coast of Ha\\'aii. So it seemed potentially ominous for the Cali· fornia shoreline. "Get into that EngliSh heap you ca ll a sports car and get down to Alamitos :say,n grov.•led. my Long Beach city editor at I a.m .• jl1st as I v.·lli .due to ge t off. "~e b;K:k upllairs if you need a push to get it • VINYL started." ' Tidal Wavt \Vatch beadquaners ~s ·the Harbor Department right at the edge or the bay. There was free coffee, free doughnuts and f~ debate about ..,,.hether we v.·ere about to be inundated like ants trapped in a kitchen sin k with both faucets going. \\'ell . I got antsy. I finally placed a 2:30 a.m. phone call to my_ girltrie~d. ~e v.•as .a librarian. Not your ordinary librarian, but shapely, an artist, a fantashc cook and she had a great collection of stereo albums. She !ived in a rickely old apartment·house which el_ung to the side ,o~ a cliff -overlooking San Pedro ~arbor. You know the kind, one story high oo the inland street level and six stories high on the seaward side. She li\•cd on the sixth. Her place v.·ould be a death trap v;'hen The Wave hit. Naturally. I didn't want to lose a good thing. The phone rang several times before berhuskiJy.whispered : "Hello ... ?'' Gent ly. I broke the neWs of the tidal "'ave alert and the fa ct I "'as. risking all in the name of news coverage dov.n at the edge of imperiled Alamitos Bay. .. , l\"ant you to ge( to high ground." I urged, without crassly men- 1ioning taking her ste reo album collection along. A slee py. cynical snicker followed. "Thanks." she said. "But I think I'll survive." The Wave never hit. The only quake effect in fact, was a 1\\"0--inch increase in the predicted 4:30 high tide. The following "·eek, my librarian dumped me for a 45-year-old Los Angeles artist who probably smoked dope. · Now. ( -am a cynic when it comes to tidal wave alerts, such as that fl ashed along the Orange Coast Thursday.-and wlth obvious justiflc.ation. But the k!l!er Du predicted.to be due this winter , .. that's another story. . Ragtime l(eeps Tradition -First Yacht .to Finish - • How Walter Hick.el • ' Sees Nixon--Down , .. • To the· Dyed Hair H\CKEL, EX-iNTERlOR ~ECRETARYl By TAD BARmrus showed our strengths." ... _ .. ,.,. ,.,..,,. wrtW And what of Nixon now? M CHORAGE, Alaska -Like Richard "It wilold be natural !or NiXOh to Nlxon, ,Wally Hlckellives by the sea. be a beaten man now. I can see him Three thousand miles north of Nixon's Writing. I can ~ him speakiifg. I can - 'isolated, sun·splashed San CJeinente see that imaf!;e·ooming out again. That fortress, Walter J. ijickel sits izr a image, that image. always tliat 'image. small, wtilte . house listening to Pacific I see the Nixon as we knew him, out '>'"3Ves lap Ob a rocky beach. lllcre yet ... ft Is a time tcf remember, as his "f see him c<impaigning, although I old boss must, those first heady days don1t know what he's campaigning for of power back in 1969 when Washington · · · I mean that figuratively ." belonged to a fonner grocery boy from Flinging himself from his comfortable \\7hittier and, among many other.s, an leather swlv'el chair, Hickel paces his ex-truck driver from Alaska who'd memorabilla:filled office in thought. come along for tbe ride. "I SES him like an old actor · who Hickel 's memories aren't just or red will never die. I see him out there carpets and state banquets· and cabinet in the world -not in a creative way, "But he didn't want It to show through. n "'85 ~rity. Jt v.•as the la ck of a strong decision of self, the lack ol a real strong direction. "H(S WHOLE lite was molded to become the President. He listened to so many poople that he got puShed around to do it 'right,' even to listening to what col<>r his socks should be. "If Bob (H.R. Haldeman) said 'Your socks sOOuld be gray' he put on gray socks, and if somebody else said ·~1r. President, they should be blue.' he put I on blue socks 1ITld if each of them said it at the sa me time he'd probably have ~'Orn one blue and one gray ~1y point is, the man had a lack of a strong sense of set!. a strong beli ef meetings at the shimmering, custom-because he isn't a creative man. He 'll made table set with delicate China be the old actor who ~ .. ,, g-away. "N. · · 1 rted '"'~ """ u:on 1s a very m rove man. teaoups and neatly sharpe11ed pencils. He'll be like rthe .............,, who gets a in who or what he was. .,.... ........ I think he is a person "'ho had a • • t A1y God, did he try. J.1ost meo wouldn't give that much out of lbeif lives. - "But Nixon didn 't like ~t> tions . . . J : "Nix9n al\\•ays made his · dec~ns frGn\ a written Il\et'l'Kt, 'Ind he rQJde thc1n by him.self ... "When you have a memo yoo only have "Tittelf words. Anyone can read Uie Gettysburg Address, but OQly Linc;oln could ·give it. So when you read a memo you take all the human emotion out of it. all the compassion. His decisions were made on tl1e basis of the written memo. "They should have been made on the compassion of the man pleading the argument . . . all the emphasis, all tbe 'goddamits.' Who Would pol 'god- damit" in a memo to the Presideot vf the United States? WhG would put 'Nou' I'm pounding my fist on the table. Mr. President" into a memo! O!ber flashes intrude on the pomp facelift \0 try and get youth back. very strong drive to succeed but had of past circumstances. Nixon's dyed "Richard Nixon probably can 't face_ 11 h t'NIXON WOULDN'T allow the input. _,,__ . A, he . never rea y been secure as a· aman d 1 • ~ thou·~· bul black hair and a uu.o.;USS1on ...,.. t merits thct reality or the moment, whatever He ha a ot ot gUIN. 5-''.., _of gray. Countless yellow legal pads that r~ity is. He's probabt)> not capable being · · · l don't think he Md any real strong strewn acr<m a comfortable cooch. A of ever £acing it." "So many of 1).is \\'Orcls gave him convictions about the domestie problems cardboard image of a president and 8 . 1 a Way out. ~fost of the things he said o1. America,, and thars wby I think hovering hangers-on who kept taping [).iring a tw~hour interview, icke you saw him say. you didn"t bear him it was the end or an era · that started he GI. r ho dredged from his personal past 0~ say tbeiTI. You can read a man without · r N. it toget r. impses o a poor y-moments with the 31th President of long be ore ixon. become-president who envied wealth . The the United States. The following are hearing what he said . "Johnson ahnOst brought ii to a pea\, seeds of Watergate being sown. his memories, his thoughts, his predic-"I read men, I don't care what they're but Nixon brought it over the bmnp. In his book "Who Owns America?" lions: saying. The public does that , too. That's It was that Afachiavellian approach to Hickel recalled that 1963 post-Thanksgiv-"Richard Niton's sole aim-ln life was what they did to Nixon when he was government. that the end -justines the ing day -telephone call in wtrlch NiJ:on to be President. 1 don't think he thought on television. They saw wh3t he was means. lt was the tot.at · political con- offered him tile interior department job beyond, that. 1 think -he believed t.hat saying, they never heard what he was sideratlon rather than· the total of what and guaranteed him a footnote in history. the grl!atness of being President 'i\-OOld saying. runs the country -the SOClaJ. human, "After I hung up the phone, l wept," come a.fter he became President. His economic and political overview. That's Iii k I •• I THE \VAS a loner. he became a u•hat it takes to make the nresidency c e wro'<'. I fe ~·as zeroed in on becoming President " r loner to get there . . . rm not so .... ·ork. ON THAN·'sGIVI•·c e·•e, 2·4 mooths aod it was reflected in the men he ed h "' ·~ ¥ sure he ~'3S embitter as muc as ''\\'e ha ven"t had -a n execuUve in the after he 'd gotten the job, Hickel was brooght with him to the White House. he felt abused. He'd lost a lot of friends. \\"hlte -House since Frankli n Delano • ,banished by the president qf the ·United They were the PR guys · · · I think whether he meant it or not. .JtoosevelL By AL!\10N LOCKAIJEY · BYC : %. Lucky liu£r. Di& Foxx, BYC ; States. Hickel was .a{ "I ~him one time '~lr. Presi~. he-sct'1he'"Whote-atmospHHea00-o.Uitude "Regardless of whet her Nixon kne.\v -°'-.. c.11~ ~u.e-s1• -3~egre,John-MerriU;-strFY ~--:-pu61'iCIY""Sa°ylng 1100 had isolated 'OUf r g wt t gray of this isolation thing. t think he was anything aOOut \\'atergate. he set the Ra · be 62 r l N Zealand ,,_ a.ASS t-shearwater, Beking and himself in the "'bite House behind a in it.' He had beautiful gray hair , but very much aware that if he became attitude ... the momentum . the at· gtime. 1 · 00 ew ,s"""")!' ' ..... drews, =vc,· 2. ~~·tor, Ke"" wall or 1·n·-s1·t1·ve ""11viuors. Four vears he always kept it black. He didn't want Pr d l l ha be b. 'al·1ed by B1·11 \Vhit e ·and BW P11.c:m1in1· "'' "' .....,., .... '9 'V .,.,.., ~ -/1 •~ ~L.-that h air ·d 1 that esi .'°. t. t. ~'Ou d ve to on. IS mosphere was there. JI It hadn't been _,,,~ ~f;ner· , yyr. 11.1a ........... n.--n... ...... eok', after that, Nixon..bimSeU .is outJ~y .. I. .... ~11vw , e . ~·as a1 o . of Long Beach Yacht Club, livtd ti\> ~· ...,. ._ ....,&••~ i:wvicii Something to do with t.he fact he didn't ov.n truliative. No one was gomg lO the I.apes it ~·ould have been 90met.hlng to her reputation .as a !irst finisher St. FYC. ~ Hickel, the hard-driving, staCcat~ want to show his emotions. It was a lead him. He had to push. He in-else. in long &.1ance yacht races fri$Y ·I : • ... .f speaking. self-qlad~ . mdilliopolina~ret.ea\from cardboord image . . . -st 1 _ inctively knew he wasn't going to be '"\Vhen v;·e left Washington in but J· ... t barely , • ' • AnctlOrage, is con.vmce. a. I ""· ·-"I'd •· ht •y 't' ·t 1ked N"ovember 1970 my w1·re said the Wh1·•· -~n Ne~rt . Ha;bor Yacht Ctub~.isi.'. •-Bid ·an:Free..1~8ir· has ended. -· • ·> Y~ 1008ty ~~e;~. Tl~~ :Z; ff!;1k "If. you derine. ... weaknesa in a man -HooSfH;taif woold eitt--each. other u;. mile -Cahforrua Coasta l ract"" from-SL -. --:: , ,,. "\Vaterga te is the~Waterst!ea i11 .-20f.b ~ 51.1}t . you have on all the time, that"s as being afraid to try. then Nixon was and that's v.•hal. they ended up doing, Francisco Yad\t Club. San Francisco, ' century Ainerican politics." says Hickel, not the real Nixon ' a very strong n1an because he tried. eating each other up." ful gtimc edged Jake Wood's CCj;l sloop Under 'Estimate who was "cerrtly defeated for the ''-.-"· _____ · -----------------------.,--------::i~~ ~::ir~~~ 5E ~iE~ state Depa~t o1 Trao•JX>rt•lion ;:~7:~~br~tiE~~ ~;~ -· IW11t111111111111m11111111111111111111111111rumm11m11111111111m111111111111m1111111111m11111111111nowm111111111i111111m1m111ru1111111111111111111wm111m111mR1m1H11111 behind Sorcery. One sloop lost her mast officials 31 pJe.asantly surprised that hide.' In exposing our weaknesses, we i.n the race. bids · for ooostruction of a stretch of the Corona del Mar Freeway in Costa None of the Class A leaders could Mesa have come in W"ld.er their save their time over the fast Sparkman estimates. & Stephens one tonner, America Jane, Sukut Construction Jnc. of Santa Ana if ·woo finished fourth and picked up overall and c. w. Poss Inc. of Hungtington handi cap honors in the 19-boat fleet. Beach \\·ere low bidden at $6.8 million . America Jane, owned and ·skippered by about 2 percent less tban the projected G€0rge Tooby. NHYC. finished three co.st. hours behind the lead boats. The bid covers construction or one Tinsley Light. the 35-foot light displace-mile of freeway from the San Diego mcnt sloop widely campaigned by Henry rreev.·ay to an interchange at the Grandin. St. Francis Yacht Club, v.•as l\"c"'POrt Freev.·ay northeast of 8~1.01 d.lsm11sted in a 30-knot "''ind and lumpy Street. sea off Point Concepcion v.·hen she dipped her spinnaker pole in the heavy going. The boat \\'as towed to Channel Islands !\larina. There atfrc 110 known injuries. As overall \1•inner America Jane "'ins the BaJdwin !\f. Baldwin Perpetual Trophy. OVERALL America Jane·: 2. Sorcery ; 3. Kan H. l)ick Kelton. LAY C. CLASS A-Sorcery: 2. ~liramar; 3. Hagtimc . CLASS B-L-Oco Vicntc II. Jim Seals, Prison Guard Knifed FOLSO~t (AP) -A Folsom State Prison guard was stabbed by an inma te Thursday as the officer tried to help medical personnel administer medication to the prisoner, officials said. Ofiicer J .L. Brown was treated for four superficial stab wounds after he was attacked with a dental 1.-nife by Gilbert \\1atson, said a spokesman. DAILY PILOT DELIVERY SERV IC E Delivery of the Oaity Pilot is guarantee d ,,.O,,<U•·~'1<1•• "VOY<l<tnllll!.l•e""Y'""P<:•b• } .>O p ,.,. cell •"d your <OP• w111 II< 1>rouq~1 lo you (•l '•••~l•,enur>hll.OOP.m S.. tYrCl.iY •rt<I ~~<>O•• I! '''"' <l<t no! '~'" ••~ YOur lttpY f>Y • ~"' <;.,11..,.,,.,y, °'I• m . 'ilun<l6<, (ill imd • copf woll be 1>roug~f lo""'· (fll• .,, i~~tn ~n1•! 10 • m . Telephones Nortftw.HI Hunlot•gto.r> S...cn •"<I Wrtimon;ter. S.n (lrmrnl!, (dP•~!•ino Bt~( n, S.,,n Jv~n CaP•" '"'""· o ..... Pili"', !><tuTl'I ~•qvn•, l•gun~ r"ouel . 110·1110 •9? U IO Snow Falls on N. Rockies JT1inds . Whip· Across ,tlichigan, W'isconsin 1;·.s. S 111111r111r!f t.lllM $"6W br111!'1td l~e "°''""" R~<'· v Mounr~'"' ;tfl0 ""''"' P"""' pl•lnt 5&111•04V •nd SlrO'IG \ool"<I~ wnlp. pr<! •trou !llf: Gr1al L•k•• SnO-N ltll o....-mvcn "' Won'"""'' Wvominq Ind l'llt wt1t•1n (),.,ot~1, r>111!1Q "f:..o,, m0<1 '""'" en •ncn "' 81111>\Glo I ! 5•oc~"'""''s lldlll10•1e1 "'"~ "111"1! IO• ..... , .... Norin 0.~0I •. Wl.-.Gt uo to .t:I milts "'' IY.tl!r •~C~d ~C•03S MlthlQ~n 1n<I W"ton n C.'lt ... ina w•rnlnqt w.M "" •e• L•'e ~·1tn•o1n ~"" L~kt !t1111trll>' lnun<1""'"°"""'s p~n..i I II r o u q n >'.~"'•'· """PPl"ll l.t lro{llll or '''~ '·~• TOl!t~•. 1"4 l tlt!trtd '""" 4••·•0!",..I ma~tl\ •nrnucin tr.. Tt.-J~ '"·""~••<trf C.1-• tOVlfHI ,... nor!twrn ll«"t• to !"t 011•0 V•ll11~. •~•r• 1••vH Ot•• '" '"' ·~•' 11r>0 p·.• 1\1 th• lrn.t~y Nny!'!~•l\I •rt•"'IO" 10-lluftt •A~t<J " t' ~ell'~• It PfQll"I'-~di, '<I )1 cl~ll'ff\ 41 Crl•I Ftll1, M""t l,,.., •••IHllt CN Ill I""' tJo\rlll ~'"" """ morl'll"" IOOl/•t "''H'ty 1<111'"' c~ • ,,,... .. 111 •••• '"'~VQft "'""°•Y. l e< HI wl...,., 1t ti..,., """"'''1'11 1• •·'.rlh ... n ""''O' ! ~Il l r.l!iiMly ..... •"'f"• <itv1 ('A1l1t "e11ov1 but """' ... ..,,.,... '" ,,,.. lf\lftl<Qf". tt)S ('):totOELU -MOl.IJW t ... r ,.,,.,v~h 11'-.lt bu! '°"'' IAll l!lgl'tl ..,.. N •ly --low tl'1WCll. "lqltltv """' cl tf• 0-.trnloni 1o .. 1 lo• 1o. Hl'M IO<lty I-lo l'P'lld ~ ~ • n19111 ,,,,...,,,¥ "'"' "' ~· I • /,\C)VNlAIH Alrr•f -1•...,,uv ••I• • .. '"'MG'I MO!lda., btot loc•llv w\fljjy •1 ll!IW' l'Od•Y• ri>Otlly Nrlllfff\ , • ..,.._ Sllth' wl,..,."9 "'""' 1rtrouon ~1v. 0.-.ff'lltn• -'""' "'JG :io. '"'°"*" «J •. Hltftl !D'Uy 6'I 10 H •nd f'llp~ MO!lll•Y '' to 7). Dt!5EllT tlEGIOHS -f1lr lllr8'j\>ll MOflcl•·f bl•' II)>" 1111 .,,,,,.., I! lln•et. n>Oll!y ftQl"!f>trft !ff''"' v•lle)'I.• Not mlt"n J•-UIJI'• c.11,111·•· OYW~lgnt ~· Vl>6or '°' '"'Mii SO. ,,_ ""~' M>C1 .H •o ti IOWff clt1tr1J. MIQI>• '°'~ ...,,, MollO•r 1' 10 l4 nlat1 ,,. .. ,., •fl{! 11 10 n '°""• Otl•rl r•ll'll .. IB•·0 • l;·~•J...ow rml"°""'' .._ .:~ Te111pera111·re• •• .. r. • ll " ., ll " ,. ,. ~ H ' " " .. ~ " ~ • r. " r. " Sim, ~10011. Tides S.c:Ofld lllOJt U 110 '-"'· lA ~°"' row •: 11 ....... o., ...... ''"' ~'"' J :ll '·""· J-' Fir•! IOW ~JI •• !'l'I. ,.0 SttOl'ltl l'l\fn 11tl •·"'• "' ~ loW tt11 •·"'· •.• S11n f1Ml1 l!SO •·"' St11 6:D t.n\. MOO!'I rlus •i:tt '·'"· &tt1 111~02 •·""· . , Fine . Quality Padding. and Labor Availabte I All Work I Fully -I-Guarantet . llll~ll~llllRRlllHllllm SHAGS ONLY • D11P•ftl .501 00 • Hl·l•w• •S.lid• : ~.~~··"' $ 3 • TwHdt Pfl SQ. V1lwt YAlD · h $6.fS NOTHING IN STOCK OVER . 56?!.Yd. •-loSll.U • NOW YOU CAN AFFORD TO CARPET THE WHOlE HOUSE! LEADIN·G · · NAME BRANDS HUGE SELECTIONS I IK·E~S _ CA , IT4YAREHOUSE , 124 E. 17th S't • .,_. ' (11 N1wport) •• COSTA ,M~SA 645-4330~ Hour11 M: J. ·W. S. t •6 Thur. & Fri, 9.9 Sun. 12.s • ·~ , .. .. ' . -. .. " 'I s . r;-11". :::;::: c, '~ ~. '# ~..;' ;;r --d J• ·i::.Y ,. t. . ' . . . ' U'I Tt...,_.. SKELETONS BELIEVED TO BE 60 TO 100 YEARS OLD UNCOVERED T.hama County Sheriff's Dis,,.tcher Mary Fitzgerald Inspects Bones Can~er Belter.? State Clicirges Fraud OROVUJ.E . (UPI) -.A Dennis said the treatments Southl\tnd Due l\fass Transit Aid .. ~ electrician has been consisted of placing a lead WASHINGTON (AP) -A .. , ,arrested on misdemeanor belt over llhe cancerous area $11.8 biHioo mass transit bill ~ ., charp!s of illegally iracticirlg of a persoo's body.and having that Coogress may approve medicine by allegedly treating the person hold a wire Oll1-as early as next wee k. ~:ould .. ,cancer 1ufferers through the nected to a .instrument con• gi ve metropolitan Los Angeles ~.1\lst (I( Jead bells. taining a meter. at least $3 15 million -and • JO\J GuY ·Ora Rowley, 10. v.-ns He said Rowley told his pa· possibly as much :1s S2 hillion. "'taken into custody Friday near tients that cancer poison was ·'Los Angeles is the big win- here after a state Health being drawn out of their nCr.'' said an aide to Rep. , Expert to Check Skeleton Finds ' • ·. SLA .<\rt Exhibit Cancelletl .. • BEHKELE'i' (AP \ -A Catholic student center has RED BLUFF (AP \ -Er-.Los Molinas and Vina. cancelled an exhibilion or 70 · forts to rmd more skeletons where the bones of 17 people BUT 0\VIN~ said Peter dro"·h~gs by slain Symbionese ha\•e been unearthed v.·ere S C'h u I l z of anthropolo&?\', Liberation Anny mt' m be r suspended Saturday until an department of the University Cun1illa !lull 10 a\'okl .,.,.hat anlhropologisl can exa1nine ol Cnlitomia at Davi!! \i·ould " it t er med ''sensational the remains, authorities say. examine the OOnes nnrt the CALIFORNIA • site Saturday and perhaps publicity." "We re going to suspend dig~ fing in the area on the ·chance Sunday berore any rurther ex· '----------The Rev. Theodore Vierra. it might be a valuable cavations. • directOt of the Ne 'A' 1n a n ardleolOgical si te." s a J d He added that __ 'J'ebt>ma , Center, said Friday he Tehema CoUnty Sheriff Sgt. County orficials expect Schultz ing previously unused laud for v.•ithdrew pemtlssion to use Luther Owings. to take the remains back to planting alfalfa. the building for the exhibit A team of five officers had the university for further ex-· Officials said the \rorkers because of 8 bombing at San been scheduled to cUg (or more amlnation. found the first skeletons about Pranctsco·s Sheratc»-Palace skeletons in the rolling hills The mass grave was round four fee t· underground. buried Hotel Inst Wednesda;t fo r east of the SecramentO River Fripay by \\'Orkers at the Ro-qn top or one another ap-v.·hich a terrorist ~roup claim· 1 _bet_.-_ .. _n_the_'.·oonvn ___ un_iti_·,. __ or_·_m_la_no_Ra_nc_h_w_ho_•_'c_re_le_ve_l·_::.1"'::..•::..en:::t:"'.ly_i::..n_a:__ctrec:::..n'::.·i1::... ___ ..:ed::..crespo.=c nsi bility. DAILY PI LOT A 5 I Heiress Gets Jail \1E~'TURA (AP i -A %6 -ye ar-old heiress d<scribed by Dop. Dist. Atty. Jay Johnson as ''a poor little rid1 girl v.'ho likes to sell heroin" has been sentenced Lo fi\•e- years-to-Iife in prison. Patricia Vujovic h SplaVrll, 26. heiress to a Ventura County ranchland fortune. v.•as sen!Cflced Friday in \1entura County Olurt. Investigators S.."t!d her records shOY.·ed 11he sold $45.653 in . heroin last •January and • February alone. Penney 1 Department undercover agent bodies when a needle 00 the Joseph G. J\.finish , (0.N.J.). "~1• made an appointment with meter mdved. Dennis said the \\'ho v.·ants to distribute a --Ro:w~y-t...beg\n cancer treat--n:eedle a-s ~aawatec1--~lai get J)ereei1tage-of-the-fundsl-4----- •• 'JUE!Dta. . . perspiration of the patient. to eKisting rail transit systen1S .. ,i; Ruben DennU. 8 n '°" Oenrf ·d Rawl ~ ..... ed in the northeast. . . ·;. vestigator .for U. st ate is sru ey ""'J0,1 6 The distrlbution rormul1t n.;~em of O>osumer At-$5 per treatmalt and gave contained in the proposal '!airs, said Rowley treated a.bout IS treatments per pa· before Congress is ba!ed on penons in two rooms of his bent. a city's population and its six-room home and had a list The investigator said densi ty. Under terms ot th~ ~ .. 1of 17 patients, several from Rowley told him that he began n1e3suNt Loij An_geles would .r.'lr'lfS fara 'Way as DrelOfl. m -1reating persons-afterhis-wife get $315 million £1001 a $3.9 -'1said Rowley had no medical died of cancec in September billion fund for either capital training. 1973. expenditures or operatin,:!'. ~ Stewa¥Hess Pr@w,sts ---. ..... . ~ -• •• '/-~ ~ 'ti , .... --;,,. :$ 'Over~~e:-u-~~· firing = SAN F~CIS(X) (A!\)--_lhls· to_ me. .. 1c"'thY ·Tru~x. 2;\ West-ern Airlli;ies 27, Sl}ld Friday.:.~ take home -=sewardess, fired tor -ht~ about $750 a month. 'lliis ~ pow»ds overweight, said really hits tOO ck>&e to· home." :~ would l!icket and perha.p.s -· Afiss Trwix. is a-feet-7-inches >..:sue to get her job back. t'an and 13914 ~ -and "They're 09t going to do four pounds overwetght says '~ ~Feminists *--' • 1 the airline. ''The weight limit for a persoo or my height is 135 pounds, 1 think t b a t ' s arbitrary and sexist;" she \ said. "We shouldn't have to \ · be weighed at all." · Miss Truax, v.ilo's worked -7~ MONTEREY fUPJ) -,for Western for four years ~RepresentatlveS of Bay A~a •and seven months, said she ::temmtst grOups picketed the will appeal her firing to the -ooterey County Jail Satur-U.S. Equal Employment Op- -. day to protest the murder portunity Commission. ,Picket :Angered _;yerdict against Inez Garci8. the · airline's office a n d :rlO: wbo admitted sla)"in& I• possible take, the finn to court '7 0Wli man_ who all<~ l<l get her iob.~~k. · .-...ntped her. "I've never -~ anything --'A jury ol seven-women lind'-like' ttits." she said. "But I'm : -:ft Ve r nSen convicted Mrs. mote' ~about fat pilot$ '-j:Afcia ot .sccood de~ \.t\f.lng for \Vest.em than I an1 ~ Friday following a ~abOul me." _ even"week trial in Mootercy (t& Truax t'ris fired Sept. -_.p.mty_ ~ Court. , 29. _ I_ . ~ AbQut ·~ v.;ornen .~hed \ ·~western AlrlWes has ~ , .~ the jail Satwilay and ll long-<tandlng policy applying ·~eny picketed the home of "' weight standards for both -Superior Court Judge ·~ley :. .male and female flight at- ;:J..awson, .who presided over t la," said, Ken Etick$'IO, -:the trial. 1 • , a tstem Airlines spoJcesfnan. CUT FROM ·COOK'S · FINEST USDA CHOICE BEEF Limit 3 lbs. Per Customer sub.sldies. State and local funds must match nn equal amount of m<iney used for operating sul>sidies and 20 per· cent...-oi:: ihe ngl!Te-used £or. • capil!l projects. . ln.~n. transit agencies Jn Loi! .&geles and parlS ol -orange and San Bernardino' 1counties • cculd appl.v f o r government grants to sup- plement 80 percent of project costs. The grants \\'OUld be issued from a $7.9 billion fund for capil'll projects. RTD Strike Runni11g On LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The stalemated S o u l h e r n Ca!Uomia bus strike moved into its S.Sth day Saturday to beeome the longest rurming public transit strike in the city's history . Talks resumed with the l'ros- pect of a special session of the ~lalure being called to deal with the lengthy labor dispute, which has idled 1,fKIO rapid transit district buses in four counties. Negotiations ~itb representati\'es of 700 stilting · mechanics proceeded through most o( the day. Sessions \Vith offlciAls or the 3,300 striking bus drivers were ..ac~ tor today. . t ': . . Get 20°/o savings on made to measure in over 700 colors. You get great fabrics. grcal 111 And a custom look tor ready-made nrices. Choo:.e trom over iO paltcrns 1n an11que ::..:irins 1acouards. p11n1s. sht?(lrs o! acclJte. cuuc n. p01yes!er ··•-a· Sale IOx24" r09, 5.11 , , , ..... Sele c.55 IOa30" reg. UI ........ S1i. 5.11 IOdl" reg. 7.41 .. , ..... Set. 5.99 Valence r•o. Ut ••..... Siie 2.87 Heavy Wf!lght °"'" we111e c::asemet1ts ol 'ayon,cottonfacetatelpc1y111er Sale Follow the measuring u1.01nictrons Delow. brrng us the measurements and we'll ha~e your draperies made ro 11! To measure: Width. measure lrom !Gl 10 [HJ. or simply the width you want to cover Length. for ceiling to 11001 length. meas.ure {Al 10 (0). For regular Hoor length . n1ea:>urc (C) lo {0). For sill length, mt:,1sure fron1 iEl to (F). Add !hree inches 11 you want oe1ow-s..11 length. 70l24" reg. 3.99 . , .... , . Sei. 3.20 Sale ~ Slx24" reg. 4.49 ........ Sile 3.60 70x30" reg. 3:99 .. , ..... Sale 3.20 70x36" reg. C.49 ........ S•I• 3.60 Swag reg. 5.49 .......... S.te 4.40 $(,ha color bo• we a Yes Ol l)01Vttte-r h"IVO" Slx30 .. reg. 4.99 ........ Sile 4.00 68x36°' reg. 5.49 ..•..... Sile 4.40 Valance reg. 3.29 ....... S1l1 2.63 Cu•ltl'M !t•e DO'Y"S'l'"''rayon .,..1th k,.,11\ecl boll Om t11m ot tol\on acryhc -rayon .. .. .. . . : : . ' . ; : .. . ' .. ' . ' . .. •":>f • Shop Sunday 11 A.M. to 5 P!.M. ot the followlllCJ sto...s: FASHION ISLAND. NewP<>" Beach 171 ~16+4·2313. HUNTINGTON BEACH. Hoot,,gton Booch 17 14) B92-7771. HARBOR CENTER. Costa Mesa 1714) 046-5021. " A6 • ( DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE .) Why Moretti's Angry 1-'or'mct California Asscmt;ily .Speaker Bo.b Moretti js hopping ·mad. So <ire ;1 $ubSti1ntiul numhcr or Other Jc~is lators \VhO ply their tradc Unde r the golde n dome up in Sacran1ento. Atorctti t.h.:cide<l two years ago to take a stab at the governship. I-le didn 't rn ukc it . ln fa ct, he didn't even make it pa st th{~ primary. Young Edmund G. Brown Jr. SH\\' to that last spring. Some folks \~'Ure syn1pathetic -lo\'.rard f\l oretti. \Vhat 'sit like to be kiekcd out of a career at the age or 37, even if parti<il ly by your 0\\111 choi ce? Jt turned out thHl J\loretti ,,·as not so bad off after all. l-le Y.1as the first beneficiary of a pension plan passed \\1ith only n1oder<Jtc ripples back in 1965. As details of the plan hc~an to unravel a lrnost 10 yel;l rs later, it bccarnc tlt·~11· il was quite a pa ck;.igc. P.1oretti '''<IS entitled to :i fat 58,292 a yc;;1r until he was 60 . And n1orc lall·r h1ore of t he story unroldcd. !\1orett.i \v:1s tflc firs t to be re\vardcd by the slick pension p;1ck;ige. but hl' was. far fron1 the only reCipil'nl. l~e wasn 't espechilly big in the money de1>arlment, e.ven with a tidy $8,000·plus in his pocket forthe next 23 years. 1'hose on the c li ~iblc list rc;.id like a \Vho's \Vhoor the California Lt•gislaturc. The an1ounts of pote ntia l benefit ranged up to SI2,000 a year . J\·Iany of those in line for the handsome benefit h~d done virtually nothing to earn it. They stood in line any\\•ay. You kno\V \vhat happened next . The people of California read of this ripoff. They responded. They res 1)Qnded in1medi:l tely and they r esponded vociferous ly. There \vasn't a Ja,vrilakcr in California who didn't feel-and "'ho didn't he;'lr plenty aboul- a n uprising in every Cali fornia county a gains t th(' pension bonus. . As the heal g re\v, ltepublica ns pushed Governor Reagan to call a special session to repeal the pension pl~n . Re a gan, reeling the Democratic majority \\'Ouldn't go ulong, a t first refused. The pressure incrc<ised. The DemOc rats caµilulatcd and Reagan ('ailed the special session. So the state's usscmblymen and senators went 1back lo Sacra m ento. They squirmed under the hot floodlights of publicity and they knew they ha d no \Vuy to go-not in ~n election year. No one could risk that kind of campaign issue :.igainst him, even al the risk of e ndangering his own pension package. 'fhe pension plan was repealed. 'fhey \vere hardly heroes, these legis lators. They n1uttered and they S\\'ore at the lawmaker mos t responsible for the pens ion repeal, Assemblyma n Jtobcrt McLennan (R·Oo\vncy}. 1'he most violent oaths \\'ere reserved for lhe press, whic h by repGrling the i!-;sue so aroused the Ca lifornia public. Key credit fur the outstanding job of sniffing out the s tory ~nd revealin g it s fu ll implications to the public goes to an Associated l'ress repartcr, Evans \\'hilt. Some of the legislators Y»ho lost their fat sacks of public m oney could hardly disgtilse the ir feeling toward \Vhitt last '''eek. l\1orclti himself called the Evans Whitt work "the cheapest s hot" he had seen at the capitol and told Evans, "If you arc proud of this you have no business being here:" While it is easy lo understand Moretti 's outburst, it is equally easy to see tha t \Vhitt led the California press into unmask ing an a lmost fraudule nt abu$_e of legislative po\\'ers. Jn all , about $6 million of the taxpayers' m oney \V:.lS saved because Evans ~hilt sa'" the story, '''rote it and nc"'spapers publis hed it. TodaY is the first day of National Ne,vspaper \Veck. The theme this year is "Ne,vspapers : Freedom 's \\'capon." 'fhat last chain of events in Sacramento pre tty well tells ihe s tory of \Vhat the press is all about.. / Who Writes the Editorials for Daily ~Pilot? Apropo s oi Natit1nat Newspaper \Veek. which b4!gins today, the Daily Pilot oflers this answer to the most frequently asked question about lhc new.spaper's ciperatifin -who writes the editorials? press the opinions of anyone man. The newspaper speaks with one voice only after many have been heard. TllE VOICES are hea rd -loudly Who "'ri tes the editorials'! and •clea rly -in the informal at· It's a fair qul'stion, probably one of mospherc whi ch s urrounds the the rilost frequently asked about the "'eekl y meetings of the editorial nev;spaper. Anti the answer at the board. Out of these meetings come.the Daily Pi lot is no one -no one person, foundations on which Daily Pilot th at is. editorials are b ui lt . Editorial 1rriting is a tea m effort at At.-the head of th·e editorial board Nall and Charles Loos, assistant managing editors ; Terry Co \·ille. West Orange County editor, and \\'ii· liam Schreiber, county repo rter. As they discuss nev.'s or the '''eek or o( weeks ahead, the talk-ranges o\'cr topics affecting each or the Orange Coast communities' the Daily Pilot serves as \\:ell as the stale. the nation and the world. p;1rlit·ular int erests'! was the original Proponent of acer· whoever pro duces i l . 3. Doesthe ne\\·spaperkno\venough t·ain pos ition a nd pos ture the Jty,•illbere,'iewedas manyasthree 0:1bout the topic to make an intelligent, newspaper should assume on a given times -onc.e by Editorial Page respons ible comment? topic. Editor Kre ibich, again by Editor Often the third question is the mos.t BUT \VllO actually writes the Keevil an.d, fin ally by Publisher \Veed difficult to ansY.'e r. And sometimes editorials for tile Daily Pilot? (where "the buck stops," as the theansvteris·'no.'' Ttie editori al board calls on any saying goes) -before it final ly Even after co nsiderable rese£rch man or \vo man on the staff -the one reaches the publication stage. Each and further diseus!lion at a later moslqualifiedtowriteonthespecific revie\v usua lly brings son1e further editorial board meeting, a topic can topic selected for comment. ed iti ng and rerining. be dropped altoge ther because the A reporter "'hose assignments have . .\ny n1ember of the ncu'S team \Vith • t Ii tr ;, e w t la •• • T h 0 t' n • J A N th e Daily Pilot. It is the art of are Robert N. \Veed, publisher; phr:isi ng thoughts so that the finished Thom as M . Keevil editori.Jl_nd B . 1-----e<litorial-re present-s-the-ne"•spaper's-tJ'aTii'K"feibTcli , e r orii page editor. opinions on ne1vs.events and problems Other board members are Tho·mas or the d~1~. 1'he editorials do not ex· i\1urphine, managingeditOr~ RiC'hard ~ TllERE IS a three-...,•ay test or any topic proposed as th e subject ror an editorial : , ~.sjt.a..t.opiU..'.hiehm.erits.editol' .. io'I comment ? 2. \\'ill the.commentary serve the 1'C\\'S paper's .readers in terms or their ny~spaper still does no~ have ~ur · placed him c losest to the facts sur· kno\1·\cdge to co ntribute on the sub· f1 c1ent kno"·ledge to make a meaning· rou nding the editorial topic may "·rite ject is invited to put forth his best ef· ful editorial con1mcnt. the first draft. . ·~-_,__furl ----~ ;---Dis~ussion-.-i n-a·!l-~itorial-bo~rd -1\TOSlOl'(en lMOrJslr\aldrait is..writ· f.lany voice s blend into one. The m.eet1ng can m?dtfy' the eonclus1on, ten by one or Jhe senior editors. And editorial speaks in the single voice of sh1~t .theen1phas1so/e\·enreversethe us ua lly even a "f irst draft'' the newspaper. \Vho wrote it ? The pos1t1on of the bc;iard n1ember who represents several rewritings by Daily Pilot did. • • How to Fight lnflatio1i Military Cuts Should-Get P .riority The \Vhit c llouse Conference on In · nation dre\1' up a long Juundry li st or things th ~1t ought to be done but stee1·ed tlea r of one or the n1a jor causes for the inflation -the S92 bil· lion n1ili tary budge !. Ob\'iou slr. a 11:1tirJn ·s firs t obli g:ltlo11 Is l(J look after tht: sccurttv orit-rpetiple .. £,·en a t the r is k o l' causing cconon1ie di s loca ti on s, n governrnent has to a ttend to the con1 · n1on safety. I do not quarrel \l'ith thi s propositi on. \\'h:it I do qu<arrcl \\'ilh. hO\rerer, is the n1aintenant'C of a • S\\·olJcn. 1nititary bureaucracy and \\'ilh a po licy of O\·e rk ill that have lit· tie lo do u·ith the true rcquircn1ent s ol the n;itiona I seruri!r . RlGllT NO\\', th{'rC is h ard evidence to indicate lh:it the U.S. go\'ernnH:nt \Od:ly i~ on the biggest binge uf niilit ;Jry n1i sspcndin g in its historv . Son1c it.e1n s: ..... I ~ \\'c have been in an o\·erkill po.-.ture for more than a dec ade . The' .stockjlil~s of nu clear cxplosi\'es are ( NORMAN COU SIN S J more than enough to destroy an cne1ny lhe size or the Soviet Union at lea st 100 tin1es o.yer. But the expen- si\'C slock piJi ng goes on. 2 -The end of the war in Vietnam, the SA LT agreements "'ith th e Rus· sians and the new relntionship \\'it h China -all of \\'hich were hai l<'d by then Pres ident Nixon as the most sig · n_ificant gains for "'Oriel peace in n1 any years -ha\'C no refl ection in the size or ou r military hud get. Ac· tually, "·e arc spending more money for military purposes th;in we did at the height or th e Vietnan1ese \Var . 3 -A tailspin ccononly tharac· lerizes a large part o( the military budget. Nc,v tanks are going into production at $750.000 per tank , Some expe rts have asserted that the new \Vrinkl cs in th!'SC tanks have no military justiri c:ition. 4 -Th e Depa rt ment or Defense h:is blamed !hi." nc\\· volunteer Rysten1 for mos t of the increased manpo\ver costs. lt haS said very little, ho\vever. about the salaries of 1.5 million or- ficers and noncommissioned officers. \\'e now have more military ge nerals on the public pay roll than at the hCight of \Vor ld \\'ar IL 5 -The basis for creatin~ NAT01 (Nort h Atlantic Treaty Organization) and SEA1'0 (So utheast A~i a Treaty Organiza~ion) y,·as thllt <ill tbe co\ln· tries involved would pull their own \\'Cight. Jn actuality, this has tu·rned out to be a farce,.both in Eurcipe and Asia. G -The Americ:ln economy is suf· fering from con1pctition by J apanese manufacturers, but \\'C continue to help the J apanese economy through the maintenance of large 1nilitary spending inside Japan. 7 -\Ve maintain 42,000 military personnel in South Korea. Tw en ty. nine thousa nd or these men are in ad · n1inistrati\'e posts or have logistic support functions. Approxin1:ltel y thr sa1ne ratio exi sts in 'l'hailand. where 27,000 out of :16.000 1nilit ary JlC'fSQnnc l nre in nolicon1b:.it assign1nents: :.ind in the Ph ilippines. \\'here 11.000out of 18.000 arc in :iclministra1ivc or otht·r noncom bat jobs. 8 ~ During the pa!.t ~'ea r . 1t req uired 142,000 military instructors and' general personnel to train 221,000 inductees a t a cost of S6 billion. 9 -About SIS billion will be sper1t by th e n1ili lary th is year for main· tail'ling forces that are trained to fi ght in a \\'orld \\'ar II kind of conflict. TllE ABOVE list is long enough to indicate that the military· budget could be cut by at least one.third, "'hich is lo say. by some $30 billion . The result not only \1·011!d rail to reduce ou r n1i/itary c:i 11ahility hut \\'Ould probably cult! to it by gt'lling: !'ltl of massi\•e \1·:i~t(' :111d bureaucratic proliferation. The st•1\crncnt 1r<1li n1alle :.it lhe \\'hite House Conferf.'llt'l· on lnt!ation that if the go\'Crnment cuuld cut Sl2· SIS billion out or its budge t. H \voul d t<1ke a gia nt slcp towrd bringing in· flalion under control. unrortunately \•ery few of the experts are wil lin g to; look al th e possibilities ror at"hie\'ing this purpose by cutting n1i\itar~· spcn· rlln g. 11011' \\di 11 <·011lributc to the ~ccuri L~· t1r thl' i\1nerica11 \X'op!e iC we tontinu1· Iv pursut• n1ilitory policies that \\ill unhinge the American economy'! Economic Laws: Not Exactly Exact Aldous ifuxley once \1 rote · "1'hr COllSit:l('ncy Of )1Ull1~111 bC'h:JVJOr. , .h due to lhc facl lhot men h:i,·c for· mulatcd their dcsirt•:.. :i ncl su \Jsrr1ucn· ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robt'rl N. Weed. Pitlili.~luir Thomas J\ccvil. Editor Rarbara Krt'ibich. f.dUoriol Pogc l-:d1 lor- The editori al po)%e or .the JJaily . Pilot seeks to inform and ~Umulr1tc reade~ by prescntin11 on thi:\ p:i~c di \'e rr.e com1n('11l:1ry on 1011ici; of In terest by syndicel!d co!umnist~ and ~artOOnlsts. b)' pro\'hlin" a forum for readers' vie\\·~ and hy presenting this new1pa~r·s opinions and ideait on current t opic~. The editorial opinions of the Dally Pllot appear only in the editorial rolumn nt lhf' Lop of !ht Plltc. Opinions exprt"!l$4!d by the t•ol11n1nlsts 11nd cartoonbt11 and lellt-r wril«rs ;irl.' th('1r o\\n :tnd oo endor.~cm~·n\ of 1h1•1r \'Jc.,.,·s I!)' tht' Dall.)' rHot 5h()t1ld bt inferred. !i11nrf~1~1 , ()l'lober ri. 197 i .. tl y ration:i li1.t'd I hem, in terms o~ w~r· <ls ... If H \\'l'rr 1101 for the dL•scr1plive <ind jusliNcatory wntds 1rith \\'hirh .\\'C hind our davs tngctht'r. \\'C shou ld hvc likl' the 11niinals in :i series or di screet ancl separate s purts oCimpu\se.·· 'l'hus. indeed, clo y,·e bind our days tngct her . Whether you descrihe your· self as ''machinist,'' ''Policeman.'' or :'te:icher." sou don't always feel like bcin~ " n1achinii;t or policeman or teacher. l,:i\\' is !he mighty t•ollecti"e effort n1ade by hun1 nn beings to or~anlze thal degree of ordcrfy and unirorm l~h;Jvior lhal r?takcs socicly possihlC'. l,r\\\I r\NI> SC lf:l'irt: nrr v('ry d1f· frrer1l fro1n rach 01 her, \.fhAt science prt•dicts l"ice \Viii nl('lt <I t \('tn· per:.it11re s above 32 de ~re('s farenhclt"l comes true indepe nd ent of our \\'i~hr!>. \Yhat la\\' pr~dicts l "P~·r:-;ons convicted or murder will be han ~cd .") <·01n l"s I rue onl y if Y.'e ::tr(' (\(•tf'rrn ln ('d lo do\\ hal \t'C said \\'C l\'oul<l 110 . At thl' hasis ot l:nv is ou r llc,t 1•rm inaU•1n lo ol):-i('J\'e t•nnjunC"lion. t:inr,uagC' or thf' h1v,• is of neccssily, lhi•rrrorc, In part a ·kin<t o(. !'i~r· 11101111.iu~. fn. alldilion to prtscr1b1ni;i rer\;Jin form!\ or bchu11ior. it. must [ S. I. HAYA KAWA ) t r('atc in us I.he 1\•ill and lhe desire to foll ow lhe prescription. This fact makes the judge, to a large degree, a preacher, The tri<1l is a-kind or morulily pl av. ·ro reduce th is matter to a simple r~ampl e, let us supp<ise that the pur· pose of u gl \'cn ll lrctti\'c ls to get Junior 10 cat hi.~ pe.'I.~. lf the simple dcn1ri nd . "J unior. eat yo ur peas," tloe!I not \\'Ork. one proceeds im· medin lely to a sc r rnnn on the subject: "Vci;ct;ibles :ire ROOC'I for-jiou," ttnd ''All growing bo)'s should cat plenty of \'CJtctables. •· IQ olh('r "'Ords, the dema nd th11t Junior cat his peas is assf!rted to be not merely a passing whln,, but the partlcularlzation or a general nutrili\'e princi pl e. Hui 1hc i;:rc~1t princiJllcs '''l' l'11un· ('\ale on on(' d:1y 11ro\'C to he C:>i· 1 rcn1ely in('(ll1\'(!nicnt on ann1.her dn y, as ine.Vitably they mut.1,--f'ince they stale il J'lO n111ch 1nnre th<in u·us necclo;· ~a ry lo bejlin with. _ Sl'I, n~ l''t1thCr hiih:relf -leaves un. • touched his carrots -and raisin salad ;,1 re\V days later, he can say, if chal- lenged : "What I u•as arguing for all <i long is not \'egetablcs as suCh. but a balanced diet -as it is possible to achieve balance without this pa r· licula r salad. A man can't keep going on rabbit rood." I V.'R-ITE these words as·l'rcsident Ford's econom ic summit conference drti\\'S to a close. One·gets the impres· sion. heuri ng the sun1maries of the proceedings, tho! CC'onomics, li ke la\~·. it' not so much a science as it is a br11nrh or homiletics, or the art or prc11ching. S;1l\·;~Uon lies. "'0 "r<'-told, 1n r1 gu:1 t·on1 rols O\'Cr prices :ind \\'ages -or no eontrol~ at atl; in rclal1ng-t fed('ral re¢ul:i1ion of husiness: In sivin.i: lhe con sume r greater Jll'OtCClion : in lower laxes £or \he poor : in'Nt!hor t~xes for everybody; In u f11nv or money: in ell minuting (or incrc a)o.l'i1i::l depi ction atlow1:1nce~ and suh)o.Ttl ics. 'fhr•r£• a rc us muny C!cn nntnlc tlntl rh11•s :ls thcrl! are Prolest:int Sf'f'I ~. \\'h~r h J:lt'ICS In Sh()\\' thAt \Vhtlc Pl'nnn rnil·s os a r-;c ience i:-1 not doini;! \lt·ll. ccu110111i cs as a rcU.i;ion is dninJ( ju,,;1 One . fUVJCING, MAIHlrnA MCt' W ift!Q.llOIJ PUN CK " and you also appear to have left undone those things you ought t6 have done." Let s ·tate Department Run Foreign Affairs I( there is one thing that should be left entirely in the hands., of the President and lhe secretary ot state, especiall y in these days of world tur· moil, it is the whole question of foreign relatio.ns, This w;rs illu s(rated mo.~t recently by a self·arranged trip to Communist Cuba by Sens. Jacob Javits of New York and Claiborne Pell or Rhode Island. The senators ca rried no message rrom President Ford or Secretary or State Henry Kissinger, but the mere fact that they are both prominent me mbers or lhe Senate Foreign Rel ations Committee carried an un· fortunate inference. BARRY GOLDWATER had "proclaim ed openly the r ight tO inte rvene by u·halever means. regar. ~less of how illicit., ,dirty or crude, in international pr,ocesses in nations or the hemisphere.'' Sens. J avits ond Pell , by their mere presence in Cuba at the time or \ii at speech, gave th e a1ipcarance oC-an overanxious American governmenl trying to patch up things with the' CommunJst regime 90 miles~ ort the f1orlda coast. · ACTUA i.LY, they managed to em· b~r~ass: the Uni ted States and play r BELIEVE that so long as Cuba is w1lhng pawns for a stratagem devised under Co mmunist control and Cuslro by Castro hlrn self, retains his belligerent attitude toward Sens. J avits and Pell met with this country, we shoµld have nothin'g Cuban Forei~n Minister Raul Roa on to do \Vith th e Cuba n govern ment Sept. 28 and 1m medi ately told rcpor· eith er offiela lly or unoftlclally. I de th t fi hi I' •• , 1t t I N a c " tcrs they hoped for an eventual "nor· It doe.~ not necessarily follow that malizaUon of U.S.•Cuban relatiOn!'i.'' because tensions may ha.~ bee.n----11----!I nut et the same-ttmc--Frime·~1in-tstcr eased with C'Om muni11l Chi;•:' and the 1 Castro was dellvt:rlng one or his Soviet Union thal we shqutd now run strongest denunciation!! or the United to Fidel Cestro and arrange a dctente. f States In many "'eeks. Nothing the Coha n gO\'Crnmertt has l lie strongly denounced Pre~ident done recently leads me to helieve lhnt f Ford anrl called upon Third \Vor ld it ha!! ever gi"en up its attempt to 1 nations 10 support the: oil countric!I mohiliie th e revolutionaries or Cen. I :•i::alnNl the U nit~-d StMtc~. C;u1tro's tral and South Am erica against our speech v,•as dell~cred to C'hccring country. Cuh;ins In RevolutiQnary_Squarc in~ AR a mt!rn~r oJ the U.S-Scnutc, I ll:1vana and lasted so minutes. rei;ent the lnf~rencc-that l\\'O or my 1\mong other lhJnr;li. Cui'ltro 1 collcugucs ~re uttcmptini; tn 11rranj!C: charged th:it President Ford, in a re·rcco~n1tlon or the Cuban govern· detcndlni! covert. actlviU~ tn Chile. men\ ul thi!! Umc. 1 -• , . . • Sunday.Oftobet6, 1974 DAILY PILOT "7 What ut Airline Fare Windfall Profits? •. , Uy JAY PERKINS AJM<+•lell Prt•tlllfrttr WASIJINGTON · 1'hc nulion'lli ).,'o from S726 lo S7G1. IL "'·us Slh.'G l;u;t 11.11. 110 0000 "0" "AllAGI •CTWllH JIOtNTS OUfLINl:O CAJtlllll ,LIGHT CLASS DATC domcsti~ 11irlincs ~ave lmpro\·ctl ~ir profits a.s a rcsull or lhe encr1tY cns•.'i. und this mil(hl be their btsl year Slncc the '60s. 'l'h~ domeslit' 111rlincs »re carrying mor~ passe ngers than l11st )'C!Hr. The traffic upsurge plus rising air fares J,nd fe'A't::r fli ghts \\-·ere the principal reasons the nation's entire airline in · dustry earned Sl!.tl million in the first liiilf or 1974. The profit Wll~ despite huge losses for Pun Americ.11n World Airwuy!:> llnd Trains World Airlines the international carrier5. ' By comp11rison. the indusll')''!:I ncl proril was only $34 million in the rirst sf:< months pr 1973 -a difference of 4Ut percent. , TJ11RD QUART ER earnings will be ot11nounced in late October. Checks with 10 major airlines indicate that passenger volume remained high and the .third quarter, therefore, y.oas f)f()f1lable. Jn last year's third quarter tl>e airline industry earned $148 mil· Hon. The third quarter for airlines is, traditiorially, the best, and the rourt.h is the worst. Not since 1966 and 1961 have airline industry profits seemed so healthy.Jn each of those years, the companies - 30 in all -earned over $400 million. Then profits declined. This year's net income could exceed $300 million. It '"'as Jess than $200 million last year. Passengers are not as Cortunate. Uomeslic air farefi have risen 11 per- <'ent since the fuel shortage started last rafl. A one·way coach ticket bet· ~·een Los Angeles and New York, for example, has gone from $168 lo $187. 1'hus far, the domestic airlines haven't asked the Civil Aeronautics lklard for another rare increase. But one a irline president -Eastern'& l"loyd Hall -says a, 5 perceftt hike is necessary before year's end to pay for costlier fuel. ' International air fares have risen even more sharply than domestic - JS percenl on North Atlantic routes. An additional 10 percent is sought for Nov. 1. A round·trip economy ticket. between New \'ork and London would Tiit; 111-;AJ.TllY dom~lit• uirllncs urc in shar11 c·untrust tu Pun Am und 1'WA. 1'hcir bil: problem wus pus· sengcrs. \V hllc l~e number curried on domestic uirllncs jumped S.4 percent in the rlrst SC\'e n ni onth~ of this )'<'ar. UCl'Ording to the lutcst Air Truns1>ort Association figures, inttrnt1lioni1 ! traffic has (;1llcn 15.l percent coin· pured with the first se\'en months or 1973. Dollar de\'aluation, unrest in 1itediterrancan countries und the higher .air fares appurcnlly ronvlnred many Ame ri cuns to vucaUon at home. Domestic carriers , especia lly those llying to v11c11tion resorts, . picked up much or this tfuffic, ·ATA .stutislics indicate. · Allegheny Airlines, which operates a number or flig hts between 2tlO and 300 miles in, length, believes it has many firsl·time rider$ v.·ho traveled by car until "chased ofr the high· ways" by fuel s hortuges and higher ·gasoline prices. T~e fuel shortage last winter prom· pted airline savings through cutbacks in ru·ghts and in the labor force. However, the unexpected growth in traffic has resulted in many or the domestic rli ghts being restored and in most or the 17,000 furloughed em· ployes being recalled. U.S. airlines operated 15,200 flights per day in July, 1973. This was cut back nearly 25 percent al one point in the energy crisis, but iS back up to 14,200.flights today. AIRLINES that were proritable berore the fue:I cris:s generally have shown the largest profits so far this year. But the fuel shortage also revcr· sed the financial decline of two major carriers. Eastern, which lost $10.5 million in the first seven months last year, made SIS.5 million in the same period this year. American's turnaround was e\'en more spectacular. It lost $33.2 million in the fi t'St seven months a year ago, .llut made Sl2.7 million in the same period this year. The hation's largest airline, United Airlines, s howed a profit of $56.S mil· The Harbor Hopper: • • •• •• .. ' lion for the first se\'en months. That's an improvement of nearly $40 million O\·er last year's profits or $16.8 million in the same time period. Allegheny', the largest local service carrier, incre ased its profits from $1 .2 million in the first seven months or 1973 to $7.3 million in the same 1974 period. Perennial money-maker Della Airlines m ade even more money, showing a bottom·line of·S50.4 million for the first six months or this year compared ~·ith $14.7 million a year earlier. Delta hns signed a contract \\'ith the Air Line Pilots Association that has left its con1petitors grumbling. The contract will give pilots and copilots a minimum of $48,000 annually in 1976 • -F'!'!,~!!~-E'!'!.~~!~~~~l-~ The important product that is" funneled into the bus they call the Harbor llopper has a look, feel, and quality distinctly its O\\"ft. Seldom in e\'idence is the slick, chrome· shiny •·cautornla b1onde.''-She remains behind the wheels of slick, ~chrome-shiny sports cars. Not many business suits here, either. A whole segment of the population appears to be missi.ng- peopl~ int.heir 30s and 40s. . There are rolks of reU~ment age -neatly dressed, neatly trimmed -on their way to and from the many shopplnJ centers the I-topper touches upon. lf alone, they sit quietly, perhaps anxiously peering out the windows lo satisfy '"lhelr u.·here:lbouts. They-may form gregarious enc\a\•es. lf they find then1sel\·es on the wrof)g bus,:they treat it as an .amusing romp and disembark to await another. G RO UPS OF youne people, bt!aring books, board the bus on their way to and from the various college campuses . Loud, con f using, se ml ·t'r.ud ite. discussions <a lways among the n1ales) are often impressed upon the capti\'e li steners throYJhout lhe bu s. An .informa l ··-it uninlormed -education may be gained in the listening. Ttle i1eople who regularly commute lo their jobs by bus tend' homes, restauraiiu, hospitals, and other businesses along the routes. Hard-working persons, fresh \..•hen starting out, weary upo n returning. You can see cocktail waitresses, glittering in, the still·bright late anemoon sun -wearing uniforms or shining pantyhose, or !ights. setting off short outfits of brilliant red satin,· ot' · gleaming metallic fabric, wearing theatrical makeup, care£ully applied .. They always ~ seem to have a pleasant weird for the appreciative driver, v.•bo lets them oft as close to thei r destinations as possible. Sometimes'.: a: glimpse is .then cau,tht or the ~irl. framed in the club's dark doorway, and the st.age make.up aild bizarre outfits suddenly take on a magical appearance· -perfect for working in the dimly lit, smoky environs. · LIVELY young families - perhaps ini;lud.ing a grandparent or two -make liberal use of the Hopper. There i~ ;in enviable,,. constant interaction between f.Qmily metnb~rs, usually ce.nlered around alert, f ascina ted •. fascinatirig children, especially among the Spanlsh·speaking. ·Along the beachfronts, hordes of youngsters between the ages or 10 and 14 , rreqUent the bus. The boys travel light, carrying only a towel (if that) or a fishing pole. They are 9rt~n cl~d in s leeveless shirts, unbutlon~d. e_xpo_sing ·t hin. t_an' chests. The . ti..ubile girls carry Jumpy bundles, a.nd v.·ear shorts or jeans over colorful bikinis. They are alv.·ays. al\\·ays, giggling and sell-conscious. Boys and girls both carry into th~ bus the smell of sun·'A'armed skin and wind and sa nd. They find 'it impossible to remain still. Boys test their s tre n gth on the hand·holds , raising themselves into the 'air, O\·er the aisles. Girls shift constantly, ""'itching seats, forming ever:changing temporary al\lances. All add electric chei!r to the bus. ti.lany passengers -serious young matro'ns, earnest kids - hesitate for a moment on the steps to queslion .the''di'iver: Does this bus pass Bristol? Does it go to Santa Aria··or the -other way?·The ever·patie nt .dri\'.ef'. alW:lys answers in detail. The drivers are pleasant,· the passengers interes ting, the meandering routes a revelation. There is time to think , gather forces together and come out of the Hopper refreshed. · It's a good trip. There's nothing· quite like it in Arizona. The going price for a ticket, .......... t•l(llt 111..Clll(ll• ' . ., coach class, from New York to Los Ang eles on a scheduled airline is now $187 .64, just about $20 more than that same ticket would have cost before the fuel shortage. Domestic airline profits are cl im b- ing even faster than th e fares. • .A...:.. ,..... ... ~ ... and top·scale captains SSl ,000. The current average salary for all con1· mercial pilols is about $35,000. National, shut down.by a strike that started July 14, had a profit of $21 mil· lion for the first six months despite passing out $1 million in bonuses to its employes. The 1'1iomi·based carrier made $11 million in the first half"Of 1973. Even though prorits ~·ere records for mos t carriers, they still .Jen the airline industry below the 12 percent rate of return·on investment !he Ci\'il Aeronauti'cs Board says it should ha ve. The CAB s ays domestic trunk airlines -carriers that ny between major U.S. cities -had an 8.3 percent corporate rate or return for the fiscal ye ar that ended June 30. \\!hi le domc ~.i il' carriers \\'Cre showing up in the black, the ncitlon's l'A'O largest intcrnation;l l ca'rriers wel'C going deepe r into I.ht! red. Pan American \\'orld Airv.•ays lost S.12.4 million in lhc tirst se,·e n n1onths compared "'ilh a net loss of $13.5 mil- lion a year earlier. Tr.ins \Vorld Airlines lost S28.3 million before taxes compared "'ilh a profit of S20.9 million in the first seven months a year ago. The huge losst>S have forced both carriers to apply for ~ovetnmcnt sub- s idies. Pan Am has said it will run out of money to pay its bills this winter unless it receives government help . But President f"o rd. on Sept. 18, denied Pan Am's request ror a St0.2· million federal subsidy. lte offered an FBI Target <ilternali\'t' plan lo S3\'(' the airlinl'. a plan ain1£>d l;4rg('J,v 111incr('a!>1ng 1>as senger vo\un1<>. J\\leghcn y·~ l '1·l·~id1?11t D.:irnt>s and Eastern's !!all predil't that domestie airline prorits "'ill hold up through the year, although th e rourth quarter traditionally has bcc.>n a money-loser. "I don't look fo r any soft ening through the balance of the year,·· sa~·s. Barnes. •fall adds that the first se\'en months 14·ere ''the best re,·enue pel'· rormanCe ·Eastern 'has e\'er had at :t comparable period in the year," and theoulli>ok for 1975 is goocl. United's President Ed\\'ard· L . Ca rlson is cautious. He s ays the outlook for 1975 is clouded. 'White-collar' Criminals The following Orlicle Was written bY Clarence r.r. Kelley, direclo" of the Federal Bureau of lnvesligation. There are strong reasons to belie\'C that the cost of "white·collar" cri me dwaffs that of crimes or violence. Financial losses to the many victims of these offenses are_estimated a.t. O\'er $41 billion o.nnually. But the greatest cost is in the erosion ot public confidence in Institutions and persons £tom whom a meticulous regard for the law is expected. \\'hat is white-collar crime? It exists in many Corms of fraud, government corruption, and conrtict of interes.t, as well as in an unlimited range of dis honest consumer and economic schemes. \\!ho is the white·collar criminal? He can be anyone, but usually be is a person untainted by any association with •·common" <:rimina!S or rom· mon crimes. His techniques are s ubtle and hi:-; appearance is often deceiving. Rarely are there any coarse threats, ph ysical abuse, or lethal weapons involved in his crimes. Indeed, the victims are frequently his patrons, his associates, or his constitutency. Because the effects of his crimes are far-reach in g; taxpayers·con· sumers are among his victims. They are generally unaware of being fleeced. There are good grouods for their innocence. The white·collar criminal characteristically has all the trappings o r success and respec- tability. Not uncommonly, he is a prominent member 9( the com· munit)'. --at the FBI Academy which were at. Because or the insidious nature of tended by representatives from other much white.collar crifrie, the public is government agencies, university lee~ not sul'ficiently sensitive either to iti:; turers, and businessmen, as well as presence or its d&nger. key FBI personnel. To combat all manOCT' or crime er~ These seminars were designed lo feC'tively requires an informed and improve investigations of white·eollar alert public. People should insist on crime and to edu<'ale participanlS the sa_mll strict tmfQrcemenl 9.Ltb abo.u.l i_t.:;...scop,c_a1J.d..tti]s. 'Io..c.urtail law for business and government of. these crimes, a four-phase program ficials who break the law that they of research, training, intensified in- demand for those without status. vestigallon, and increased pub lie They ought to be as outraged when awareness has been developed within bilked by corporate fraud or govern-the FBI. ment corruption as they a re v.•hen as-Jt is essential that law enforcement saulted and robbed by a stranger on agencies at all levels examine their the street. priorities to m ake certain they are l\tor eo\•er, to r einforce this pursuing vigorously their res pon· heightened con cern, the public must sibilities to detect and investigate have confidence lhal i\s complaints v.·hite·collar crime. At a lime "'hen will be heard, the facts responsibly the fairness or ttie criminal justice in,•elil.igated, and t hose.found guilty -system is most seriously questioned, v.·hate\'er their station in lire -ap· the law enrorcement profession musl proprialely punished. insure that, in the in\'estigative llecently, the FBI conducted a process, there is truly equal justice series of \vhilc·col\ar crin1e semin ars under the law. Christian Children's Fund-.Global Ripoff? WASHINGTON -The renowned Christian Children's Fund. like the old lady who lived in the shoe, has so many children it doesn't.know what to do. Worse. the fund doesn't know what it did with $25 million, which was raiftft to feed, clothe and educate (JACK ANDERSON) Real Rockefeller Wealth Is Power, needy childre n around the world. As part of his study of charities, !;en. \\!alter 1i1on· d ale !D ·~finn . I :isked the General Accounting Office to investigate the Children's f'und. The GAO 's se<'ret "The sponsor or one child in this project sent $.14 to be used as a specia l gift," reported the GAO. "The child received $4 ,28, and the project retained the rest." In Greece, money \\'as set aside lo support a school which folded up, Some of the money \\'<JS simply :lashed in a hank depository, with nO accounting gi\'c n. WASUINGTON -John D.'s been d~ad fOr 37 years, and no senator 1t the conlirmation hearings was going tc> bring up the violence, phf5lC~I and fiscal. used to build Standard Oil; but his grandson Nel~on was impelled to resurreet the old man, to defend him .;,ind justify him.... -- Su<'h is the pride .al•\ :ind closeness o( fY . •I ll~kcfellets living ·( _.. r l ;ind d ead, a nd~ that's something to remember when Nelson says he's · . an Isolate wil~out , ( VON HOFFMAN ) their power a .story to be "exposed and dissipated." He has no way of gauging the reaclions of people, who make it month to monlh on 11 Sears' revolving charge account, Y>'hen they read that between 1952 and 1970 ' his family spent $25 mllllon ln politics, mostly on Nelson. tle'd probably be insulted if you told him many or us thought he'd bought his political career. consangu in e JJO"'er. \Vhy he and HE DENIES his power because it's those three brothers are so tight they SO natural to him. Dots he even :ill even li\'e together on that Texas· rernember minor uses of it such as size estate of theirs in Pocantlro Hills, denying ''Clllien Kane,'' Orson Wel- N.'V. h!tf film cdl~ssclc1 , R,..o 1 cke11.1111or11Cebenler's The problem with 1ifr. Nixon was famed Ra 10 ty 1• U$ c , :i cause 1he lies he told i the problem with Mr. th~ movie offended \VIiii am R1ndolph JtQ.ckefeller ls-the !!!!th he beholds. Hearst? A small matler, buL ii· 1'he thrifty, hard ·"'Ot'~lng, c urcll·· uslrifrVeOT-tiow l're-Rockefeller ~oing, 8\ble·rcading grandparent he power isn't limited lo ICU or legatees fell such a slrong, IC gratuitous, need .the 'amily sends to represent them on tn talk to the senators about v.·as, in corporate boards. No, the power ex· f11ct, the most hated man in America. lends to the arts, to medicine, to But v.•hether he was the avaricious education, to everything -and one or hype<'rlle his <'ontemporanes con· ita principal lnstrumtnlallties is the sldercdlllm isn't so impDrtant as the blll1on·plus. dol~ar8 In the fam lty · rt,·elalion that Nelt.0n has 110 idea~ phllnnthrop1c roun.datlons. E~amplc: \\h)' his nnccstor \\'JS ll monster to ln 1913. after the ~·1v~and th1ldrtn of moiit Americans. ' John 0 . Rockc rc11,r, Sr. 's .striking 11e·1 ho ne$Lly his crandf1ther's 14·orkers "''erf! s hot down 1n what boy; he honesll)' thinks his family histo ry calls the "1.ud\ov.• ~t:issacre," \\l!:11'h is ~ "myth'~ and the talk of l...,•o local Colorudo coll(!,ll.c.~, whose presidents had supporfe d the Rockefeller-owned mining company, v.·ere awarded $100,000 grants from ·the foundations. (This nnd other tid- hits from a use ful new book called ··Rock eCeller Power: America's Chosen Family," by Myer Kutz, Simon & Schuster, New York, 1974. $1 .95.) \Vhcn you're born into'a couple or hundred million dollon;, you don't chisel on your taxes, you don't v.•a nt any more money. You wnnt power, and you. can gel more power by (!X· ploitlng the charity tax exemption and plitling lhC morfey into a roun· datlon you control. For $Orne,-patriotis m will su!tlce as an excuse ror allowing the Rockefel· Jer Foundation to function as a laun· dry or COl'lduit for CIA money. but that can't justify the Rockefeller Brothers Fund spending $800,000 distributing :1 book promoting stepped-up nuclear ~xpendltures. J\n unkind person mi11ht call that usin g-a phllantbtopic:. front to peddle political propaganda, The John Birch Soeiely nnd other far- ri ghl groups did. 'fhc Council on Forelan Rela t ions, another tax· exempt Rockcrener sull51dlary, wa:., lhcy charged, the actual loc:us or American foreign policy formulation. ~nd there ls cons iderable evidence to supJ)Ort their p0intor ''id~'. '4(osr RECENTl.V Rockefeller rcsij?ned lhl' go,ernor~hip of New '"ork to hcu <I up no cll'f':lllO:iyn:iry racade called the Commission on Critical Choices. It was here he stationed himself to lake advantage or 1i1r. Nixon's fall, a fall that some J>eopl e i n \V ashington suspect Rockefeller may have helped along with a nudge. Anyhow, now that the only critical choice ft ockcfeller cares about ha~ been m:ide. we won't be hea ring from the Commission any more. Rockefeller's defenders say that even if you lump the family money together, whnt can two or three billion do in a trillion·dollar economy? The ansv.'e r to tha\ i:-le\·erage. The owner· ship of 2 percent or I he stock iiives you working <'Ontrol of a major cor· poration, but that's neither here nor there. The RockefellerS art!n't i:-oin,i: u1> against the entire eoononiy -that ""orks for them almo!il automatically -most of the time they nre plf1yi ng one-on·one against individuals. They are anorganlzC'd powe:i", "'hilc the rcir;t of us 're a nation or f:imilies "'hich :average $15,000 or ll!sr; a year. And for proof 'A'e ha\'t the giant jaw m an himse lf ; Nelson Aldrich Rockelcll •r . three limes repudl11led hy his O'A'n part}'. c)ppo~ed b~· the IA'ft a nd 1.he Rl xh1 v.ilh the mid,11c in1tif· ferenl, nnd y('I In Congr1·~,_ till'l"re going to be fll::htiniz for who J:C't:J the honor to ,·otr: f nr him nrsl Tf that's nnl pov.•cr, J ('ri;.• l"nrf'I ha:.. nn rca1>11n to look t)vcr his sh1J u Ider. report In ~1ondale may prO\'C un~et­ tling to the sponsors "·ho monthly con· tribult> Sl2 apiece to help one of lhc 188.000 children 011 thc needy lisl. TllE GO l'ERI\"i\tf':~T :iu rtitors di5covercd, for insl ~ncc, thnt the fun d :-<inks $2.4 million or the ehanty money into ;1dvcrlisins: to r:i1sc still n1orc money. The ads, sho'A·ing tallcrr~ tots \\'ilh pitiful faces, arc he artrending. 1'he solicited sponsors :ire J:i\'f'n the lmpte$Sion that only \,h e nccli1('St arc hcl~d. This is nol ('.~11 c1ly truf', aecordinc to the GAO. Jn the Ph11\ppinrs and Colombia, where Ille GAO made on · lhe·SPot checks. lhe n(·rdir·'>t :ire iA- nored ''because lhl'\' nrt: nfll·fl uudrr. nouMshed :ind , ;is· :1 rc ... ult, c.:\ot. studyeffecli\'cJy ·• As a fi eld off11·l' '>UJ)lc \isor fnr l c. fund put it, sonic" h.11 unchar!l;tblv. "'sponsors :.ire plcll!i('tl 11ith a s11ccc~.; story." Cluldr1•n too Car ~one 1n Poven y n<'t:d not apply. ·r111-: Sl'O~!'\OR IS urj?«d to J:;i\'e hi s "rh1ld ":i !if't•r111 I i:ift on hirlhda\':\ :(nri ('hr•~tm a .. t'~ not th~ scrrrt cAo i-tudy round 1n l\rn~;1, for f'\::1 n1pll', lhal rinl)' 25 r>f'1' rrnl tlf the i;i(I monry l:\•cr rl'~1chctl 1 he dcs1,itnulcd chl lt!rcn. At a similar school project in I long J\oni?. 1 IR chilrlren v.·erc supposedly being assisted by the fund. \\'hen the GAO checked, it found none or the chil dren "·as c \'cn enrolled. Tht> school u.·as pocketing the cash. SUrERVISION or the Spt"nd ing \\'SS catr:h·as·catch·can. Of 68 thildrcn',_ Jll'OJCcts in Kcnyt\, only ~ix hnd he.en i~!>pr:Cled as required. In the Phillp. p1n('s, only 46 or 78 projects had been <'v:i lurttcd; in lion~ Kong only ll of 21: In 1\tex ico, 44 ol 147. ' 1\Tondolc, d i'.'<tre~11cd nt the rlndln l?S pl ans hearings shortl y. Not only Lhe0 Chil<lrrn's Fund but other charities v.·dl be put under the spntli,qht. }'~or example , the Fosler l1arC'nl!> l1l:tn, ac· cording to th!· GAO, ""·111 not accept lhl• nlo!it n1•c ll y f:11nilic . ., in an are11 IR'cause thcr (('t·I the\· ar<> 1c!'>~ lik~l v to nl'hiC \'C t I h1· J goal Or hecon11ng S('!f. ~ul f1rirnl."' Fcontnn!('' 'l'he Chri~tian Childrcn:s f)1nd C::Clll('edcd lhl'Y \\•('re short of pr•lll'l'l 1n~p<'rtors. J\ ~J)Oke!'>man l'.a irl l hnt ai; fa i-t a :i; GAO 1urn1.:d up dt·l11·11:0Cil·~. thf' F'und he~a n cnrrec .. ll\'t" art1nn 1'he fund "lt•d lhcrc "'•ts nri C\'1<lcnct• vf l'tl1~.1flprnrr1atioo or nioni>y, (Hll,\ nf 1ntoff1cf~·nl prO<'edurei.. l\ l"u .. trr r .1rl·nl' ~t•nla· .. man !'iitld "\~•· tann,ot ht>lp <11! the Mt"t'd )' l'iO \\U h1·lp tho"t' umnn,c: Lht nccd1c. .. t with., (n~htinJ:t'hance" ·-. I ' ' • • • ' L!_ 8 DAILY PILOT Sunday , Octobtr b, }q74 Cremation Control Law ,Signed, Others V,etoed By O.C. HUSTINGS Of ""' Otll'f "'"" Sl1tf Controversial legislation gh•· in,g fwteral dlreCtors regulatory control over JoY.'- c."OSt crema!ioo societies has been signed by Go\•mwr Ronald IU!agan. • the funeral directors and enl- balmers board. Tbe other three members represent the public at large. • • • GQ\'.ERNOR REA.GAN also has signed a bill (SB2066J by· Senator Dennis E. Carpenter (Jt..Ne~-port Beach). It re· quires assessors in .counties with 10 pe.rcenl or more Spanish surname residents to send property tax information lo hoo1t¥™~ as \\'e ll as English. LEGISLAT!JlN dealing with the controversial OUno Hills airport proposal appears dead. at 1east fur this 7ear. Governor Reagan vetoed a bill (AB3553 )/ by Republican Asse mbl y m a n Floyd Wakefield that caUOO rOf Orange County voters to have the final say on construction ot the proposed conunercial fllcility._ .. The assembly, overrode the "\'ClOI' S4·9, but the-state Senate ndjoumed before acting on the matter, thus alloWing the veto ties in a single air pollution to stand. <..'Ofltrol dlsUict. • • • Reagan said he vetoed the GOVERNOR Reagan vetoed measure 'by Sen. Craig Bkldle legislation Utat Y.'OUld have (R·Riverside) becaU&e of -oi:r created a rulltime A I r position rro1n five or the six ~ Board and pla~ counties. involved;'ftlld. because six Southern Calitomfa coun· he felt ·the present, part-time ARB was sufficient. The measure also .,,'OUld have required the new air pollution control district to 1neet fec;leral air quality..-stan- dards that are ''tlnreaoonable and Wlworkable," 'Reagan said In a veto message._. Op~ts ol the measurci'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~...-,-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ IAB1828 ! by Assemblyman Hobert Badhan1 j R·Ney.·port Beach ) ht1ve cootended it could drive lov.·-eost societies out of business. lea\'ing the public wiUi no alternative but a traditional and more costly fw1eral. Sought by funeral directors, the bill gh·cs the slate Funeral l>ire<.1.ors a n d Einbalmers ORANGE COUNTY ' , 'Board in the Department of Consumer Affairs regul atory authority over the societies. Supporters have said the bill \1'35 needed to safeguard the public against possible health hazards or ot her abuses. r .. toreove r, funeral· directors said ii is only fair that all businesses which dispose of bodies be regulated logether. Telophase · Society of San Diego, which offers low-cost cremation services through a membershi p plan, has bitterly complained that the bill would put it under control of its direct competitors -the -funefal di rertors: Funeral directors currently hold five of eight seats on Death l\'otlcer IMITM .,9g. $6. Ladles' turtleneck. 100% acrylic, tong sleeves. Fall co\orsand white. $,M,l . ' , ,. 1----...... ~~--ff.-t>m-et"'11eftttl. Oct-5. lt1'-MrL Smith •• wrvlYICI by hw d11J9hl"', Edllh Incl S0<1-ln-l1w, Rot.r! JoMson of lJ.ti Slm1r Otlw, C<>11t M1w1 rw. ""llrL Slllll McCcmb 01 .lrcldll. JnUt aw .. ., o1 PoN~PlllU"" Ohio; lll'Ollllr, El_.. Jones ol Col11mbuJ, Ol>iOI 1100. fl..,. or1ndeftlldr1t1 1nc1 flt· leen 91'u l11r1nddilldr.n . .. • • " -·-' r: -IALTI.IERGJllOH _,' FUHHAL HOME ..• Corona de! Mai Cawa Mela -·- 673-9<150 646-2ol2ol llLL IROADWAT MORTUAllT t 10 Broadway. Co~IO r..1e~ . 04].q150 -·-DILDAY llOTHEIS MORTUARY 1791 1 Beod1 Blvd. HuntingTon Beach 842-7771 244 11~ndo Ave. Long Beoch (213) 438-1145 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA llACH MOITU.UY 1795 l o!lvno Conya11 ltd. 494-9415 -·-McCORMICK MISSION MOl:TUAIY 28832 Camino Copillrano St1n Juan (apllilrano 495-1776 -·-PACIFIC VllW MEMORIAL PARK ::enietc•y Cl J:,~I 3500 Po.'.•l·c v,.-.., D"ve Newport 6e(IC' Col1!or1110 6-1-1 ~i'VO -·-PllK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 780 I Soho Av.-, We$1nun~er 893-3525 -·-SMITHS' MOttTUAR-Y 627 Mo,n 51 Hun1mq1an Beoch 536-6539 HOW TO REDUCE TODAY'S HIGH COST OF DYING T1 .. r.ier1,...., Sot1"'v 1 !M Jl'~•n.1!0Y11la '""' ,,i 1 '"""'"'1 ..... •ly1•v·h1n.,.•l-C..«•.....,..,y;,...., .. ~M IOOy~" '''''"" "'.-tu ,,,...,'"'' 1>'1111 "°"' 01 ""'"9" Ir. Nooo!·J!'ll ~IV 11<':>••<!&1 ~ l"'lfl'tt d"<! .. ~'l'G """""" ~ .... ,. ....... d•,.. ...,,,.,...,, .i .... ''''"" ·· ''° ne.., lot n"T'tll&"""9· t O•"'• ·~1uQ1 '-••-•• or ~-YO'O' IMltwl li4<.uo•IV O< 1/11 ..... .1 "°"""""""' ou•n """"''' "'4Y ~0•111" o.,r~_.,,,. c...n~•l•r·.1. THE NEPTUN E SOCI ETY 2400 W. Coast Hwy. Sulle HF'" Newpert Beach Cahlorn1a 92860 646-7431 2~ hour service ~r..,~1,, NAME .. ····-····--··---· ADDRESS •••..• -· .. CITY ................ . STATE •..•. • ...•• ,·•···· 9.88 -Reg:--11.99. Ideal!!!. Rub-A· Dub'~ dolly. l ots more fun cause two 1n the tub is more run lhan one. 17.99 Calculator. Battery operated Commodore calculator. Performs the lour basic functions. Six digit display • . . ·. . . . •. : <.i}~t..if:i'·~i\ Reg. 9.99. Girls ski iackets. Ski style, machine wash. nylon. Solidi 10.99 2.99 yd. 6.80 Reg. I .SO. Pre-school size~4 TO 7. 29.99 Reg. 39.97. I lrack tape player. For all cars. Compacts and sports cars, too. Full controls. (2602) 78~88 General Electric · 12" (diag.) Black & White Recessed grip lels you-carry.this TV anywhere. Includes higb gain VHF tuner, UHF solid slate tuner. Antennae tor VHF and.UHf. Polystyrene Cl'llbinet w!H1 roSewbod Woodgrain linish. (SF2301). ·. .Prices effectiv~ •hru Tu'.1.: Oct. a, 1974 ' Com popper. Hamilton Beach's sell· buttering poppe'r witn no stick plastic cover. (499) 17:..99 Norelco slyler dryer. It does wonderful lhings to your head. Powerful, easy · to use. (HB 6600) IUEHA PARIC: Beach at Orangethorpe •Open weekdays-10 to 9:30. Sundays 10 to 6. OIAHGE: Clly Dr. •.t Garden Grove Blvd.• Open weekdays 10 to 9. Suridays 10 to 6. SNITA AHA: 3900 So. Bnsfol-f'!o. of So. COAst Plaza• Open weekdays lO to 9. Sundays 10 Jo 6. .· ' Reg. 3.99 yd. Crepe Dauble- knll. Fabric is60" wide. 100% AO iron polyester. ,. Rig. 19.97 Basketball bock- boord. 36"x48". 18" diog. gxil. Net included. J'.FaTeJ ' 111 451 111 I I -- • • ' 1 • ; a • • a i T t .. , YOU ' DAILY PILOT SECTION 8 Suncu1. Octobrr 6, 1974 'Breast Cancer: Do Wometl. Do What They Can?: • Docto1·s Def e11d Extent ,, ' Of ~astecto1ny Su1·ge1; "A former presKlent of the American Cancer Society says the radical mastec- lomy, the kind of ·operation Betty Ford wxlerwent. 'is the only way we kno\v 1''e can cure breast cancer." ''Traditional radical breast surgery-the type. performed on Betty Ford-is no better for most \Vomen than a less_ mutilating opei-ation.i• These ty;·o directly conflicting stories \.\-'ere filed by Associated Press and Unlt'ed Press on the same day. one 'vith an Atlanta dateline and the other with Washington dateli ne. They are illustralive of the connicl which exists in dealing with breast cancer: No agreement has been reached as to· 11-ilich type of surgery actually \s best.' THE FIRST statement.. that the radical mastectomy is the "only way to cure breast cancer." is front an AP release quoting Dr . A. Hamblin Let· too. The Atlanta physician said lhe radica l mastectomy is the •;only \1·ay to be certain of removing all cancerous twue . • '·I'm doing ty;·o of then1 Tuesday," he said. ''If it \rere my oy;•n wife, I wouldn't want to risk doing someth ing ex perimental ." The AP stofy further quotes Dr. Letton as saying that "brtast ca ncer has reach- ·ed epidemic proportions in the United States.·• The UPI story, t y Al Rossiter Jr., the service's science editor, cil es a Lask force study made al 37 hospitals around the nalion since 1971. ,,. ROSSITER SAID the report contained evidence that chemical therapy can "drasticall.v,'' reduce the recurrance ..... or breast cancer and that radiation therapy. with it.s sickening side effects, is un- necessary. The "Report. to the Profession." Rossiter said, was presented in a con· ference at the National Cancer Institute. It dealt W.tti five different aspects of breast cancer treatment and , Rossiter said, "contradicts many long.held con· cepts." Rossiter explained that "surg ical treat· men! of the disease has changed little in the past 100 years, and scant progress • At Your · I-S ervice Got a problem? Th'1t write Pat Dunn. Pat wilt cut red tape, get the answer1 ona actfon uou need to solvl! inequi!ies fn government and business. Mail your questioM to Pat [)unn/At Your Service, Orange Coast Dtlilu Pilot, P.O. Bo: 1560, Costa ltfero. Ca. 92626. ln· elude your teleph1me number. The column appeart ot' Sund.Gus. Alo11days, \Vednesdays and FTidays. Don't Pny tor Vtllitle• at /Harket DEAR PAT : My son pa.Id our electric bill 3t SmJth's Food King Store in Costa Mesa as we always do on Sept. 6. I disregarded the delinquent notice which arr:h1ed the S11me day. 'Mlen on Sept. 16 my bosba.nd arrlv@d home al 2 p.m . to find the cleetriclfy had been shut off at 11 :4.~ a.m. Ile wc,.t to Edison right a"-'BY and 'fSS told our payment had not been fe<.'tived and our receip.t ~oul~'t be accepted because Food King was not nn authoriiod pay SUI.lion. the store had sent the payments to the wrong location, we were tolrt la'ter. EdlJon wanted $45.23 for the bill, plus $2.50 service charge and a S60 deposlL Another Edison representative finally accepted our rece ipt, but we still had to pay $62.50 and were t.old the deposit v.'Ould not be returned for a .)'ear, Tbe electricity wasn't tumtd on tmUJ 7;48 p.m. and food in our freeier had defrosted. We feet Edison should tell Food King oot to accc:pt utlllty payment.s if it is not aocredittd and we would like our $60 retumed since the bill had been paid In good faith and we were n'IOst incon venienced by the whole situation. F. f\f., Costa l\fesa Serry, but Soutbtrn Ca11fomla Edi~ will not rtturn your $60 dtpostt •t thl1 time doe lo your bUI btlng paid at lhe "unauthorli~" poy stROon. An P.:dlson spoktsmaa aays thtl '•tlllty cannot control "''bat 1t'h1tces 1nptrmatktlS offer tbelr cu1tomtl'1, nor call it be re!ipgn Ible For tbe itort's en'Or in mailing paymtntl. lt looks as If yeu and o(bt.rl 1bo11ld be very careful to make payments al author· hed ••contract atailcn••" -,·htch d.lspl•y set: emblems and bsue a receipt be11 rlng By CAROL ~IOORE 01 .... OlllY Pll.t Sti tt Betty Ford had breast cancer. So might a woman you know if she's uncertain about the sin1ple procedure for checking her breasts for tcll·t.aJe lumps. Or U she's unwilling to search (or the mGSt dreaded tumor. Like the First Lady she may wait for her annual physical checkup -1! then -figuring ttµlt ~ doctor will find anything wroog: Hov.•e'ver, 12 nlOllths may be too loog'. A malignancy> could spread from a tiny lump to lymph nodes , requiring more extehsive surgery. .Self-examination is the recommended earliest warning. But an informal Daily Pilot sun:ey found that doctors differ on the method of instruction and v.·omen are left wondering, worrying . . . and pro- crastinating. "Doctors hciV£.never asked me if 1 was indeed checking my breasts each month. And it remains some· thing 1 do not do, don't know li ow · to do, do not think to do." "J\fan, tt took me a long lime to realize that I 'm 't6t the only one afraid to go. Afore attention s11ould be given to paTtiol mastecto~ies. You're taking away a secondary sex characeristic." Two Coro11a deL Alar won1e11, ages 27' and 32. ' "A '1eighbor died from breas t ca11- cer but that didn't cha11ge nit'. I don't k11oto what would change me. Who want.s to fork out the bucks for a yearly exam when you're feeling fh1e." tl Hunti11gto1l Be1Kll t_esident, mid· 30s. Less than a third -Of the "·-0men ques- tioned actually had received instructions from a doctor, often at their oWJ) request. A few reported being rebuffed with such comments as "There are pamphlets in the lobby" or "Don't try it yourseU: you'll make yourself ner,·ous. '' "I cau't examine tnyself becattse J've had a hi.story of cysts afld can't distinguish~tlie tumps. But it's so liard to get to a doctor while l'11t worki ug." A Ne wport Beacl' secre!ary, past 50. . "/.fy doctor has show11 n1e bitt I forgot. The 11ew.s about tile F'irst Lady IUlS triggered me to take this more seriously. Tlie next time I witl have hini go over tlle procedure again!' A flun ti'l'lgtotl Beacll 111otl1er, 43. "A ve·ry fine old doctor tlu1Q1it nic. He was concerned because ll is wife had died of breast co11ce r. "l 'nl Hry iucensed ab out rad ical mastectomies. Tltere would not be so The information In tills page wa1 com· piled by Staff "'riters Bea Anderson, Allison Detrr, Laurie Kasper and Jo Olson of the People Section. many if there WCTe more women doc· tors. r know a woman wllo died psy· chotogicotly after hers." A Costa Afesa woman, about 50. All physicians maintained that they leach each patient personally. About half send along back·up \VTitteo material. But "'hY isn't the information remcn1bered at home and practice<t' regularly? Various doctors suggested v.'Omen "can't handle it emotionally ... don't listen because they're nervous in the examining room . . . are uptight about what they might find ... give in to husbands who don't peed doctor's ad· vice." Dr. ~1arsh Ste"'ard of Anaheim disagreed that self:-examinalions are a- highly effective way of geUing result! because women can't be ob}ecti\'e and get ~'Orried about whatever they find. Dr. Tonia ~farie r.lar:ralle of Costa li-fesa refuted him, noting that the earlier the practice is started, the more "Every woman is a physicia n for herself. Ninety percent of my breast cancer cases were by their own detection." -DR. RAJENSRA DESAI Presidenr. Orange County chapter Amcncan Ganeer Society has been 'made in pre\'enting a recur- rence or improving chances of survival.'' .The simple mastectomy, which is simply the removal of the breast, could be done more often if surgeons would _"change their methods." Rossiter quoted Or. Frank Rauscher, head of lhe NCI, as saying. . RAUSCllElt suggested that surgeons te~ for cancer cells in the lymph' glands while the patient is still on the operating table. "At the present time. I would estimate that well over half of those would be candidates for the less radical pn>- cedure." Ros.siter further says: "~!rs. Ford's surgeons knew or the new findings. But one of them, Dr. William Fouty, said in a news briefing after the operation that 1hey chose the radical form of the operation as 'a solid procedure that we know has worked \'Cry "-'ell in the past.' "While widespread adoption or the simple mastectomy "'·ould reduce the trawna experienced by v.·omen who undergo breast stUgery, Rauscher said the other four points dealt 11.ith in the -task force report could be of greate r importance in the fight again~1 cancer. "ONE Of these is the tentative discovery that radiation thcrapy-\\'hich produces such side effects as loss of appctjtc •• oa.YSeJL and.diarrhea-offers_ no advantage over surgery alone in preven· ting the recurrence of cancer. "Another contributes new strength to the theory that cancer is an ·extrensic' disease. one \\'hich arises from a source outside the body rather than from anything a person is bom \\ilh. . "A third indicates that the size of tumors in perhaps 50 pe rcent or the \\'omen who develop cancer can be reduc· ed \vith substance that decreases the level of estrogen, the femal e hormone, in a woman's system. "And the fourth, presented by Dr. Bernard fisher of the University ol Pittsburgh, the task force director, shoY.'S that chemotherapy treatment started tv.·o \\'eeks after surgery with either one drug or a combination of three dru gs it "is drastically reducing the number of vromen who develop a secondary c.ancer'," Rauscher said. an SCE stamp. It may be wise either to mail your blll ln the future or pay at an Edison oHice, wbere Y"'l can obtain a list of authorized payment stations. ' Tlrket B"ycrs 'Sralping' Tl1cmseh1es DEAR PAT: ~fy teenage daughter recently purchased two tickets for the Oct. 3 Elton John concert at the Forum. Even though !he tickets staled an $8.:lO cost eachl she had to_pay $45. J asked Immetta's ticket service for a receipt for the $28 balance, but none was given. After much deliberation, and assurance from the agency that it niade only a $3 or $4 profit, I was given a receipt ind i· . eating ooly that the tickets had coal $45. Since scalping is-illegal, and since the tickets are v.·orth $8.50 each, who is "rippln ' off" the kids? Somebody must be making a bundle. S. l-, Costa l\lesa lmmetta's spokesman 1ay1 the kids are ripping themsel\'es off by continuing to pay svcb exorbitant prt,ce1 for rock concert ticke ts. He added that brokers ba\'e io pay "lbe going rate" io their suppllen for ticket& to a popular enter· tainmeot event, and UU1 C1:1St Is passed on to the ticket buyer, with unidentified "mlddle men" geUlng tbe maln profit. Jmmetta'1. claiming an ability lo obtain "bard to get" tickets; cate:rs mainly to business purchasers, aDd Its spokesman coatt:nd1 the firm always request• young peT50ns to explain the out-of~slght ticket tabs to their parents be-fore an actual purchase 11 made. lf you 1''ould like a -,Title.• uplanatkln tf the dckel broker'• chargt1 and purchase costs, lmmeua·s will stnd )'ti tta broclntrti on tbe sub ject -1 elelr lndlt.aUon that )'Ou're not the first l)enort to object to ~·hat appears to be 1elf·lnOlcted 1cnlplng by tht entert.alnment seeking public. lns11rn11re "Ian. Wants Sero11d Look DEAR PAT: l1d hopN lime ••ouJd ttsolve this problem, but I fttl my young cousin has been treated unjUltly by the State Fann Insurance Co. H1s ca r wu sloltn from bis home in Signal llill on July 6: He reported the theft to bis insurance ngtnt July 7. When It was rf:COvered , the steroo had been removed and the car kept popping out of gear. JUs agent told him that neilher the stereo k>8s nor the police Impound recs were covered. After the car was che(ked out Md found to have 5.1()0 worth or transmission rcpc1.lrs needed. he v.·as told tbls problem had existed "be.fore" the theft. even thou gh the mechanic said th.at was not tbe case. This yoq man I ~ hArd \\'Orkin~. ha!! h:id no tickcl1 and pays $169 every she months for insurance. I rttl ne·:s. bc111g taken r0r a -ride by bis insuraDce agent · R.Al., llunllni;:lon Btach Your cousin's Insurance agent reques~ th at be re-ctotact State rarm rt· prdlna: tettlement tf tllla cl1lm. AJllJough no retordlng or playing equipment familiar and ha bitual it becOlnes. he has !aught teenagers. although illcidcnce is ext remel y rarG und er 20. Dr. Benbov.· Thompson of Orange County li-fedical Center s:1id ACS films are shoY.n to pre-natal patients since "'omen in the child-bearing group are more prone to take-care. of 1hcir; bod ies. I li-1edical research has identified thrl'e high ri sk groups for de\'eloping breast cancer. These are v.'Omen with a maternal history o( breast cancer or fibrocystic change. \•101nc11 "'ho ne\'er · ha\'e had Children and women O\'er tbe age of 35.) Doctor's ad\1ce on 1hning of self-ex· an1inations varied fro1n "on your birth· day . . . some set day e\·ery month .... afler bathing." Another fen1ale gynccologisl. \\·ho led a sc1ninar on \\'omen's Health for UCI Extension last year. explained the con· sensus : · .. Shortly after each n1enstrua\ period , v.•hile the tissue is still soft v.·ith engo rge- ment, is the best tirne. During the period itself. breasts may be too tender or 'lumps' may forn1 that disappear la ter. "\\'h.1t vou don't "·ant to hnd ft.'<'15 llke a 1"-'l>bll' or dry hard \lCa.'' Thut switrh to tRe nt1!;al1\r. un· dcrsCt)red her synip:ilhttlc understanding of Y.'Omen's worst nightm ure. "I en<.'OUI'age \\'Otnett to c h e c k the1nse!ves regularly but some press loo hard ond bt.'CO tne overly sensitive. And ottiers y,·ould be anxious alt the un1e v.•h1ch 1s a poor 11.•ay 10 Ji,·e" Sht> descriix'd d e·1 c c t i on h}' thcnnogra phy, xerography and 1\111111· 1nography as readily 1:1va~lable bu! not I refined. • "Snrne. doct ors re<.'0111mend these nll'thods be used annuallv <tftcr 40.' But you ha,·e to \\'C'igh ihe bcnerils \'ersus th:i t much exposure 10 radiation f<ibsorb- ed 1nore by soft llssue) <Jnd 1he cost tfronl $50 lo $10fll ." ,\bou t 20 percent of the 1ron1c n surveyed indic:itcd they chose \•:on1cn doctors or considered attending feminist clinics to become more a\\•are and less self-conscious of such a personal mal!er. 1 lealth agencies. especially t h c A1nerican Cancer Sociely, frequen tly eooduct Jree breast checkups. Two y,•cre (See BllEAST CANCER, Page B!J A breast check $~$fl~~ ••• oo n~mll\\fc li:.ithin~. ~.l"IO\I L1111g. Your nlO n1cnt to t;.tl.t' c;Ut: ot \'C>Uni<CU: 1 llllC' 10 lw..".!ln 1oor brc:.L"t c:\ou1un..1tion. ''11u1 hn';!t'l'i <.lick· C<t'•J \'. ,\, \i'l.I II .1~1 1 IOU can tki,1 '1t11pl1• ( l"ll '\ i,.. tl1.1{ II di n_1[UU\' IJf.ll Ut,Jl1 110 Ul l\I' After the shower, do a more thorough check -F<Jllow these simplesteps:.-- 1 l,1edown. Put one hand behind your head \\'ith I he other hand . fi 1111ers n:ittcned . llt:OllY reel your _br_casL Press e\•er so lightly Now exumine thr other breast 2 This Illustration ~hows ~·ou how to check each breast Begin where )'OU see tht ,._ 3 and fOllo"" the afi'Ow:t tecling gentl y for a lurTip or thickening Hcmemberto feel all parts of each breast No11.· repeal the same procedu re siltin g up, v.·1th the hand s1ill behind ~·our head. • llh11tn1lion' token ho.., lHoch•"e •~•iloble h om Ame•iuan (once• ~oc>.11 is covered under auto theft policy pnn•lslons unless il's ractory installed or separately covered, police hnpound or towing charges may be covered. lnsu runce records indicate the car y,-as reco\'ered July 7. but lhe theft y,·as not rl'1)()rted lo lht agent until Aug. 9. Transmission problems ma y ba\'e developed on this 196' auto during the illterlm v.·eeks. The uge111 says be offered to ba \'e a clai1111 agent pre1;ent at tbe time the auto v.·as examined by a transmission nll"chanic, but be heard nothing further from your ('(lusin . The agent ls follo"in g up on Ill.ls problem and will Inform me of furtl1el' de,·cloprnents, ~·hlch "'Ill be for· y,·arded to you. 1\0 ~lo11cy I<> ll11r!I Pou•t•r Cnble .. DEAR PAT: I ha\'e \i\'ed near f 1:1irvic\\' and Fai r in Cost.;1 ~le~ tor the past 10 years. Every fall for fh·e years Fai r\'ley,· has been ton1 up for one reason or another. Now it's the v.•idening project v•here "'e 11.•ill lo:.e hundtcds of trees. l really v.·ould like to know ho11.• rhc utility compn n1cs At'I :n1:1,v "1th puUing up those ugly poles instead of burying the pay,·cr hncs. 11.,\1., Costa ~1t·s;1 A Southern Callromla Edl~n Co. spoke$n1an says puv.·l.'r lines :ire 1101 burit>d due lo prior use of Public lJtllitles Co mn1ission funding allocutions on ll arbor Dl\·d. Costa l\lesa's 1h.H re v.·as Sl.5 mllllon. he said. adding lh:it It y,·onhl u1~e 15 years or allocated funds to insl&ll undtrground cablts on t'a!r,ic11.. • Joh1 ll1 e Club -PIPHllJ "' Co111,.lul111• DEAJl PAT: In Oct-0ber. 1973. I ordered a rin_A from the Oi a 1n1~:t l;l'n1 Co .. a branch of Dhunaze Co .• sendlnit Sl3.9r1. \Vht•n the rin,t: ~1rMr('d 1n JanuAry. T didn't like it :ind sent it brick. No refund llrri\·ed . only u Afft <'heck fltr Sl3.95. I then ordered a v.·atch for the check plus $3. t h.t1\·en·1 rrcl'l \'ed !he Y.3h"h ln spite of repeated reassurances that it y,·as on i~ \\:I v in fl'brunry. \\'hen ~lay ca111c, I ~TOte once again and that letter \\3!1 rcturnNI uncl:H111rd \\'h;at 's gf'ling on" c.n .. Costa ~lest1 '"l'ou'\'e jolnrd hundr~s or other romplalntll, accordinl[ to th" ~ll'ln>politan Nev.• \'ork Ocllet Bnslnes1 Burtau. J)ian111zt i>ignt>d a lt'T! 11,::tl'l'mrnt "Ith lbc Ne•• York Chy llepartment o} Cons11n1er Aff:ilrs, pro1nisln1t 10 dtli\otr nitrchnn· dlse Ylltbln sil: y,eek1 of an order, or tn n111kt' n run refund , itihlsc or t'\:~ll'd delRy or send n s11b11llt11le. A t!i3 llUlt hy "·'·· Con~u1ner Aff11lrs. cbi1rgln.1t lht ~11n1e offPOll("li . hR \'ti lo ht <'nlmlt1 •11rt1 . l~"""'"'""".t , ... ,.,,_1,.;.,•c. ""I Ill· eluding youl'l!, "hirh hoiitfully nu"· bas btri1 rt.::rUf\td, ~ttould he M!Ol to the ~rMinlll attention of llov1ard Rt-insteln . prt'~ldtnt or Oh1111nze, 83·19 l~!tth A\e ,, llo•1rd Uti1e b. N.l'. 1141~. If usulls arr nnt nblaint:d, direct carbon ('1)piq It ,\I ''oro~, Consun1tr Con1phdnt Cenlcr. 1>epartn1cnt of Consu1ner Affairs. s:t LaFa)'ttlt St., Nr:w Vofk, N.Y. 100\3. ·' , ' " • ;r DAIL V PILOT Sunday, October fl. 2q74 OCC Boat Builders Learn Basics of Art ' , r I MRS. NANCY FICKEN OF DANA POINT Good Deeder She Can't Say No • !\trs. Nancy Ficken is cne or ttlose people dear to the hearts of organizers and clubwomen. She can't say· "no." Whenever !here's a job no one else 'A'ants. a chore no one else has time for, Nancy Ficken volun teers. The Dana Point woman, the wife of H. lt1. Ficken of 33302 · Ocean 11111 Drive, believes In exfendlng a helping hand whenever pos.!ible. And with three daughters bel'>l'een the ages of nine and 15, she finds lots of opixirtunitles. "She's been involved in many church activities -v.·omen's vice president, Sunday school teacher, organizer, janitor, ooUector, babysitter, cook - you name it. she's done it," said her neighbor, Mn. John Blcs. "Yet through a11 this she still has Ume fo':' ' friend and just a chat." 1 The Fickens have lived in Dana Point for 1.2 ycara. They attend Gloria Dei Lu1heran Church and are active in community activities. ~ Hy Ult.ARY KAYE Of the Dally l'il•I l•11f Only 10 of 23 aspiring boal bui lders who enrolled in a new Orange Coast College course, "~farine Construe· tion ," rtn1aln t\\·o "'eeks after the class began. The 13 who left proved to be "starry.eyed romanticists,'' according to course lnslructor Fred 1'.1jtler. "The drop-auts thought the long hour:;, tough \rork and career outlook r£· Quired v.·ere not quite "'ha~ lhey had In mind."' he added. "Tho@;e who had idea1 of bu.ilding their ov.11. Y.'OO<ien boats and sailing off to the South Seas "·ere the fint to leave," explained lo.tiller. The exodus from the 12· v.·eck class has left lo.filler with a corps oJ students ranging from Ill to 60 yea r:o; old, de· termined lo learn the basics of building rJberg!ass sailboats and then find their niche In the gi~antlc boatbuilding in· dustry 1n Orange Cowity. AUU.ER, a blond. crew-cut graduate of Stanford, has a hislory o( award·wlnnlng 11ail· ing and boat building as well as a five-year stretch as a ne Y.'Spaper boating editor. His class meets rive d~s a ...,·eek from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. The first l\\1> days each · w~k are spent in on-thc·job training with local b o • t building finns. The final thret days ire spent at OCC with Miller In classroom lecture and actual lab work, building a boat. c.otnpanJ~s y,·here students are training, and where some n1ay eventually find job&, in- clude Co a 1 t a I Recreation, · Coast Catamaran , Columbia and Ron Jone1 1-1 a r i n e Engineering. Althoogh lhe boal building industry used to be centered on the Balboa Peninsula, high land prices and the realization that waterfront property Is not necessary have caused the companies to move Inland. primarily to the Ir v I n e Industrial Complex. "THE IDEA of the eourse is to tum out a new breed of boat builder, someotie qualified to step in at any operation at the lead man level ," A!iller explained. The instructor added that an executive with one of the local boat building firms recently complained to him that good boat builders are increasingly scarce. "It's been aorne time since we've found somebody who knows everything about this business. And now, we can't find anybody ...,.M knov,;s an,ythlng about it," Uie man told Miller. The. OCC course, v.·orth eight units and perhaps a job at lhe one!. 11 lry!ng lo remedy the lituatJon. ftlillcr, most familiar with fibreglass s a i Ibo a t con· struclion, plans to center his course aro und that type of er alt. 11£ IJAS lectures planne<J during the course on the history of Orange County boat- bullding, the pn!Sent t~at· building market &nq the in· dustry's future. Practical lnstruction will In· elude lectures and demonstra- tions on gel coating, In· stallations of boat equipment, basic flberglasa production, touch up and ripair, rigging,' sailmaklng, and a one-week lecture on non-ftbergl3's boats such as v.-ood , alummum, steel and ferro-cement. Some of the students en~l­ ed in the course are taking It strictly as a vehlcle into the industry, where salaries \ begin at $3.50 an hour and increase to between Sll,500 and $16,000 a year at the fOf'eman's level, accotding to M1ller. Other students are enrolled in the class, which will be repeated every three months, as part of the marine science major at the school. .ft1llter believes his course Is the only one of lta kind, Y.'here boat building knowledge is combined With on·the·JOb training. O.lly Plllt Steff , .... In addiUon to church work1 A!rs. ·Ficken also ha• put in stJnts in Girl Scout achvlUes , something she'• about to begin again with her youngest daughter, and has also taken part in various Parent Teacher Or. ganizatioos at 1ehool1 her daughters have attended. And once in a while she finds time to play the organ. High School Students Get Inw Act Instructor Fred Miller, upper left, chocks Ralph McComb '• efforts while Stove Caioltno wotchos. "Ali her many deeds are sincerely appreciated by all who benefit •· said ~!rs. Bies. "But it's time "'e let everyone know ' what a gem vte ha ve in our neighbor- hood." Delp for You By FRED SCROEMEiu. Of t"-DtJIY I'll" lltff Boat building, once as easy as carving out a log, IS just _QOf. that simple these days. High school students taking a boat buildlne: co u r s e sponsored by the Coastline C Regional Occupation al --€he(•,L-U...,ed -a~--~-Prognim (CROP> •relearning K U CJ I ~ just how intricate today·s ~lost uaed cars art sold "as Is," ""ilh no guarantee at all or wi th a short guaranlee, ·or a guarantee with limited meaning, according to this week's coosumer hint from the office of state Atty. Gen. Evelle J. Younger. methods are. The high school students, 16 in an, are getting the first hand erperience a t Jensen Marine, 235 Fischer Ave .. Costa l\Iesa. Jensen, one of the largest yacht bullclt" In the country, shop, learning mold prepon-BASICS of bolt buildin( att r ---•111"9 AD IN fOI DISCOUNT - - --, is ·one of several buc.lne.sscs Uon, gel-Q')lting, fiberglass being covered this semester. J•welry E1t.t" I that doubles as a classroom lay-ups, pilling parts and Afore in-depth lnstructicn will I ~ Bought ind Sold for students wanting on-tJle.. touch up; in the woodworking be offered nelt semester. I ' I job vocational training. shop where mill work, cabinet Junior and aenlor high DiomoM11 oMI rrKiovt S1o1111 CROP is supponed by five making and pan assembly is schoo l students, as well as I >wO• I high sclnil districts: Hun-taught ; in the cushion shop adults li ving in the bounds .I Xeno Utras I tington Beach Unton,_lnine.--lrtlere drapes. cuab.Mxw and-of the five --districta,-may FIN! JtWEUY Ne wport·Mesa, Saddleback headllnera are fashlonfd ; in enroll in the course or any I I Valley and Tustin. lhe mast making shop Jeaming other CROP offerings. I I about macbine shop equip.. Furfhcr information may be designer .t-welry, Inc. UNDER the direction of ment end rigging, and ln the obtained. by calling 549-2929 I 16833 algonquln 1treet. tiuntlngton bli•ch, c11if. &a49 I Geae Madden, sb>p manager small boat assembly area . for taped course descriptions. Huntington Herbor Balrct..v1lk Plwi 714/846-295S .I at Jensen, the Mud.eats &re Field ~~ and lectures E~llment may be made by ~---•llAMG-Al>IMJOIDISCOUHT ___ _ receiving imtructk>n in five from outside speakers also are calling 979-19S5. areas of boat building. included in the course, offered -'--'=-'-'-"------------------------- They work in the fiberglass for the first time this fall. Be.fore buying a used · car, have it checked rirst by a competmt mechanic. The coat for such a se rvice is usually quite small. Es.amine the car yourself, and klok for-signs of wear and age or accidents. (Look for doors that do not nt properly, rust and dampness under floor mats, repainted areas along body skies, oily "scum" in the radiator area, tire wear, unusual noises, slow pickup.) IlREAST CANCER CHECKUP ... Often tbe salesman (or prtvate party making the sale) v.ill tell you something about the condition of the car, or what the seller has done to put the car In~ shape . Whatever he tells you about the car's cond.Ttlon or repair, ask him to put it in writing. If he doe5 not, don't buy the car. 1be reputation ol the dealer is even more important in regard to purchasing a u.wd car than a new one. Dealers who alllO sen new can: usually have a greater investment in their buslness and are usually arowid longer. You Can Delp Doce1its to Serve (C.Ontlnued From Page Bl) heavily attended receatly, at- tri butable to the Ford .ptibli· city. "I 'd rather 11ot thi11k abo11t it. If tllere's 1ome· thing w rong with my breruit, my husband will tell me." A Cos ta Alesa wife, 28. "All patient.s are given a breast checkup and le1son on tile routine when they attend birth control rap sessio11s. \V e.'ve eve1t found 11011ps i11 soni.e ver11 you1111 referral·s." Spokesperson for Laguna Beach Free Clinic. Seventy«ven percent ol the loo, becau,,e cancer Is a women in that survey had honnone-dependent t u m o r • heard of self-examination but Removal of the ovaries has a third of the aware women been proven to inhibit the. never pr3ctlced it. spread of breast cancer. Md Dr. Rajendra Desai, presi· "'Ith older V.'O!llen, we might dent of the· Orange County remove the adrenal gland, too. ACS chapter, is an outspoken "That's why follow-up and proponent ol self-es.· teamwork by physicians and aminaUOOI. chemotherapistl is go Im· "Sloging cl the dis<ase is portant." the m:>St important upect of He and Dr. Malcolm Sterling cancer today. will dlscu.sss Breut Cancer "It ts so na-essary to dttect Detection at a free meeting . I .bl E h from 7:M to 9 p.m. Tueaday, 1t as ear)' as p<mi e. ac Oct. 22, in Fountain Valley \\lould yuu like to be a "docent"? The word ;'docent" comes from I.he Latin "docere." meaning to lead or conduct. That's exaclly v.·hat docents do. They conduct guided tours of museums. Bowers Museum in Santa woman's case Is different but Community Hospital. A man· she's invariably the first to nequln will be displayed for know when 11>melhing's wrong palpating practice, to di1COver '"Doctor$ seeni to think in her body. what a malignant lwnp feels like. co11sultatio1i t11ne is extra, "If she reports an air Orange County statistics If they would just explaill normality i mm e d I ate I y , show that 199 women died • Ana is OOlding training classes for docents this month on '~'ednesda\'S. what thfy toere doing while there's less chance 0 f of breast cancer tn 1972. The they examine the breast, I Is They'll 1ea m a Jot about the exhib.it.s, including antique vehicles. Indian art . natural science and the pre-O>lumblan exhibit in the new wing. If you are interested, call the Voluntary Action Center, 207 Avocado Street. Costa 1.1esa, 642-0963 or 8.U-9278. could aak quesioii.s theii aiu.l spreading and involving other national toll this year ex- be much less emba·rrassed." organs. pected lo be :13,000. Yet early Al iss iinl Viejo teac ller, 40. __ "'A..:ge:e_mak __ es.:_a_big..:":.d_i_ff_er_enc_e __ d_el<dlon ___ i_s_so_sirn-'p-le_. ___ I The Mardan School for educational therapy needs ..,,.orkers for its thrift shop in Costa Mesa . This v.•111 be an intere.sling job. "'·orking with people. If you are interest~ ca)J the Vo\witary ActJon Center, &t2.o964 or 833-9278. Th.at re.mark v.'as echoed by 7l percent of the 1,000 women queried In a national Gallup poll that also revealed half the adult female JlOPU}atioo do not have annual breast t xaminll tlons by phystclans. 2 Hats, 1 Office For Agency Rep ..---.,: Sornetime taler this month llle Huma n Services Center ex- pects offlclally to open an office in Huntlnaton Beach housing several United Cru· sade agehcies. It v•as dec ided that the \Vest Orange Co u n t y Voluntrer Bureau and the S:!lvatlon Anny would join· !on:es. Though still ictlng a!I M?pa· rate sgenclet the y wlll share the same otnce and the !lame office representative, Judy Lower. The ofnce Is located at S20 Pecan. The telephone number Is 960-3312. • DIVORCE • II', l'O\t 11 fOOI .. ., •• Oqr.....t to 00 IT f01JR\(LJ r_Al ll-OllHIA 01¥.,Url C OUH\fl \!:>'!~ W od. \r• '" • SJJ-7740 ' Fights GJnflationl or your person an your purse Mondsy, Oct. 7th -t ..._ Brentwood Savings & Loan 1640 Adam s, Costa Mesa lMrT'I how • ea11no nu1n11ona11y bli nos 1bout weight lo~s • anactung notn11onat1y keePI you u tisfied • meat p1ann.ng rvntionel!_y keep1 IO()\t COii' In ltne. Se ~ of a nationwid e V'k'O e11~r.c. th11 11 tdocatlonll, eKcltlttg, and endOfMd eo.-Monon B. Glenn. M.O., former Nvtntlonll: Consultant to tl'll Uniteo Nations. ,_. lltf• 1111 4 ...... c• 'll•lltl - -SERVICE-1 • Diamond and slone selhng • Expert watch repair • Ftne Jewelry repa ir (ewtl• by Joseph can service all vo ur j....,.lry needl, from crealing an o,igln al and exciting ring to appr•iling I valued heirloom. Professional Service by trained professionals jewels by joseph • Jewe lry designino •Gemological Diamond and jeWillry appralsa ls ALL WOU DOHI IN THI STOii ....... ~.,.... ................. . ,.., ,,.. .... ;...try • ..,. ........ .. ~e......·•~r·-• ~.,.....,... .. , ..... SOUTH COAST l'Uli llMtDI ..... 0...., ,_,. - ·COSTA MIS.A HOUll : ...,, .. , .......... Clo ... ... 14 ..... . berry pie m11de }(notl'11 Berry t'11rm famoua, the wnrhl o\'er. \Ve of(er both 1111 ye«r round nnd 1lurin1r ~elebration ilay~ we're addln1 old time mu .. lc. fun, and a. bilf bo)'M'nbtrry 11i1 take homt offer 11tt! fm toy11 for tM l(ida. Knott'11 chlcktn dlnn.r \11 !It.Ill on or the belt Yalut11 •round. Jt"a a birthday lion&rua for the whole family! Mualo and run for-everyone I FREE toys !or the kids. The hlla.rl0\13 103• Mu1k11 ~ ~.~ MBBU MRS. KN01TS FRIED CHICKEN DINNER {'tlerry Rholmr b ~uuce Sa Jaji ftlno. Knntt'-fried C:titektn M111hed l'otll08 •nd Gravy Ve,m.b1-il Hot llll'eulta F11rm·m111le lltrr)' J1rn Ch1:1k1 or : rottH, Tea, Milk (\holf't ot : Herry Pie, Vanllll ltl CtuM, llo,~enburr.• fiherbe\ fh1\•u1 wUl bl fe1tured in l\n0\f11 John \\11y111 T'hutre - Oct. 11, It, 13, 18, 11, I 20, -----------I . eot'/'oJX; I . ~ 111,,~~-~~-~~t I I KHO~ Cbloken Dinner I ~~ I ................... "4()01 ~"· tt• """'" lko'j!.'•'"' . a., ... ft.'1!111 r;., rer •ii\ l!Ul1h.Nt otf I¥~ (hl•\I" lll.Ut. 13,~ Al.: ~OIJI I °'"''-"""· ""' "~''"'" .. "" I~ ~... -----------,, • • J ti A E • II ti t B w E in I VO .• .,. lo Pa un a fa • in wh SC de or lea Co ' 'S1111dAt, Oclobtr fl, 1~14 . DAILY PILOT JI 3 l1a Scarc ia of the An1erloa11 Bre nna - -Part 2 Europeans Picture. New World 'Utopia' Th'• f.J the · 3cccmd of 18 article1 e:rptorhiq t1t.t tl~eme, In ·Searcti. of tht A.nicrlcan Dream. F.ntltled EttUtled . "VoJIOging," this article 13 tlie fir1t of a t!iret•port discusslcn~ of tht ge1it10l subject of Tht New World as Utopia. 'file au.. ·tlicrr of tllls article 1.J prcr Jc1sor of history at tl&t Uni versity a/ Califor t1fa, Ber keley. By WINTllROP D. JORllAN It requ ires effort to realize v.·hat a powerful imp~ct the voyages of Columbus had upon ·: the European imagination. By : comparison, It could b e argued. recent lnndings on the moon have been of no very great importance and indeed are merely one rnore ez. tension or the historic procees begun by Columbus. Shortly after his discoveries, It bec!lfTle clear that America was not China and the "In· dians" not nali ves of the sought-for Indies. Europeans thus confronted a world that was tnlly new. It \\'as 1>recise-- ly the newness of the New \Vorld which stimul ated Sir Thomas More. in the 16th Cen- 'tury, to write "Utopia." In this book a bout an ideal country, More used the WlSJ)Oiled no;ielty of the new lands as a foil for eipOS\ng the stale failures of the Old World. Sir Tho m a s' fello,.,. Englishmen were late in tak· ing so great an inteffilt In the lands beyond the Atlantic. DRAWING (COURTESY BETTMANN ARCHIVE) OF COLUMBUS LANDING IN AMER ICA In Retrotpect, lmportent •• First Astronaut Landing on the Moon? of his treasure to Europt>, anti consequently to ah.Ille the pride of Spain and or 1he wpporter of tht• & r e a t Antichrist or Rome." Tilt.' r\(.lW World wou ld he tbe fulcr1m1 by which England v.·ould ral8t Itself to greatness in the Old. Thus it is clear that Euro- pean perception.~ of t\n'ltri ca were from the beginning very much shaped by Europi.·an na- tional rival ries. To each nation Uie ad· \.'antages of the Nev.• \Vorld were enhanced by t h e koov.•ledge that others v.·ere eyeing them. ln1t>rest i n Anlerica v.·as In reality the beginning of nearly five hun- dred years of European ex- ploitation of the peoples and natural re!IOtJrces of the re- mainder of the globe. The Spanish had begun such exploit.atioo of the New World nearly a century before the English. Not' all SpnniP rd s .,ad been moti vated by the lust for treasure v.1hich drove Cortez and so many of his followers. Some came to s.1ve souls and . as they conceived it. to better the lot of their l11dian su bjects: Vasco de Quiro ga. first bishop of J\:1ichoacan. suc- COURSES BY • SC"n1·ce\y a g I a m o r o u s busu\CS!. nor was it n business f o r gentlemen-advenlurerl!, Llut the fisheries came to tic grestly ::i.p;>reciated , ~h ai;; nurBeries for seam~n and as a supply of food and of trade to other nations, 1'he forests . another gre:u nntural re~rce of I h ~ 0011ht>rn parts or the !\L'w \\'orld. soon \.\'ere equall y ;J\>- preciated .a:, a boon t.u Tlt11orlltli:1s 0110/hrr 111 rhc Jf.porl Co111 ~t-.i' by N~w~paµer 1tnt1 bf!rng o/r1•ri>d. hy lhi! Owly Pilol a' a puh/1'' J1rr1•1n• Rtadtr1 O/ fhe it•ru•., nn11 a.ho tor11 C(J/lt'!Jt' l'Ttdll /vr their t i/Ori• b!I l'llTOlluig Of tilhtr UC /r111ne Qr Orange Coa&t Evtrung <.:o/lt'gt . r~ 1e n r 1 11)(18 prl'part!d by UC San 0 1;-go 1-:rll'n~ron nnd 1~ dutnbultd lltj L'uplt•y .\<'It'\ Ser111ce cessfully orga nized l\\'O Indian England's national detense villages oo the princi ples laid and econornic seU-sufficiency. dov.'TI in Thomas J\:t o r e ' s .. Utopia." The nor thern for ests yielded But such utoPian ventures mast.3. spars. and other stores were exceptional. and for the for the backbone of nat ional Spanish conquerors th e power. the nllvy. 'lbese san1e primary Issue was gold. ft>rest.s were teeming with fur- Although the Spanish claim-bearing animals. Furs were ed a moriopoly on the entire greatly Jn demand ln Europe. New World, in fact they ef· and for nearly two centuries trolled ~A the fur trade was a cent ral NEWSPAPER googrnphi~I supposition tha t :o;imilar latitudes necessarily had similar c l i mat es. counUess attempts were made to cultivate such products ,u silk. Ytlnes. and cltrul Cruits. :ill ol then1 pronoun ce d railurt'S. ~luc:h or the labor fer these \·nte-rpri !K'S came f r o 1n l::nglishmen "'ho v.·ere lacking c>pportunities iii honle. A \'ery sizable porpo11ion of English settlers came to America as "indentured servants." having: sold 1 heir labor ror a period of y~ars to a master in cx'- change ror their o c e a n passage. By thus alleviatinc soinc or tJKt pressures of population within England. the colonies further contributed. as J!akluyl had predicted, to her sotlnl and e c o n o rn i c "·elf are. ll look experience and ex· pcrin1entatioo, but gradually Englishmen in America were able to rea lize. the hope that the .'\ew \Vorld v.·ould give for1h v.·ea llh lo the Old. \Vealth meant power and na- tional grtatness. A m t r! C'tl came to nurture the island nation. Rlchard Hakluyt had been absolutely right. Nut: "Settllng," by ~'intb· rop D. Jordan; proftllOr of history, University of Callfor· HAD ~rr not liten Jor voyages in the 14909 by John and Sebastian CaOOt, two Ita l ian-bt>rn mll.riners somewhat offhandedly sup- ported by Henry VU . England , might not have been able to lay claim among the Chri11tinn nations to origimil dixovery and therefore settlement. exploiting the clv.im establish- ed" by the Cabot voyages. Rather suddenly. in the 15708, a number of gentlemen- reached America; the second dkl, bot Sit Humphrey V.'8S kl6t at sea on the v.'11y back. ···~1aster Hakluyt hat h served !or a very good trumpet."\ Al the behest of Gilbert's half-brother. Sir W a It e r Raleigh, he addressed a tract to Queen Elizabeth, comnwnly called "A Discourse ·Con· 'eerning Western Planting" (1584 ), which set forth the cue for setUement as a na- tional program . adva.ntage: u n em PI o Ye d fectlveJy con t • .._. ac-concern In Eng Jan d 's mariners.. returning wa r ccessiblel J>0:1~?1 ol Soothh and diplomatic relations with the',-----------vet<'"'"'· and "the fry of the entta ru1tt::r ca w ere I ta! di\ native r.atlons of America. 1tia, Berkeley. ' As it was, England \YB!I just , beglmlng to recover from t1 ' period of civil strife. \ The country was headed for wracking political, religious. .J and social changes, which •seemed at limes to tum on ; the ~ tor100us marital dif- ~ ficul ties of llenry VIII , It was .. llOt until three_ ~enerations had 1'-passed !,hat Englishmen began to take an active interest in He was last seen seated adventurers became in· in the stern-theets of a Io-ton terested in the New World.-fishing smack, reading (of a.II lt was not merely a matter ptmgs! .~ copy of More s of mounting a voyage to Utopia. Arileric1.1 or of' actually goitig The greatest E n g 11 s h there (which some of them publlei!lt of America11 set· did ); it was above a 11 tlement was Rlcltard Hakluyt necessary to rouse the En!?\ish (the Younger). Known a!! nation or (as we m:iuld "now Preacher Hakluyt, hr, was a say) • to advertise the successful preache! of divi!li· desirability of colonization. ty; more effectively still, though. he preached to the SQ;\IE MEN did both. Sir entire literate Engijsh nation Humphrey Gilbert, for et· the importance and indeed !l-ffi~_.._D:Qt ooly.Jt101t .. Jbe.1lrs1-necessity of Engl is~ pl:1:1ting promotional tract (1576) but in the New \Vorld. himself led two expedUions. Today it still is poesible to Tt proved easier to advocate sense the stirring impact ol colonization than to achieve his glori fi cation of tbe cause. it. His first voyage oever tA.s was once said or him, Hakluyt 's "DillCOUr.!le" was· a persuasive • "collection of certain reasons to induce her Majesty ·and the state to lake in hand the western voyage and the planting .there." Some reasons were economi c : "~ap commodities" might be s>ld to the Indians and perticularly might a market be found for English woolens. Some reaDl! looked as much to eocial as to financial wandering b e g g a r s of prec ous me s were rea y England . that grow up idly" available. 'Eng I ls h men' . WllAT Englishmen did not might in America be put to enormously frustrated by this appreciate Initially about gainful employments. fact, ol necessity focused their America was that in the long A point not to be neglected at~ent.ion ·elsewhere i!Jt run, truly enonnOUll wealth was that "we shall by plantlng Arnenca. could be derived rrom certaln the-re enlarge the glory of the TT TOOK the English a agricultural staples w bi c 11 gtlspel, and from England long ti~ realize that they could be cultivated there. The plant sincere rellgion"-by were not golng to find much most important staple proved which Hakluyt m'e ant , gold themselves and even to be sugar, a product which naturally, Protestantism. Yet longer to appreciate that they tumed the little Islands or clearly what rT'IO!!t animated had not been 8hunt.ed Into the the Caribbean Into by far the his "Discourse" was Hakluyt's less desirable parts of the meet profitable part of the fear that all these advantages New World . Slr W a It er Old British Empire . mi ght accrue not to the Raleigt was "S> firmly con· Another was tobacco, and English nation. but to"101Tleone~vtn.ced\hat\he · -gilded city F.ngllshmen In Vlrginia Wefe else. of "El Dorado" actually ex· 900fl able to prove, despite A!, he eloquently phrased the Jsted in South America that many 8.Sllert.IOM to the om-lAfall)'I: lll'IJMlliM:• DeUM,,.1 matter: "Thl.s enterprise may he mounted a disastrous at-trary, that it was indeed possi· ~ Coin'.\. silver bullion. ur stay the Spanish king from tempt. to ~d an Engllsh ble to "found an empire upon silve r cl1inbagsandPl.\tinu1n 'Secret' Files on Students Outlawed flowing over alJ the face of colony in Guiana,. smoke." Other product!! pro· lnten::ol\tlM:nt.l lnvtabnent that waste firmament of A no t h e r Elizabethan ad-ved dlsappointln,. 1 Llru!L!ileo:tJ......,ullcm:ll!!:::!!!~ America, i[ we aeat and plant venturer made three voyqes Opef'!tlng upoo the age-old I 714 84 1292 there in time." In the 15708 In searcll of the',------------'-----------supposed Northwest Paaeage TT WAS a bold suggestion ; to 1he orient; he became so SACRAMENTO IAPl Parents of California school children can now peek into previowly forbidden territory: the manila folders bearing their children 's IChool records. What they see there may range from l.Q. scores to psychological profiles to com- me11ts -some anonymous or unverified -that Johnny has a bad attitude or an alcoholic father. A new state law gives parents, for the first time, a chanet! to re!J)OflCl to and in some c ire u m s.l an c e s remove item11 in the files that they object to. But still Wlt'ellOlved Is the question ot what records, if any, a public school should keep on a stu- dent. AN advocatt ot doing away with student files is Eldred Rutherford, a psychology pro- fessor at San Jose State University. He se.ys the records "al be9t. serve no U11Cful educa· tional purpose. and ::it worst serve to divert teachers and aides away from focusing tbeit work on the learning procesa to that ot excusing-. or blamlng children for not learning." A group called the National C:Ommitlee for Citizens in thi s was before the defe.at diverted by his dl11covery of Education says school records legislative hearing brought or federal aid to violators. of the Armada ·and HakJuyt "gold" that he hauled several are "one or the largest in-testimony from n u m e r o us nie federal law also limits v.·as urglng tbe English natlon hundred t(lnS' of ore beck to fonnation pools in existence parents who said school of· access without parents' con-to take on the world's super-London. on U.S. citi!:ens," with some ficlal1 wouldn 't let them see 9ellt to achoo! officials and power, Oppos!Uon to Spain Gradually Englishmen came 45.5 million files . thclr children's records. to persons hold~g a court wrapped nat.looal pride, finan-to realize that their portion The group says it rears the The new state law order. cial g8.in, and rel.lgloUJ faith or the New World coufd pro- records are being fed "Into guarantees access to parents. But there is no law that into a single g1orlowl en-duce ,~~ f~d-'1.'!..ee.1!~~ that growing web of com-and ao doet a new federal le ts 11tudents see their own let'pl'ise. As Hakluyt puL the The Ji.ift:l ies Y.J.C..L l;:\Lw; ~ passiooless computers main· law that threatens 8 cutoff Oles until they turn lB. matter, "planting" in America genuine pro[its. tatned by police departments, v.·ould enable the Engllsh "to Pulling fish !rom the North welfare agencies, insurance spoil Philip's navy, and to Atlantic. one o( the '\\'Orld 's :;::n;:;,ymot~" servieeti Hosmer Sees 'Bamhoo1J e'·-d•_P_,;_ve_h_1m_o1_Y_""=1Y_t>S""'-:_g_e __ tltt_•_t_n._hl_ng_rro_und_•._w_ .. TBE RECORDS are. meant JCnenney =!~: ~t~i:l£~~ In Vitami11 J_,aw Actio11 r1 lheir new students. They generally c o n t a i n grades, srores on standardi,z.ed intelligence 4lnd achievement tests, and medical records. Also included could be psychological profiles, data on parents. and a wide range of observations about the pupil 's home life, behavior. attitude, and suspected emo- tional problems. Current state law allows school and state education of- ficials, law enforcement or- flcers, and adoption a n d children's protective agencies to aee the records. While parents are legally entitled to see the files, those who have tried have run into roadblock i ... A recent WASHINGTON (UPI) - Rep. Craig Hosmer, R-Long Beach, said lhe Food and Drug Admlni.tration (FDA) was trying to "bamboozle" Congress in1" not passlng IGglslaUon prohibiting th e agency from restricting the sale of high potency vitamins. Ilosmer blamed the FDA ror "stalling" and bottHng up the legislation in the House Interstate Md Foreign Com- merce Committee. He urged hls colleague& to sign a discharge petlUon 1" bring It out for a vote. Such a petition requires the signatures a ma- jority or the House. "They knov.• they'll have their way if they bamboozle us into not passing legislation this year," Hosmer said in a Jetter to other House members. The Senate, by a vote of 81 to 10. already has approved an amendment by S e n . William Proxritire, l).Wis., to prevent the FDA from putting its pro~d new regulations into fort'e. The FDA plans to restrict ,the sale of m'iain vitamins that exceed 150 percent of the Sl><'alled "minimum daily requirement .. even though it has not found hi gh JX)tency vitamins to be hazardous to the health. JEWELRY AUCTION SALE Special, 14.88. Fashion frosting, shampoo and set. Our fashion lrosting Includes shampoo and 1et. Helene Curtla "Proteine"' perm wllh protein additive. Only 10.81. No eppolntment ntensary. Ch1rgell. FULLERTON (714) 871-4343 NEWPORT BEACH (71 41644-2313 ' HUNTINGTON BEACH (714) 892-7771 ORANGE "THE CITY" (714) 639-5091 Monday Oct, 7th at 8 Exhibition 7 p,m . OUTOFPAWM SUNDAY, OCTOBER 13th-12 NOON Half-Million Dollar Stock al Diamonds. Emeralds. Sai::iohlres, Rubies, Gold Jewelry, Pocket Watches, Opats. AnliQue Jewelry. Jade,' Carved Jade. Newpor ter Inn 1107 Jamboree Rd. Newport Beach E•dl llvt tV"t lltMCI 1111111 tudloft coma Wl!ll •two n •r ,...,,.,.11., wl'll(ll ,.tmlH """"'ti••· c....,. t'lltl tor ..,., 1111tr ,,,,__•DI• !Nt<"-- prlu 10 bl INl'(..,.~tl ti lllY OI -l!Awl M · "°'"' • Cluster Rings. Watche~Rolell:. Omega, Hamllton. lndlan Jewelry, Sterling Sliver. • on the premlte• ol Costa Mtsa Jtwtli'y & Loon 1838 Newport lault•ar d Co1ta Mesa • 17141 646°7741 Auction Condu¢led· By National Liauidators C••t.Me-.~,....'­,1141,.4 .. 1111 fASHI ~I NO, ~l:o"! &0<"1 (1!•) b44 rl!l. H..Nflf'(jfCf·I CENT I.-. Huft..qOll 8tot"' jfl 4) 141 Tiii Special buy 17-jewet-watches. At 29.88, ifll pay to be punctual. Ladies' goldlone ease watch with lapered bracele t. Also AvAi!able 1n s1lver1 one. Men's gota1011e C"'ir' watch with ca1en11111 champAgne C11,,1 ,1n<1 malch1n9 b111cet('! Ladies· goldlone case walch w11h lapered bracelel. Also available . 1n silvertone. t,.,ron's e1ayl'd111e wJlch with 51lvf'rtone C'1Se ,1nt'.lh !ued1111 malchinq nicsh bracelet. S..., S-0.., 11 A.M. to t P'.M. .t tN f_..,..,. dwH: •ASHCN, NO.~&.(Kh(71•!fr441lll ti.NTIN:...100 (lNl!jj ~ ... """',... ilfo1Wl-tlt4l 8'11·1111 ' • • Women Learn Howto Win In Politics 8 .v JO OLSO~ O/ l~r D•oly l'•l•itill A ::.~emb l y t:a ndi dale Arline 1'1athev.•s \\a!' prophetic \\'hen she :>aid durini:: n Dcmorrutil' \\.'omen 's Caucus in the r\il'jJOfl i\Ja ri na ~lotel that lht• gre;tlt·sl problem ror women c:1ndidati•s IH·s in fund raisini;. At th e t.•ntl of Lh t· d<1y ·lon~ mectini::, (·:1 ucus org;inizers at•· nounced they \\'t'r(• 111 the hole· becausl• or the sm;.dl cro11·d :ind the large J1111t'h bill (only ha lf the I ' • ' I ' ~ • I • guaranteed number sho11·ed up ) . Some old-fa shioned fund-r ais1n,g took place -the h:it "·as passed -. and thl! v.·omen l ~a rned their first lesson in how to get cam!}aign backing. 1'he c;iutus 11 :is c:tlled for onC' reason -to discuss wayS of gettini:: .... ·omen elected tooffit-e. It <·ould have hccn a Hcpublic;1n meeting or a gathering of third party \\101nc11 a spiring toofricc, bu1 ttic <1uestion \vould have been !he same: ho\v lov.·in. ' • • " ~· OR. MARJORIE CASERIO DOES RESEARCH AT UCI Offering tht' keynote ch4'11cnge v.·:.i~ Elizull.;o th \\'l•ingu nd , runner· up c:.indtdalc rur liculcn;.inl go,·er· nor in the June prlrnurirs. "\\lhat "'e arc t11lking HboUl in l.'lccliu~tnc.n.!'' she asked....· Ad\•isina the audil•tu~c 1.0 "forget "'-' arc Yi'oruen and think or our· selves as <:andidates." she urged tht• "'ornen to .. think only or \\'hal the average candidate nlu~ race.'' \\'01\lt-;s·s PllOBLE!\I!; 1'hen lhe Santa Barb<ir.a environ· mentalist posed the key question or the day: "\Vh y do v.·01ncn ha\'e problems?'' fo~irst, she said. wom~n are l)Ol truincd lo be leaders, Second, the public a lso haS this <'OllCi!ption Of v.·on1en. 'l'hird, \\'Omen must do a ''selling iob '' on th cn1 s c l \'c s, 1\'lr~. \\1cingand said. She reminded tht' \\'Omen or the their bleak record of political ac· comptishme nts in California. "'In 1911 California "·omen won lhc \"ote. ln.1974 , there is only one California \VOm an in Congress. '!'here has ne \•er been .a woman Se nator rrom California and only one \\'Oman has been elected lo a state Cons titutional office." ~ In her o"'n career she admitted she has spent hours as the "woman behind the s uccessful candidate," but now she is asking hersctf how that candidate came to he born . "'I continued to \\•ork for can· dicl<1tes but l should ha\•e been preparing mssclf to run,-" she said. lieutenant ):O\'ernor's seal <'amc af· ler her husbund s ui:a:cstcd sbc t'Un tOr a \'ttc;tnl seat in the stute Senate. "I s"·ltc hcd bct.iuse of the Is· s ues.·· JU rs.. \V ei11 gu nd-em.-- l)husized. "I v.·anted to i;o for the tup offict1'. I looked ilround ·-this \1•as lhc year "·e \\'ere blooq1ing \.l'ilh 3,000 c<indidates nalion"•ide." In s pite of her d~tea t, !Hrs, \Vei ng<ind beli e\'c's more .ind more \\'Om en s hould run becatl5e sheer numbers will h.ave un impact. on elecliuns. ' "It seems to me that if we inun· date the field. this would help the cause." . She gave six points of advice for \\'Omen considering seeking office, ' \\'hich "'ere to be the first or many differ ent suggestions dispensed that day: "1-la\'e a m assi,•e public relations l'amp:1ign. Atte nd all the go,·ern· m~ntal meetings you can. Study budgets. 1'ake public speaking Jes· sons, modelinl? and drama classes. Pick your spot. Accent the positive at all time s. Don 't be a radical-please <this upsets the voter )." PUBLIC FINANCING Atrs. Wcingand also observed that "public financinJt (of ·cam· paigns) is all·importanL "Government will not improve until candidates are freed from this (worry l." ' • \\'Omoin oind ~'ti$ \'e l")' proud of it.·· 'J'he first pane l was titll'4 \\'omt.>n·1 ltole In the Den1oc1·utit.• Party a nd \\'US coordinutl'd by Ailet•n llernundl':t, rormcr n.illonal pre·!l~dr n-t or 1hc Nutlon :i l 0 1·ga nizutio11 fd r \\'omt•n. l>anel m embers, v.·ho included turrenl cundidutl'S und pa11y or· fi'ccrs, did not ever really deal v.·ith the topic:. An assembly t'andidate, Betty l\lunn, s uggested that ii "'omen \\'ere train,ed to be good can1p01ign \'Oluntcers, they could e\·l'ntually run themselves. She also advocated seminars on how to run a campaign. "\Ve can't gel elected without po"·er, but y,•e can't get Power till we've hP.en elected." she puzzled. l\tenlioning fund·raising again she said, .. Some women will only I QA!!,Y !'II.OT •<f gi\'t' to \l'Omen iurumbcnttt. Wt.• hh\'C to rais~ tnone~· bt•t.,.·ffa ram. pa\gns. The second p11nl'I, rhaired br Rita Gordon. of lhe Nationnl \Vomt'n's Politi<'ill CUU<'US in Sarroimento, denlt \\'Ith The F'emule Vote ·-llo\\· CJn It Be l\Jaximized No"·'! Again . \'ari.J!d s µggestjons v.·cre orrered~ ' • t Bv the third session. "'hich \!.'as l'OOi·dinated by Blan<'he Goldstt'in, forme1· thair"·om11n ol tht' CaHfor· nia Den1orratic P-arty .\llomen·g: Di\·ision, it v.·as e\·ident lh&;t all the possible solutions. had been disrus-: sed and they \\"el'e merely being rephrased. But the main qucstiOn remained unans\!.·ered. Ho"' do you get v.·omeR elected to offire? _._ . • llUSBAND'S IDEA . lier entry into the race for lhc · Ending on an optimistic note, ri1rs. Weingand said the "pu'&ic generally is ready for women can- didates. I ended up running its a · BEA ANDERSON, Edllcir • • • Chemist Writes Own Formula for Success By ALLISOI\" OEEllR Of l~t D•ll~ l'ilal SUH Brit1s·h·born themist l\tarjor1e Caserio visit.cd the United States '"'ice. The first trip \\'3S to do graduate ·\\'Ork for a year on a fetlov.1ship to Bryn l\l av.·r College where she ear· ned a masters degree .. lier Un· dergraduate work was at thC Uni \'ersity of London. 11er second trip. on a teaching rello\\·ship to the Pefinsylvariia Col · lcgc, v.'as to st<i ~' and author of ·more than 40 research papers, Dr. Caserio spent eight' years as a post·doctorate fe l· low and reseerch fellow at Cal Tech before coming to UCI when the campus openei:I in 1965. Current resear ch p~ojects in· elude the role or sulphur in organic chemistry and the study or reac. lions in the gaseous, rather than selve.nt, stage. · Last spring, s he \\'as given the and enjoying the srienc·es~ .. Peer pressure, social pressures tell them thal girls are not supposed to bctoo smart." · · . Dr. Caserio v.•as told by her parents that pursuing a pirofession v.·as foolish because she'd marn· and have to gi\'e it up. It is only recently, she added, that ~·omen have been given oppor. tunitics on the professorial )evel -----.... ~11cturned t o Etrgl~na after !he year at Bryn J\ta"'r and s pent six: months looking for a job. l rinally decided that if research and . teaching were \\'h ~t. I v.•antcd, I had to return to the Uljted States." Tbe UC lr\•ine professor or che mistry is one or just three "·on1en on tbe physical science faculty of 100. It is a field where there is only 5 percent women. of personal discipline to find your own idea about _what you can do .· UCI Al umni Associa tion 's Dr. Caserio cites the statistics as Distinguished Teaching Aw ard. partial explanation for the Garvan ~l eda l , the 3\\'ard s he just recci\•ed A member of the executive com· from the Am erican Chemical mittee of the Organic Division of Society "for distinguished service the ACS, the Chemical Society or by a \\'Oman in cht!n\istry.·· London and Sigma Xi, she is 'l'he a\vard ,, ... s established in familiar with the r ange or careers open to the chem i 1936· to e ncourae:i: v.:rune.n..lo4tudy•--~- chcmistry and pursue research. Her husband, Frederick Caserio, FEW WOM EN Because there are so rew \\·omen che mists, they ha\'e little chance ror recognition. ''You're literally lost in a sea or _males,'' she said. Feminists might view the Gar· van l\1edal as discriminatory, but Dr. Cascrio £eels it is motivational. According to Dr. Caserio. \\'Omen have not been encouraged to study the physical sciences. Enrollments in graduate programs in the field have decreased, a reaction, she 1 believe1>. to a cutback in industrial research. . "But industrial rirms are begin· ning to do more basic research. lloweve r . v.·ith fe"·er s tude nts going on to the gr aduate level, in 3 feYi' years industry \viii be star\·ing for chemists." CO·author of Se\'Cral textbooks \vith Dr. John D. Roberts or the California Institute of Technology is an industrial chemist she met when both worked al Ca l Tech. They have t~·o sons, 13 and 11 . As a teacher and·a chemist. she is concerned that children be ex· posed lo the sciences and en· couraged tow-ard careers in science irl the ele mentary grades. "I think that children could learn much from the observational point or \•iew , learn to understand their environment, to see and feel it. "Then they'll grow up with an awareness of the natural being or things. ·"" "How ma ny children can explain why the Sanla Ana \\•inds oCcur? The reason for tidal changes? Wh y it's colder in winte r and v.·arnier in summer ?.. · PEER P.RESSU R E , She 'fe e ls that girls are discouraged Crom studying hard and in indus try. "Cal Tech still has no women on the professorial lex.el. "fllany la rge industrial firms hire "'omen chemists to fill the mandated quotas , but '11.·on't hire ~ PhD level v.•oman because .'she is not physically able to do lhe heavy labwork'." Her British primary education was one positive factor, she said. Because of the tradltlenal segregation of the sexes, she wasn't subjected to &Oeial ·pres· sures until college. : She ignored a lot of advice, as \\"Cll. "Jt takes a certain kind of per- sonal diseipline to find your O'Nn idea of yburself;· what you think and what you are abl~todo." Although there are still few op- portunities for advancemen,t up tho ladder , Dr. Caser jo feels that women have. a better chance or being hi red today than in recent past. · "Chemistry," she ad~ed, "has wide applica~ion. 'B~ic research is "'hat runs the country. Without it little progress would have bee~ made." ' All she requires now is a little more lime for rese1re• inlher lab, "Where things are happening." ' , Sweetness, Spic~ Make Recipe for Mar1ia.ge Nic,e "" OLAH A'.'\N l.A'.\Dr:Hs I JUSl t C'C'C'i \·(>cl ;1 l't•Okhnok 1'1·11m uur'l\11n pie :'\1~f('rhoorl . It h;ul rn;u1y rt"c ipl'~ from 1ht• he:-1 C'onk -. 1n \1 1\\l\ .'\\~ ra1·ori1r rt·1·11H' 1.~ l'rlflo ... 1·d ;1nrl I ho1x· :-1111 v. ill Jll'lnl ii 11 1:-t•a!l.-1! "llO""' In i'N""it'l'''t' ;1 ll11-ih;11ul " F1rsl . Ul'<t' r;1r1· 111 ,••h •1\u111 (;1•\ Ont• that IS l\ll\ \UO ~11\111)!. hul lcnd rr a n1I tie11llh ~. If ~ou 1·hn1'l!-i1· o~ rcck.l~·s~I~. 1\ 01 ;1~ not kl'C'P l)l)n't p111 1n ho\ 11 ::ilt·r 1'111!'< makes tht•m 1ur11 :o.ou1 Swe<'tr n "1th ~m1t1•' :ind !'pn·e \\llh patient•('. 1\ll ,,,r1c\1c'i \\Ill respond 1'o 1nsurt ;1 ''ondr rful t·nn .;istrn· ey, ~t 1r ~('nlly ·-nc,·cr IX'~! 1\n<l .don'l le.11\·c. 1111atlc.nded fnr lonA JX'rlocls or 1 \m<' Tn nrld ;1 dt'li t l•JH " fl ;i1or. . , :o.prinkle genr rously "1th praise ;,nd appreciation ·rhC' pool'Cst s p<·!'1n1C'n n1;1_\ b .. imprn\'t•d if you folln1'' l ht>.~t· ln· ~true'tit1nlt <1nd \\'ill kt•1•p for ;111 11nlin1it(•d nun1bl'f or :-·t';1rs 111 any rtin1:ilt'. 1·,.:s1·,.:1> II\' \'()I 'll ~ THl'J.\' lll-:,\R TR lit l ': 1'11 lik1• lu add ont• sma ll s uggrstion: F'rrc111ent t)I.· 1>0sure In l'Ohl l<'n'l lltra111reJ11 ha s btc>n knnM'lt to da1na i:e lhl11 dish Pf'rm~n ently, Kf'f'J> a sn1all, sll'ady nilm(' gnin g al a ll times. fJEA R ANN l.Ar\llERS: J am 16 .ind in need or hl'lp. Please. Plcasr. I bahy·sit and ¥•o rk l!iummers so I <'an lu1 .. 't> nice clothes. fl.1y si~ter l...oui~c (aJ!e 151 v.eiRhS ••bout 10 pounrl" more lh:in l 110 She ii;; ;1 slob. (Spills things on he rself, etc.> i':\"cry t.in1e my back is turned Louise "·t'ars some thing that he lonJ!s to mt'. l .. ast ni ght s he ruinetl my nev.• white blouse by spi\lin~ grapcjuice a ll over the front. Tv•o \\·eeks ago she split my ~CMMI nav~· slat•ks right up the back. \\'hen I complain to Atom and Oad they s;.iy I s houldn't be sellish, lhat sislers i;hould share. ("It iiJ !)('ti er lo gi\'e thnn lo recei\'e.") I ;un :>ick of those canned phrases :incl hc lh?\'C 1·m getting a \'ery rot· !en deal. {';i n yo u s:iy something that n1i J.thl hel1> me get some justice aroundhert ?-Al\I Y 01~1\R J\1\J\': I'll try and I hope I ~11C'cetfi , beea use I a~ree-yo 11 ARI•: ~ellJng a very r111tendeal. ~ • Ann Landers \'our parents s hould bicl.: you up and Instruct Loulse to kttp her tot· ton·plc:kin' hanfis off your etotltes'. If lht.~· refuse, I l!i uggest that you buy a paste board "''ardrobe, put a padhK!k on it and l\'ear the key around your neck. DEAR ANN Landers: The other.,. day I was In my parents' bedroom and noticed w column of yours, un· d~r lhe glass top•of my rnother's nlght~tan·d. It wa!\ ttbout a f4ttler who "'as trying ltl he a pal to his' son . The kid was using drugs and i he fathe r didn't know what to do about it. You advised him to tell the kid to ''shape up or ship out." That's exactly what my parents told my brother to do. \\lell , he 11hi pped out, said he "'anted to make it like my rather did, on hi s own. Now he l!i renting · an apartment w\Jh a friend and "·orking hi ~ t,..ay throu~h coll eie. t.ty p~ren\!\ :ire very prnud orhirri . I learned a va lu;ihle lesson Crom watchin Jt n1y hrnther . I \\':Jnt • nottring to ctn wilh dru,qs. It mukes me sick to see some or my rriends going down the drain because they got hooked. J'm glid my folk s wrote to yo1.1 a nd took your advice. I thought it was about time I said lhanks. - GRATEFUL17 DEAR 11: rt·was good ot yoa to let me know how well tltlfK!l lurned out at your house. Now I'll~ say thanks. Don't Clunk your chemffilry test. Lo\'e is more than one set.or glands calling to another. tf you hav trouble m;iking a dlst jni!;iOn y need Ann·~ booklet, 1'Lo\'e or Sc und ~low To Tell the Difftren~. Send u lont. !)Clf·addre5Mld, 5ta ped Cll\'Clopc with your requc!lt an 3S centfi in coin lo Ann bndcr. P.O. Uox 1400, E l ~ln, 111. 00120. ' J " ' ' . . . • .-• !. '.· I. Sunday, Octobtt f., 1974 DAILV 1PtLOT Gs Gemini: •. ,, ,, ~.hnng·e . - '.._Coming _, ' l ~ ' '· : ~dNqAY ., · ' .. OCT.'7, 1974 .. ~ •1 I •II '• •· ,lly SYDNEY OMARR < ,lim;s (Mardi it-APrfl 19): , tAzr.ange entertalnmeni a t ~· Cb:mge of pace is more unportant than in recent past. Show family members, loved --- • i'i:b1~P-)'Qll ~~a:-;iot ~JA, · TA~fms (April 20-Mav :WI· Some ipeople seem to want You tq trip, to suffer setback. ?.fake tlear that yoo · wtll not oblige: Set tone by (l>einl!'. speclflr, insis~ on l•clf. not ' .. ) 101 THE lATEIT AND IJIEATEST IElECTION OF -~. .Ii ® fantasf or rumor.:.·. . . 1_ ' GE!lpNI (May 21'-Jime 20) .' Accent:' on changes; which result ~n better monev pesi- tion. Yoo corrie ..acrosS item of ~value ..:. it:. could . betong m special collection. CANCER (June 21-July '22): -. SEE · tHE IJRANT BOYi • WE'VE IJOT 11 ••• WHEN YOIJ NEED 11!! You come to terms with one who tugs at your emotional strings. You find that famil\' structure becomes solld-yooi- personal "rudder" improves and your sense of direction is oo target. MASTERCHARGE BANKAMERICARD ALWAYS ACCEPTED!! lEVl'I® FOi IJAll FAll COOIDINATEI LEVI'S® FOR GALS LEVI'S® FOR GALS · STA.PREST HOMESPUN JEANS MISSES CORDUROY JEANS LEVI'S]! FOR GALS HOPSACK DENIM JEANS LEO (July 23 -A11<1. z2i :' Glamor, my.stery. Ult clan· ~ dtstlne, the • ..Met Smell . of privileged inlonMtioo--these all are highlighted. Yoo may be coocerned with hospital, IR:stttution, club, organizatiOO · ' dedicated to ebaiita111e ••ses. ,-f Sizes3to15 ll'INcr-y. Bt~. Gt-eer1, & Beige Siz~ 8 to 20 In Medium & Short lerogths In Nerty. Brown, Greet'!, & Rusi $16.00 . VIRGO <Aug. 23-Sept. 22>: Accent is cn involvement. en· ' tanglemeat, int'enslfierl rcla· .-tiollship with one of opposite sex. Imprint style. ln'O'est in your own Ideas, abilities, Ulents.r ' ·.tiJl!IA. Jstpt,' !!-Oct. 22!: Added recognition could be order o{ day. Some ·J?'rson!, ~ ... vehemently opposed YQU• DO'IJ ~ ahmst lackad'alsicall.v coDctde you were right. all along. You rind way to appeal to more permrus with product, ideas. I '1 / ii I;;, 1·1 'it I 11 I •l ' ... --v ... """r:·~~t!';N:~-1rr~ ! · . -~•--'""--'oi away and long> .~go-suMenly . ' \ more aware, spiritually and otherwige. New '•tar;. could • mean new change, 'renewed · · • come9 into focus. You 'are I I " lease oo IHe. 1-J.-------~-U ~,,,,,:~ SAGmARJUS (N'oV;' .~ • f f-,\ ·~ $16.00 16.00 WITH MATCHING .. • ·WITH MATCHING . STA·PREST· HOMESPUN CORDUROY BLAZER JACKETS SHIRT JACKETS Si:r:es7/8 to 15/16 Sizes7/8to 15/16 Comes in Rust 0nly $20.00 $28.00 LEVI'S® FOR GALS BUCK-SKINN'S BUCtC.SKINN SIDE TRAIL JEANS "'-______ .:.;•l:::•H::.3:..•:::..o J 3 In Mocha, Nov & Sen.ice_ ---- ~ 1l.00 MATCHING ... BUCK-SKINN SIDE TRAIL SlllRT JACKETS ~zesS to 13 ln-Bfft, Mocha, & Spruce . . .. WITH MATCHING .. HOPSACK D.ENIM JACKETS 'NIH1 flEECf LINING & COl.lAR $38.00 - • . . Dec. 21): 1.foney, savings, tax· et, security-these con tinue to be · of ooneer:J1. You may be , , 1 · atttp:Ctcd and r~lled a't one and the same time'. .LO.OKS LIKEWOOL!! ~20.00 • .. •' •'. ~ CAMqcoRN (Iler.. 2~-.Jan I LEVI'S FOR. GJ>,LS 19): You rind that darkest ' .! . LAMBSPUN ·P,,ANTl' · picture has bright s i d e . I ~ .AMa~ who has right to ~l · ~™ 8.to 16 · be dtpressed begirui relating j~ .C-tnt:b)'.ec-l.&9J~ -~-which~ghllghLhwnoL 1 ,,:.· -$.-20;.oo-.. A oorrtr.ad _is offered and yoo require expert legal ad\•iee. ~ .AQUAllms .(Jlin. 20 • Feb. 1 • • !1)1'.!low pee<. _Be-detlberate. :; TMkin-manner which copvefs ·t fact thlt you nieari buSiness. ..... j· .Le\ others know Jhal you .,.. · AND GREAT !OOKING ' LEVI 'S® FOR GALS LAMBSPUN HOUNDS TOOTH PLAID SHIRT JACKETS S in llto 14 • c-inC......I & Gre7 o..!7 .$22;00 ' : " ' ' • • • .. " ' ~be down-to:.earth. You Jlave · more coming to you than is apparent. 'lEVl'I® llJl-IJAtl JEANS < • J>ISCES (Feli. 19-Ms rch :!ii): Changes are leatured and 90 · is e:rel.~t of ' discovery . .AccentJs on children, creative . •""• fl'!ll!'gs, the way you handle complicated slttiations htvolving opposite sex.. 1 .• .If today 11 l'>"' birthday you ::1. ;fre sensitive, drawn to law r;, and justlce, very much the . l:' · perftictiqnist, susceptible to 1· drugs, appreciaU,·e of those i.\' who qe creative. June ~·as n: lrriportant-in November you ., begin to build on a roore solid ,. ~ base. Pitoes, Virgo persons play important roles 1n your lire. This has been a year when you learned to ~·ork wit h others. to rooperate with family member. Coast Girl ' ' Given iPost iteria de! Pilar Luna. the ·c1auglitef "of -1\1r. and ~11"s, Ricardo· Luni o( '213 Avenlda · Cabrlllo, S:ln Clemente , has · · , lieen .eleclj>d to Mortar Board, -a nalioeat . )\'Omen's group emnh1siting scholarsblp and Jead.er!hlp. · , The ~<;r or the Sa n r Clemeate oouple.-was selected b1 pist. )fortar Bo a r d rnemben. The 1971 graduate of San Clemente High School is a ~nt at the Uni versity of .southern ~foml1. .&:ONELY fnatrated. l)robtema? ~ T1l1p11on• Co.Jntetlng Service 64.S.222_2 .... ' I' " I ' -..... QUALITY AND SERVICE FOR 25 YEARS! . . •.. LEVI'S® FOR GALS • PJ~~!~!~!;~,1~l!~~".~ . _ $14.00 ~ LEVI'S® FOR GALS $ MiN t1nd Ma tell DENIM LO-RISE FLARES 14 00 '00'"°"~>•n3>o<3<..... , , I llOIJIEI & SWEATERS LEVI 'S® FOR GALS ~!~~~~-O!J.Ef!.~~ ............. $15.00 by lEV/'1 ° 101 IJAll LEVI'S® FOR GALS MISSES STA-PREST ~.~~!~!,,'1!,~.tA!S"..,· ,,., , >p.<• . . . .... $1 l 100 · LEVl!S'H> FOR GALS ~!~~.~~-~~J,KI".", J~A".~ .... $1 l .00 SKIRTS LEVl'SE FOR GALS LONG SLEEVE CALICO PATCHWORK SHIRTS S.t n:!>/6 to 1.5/161n0fftfleo.r.binol'°"' $14.00 LEVI'S® FOR GALS LONG SLEEVE PROVINCIAL PAISLEY BLOUSES s;,ft 7/8 to 15/ 16Mu!•i-.:ola<id wilh M°"J' lacliqrOUlld $16.00 ·LEVI'S" FOR GALS LONG SLEEVE HEATHER-TONE TURTLENECK SWEATERS S.te• S, M. & l Come."' 1111\I, G<e,, 61ue. htge. & N"'T $15.00 LEVI'S ~ FOR GALS LONG SLEEVE RIBBED CREW NECK PULLOVER SWEATERS Sl1e~ S. M. & l c-i" Coml!I, C.ffl!. Gr~. & Sloe~. $16.00 ,, ,u ~ ... .\' THE •f 'GRANT BOYS '·~s,.,.. ,J • • ·'· ' ' " ;I 11 II ' I I II ~· • 1 B fj DAILY PILOT Freeway Cowboy Clocks Best Time Catching Cows In Orange Co11nty hlaybe It has been a \\·hlle since Bill Ruehle turned an Or11nge County f)'('l'\\'ay into hi s own. per~onal rodeo aren a. But !hat's onl}' bc..">Cause there haven't bet·n any coy,·s here to catch late!~·. The onetime Cyprrss rt'sklen t is :sti ll on tall 24 hours a day as the "freeway C<lwboy" and can s11ll manage to have a loop over the hpad of a cow loose on nhnost any Southen1 Callfomla freeway "'ithin a l.'OOple of hours after he gets the call. J F llE Is roll ing on a ma jor emergency in\'olving the roJ> ing of dozens or cattle, he'll take two or three horses . ("After you catch 30 or 40 cattle. you're going to have a tired horse and you need a remount.'') For roping a fe\\' steers, he takes ooly one CO\\' pony. Jn addition ta.,several "Ut· ing" hor1es he leeps on hill Banning ra.i>ch. the three he col\Siders to be f u I 1 t 1 m e 111etnbers of the freeway slring are veterans in the business. hnppened," he recalls, "that critter had me wider him and Wldcr the water and I knew I was In more danger of being drowned than he ever had been." E\"en though Dude v.•as matched In we ight ahnost pound-for-pouOO v.•ith the big steer. the wily cow horse managed to pull the aninlal off Ruehle and ~out or the roaring current. "J don 't even kno\\' how he did it -J wa s too busy spit- ting out muddy water and trying to find my feet," Ruehle chuckles. ''Old Dude, sure prov!!(! he \Yas some kind of a horse thal ni ght." so easil y,· Chief Robert H. Bockhacker head or !he police force in Vemoo , \\')lere most of Southern California's meat plants are located, doesn't dismi'lS Ruehle's .;pecial tal- over to Ruehle \\"hen he ar· ri ves. • OUR SUHDATHOUIS UFFELL'S UPHOLSTERY ..... ,.w .. ...... lfllH ......... I. c....w.-14 .. 0Jlt TWELVE: TO .FIVE South (oast 'Pina ents so lightly. Alter 20 yeurs of v.•atching the guy nev.·smen have tagged the "freeway cowboy" at work, Ollef Bock hacker says: "They keep wanting to stop traffic." Ruehle says, "but I tell them to let everybody come on through -maybe at 25 miles an hou r, or so." He explains, " I'd a lot' I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;::;;;;;::;::;::;::;::;::;:;::;::;::;::;::;::;:; ruther 1naneuver among mov~I ... "I can't think of a single bad wreck or any other mishaps caused by loose cattle ing ca rs than to try to catch a scared steer In a frozen Soutbem Californ ia traffic jam:• < • when BiU was on a the job. Drutlaer? Jt always seems to work out Got your "Druther Be that he can run right down Horsin' Around" bumper through the traffic and catch sticker yet? Send 50 cents the critters." each for any number ' to : Calirornia Highway Patrol Horsin ' Around, Daily Pilot, C~AMS • OYSTERS • SHRIMP • SWOROFISH • BASS LUNCHEON from 11.96 Smid Olily 'ti 4 l'.M. 11271 P1tlfieC._ Hwy. HuntlnttOn llttdt • 1213) 111-1321 3901 E. Cowt HlthWIY N_,.rt llldl • 171411-,,...00 "Used to be able to get old Jake into the trailer and be on n1y \1•ny into LA In less than 15 minutes," Ruehle recalled in an interview at his Rocking B Ran ch, where he nOw makes his head· quarters in Banning. "I've seen the lime "'hen T got called oot of the sack in Cypress al 3_ a._m .• hauled n1y rig up the highway to Vemon, roped a couple of cows for the slaughter houses there and was beck in bed They include Jake, an 8- year-old gelded quarter horse that st.ands more th an 16 hands high; another 8-year-old quarter horse that Ruehle describes as "big, bad .Dude, a big, stout dapple grey who Ms made me loll of money'' and Loco, a 12-yea r ·o ld buckskin • colored thorough- b<ed. officers working at accidcnls P.O. Box 1560, Costa Mesa, HALIBUT , ABALONE • LOBSTER • STEAKS IT WAS a ..... rformun cc thatl -~l:"ha~t~ha-'~''.':."'~Pi_'_llLl!ed:"__e~a~tt'_le~in~to'.__!Cl()A~92~62~6._T_he~y-·1_1 _be __ m_•_iledJ~""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""~~~~~~~~~ r-traffic often turn the show po!tpald. would have brought e r.xleo crowd 10 II.ti feet. by 5 o'clock ." IT'S NOT such a c;horl haul into the cenler ol activity since he moved from Cypress lo Banning, but the extra mileage hasn't kept the lanky cowboy from doing h Is His horses, Ruehle says, almost can d:.> the freeway cow catching job alone. He tends, like many cowboys, to Horsin' Around "\\'hat I do isn't rodeoing," insists the 43 -year-old cowman, "Jl's more like being ·a ·wrecker operator and going out on the highway lo clean up after an accident." He ob- viously loves the work :· roadway rodeoing. with Tom McCann Jn 1'73, he caught 283 head '"-------------••,...,-of loose cattle at an average fee of $100 J>Cf' animal, "not a bad a salvage price." he says, "ll!hen you consider the alteinative is to shoot an animal worth anywhere from 5450 to $5011. Most of the animab Ruehle is called upon to round up are survivors of a truck wreck or just plain,, esc1pees who dart away from unloading operaUohs at the meat pack- ing plants. 'nley're nearly a I w a y s heavyweights. ready _ to r market. \I/hat that means is 1hat Ruehle's big r op Ing horse. are matched about pound-for-pound with the steers they're supposed to catch and drag Into Ruehle's !railer. (The horses weigh J,300 pounds each ). Ruehle's freeway rig, ready tp roll 24 hours a day . seven days a wetk, consists of a 16 foot stock trailer specially iiet up so that he can ride his "(reeway trained" roping horses right out of it and so steers he calches can be driven straight into it The rig carries portable pipe cotTaJs, portable Io a rt i ~ g chutes and $encrator-powzred emergency lights. give almOst too much credit ~o his cow ponies. But one of his string, the big grey named Dude, very likely saved Ruehle's life in : the only really da~erous mishap he bu had during his years ol freeway oowboy- ing. HE HtW caught a particu- larly feroci~ Brahman steer on a wind--wbipped night in tlie middle of a rairuitorn1. Tying the beast "\C~r a storm drnin (the t f p l c a I ooncrete-llned canal, probably 20 feet wide at t~ bottom and 20 feet deep with sloping sides), Ruehle rode orr and caught some more runaways before worldng his way back: to the blg steer. He found the animal had somehow thrashed about and toppled Into the rushing water which had filled the big con· crele ditch . Tossing a, loop over the steer's head and ty ing his rope to the saddle hom be f o re dismounting, Ruehle stepped down from Dude's back. He intended to prod the steer out of the storm drain. "Before I knew what had "Some poople like to play golf and other things.; I like to rope cattle." He will. ln fact, drop everything else he's involved in -iJ,nd that includes ex- tensive (arming and ranching operations in addition to in- ternational caU\e trading - to chase loose steers. Ruehle · coosiden himself on call 2-1 hours a day as a cow catcher .. Ills answering service phone number is known to every major cattle trucking outfit, slaughter house, insurance oompany and police agency likely to have need ol his special services . HE i\1A.KES light of his cat- tle and horse--haixl.ling talents. "By the time t get to the scene and get ready to catch a bunch of loose steers, they are usually scared -or mad -and ready to fi ght. If they're mad enough to charge, 1 either rope 'em coming at me or just lfiongle a loop where they can stick their own necks in it as they go by." Though be kisses it all off WET WORK -Bill Ruehle. aboard bi g hay he calls Jake, ke el"' slack rope looped around neck of ~teer he has just lassoed in this news photo 1of rain- soakcd truck upset on Pomona Freewa y in Ontario on Feb. 7, 1973. No one was injUred in th is one. but it spilled seve ral animals onto wet pavement. RuehJe's stock Lraller can be seen in back ground whe_re roped steer is heading. Poulsen Galleries wlll1>e closed from October 10th to October 25th. ·rjze Conscious (reation • • W. believe that ... the difference between 'art' and 'fine art' is often as basic as tl1e artisan's point of vie\v. The design, detailing, ilnplcmentation and ulti- 'n1atc achievcmeht mu sl be, in gre at 1neasurc, an ego trip ... tl1e very best a m~ can do \Vithin the confines of his art. That's why everything we build has the Deane Homes name on it. Every plaO is Deane designed": •• construction js cu sto111"" in aln1ost every sense of the \VOrd. .. We beJlcve that's \Vhy over 155 corporate presidents, vicc--presidents, and their families are o.lready 111t home' in Deane I-Joines of Big Canyon .•• an Irvine Compnny planned 'con1n1unity built around the fainvays and lakes of t11e prestigiOus ··· Big Canyon Country Club. The very fines t loc.1 tion s have been developed lost. There's room for only fr more presidents. And, when they're gone, they're gone. oea ,necittomes ~ lfiln~~ neWPORT BeacH $125,000 .. S260,000 [ :¥111.ga by -1HE IM'E a::JlffHf I ' . PJe1set91I (714) &40-4262"Wlltct11(or14 1ppoln1rnfl'\t, Or, p> to th1 ~·Mt auanf 1111e en1r1nct •ttd •• ~t Dellnl Homti ·SaJe1 Office. - • • •• Life With Tee11•nger He ·Learns to Dress Self By t:RMA BO~rn~<:K t. addressed mysclr lu a pair or feel \\'aving like u nag from th e clothc::s han~· per. , "\Vhal ure you looking for '!" I askl'd. "l\ly brown corUuro1·s," said my son . AT WIT'S END "They're dirly." "l\1om ! C'mon, I'm going "I kno"" bul O;in is ·tobe lule." "'earing his tollay. \Vherc's ''\'t'hy can't you \Vcur a my shirl'!'' clci.1n one?" '"fhe clc~1n ones arc in "Dan is going to wear his your closet.'' tie-dye.'' "I wunt the T-shirt I tie· "Your hair looks funny. dyed in art class." Can 't you do something ''Did you bru::i h your teeth?" . "No, Dun's not brushing h~." "Jr 1 .... ·ere Dan's mothtir, I'd lock hifll up on trash da y rur his o"'n.J arety. •· "I think Dan looks neat." "\Vail a minute, let inc take a look at you," I suid. "What's that plnk ~round your mouth?'' ··Kool-Ade.'' "I "didn't know you ho.id Kool-Ade [or breakrasl." ''l didn't." PlUS \\'iththatcowlick?" "l'VE been dusting the "'OUT!'' I said, ordering him back lo the bathroom. "F•'"••nc PLANET' · · h · "J'll sec iC .Dan wears "'"'rw p1anow1t tt.'' '==========~I:==='========• his .. .iC not,"1 'll take it oN. r , \Vhere ure my shoes?" "\Vhcre are they usual- ly?" f.1inules later he stood proudly be£ore me, the pi c- ture or poverty in a pair of '''rinkled corduroys, a t:fl·ky T·shirt, hair that looked like an un01ade· bed. and a pa ir of gym shoes with so many knots I t hought he was v.'earing macrame. • '"THI GIOOYI TUil" ...-.1 DOIS IT HUITT' Ill "Tl* SlOUCTIOH Of MIMI" Ill liMCi.11,rlc.e 12:)0 to 2:00 p.m. l11tctt11 Sun.• HolicNv•I 1 21 LA. f-8WV IMANCHECTEA EX .I .0 , "RWY CITV A. EX.I "'MACON COUHTT UMI" "tHft PU.INS DllFTll" Ill • I AC.t.OIMY AWAlDSI "CAIAUT" t,GI JA "MATH WISH" " "'SH.l'tCO" Ill ADVANCE REGISTRATION A '"THE OUTFIT'" • Enhance your child's poise 1-V~-"'°.;..;;.Y;.LINT-.-.;;G;;.";;';."-".;;'PG.-'-tl an d posture. A p la nn ed program of lessons with the exclusive Ice Capades' easy learning method gives you or your child healthy exercise i n pleasant supervised surro und ings. ----:--· REGISTER NOW Sptcj .. Gr,.. Rllhs MESA VIRDE SHOP'9MG CENTER H...ttor & Act.is. eosi.Mftll Tol.17141f7t-lllD NCIP"IC DlllVl·lll IUNll IWAP MllTI e HAalOa ILVQ.Orhre•lfl • l.t.1s.....-1-111.,. eOa&NO ... Drlwe-1111 & 17 Jfl..hl.I hll.·8MI,.,.,.. ,.,.,, .. .....,.., ........ , .... Fem11, Fun! Preflt•1 ••real1t• 0•'9r•! Dl&nt WISH 111 KUS e M. PM:ltrlO $H,ICO • __ t...,. ••"" SWl~NG .. ~~... CHllltUDlll 111 .. ",,. efMI Strl Nvrus l'l ........... .... _ JUGOllNAUT tNll IMPllOI OP NOITH '"' ""''" DIATH WISH 4'l Pllll • Al PACINO SllPICO jll ..... .._ ............ saYAGI s1sn1s "1 Dll" O'Nlll Ill ... _,, llAZING $ADOll$ "' PUii f WIN Wt«< POITNOY'S COMPLAINT l9l llOfllf MrUl t U"f'I W.Clt THl OUTFIT ,. PU.IS t CMU\tolrl ll•TOH SOYUNT GllllN "' lie thought a moment, "In the ba throom, under the bed, o·n the porch, in the car, in my locker, the bike basket, the fic hoo l bill!, the hull closet, the playground, the drugstore, or Dan'!i house.'' "\Vear yoitr good ones." .. TllEY got dust on them. You trying to make me look bad?" "Do you have any idea how you look?'' I asked 'tiredly. '-'.l knew you'd be pleased," he said, ··Today we have our class pictures taken." "2ffl Sl'ACl ODTSSIY" ... "'MUMT IUNNIH•" IPGI "'CAIAllT" INI ... "OH A CUA.I DAY" '\.OllDI Of PU nuSH" INI 'UTM~TIMISIOU" 'UT rr II" "DIATH Wl$H" ... "'Slm'ICO" Ill OM ....SOAY, OCTIOIH '· 1974, IDWAIDS CIMIMAS MA. STAIT OU1 4STH YIAI Of SHOW Ill -OYa TMI TIMS WI MA.VI nouG+fT YOU AU. Ol Tttl HIAT MOV•S. l!!l!LOf.DtllUllU . -- 10 cw••n OUI AMHIYllSAIY WITM YOU. WI w.urno W:U 10 MAYI THI llST IHTllTA....-wT Of THI SU.SOt4. AtllSQ. •••.• OM WIONISD.t.Y, OCTOlll '· 1914, OUI IDWAIDI tlMIMTON CIMIMA AT llACH IOUUYAID AMI IWI Amn. ~TOH llACH, Will PUllMT A MOY• ..... ~ YOU HA.YI IYla SHH; 1'ttl U.IT 41 ......S Of THI ftLM Will HAYI TOU HOWUfl. AMO Q II IJKI HO OntH MOY• MAI -fTI POPUU.I .,,_,.........,.AT ITS ffHCL fUNHY, I~ UST, rt'S "THE LONGEST YARD" • • Off She Goes Kim Payne is r eady to take orf on <i "threc-\vheel bug,. one of the n1un~· motor \"ehiclcs on \"iC \\' ut the George Colouris Recreation. Vehi cles and Boal Sho\V \Vhich closes its five -day run today at the Anahcin1 Stadiun1. It is 01>en from noon to 9 p.m . "BORN LOSERS" ••it-1•• .. .... TOMU.UGHUM Al "BILL JJ_ACK" fnc~ Mr1l1ry ... L..c.1il"' . "MIDNIGHT II Ill "' .. 0 90oci ltliwg Wed. Mat. I PM $1.00 flH UH:fSHMINTS! f MACON 11 COUNTY.f, LINE I. ·-· cw lftt.ooll "HI~ PLAINS DRIFTER" '!' ffiMN THEATRE$ l•tliAlll •ATlllll ADULTS & STllOlllTJ 11 .J!I 'Ill t ·Jl •.1 . AMES fAIL JONI DIAHANN CAllOU "CLAUDINE" D•lfr 7:00 I 10:30 Set/S•. • l :JD, 7:00 I 10:45 C~ot.rt "ELECTRA·GLIDE IN BLUE" D91fr. l :JO Strl/S... • l:lO, 5:00, 1:45 "***~"''"'" ~(R•1<ngl "TOPS IN ENTERTAINMENT:' -New York Ne,ws ''@@@@@ (5 Camera Eye s-H1ghes1 Ra1 1ng) .. STUPENDOUS" Jazz Club l\leets 1'hl' Ne~· t)rh•aus Jazi Clull of ~11tlht•1·n l'ahCorniu n1t•,•t:-ttKl:J\' at l :30 11 111. in till' fullt•1:to11 ' tlks 11:111. 1151 Urt·a JU\ ll. A lll'I\' ll:inll \1 ill plur t'1 t'l"Y hulf hour ho.·~in11i11~ ;ii I .30 v.111. Ad · 1111:;:iion SI. U.ST DAY Orange County's Only Fall Show ••. Plan Now to Attend ! YOU'll SEE .•. Molor HomM & C11mpers t Shells t Tra ilers • Vans & V11n Conversions • Sdil Boats f C111amarans • Skl Boars t f,'\olO<Cyclts • 011 !he Road Vetii- cles 1 Camping Equipment and )lundre<fs of other EKclllno Ex· hibi!i. MANY NEW FOR 1975 RECREA· TION VEHICLES & BOATS TO BE ON O!SPLA Y FOR THE FIRST T t.\~E! S'ICIAl fAMJl 'f' INTllfAINMINl DAILY! Voo'!I see th e world FamOtJs Kar t Winn Walk lhe hi'ghwire ... Karl & Sheila In their elCciling hlgh·wlre mororcycle act .•. a thrill for all ages! SHOW HOUIS: S • 11 ,.M. W11luf•Ji • Nooft • 11 '·M. SoNrNJ • NHl'I • 9 P,M, Svndoy Ach1/t1 $2.00 (hlltlrm (U!idlr 12 flll with Mvlts) U'I SOI•• -.ft tifttl -1111 r-lf"'IW olli<-tltktt, ........... ,,_ _, • .... ..,. ..,.ti, ftoriftJ °""' ,..,., .. ••• ......., ...... ~llWU. ., ---'MMIATISf nm.ul OfAU. -"FREAKS" • &... c....,, SI'. "THE UNHOLY THREE" OllGtHAL ·U (1(\'11 ....... f ~~~.~r. .. . -~ , ........... u IOIODT · PUTS IOUGHll Tlil TRI OVTFIT ..• ... . EDWARD G. IOllNSOM CHAILTON!*STOH "SOYLEHT GREEN" "'" OllTFtT Mly: 1 I I O:it SOY\.BifT Deitr: 1:45 CWT'ffT 5-My: 2·S:JO.' S.,....~S:fS.7:1S.10:41 "UIHG ME THE HEAD OF ALFREDO GARCIA" IRJ 1:40 S:lO ':IS .... ~,;,•;o.;'";i;'S;O;Y;L;EMT=~G~R;E;E;N;';' ~a·...:ll., IAIGAfN MATINll IVllTOilT .,.,, ....... 1'CLAUDIHE" L:,~~n- "" "THE HEARTBREAK KID " INI J:JS.7:2S Oct. 1-10 G•lol.-I H•rlow "CHIHA SIAS"-••rl•Rd I ...,. "fOWitl A.MD MY GAL" Oct. ,s.11 J l1rry111•r•s "1145'\ITIM I THI IMPRESS" L11•t I F1•l 1 l 11.-''THE ................ Oct 21·14 -Gr1t1 G•r9'1 1'"'1 T1rl1r 111 "CAMILLE" ...,_I...,... "G.t.SLtctHr' Oct. 29·ll ..... ·-J-Cr••f1rd "THI WOMIH'" Dr1111 r•l1rry "TUGIOAT ....... Her. s.7 Me1ric.-Cllt••litr "THI MI RRY WIDOW" I McD011ld·lddy "NAUGHTY ' ~m•"' ..... 12·1 4 T .... hMllHd '"A ROYAL SCA)t0AL" lllh D1•h •A&J, AIOUT IYI" Mm. l'·ll J, G9?'1or-C. ,_.,.. M Od. 11·1 4 "SAl'4 FIANCISCO" Mc D.tW I GIMt: Men ht. •A HIGHT AT THI OPIU" Oct, 1 .. 21 1 .... Ni•.,.. r.i MGM'1 •rltl11I "llH HUI" a-t.1 cti.,u. ''THI •OLD 1lllSH" Od. lS-11 -.,...,.. ~ ... "-•· Htl11 M•rt•• "SHOW IOAT" A1t1lr1 I ltt•r• "IOHITA'" ~. 1-4 a.. ClteMy't ........ '?HANTOM OF THI OnilA" ,,..,;ell MW'Cll "DI. JllTLL I ..._HYDE" Jr4o•, l •l f J1lwi11y Wtl .. IHllllf' 'TAUAM, THI A.Pl MAH" W-. ~ Loy ''THI THIN MAH" Ho•. I S-11 KetMri.. Htp6ieno ""'* PHILADILPHIA ITOIY" ...,..,.. + T,.cy "AD.t.M'S ... "SIYIHTH HlAYltr4 " I Will "-"· 21·26 .... I L ....... ....... "STIAMIOAT IOUND "MUTINY ON THI IOUHTT" lM: llHO" ' ..._ ...... '"THI •IHHAL" SoMt of the .,.......,. flllns of •II H•• aMw11 MJ c_....t as prtseltttd Mt orH)Mol tht.tricol rt'IHM. "' .... . -.-.. ....... .. . ......,....,, ....... ........ to llllo• ......... "''ht .... ,,...., ........ !ti "DIRTY O'NEIL" , •. :· • • ' DAILY PILOT ft 8 ,• .. -The Week's Market Highlights VOLUME, HEA_VY TRADERS t .. -". I.IS ··~ t .01 6.SJ "' >.U . " I. !J ACQUISITIONS. Mf.RGE.llS AND PRELIMINARY NEGOTIATIOtlS A""f .. CMI B<.ttl<I\ lnt·M.l<""I UQl'lllroq "'' Chram.lloy Amtric•n Co<l>'AI..,.. 51ttl & MloCl'ooM (o E.c;.&C. ltit ·(d""1'0'i.,. Pitt lnq HirYl'v•i SIO<fi·l rOlll• loq~ lti!•rn,ol-•I C..nt•ti·Wonpo-Corp No•!Ofl Simon •nc:·!>e•P~~ Slalbe ..... Co•P·D•!I•• s~e• lttldlS ~.,,.. (orp.C.tylo•d S.01>!~-'1 (Ofl' This Week f01W Y01tl( -lllr '"•rt ho , ....... 1or lllt wK• t ... 111"1 0,1, '• Ult ; Dow Jones Stock s ,. llldtrlt 111 f rMt II Ulolt U S»clLt Dow Jones Bonds O!H" Mi"lll Lt w Cl-°" • Bdt M .•t ''·'' tt.U M.U-O.l t hi llJlt t S.tt 4S.llO 4S.14 fS.I•-O,U JNI Jlllt U .'1 •1.11 tl.U 61.U~ O.lt Ut1!1 11.1• 11.M 11.n 11.n -11. l.!J u1111nl 11.41 11 .(1 It.II n .'1-1.16 IM. lllllh «.ti M .ft 44,11 M.S6• 1.0. f~,, ..ett't UO<t wolwme •••• ll,ln ,t70 VolwlN ... i. i!I" ............ Ml,llJ.UO f>,ul w•. Mo...,., ········ ''·"'·'· l"'""4't •······· U ,tO,JliO ......,..."'"' •...• 11,iu ... Tllwill<ly •••••••• IJ,1SJ,llt l'rlll4y •······••• U ,'ltJ,Ool T"'-lls ........... IJ,Ut,t/O Weekly Sales Yr.A911 •1,1'1,4t2 $\DJ,Ul,000 11,ll0,120 j ,JOS,000 Yearly Comparison W'il • E Mecll Otl. t , Hit Stpl. "· ltlt °''· '· "'l °''· '· ltl Hl111 L•w Adw Otc J •11 w 12'1 11 JU UJ n• Ill 11 I~ !lot •l llZ "' 111t ~· '" '~ ,. ,. Standard and Poor 4211-slrl.is U A•iff-s Ml UUllli" )Of si-c•s Hl1ll 11.01 )f.J• ]l,lt "~ EARNINCS ... •t.SJ tt.• •• Y •w Hltllff t Mlln\llS .J A_,.k.on •Qfl>••OITli(~ $1.GJ $ .11 (•bltou>ITI C..M•d! Inc .JI.,,, .03 C'-•\I• S~lem 1n.i; 1.11 w• S.11 l~tffl>OOI Liii 1.f~ "" .'ID U. S. Rtd<><hDll 6.t.O n 1.JJ Lowe• ' Mo~t~s "¥CCI C.0.11 8...ul T•i·Sld!~ Coro HM! S<ll11tn~r & M1,.. N•r<o !><i.enhrir Ind wo1.,..,~ World W•d~ $1 IJ tr.. $1.'ICI t,I) ... 1.J.I> t.U n I.JI .•S '" .~• JI ~~ .32 STOCl(S TO 8E AOMITT[O TO T HE N.Y.S.E. Y;jile., 1ndL>tl<ltS---Otl. I MEllCERS CALLEO OFI' T R W ln<•I U !nt ..... l•an•I Un•t•-c.or11-Soud S1't~ sc;.n1llic (o"'""' "" ., UflltH Prfts 111 .. ....ii...11 "" "" "" "" Off Off <>O 000 g:: 000 mo <>o "" <>O "" "" <>o Off 000 g:: Off "" mo m o '"' 11.f no 11.1 '"' ~ .. H,1 19.0 OU "' 11.9 II.I 11.i OU IS.9 IS.6" IS.• lf,9 "·' "·' lf.J OU 1•.l lt.J .. , e• ~ .. 11.,. ,,, 21.a "·' "·' Jl.• JJ,I 11.1 n.1 11.9 'II.I "" <ll.2 21,1 ~.· ~.· ~., ~" ~ .. 1•.1 19.1 19.• • •.111.0.:. I 1 Federal Reserve Bank: A Peek Inside By STEVI·: J\11TCllELL OI T~I D•ll' PllAI Sll!I S\\'ept up in the \\'u\·e of _..__.opt'-flnt"s: in ~O"Vernment and businc:-.s brought about by the Ford admiQ.!.stration. the Federal Reser,·e Bank of San Francisco opened its Los Angeles branch offices to Southern California ney,·smen for the first time. ,t\nd. s urpri~i n g ly. the drab brick builchn~. l1.10lo ng e\ l'ry bit its 41 )'l':tl':'i In ilj!l'. is sin1ilar in n1 ;1n.v re.~1>t.'ets to plain old l'1Jtn mt'rt1;tl banks localt'tl 111 l'itit•s across the nt.1 t1 on Forinstanl'C'. IT l ~~l' I':~ ('.\ P ITA I, ~lock. has ;1 ho:1l'tl ur direc· · 1ors. handh"' rlit•t•ks. ha:, !Illes :ind dt•p;1rl ml'nls ~imila r tu tho:-.•· 111 !l('t~h· borhood b;ink ~. ~i nd 4.'0llctts healthy e;1rnin~" front in - terest on 10;111., .1111.I in\·csl· 01('111 :-,. 1101\f'\'l'r, lhf' b:1nk docs h:1\(' its pt·t·u 11 ari1ic.", not 1h(· lcast of 11 h1th i~ il keeps l\\'O furnr1l·t'" hurni ng 2·1 hours a da,\. usi ng S.5 mil · lion 111 cash f11r fu t•I. 'fhar.s N million -c' l'rv dav. ::>ortin,e out olcl i-rl.in'cy ;.ind :... ' ' ': 1' • ...., . I ' r:' --,- 0 • • ' burning It is only one of the the Civic Center for three TllEN ON 1'0 TllE in- bank's functions. The Los years,"hesaid. <:inerators . t\vO large. iron Aogclcsbranchalsohasthe Cramped qu:lrters. ovens that burn up S.5 mil-ti~Tn ct+on -of--b~in~ 1·hC' -inadequa1e hC'n~d'lJt.1 lion in currency a lla~. second busies t check-modcd vault arc<1~ .ire "\\·e stop Lhe furnaces processing center in ·the some of the complaints t\'-'ice a day to sift through t..'Ountry, handling 1.4 mil· pointed out by tour guide ' the ashes," Erne said. "\\le lion checks per day in three, 11arold A. Erne, ·an as-wa n t to m a k e s ure eight· hour shifts. ' sistant vice president for everything we put in here is the Los Angeles Fed during completely destroyed. (l's a quick walk around the in our contract." "But, what we are essen-, lia lly, is a wholesaler." S•1ys Cera Id R. Kelly.senior \·icl' president and manager of the 12th District's Los ,\ngelcs branch. .. WE'RE A CRE ATURE of Congress, but more of a quasi-governmeiltal agency -pretty well independent of Congress and the !'res ident.," \\'hat he means is; the Federal Reserve Bank con· lrols the flow and s upply of :.11! cash in circulation in the United Stales. Fo,lan agency that han· cll es bi I lions or dollars daily. the do\\·ntO\\'n Los Angeles building is in a pretly sorry ~tile. Kelly odmits. ''\\lc'\'e been tryin g to get. funding rrom the General ,\l'COunling 0(fice (GAO) for a ne\v buildine closer to ..... it keeps two f11rnn~Ps h11r11ing 24 ho11r.c fl da,,. 11sin9 s:; n1illio11 i11 ~ash lt'r f11el. That's S:i 1nillio11 -every dtlfl·' part or the. building sho\l.•n . to ney,·s men. ••SEE TllESE aisles? \\Te have to push hand cars p iled hi g h \\o"ith coi ns through these narrow v..·alk- ways," Erne explained as news men headed lo"Y.•ard the basement vaults. "Even with one guy in front and one pushing from the rear, it's difficult to get around corners down here," he said. Shotguns in glass cases adorned sever a I w al Is in the. baseme nt areas , v.·ith guards trained in their use standing or s itting nearby. Employcs, many or them young people. in T-shirts and j eans. count and separate "·all s of St, SSs, SIOs, S20s, 5:iO and SIOO bills, appearing more interested in the tour than in the millio ns or dol· lars locked into caged rooms \Iii th lhc n1 . One youn g y,·oman, tos· s ing S20 bills into neat stacks almos t as fa st as the eye could rollo\v, v.·as look ing for countcrrcJt bills. ~ \'VllEN ASKE D 110 \Y she could pick the m out so qui ckly, Errie said. "You'd be surprised hov.' accurate she is. \lie s lip in a counter· fe it bill e \•ery once in 3\\•hilc. and s he usually cal· ches il the fir s t lime through, And she does that eight hours a day," A room half.filled \Vith b ags of coins greeted Jlt'\\.'Smcn in one comer or thc.,,bascn1 enl . Despite gloom brought about by double-di git in· nation, high interest rates and sagging stock market reports, there won't be any banking panic like ones \\.'hi ch have s wept the nation in the past, according to Er· ne, a 32-year \'eter an of the Fed. "The Fed is a lender of last resort," he explained. "\Ve aren'L goi ng to have a banking panic in this coun- try because of a Christmas present Congress gave the United States back in De c ember 1913 -the 1-"ederal Reserve. Act. .. Before establishment of th e F edera l H cse rve Srstem. the U.S. relied on a patchv.•ork banking system, and the country paid the price of that policy, accor- ding to Erne. DURING CROl1 sea!'ons, 1he burden or s upplying f ash to farm ers fell on small banks \oihich couldn 't handle the de m a nd. Far· mers couldn't buy grain or stock and, "Presto, you had a nat ional panic," 1-~rne said. So ih 1914 the 12 f"Meral Heser\'e Banks opened doors to prnvi de flexible curreney .... and to supervise the bankinJ?" process. \\'here does the Jo'ed fit in !hr ('COno mi c picture today? r cderal Jl eser\•e Chair· n1 a11 Arthur Burns, speaking at. President ford's economic s ummit conferrnce la st y,·eek'end. emphasiied the need to cut ft'deral spending and aim ror a baltinced budget as ::i solution to the 11 1.1tion's t•cnn otnic \\'O<?s. Cutting spe nding Fed 's spcci;1lty. is the Brond1t•nu Lng111111 ffills "These ha g~ are marked 'l'·ith the name or the hank t hat sent then\ to us," Erne !!aid. "\\'·c go t.hroUg h them lookin,I? for buttons, sluJ?S and defaced coins. \Vhcn y,·c find one, the bank y,•ho sent it in is charged for It. The same policy ~oe$ for coun- terlelt bills,'' he ex plained. ""°o IT OOt:s it 1hrough a pan('( or 12 men who make up th e Fede r a l Open 1\1:.irkel Comn1lttcc. These rn c n meet C\'C'ry three v.·ccks in \Vn~h ington, D.C, to delern1inc open.market policy. . . /\n $8 .!i n1illion 1 ~ro:id\\;~y Dcparl nif·nt s tore is 1-!0•ng up in lht..• 1 .:1~un11 llills J\l;ill. Srhcrl ul ed. lo nJK.•n in 1\ 11 ~11:-.. I . I !Ji.i. I ht· !'1 nrr \\ 111 bt..• th rt'(' stories hii;!h nnd fnrlutle a t't•:-..t:111ranl ;111lf tire ('(•n tcr. The OC\\' i-tructur(!. \\ill h;1YC' 15i.2AA squa rt• feet. com- 1>01red lo 1All.llOO ~quart..• ft..•cl Broacl\vay P lt.1za s tore in Los An t:cles . Another roon1 houses several do7.e n compulers lht•l sort the approxi1natcly 1.4 m illion chccl(s that con1e {hrou.1th \he l.os 1\n,Rulcs branch every day-. The r-·ro has three shifts working 24 hours a day in the. ch<:ck processing sections. • • 1-:rne s:iys the committee h3S three a,·cnut's open if il wishes to put the stopper on the monev rtoY.•: -It cun increase the reser\'e requirements ror the 5. 700 member banks. Each bank. (all Ba nk or meriea ~b(,.ane-hes. fur-in- stance, equal one bank) are required to keep a percen· tage of every dollar they hold, on depos it, at the 1-~edera l Reserve Bank - currently 14 to 15 cents per dolla r. I F Tllf~ FED increases that r equi r e d r eserve amount, th e s upply of mone y is d i mini s hed beca use t he i ncreased reserve is sitting ti ght in Fed vaults where it can't be spent. -The Fed can also in· crease the discount rate, or interest rate member banks pay v.:hen they borrow from the reserve banks. A highe.- discou nl rate tends to restri ct borrowing. -The· third Fed tool to cut s pend ing i s · open- market operations. To lower r eserves in member ba nk 's vaults , the 1-'ed !'iclls gover nment. securities. Si nce buyers pay for securities with eheck!'i dra \\'n o n c o mme rc ial banks. the result is to draw on bank reserves and limit lending activi ty by the bank. BESIDES JTS ROLE as a .. Controller of the Curren- cy," the 1-~ed era l Reserve Ba nk provides services for member banks, sa ys Erne. Nearly one-fourth of the 680 cmployes at the Los Angeles branch process bet· ween SI a nd $2 bi llion in <'Ve ry d ay, according to .t:rne. The bank ;i\s o operotcs a coded syslen1 v.•hich electronically tran- :-;fers fund s throughout the country on a computer net· v.·or~. Excess funds -those over and above reserve requirements held by com- mercial ba nk s -are lent to o ther ba nk s for s ho rt periods at 10 to 15 percent interest by the Jo'ed. "Some. banks 'will find they 11re deficient for a day !'iO they borrow funds from another bank through our offices," F:rne expla ined. IJA :'\if\S C1\N Al.SO hor· rov.• directly from the Los Angcl1:s Fed at :.1 lo\l.·er in· l c r cst ra t 1·, but. thot pr'i\'llf..'Ac Is us u;llly rcser- v e d f o r e m e r ge nc y situations. 1'hc r eel is also rcspon· Sible fnr the h;suancc or Treasury bills and notes. i~ in\'Olvecl in the food stamp prn,1:ram , 8:l Vin µs bonds, and Po!iilal monry o rde~. "\\'itl1 a ll our other rune· lions, v.·c stlll dent with the l iltlc o ld l ady f rom l'a!oadt>na \1tho comc8 off the ~trcet l\l ca.sh. a i;avln.i::s honrl . · · ~;rnc :;a id, "just like any other banking facility in Ule United States .'' I Coast Developer Outlines 35-unit lndwtrial Area John D. Lusk & Son hns Land and south or lifcFad· startedconstruction ona JS.. den Ave. in Jluntington unit indu s trial con . Beach, the new Lusk \'en· don1 inium project, the fi rst lure will include a total of 12 ever unde rtake n by the buildings totaling 185,000 Nev.•port Beach-based real square feet. A wide variety estate developer. of floor plans, r anging in Located on a 10-acre s ite size from 4,000 to 8,000 ontheeasl sideofProducer s quare r eel will b e Contracts :.1 vaila ble. nccording to Cold· \veil Banker Commercia l J1rokerage Co .• sales agent ror the 53.S million project. To Rockwell GEORG E L uS'K. vice president or t he devclop- Contracl a\va rds totaling n1ent rirm, said his conl· rlose to S3 million ha\'ebeen pany's eittry into the in· n1ade to ·Rockwell Inte r· du s tria l c ondominum national, Congressman An· market was promptetJ hy clrew J.linshaw has announ· market surveys which in· <'ed. All three rontracts were dicated a strong demand for n1adehy the U.S. Air Force. units of this type. 1-lin shaw sa id the. Orange T h e L y s k I n • County firm has bee n dustr1al B usiness Park a v.•:.1rdc d u S l ,406,598 willoffermodulesassmall contrac t to upd ate n n :1s 4,000 square feet which engineering te.liit facility in can he combined lo acoom- l:l:ih; a Sl,010,435 pact to moda t e l a r ge r s puce pro g ram a n inertiul requiremenL-..lnarldition lo meo~ure n1 ent unit intcrfal'c direct ownership of !!pace console u nd a S40rJ ,OUU \\'ithln the project, ell ch ~ sup11lc menlc.il a gree111ent tn : a prc\'ious contr:1ct for l design <Ind development or a IO\\'-CO!\l inert ial navigator sysl.em . uotes l PARTNER WANTED ................... _""' __ ol ~· ... ~ c.oe:e .. ~ ~twit Jr • ...., &.111et1 to~ 111111•11 •vt••t•I• 111 t 1•vu11>1+eft1,, .,.., ••ll ••t ... c• -·-(IC'J@NI .... MltCl'I OOl/lf ~ ui ... ---.11--. fd .....,. """"' .. -~ --D,I. YID SILVO 17141752..0421 buyr.r \\'Ill be long. to the pa r k's r nn1muni l y a s. sociation \Vh1 r h Will ha\l' owner~hiJJ and control or commo n areas :.ind ~tr · chitecutral aspects 0£ lhe development. CONSTRt.:CTION OF' th<' Lusk Indus trial Busin ess Park \\•ill occur in thrr>e Stages, C3<'h of \Yhich \\.·1JI include rour buildings. Lusk expluint:d th::tt con,;truction phas ing: '"i ll e n :i hl e lht.: cornpany to modify il s huildin~s to meet ctui ngin.i:t market de mands. All 12 buildings are xpected to I~ completed in 18 month~. Lusk Industrial Bu.sin es..c; Park wa s ·de s i gned b y Robert. Jlnrding AJA or Ir· vine. SILVER BARS .l!! + PURE PllllNUM COLO COINS e Sllitl COIN llC COl'lllc:l~ll•I CorPGr•lit $10fA9t or lmmHI•'• oeu-,. INT£11tCONTIHENfAL INVES"'TMENT C()Mfl.utV -"* NtwpOrt Ct111tt OtM Tiie ftlN1ncl11 Cer.ltf' Newport lle«h, CtHf, 644-9410 .. • • ' ' ' ' ' ' ,, ' ' .. • " N OH WO ' N d OM ,, ' D " • m ' ,, '" • "' '" "' d •M ..o • 0 .. n. d " 0 .. •• • ... " '" . .. ' "" " •o " "" d ' DE " " d ''" .. .. " "" ~ o .. " ... " d • • OH '"' >l..CAll .,o " ~ .. DAO ··~ " 0 "' "' D •• • '"' .. o .... 77t• '" • '" PVBUC NOTICE PUBUC NOTICE , PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE l')lM PUB OTIC Put\llthed OrtnQ• COAi! O•lty Pllol, l'ICTITIOUS IUSINEIS LIC 1' E S.hlmbllr 2', •NI OCIDIMI' 6, IJ, 20, NAME STATIMINT 1 ---:>i<iiT>owl'i~;Niiil---1~·~"~'---~~-----""~~"~'I TIM loltowlr141 PtfMll'I 11 do<"I b!.11\.,_u .FICTITIOtlS •U$1N81 ''' NAMI! STATEMENT FARGO SANOWICH '"0. ••o < Tile followlng ~ .... IM!riQ 18"2 A '" " · • tlY•l»ess oJS : --~===,.-,'===---1 Mtoc '1h1H Blvd., trvint, Callt. OAMO• C£MP•>•Y', mo E. ....... l'ICTITIOUI t UllNl'll G-vltvr Shells, ~-~nOAYlllt .. """" L1k1W<Qd, Com. _,1, Pt, S1n11 ,.., C1Ulomle 9271li N.t.Ma ITATl'-11"1' T11l1 Dvslneu II UlndUCl..t by tn D1vld Poll•~· Jr., UGI) Old Hero.<-..,,,. '911-1"'111 Plf"IOll 11 Min; butlMK lll!llv1du11. Ln., Num11er J17, M1rl111 Del R..,, 11; Genevieve SIW!ls C1llfornl1 90:191 HfAMAN'1 SUCCE$$ SALES, 1115 Thll l ll ltmtfll w11 flltd Wllh ,.. MOl"l<lfl J Jl'O~, 414 So Almont, Mfllul Or., No. 319, A"41 .... lm, C11l1ornl1 COi.i'ii Cl ~ !ltWfly Hlll1, Collforn!1 91111\ 92'02 Sept, ~1, u%. 01 Oringe Covnty °" Thl1 bu1Tness 11 coflducled by 1 ;t111r11 Htrman Elv.,1, 2115 Mil!ul or , p1rl119rghlp. No. 319. A.,.helm. C1tltornl1 nam • ''' f -J11 i0 Morkln J. JltObsGfl T ' ' .. u il'led Orlngil Coal! D•lt~ Piiot Oavld Poll•~-Jr. hll 11\11 Mtl I cllnClucttd by 111 Sl!J>l•mbtf U, 22, 29, lrld Oclooer ,, 1974 Thl1 1111"'"'"' Wll flllld w1UI IM lndlVld!.111. ' :i.2114 Herm1n Elvtl'll ----,--------.::::·::, Counly Cl1rk of Cringe County ~ Thi I llilt !ntnl ""'' flJ.O wllh tht Seo!. lJ, 1914. ~ , '' , , o ' PUBLIC NO'nCE P"-tntr -..aun Y ... er c r1na1 .. ovnty Oil Published Or•"'t Coist 0111~ Pllol Stpltmbtr 25, 1974. -Pl14tl FICTITIOUS aUSlllESS $eprembtr 'rl, 2', OClobtr t, 13. lt71 Publlshtd Or1ngt C&all Dolly Pitel, NAME STATEMl!NT " 352S-74 September 29, 1nd OtlOber 6, I), 7(1, 1971 wTs1':.ss '~~wl»g Pt•tom ire doing PUBLIC NOTICE :ili91·1' PUBLIC NOTICE WESTERN STAT ES REPRESEN-1-------------1 TATIVES. llOll Qu.it str .. 1, Su/It No. FICTITIOUS •uslHEJS 1114 NIWP<M"I Bit.Kii, (1llfor11fa t2'60 NAME STATEMENT 01vld R. Timmons, l'lt5 San llr..,,.,, The following per.sons •r1 doing P"t("TrTIOUJ aUJ•NEJJ N-parl BNCh, C1lll<>rnle '1U.O tiuilne1s 11: NAME STATEMENT N John lllnnen. I !11...-...od Qr., M1nuf1ctvrh'9 Wcotl Finl~ 1725 Tf'll tellcrwlno Jllf'IOll 11 doing blltlnffl --1 !111<11, C111tornl1 '1'60 ....._ov11 A.,.., J loll t. C-4, COiie Mffl, 11; T!\11 bullnu1 It C~l<I by I gener1t C1lllornl1 '1U7. It HOUie: DEllGNS. "' H. CoeJ! Plrtflll'"!lll0l~;., , '' JMnll "E ... Jillr, 1m M«i,...i1 Hwy., Ho.. 1, La<;run1 !leech, C1Ufcrnl1 ••• · mmorr1 Ave .• Sul11 c-1, Cotti Miu, C11l1orn11 tU.!l. Th1$ llllflnttll Wfl flltd Wiii! tt.t '2617 Pllrl<l t llfft.. UP H. Co11! Hwy., <,.ou~tv-'",rk of Or1n;e COll<lrv on Rtlner H. J1hr, 11U MonnNl1 N .. 1, L'11-!111ch. C1llloml1 "'51. PI 7, "''-Aw., Suite C..t. COiii Mftl, C1llfornl1 Tllll bu1I""" 11 c-ucltd toy 1n '1rz11 '1&17 ln.cl!vkl~I. Publlshtd Or1noe COll~I Diiiy Plhll, Thl1 bu1!t1t" ls cOfldutlld b'f 1 11iwr•I Pllrl<I" llt11• Se1U1motr U, 29, 0c1Qllef" ,, 13. 1'14 perl,..,.11\lp. Thll itll-nl Wll flied wllll tht PUBLIC NOTICE lSOl-74 J111rnle J~ltr Coun1v Cle<k of Orlnge CoonlY on __________ __:=:::1 This 1tat1m1nl was . IHed with tlll September 23, ltll. • , (. GEM-CUTTER PUTS TINY DIAMOND (I;, CARAT) IN GRIPPING DEVICE He Then Applies It to High Carbon Steel Wheel (Oise) Polishing One Facet a.t Time Dutch Give Diamonds a Cutting \VU/ia111 Sc/i reiber covers the Board of Supervisors and otl~er county seat 11ews sources for tl1e Daily Pilot. But lie a11d his wife ioere "typical tourists" w he ?l the11 stopped in A msterdanL to visit diamond factorits OH a.European vacati011 this past summer, By WllLIAllf SCHREIBER Of 1111 011ly PUlt !111! The diamond -nature 's perfect artwe>rk, h a r d e s t substance koo\ln to man. a girl's best !riend, foundal ion and ruin or empires. To a handful of master craftsmen i n Amsterdam, Holland, diamonds m e a n business for a specialized trade with hlnireds of years rA history. The Amsterdam gem-cut- ters. many of whom st.i ll \\'Ork in smaU, back-street factories, are acknO'>l'ledged as the finest in the \\"Orld. They ha\"e been sought through the years to cut and polish Uie \\"Orld 's mos l famous, priceless stones. in- cluding South Africa's CUiiinan - a massive diamond that v.'eighed. a record 24. ounOOl in the rough when found 1n 1905. TODAY, AnlSterdam's gem factories e1.re '>l'ork ing al full product ion. Dia1nonds a r c thought Uy rn.1ny to be a sure- fire hedge against Jn1pcnding economic disaster. PUBLIC NOTIC'• County Clerk of Orang• Caunlr °" · l'Jfffl --::""==~~---·---I Soplember 11, 1914 Put>lllhld Or•hv• Cotll Ot ilY Pllol.,1 .... -------------------------------------, ST l'J"l11J S.p!embtr 2'1, and Oc:!Obff 6, 13. N , 1971 ATfMENT OF AIANOONMENT Publll~..:I Ori<111e Co;ist Diiiy Pllol, ~1• r-.1any of Ifie factories. such as Holshuijsen -Stoehie Inc., no'v ha\•e a virtual open-door policy for tourists who wAnt to see v.'here the sparkling stones come from . Each com- pany maintains a sho\\TOOm and sales office \\'here visitors can buy mounted and un- mounted gems r anging from pin-head slze to glittering lumps the size or golf balls. OP Ull! OF P"lCTITIOUJ aUSIHEIS NAME S.pltmbtr U, 29, Octcotr '-ll. 1'1• The tollowlno rierS001 hive 1b1ndgned !494-14 PUBLIC NOTICE Ille UM of Ille llttlllt1111 bw!llffl n..,,., ----,PDUBrn;;LJ-;;~;;011;;;;;;CE;p----1 --__:_:_~_:::::..::::.:.:::.::_ ___ 11 CITY CENTRE COMMOOITY 'PAAT· c N Pta"ITIOUI au1u1111 Nlt;RS, P•YllJOll !I., 2 C:lty Blvd. NAM• ITAT9M•NT E111, Oronoe, C1lllornf1 916'11 SLP-J.,,20 " ' ' " • TN "ltl\tlou• Bu1lntn N1m1 n!lll'l"td SUPEJ IOI COURT OF THE ,,T/~ ' lo.-no ..,_ I d 1'11111 bul Mii lo 1tioow w11 llted In Ort"" County STATE OF CALIFORNIA FO• THE COPFEE OltlHOEI, 1021 an 0.C:tmlMr J, 1973. TH E COUNTY OF OIANGE North Cotti Hlgt1-.ey, Suitt "C" 92MI Robert C. O<Mrt, 2011 P•lctritr H .. A-114» '2.UI Or., Gletldor1, C~lf1crni1 t l140 HOTtC• OP MIAW INO OP PtTITlON Jiit\,. l 'ft'Dll H•r1 1'"1 Lit Marini Flovd W. Bl1ncllard, '317 Strtll POI 11"9:014.Te: OP WlU. AND POii: ltnt Mt.K'°" Vlt j 'Ctlll $1., 8urb•nk, (IUfornli tlSM LltTlltS Tl!STAMl!NTAltY Thlt ' ltltll-I !i 1'COIMluCt..:I by i n Glorto B. Brl lnlkotl, 16l\O' Mtrll Elllll of LYDIA Pl fGER, DteefMd, l!ldlvlduil. Ave. Garde<1i Cal\lomli w141 NOTICE IS HEA!!I'( GIVEN lhtl Jolln I M fl 1vt., Wl'll~ 'nd Sor-. 1 ' · AICHAAO H. PLEGER Incl ALFRED . · 1 illtt Dr N1 ' nc .• llo6l """'· C. PLEG!A M111 111111 l!trtln t petltlan Thi• 1111-nl wit !!led lll"llh tM 9lMO ·• twporl ISHch. C1llkirn11 for Prebllt Of 'Wiii 8"" for luuenct County Oltf'k "' Or1111• Counrv on "'°"" W. Bttft("flant ol l.4'f1«1 Tftl-IW't' ~ .,_ ~-kpt. '-1t71. Tlll1 1!1!-nt ,.,.11 11ll'd wlrh ll!t Uonera. ..tltf'ente lo Wl!ldl Is midi FU.16t CouM-, Cit•~ ol Orirog.e c-r tor lurtMr p1r1lcul1r1, Ind ""' -1119 Pubtl1hlld Dr1n~ C1>11I DtHy Po!gt S19t1rnber 11, 197• ' °" lime 1nd Jlltt• of f'll1•r"' tilt um• S1p1tm1Mr U, n , :n, end Ottowr ~·:: ""'n h•• been Ml for Ott-:12, lt71, · POJ111!1htd Ore~ Cw11 01lly PJlof U t :Jll l .m., In n.e CCMlrtroom OI .PUBLIC NOTICE lePltmbtr n, 2'......._ OctQQ_w 6, l:L 1t1.i rs.tr.rtmtnt N&. S of, !'lid ~qj,11;1._ I! ---·su.14 700 Clvlc-cenfir Or.ve West, In tlll'l-----~~------11 ------------=·= (Uy ol Stnl1 Ari., C11if0f""lt. PUBLll: NOTICE r tC:TITIOUI aUtlNlll MAME STAT•M•NT Oetcd Ociobtr 2, 197~ WILLIAM E. SI JOHH, coun1y Cltrk The lollowlna pitr11111 Is dclng bu1Jneu • 41_, C. A-Hlea1E 11: SUPl!llOI COVllT OF TH• nt M1r1M A,,. VILLA !"ARK II!, lntt ttVlM JTATI Ofl CALIFOINIA FOi a11-. 1.i111t1, (1lilonill f26'l 8ovlev•nL Sulll 4.. TU1lln, C1lltornl1 THI COUNTY OF CIANO• UH) '1J•1'1t f2MO. H1. A-11411 Att-y fW1 Mtltl-1 CllTlltlOfol OIVEL.MM!HT, INC., NOTICE OF HEAllHO OP l"h"ITION PUOll#ltd Of1noe ea.it D•llYJ Pflol, :Slt19 t1I C1lllor>ll~ 11722 lrvfl!f "Olt PIOaATI" 0, Will A)IO 1101 OctOO.r ,, 7, IJ. lt7' 312•·7( lloulWlrcl, Suitt 4.. IUllll\ C1lltornl1 Lln1:1s OP" ADMINlSTltATIOH tHIO. WITH·THl!·WILL AllNIXED PUBLIC NOTICE T11!1 l!VllMff I• andvc:lld lrf • vener1I Ell1tt of SUSIE SPLAWN, o.c1,.., p1rlntr1hlp. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN i111t CR1Tlll10N DlVllOl"MINT, Inc.. Kt•ry l. ICe"f"IW" 11•1 llllcl hertln 1 ILP•74$U Frink l . FMIM ptlfllon IOI" Probele of Wiii I nd flM' NOTICE TO Cll!DtTOIS Ge"'llrll P~•lntt" el i"u•nce of Letter• of Adrnln!JlritlO!I SUl"ElllOll COUIT OF TNIE Vitia P1rk Ill Wllh·l~!--wl!I •nnt~td lo !I'll Pl!lllO!Wlr STATE 0 1' CALIFO•tc•A 1'011 Th(s •llltmtnl Wll llled wltll !hi ret.renct 11 Wlllch Is mlodt for tvrllllr COUNTY OF OIANGIE CounlY Cltrk 11 OrlllVI County °" 1»rtlcul1r1, 1nd 1t11! !ht llmt and plice NO. A.fltll Sepltmbtr 23, 1914. of ht1rlno Ille time his bten Ml Estate of WILLIAM HENRY OILLOW 1'11444 f(H'" October n 1•14.. II t ·lO • •ho known ., WILLIAM H. DILLOW. Publllhld Or1na1 C&all D11tv Piiot, ln the courtroom o1 o,~_,;......,1 "NO' OKeal&d. S11>11mbtr lt, 1nd 0c1o11tr ~. 13, :Ill. ] of 11td coort, 11 700 Clvlt Ciroi.,'. NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN to the 1P74 34J3.14 0'1ve W111, 111 1111 City of S•nfl Al'lll, (rtdllon ol the 1bav1 named deadt nl (1lfteml1. lk1I ell Plf"SO'IS h.llvlng cl1lms ~alnsl PUBLIC NOTICE 01ted OclObll" I, 1•74 tM H id dKldenl 1rr .-.quired lo flrt WILLIAM I JI JONN !hem, with the ~1sary voucr>ers, ln l-------------11 Counry Cltr-· ' Ike oHlc• Of tl!t cler-ot ll!t 1bow NOTICE 0' l'ILING Al"PLICATION IO••IT s. WHIT.. tnllllld tQUrt, OI" ,, prese<11 lhtm, ... 1,~ FOii: INTll:sv:T~'!~=~~~~~NI llATl!I 2?»11 HaWlhlrflt l lYlll. !ht 91f(INl'V VOl/dlef"I, lo Ille W. TW<ll\Cf, (1LllorN1 MM$ 1111"lltnlld 11 c(O R(H'llkl H. Prenner, The Pielf!c Tele pllont tnd Telegr1ph Tel: n1i• m '"" AllorMY II Ltw, 165"1 E111 Fourth Comp1ny on Sepl1mbel'" :JO. 1974, !!led At11,,..,. '°' . .,.1111_, StrHI, 5u!Tt 1'1. Sen!I A111, C11Jfornl1 will! lht Public Uttulles Commislion ol' Put>1l111ed Ol'"enot c ... 1 O.Uy P!lot, '17tll, whldl Is .,,. plKe of t1111lness "" Sllle ol C11llornt1 •n 1pplluillon OclOtler '' J, 13, 1•11 ]12).74 Of Ille lltlOtrtll,,.., In ell m1ltltf'1 per· lor 1ul11Crl1Y lo lnc,.IY ct111ln ln1r11l1!1 ----'---"'--C..:. ___ __::::.:.:111lnl"1 lo the ttl11t ot $1111 dl(tdlllt, r11" •nd ""'1111 1ppllc1b11 le lfiei>llO<>I! wU~l11 foltr rnon!M attw 1111 1Jr1t pvblk .. Mrvke tvrnllhtd w1thl11 thll St111 of PUBLIC NOTICE lion ol 11111 no11c1. C1lltornl•. Tll9 pr-* r1t1 lnc,.Hti D•llld St!>t•mbtr 11. 1974 Wiii pennrt l"Kltlc to oltwl lnc•llMI IU .. ~llOW COUll:T OP TK• SHJILliY M. DILLOW In •xllfn111 dUI to w<191, ulary •nd STATI 011' CALll'OINIA ll'Oll Exteutrl• Di/ 1111 Wiii of 11.ocllltd lncr1a-. In 9<1111r1I i.r"", Tl11 COUNTY 011' OltAJllGI tM tboYI flll"ned Otetc'.ffll 11\e Pf"lflOMill 1111 ci.. ... t ••• 11 loll-a: N .. A-11411 IOMALD H. PllNMllt No thlflles -.hi! .. ll'lldl In bl1lc NOTl(I 01'" Hl!AltlNI CW l"ITITlotf All-V 11 L... !l'llfllhlV IJIChll'IQe ..,...let r1let. POil PIOIATR OF WILL AHO llOlt 1 .. 1 lttt P~h ttNtt, t t«t 111 StrVICI C-llon ck1r119 would ln- LITTl:ll 0 P" ADMINISTltATIOH .. ntl AM, C1lll•rt1l1 ,,... .. for MW i nd Ndll~el Hrvl<e, WITH·THl·WILI. ANNllillD Ttli 1110 W-&ttl movft ol' CUlll!Ml"'l l1!1Pl!Of'l1 Ml1, E1t11t of WAI.TEil MAltlON TAla!ltT Atlwnt'f f• lxtcvt;.x Cerltln C"-""t gj culft)mtr'1 1~1 Ind Oflctt••d. Pultll•hed Orenge Coist Dilly Piiot, ~ey lete~I 1y1tim Hrvlc11, •nd In NOTICE 15 HEREIV GIVl!N tlllt Jtplembtr U, ?90, 0.:loOlr 6, 1), 1'74 pltet tonroecl!cn cti1r111. Tl\9 cl'lr" Slepl\en 0'0•11 1111 flied !wlr1ln I 1Mllrl•11 :)54&<1• for 111111•1• COflntctlon of I <tlldMCI for l'robtte of Wiii incl for lttUlncl ltltPllMI -.1d bt lncrell<!d "''" S2•.ll0 of Lt lltf'I of Admln111rt1lon wll~·lh•wlll PUBLIC NOTICE to S:J0.001 lf'll tru1!ne1t ch1r0tt would •llfll•td to tilt petltl-r rtltrtfl<I to lncre1M lr•m t.31.QD to Ml.OO. Tkt w111<11 It made for futlhet p~•!l(u!1r1, ILP•Hltl chfortt lor I cu1l-.ln\ll1t.-cl d111191 Ind t1111 !ht llmt and plKt of Plffrl11t MOTICI TO CIEl)ITOll In ftl~one llllll'lblr W!IUld lnettlllif from !he 1ame 1111 boMll HI tor Oclabtr IUPllllO• COUIT OP THI U.00 It 110.00 fDf" • ,_sldtnct Ml~, n, lfll, It t 1JO e.m., In the courtroom •TATI OI' CAll,OltNIA l"Oll 1nd lrOll'I 110.00 lo $11.00 for • bYllMN OI' Oe11otrll'f>enl No. ~ Of Mid courl. · ltftphcil!9, e! 100 Civic Centtr Ori,,.. Wt!I, In THI COUNT'f Ofl OllAltOI Ch1rget fot 1!111 t l!ftn1fon tnd 11rvlct l~e Cl'V of $tnl1 An1, C1lllornl1. '''''' ... ..l!"oo"='ol~I~ G. TUST>N, con~IOfl 1-c:HlllM Ill 1\lburbtn •Ntl 01ttd October l 1t74 "' ""' " would Ill cM"Vlld to red\ICe tlle frM WILLIAM 'E SI JOHN a~• MAll:GAltfT Glll80Nl TUSTIN, fooi1;e 1llowtt>ce 111d to !list cf'lerttl Counly C.lotr~· ' Oec11..S. fer-flCIU feolatl t11 I (ltl"CfflllOt HALL SIELY HOTICI' IS H!AllY Gtv!H ta 11'11 ol co.I lt11ftld of e fl1f ,, .. Jltl' loOf. Att-y et l-Crtclltorl of .... 1tio.... Nll'ltld OKldtnt For lnlr••'-19 mM•lr: IOU fUl'Vlc•. m. :116 k11 Mltltl Orlvt that •II IMl'Mnf htYl"I tll lfl'lt ... 11111 ~~::= ·~v= n r~M:t-::~:e ,.,..,.., kc•ch. c1111en111 ,,ut the ltld CIKtdflll ... ,....ilrM te fUi -lld .tlrtc:I dleltd lrrlllel _......... -•• Ttl lllO '4' SMl ll>em, wllll 11'11 -.ntry llO\ltl\tl"t• 111 ,_, "',... A~ for ~.tlll .... offl(I of the clerll of IN ...... Ill rllluud from 11\t'M ml11u111 ,, ··~ ... , 1 -11 I t ,.. Ith Oftl l!'l lf!Utt. Under 11111 11""1~. Pl>llllll'Jed Ori~ Cotll 01lly Pilot. etrl I Id court, ~ o IW"eston ,,."'• ""'.__ IMIWllll 1horlir lkOll 11\t'et ll'l(llU'I" Octooer 1, J, 11, lt7• l l-14·11 Ille ~rv voudlea, lo ,..r -.hf ,_,1uy (till 1"' •nd 111.,11,., ------------dOrslgned 01 n.e Law ottle• or ... 1 PUBLIC NOTICE (. A. HIGBIE, ttt M1r1ne Av1 .. l etllol VO ttw• Ill llUI•• er loneer _,. ltllnd, Cllllornl• '2162, whlctl Is lhe cot! ll'IOl"f. Ill the ...wlf1111, 1119 r1N -------------r,11ce et bUllnut Of Ille llll<Nniolled tor dltld dll ltd rnt1U9n ufldtr JI SLP-7'602 11 111 m1tt1r1 11«l1lnlng to tM "'"' mllfl would bt lncrttNd, with SUfllltcwt COUIT Ofl THE ol Mid llKtdenl, wllhln four monllll df'CfMMI •+ cert1l .. mU61ti 111111. STA.TE OP: CAL IFO~NIA FOil •fl•r Ille llrsl pUbl!tetkln of 11111 nollc•. The ~I dll'«.t 4111M ·r•hl W'Ould THE COUNTY 0, OllANOR Dlllll Stflltmbll' ''• 1t74 bt Plendtd lo lroc:IW. IH d1y .. turd1y. CIM HYll'ller: .Ul)'f RUTH G. WIEIE For c:oln (alls, I NP'flll: rtll: KhtdUll O•OEI TO SHOW CAUll l •tc:Ull'b of Ille Wiii or woold bt tst1bll1htd. ..~ '011 CHAHOI Of' NAMI( lilt 1~1 !limed dKldtnl Re$ldal\Ce al~on1 would bt In- In "" Miiie• ol ..... 'A119llc1 t!on llf c A NIG••• CAIHd ,,.,.... 11.00 lo 11.25 per mo<!lh. ROBtN TONEnE ANDERSON, I mll'IOf', 1ff M,.n111 Av.. Touch-'-celling M•Vlte would be tor JANICE M. HOPPER, htr Motl!tr lllllN llllMI, c~lllonlle '1641 All•ucturtd for ll!dlvldvl l 11,,. l'ld •nd Gu1rd!ln ~ Uttm. Fii ClllO'IQI Till rn•I 67'·767' mulll..Jlne bu1!M11 •lld tesld1nc1 or N1m1. Atl-y I• l!i.cvtrlll wrvltt •nd P!l)I lrunks. Plltlloner ROB IN TONITTE AN· Publllhtd Otll\lll COit! OlllV Pllol, Some klY '"1111.,,,tnl I n t I I 11 e I I o 11 DERION, 1 mlf'IOI", 11111 ll!td t l"ttltlon lfPl•mbll" 2' .,111 OctWtr ,, u, 20, c1wtr911 would bt lrocrHHll. bV htr mo111t1 1nd Gu1rdl1n •d l!ttm, 1914 ' 3'.lt·ll Th• Wide ••ea !ti"'"°"' ...-vie• In-JANICE M. tiOPPER, wllh IM Cler~ tllt11ll011 thlr;e 1>1r l tCllS 11111 would of 11111 Covrt tor 1n ordar t hlr>Qlll\J UB IC NOTICE lncreose from 110.00 to '511,00, IN fll ml of pelllloner llOlllN TONETTE p L Ctrlaln 1t1!Ktll1111ov1 end 111pOlemtn!•I ANOIR.JON to ltOllN TON&TTi HOI"· ~llll'l\lflf h11tetl1l~ cll1r"' Ind c..-. PER. SUPlllOA COURT Of" CALll'OltMIA t1!n ptlv111 llne .uppl1mem11 tQUli>-IT ti HEltEBY OROEREO lhtl 111 COUNTY Of' o•ANGE mtnl l11111ll1tlon cher0t1 would bt ""'°'" 1n11rested In Mid m11ttr 1ppe1r 7'I Civic C•lller Orlvt Wt'I lnc111Md. bt!On fhll COUrt In DtPlflmtnl S. t11111 An1, C1ll~l1 ft1tl The rat11 Pf~ In the •ppllc1llOJ1 CASI NUMaElt 11711• 11 od OI '" • on Nov, u , 1t 14 11 101eo •• 111., 111 SU-ONs 1,. n m1tll! 11 pr uct •• r Oii.ii 1"' tM Or11191 Cou"ty Courthou... loc1ttd ' 111111' 11r-,....._ " lltl.llOO.oot IWvl et 100 (l"fle Ctftlft Or'lva WtJI, l>t~ll P11lnl(lf; HOMf SYSTEMS. IN(. prrstnl ''" tevtls. .t.111, C1lltornt1 tt10T, •nd 11'10w U VM, Ott.ndlnl11 DONALD L. JIWILL 111\d He1rl11111 on lhl •NlllC1110fl wlH M 11 1iw, wl!Y tht Jllell!IM Ill" Clr.tnvt f.llLOlttO A. Jl!"Wf!LL Ml et t IA!tr Gift. Notice DI 1\IUI OI' Htmt Jl'IOU!d not bl t rlfltld. Te lllt Dt#nd1nh1 A clril tellltlllllll 1'1Hrlng1 w111 be publltl\l.d l10I ltu THI CLEllC 11 QADlll!O M mt!t .... btlfl flltd "V 11'11 Dl•lntllt ••1lnt1 1111" 11vt "°' ml)l't !fie" ll!!rly dlYI 1 Cot>V o1 lhll Order 19 (ltlf!IOl!f('t nu. II 'fDV '1111111 10 dlllnd !hit lawt.Ult, "°lor to the lnlll1t Mer1111. f1lhtr, llCHA•D NENIY ANOEltSOH, \ltu MUlf flit Ill llllt Ceurf e wrllten The <llfl!Pln'f'I prlf)OMd r1H• _,Id 1621 ,r,. Avtftlll, Ape•lment A, Betl, P1eldlllll In ••lPOfltt to the <Ofl\fllellll btc:omt tlfl(lfYI 111 v1•I-CllllOl"nl1 "-.C.illftrnll f02Ct1, not' lftl 1ti.n ltn d•V• (or • wrltttn or orlt p!ffdln;, If ~ caunllt• 1nd '"""'lcl~I corP01"1llcrrt, 111< OfW to 111'1 11t1r1Tio. Jut1k• Cwrt) wllhl11 llO 4•Vf eltti' chldl1111 fM CouRIY of OrM>Qe ltf>d th1 IT IS FUl"lliEllt OltD£11EO thllt 1 11111 IVmmOM Is llfWd an vou. Cltv Df Ce.le MeM, !IC"" r.tnt ol' eu- COPY ol 11111 Ordtf 10 l>how Cflll;e onvn.1,., vour dfll!Jft will bt entotred fhor'lly ""'""°' flty 1111 C•ll ornl1 Publlc bt Pllbtlll>ed "' Ille OllANOE toAlT Ol'I IPJllketlon bY' ,,,. pltlntlff end "" Utllltln Clfl'l!fllnlm. DAILY PILOT\ e ft..,.lplll!lf" ot flntrtl <11111'1 '""' lllltr I 11Ht!tmtl'll lfllflll A tWY llf tM ...,.tOllt'l'I ll'IW IM drc:\lll llOfl ,... nltd In Orl110t c-IY VOii !or IM "'°nt'I or ofhtr rttlef IMOtdtd toy 111y lllltf'h"°' "'1"Mlll In 11 11111 ~ tKft --tor IOllr SOC: rtq111iltd tn !fie coml)ltlnt. Ille ot'ilct of tl!t P1clllc T•tPhOnt ti WHkl prior le ffll Nie .. , II 'l'MI wb ll .. Met !flt HYIOI ef Ind Ttllgr11>h COtl'll>lllV II 1~11 H. ~ i::,1111 .,. !ht ,...111on '" etltrlle'f' 111 11111 milter, YMI tllMIWI Mlln It .• 111111 An'" C1llllfftl~• ''" OAtEDi $1111Wm1Mr 2S, it74 .. M ""'"'"y II 111111 "°"r ,.,. ... "lo In flle oHlcet of lht PU4111c lll!IM FllAN~ QOMlNICHINI II lf!Y, irll~ k tllt!I IMI llMI, Comml•1lon ot lf'le 11111 ot ""I .. "'•· Jud!ll ot tilt $UCll<lor Court 011111 A11111n1 U, 1•1• fifth f'-, Sl1t1 Ovtldllll1 Cl\lle C¥1t•, AltTllfUlt M. •ooo WILLIAM IE:, SI JOHN, Cl'1t S•n "'ll'Kltco. CIUIOl"f!IJ, •nd '"'' AllWlll'f "' t.a• t 1 Mff"\en O. Burgm~11. CfflUly lulklll'lt, 107 $ol.llh 1'1111dwl~· l..ol ,. " Sf!lll!Vld• IWtv•"' t•tOllL. CltAIL AND &lll•l l A""I'" ceu1or~r1. Suitt iit 1'1T Wtl lellfl DrJYt, Sloile 20t Dlltcl: SlllltmMr )0, lt 74 lll Alltt!tt. C:tllftfl'!ll "°41 lowwt •••tll, Calllef'NI .,... THE l"ACIFIC lf!L(l'HONE 7Jf·JH1 tr tfl-4111 (7141 ........ ANO llL•GltAPH COM .. ANY .t.tton11y tar l"ttllttfter All1r111y1 for Pl1/ntltl ty 1thur C. Leino, Jr. l"ubt!lhtd Or1nlllr cc .. 1 o,11v 111101, ,.u&&l\f'led OlllWlt ~•st 0111v P!101, Vitt l"rtsldtnl $tflltmtotr tt I nd Oc!Obtf I u. 10. \Iii S.~llmltlt" "· •"" OCIO!lff •• \l, ,,. l"ublltlled O•anow: Cotti Dtllv fl!IOI, ' ' 3'Jf>14 1'14 ,.,..,,,~ ~ .. "11 ,,~ TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 77 Medlcal 152 Radium 20 Choose 103 Mothe'r : suffix symbol 33 Roman Latin 1 Memento 78 Create 154 Swear bronze 105 Winnow ·6 Mistreat::. mentally 156 Born: 35 Defeated 106 Make 12 Disgrace 80 Approaches French 38 Preposition precious 1] <;pn_cet_n 82 Austerity 158 lnstrumanl 40 Carry 107 Abounds, 21 Venerate 84 Creeks 160 Attending 41 Food fis h 108 Thong 22 Yield 86 "The eyes" 161 Not: preHx 43 California 111 Nephric 23 01 Paul VI 68 Scribe 162 Helm fort · 113 Quibble 24 Elliptical 90 Mercilully _____ .oositlon 44 Lay.er 1-1-lnborn ·25 Unimportan1...... 92 ~,.,eat 163 Fumes 46 Irish 119 Lounges 26 Touch : serving 165 Symbol !or seapor1 121 Reveille cOmb. lorm 94 Stable oleum 47 Milk: French 27 "--deum" greeting 166 Chinese 48-Rogu ish. 124 Musical 28 Melal 96 Pickle weight 50 Live coal note admixture flavor i68 Lariat 52 Come back 125 Hindu 29 Fabricated 97 Shielder loo.o 53 Money deity :30 Chemical 102 Antitoxi n 170 Ba seball substitute 127 Harvest suffix 104 Storage team 54 Sultan 's 129 Network 31 Contlnenl : spaces 171 Walchlul order 132 Gypsy man · abbr. 109 Eternal 172 Negligent 56 Scaner 134 More 32 Daub city 174 Donated 58 Danger minule 34 American 110 Asiatic 175 Reach across 60 Yes: 136 Unusual author anlmal 178 Obsolete Spanish 139 Washes 35 Fundamen1a1 112 Ice 1 177 Pamphlets 61 Tribulation lightly 36 And : Latin pinnacle 178 Theimpofo 63 Lowest 141 lndettd 37 Extinct. 114 Small piano tide Hriahl bird 115 Glacial DOWN 65 Long for 143 Ensnare: 39 Respond ridge 67 Stormed archaic 42 Struck 116 Nero's 1 Fiberp\an t 69 Simple 144 Reads heavily ~ "eleven" 2 Decree 71 Man's name briefly 45 Youngster I 118 Strange 3 Actor 73 Wipes 145 Showy 46 "Three-baggern120 Complete Chaney 75 Greek !lower 49 Trap 122 Small sh rub 4 Presser dialect 146 Am phi- 51 Prickly 123 Firm 5 Of pottery 79 Build theater planl reques1 6 Crafts 81 Pigpens 146 Look s 53 Knight's 126 Spanish t itle 7 Radiate 83 Sma ll askance t ttle 126 Al no time 8 Open sore brooks 150 Moral 55 Glowing 130 Arabian 9 Compass 85 Neuter duty embers district point pronoun 152 Out of bed 37 Dutch 131 Wrongdoer 10 Contestanl 87 Fabric 153 Correct /-admiral 133 Yarns 11 Female 89 Heron 155 Perceived 59 Despise 135 Rends . saint 91 Wed 157 Italian 62 Common 137 Reptile 12 Mast secretly fam ily swift 138 Relish 13 Pulls 93 Philosophy 159 The Orient 64 Stylish: 1 1-40 Vicuna 14 Confidence principle 163 Hiatus slang source 15 Chinese 95 Great Lake 164 Armpll 66 Arrowroot 142 Alphabet unit name 97 Goad 1e5 Swedish 68 Withdraw 144 Depot: abbr, 16 English 98 Garden weight 70 Chest 147 Dravidian river flowers 16?. wartime sounds language 17 Stupor 99 Hindu agency 72 Fatigued 149 Kegler'a 18 Stop: mant ra 169 Eggs : Latin 74 Sun hat mark nautical 100 Da llasiles 173 Jus1lce 76 Greek letter 151 Sea gull 19 Wireless 101 Dress up goddess ' l ' I ILi' ' ' • " II " " " " " ~ " " " " \tfil" • ,, " • \;') • • " n n ' • ' » i)\, lt I ; , lZ " • • > ' • ~·~ " • • • " ~ -., .. ,';i' " "· M 1£' ' ?{' ~' " • " w %" II " ' ~· ~~~ • .· • " w " " " ,, " • • ,, • " • " ','f·· t.i " 'I " " " " .'Jttl2 " • ' " " I?; • " ~ 82 " • " ' j " • • l<lili" . " • ~ • • . ~ • '\'.' • ,, .. .'· k< 11919911» "' '~ ,. .. '" ,. ,. "' ,. ,. Ell' "' • '" "' • '" '" { ... Ill _>; Ill '" 113 Ill "' '' " "' "' .. •• 1U -1a " •» "' '" Ill •• "' •• "' -,. ,. ,. "' •q "' . . •• I~ ,. "' ,. "" ,. '" ,. iii 1'" '" •• '"m .. ,. ' I~ ,, .. • ,g ~'" •• , . ~,. "' '" IH "' ,. '" "' Ill .. '" '" ,.. I "' ,,, SEE-CLASSIFIED SECt!ON_FOR ANSWERS .. .. ft.1ost of the world's diamond production -about 30 1nil\ion carats over the last 50 years -is used by induSlry. Only about 31) percent of all diamonds found are of high TRAVEL enough qua1ity to become Because of Its natural pro- gcmstones. perti~. the diamond Is tJ.· When diamoOOs reach the tremely d!fficult to sh.ape. factciries, they are for the Each stone, from !be smallest most part lusterless. opaque to the largest, requires ceyslals with a natural oc-tedious, arduous \\"Ork lo yield tahedral shape. t h e s p e ct rum-shatteriJli The crystals originated as brilliance of a finished g~. lumps of organic carbon com-The rough stone must first ~"Under millions of tons -be"'CUt'"into'lhe general shape of pressure, heat<!d by the of a finished gem._ Depending earth's molten core and thrust on the stone, this ts done tov.·ard the surface by millions either with ~ hair-thin copper of years ol volcanic upheaval. saw blade impregnated "1th NATURE'S production line produces a substance .so hard it can only be cut and shaped by other dlamonds or diamond dust. WEEKS London, Paris, Rome, Madrid The Spree - IT4TW1Wt A tour with value ror seasoned tra11elers and those just starting out. A great introduction to Europe-or one of many happy returns to four fa11orite eltle1. "The Spree''-an unfor&ettable Getaway Adventure. TWA ........ f!tic• 9cWn: •London 3 days, Peri• 3 deys, Rome 4 days, Madrid 3 d•Y'· •Round-tnp economy Olau jet transportation lrom New York. •Room with bltl't In Medium or Firwt C1us hotel. "Budget hotels wilhOul balh exceot 1n Madnd. •Conhnental breakfast every day. •Hall-day sightseeing in each ... .,. •Intercity air trave:J--reserved '°'" •Transportatio n between arrports and hotel1. •Servioea of local Hos1esses. •Tlpa for baggage at altf)Orts Ind he>tel1; gralullles tor hotel pet'!Onl"el. •H1nollng of all tio1e1 and alr1int1 raaervation1. •Portloho ol te>ur doeumenrs. -Getaway Adventure s flight .... OVERLAND TRAVEL 7521630 1151 DOVf5TlHT s.tl•215 HEWPOlTIU1CH ' diamond dust or by thl! time· tested method of c/ea \·ing ~1th a n\allet and chisel. Before either p r o c e !I s begii'f5, the craftsman may spend day1, weeks or evl!t1 monl.hs i;tudying the stone and ita natural cleavage planes. The ah.aped stone is then faceted on a high·speed steel disc coated with a paste of diamond dust. The most oom- mon cut is a l'OWld stone \\1th 58 separate facets -33 above the center line and 25 below to provide !he optimwn brilliance. '!'he ~facet e>perat!on, call- ed a "brllllantinl!" cul, can be perlonned on diamonds as small as the eye of a needle. <>ice Ille ...... has 1-1 fa~, I.he cutters spl!nd. many hoon polishing on the same spinning steel disc. ~IOST of Amsterdam's Cac· tortes are wholesale oullets for je\\'elflrs all over the world. But each mainlains Its O\ITI in.house supply of stones for sale to visitors. Aecording to officials at the H o!shuijsen-Stocltle factory. n1ost of the S10J1es sold are brill iantine cut, blue· y:hlte diamoods thflt are either fla,1·\ess or nearly so. But on request. they will show green. yellow, deep blue and e\'en pinkish diamonds rot in a "'·ide variety of sha pes for a '.lide 11ariety of prices. Gener ally speaking the pril"l's of factory diamonds are Quite good. A Quarter~arat brilliantine with on I y In- finitesimal flaw, for example, can be had for about $60-$75 . wunount.ed. Expo Plans Big FinisJ1 SPOKAi\1l:. ,\.ash. (AP} - Expo ·74 officials say !hey are plaMlng a big party for !he five mJlllooth paid o,•;orld's fair vl:-Hor. \\i lh about five \\('('ks to J:O bC'fon-Its sched· ulf"d clu<.:ing NO\" .. l, offldel<; :-.1v the "·nrld 's fair has met iiS onJfinal proj('ctcd nttend- anre total or 4 a;, millloo vlsi· · !Or~ SePtcmber's p~1d ;iltanJ- an(.'t' <J\('ra1u'<I :ibou1 2.0,400 per~n!l :i d:i~·-orruials say lhe~ rK"('(i abool 16,iOIJ a day to breAk even. TRAVEL NEW 'TU.Yll ACJlMCY HiWPOIT llACH AllA I 1"1 hflW PW' tr .... I OWlolOI ult' --·...ct......., ......... f"> lft\lt Ill f!MJ 1 •• i ... ...,. Otiity Piktt lo• "271 Cotto M.tt, C•llf. •01.zo .. ) BIO OAl\VPILOT f \ BARI<ER BRO • I anniversary • STARTS TODAY! SHOP SUNDAY, 11 to 5, MONDAY 10 to 9 pm DISCOVER BARKER BROS. . . . . • . . . . . the most exciting furniture sale •.• an adventure in Jiving with line furniture DISCOVER BIG SAVINGS ! DISCOVER EXCITING IDEAS ! DISCOVER POPULAR STYLES! DISCOVER GREAT NAMES! ........ 10 % to 30 % off during our gigantic 94th Anniversary Sale I ... Beautifully refurbished stores, filled wiih fabulous model rooms, vignettes and decorative settings! They'll inspire you to create a smart, warm setting c!I your own! . Countr}o French, Italian, Spanish and English. Mediterranea11. Court French, Italian and English. Oriental. Contemporary. Modern. American Traditional. And morel .•• Henredon. Heritage •. Drexel. Flair. Thomasville. Selig. Marge Carson. Century. Hibriten. White. Baker. Davis. Sherrill. Karastan. Sealy. Simmons. Magnavox. Woodard. Philco. And many, many more! DISCOVER HUGE SELECTION! ....... Sofas. Chairs. Sofa sleepers. Rec liners. Bedroom and dining sets. Tables. lamps. Pictures.-Mirrors.-Giltsr Draperies.-Garpetlng. Beddino;--- CasuaJ Furniture. Outdoor Furniture. DISCOVER IMPORTANT SERVICES I ••.• Friendly, knowledgeable salespeople to help you I One of the bast decorating staffs in town will assist you in choosing a few pieces, or planning a home! All at no cost! Receive a complimentary copy of our own colorful $2 decorating guide. Delivery and set up at no charge! $469, reg. $629 .•. S·pc. bedroom in celery finish. Set -=~ includes 68 " dresser, mirror, two night stands and king l-size headboard. (Or pair of twi n headboards and one night ~~~ stand.) Arm oire to match is also available. Reg. $309 $229 '\ I $269, reg. $389 •.. Huntington House tuxedo style standard size sofa sleeper with arm pillows. In quilted floral polished cotton. Choose melon, sapphire or spring green. $5991, reg. S699 •.. 2 styles ol sol as ~­ by tiickory House. 90" with spring/ doWn seats and Traditional styling. Loose pillow back. Many fabrics to choose from. Matching loveseat at $499 •• ' $99, reg.119.95 ... French Provincial tables gracefully carved and lustrously finished! Choose the styles you need at this one remarkable low price! i, ,,, .: ,.. ~ ... ..l.;,jj.,i., $169, reg. $199 ... Choice of B stylings in Hickory House lounge chairs: 2 man- sized , 3 ladies' lounge, swivel, swivel rocker, Queen Anne wing lounge. Many colors to choose. Shop Monday. Thursday, Frl 'day till 9 P.M.-Sunday 11 A.M. !ill 5 P.M. Hllft!l1!9tOt1 ltach-lo !ht Hultli1!9tOt1 Ctnltr, IHCh ll•d. et Edni.-r-192·4405 Santa Ana-2522 North Ma in St.-547-7651 $399, reg. $449 ... Choice of three styles of Hickory House sofas In pillow back tuxedo, attached pillow back or tufted back tuxedo. lots of colors and styles here I ' I 1 ' II I d • w to RI ii ii co I m • In • N Co w u. ,,. far Si:> ha lea Iii l " te ol da ..,, 4• be In . Gu i1 t> st " p, ,, .SumlJ.y Oclobt'r 0. }q74 DAI L V PILOT C J Sutton's Pep-Talk Helps LA Past Pirates, 3-0 . PITfSBURGH (AP ) -Cool hand Don Sutton ol the Lot Allge.les Dodgera gave his teammates a pep talk before the nilltb inning of hls four-hit S.O shutout over the Pittsburgh Pirates Saturday in the first Of the_ be$t-of-five game National League playoff. ·' "1 love the confidence you guys have in me, but you'll get me 11>me more runs," he told outfielder Bill Buckner as the Dodgers 81.arted the ninth lnning cillnging to a J.-0 lead. ' The Dodgers obliged by picking up two more runs off Pirates' relief ace Quick Shots Around The Beat ' Checking the outposts: When baseball gets around to narTUng managers of the year, Billy l\lartin of the Tex.as Ran gers would surely merit prime consideration in the American League. unless you take into COO· slde ration that he slapped the face of the team's 6(}.year-old ma1e traveling secretary during a fl ight following a double header loss to Chicago. Jerry . West bas done what all super athletes sbouJd be able to do-retire .,.hi.le th ey are still on or near the top, oot wait antll they are over-tb&-hlll, \'ainly slruggling to get one more hit. score one more toucbde~; ''t one more basket: or wt. ene more fight. Top women's pl~ying in pro tennis stars will be championships at the ' ' . . . ~ WHITE WASH. Dave Guisti and It made Sutton's job easier. 'Jbe 185-pound right-hander. a It-game winner who won his last nine decisions during the rtgular seuon, said he was dog-tired al !be end. ..lf it would have been any closer. J couldn 't have walked out in the ninth,'' _ said the weary pitcher. "1 was just tuckered out." Ironically, the gam,e between baseball's two strongest hitting teams was decided on a bases.loaded walk by losing pitcher Jerry Reuss in the second inning. > ' •. The &!stem Dl\tl&lon champion Pirates never ca ught up, tbelr big bat.s mu!Hed by Sutton, who collected the tblrd shutout On TV Toda11 Channel 11 a e-10 in the sit·year bistor.x,. of the National League playoffs. The fastball-throwing Reuss w a s understandably upset about the bases. loaded walk to little Dave Lopes tluH fo rced in the Dodgers' rirst run. Lopes was the second straight ,walll "• \;; r· . ,\ "''°' ')" I \ .. 1 " "!:. •• . , ... • is.~ in the inning by Reuss. •Te lost the \\'tak·hlttlng Sutton on rour straight pitches outside the slrike> zone>. '"I thlnk two or them were strikes," Reuss said. "But v>'helher you miss by un inch or a f09(, Jt's still a lm\1." Reuss uld of the wL'lk to Lopes. . "I was overthrowlng. 1 On the fourth tHill; I just didn't want to lay it in ~'here he could hit It. I didn't see uny ~ in just putting it down the n1 iddle." Lopes said of his ball four, ''It \\'asn't · even· close, it wr at eye level, I d!dn'.t • l+A Sports Arena Oct. 14-19. JnchKied will tie Billie Jean King, Chris Evert and THE DODGERS' DON SUTTON FIRED A FOUR·HITTER IN BEATING PITT~BURGH SATURDAY. Evonne Goolagong. ' · Frank Fuhrer ......... owner o(Jl&!'>~h~--,,;::--'w;.-.v-:-.,.-.---~ --entry in Wor d Team'.Tu-.ti:ls, lOld thi!I 3 ci>lumn that Goolagong could be the best v;omen's tennis player in the world if she had more self-confidence and il shit wanted lo be No. t. ,. ' • ' ' -.Home~" : s1·nk '."' .From what I saw of GOo1agong In ~I. ~ k competition at LA recentlf ii•r~:LaiNP 'in"!.:. ~' (. -1 ~.:i ~ , ' 1 i.: ~1 i~ , the U.S. championship fina ls, l<'uhrer has correctly evaluated.hls'Uaip'(Young ' OakJdlld' 6-3 starlet. o ... , ........ ,., .• ,,1 . i ' . ' ~ ' ' ., ·~· ~ t : ' ,Tiie U.S. figure skating ch8mj,ionship1 are slated for Oakland Coliseum Jan. ~AK.LAND (A~) .. Th_e .~altimore 21-Feb. I next year. Top Ice skaters Orioles knew Jim Cat~1sh Hunter la America wUI be eompeUng. woold dare them to hit -and they res- ponded with three home runs and ·a 6.J rA mixed bowling league in Folsom victory. over the Oakland A's pitching features 48 players, nine of whom are star in the American League playoff named Johnson. -~ .. ..r • •.• · : "' opener. . A reCtri~,.,;.&· in·! the-'Saa Diego "I was O-for-8 against him in last marlin fi~rig M y WJ~•· etth.~wman, .year's playoffs, I feel like f got a owner ot the BL Pa r. (e~tj' ara~t little revenge," said Bobby Grich, who in Newport Beae~. . delivered the most crushing blow of • 1 ... \. • , • • ~·e game with a two-run homer in .People 1d~cu!>ipg . the 1clartt-ai/es in 1be fifth inning. the Newport-O>Sti : ltf~ 'aie'aSi imight '''l)e ·~· git so,n1e pit.ches up !Wgh v:ell be referfin_g '10 ilht liC"ht~g at , , Newl'Ort Harbor,ijig~·ahd ·~;€mist On TV Toda11 College footballfadiufllS. A .. co !miner C: · ...., 4 1 would feel right ~ in <,it , :plac.. , llanll~• · . ~( Entbu~astic 1 lb ·~ al~d~d the and \11.·e -didn't score tnough runs," said U.S. World Gardes wO~tjJ!J;.~astit.'5 Oakland's s31 83.l)do. "\\'e can't afiord team t,Yoqit~at l\)iiilie19',..recentlf'r re to lose SUnday." · datmlnr the µ.&. tlthtett:s affl 'l..cktsln g Paul Blair and Brooks RobinsOn hit ground on their blgM.y regarded· R~&11 homerS with the bases . ejnptf, Blair oounterplerts. I • ·· • · .. L '· ~; m ithe fi~ inhipg a~ R.Obllison leading Looking at our ~ ScorfrS, wjiO ranged ~off the-fift h. ~th dttves al~ !Cl'll~ from 9.3 to 9.6 Jn J.Udge:S'"views; ~!l@t's a ~ left:P:eld foal pole~ but Gnch s blast far cry frit;m •t~ 9.7§.:9.9 .scores •the . ~S ,a 3;5(1-footer. Whl~h df9ye ~Unter Sovie~ chalk uP. ·, . · c • · o~t.-.o~ th~ _game arid put 11a1111no r.e . Furtber df monstrati ng why San ·Diego . ~acf, ,61· .:· . has the worst record In the major -·"':~·H~ •. gq.t __ ,a. s~er up-8Jld over t~~. leagues, Padres pinch hitters bad a ·_pl~te, ~ G'(~.' who also doubled 6igher seasonal batUng. average ( 231 ) m1 the f~ .Inning and scored the tban the regular club lineup (.230). · go-ahead nm. -maybe' ·c~t'"dldn't ha\•e ; .... his" umar pinpoint control or as good Asked H b• ogreed lllat THE GAME a fastball as ·usual." .~ ot the seasoa· for LA this year was TOmmf"Da~· who "smgted home Grich· the one Sept. 15 when Jimmy Wynn 's to break a· J.i tie in tht 't-ourth sa id crud slam llomer led the Dodger• to Z.game-winner Huiiter .. isnl over-Power· a come-frem·behind win .O)'er Clncy, ing ... he gives you solnething to hit. Dod.1er1 pablidsl Fred Clatre replies: and jf you don 't hit it, you·re in trouble.'' ·~& waa the big game, no doubt. The A's •. by losin g the o"pener, are H we ~~· we featl ,h); ·1 hall game, a team in · trout>le in their quest for ff •·e . Wlli. w~'re ~~. ~.~ad of ~cy. a third straight wo rld's championship. The big pitcll of tbe1 c•~e. ~asq, t lbe '·'.>.sty day now we're going to break itpber baJI to Wyn~i·I!.~~ wbdl,Don Joos~,and score run~·~\Ve'rc overdue." Sutton struck oat:'. To~~,.. ~· wllb Oak1and' manage r Alvin D{lrk said, Mte bases I01dedl and ~~· eur:.itn lbe ~atulg' a statement he's made dozens IUtll and ctncy ahead, 1~. " of tithe! "over the last month. Baltimore manager Earl Weaver said: "NI it ,fll.e'!DS js wc.,h~vc.to win l.'t'O now and they have to win three.'' ·r----v ·~, .,,,---.,,----White· Sparkles $l1fggish B11uins Roll ' ' To2·7 ... 14 Win Over Utah SALT LAKE CITY (AP) -l<>ng runs by Russel Olarles and Wendell Tyler set up first-half points for sluggish UC LA. keying a 27·14 college football victory ~ver ~winless Utah Sat~a,Y."' Until the fourth period, the heavily favored Cali!orl;lians were h<U'd pressed to \\'in their second straight after a loss and a tie. Utah controlled the bait for much or the first tll'O periods. outrashing the biggef. stronger visitors and played tough defense. But Uta h Jacked a scoring punch and its defense ·spent considerable time on the fi eld. After a scoreless opening quarter, Ch&rles raced 42 Y,ards around right end tj) start UCLA. on .:! 74-ya rd touhhdown drive, capped by C.arl liaby's 10-yif~ npi. Later in the period. Tyler sprfrited 4.1 yards around ihe left side, setting UP' .. a. 32-rard field goal by Brett White, a fonnet Hunti ngton Beach High " . and qoJden West College standout. Charles Scored from• seven yards out on a right-end sweep in the third period, raising the Count to 17--0 before 1Jtah finally !lroted oo a freak play. ~velt Hutchins picked a fumbled sco11i l Y QUA11Tlil:S UCLA ti 10 1 Ul11ll II O 1 • UCL..,._Z.br 10 ru" !White kltlO UCLA-FG Wllil1 :J-2 UCLA -Ch1rle1 7 rul'I fWl!lte kick) Utth -Hulchll'l1 ~ "''" wllll r.COV.,.«I (l!lrown klck l UCLA -FG White '1 UCLA -Z11br • "''" (WMlt kick} Ul1h -H11tcllln1 ti run !Brown Ide~) Flr1t dow111 RUil>fl·V•r<l1 P•ulnci v1rd5 Relurn v1rd1 P1ue1 PUn!I Fumble.i·IOit f'•o•lll••·v•f0i- STATISTICS '"-" 7-14 lum11l1 pass out of the ai r and ran 27 yards to complete a ~yard sooring play. Late in the final period, Hutch.ins. scored Utah's other toochdo.wn on a (ii-yard ·run., \Vhlte's 41-y;nti field goal and Zaby·s eight·Yahi touchdown sweep around left end in the fourth period put the game out of reacfl before Hutchi ns made his long dash. \Yhile also booted three PATs. UCLA used a grind·it-0ut approach and the game was a far cry from the 6&-16 route the Bruins scored over Utah a year ago. 'f9p Collegiate Football Scores USC 41. Iowa 3 UCLA 27, U!ah 14 Ohio State 42, Washington St. 7 r..lichigan 27, Stanford 16 Oklahoma 63. \\'ake Forest 0 Kansas 28. Texas A&f\1 10 California 31, Illinois-14 Northwestern 14, Oregon 10 SM U 37. Oregon State 30 Nebraska 54, f\1 innesota O \\'isconsin 59, f\·lissouri 20 Notre Dame J9, ~fichigan 14 Colorado 28. Air Force 27 Alaba1na 35, f\1 is.sissippi 21 F'lorid8 24, LSU 14 North Carolina 45. Pittsburgh 29 Duke 16, Pui-due 14 Penn State 21 , Anny 14 Texas Tech 14. Oklahoma St. 13 Texas 35, \\lashington 21 Arkansas 49, TCU O !See Details. Page C'll \\·ant a \\'alk. I'd rather hit \\ilh the bases loaded." In the ninth Suiton singled lnto center field and was fciret...td out by Lopes. Lopes stole second bcCore Bill Buckner popped out. Jini \\'ynn . who hit 32 home runs this season , ripPt-'<i a ground-rule double tu right . i;coring Lo1>es. F('rguson bounced a slnglti through the rn lddtc. · ehasing horne Wynn and making it 3·0. The Pirates. who ...,.on the NL E.:ast ·by I \1: games over the St. Louis (See DODGERS, Page C!l Explosive USC Belts Iowa, 41-3 8\' GLENN \\'HITJ<:: 01 the O.llr l'iltl llUI LOS ANGELES Opportunistic Southcn1 Cal exploited its explosiveness to overcome an early 3-0' deficit and bury luckless Iowa, 41·3, Saturday af· ternoon in an inlersectional football bat· tie before 52,095 at the Coliseum. IO\\'a controlled the ball but the Tro- jans controlled the scoreboard. They got two touchdo\\TIS on runs of 83 and 98 ya rds by Cha rles Phillips as he scooped a fumble out of the air for each of those long plays. turning back Iowa sroring bids and at the same time further increasing SC's advantage on the scoreboa rd. And Anthony Davis. seldom used and totally contained during plays from ·scrimmage. put USC aheact for gQOd "'ith an 80-yard kickoff return to become the highest scorer in Trojans history Y:ith 222 points. And it also gave him another school career mark -37 touchdowns. lo...,·a had struck quickly, recovering a fu rnble on the opening kickoff and moving to the 8 before settling for a 2&.yard field goal \Vilh 9:37 to go in th"e first quarter. However. Davis retun1ed the ensuing kickoff for !he TD as a key block by Ken Randle at the 12 cleared the final th reat for Davis. The rout was on. l11cide11t s Recalled F:ditor's l\'nle: Tl1e 1node rn tra sp(!Tf."1 uisui is proviclmo t nr ert11i11 n1ent , q110/itu and oc· cosionnlly controrers/1 011 a :ic1.1/e 11et't'r before a!l<Jh1td iu the 1torld of 01J1/,.1ics. "\'tt .!porls of day.~ uo11l' by a/$0 l111d !Jreut n101nf'!1ts and ."l!Or pl'r/orfneri;. Today 011r /nok at lhPsf! du!J'I" focuses 011 Jornier Nor1011al League umpire Beans Rea rdo11. 9,, HOWARD L. llAN"O'' '01 I~• 0•111 1'11•1 Sl•U .John E. "Beans" Reardon is a \'eteran of fi\1e \\1orld Series as an at1ive umpire. llis career in lhe National League V.'as marked by nun1erous incidents that \\Wld take a book to nu. But the retired umpire and more recently beer baron of Soul.hem California ror a St. Louis company, can still .recall the happenings of others Series, along with keeping pace ll'ith the current playoffs and upcoming \Vorld Series. In modem dav \Vorld Series play. there are six ~lnpires \\'Of"king all games lli th the extra arbiters dowo the foul line checking oo fair or fool rut balls. \\'hen did th.is innovation come into being? It was in the HH6 Series that Going Back IN SPORTS two extra um ps ...,·ere assigned to the games but they had no part in the action . Beans. a veteran r-; a l i o n a I League umpire \\'ho called them ~-~,---~· as... he~saw_tbem in_fLv Vorl -·mr.;;w;;;enl 48 yar s iilSix plays the Series. \\'35 one of the extra um· next time it got the ball as Pat Haden pires in l!H6. scampered the final 11 after earlier '"Charlie f\foran of the National running for 17 and passing to John League was \l,'Ork::ing at second base ll.IcKay [or Ill. in a Series game prior to 1949 · ·That made it 14·3 and set 1he stage and \\'as hit by a hatted ball," for the possible turning point. 10 .,..,a. Beardon re<>all s. \\"hich moved the ball consistently, had ··He ...,·as in pain but he wouldn't n1oved· inside the Trojans 20 \\tlc.n le.a;•e the Jif'ld," Beans says. Phillips picked off the flying fum ble ''As a National League umpire , and sprinted 83 )'ards fo r the tally. i! he left the ,lleld, an American He repeated !he scene, only adding 15 .~ague !it~ \\'Ould also have yards to lhe disla nce, with 1:48 to gc> to leave. · is to keep the proper in the third per iod. ~11ance . -j.He ga me \'o'OUld be played witft .tv.'O' umpires." lo\\·a at one point had riln off 4'1 That was :wpen the commissioner plays from scrimmage to 13 for use. decided to put two extra men oot yet the Hall'keycs lagged 2l·3 at that the re, sitting ·along the foul lines juncture. They held USC to· mi nus five le take over ~n case of injur)'. yards in the third quarter )'ej Phi ll ips' "The next year !1947 1 he .,..cnt· long run put the1n another seven points a step farther." Rea rdon adds. behind. "Thev \\'ere included in the um· Six times Iowa \\•as inside the USC piring Cre"• and \\'Orkt!d dO\\'TI tbc 30 and four limes it penelrated the foul lines. then alternating ~ilh SC 20. 'i'et fumbles (fourl and a tough the other four umpires. defense continually lh\\·arted the in· ··No"'• if an umpire 1s hurt and vaders. unable l<l continue. they can eliminate the foul line umpires and As L:SC assistant coach Ray Geo rge, go ll'ith four as they do in the a Corona del f\1ar resident, told the regular season." Daily Pilot , ··1ast week we had the In 1939. Reardon \\'as behind the ball all the lime and couldn't score. plate u.s umpire "·hen ... l\tonte Now we hardly have it at all ·and Pearson \\'as pitching a shutout look at this. Iowa isn't that bad of and a no-hitte r for th·c "Yanke<!s. a tea m." Pearson had gonl' throu gh seven USC put l.Og('ther tll'O imposing scoring drives. one of 74 yards in the S('('Ond quarter and one of 80 in the closing minutes with reserves hand ling duties. Davis, the SC \\·orkhors(' normally, ca rried five tin1es for a net of five yards. In all. Iowa ran ofr 90 plays to 43 for the "'inners. And use was frustrated by 109 yards in penalties, eight of !hose being major infractions. First <IC•"" Ru111e .. v1•d1 Paulno v1rt11 Return Vll•di PISSf J 1>unt1 FuMb1!1·1~1t P•~•lll•1·v1•dl SCOlt E IT QUAltTEltS STATISTICS " H ~f9 "' ' 11~1 "' .. '" complete inr•ngs and was on his \\'av to the i!':·st no·hitt cr in \\lortd SeTies hi story. But in the eigh1h inning. Ernie Lomba rdi. the Cincin11at1 llecls catt her. drilled a single to the outfield \Vilh one out. Thls ruinl'd Pearson's hid for a no-hiller in the \\'orld Scritis. He later gave up a ninth inning single .,...ilh t\\"O a\\":JY to complete 'i 4-0. l\\"O-hit shutout. !Next llceck. Reardon tells of a player being bann(od fron1 a Series game by baseball cotnmissioncr Kenesall· r..tounlain L.:ind1s ofler he had taken the field late in the ~ame.I i\lon;i;on ]{e ai ns Title. BUE~OS AIRES -ArRenuna·s Cnrlos ~lonzon knocked out 1\u~1 ra!!a·s Tony J\!undin(' in the S(•ven!h round Ssiturday {Ind retained his \Vo rld Boxing Associil· !Lon n11ddle...,·e1gh1 Htlt> . +4:NTE;l'l'EftS~·F:ALL IN PQ.LQ _, ~'-l~fi4S "STANFoR}J:..o c i,.;inl,:,r•water polo team battk!a · Ui wa y '-lhto .. 11te-finals of the N~~ ~I tourney1 here, Satur· - day only 10 lose to ·1oug6 UC Berkeley, 6"), l allimore •brflbl c.,or;,,., rt r llalr, ~' ' Gri(tl. 20 T01W!lo •dll JPQ'Wltll, 10 111r1or. 11 8RObllfltft, )It HtondrlclQ, e 8•1•""11111'· ... Cwl11r, p GflmMer, p • 0 0 '~ • ' t ' f t 1 I • 0 1 1 • 0 0 • «n•luMI lb r 11 ~I Nortll.tf JJJO C1m°"'l~ '' • O l I RJ1cl1M111. rt 4 O I f &alldo. :Ill • 0 ! 0 RIJCll.11 •000 Bains -Try to Rebound Agai11st Lio11s Coach FA Newland's Anteaters had 4omped Stanford, M , to gain the finals bertll.,Xl>e.Jw..to ll•hri11.JICl'1"1!W'k to 'w. Cal Is now 14-4. • Freshman Gary •Ftgueroa and goalie Guy Anlley •ere praised by Ne"·land. F\gueroa lvld tight goals In the five mumamenl games whlle Antley was a ste·ady perfOrmer. ~ UCLrelW'U lo action Wednesday night " New~i;t Horl!or High, ho6llng Cal p,!f1l>Om6hal "lt ~. • .. • D 2 o I I t I • ' 1 • ~ 0 0 0 e o o o •••• l•n~<•• lb J 0 0 0 Manti/II, dll 4 0 1 ·i> FotM.< 1010 JAlou, Pl! I 0 1 0 lrlllo,pr 0101 OGrNn, 10 I 0 0 0 ~pft 1010 Hvnlet, P I o o o Ooom.p 0000 --r. Plnvtrt,p 0000 l otll )5 ' 10 6 Toi.ti S4 ) t J laltl~ 100 no ooo-t Oeltlll'ld DOI 1110 001-) Pf' -Olt.lfnd 1. LOI -81t11rnor1 J, Oekl1nc1 t. 18 -Grkl'I. Jfortll, CWhntvri. kll -111•1• Cl!. a. RDlllt'!10tl (1), C"HltJI f11, Sl!t -Horttl, C1m11oeiwi%. ' s -et1tnQ«. $1' -ea ... ,_.,...11. .i,. l"H~lll l1$0 ('l'fl!.r fW, I.OJ t~ t ) J 4 4 Grll'lnll't' I I 0 0 o 8 HQl!tr IL, Oo-1J .411 t I 4 O ) .,. ~ I'~ I 0 0 0 1 "'"""· 110001 " P8 -Foat. T -nJ. A -. U,fOf • • LOS ANGELES (AP \ -Coach Ghuck Knox of the Los Ang~es Rams greeL,. his former team. the Detroit Lions. today at Ille Coliseum and he and his club are favored to hand them a fourth straight loss, lt's on radio (K1'1PC.. 710) at I o'clock. In the finale of 1hc 1972 sea!!On, Detroit invaded the Coliseum and whif)f>td the Raras 34-17, lltf last Jou su!ltl'ed by Los An~lcs at il.9 home arena In a regular sea~n gamt. - Knox wtts an 11sslstant with Detroit fn 197Z but a few moo1hs Isler R.an1s owner Carroll Rosenbloom hll"ed hin1 to rtp\ace the fired Tommy Prothro Today 's game marki Uie first nle<>ling between the Wons and the Rams sinCt! Knox look over the head .coaching job. With a 2·1 record thli; rl"'gular S('ason oveN1JI, the Rams have been 8-0 at the Coliseum sl nce Knox artlvtd on the scene. A cro"·d or 65.000 Is expected and Knox plans no changes tn his -i.1ar11ng .tiUgnml:!nt despi te 11't-1'~1-4 u1~1 at t~e hands of Ne"' F.:n~ln~ a v.·ec.k ar:o. John Hadl OJlt'llS at qu:lrtcrb11ck nnd with l.!192 pass cornpletion~ dui·ing hls career. he needs just eii;:ht n1ort to bcco1ne the eighth man in Natronnl Poot· ball League history lo complete 2.000. Jim Bcrtels<'n r+nd La \\'re n c r ~fCC111"eon go as his ninning backs with J::iek Snow 11nd Harold Jackson as the wide recel\·t•rs .. f\noio: poinl" out the pcrsonllf'I or the Lions on offcnS4.! l!I the !'>1tn1 th.it played in that 1972 fln:1le ;ind he f('(']S the f)(>lrolt dcren;e has lnipro\·ed Bill i\luuson. an e).·Hatn. it C.\J>\.'Cl.Cd lo !illl rt at q11nrti'rh11 ck hul Grrg l.11n 1lr~. thr i;tarlt'r llf'forc be.Ina injur('d in Ilic finttl prt.·!~ason Jt!lmc, n1l1:h1 s~c act ion for lhe first li nlt :-Lt'K'C breakins;: his ro11arbonr Altit> r a,lor and St<''t' Ol\Cll!I start :;it the ruruling b:ick pos1tloot for Detroit but noe changt' iii E"Xl)t.-cled la see Bob Pickard at one ll·ide rectl\l"r spot. Ray Jarvis, \\·ho had ~n s1art1n~. mi55ed last Wtek's game because or Injured n hs. . Knox has \\"Or'-cd hi s backs hard on 11\'0ldlng fumblt~ durl'hg prticllre this \1eck"-The~ Just three. a£:t1n.~1 the f':itr1ots :lnd lh(' Cfl:teh declares. ''No h>lllll th;1t has SIX turllfJ\ l!fS coin CXPL'<!t to ...,.ln."! · C .2 DAIL V PI LOT Sul'lday, Octobtr 6, 1974 Cal Belts Illini, 31-14; Michigan Rallies, 27-16 C II A M PA I G N , Ill. (AP) Quartcrbuck S1c1•e llartko.,..•ski passed for t.,..-o to11chdo\•:ns to spilt end Ste\!e Juvera. leading CaUfon1ia to a 31·14 <.'OUt .. ge rootba ll U?';let or previously undefeated Ullnol:t Saturd<i }'. 1'hc Illini, v.'iJulC'rs of 1hree straight and ranked J~til [n 11ie Associated Press poll, took an early 7~ load but then ~'tre riddled by UaMkowski's passing, which ignited four long Bear touchdo .... 11 drives. Bartkowski. completing I ~ of 19 passes for 244 yards, fired scoring passes of 30 and 19 yards to lhe speedy Rivera and set up louchdo"'ll runs or 35 yards by Ho)Vard Strickland and 25 by Chuck J\tuncie. It "''as C.alifornia's third straight vfc· tory after . an opening 21·17 Joss to Florida. On the first play of the second quarter the Illini took a 7--0 lead on Jirn Phillips' IO-yard touchdov.'Jl nm cap- ping a 55-yard, five-play drive. But California struck 70 yards in five plays to tie the srore at 7·7 on Strickland's 35-yard run and moved ahead m Rivera's l~yard grab right after he speared a 43--yard toos from Bartko"·skl, Ron Vandenneer's 54-yard field goal triggered a 17-point Californla third ciua.rter v.ttich broke the game open . Bartkowski shattered the Illini defense \1·ith hi!'i 30-ya rd touchdov.'Tl pass to Ri\'cra and tosses or 18 and IS ya rds v:hich set up J\tuncie's 12-ynrd {()uchdov.'Jl run. <.~ f'.ra11kl111. Sparkle• STANFORD -Qu..1rlerback Dennis Franklin ran for lwo touchdowns within a minute to bring the fo~ranked. unbeaten J\lichigan \Volverines a 27-16 triumph over Stanford Saturday. Stanford's defense and the passing or sophomore Jerry Waldvogel -making his first start at quarterback -staked Stanford to a 6-0 lead in the first quarter and a H halftime edge. Stanford's fl.like Langford booted a 52-yard field goal after just 4:19 of play and added two more later from the '42. 1t1ichigan st.onncd back alter the in~ ltlidwest Rou1td1cp l{ansas Upsets Ag~es; Spartru1s Scare lrisl1 LAWRENCE, Kan. (AP) -Sophomore don Thomas as the fourth leading rusher Scott ri.fcri.flchael tossed a 61-yard in Sooners hlstory. touc¥ou'TI bomb and later unloaded a rune.yard scoring pitch that lifted Kansa s Washington gained a11 his yardage l.n to a 28-10 victory over Texas A&?\f the first ha1f. The Sooners put in the Saturday and shattered the fiftft..ranked thtrd.-string backfield after the half. Aggies' dreams of an unbea ten season. B k E 1 d · The big homb, coming in the dying 111 ers xp 0 e seconds of the third quarter, was grab-LINCOLN, Neb. -With quarterbrick bed by Emmett Edwards who was all Dave Hwnm at the throttle and in alone at the Aggies 30. The fleet flanker full health, fifth-ranked Nebraska took then raced in for the score. command from the opening kickoff ~1cMichael hit Robert J\t.iller with the nJne.yarder mldwriy through the fourth Saturday and breezed to a 54-0 victory period, killing whatever hopes the Aggies over the Minnesota Gophers. had of salvaging the intersectional foot· The Comhuskers took a 6-0 lead in ball battle. Laverne Smith raced 53 the first period after marching 35 yards yards with 26 seeonds remaining for in 16 plays with the opening kickoff. the third Kansas toudldown in the second -ball. ---Badger• Bree::e The Jaybawb rolled 72 yards on seven llADISON, Wis. -Wisconsin scored plays the tint time they bad the bell. nine of the first 10 times It got the Miller romped seven yards for the ball, starting out \\i th an Bl y~ run toud1down that put Kansas ahead, 7.(1, by flashy Billy Marek oo the fi rst play .. of the game. and stunned 16th-ranked Irish Tr111mph Mi=<ui, S!>-20, Satunlay. EAST LANSING, ?\1ich. -Wayne ·ltfarek, an all Big Ten halfback, scored Bullock rushed for two short touchdowns three times even though he played onl y Md Dave Reeve notched a pair of half the game. Larry Canada and Mike field goals Saturday, givin~ seventh-hi organ both scom:I twice as the Badgers ranked Notre Dame a 19-14 vit'tory over ran up its biggest score in years in stubborn. Michigan state in a non<en-winning its third game in four tries. rerence college football game. Tbe powerful Irish, coming orr an upset by Purdue, capitalized on two Michigan State fumbles for their touchdowns and a 14-yard Spartan punt (or the first field goal. But Notre Dame was Wlable to establish a consistent attack. against the grudging, young Spartan defense. ~lichigan St.ate, dov.11 1&-0 at the tialf, rebounded with a 99-yard scoring drive tD the third quarter. The Spartans marched 76 yards in the last period to close the gap. ' Tom Clements. the vaunted Irish quarterback, shunned the pass after throwing nearly 25 ti.mes a game in Notre Dame's first three contests. Oklaho1na Romps NOR..\1.AN, Okla . -llalfback Joe Washing1on put on a danling display of open field running and quarterback Steve Davis hurled two touchdown passe9, helping second ranked Oklahoma crusti· a young Wak e Forest team, 63-0. in an intersertional !ootbatl game Satur- day. \\fashin gton slashed for 145 yards in 10 carries and scored on a 65-yard scamper, leadln~ the tmdcteated Sooners to their third straight victory. That mov- ed Washington, a junior. ahead o{ Clen- Hoosiers Po1111ded BLOOMINGTON. Tnd. -Jun Io r quarterback Chuck Fiorante came off !he bench to spark a 21-polnt second quarter spurt Saturday as West Virginia pounded Indiana, 24--0, in an in- lersectiona1 college football game. The loss was the 11th in a row for Indiana and its fourth of tbe year. The ~g o! losses ties the school rerord, set by Hoosier teams in l!HB-49. JAPANESE WIN VOLLEYBALL TILT A turnaway crowd of 2,100 fans wit· nessed an exhibitioo volleyball match in UC Irvine's Crawford liall Saturday night with the Japanese Olympic cham- pionship team defeated the United States NaUonal squad. 9-15. 15-13. 15~, 15-12. Miles Pabst and Dan Patterson. cap- tain of the U.S. squad, v.·ere given special praise for the closeness of the com- petition between the U.S. team that will participate in the \\'orld Games in J\lexico City later this month and the 1972 ~1unich Olympic Games cham· pions from Japan . ... tennis.o;ion to drive 94 yards for a tc0re. Sophomore Rob Lytle, who didn't carry Iii the first half, rushed .seven times for 38 yards. A 16-yard gain on a pitchout to Lytle moved the \Yolverines into Stanford's 21 and Franklin ran a keeper over the right side fron1 the 12 for f\.lichigan's go-ahead score. • Seconds later Michigan's Lariy Banks recovered a fwnble by Scott Lald1aw on Stanford's nipe. Gil Cbapman rushed for five and Franklin again went into the end wne standing up, this time tor four yards over the left side. Bl(_ckeyes Ronap SEA'M'LE -Ohio State's Buckeyes, behind the running of Archie Griffin. rolled th an easy 42-7 lntersectlonal foot.. ball victory over Washington State, here, Saturday, Griffin raced 75 ~ for an Ohio State touchdGWn in lhe second quarter and fmisbed with 196 yards in 22 carries. 'lbe Buckeyes' offensive line, led by EH. 254-pound senior tackle Kurt Schumacher, manhandled the Cougars) especially in the second quarter when Ohio Slate scored !our times to take a 35-7 halltime lead. Ohio State totaled 370 yards rushing and had 423 net yards for the game while holding !he Cougars to Just l~l on the ground. -'!'he Cougars contributed to their 00wnfa11 with seven fmnbles and two pass intereeption turnovers. Beu.,ers Lo•e DALLAS · -Halfbacks Rex Gamer and \Vayne Moms and quarte.rback Ricky Wesson tOok tums igniting Southern ?\fethodisfs relentless ground attack and combined to score four touchdowns Saturday, allowing t be Mustangs to swat win1e!S, Oregon State, 37-30. Gamer, starting only his secood game al halfback, scored on runs of five and 12 yards on SMU's first two possessions. Oregoo State did not score unW &."\IU built a 17..tt lead. TigMnd David Brown picked up the Beavers' first touchdov.11 on a 17-yard pass from Steve Gervais in the second period and Oregon state added three fourth quarter toumdown.1 on a one-yard pluDge by second string quarterback Alvin \Vhit,t2 a five-ya rd burst by tailbaCk -mvin 1tf0moo and a JO-yard throw from White to Brown with five 5e<Xlllds remaining in the game. The Beavers could not move the ball consistently until White replaced Gervais at quarterback mid way through the third quarter. White, an ex-Orange Coast College standout, hit 12 Of 2.S passes for 242 yards, but also threw an in· terception that wrapped up the SMU victory. D11cks Drown EVANSTON, Ill . -Milch And&son came off the injury list Saturday to throw two touchdown passes and lead Northwestern to its first win in foor games this season, a 14.·IO victory over Oregon. Anderson brought the Wildcats into a lie with a IS.yard touchdown pass to Scott Yelvin in the second period and JX.ll the winning points oo the board -v.ilh a IS.yard TD pass to Bill Spevens mid way through the third periOO. Andersoo , who missed the last game vlilh a shoolder separation suffered against Noire Dame, completed 9 of 24 passes for 127 yards, but had three passes intercepted. B11•kles Bllt:red AUSTIN. Tex. -Freshman fullback Earl Campbetl barreled for 88 yards in the third quarter , scoring once and setting up another touchdown as Texas withstood Washington's passing barrage for a 35-21 intersectiona1 football victory Saturday night . Five Longhorn backs s c o r e d touchdowns as the TeX"as wishbone·T offense rolled up 367 yards rushing. But \V ashington quarterback C11ris Rowland split the Longhorn pass defense for 328 yards, hitting 24 at 37 klr tv:o toucbdowns. Sports Clippecl Short Jahhar Fractures Hand BUFFALO -Ka reem A!Jdul -Jabbar. U1e ~lilwaukee Bucks' 7·foot·2 center a_nd last year 's t.lost Valu01b!e Player In tho National Basketball Assocint1on. rra ctured n bone In ht~ rig ht h;ind Sa!ur· tlay nigh! durinR a pn'Sea30n l(IHTIC with I Ile Jloston Celtics. He'll be out of .actioo from three f41 six "'<'fkS l 'hc inju111 S!l'nHned frQn1 a frt•;1k lnC'1d~t \\'h('n lhe st:ir r••nler t'01lidf'd \\Ith Boston·s J)on \"rl"<:1n undr-r the net 1n the f11wl quarter. Abdul-Jabbar <:Ame dov.n holding tu~ >uind over his eye. Then. apparently out of frustration. Abdul ·Jabba r pundie<I rhe backboorrl support pole v.ith his riJthl fist and broke the bone. e T l1ree-ma11 Tie I.AS VEGAS -llomero BlllllC'IS Ued the Sahara-Nevada O>u ntry Club course record with a scvMi-undrr-par G4 Satur· dfl.y to ll,o Into a f,l rst·1,Jace lie w\111--' f>11vc 11111 and Al Gt!.l!Jl;'rs:er wlt.h a M--holc total of 20l Jn the SIJS,000 S.1bllrfl Inv lt;ilionnl G<ilf tournament. Blancas, playing 111 The s a m c thre('some Vlilh Hill , had eight birdies and one bogey for Pis round of 32-32. Hill fired a 65 \>;hile the penC'il-thin Ceibe rger came in with a. 66. Johnny Miller. bidding for hi~ ninth tournament victory of the year, fell out ~ot contenUon with a n for a 215 total. e Casp er Leads P A.RlS -S1eady Billy Casper flred a two-under-par 70 Saturday ~nd opened a six-stroke lead after 54 holes in the t.ancome Trophy golf loumamcnt as his closest rivals raded. Casper began the day with a on~troke Jead O\.·E>r fellow AmericM B e n Crenshaw. bot Crenshaw baUooned to fl i8 and fell nine stroku bt.hJnd. Casper had a ~hole total of 220. while Crenshaw "'·as al 228. e ll11 ef;11e r Robbed PITI'SRURGlf -Los Ang,les Boclgers lcll fielder Bill Buckner was a l05cr bt>fore the Nntional tengue playoC!1 got started Saturday in Pittsburgh. Buckner !old Pittsburgh police that son1et ime ~tv.·een I and 6 a.m., while he remained sound asleep, oomeone entered his downtown hotel room and took n wallet containing $180 'and a gym bag containing about $75 worth o! game equ ipment. e 4-J Vietflrll JOHANNESBURG. South Arrlca - South Africa. conccdc9 the 1974 Davis Cup t.llinnls championship whtn India announced it would not compete in the final , completed a 4-1 sem.i!lnal victory over lta1y Saturday. Ray ri-foore of South A!rlca beat ltal)l's Antonio ZVgarelU 6-3, 7-5, &J in Slturday's first singles, then Adriane Panalla prevented the Italians rrom suf'· rering a shutout. trollflclng veteran Bob lfewitt, &-3, 8-6, 6-2. e H1urlia11s. Tied :\tOSCO\V -Team Qinada gained 1 ~~ lie with the Soviet Union Saturday nlgfll, but ilnmlldl11lel)' protest~, claim- ing victory with the puck In the Russian net nt !he !inal buzzer. ' • ' BOUNCING BALL -Oregon's Rick Kane (right) and two Northwestern defenders Pounce on· bounc- ing football in action 8aturday at Evall!ton, Illlnot.. U~I T11HMM Northwestern recovered the fumble and went on to post a 14-10 vfctory. Southern Roundup Chargers Test 'Barna Topples Ole Miss; Plriladelphi1J, Duke Nips Boilermakers JACKSON, ~fiss. (AP) -Hallback Wlllie .Shelby scored two touchdowns Saturday'll.S.Alabama's vatmted Crimson Tide !pllttered, caught fire and outscored Miss.issippf, 35-21, in college football. Afl<r watching wllh disbelle! as Ole Mi.u turned two third-period breaks into a 21-14 lead, the thlrd--ranked Ti.de struck back with a vengeance to regain control _ and win the Southeastern Conference battle. Alabama punched out a methodical 14-7 lead in the first half, then handed Ole Miss l\\'O quick third quarter touchdowru:.-- Then Alabama drove 68 yards in four play.s to pull even again. Shelby, a quick-moving J711>oo00er, scored oo tbe fourth play by taking a pHchout, eluding several tack1ers BDd sprinting 58 yards. Then the Ti.de marched 54 yards on its next possession ID move ahead for good. Hallback James Taylor swept in for 18 yards, the big play o( the drive, and fullback Rick Wat.oon dashed eight yards through the middle to score. Purdice llpset DURHAM, N.C. -Sophomore nmning back Tony Benjamin ""'""1 to give Duke a mne-lrom-behind victory over Purdue in an intersection battle. Benjamin plunged over witb 3:18 left Red Raiders Bag 14-13 Win Over Cowboys LUBBOCK, Te:r. (AP) -Sophomore quarterback Tommy Duniven guided Texas Tech to two touchdowns in the second period and !he !Olh-l'lll1ked R<d Raiders held on for a 14-13 nm-con· ference victory over OklaOOma State Saturday night. Fwnbles, Interceptions and penalties took a heavy toll on both teams and .an apparently mishandled map on an extra point attemtit that determined the outcome. Oklahoma State, oow 2--2, st.ruck for a t:oochdown in the third period on Skip Taylor's two-yard run. But the extra point snap was: mishandled, wiping out the extra point kick. Sam Lisle then stooped up the ball and struggled towanl the goal, but was stopped just short of the go.ahead two-pointer. Ru:rorbacks Ronap FORT \VORTit -Ike Forte scored tv.·o touchdowns within 71 seconds ot the first quarter and started the 20th· ranked Ark:1nsas Razorbacks to a 49-0 Sout hwes t Conference victory over the Texas Christ ian Saturday night. Quarterback Mark Miller also scored t .... ·o touchdowns as the Razorbacks whip- ped the Homed Frogs for the 16th con· secutive time in SWC play. B11traloes Bold On AIR F'ORCE ACADEMY, Colo -Sopit· omore tailback Billy Waddy rushed for 171 ynrds ond 1COred tv.·o touchdown"S Saturday to lend Colorado to a 23-27 vic- tory ov'r Air Force. Air Force jllnlor Dave leW90n.. who kicked a 60-yard rield goel In the llrst quan.... mime! on a 50-yard attempt with JU!!t five seeon<b 16ft, as the nutaloes held off a Falcon.'! !ieCOnd-half rally to even th&Ir record at 2-2. S11n Devll1 Wl11 l.Al\AMIE, Wyo. -Wlngbaclt Morru Ovi•ens, oot for a month \ltlth 11. Plee injury. tool!: a pess 61 yards for a • touch<loWn tn lho · tltlrrl quarter lo !<ad 13th-ranked Ari7,0fll! State to a 16-10 victory over rumble.prone Wy0ming in a regjonAlly televised game Saturday, in tile ftnal period to give Duke the lead after the Blue Devils bad trailed 11-10 since the quarter began. The Blue IJevtls led W-7 at the ball but ..,.,oomore Sc«t lll<rldng hauled the ball 10 limes ln a :in.play, 86-yard Put"Clue acoring drive Baj backup quarterback Mark Vitali bucked in for a score from a yard out. Gators Colh!et GAINESVILLE, F1a -Jimmy Fisher fired two toumdown JMlS'CS to Lee MJ:rur and 13tl"""*<d Florida's clutch defeme rejected five 1 c o r I n g op- portm.ities to lead the Gators past Louisiana State. 2+.14, in a Southeastern Conference football game Saturday. Fisher, reserve quarterback. connected uilh McGrit( on a 60-yard play in the third quarter. He settled the IS!Ue for good with five minutes remaining by combining with McGriff on a 62-yard toudldown play. LSU, picked as one " 12te favorites in the SEC race, mw three.fuurtb..down , gambles fail deep In a Gators territory and also missed a pair of second-quarter field goal attempts. Pitt Tumbles CHAPEL lilU., N.C. -Tailback ?\like Voight scored two touchdowns in an explosive third period to lead North Carolina to a 45-29 vldory over Pittsburgh Saturday_ North Carolina., down 21-20 at the hair, opeaed die thtrd quarter wllh a 65-yard drive, climaxed in a eeven-yard scoring run by Voight. a sophomore wh> finished the game wllh 113 yards as the game's leading rusher. The Tar Heels defense toughened up after the intennlsslon, all~ the"' Panthers only one soore in the _)econd half with less than a minute to J>l!Y_,.. Vols Triumph KNOXVrLLE, Tenn. -So!lhomore Stanley Morgan ran back a punt 48 yards for the wlM!ng touchdown with 4.2 seconds left in the game Saturday as Tennessee struggled to a 17·10 victory over Tulsa. 1'le Golden Hurri canes, down 10-0 at the half, evened the game on a tbrte-- yard pass from Ron 1-0ckerson to end Steve Largent and a If-yard field goal by Arthur Bennett In the third period_ Toda:y's Sports -Ou Television JO a.m. (2) -NFL FOOTBALL -The Washington Redskins take on the Bengals at Cincinnati's Rivtr!ronl stadium. (4) -NFL FOOTBALL -1'\e Oak I and Raiders meet the Browns In Cleveland. (11) -NA110NAL LEAGUE Pl.A YOFFS -'11t< IAO Angeles Dodgers meet t h e Pittsburgh J>iratee: at Three R!Vttl Stadium In the second playoff game. I p.m .• ttl -AMERICAN LEAGUE Pl.A YOFFS -'It<! Baltimore Orioles meet t h e Oakland Athletics In the "oond ~ame in Oakland. 4 p.m. (5) -COLLEGE f'OOI'· BALL -UCLA meeti Utah In a game played S.lurday night al Sall J""ke aty. (7) L COLLEGE FOOTBALL '71 -Scheduled: Iowa vs. USC, Notre Dame· v a ~ \llchlgan Slate and M11"'1rl n. Wisconsin. Gabriel Today SAN. DIEGO (AIP) -A veteran, Philadelphia's Roman Gat.itl, and a rookie, San Diego's Don Woods, 1'111 be the centers of attootion today u the Eagles, 2-1, meet the <llarg<n, 1·2, in their first regular se&JOD game .ever. , 'l'lte Eagles beat Dallas, 11-tO, and Baltimore. 3()..10 In their last two gamed, while the newly improved Chargers upeet the Cincinnati Bengals, 20-17, two weeks ago, then lost last week to the Miami Dolphins, 28-21, in the last nine mtootel of the game. Woods, picked up from Gn!en Bay, ran f_qr 157 y~ llfl.A two toumdo\fgs ln"'The contest against the back-l<Hlodc Super JloM ch-ions. Gabriel, wh> played under Clmgm coach Tommy Prothro for two years at the Los, Angeles Rams, completed 17 d. 25 passes for 206 yards in the Baltimore game. "I finally fell !he good ritytltm," said Gabriel, who led the National Football League in completions, attempts end yardage 3,219 last year. "We bad hem trying too hard to make the big play, and .in trying to force big playa, WI were making big mistak~. "We 're getting our defense f:olether,'' he said. "\Ve've got ttie talent lo go all the way in our division." While Gabriel's excellence Is m surprise, runliing be.ck Woods Is becoming one. charting the best r u 1 ti Ing performance in the NFL tlrls year ln bis one-man attack on the Dolphlns. A No. 6 draft choi«. the !1-foul·I, 191-POUD<ler was released by the Packen on their last cut and signed by San Diego for tbe '100 waiver price. DODGERS ... (Con!foued From Page Cl ) Cardinals, attempt to square the series today when Los Angele!: right-hander Andy Messersmith fare; Pittsburgh left. \ hander Jim Rooker. Sutton ·won six of his first eight decisions and then couJd not get a victory for his 14 starts spanning two months. Bu t he then woo 13 of his nert 14 decisions and spearheaded the Dodgers' battle to outlast powerful Cindnnatl. "I can't explain my season," said Sutton before heading out to face the Pirates at the sundrcnched Three RJven Stadium. He diSappointed a partisan crowd of 40,638, some 10,000 urxScr capacity, as he handcuffed their proud Bue.. Sutton had few problems during the Pirates' long afternoon. Wlth two outs in the third, he walked Ed Kirkpab1ck. Frank Taveras then grounded dlarply toward thirrl. the ball bouncing orr Cey'• glove to Russell. whose throw jullt ml• ed geUing the batter. Cey was charged with his first ol two error!. But Sutton survived the jam when Wynn raced back and grabbed ReU!I' long drive against the shallow center field rencc. The Dodgers were buoyd &fttr the tenge trlumph. Lopes called It the pivotal game. "I'm not popping orr. but I don1 think they can win three of the nelft four, "-e've got a better ball club," said tbe second baseman. LM All9tl" ~llhWrfll 1ll rlllM ••rllW ..._ .. l vt-,..., If W\trll\. ti G.,......., lb ,..,_" cw. I& ""'""'· .. v..,..., c """""' • l 0 l SllllWlll'I, 10 4 0 O e Sl l·OH..,._.,3' 101 0 :J I 1 I AOllWI, cf • t I I ' 0 l 0 ''·"""· If ' • , • •ll!Zllk,rf 4 111 :JOO l $1110U1Mn.c 4 111 S010ICl'1!Nlrl<:t.1•:Jtl e •OOITIYWll,p 11 11 :lllOPGllO't'l<:fl, .. ltll 11:-.11 f ltl OP1r1cw, pt, 1 0 t t • Ol11Ht, II 0 t I e Tot.tll llS :I t :J Tat•ft » O 4 I 1.61 Motl• OIO 000 001_. ~llttevrt!I ODO 000 000-0 • -c;.., 1. OP -lot MD•ln I. LOI -Loe Al!Otln, n. !"l"lb\11111 1, 21 -a...,.,.y. t\.ldl:...,., W)'M. l l · -Lr.i., S -~ ... ~ · l~Mll1•1110 SulO!!!W,1.(1) t 40 0l t Rton,tl.,0.1) 1, I I 4 I Gh1i!I Jtf f>O MllP -DV s111ton !Mltwlt,). t -i:n. A. -....... • Mesans • ht 16-6 Setback By ARMAND HANSON Of tht Dtll., P1i.t Iliff Costa Mesa Hlgh's Mll!tangs are still winless alter three starts following Sa t u rd a y night's IM Century League football Jou to El Modena at Newport Harbor High. And the frustratlon 'tor coach Tom French and his ?itesans can be wrapped up in one seqU<O<e during the flrst half of action. Down, HM, the M~gs threatened to take the lead after driving lnto El ~fodena territory. A pass from quarterback nm R o 1 a u e r missed by Inches In lbe end zone to Tony Martinez. And lbe following pl&y resulted In a lo.o;t fumble. El Modena's Vanguards, aided by a 15-yard penalty, got lhe hall in acorlng position and added s1x more points to their total when quarterback Steve Cody hit Rodger Rees with one sec- ond lel"t in the half. That was the ball game. The Mustangs played the Vanguards on even tenns In lbe second half, held lhem • •• to no first downs, a n d , D••lt Plllt '""'°' "t ,atrkll O'DIMtll threatened several t i m e s , driving to 1be 13, nine and GOLDEN WEST'S PAUL FISKNESS 120) RUNS FOR BIG YARDAGE AGAINST FULLERTON SATURDAY NIGHT AT ANAHEIM STADIUM. 22-yard lines but each time falling by Inches to keep the drives going. Costa Mesa's misfortunes started on the second play d. tbe game when Rooauer's firsl piss was intercepted on the ~fustang's «-yard line.· Mesa held the visitors at the 12-yard line for three plays, then gave up a field goal by Joaquin Mwt0z to trail, 3-0. Following lbe k ick off , another Mesa pass was in· tercepted, this time returned to the Mustangs 27-yard line. Eight plays later Don Gubler caught an 11-yard strike from Cody in the end 'lOfle and when M""" kicked lhe PAT, the Mustangs trailed IG-0 with the game only eight minutes old. Rosauer had better luck v.ith Im third oass. Wayne Vering, grabbed it in the fiat near the line of scrimmage ·and with nne fancv footwork. and power eluded the comer d<lenses, then sped 6' yards down the sidelines en a spec- tacular touchdown run. OAM• ITATIJTICSIM CM l'lr" 4'DWlll nnhfn9 J I Fl!111 -fMIH!ng l 1 Fir•! down1 pen1lllt1 5 1 Tot•I tlrtt clown1 II 10 Y1ro1 ru\l\lng t• S. Y1rcl1 fMIUlnf .. 19• Y1rcl1 lot! I Sl Ntl VWdl ttlned 161 ltf Punh/t"9•e{le dl1ilnct 7117 3/Jl ...... Hudly1nl1 P911el. f /tS 10/110 Fumbl..nost 1/t 111 I~ .., Oiia"9n 1!:1 Modl-nt 10 6 O 1)-16 Co.It,,,,_,, 6 0 0 O-• lt0Mu..-V1rlna •USHllfO (Hit~ ~II lf ~ ~,, ' ' J \,I ' 10 a 1.1 Loara Baffles Marina, 20-6 • BY DAVE R0!\.1ANO Of 1M Dally ,llot Sltff Loara 1 High turned two Marina fumbles into touchdowns in the secord half Saturday night as the t)osting Sa•ons posted a 21Hi win over the Vikings in the Sunset League football opener for both schools at La Palma Park. Marina held a 6-0 lead at halftime and appeared to be in control or the game when it gave the ball away to Loara mid way in the third quarter. The Saxons quickly converted the error imo a touchdown and e.uly in the fourth quarter turned anollier Marina fumble into a score. Loara thf.n added another score with on]y one minute left. The Vikings dominated the first half with the same ball oootrol type of offense they had in a win over Huntington Beach last week. Led by Jim Rankin and Ron Ross , Marina kept the pressure on the Sa.<t· on.s. but C05liy penalties kept the Vikes from pulling away. out of reach. The Saxons ad- justed their defense a t halftime and completely shut off the Vikes growld attack. !\farina's defensive play also rolla~ in the second half. The Saxons ""'ere able to move the ball on the ground and took advantage of every Vik· ings mistake. A thorn in !\farina's side all night was its kicking game. The Yikes pmted rive times~ averaging only 14 yards a boot. It kept hiarina from obtaining good field position. The Vikes also missed an ex- tra point which looked very Ii-"'"!" big at one point. J\1arina's only score or the ~ ' night came on an · 82-yard "' drive which took 17 plays and ~ most oI the first quarter. The Vlkes converted four third down situations on the march which was climaxed by a four- yard nm by Roos . OAMI STATl5TICS M First down~ rulllln• t F lr•I OOWnl p111ln11 5 Flrll down• peo'llllllft Q To .. 11;.,11 downs 1• Yullt rullllll9 lJO YMdt oanlno Hl Ytrds lest 11 ' " • ' .. '" .. ' SundQ, Octobtr b, 1'74 DAIL V PILOT C 3 . , 85-yard Run Gives GWC · .::· 28-21 Victory By ROG ER CARLSOS # Of "'9 IMllr Pli.t -01•" Paul Flskness came through with an 85-yard punt return ror a touchdown with 6: 13 re- maining to pro\'ide hi9 Golden West Q:illege Rustlers team· mates ""'ith a 28-21 non-con· ference football victory Satur· day night before 4,7fl6 at Anaheim Stadium. Fiskness fiel ded the ball at his O'A1l 15. sped by se\·eral Fullerton dcfeOOers arvi broke- lnto the clenr at 1nidfie\d. ~o one touched him on the jaunt and the Rustlers of coach Ray Shackleford re m a i n w1- defea.ted and untied after devouring three South Coast Conference representatives. And although the .Rustlers dominated every phase of aC· lion Saturday, there was a seemingly llll{eal situation through three quarters a.<: Fullerton led, 21 -1 4. FullertCfl's Hornets had capitalized on a 43-yard screen pass for one touchdown and two tremendous breBks for two other 8COrt!. A 77·yard return of an in- terception by Larry Estrada and ~lie.ah Harper's 4!}-yard run with an interception to the C'.o\den West four had not only kept Fullerton in the game, but it appeared the Rustlers might well lose out completely. Golden West eo.-ened it at 21 with a si.x-yardJlerial from Dan Accomando to Erik Escher with 12:40 left, capping a 62-yard march. Escher made a nifty catch of the short slant in dart and nan ~!cPhersoo kicked his third of four PATS to e\·en the score at 21. Later it was the defenslv~ play of David J\1cBeth and Larry Grady that forced the Hornets to punt the ball, giv- ing Fiskness his shot Cmm 85 yards out-a school record . The Rustlers ilad poured it to the Hornets in the first half. Flskncss capped a 7~y3rd maN."h "·rth a IY.1'.>-yard run behind Bryce .o\dkins a.pd Bob Cicero. • And Accomando threw up a ~'Obbly prayer from 'l:1 yards out and Rick Hoover answered it bv outfii£hting the defender · in 'the end zone ~ith six s«"Onds left in the half. GAME STATl$TICI •• Flo"sl Oownt ru1111,,. 11 Finl oown1 p1uln11 I Fl"! ""wn• P!nll!ltt 1 To111 tor'ld1>Wn1 n Y1rd1 r111~1.,. 700 Y1r<1• N•ll"'I 161 Y•rdt loo I N•I y1rds t alntd 3Jt P~n1111v•r•tt 111111..c1 5 '" Ptn11llif!11\'d1 Mn1ll1ed 5141 F""'bln/turn1>1•1 1os1 111 Sew• •Y Oulf'l•'I ~Wti! I I• I FulltrtOl'I o 7 u llUSNllllG GMffft W11! • • • ' .. ·~ "' • ,,, ,,. ... .. ·~· ,__., .. CCO'l'l n!IO Fis•"""' Par1"1dGI D1vl1 Tello Yt 71 '"' ,. .. l ].t ll~5].1 10 3' 0 l' Toll!s Vtn D11!e "'"'" .. _ Mlllto' Slnrtlltr>e Ttlll1 • 11 0 ,,0 )1 ,00 I 1 1 f lllllrt.11 " 10 ' l.1 ~ r I~ ~·: I l 0 11 1101.• JO 100 » 1.6 ~ASlll'IG Ootffn WHI ,, oc llftl 11 I' l ' . . 19 U I f 11111tM;11 • • • 10 I 0 '' 11 • " "' 0 "' ~ '" •• ... .511 .. ... ... ·"' ... 41-23 Defeat Mistakes Costly . - As Bucs Belted By HOWARD L RANDY Of fflt Dllty ~n" lrttt I..O~G BEACH -Vran~e Coast College won U1e battle of statistics but lost the war on the scoreboard to Long Beach City College Saturday ni.izht, 41 -23, in non-league foot· hall actioo at Veterans Stadium here bercn a sparse CT™-d of 849. The offense belonged to Orange Coast. wtth few e~­ ceptiom, but unfortuna tely, so oo a 31-yanl field goal by \\°oody ...-Tressler to cap an opening dri\•e of 71 yards. He missed tv.-o others of 36 and 32 yards be/ore the Vlklll,!« took over completely. Dave \Vhite scored the first. OCC touchdown on a !e\'M- yard sweep in the third quarter and fourth period srores ('ame oo a five.yard run by l\1ark Stewart aM a three-vard dri"e by Bill did the mistakes. GAM~ STATISTICS The Pirates of ro11ch Dick occ Ogden. " ' T .. ~11 M lrTIMJ .... ~ , .... 6 1111.5 I 2 0 1.0 11 S6 SI .,1 1 Marina's defense a I s o sparkled in the first half. con- taining Loam's sprint out op- tion offense. !\lark Vick, Mark Scavo and Jim Wendell sparkled, but everything changed in the second half. Ntl Y•r<ll 111lntd 732 Puntt/tVltl'Ht dl1!1tr1Ct 5/)( ;~.DAN ACCOMANDO 110) OF GOLDEN WEST IS TACKLED AFTER A SHORT GAIN. ~-·k (led f '75 d F!•ll 6-ru,!'>I"' 17 • 1.n..: er ro or " yar s Flr•t down1 PtHI~• n net gain to 298 for the Vikings. Fini <1own1 11eM1tles 1 Taking three aerial bombs of ~~11 '~I:',. ~ • ' " II MedtN Penllll~.,yds pet11tlQd ''" ""~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~~~~~~~~~-M It I? ' . , , • • • u .., ••• Fumblft/lumbltt IOI.I 111 ICll'I ly Outrten • • • ., ~· 65. 76 and 75 yards (net 216 Yer<ts P1•lln1 211 Yt"1t Iott It ,... ~ . , . ' . 31 ., l"ASl1NG (Hit~ N K ... U It J ,,_ ' ' ' " ... -.• -.• '·' "' ... The Vik ings coold manage only one first down after in- termission until the game was Rill'llln • •• t.on11nte11.1r H1wn Del.UC! Tott II 0 • ' llUSt+ING M1rl11• k llo .,., " . • • ' " . " ' , ..... " ... • u • u • • •• • , ' Gauchos Rally, 14-12 yards) away from the total NII Y1r<1s ,,,,,.., 41S and the Loog Beach offense l>unttl•wnM d!1tM1C• 1'J7 P • .,.r11"1vc11 -11rm '"' was \irtuilly nil . Fumbln/f\lmblft '°'' Jll Tu'O first half rumbles deep °"'"''' caS:,9(9 ... r·~ 7 In Pirates territory at the fi\·e Lano eMC11 1 21 i1 nd ~ ard li •USHOtO "' "" •1105 ·~ ,,___,, ,,___., , ' . M .... '"" • ,, " u a urY nes w e r e D••nt• coert " ... For Coast Area 1r1ton 8rer1 &arbl!o Pe.:dlit TDltls 31 HO LMrt ,, lJl 12 d . .. , " ' ' ' ,, , '' Saddleback O'vercunie.~ J11istakes reco,·ered by LBCC and tum-tc:• "' ~--~ p~~~ • ~ ed into touchUl1"'1i;,. N•Ni.o 11 ,, Then It \\'as a 50-yard pass wn111 ~ 1~ , ••• • u " '·' 0 " ... JC, Prep Polo Hawn CtrllM 0 " 2t• PASSING ' Mlrlnl ,, ~ .itl .,., 11 I 1 lll LMrl 11•261 • ' .., Uv ED BURGART oi lllt 01ltt Pilot Sitt! ove r punter Ron Stephens head in the second quarter ,(, Th c ntistake-prone Sad· and the Apaches l.'.lckled •410 dleback College G a u c ho s Stephens in the end 1nnc for .~10 overcan1e two poorly-executed a saiely. plays Saturday night and Then. in !he third quarter, JUM!Dt. CDLL•o• M•rtn• Korlflll: fluck,,.,-7. 111°111115 defeated the Soulhwesten1 on a third and 30 play. the ~111Ats 1NVITAt101tAL '·e~~~1~ 2.K~l~·Lee 7. wv~11 2. UCJ Tl • d Apaches. 14-12, in a ragged Gaucttoo attempted a surprise . ..,..,,,sur. 'Y. o;"":" , l-3 o~00111 2. s 1ev1n1 '· Sloan 1. Kllttner. 11 l' ~>fission Conference football punt. But il backfired \\•hen ~ CHAM,IONUU, or•~ cou1 1 2 0 ,_, S<oni bY 0111r1..-s game at Mission Viejo High. Coryer hiked the ball a~·ay Stdcllttieck Korlng: C • rn Pb' 1 1 • t.•vu111 !11ac11 ' I 1 S-11 f The A ch • K1tMn0t(k, Wiil.Oii. M~rlM 2 2 , a-s .l l All c } Trailing 12-7 at halftime, the ron1 e\·eryooc. pa es 0ni1191 co-.t ICOfll'lll: Lund 2. T11'"'' Liii.,.,,. a.ac11 1e01"11111: Amldtrl '· ... ~ · • .a Ga··-'-os took the second half Lyle Barton fell on the loose !, Fr1ntorn 2. 5m!lll. Morre~!• 3, N•W!On 2, P. O'HM1, Ul;ll I h G •·· · rd S<-a,. a..,...,. '·'ckoff and drove 63 yards ha 1 a~ I e oaucuu:i rune-ya Ori• (all J S J 4-11 p...,..y, $1m"'°"'L II.I 1· uc• JV 2 0 0 2_, M•rln• M:ort1111: Ekl!Ht 3. Go1onk1 DAVIS-Steve Scott's 12th fur the go-ahead touchdo~11. me. or....,. '°'" 1COtl1111: M1tci.11 '' 2· 1.1.L·TDUt.lllAMl!Nt place fini!'tl helped UC Irvine "ith quarterback J\1arty ~1ik-But the threat ~·as short· Lund 2• ...,._..._ .. 2, Zlldln 2. ,,,..,.. C In the All-Cal I · -'· s _ _.. SIL a101i1 to third place kelsen hitt;nn receiver Jim lived "'hen Brian l ester 1n· "'"'' a l, Robert N""10!'1 (LI ), Clifford '""~ !JCI JV Klll'lng: °"""'" Amsdf!fl 11.11. ,1111 Morrui. ft.fl!. cross country invitational, Poettgen with an eight-yanJ lerccpted a Steve Karns pass MMllntll. s_."' °",,,.,. :::r =: ~~t fl5':i~ee 11= here. Saturday. TD pass. in the cod zooe on a third :;:~e~~~· cc ; : ~ ~ IM•r>. Most v11uebl• Pl1vitr: l ob UC Berkeley '''00 the meet And the ~uchos' TU~i:!ed do\\ll play. 0r91191 Cotli Korlrit: ""°""11oos• ''"''111 ~;:P~~~·1s,, JUNIOllt with 21 points, UC Davis tota1-defense allowed the Apaches The Gauchos defense then '-Tllfnll' ': z.!l~~,~~lll. LUNt. v••s•TY TouttNAMINT ed 351 UCI had 80 and UC only one first down in the 11·ent to \\1)rk on South\\·est· 11TANCIA tou1.111AMINT D•"' Hllliscwe 11Y °""'1)11 3 s-io ...santa Barbara "'as last ~ith second hall. 'nle tmbeaten em's tur1lelike offense. not L1t11"' .!!~' "' ow•r1-;-i 1 ,_, E1~~':i1'H1111 icOl'!llO: M•r! .~ Jcc!rt1! 105. Gauchos are nO\I' 2.0 in con-ano~i.ng ~,_~~(let(' a "111111111n "•11w 0 1 1 J.-53 '· 0-11 had a clocking of 25·45 ference action and Sooth\VC:S-pass in t. s a · • --lt!K~ ICOl'!f\O: Armdt fl • ~v . Soo'~-·-.-··m W"S l••cky to >.••--E1l1ocl1 te0tl<1g ; l<t~y S. Petlt1 Doo Kn t is ~2 1.1rw.,..~1.e o Morr101 l. Newton. P•, ""'Y·-,1 1 2, D\fttn, ll•O~tr. With teammate g aw em • ......... ...,, at all. The A~ch-f>·r.•• Fwnt1111 V•ll•Y 1e1r 1111: .. c • snrw ,.,. Oll•rt•~ pl 1 ISIJt 125 501 n-....t But the victory was oot easy ""-V'" ,~. "" ·' M.P. K•11\• 0 •v1•11on· Ho0111· co111 Mu• 2 3 3 2-10 ac ng : 'ri c;,On • threepolntscameona27-yard cwt 11y 0111rter. ., w••·-, , , ,_, Cam~lf l61h 125·52) Ralph ror Saddleback. Us center, p n 1. Id I f F°"'""''t't v1111~ 1 o ' ,_.... ~ ...... l""' · • · epc ravo 1e goa n te.r E•t-=•• 0 1 2 ~ Cot11-.. M:lll'h10: Lys1n11 ,, kllu1ti Staunton 18th (26:27 ) and James Coryer. sailed a snap M•.kkel·-W"" ,·ntercepted . FOUl'lltlfl VlllfY KOfll>O: lllld6. 2. Wl'llln!Ol'I 2. Ll~oln. N1111. Green1. D "d ··-·•ein 191h 126 • 19) \j====;~~~==::::::1 1r.i~~-~·~i-i~i~i~ " .. ·-. •><• ,ull, D1vldlfll, Kolltl. l etrt •Y Chltrt1rt a VI o.:.i ll:tl. . • .... Fao111m , • , ._, k ~-fr e1t1ll(ll ICOflflll i ,,...~. Lit , Gor-dt!Mlr • 0 I I,.... Thewtnnerwas MI evu ey ATHLl:TIC (OC19l1nd. S(lft llJ Oll•"•n Coron."" M#lr KOl'!t19: Plper, Halk, of UC Berkeley in 24 :28.6. SHOE REPAIR ' ' • 1 '-13 Wr\oht. ~. ~~ ..... "°.it1•m"" 1 , 0 1_ s CHAMPIONSHIP UC1's Anteaters return to un1vtn11y tc.or11111: c1mot1t11 '· L•k•wood '~ w OtH11•~ 0 1 o-1 action Saturday momJng at l omik t. :=-_., hlntn Pfewpott H•rtiof' 1 o 3 ._. 10 aga.in..oll host San Diego I J , ) , 1 1-U NfW!Xlfl H1rbor IC'Ot11191 OWIMY L Stale. ! 2 I l 0 I 0-11 1 _._,_.,~·~·='w-.-:~=·~·-=.....,=;:'~· ;::::::::::::::==--:;,:::::::::.::::-· i ' .,.,. ~[qua~tee}d,.,. College Soccer Al ..,,...,. ,.,., AIMMll!t S.Cll Clll9g9 ~ PIC.lflC. Chrlllllfl t St(tl ~orlnt.--0..fl l l lOI 2. 100 ~ I, IC6'1 H~ 1, ~ MltlJl'IO '· UASl!A.74 DATSUM . 610_.,,_._ " ... il_N-L .COSTAMISA DATSUN JMIHAllOllt.YD11C.M. .14M410 ' ' • Tll0$ • THIUDS otf•r1 OfflCIAL NMI• ••II ttp•lt """'"' • Adidas • Puma • Tretorn • r!O&r •Nik~ •Heed Fast Service Treds & Threads 2:50 I. 11tti St.-Ctttc Mtt• ...,.., ... ~s••·l:t1J · How.: ....... ..,.1, 10-t s.t. t :)l).6 •t..-P.,-..t• ..... 0.Wl'I ,..,....... • ...._c .. h«"Y 1 or J Y1w1 •n..t •_,._... .. .,..,. Contoct th• L..CIM Exptrf• at HARBOUR vw 18111 lroch. •.:···~ ~nqtOR INCh .. ".. 04J·44l5 ·~ 0,.. 1 0.,. ...... "'"-•.•• w I S-f-4 After scoring the snfety. interception mum for a third !dft~ 1 11 smre and Long B e a c h ~~i;!." : ~: • u • 11.0 ' " Southwestern got excellent field position at 1nidfield on S.'lddleback·s free kick. And lhe Apaches scored when Karns fumbled at the Gaucho& four and rece iver Cedric Nea· !y recovered in the end rone for the TD that made it 12-7. qu:i rterback Pete Tereschuk Otde" ' u hur!ed his first bomb of 65 TOltll PASll~Q 112 • • " • •• .. " yards lo put Long Beadt in Dr1n1e CNtl ~· PC ol!I YI t (I front. 28-3. .. wi.111 21 B 2 n2 .SJ4 During the first haJf. Orange,_•_•_·-"-'---'--'-'--"-'-·'"'- Coast rolled fO'I' 269 yards net gain It> 15.t for the Vikes. Long Beadl failed to make a rim. down rushing and had 'onlv 13 yards on the gorund. GAME STATISTICS .. First dawns ru'1>1"9 I First !lawn~ ~ulng I Fir•• UOWM ., ... 111e1 3 Tot~! llrol oown5 17 YarO• ru\'/11119 IU Y•rO• PaHlnv 195 'V.t•ds lo\! 61 Ne• •••O• vallW'd '" p,,,,....,,, __ dlll-1171 F\fmt>le• '/""'b~ lot! 110 Pe-nalliHl~d• 1>en11!lf!d •tm Sc.,• toy Qw1rttr1 5.ou'lllWH'to'll 3 f 0 S•Odlt~t~ 1 O 1 M·••.i•f'I' Pee• Dot>" ~crlnGm1n llUSHtNG SIMlfNclr kllo .,, ' . 11 ,, . ~ 11 .sa , 0 64<1 c•nTtt SMDSt lOl~ll " '" PASSINO Slddi..,ck .... • ' ' • "' " " .. ,,,. '" •t)l ~" ~" JI t •9 4 -tD ' " . " . " 50 _,, 0 ,, 1.t Ml~~~l•tn Ht519t Tnt&ls Pl PC •Ill yt JO l) l ,,, '" "" .... I 1 0 16 31 ,. 3 1~~ ,516 Further frustration ~·as heaped on the Pirates by Tereschuk's tv.-o second hair bomb:<i to p.it the decision oot of reach before reserves took O\"er. The 41 JXlints ~·as the most scored against Oran'!e Coast !'ince Fullerton bc:-lted the Pirateii. 43-0. in 1965 and the loss could ha\'e been a rostly .,,, ~like ;\anko left th(' game with an injury e<1rly tn the fourth qn;:irter and is dQubtful for Friday's game with El ~-Orange eo._ ... .st ~ nrst ENJOY MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL . ~ct~,,,;. AN CI ENT ~MARINER FOOnONGHOTDOGS-2S' 2607 W. Coast HW., •• H•wpori IHCh 30 I W. Tuslill Ave., S1111ta Ana October 2·6, 197 4 Orange County 's Only Fall Shaw •• ,. Plan Now to Attend! YOU'L L SEE . .Motor Home~ & C&mpers • Shells 1 Trailers • Vans & Van Convtrsioni • Sail Boals t Cara mar ans • Ski Boah • Motorcyclrs 1 011 the Road Vrhi· cles t Camping Equipment ind hundreds ol oltlet Exciting E•· hi bits. MANY NE\\I FOR 197S RECREA· TION VEHICLES & BOA.TS TO ee ON O!SPLA.Y FOR THE FIRST TIME! SHCIAl 1AMllT iNnlTAIHMINT CIA!lYI You'll Sl'l' 1ne W01 ld Famous Karl \\'inn \Ya!~ !he higl'I wirr .. Kar! & Sheila in rhei• r1c1!nig high·wir1 molorc~·cle acl. a lhrill lor i ll cJ~i! SHOW HOUll: I • 11 ,,M. WHkH'yt • ......,_ • 11 '·M. Sert.tr•., • "-• ' P.M. k1'"'9., Muha S2.oa Chllflr.,. (Ufldtr 12 1111 wltll &cho11h) loAVI IOt tfl ..,...., lldi.i wltli.,..... .,..w ---ll(tt!, _...... " rwl _, Al.the ht• ...u+. n..lfly °"'9 tt.r., .._ h~ .. ~--. ~ DAil V PILOT . . Gree.n, Heise. Sharp . -· ----_._ .. . .In 14-0 U~i Victory _ ..... . _._ .. .• ::.;: By llAJll.AN MACK OI ""' Dtllt P'lltt 1'411f -: ' L«t.g touchdown runs by Jim --·· :· • c,..., and Art Heise led ,_._ ... ..... Univcrslty High school to its .... third ~live victory or \,; ... the football ~ and Its loo,rth shutout of the last six games as the Trojans downed ValeDcia, IW, at Tustin High Satui<l;ly nighc . . . Cal'lson Out l:fcise turned near disaster into a 73-yard touchdown run late in the fourth quarter t1 provide tho final margin and assure Valencia ol its third consecutive shutout loss. Both of the Trojans scores ·were the result o/. electri(M'ing long dashes. Green pre«?<led the Heise ell<rt with a 57-yard burst tbroogh the mlddle ol the Valencia defense to score " ' Coma~ches Sc«lp Laguna1is; 27-6 By JOHN l\lacDONALD Of n..t D•11t l'llof Sl11f Laguna Beach High was . dumped from the ranks of the unbeaten. 27~. at the bandl cf · the C·a n yon Comanches Saturday night in non.league football action at El Modena. The passing duo o f quarterback Larry PoosaJvi lo itart carter dicked for Cao. YQn on 9 of 13 tries, good for tSS yards and t w o touchdowns. Defensively •. the Comanches held the Artists in check throughout the e v e n l n g • holding Laguna to 72 yards en the ground, and pick ing off three passes, with Matt Baumam returning one for ........ series after Laguna had begun, to move the ball. Canyon held the ball in the fourth quarter for O\'tt' nine · minutes during one drive and the frustrated Aritsts ran only four plays during the entire periOO. c.anyon displayed a v.·ell balanced running attack as v•ell as its passing as fh"e Con1anehes averaged over three yards a carry. Laguna's leading rusher was halfback Kevin Pike, who picked up 53 yards and averaged 5.7 yards a carry. Serrano also turned in a JOO. . yard performance in the j>ass- ing deparunenl HO\\·ever the Artists were thwarted by four c o s t I y fumbles , whi.dl contributed to the inconsistency cM the offense. on the roonh ploy ol tbe game. \Vith ooly two minutoe: gone. he kicked the first of two ext ra points ror the early 7.-0 UnivCNily lead. With 3:4$ left In the game, the Trojaru lead appeared to be in peril a.1 a bad pass frori1 center sailed over the head or lleise, the University punter. at the 12-yard line. But Hei.se retreated, gathered in the ball at the 10. broke to his Jett, and with the aid of tv.'O good b1ocka to get him around the comer, sped 73 yards down the ea5t side line for the final m of the game. Along with Green, Ron Dykes provided much of the ground attack for the Trojans. He finished the game with 82 yards in 13 carries and coold have had many more. Several long gainers were nullified by penalties. His longest dash was a 54- yard effort that ended on the 'ngers 30. . DAMI: STATISTICS • u Firs! CIOWni rin/11"9 • • Fir~! do111ns PIHl"9 • • Flr11 downs J>9n•llin ' ' Tg!al first CIOWns ' " Y1rdl r1111hl119 '" ,.. YtrU1 N Sllf>O • ~ V..-d1 lost " " Nil Yard$ l •llltcl ,. >U P11n1i/1vtr111i= t:1l1t1nc• .,u "e P-l!lft/Y<IS pen1lhed •nM "" Fumbltl/lum~ la.I ,,, '" kWI h 0Vl11tn V1lrnc!1 • • • ,_, U"lver.:llY ' • • 1-U II US HING VOlj...,tih• l)yir;f) " " ' ... ··-' " • Tl.I O.INdlll• • n • " Htn'IOrt • • " _,_, MurP{IY ' ' • u 1>1-1 ' • ' _,. Ht lit ' n • 13.0 Toi alt " ... ~ ., "AlllHG Un1¥enllY .. .. .. , " "" ·~-" ' • " "" The Art"'5 serious blow Wlbadc John Unable to suit beck injury. &iffered a when star Carlson was up due to a· For Coast Area· ' Canyon blew the game Open In the first period with a 2(). point outburst on passe< by Olosalvi to Fred Delasantos, ?dirk carter to Jim BriSSOfn on a 'tackle eligible play. and a three-yard run by Mike U)-emal6u. X-country Results Laguna's ooly score came In the second quarter with l\fike Serrano hiUing Jim Green for 18 yards. Ulguna failttl to oon.vert the two-point attempt and Canyon had a ccrnmonding 21'.Hi edge at the half. The Artists v.·ere unable to moont a drive in the third period as numerous offensive mistakes stopped s e v e r a I •AMI! STATISTICS " ( Fint lklwM rvll'lh19 ' • l'k'll llOW!'ll ~HllN ' • F/T1I clew"' -ltle1 • ' ~·' 11'11 dDwnl ' " •I'd• nnt\1"9 n , .. v.,.n ,..uine ·~ m V1rd1 mt " " Mt! Ylf'OI .. lned '" '" 1"1111h/1vet'9N 1111i.nct "" "n """•lllt1/'ld1!>e"lllted •I~ >Id Fl.lmblft/f\lm~I• loll "' ,,, kw• .,. 0.1r1tn Ui-Bffdt • • • ,_. """" " • ' ,_,, •USMIWGI l-M .. idl .. .. " ... s ...... " " " ..... ••• • " • " lltnn"'-' ' • ... l uJlclrt ' • ' -1.0 Tot111 " " " "' l'AJS1HG l,. .. URI BtKll .. .. '"' " "' lerr11• " ' ' ·~ ... (Dll£e"f Cl:DSJ COVNTIY S.ulhtf" ci r Cotlt .. ('11 (24) CJ Nontirl119t S!,1 l"!!t_(!LD) J•~_I II~) r9lllt111 -I . JoliMOrt (SCI 2S:ll; l. Vll!·IO'IM (N) 75:4 : 3. Chiller IN) 2j:s.I: '-. l Olor\O (N) 25:5*; S. Scl'IWl\~I !SLOl U:Oil; '· Wtnlck fSLOl :M:lO; 7. C••&l!OYI (N} 26:]'9; I . McDevlio (N) :M:il; f, LISJ"O~rt !SC) 2'1·•4; 10. C11rr1" (Nl_ ,:U:SS; 11. 01vl1 (SC ) 11:00; 17. O"Urrlevlei.., (SC) 71·05; 13. I;~t ISLOJ 2?:G7, II. Hitt (SCI ·COSTA MESA INVl7ATIONAL DIVISION I VARSITY P'l)K Val"dff lltl IUI UIM""ltt s.1111 f'1 CUI 1, Del1My IPVl 10:0d: 2. Jvt¥ IPVl 10,06; l. Frill !PVl 10:11: i. Wvrn1n !PVI 10:2•; J. V•kkil1 CU) 10:26; 6. ll~a"son (U) lO:l01 7. ,.tr•lla (SF) lO;:JC; I. Lo1er>0 (SF) 10:30: f , Lowrlt (PVI 10:311 10. S!!phfft'°" IPV) 10;34, Jvnlor v1,,ity ,.... Vtt'de• Ull (3'1 u ... r¥1f'Slty same "' un I, 1111111'1!15 {PV) lO:Sl; 7. ~gntt !PVl 11:00; 3. Y<111n(I fPVI 11:01; 4. Flana<1en (S Fl 11:03; J. P!lff.ort !VI 11:1•; 6. Moel'lr!l'l!I fU! 11;30; 1. Ovtrl1nd {U) 11:]1 ; I Balet (SFJ 11:32; f . Htt"ll'ldtr fSFl 1113:!; 10. GI""' IV) ll:lS. Fn1h-s.,11 l'.i• Y...-dn (l:il) !l71 UlllYff"llty Slflte f'1 US) l. Wlgol"I (PV) IO:~; 2. Lona !UI 11 :00; l. Gr,>dtr l"V) 11;02; 4. FllO!ll !SF) 11 :6': S. G1lv1n !VI ll:OP; '· Scl'llllU (PVl 11:11; 7. 011111 (SF) 11:1]; I. 01rey {U) 11 :15r '· C.n (UI 11 :17; 10. Ht!n lf>YI 11 :21. DIYlltON II V..-sity C•• Miu lltl 14n Ull:t__,. Fw11- t.i• V•lltY 1ni l, J, Kol1r (CMI f:D; 2. ZlrlOG.lt IL) lO:OS; 3. YOl.lhl) ICM) 10:07; I. lloor'nPSO!I ICMI 10:09: S. Ellis (CMI 10:10; 6. Haft!llSOll ((Ml IO:U : 1. Alv1rdo (l ) 10 ;11; I. ltstlr lCM) 10:2'; f . Acort1 fFVl 10:35; 10. Farrlt!I ((Ml 10:21'. J\lflfor Vlf'Slty COlfl Mt» (IJ) U•> Feu11t1ln v111., U•-4 00 1. £111Cl'l'f (CMJ 10~11. 2. I . Kot1r A rea f;ri<l S u1n1ncir ies JUIUOI YAallTY Sc1tt •Y lkolrttrt W111ml111tt1r O 7 O 0-1 W•,,.,wt H1rtior 0 1 0 12-lt NNport H1r1>Cr toUcl\dow"i' Fot1y, TllPY1 Hlwll:lns. Cgt1....,Jlon; PgpO¥. "JVNIOJI \IAISITY ICWI •Y Glllrtll'I 0107-1' 0001)-0 Ecrl-l<111C..,,,.,..ll'I: $. Stmu-ll1n, .. Ith, Co1w!l"5lonJ llalc" 2 !•lckt). JUlllDI YAllllTY S<ort ...,. Q111rt1.-. Hunli110!on ..... ~ I D • 0-lj 11,,,,ltDI<~ I :JO 1• ..._.... l"U'lllngton kl<l'I ltuc ftd gwn•: Wlli.on.. CIY. CClhvtl31ooiJ: ll1btnskl 1 llNUlll. $0,HDMOJl:lr l'wt l>J" Chn,,.., Edi-1 o 6 1)-Jl fC11..Ml1in Ytllty O !l t 11-Jl EClllOll lwcfl111,.ll'I: Nlc""'t-Sn\llh. ce.nv...tlon: C1nci (-ltkl. F(lllflltl" 111llty tovchOowflt· Mtton t, Ml'lJ•'"""• lklllolll. Ft0w1~n" c-n • .,, S'91flllt 1-k~l­ t<>l"NOMOI• ._ .., °",,.,.. c .. ,. MtH •• 0 0--0 "fl~ 0 1 1 0--1• SO"MOMOJl"f S<CM'I llt Dlllrttn Ml~Del 00,0 -1 L1k .. NgO(I 0 O 13 1-20 Mltt'r Dti twd!down: Wllllami. SOl'HOMOlt• S<'IM'e lty O..rt..,, Cfftyon 1 I o I -72 Laoim1 llNCll 0 0 0 ..._, Ltuun1 8MCll tOoll:flOl>wn: Nu,.11. IOt"MOMORIE Scon ,., Onrten co.rona dtl M1r 1 1 O ._It Ml9"Qll1 0 I U 0-211 Coror11 cltl M..11 louchdo:Jwns: ll•r""' 2. H11911f'i. Con"9nlon: M¥rr l~ltk>. IOl'HOMOlll kott •Y G11trt.n NtWPtrt Htrbor 0 0 I 0-6 Wtttmlnlltr o '' n 7-33 NtwflCll'I H1'1IO• toucl>Oown: Moc••"· FR£SNMAN S<Olll Ill' G""''" Sin Cllmthle o o e 1~1• Rl'doMlg I 0 0 0-I S11\ Clemt"lf' touchdOWtll: Kl,.ley, Mort•"· Conw"lon: RDl>9ckg {peu). FRESHMAN S(or. •Y Gulrttn V11l...c:I• ' 0 ' 0--11 un1v ... 1lty o o o o-o FltllHM.AN sc-IJV 0111tl .... L•k.....000 • o 0 0-1' Mtttr Oii 0 I 0 1-U Miter Del l'OllChdoWRI • Oomlnoutr. N•l~r1. Corwtrllons: GO!Utlll'h 2 tr11rnl. M ont CHI•. LIA i ..,._ '7S MONTE CAILO s 12400 .... 3oe WI. Ol9" El'l<I L-lii" elW'ft.. IUll-W.... _ .......... l«OTN CHIYI OUT 1tt11 ...... ..._,..-._ea Ml .... I • lft•HJI azs-----------------~11" I IA.SEl.t.LL-fflT-1.t.SEl.t.W • I NU JI' c '1• "'"' ... ,...,.., •• I Wllltwf'Jlhtll .... Sl.M J KUIOI I ASll ALL t AnlMll IAM61 Jl l W. Wl1•••·• .,,~ C~tkt *'",whet ... -·------------~----~~ ICM! 10:11; l. Wright (CM) 10:31; ~-Smith !CMJ 10:36: $. G•lr1011tr ICM) 10,'1; i. D...,holl ICM) l!l:stl; 1, Grtl_f)er JCMJ ll:CD; L l:lrttt Cl.I 11 :116; t. !.enclr1 (FVI 11:1]; 10. C1v1ng¥1 CC Ml 11 :10. ' Fl'MJl.°soplt Fov11t•l11 Vlllty UI) 131) Ctll~ MK1 LlktwNd IHI c1n llctltlor l, Ptltri.en !CMl lO:stl: 2. Tes1r1k! (FVJ 10:$1; 3. $Chlklt!l!lrd !CM} 11:11: i. Ftrm!tnlo !FVJ 11:75: 5. Hlll<hl,.gt !FVJ 11 :1-: '· Ollddy IFVJ 11:17J 1. Ferguson {E) 11:3:1: I. Spr19u. CCMI 11:.M; '· Ech<1u1rrl1 !El 11 :lll; 10. Flnclleslelh !Ll 11 :21'. DIVlllOl'I 111 Y1nlty M1t ... 0.1 111) {4') C11t~M l . llowl!rig (M) 111:01; l. SI. John fM), 10:11; l. Kt1llng fM) 10:2.J; •. 0 H1r1 (I.I) 111:15; l. "'rblf (ET) 10:,9: '· Kov11ch (C) 1o:s11 7. H1re>ld {M) 11:00; I. Minor (CJ f . Clelt1dg (Cl 11 :02: 10. Fravne fC) 11 :0J. J11"'°'" Vi nny M1ltr 0.1 120 UI) c1n~011 1. Norris fMl ll:OS : 2. G1lloggs IMJ 11:13: 1 Olun (Ml H :IS; 4. Nlcl'MlllOll {() 11 :11; $, Forrf'11f'r (C) ll:lS; 6. L.nc1nll IC) 1\:l7; 1. a1rry CM ) 11:31 ; I . llelch (M) ll:S2J 9, Ctiuppe (() 11:04; 10. Furbff (ET) 12 :0I. f'l'Mll·S- Mlltr °" (U} nn CIR~Oll El Toro 1n1 l. Glgvl1inn IMf 11 :09 ; 2. Et:ldr (M) 11:10; l. Sllitlt:ls (M) 11 :1,; •. Altves (Ml 11:14! J. W1lkt r !Ml 11 :31 : '· Fo.!rr IC) 11:311 1. Scllmldf !ETl 11:33: I. Mtlf-(M) ll:JJ; f. IC~ (Cl 11:31: 10. Ptkt (C) 11;3'. OOl~NtN CICKS COUNTllY INYITATIDNM> DIYISIDH I V1f1.lty V11t11cl1 nu 511111 Aftl V1rt.y Ull D•l'I• MHI• un Ora1111 lff) I. N1uarrt r! (V ); 2. Alie""' (DH): l. Bot1 fV); 4. R-rll (V)I S. Buell(ll• (5A ); '· Flor11 jV); 7, llell fSanll1gg); I ,J111rt1 (SA ; t. Albert tSA ); 10. S.nl•mln (DH). J11r1lor V•"I,., I GU''tltl'I OrCIVI r .. l S11111 All• Vtllty OU l1rv1i. 1n1 Or11111 , .. , Vl lllKll ""' 6. B1um1n (0Hl. Sopllomtr• Dtn1 HlllJ f4fJ 0<1"9t (Sil S1ni. .t.111 v1n1y 111 v11111<1• 1111 V1l1ncl1 (11 ) 1. T•!ll•rd•n (0JJ '· II. V1111uti CDH); J, Evtrll'lt (St"lllOO)I 4, Sltvt !Vl: S. Brlltl'lle !01: '· Aeull1r (SAJ; 7. Clement (llJ; t . Callfl••lll (51n-Jl8~i'.1 '· A:1mlrt1 IOI: 10. T. Vlit!lltl OIVtllOf'( 11 Vtrsf!Y N11n11,.,1111 •11c1> no s.~-.n: 1111 .............. IUI •l--.SH ,. • ., un 1. Angel IHll); :l. vrn. 1511 l W1l50n 11)! 4. Wll50n (H8); S. Tl/Ille (llG}; t. Mc~ (Hiib 7, Tr•fnor IHll)J I. llfflSlon (H8); t, WM11 fl GI; 10. lltosSlffi !R,.I. Jlllll.,. Y1rt11y Hllllll11t!011 IHcll UU Slflll1Mck UU '"""""'*!Ill l. Kreig..-(H8); l. llec•ll'" !SI: 1 8"'1 ... fHBJ1 4. M1i.qu-t1 (Sh S. 5ftlM11 llG)l 6. llonll1rn IL.A!; 1. Oy1m1 tHll I I. AP9ef.ort !Sii t. Hlwt {llG); I • P111d11r1" (NII!. ...-~ •• .,."lff ,. .. , ,., 1, Glflclr'CI IHBJ; 2. A;ui'9 !LA); l. Cllv1110 IHB!; '-H1rrf'll JlilU: S. Htndrlck1 !1Gi: 6. LYOns llGl: 1. Hg/lnft 18Gh •• 0 'Loughlln Ill/ t. Rt¥n., (RP): 10, Kwl1!1~ CR,). Fr.i min Nllflll"911R ltt<ll !2•) •11•1 Orllllll Ull S1Hlf1Hck CHI 1, .Au1ll" IBGlt i. Robitt {HI) J. MoorhouH (Hii l/ 4. KnloM (H81 s. H11t1turd f11Gl1 6. lrt11nd (LA 1. Crean CH8ll I. T!rnmerm1nt (S f. M1'11'1 lllGI/ 10. Woodloclr: IH9J, MONDAY NIGHT FOOTBALL AMI AU SN)ITIM6 IYbtfl OM OUtt 50" PROJECTION T.V. r . . ,, .. /!()\I\ 1CY JSF. ... 11110. MAIM,,., IAHTA AHA. C•Uf. 91101 For . W ome1i Quezada Leads FV ALTU aAi1 POSITION TO IDT SHOTS men OR LOW Coast Area The aimplt5l and best way to alkr the heisfn or·a shot witb a aiven clu.b is merely to play the ball farther for-. ward in your 11anc:e for a higher tJa .. jcelOry. or fanhtr back in thc '1tance· for a tower trajectory. Goll Results To11rney Raul Qu<iad4 " leading the men's c I u b championship playoffs at the half 1A'ay point at Fountain Valley M 11 e SqU!lTll Coif Coo..,., posUn1' rouods o! 73-74-147 after 3G holes ol play. Playina: the baU farther forwa~. toward the lcfl loc for riJhthandcn wiU.cauae lbe clubhcad to reach il fractionally later in the awing. At ~ point ~ clubfaoe will be carry- mg more "'cffccti~·c .. loft than it it bad contaded. the ball sooner, when it wa1 atill moving d.owftward slightly. Irvine c.a..t Country Club w~11 teari\ ~n the A cl!VU!on cbamplonsblp , a·n d M ... Verde Country CIUb cap- turtd the B division crovm in SCGA women's Tuesday te•ll! play. Irvine Coast defeated M ... V....,. 45\\-1411 In .final &ctlon Tue>d>y •t Santa Ana cc while Bi& Olllyon topped El Niguel, 51HO, In the A division. It ia important to remember, how- ever, that when playina lhe ball far- ther forwUd you must continue to malotaia •. fum Jcft wrist througJ'li impact. If you don't you'll prob.lbly throw the clubhcad iAto the ground behind the ball. . . .,. Scom: OD the final day d. B team play found El Niguel defeallng Big Canyon, 5t}>- 31l\ and Mesa Verde topping Irvine Coast, 4S-O. Final A d.ivisioo team stan- dirigs foond Irvine c.a..t with 194¥.t, Santa Ana with 180. :Pifesa Verde \\ith '76, El Niguel -t75 and Big Ca· nyon with 174-~~-Collegiate Grid Scores ln the B division, 1'1esa Verde was first wtth 188-h, followed by El Niguel (18:11~). Santa Ana (1811A), Irvine coast-(1'19) and Big Canyon (1S9ll). Members or u.e Irvine O>ast team .that will participate In the Southern California playoffs beginning Oct. 14 at Hillcrest Country Club in a match vs. par eompctition, include: \\'est • USC 41, Iowa 3 • Ohio St. 42, Washington St. 7 Michigan 27, Stanlord.16 Hawaii 23, Pacific 14 San Jose St. 27, Cal State (IB) 17 Cal State (LA) "1 , Cal State (Fu!!ertoo) 15 Sac~1m1,.tg 10. Hl}'Wl•ll S11tt 7 sr ~ry'1 22. Occldthlal 1 US 1,.11mailon1! 13, U Vtr,....! Llnflut 1.C. WIU1matt1J Cffttral W1'11 St 13. 0.--T~h 11 ~Klfk: U, Orf'. '11, L•wb &-Cl•rk n Porlllnd SI. 4S Puoet Sou<ld 2S WhlfWDrtll 16, ld11'1o (glllOI 12 L1nfl1h! 14. Wl)llmtltt 1 Orf'Oon 77, E•sl W11h SI. ' UC ftlvenld1 IM ,(11 Ny (SLOI 11 Chico St. 31. Humtioldl :za SOll!Mrn Oregon 21, Stn Fr1ncl1CO St. 28 Rockies UCLA 27; Utah 14 Colorado 28, Air Force "' Arizona St. 16, Wyoming 10 Arizma 42, Texas (El Paso) t3 BYJJ 33. Col-0rado St. U. 33 Fresno St. 9, New Mexico st. 7 ~1ontana 24, \\1eber St. 13 Montana St. 44;-No.-Arizona 21 Idaho 28,. ldah> st. 9 Adlrnt. Stilt 20, Wnlern SI. Ce>lg I C1rr11U, Mc>nt. 21, E1tt M«tl1n11 MonT•n• Tech XI. We1f Monl1h1 n Weit W.w MIL 20. $0Ullltlrn Ul1h " Ft. ~Is 14, Wt1lml1t1t, Uhh If Al>fl•M 42, SW T•klJ Sl•te t Elft Telrll St. 17, H-l•d l'IYnt 1 Ou1dllt1 6. Trlnl!y o Sim H01.1$1Clh Sf. 2&, Sul Rm& !Ilk 7 ' W~tern Ntw MtklcO '°· So. Ullh St. 16 11(1111 SI. lll. NtYllll CR-I 11 N.ve~ (l11 VitQll) JI, Stni. Clari It !'tfld"·es1 Cal 31, Illinois 14 .Oklahoma 63, Wake Forest 0 Nebraska 54, Minne90la 0 Notre Dame 19, Midligan st. t4 Nortm.'e:Stem 14, Oregon 10 Wisconsin 59, tlissouri 20 West Virginia 24, 1ndiana 0 rhke 24, North Texas St. 24 Iowa St. 27, New Mexico 3 Kan$iS 28, Texas A&l\1 10 Ohio ,r, No. I\Unois 14 Kent St. 28, W. Michigan 6 Toledo 24, Bowling Green 19 So. llJinois 38, Dayton 16 Louisville 14. Wichita St. 7 TamP1 16, A~roii 7 Beltlft, Mllllt 14. Sioux Fflli f CMdrcin SIJl1 30, Cold School Ml" f MICl•IWI M . H1sU119i 1l Otte-rtltln 30, C:Wo W"lf'Y•n 211 C1plt1I u .. rv. :u. Otr1llOfl n Ark1nu1 Stet. 14, '£1st Mlcl'll111" 1 8 ulltr 22, W1blsh 17 O.P1vw 20. St. JOH~h"•· Ind. " F1rrls Sltle 17. Grind Valley 12 M•n~110 $1111 .u. Motrting11d1 3 SW Mlmplll1 .U, Prlnctplt O JC Standings l1k.itnd 20, NClrtlll.nd lf Mliww1011·Morrl1 U. Hclt'tlwn SI, 1.D, " RIPOii Jf. llelolf 12 SI. John' .. MIM. 21, G11tll'f AdOlphus " Wn19m llUllOl1 21, e-estem llllnol1 J wun.,., "'"" a, Luther ' Wit. e-111 Cl1lr1 .a. WI" Sllperklr 7 Wl'L Olhkoln 34, WI" $1w¥tnt I"!, " :uosburt 16. ST. Oi•f o 0::.'~.';..:i.":!~~ ~" .. 0 rfW:ll1n1 s1111 31, a111 s11"f. tt 1i11nn. Dulltlll ., ~·'"'-' o SW Okl1~ 41. SE Okl1i'lotrl9 SI, 7 Soutll Alabama 35, ~tississippi 21 Duke 16, Purdue 14 F1orida 24, UiU 14 Houston 24, Sooth Carolina 14 Georgia Tech 28, Vlrgini~ 2t North Carolina 45, Pitt Z9 Tennessee 17, Tulsa 10 VI.fl 22, Virginia Teeh 17 Mississippi St. 2t, Kansas St. 16 Clemsoo 28, Georgia 24 \Villiam & Mary 16, Citadel 12 Baylor 21 , F'lotid:a St. 17 ~iiami (Ohio) 14, Kentucky JO No. Carolina St. 24, E. Carolina 20 8etlll~, W. V1, U , All9Q~J!! Froifliilri stm v. 1 •• 1·erc11;,. H1mpden-Sydr,ty 14. llrid'Dofw1l1r, Va. • Morellclu1t 27, F1y1ttlovlU1 20 No. Ctrdln1 C"'-13, Mortin stlf9 I Sl\iw 25. Ftdef-11 Cit¥ f T111~'9M 1t. Allwony Sf., GI. 0 Elon Col1191 71 , C1r1C11-~ 7 • Llr>eotn 70. Kftlfuc~y s"" u Towson Sl1'9 "· II_,. St1lw 21 Al1blm1 Sl•I• n. /l.\Orrli llrOWft 10 Alcont A&.M 1"-SOIJ!h C1rt1 St. 0 ~pet~ 16, No.r"'wocld Mich. 1 Rel!dolph.Macon 20, W1shll'l!lfon & l111t " Wut V1. Tedi 20, W..-V1. Wflllt F11nn1n 24, Rlcllmond 1' H1mplo<! Inst 2', Elltlbelh City f1 Kl'IOlrvlri. !Ill, SI P1ut'1 11 Wftt C1rollh• 31, Morehttd. Stitt " Wofford 11, P~l1n 12 , H-lrd )1, f>tte~bul'I SI. 1 ChtltlllCIOQI U , Mlddl• Tinn. $!. 7 J1ck.orivlll• s1. 27, se Li:iul1!1n• 10 Nlcholli St. 41, 81plllf Chrl1tl1n O Easl Cornell 24, Bucknell 0 Holy CrMs 14, Dartmouth 3 Princetoo 40. Columbia 13 Rutgers 24, llarvard 21 Boston College 'SI. Navy O l\laryla,.S 31, Syracuse O Penn 14, Brown 9 Penn St. 21, Army 14 Temple 31. i1arma11 10 Amlwrst XI, Amerlc1n '""I ' C,,.,,.,..y Slllw 1, Mins~ SI. I C. W, POJI '2, Setoin Hill n IMlllM U, l'I. 25, l!:dlnboro Sttll 1 SllPPlf'Y Rock :M, Shippensburg t Trl,.lly College :M. 81tu I Wigner C. UPtlll 1 W!lll1m1 31, ROChelllr D GIHl'V't'-'I 37, M1nhatt1., o L1ll'f9lt• ''· GlllYlbll'll J Vwmont 25. M1uach11Hfh 14 Dee Dee White. captain, Betty W'rt.alis, Janis Whiteside, Nancy Ne,vland, June Owens. Vicki Garey, ?\fary Ka y Howard. Caroline Gfav. 1telen Ballentine. Kate Hairston. Thelma Garford . B ct t Y Cat.heart. Marty Sctmekler, Ruth Poole and Phy l lis Amold. :Pifesa Verde 's B team will play et Braemar O>untry Club Oct. 13 in the SCGA playoffs. Members-of the team in- clude: !o.farjorie Williams. c:1p- tain, Bobbie Wasco. ceil Neth. Glorfa Bowden, E I o i 11 e Gresctmer. June ?-.fcConnell, Dot M.assa, l\farion Schulle, Betty Hamre, and Georgia Farmer. El Niguel It was a betttt -ba-TI~ol~ fotrsome competition for the \\<omen's club at El Niguel Country Club on guest day recently. On the \\'inning team \\'1th '4 were Dorotby Nido and Ellie Schmidt ol theJ1ost club with guests Fran Sctunidt and htargaret O'Keefe of Santa """ cc. In second place at 65 were Jovce Hopton and Jackie Watson with-tt1ests Marianne Barker and Glory Mallory of Irvine Coast OC. Nell 1'oWMefld and Alma R:ilston teamed \\ith guests Evelyn Coonant or Irvine Coast and Afa:tine Pavas of Big Canyon CC for third place at 68. A massiYe tie resulted at 69. Teams included : ~tillie Prep, JC Football MllM 2', Rhode 1.:111'111 lf NIGH KHGOL e . StrtM.ldlbllrt" Klllt_,. • amp1r. L"'" KlllQI l'olhl 11. f'llnlri.m ' K td 21 Or 20 NY Ttch 7, HQf1tr1 0 .,,,. y G1'n1..,"Tr.ve .....,.,.. Coe1I G11trd 15, Nwwlct> 14 S1nt!"10 3, G1rdt" Grow O Con.-clleut ''' W.w H1nip1hlr• U P1elflc1 :it, Lot Amlg,.' 0.!1w1r1 2t. MCN-SI. ,, Nlfl~I ..... Dickinson 21, Sw«I""-"-2 lltlt G,1r4tht 1, $0rl0r1 O Southwest J UNIOll: COLL•G• N111-(1.,._nc1 M1tsro 111 CONl'lll:IENCll SMU 37, Oregon st. 30 Golfer! W•t 21, F11U•11gn n w L T ,.,. "A Texas Tei:h 14, Okl&boma St. Lona llNcn (1, °''"1' co..i JJ S1ddlf1Mck 2 0 • )1 21 13 Ct'rrl!OI '· e •• , LA P.igm1r 2 o o '1 20 S.nti AIM lJ, ,.J.,.ce J • ~!~1..,,1rc11P10 l S S ~ 1 ~ Texas 35, Washington 21 ~1,.i:,;"~";ti1 23~~!.~1'. Groo.ltl'IOftl I 0 1 30 t Arkansas 49 TCU O LA H1rbo< 13, Ml. S.n Antcinlo U Rlwrsld* O 1 1 2.1 .. • 81nlow 16, W111 LA 0 '"'"tY o ! o 11 s.. W, Tel.U St .. 31 ,So. l\fississip-c11mp11111 13, s.,.,. Manlu ' Sout!'IWHltr" 0 0 If 21 ClflYll'll 21, Anltl(llle V1lky I Sin Olf(IG 0 Z 0 11 "-' pi 0 Mir.Cool• ». Gl-S-11 21 Stt-}"1 k-1r.::;;;;===========;;;;:;;;;:::;;;;;;;;;;:;;-S16cll•bK• u . Sg..,,,,~ttm 12 Sin ll«nardlPIO 27, Sol" Olfllll 2 Gl""OUfflOnt f, Rlwr1llM f Palomir l3, C""'fflY ll Slhll'Ur'I O- Ptkln\1r vs. SedclllHllck 11 Mlulori Vltfo Hlvl'I Citro. 11 Soulhw.tttm Rl....,lldt 11 ChllflY GroH"'°"t v" S.n D>tgo 11 ltlbot Sl~I""' 0 :301 We know more about bicycles than anyone else in town. It mikes sense to buy bicycles 11om lh• people wl'lo know thf!ITI best. Thfl mf!ll 1t yo ur Ralalgh clealer have the lr1ln!11g a11d eJCpe1le11ce to help you and your family 1elec;t fin• Raleigh•. AM they have the ekclutlve RaJ1lgh Cu•ton'ISizer li' to makt sure tl'llt ·~0119 981• • perrect , cycling r11. JlAIEJt#I CYQf WORKS Ltd. ~--..... Dilllw llUMew,_t -... .~......_••a.1111 AUCTION SPORTING GOODS --.. Oct.ber 11111.· 10:00 a.-.. Coste MeH. c .. _ ll'OYed kW-~ ol ttll tg: THE RE.t.R OF 1838 HEWPORT ILYD. Costa MelO, Callfonila hlltpK"-f.tl A.M. .. .t M1t WE WILL OFFER FOR SALE TO THE HIGHEST BIDDER 'MTHCAJT LIMIT OR RESERVE IN LOTS TO SUIT THOSE PRESENT THE FOLLOWING IN PART: MARINE: inl1atable tx>ets, FIOwfron 110... heaters, rangellnders. nautlcal folding leg tables, lold1ng artehOrl. bOw roller wint hes, elc. SCUB A EOUtP: tanks, rogulators. tank boots, etc. KNIVES; Belke, Qimtllvs. PoiNen, Puma, etc. RIFLE SCOPES: T1sco & Swift. etc. ARCHERY EQUIP.: ~ntil"lg bOws. t8ke down bows, OJS(OITI artOWS tor hunting & fletd. aufvtrs. camoflage suits. elc. FISHING EOU1P.; spinning rc:idt. btek packer rods. auton'li!nie lty reels, etc. CAMPING EOUIP.: Bernt0malie ~ kitehens. lanterns. eat•lytic Miters. Insect Joggers. c:hain 81W$. etc. SKI EOUIP.: boots. pelea. sklis. aOLF EOUlP.; blQS~ Clrtl. club8. MlSCELl.ANEOUS: Johnf'IY Stewwt varmlt ctlleri w/tPtMI.~ vtf'mtnt taoes. cauets & 8 track. 8tonc:o se11a. Bronco spart '*''· 12v air C:OMOftMOr, t2v meat alt08f"1, Onan Porlab'e 110v v•• generator. tic. Forlofano-ul:f7141 S41·1JIJ ~ Let•:c 11)1 "4M,.,t ...... Cet19 Mt -. C& ,,_. 9f ......... ""C-lt4 lor.MATIOOIA~ uqutOATOH . e.ww....c .... Jomooo, SUe Foley, Marilyn J"""6 (Irvine Coast) aod Stella Salsa (Mesa Verde CC!; F.dlth Wray, Dorothea ~!<boll, 'DOfothy Varda n (Alta. Vista cci and Sue Bliss (Alla Vista cc,, Also, Ronnie Blair,. Ann Wright, Pat Stein (Tamarlsk CCI and COonle Kinzle (Sonia Ana CC); Evelyn ~izrrfll, l\largaret Sibbert, M a r g e llfcKenzie (Irvine Coast CC) aod Marge Smitll (Big Canyon CC). On the other team were Betty Spiehnan, Rae Cochran, Virginia Ford (Big Canyon CC) and Jean l\lallory .Big ·canyon CC). In a scrrunble event, Elsie Harp, Mary Goff, Roberta Sib- bc!:rt and Marie Radovich finlShed first al 53. Secmd place went to a team composed o f Dor is Handschuch_,_Helen L~~-.1 Ellie Schinidt and Peg Cun- ningham. at st1h, Cbarlotte Lowe, M a r y Williams. Nancy 'nloolpson and E velyn Wager finished at 551/•. Adrian Warren, Betty Halladay, Nell Toll.11send and Eileen Marsden were in at 56%. ·Manne Jolley, Dorothea EckOOff, Agnes Gouin and E\·elyn Merrill were next at 56~~- Costa "lera In a criss cn:M e1,o-ent at Costa Mesa Golf and Country Club, Alary Zimmerman was the A flight victor with 29 . Other A flight winners in- cluded Frankie Dlrst (31 \l), Kay May and Ann .Pappas (32) and Connie Lonergan (32;%). In B flight. the winner 'o\'35 hfarianne Holt with 29~, followed by a tie between Phyllis Stafford and Sue E~·ers (30), Cleta DeLoog (30\IJ and Vi Theiss (31). Joyce CaeUs was the C win- ner with 26, followed by Pat W!l!oo (29), B et t y V.'akhall (31) and a tie between Maxine Assmus and ~iarge Thatcher at 31 'h .. Jn D fl ight, Bobby Chartier was the winner with 24. follow- ed by Trudy Bone (28), M. V. Arquilla (30) a.nd a tie be~·ceo Coonie Neske and Phil Coepper at 32Yz. In a blind holes event. Marianne Holt was the victor with 36Y.t, followed by Mary Zimmerman (37 ), B. J. Sleva The final two rounds will be played this weekend. Jlfe sa Verde They're shooting for 100 tearN to compete in the first aMUal invitational go 1 f tournament at Mesa Verde Country Cfub, Oct. 25-27. Play will be over ttne days with a different s co r i n g format each round. IHlsslon Viejo !\lost o( the men's club ac- tivities have been temporarily canceled since clubhouse con- st ruction has thrown everything off kilter. Roger Belanger, head pro at the course, says he isn't discouraged about not getting the 1978 national PGA tourna- ment. " ' till have a .d:lance to get It for 1979 or 1980," Roger says. "They had already decided where it would be held in 1978 but hadn't an· nounced it until this year's tournament," he says. Big Can11on Lou Evans had h\'o different partners to tie for first place in a match vs. par tournament for the men's club over the weekend. Evans teamed with Frank Buckner 00 ooe team and \\ith Dick Clark on another foc plus nine srores. Dr. John DuBois and Cecil Wheat came in next with pill! eight . In a couple! betl:e.T ball ol partners event Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ryan fm;she.d vrit.h 62 for top honors. Mr. and l\-1rs. John Hooten tied with ?\fr. and Mrs. Bud }folt for runnerup at 64 with a large group tied for the next positioo. ,....., Sea c ll ft Paul l'ttoro and Ra n d y Karcher are the players to wateti·in the-men's club dtam·- pionship with the match play event getting under way this week. A1oro is defending champion and Karcher has been the hot- test golfer on the course in recent weeks. A SS i S·t ant pros Dave iicKeating and Eric Pollard shot 76s to lie fa-ninth place in a PGA event at Big Canyon. Girls Sports (39) and a tie between Dlrtt Ttnnh Barbara ~forton. Carolynn Unlnnlty iu c•> cut• Mn• \Valhridge and Gerry \Yatson v1n11y 11,..1., at 39~(:. FrfOOll CCI <Ht. KnlOtit fU} l·S. Jn B Oight, Ern1a Ha,·ens J8,,,.IOfl cu1 "''· Ftetr 1c1 l-S. T•MI (UI dtl. MllH (Cl 1-1. and F'ran Lewis tied at 371~ atch.-.m1 {C) dtf. Yashlrnt ..... K091 for f:-4 pl"""'. (C l dtl. McFttllno:I M.. Sl<iuel1nd u ;u ..._,,. tUJ oet. Sml!h •-"· Other winners included Sue OMMH ~·ers (33), Cleta DeLong ll•vrml11tr·Ho11•nc1 cc1 dl'f. !loft.Kt.. Rig IUI 1-0. Dllft.,_Kgrt (C) clef. <39~i) and a tie beh\·een K1mlnskes-Ty""' cu1 .. ,_ Mfn. Lou'... ' •.. ~. ··d '!•x;...... Auchmoody IVl dl'f. Tf'Odlr·llelCh (() .l.JUU\:!Ui au 1• .,.., K f>rk:..Cl••k !Vl di!. v,...n. Strickland (l!l'h). Kl11m1t ... l1 fCI f.7. E11111-Wllll1rnt IV) llf'f. Wrlvlll·R"°"9tl' ICI 1-1. 11«•· Lee 111erkel captured c Gr .... wocid ~Cl dlf. AlldlmoWl'·T•M' fiight with 38~~. followed by il'~"~' ~><~~~;;~~~ Eleanor Green (391, Phil .,.. Goepper (39\.'.i:) and Elise OPPQrtunity IDf par1 Stipes (40). ·rre 880.Klttes sales in South Shirley Hawkes 1100 D flight l<h,;..y NASO office. 32"' on h H isted. 52% on OTC and 7 wit 38'i!i. Ruby ulttierg' Bet· n l"unds a Mun11 . Send ty Blakemore aod Cinger Cap-trief details in confidence t PY tied at 41, followed by Ad #267 Daily Pi lot Bo Sandy l\fuFarland (41 1h) and 1560. Costa Mesi. Calif Lou Willey (42). 92626. OUTDOOR SURVIVAL SKILLS COULD YOU SURVIVE if stranded In remote area? Wonder how others have?· OUT- DOOR SU RVIVAL SKILLS tells how! This 188 page handbook is crammed with life saving techniques. How to live off the land. using tools of stone and bone. d igging roots and trapping game. All the basic skills fully revealed in detail and Illustrated with 165 Figures. Written by farrous s urvival expert, Larry Olsen, technical advisor to the filming of JEREMIAH JOHNSON. He reveals a ll h is survival secrets from making fire wilh hand drill to flaking stone tools or ta n· ning skins. How to identily, collect. and prepare edible wild planls. FULL COLOR plates of 98 wild plants lets. you distinguish poisonous from edible plants. NOW AVAILABLE IN FOURTH E£?1TION. Every Outdoorsman w¥1 treasure this most basic survival manual. -------------------- - ...... 9911(1 .... ~6t' CllfOOOq SUAYIYl.l llULLll 1.1.._,,. Pl-. -ta-Dir """" !!tor _.,. a..-. • ...,• r2•• • tioo111 ~" tll«lor ~ °'°" '°' •• the hip int le in:? 3G ill 100 ys ng .. ,. ily wn n't 'ng to ... dy be 's nt y to <Cl ,. •• .. ·~ h n : • • CAPE COD ATMOSPHERE PREVAILS AT NEWPORZ_ TERRACE TOWNHl)MES ' lrui1ie H011sing Tract Deerfield Parl{ Homes Set Models are now under con- struction for Deerfield Park Homes in Irvine, a $25 million dollar project by Century Comrrun.ity Developers and the Irvine Company, master. planners of 83,000 acres in Newport Beach, Tustin, and Irvine. Elemenlz.ry and junior high ~Is, a 10 acre public park, arid five private parks are elements in the 240 acre com- munity ol Deerfield. The single ramily luxury Deerfield Park Homes will mmplement a balariced""com- munity which will Include Deerfield Town Homes arid Deerfield Patio Homes. Five different floor plans have been created by Century Comm.Unity Developers which will feature a vaulted ceiling foyer, sunken living rooms in some plans, separate family rooms, wood-burning fireplaces, country kitchens with dining nooks, deluxe baths and private master bedroom suites, one with a lounge retreat stretching the width of the home. With three and f o u r bedrooms and two to three batm the Park Homes Will utilize ·a zero lot line to max- imize the total patio and yard for the popular outdo or California lifestyle. Prices for the one and two story Deerfield Park Homes are an- ticipated to ~n in the mid $50,000 range. Located oo Moulton Parkway and OJ.Iver Drive, the homes are close lo the University ore a 11 for n fa, Irvine Campus, Fashion Island, marinas. beaches and golf courses. The model homes are expected to be completed in November. No I~flation Hedge .~ar1•et Dwindling; Hon1eo1v11er Hurt mortgage money tight and with many families unable to . NE'N YORK (A~) -Tiie come up with the substantial ~est. components 1n th~ sell· down payments required, the 1ng price of a new. ~1ngle--_ h<msing.._market_baLshri\'.eled fam~ly-house are . generally almost to oothingness in many considered to be the cost or areas construction materials. 32 per· . · cent land 25 percent and This means the proud home-labo~. about 15 percent.' owner who brags ab!>ut his · · 1 hedge again!t infltailJl'l -"I S~ the price ~ all three can get double what I paid has risen sharply 1n the past By JOHN CUNNIFF for n1y house" -may be iiv- ing in an illusory world. If tAere isn't a market, how can there be a seWng price'' True, when the-m·arket comes alive again, he might obtain double his money. But if he ""·ere to 9ell todayj _be might find that big price tag cannot be converted into dollar bills. few years, so has the sales price of lhe average · new -i\.T U • -"T T d W · house-from $30,500 in 1m, l 'leW . ruts ull er av to $35,500 last year, according .! to The Conference Board. Over a l~year period to 1973, states the board, a business and economic r esearc h organization, the price of com- parable new homes rose 84 percent. It cites Federal Home Loan Bank Board figures to indicate that the ·price tags on existing homes doubled io the same period. But now the catch. \Vith Jolll D. Lusk and Son has started construct.ion on a 35- unit industl'i:al condominium project, the rim ever un- dertaken by the Newport Beach based real e s t a t e developer, Located on a IO-acre site on the east side of Producer Lane and south of McFadden Avenue in Hwitington Beach, the new Lusk venture will include a total of 12 buildings totaling 185,000 square feet A wide variety of floor plaos, ranging tn size from 4.000 square feet to 8,000 square feet will be available, according to Coldwell Banker Commercial Brokearge Co .. appointed exclusive s a 1 e s agents for the $3.5 million project. Only a (ew custom-quality condominium residences remain at Villa Granada, in the heart of San Clemente. \Yhitew~ter views are out , over the pier, to Cotton Point, and to C.:talina. Concrete and steel ' construction, complete recreation area, and homes with built-ins, fine nylon carpet, subterranean parking and ele~ator service. One, Two and Three Bedrooms From $46.100 . 405 Avenida Granada (at Del Mar) Open Daily Until Dusk Phone 492'8260'- ' Sunday, October 6, 1974. O~IL Y PILOT :C, Newport P.roject I Terrace Shows Cape Cod Look ..... _ ___Any_se_a captain would fee] rigllt at home if he were.. to move into lhe Newport Ter· race townhou!e community now being developed i n Newport Beach by Leadership Housing, Inc. and eye-level c_ Q 11 1 L n !.! C!__u L cleanin,I{ O\'ffiS. The Ca pe Cod motif is picked up on the lnlerior also with open heamed ceilings and bay windo\,·s. A major feature of the deve\op1nent is the 15-acre private meado": stretching through the center o! the com- mun it.v. The p.ark·like meadow provides both strolling and recreational .areas "ltltensive research went In- to the acrbJtectural design, tnterlon and land use aspects of Newport Terrace." ac· cording to Barry B r I e f . manager of the Orange eoun. ty·Los Angeles single-ramily home division of Leadership Housing, Inc. OTHER S 0 C I A L -recrea- tional rune.nities provided at Newport Terrace i n c I u d e S\\'imming pools, Ja c uz z i , sauna. picnic gr o und s. volleyball. basketball, croquet courts llOd a putt in1t green. EXTERIOR OF PATIO HOMES AT VILLAGE SAN JUAN IN CAPISTRANO The basic concept of the $12 million deveiopn'lellt is. in Brief's words "to presenl a contemporary community. with the Cape Cod atn1osphere common to New England and Newport Beach, and relatin~ to the needs of tod ay's sophisticated homebuyer." THE t.81-UNIT luxury oom- munity of one and tY10-story, two and three-bedroom plans carries out the architectural theme through the use of oob- blestone • aceented streets lin- ed wffli brass Jantems and homes with Jteep\y pitched roofs and bay windows. All interior aspects of the townbomes are ultra modem in ease and convenience, and include gas fireplaces, nylon Shag carpeting, dishwashers "All In all , we're justifiably proud of the 'package' we've put together for Ne wport Ter. race residents." says Tom Dorsey, director of sales and marketing. "Where else can you find a new community in one of the nation's top resort areas. pl:inned with op- timum open space, and at prices starting at u JI d e r $40.000?" - Three furn isbc...:.d m o d e 1 l'.omes are open daily from 10 a.m. to dusk, and can be reached via Harbor Boulevard to 19th Street, then west for approximately two miles to the end of the street. For lnfcnn.ation, phone 646-5001. Patio Hoines Prove Popula1· Si:<ty perctnl of the lirst un it of single family detached Patio Hou1es to be offered at Village San Juan. U.S. D e \'eloprncnt Corporal ion's ne1v conununily being built in San Junn Capi strano, ha ve been sold, just 1wo \\'ee ks after the stnrt of ·preview showings at !he rnodels. ac· cording lo John Stuart , sales and n1arkcting manager for the home building firm. The Patio Homes joi n t11'0 well-established ~sidential styles at Village San Juan. the Village TO\\'Tlhon1es and the Country Court Homes. VILLA.GE SAN Juan Patio f-lon1es are offered in four ftoorplans. in one. and f\\'O- story models, offering t1vo. three or four bedrooms. Prices range fro1n $36.990 to ~5,990. Stuart pointed out tha t Village San Juan's community feat ures. including its 3.5 - acre manmade lake, appear to be hel ping new home buyers d~ide on settling down at the new community. '"I\1.·o large S\\'in1m1ng poo ls. a volleyball L'OOrl and plcn1y ot O)'.lefl spaet•. :1lo11g "·ith fishing and bOating <i1 1he lake. are conlinuously popular fea tures here," he added . Village S:in Juan also has a ho ineo\vner's assoc iation. \'illage San Juun is located of( the San Diego ~"'reev.·ay and may be reached by taking the Junipero Serra exit front the freeway and turning under the freeway, then left to the nlOdel s, which are open daily from 10 a.m. until 7 p.m, The Hills· and The Fo othills have figures whic h ~hould interest you ' 8*% 8%% interest rate interest rate 1The at The Hills at The Foothills Example: Example: Hi ll s Price ofl'he Hillsdale Price of The Plan : $45,200 Balboa Plan: S33,900 Down Payment: 511 ,300 Down Payment: S6,890 Luxurious 3 and 4 bedroon1 Amount }'inant.'t.'d : $33,900 Amount Financed: S27,l00 si ngl e-level horncs or Monthly Payn1cnt : $269 Monthly Payment: 8216 generous space and live-(Includes Princ.:ipul (Includes Principal ability. Some ha\1c bc<autiful and I nteresl) and Interest\ hilltop views. Up to 8,000 Total Number of Tota l Number of sq. ft. Jots with landscaped Payment.c;: 354 Payments: 354 front yards and fenced back yards. A lovely climate and Closing Costs : $439 Closing Costs : ~78 atmosphere, plus all oft.he (Plus Tuxes, Insurance, <Plus Tuxes, Insurance. ocean-oriented rec rootions and Impoundsl and Impounds) of Lafuna Ni guel. Come to Monthly Hon1oowncrs Monthly Homeowners he Hills today. It's a great place to raise a famil y. Associate Fee: None As,<;Ol"intion Fee: $44 Jmmediate occupancy. ANNUAL ANNUAL· Homes from PERCENTAGE RATEo PERCENTAGE RATEo 9% 9%% S45,200toS53,700 µ • Put a l1fl in your life ... to day c ome to 2The Foothills The charm of the country and chorefree townhome livin~ come together here with a 'nounsh. 2. 3 and 4 bedrooms, uC to 21h baths, woodburning f1rep aces, built-ins, two pri vatepa.tios, and a Home· owners Association that takes care of all the exterior yardwork and maintenance of the swimn1ing pool/ recreation area for a nwnthly fee of $44. You'll love tbe relaxed li!eat The Foothills. Jmmediate occupancy. Townhomes from S33,900 toS41,000 "'·llel •• ,~,~ "' • Lagyn~Co~.!guel ·-. ~· _ ........ Dir1-.·1101lli: Fruin Lull A ni.:~'lct . .c:o 11Uuth UI\ thf'SanOi,..J.!o ~r1nt1c1 \nu Fr·~·wav 1 .. Crown ~ V11lley P11tk-.111v i'K1I '1'11rn r11:ht {approir. 1 l.:.J mill') lo lh1• l,.\i.;un11 :'\1i:u"I :-.. ,1,., lnlnrn111• ,.,.,..., l1<1nl',.n••·r ;<.l1l1';1;;1•t.,Jl1n.1l',,111t llflrl"1t ' _..' • :.!1 i111111·~ f-.t ih·:i~· t" l ~u.~11nfl B•••to h 41n1h•.:.: ' , ' ' --' C fJ DAJL.V PILOT Sunday, Octobtf 6, lf:J74 Dis~oiints · Offered on Ho111e · Mortgage.s WM!IING'l'ON -Somo cao!>sta"eg saWigs and loon f1rms are offering 1 dltooUDt on a borne mortgage if the borTower agree5 to prepey all or part ol lbe remaining loan balance. At avings iMllttiioos scattered across the United States, mortgage balances .. aN beina: reduced bftween 5 and IS percent for individuals who have cash a'lailable to JftP8Y socoe or all ol their """llnlng mortgagt. Even institutions not offering discounts NY they will listen to consumer offers to piepay in return for a reduction in the outatanding balance. At Bo•,re:ry Savlnp Banlt In New Yori< City prepay- ment offers will be considered although ··we are not advertising che fact ." says Yi.._id<nt Robert Pierson. l>ISCOm\-r'S ARE "not prevalent" in the aavings and Joan industry, says Cy Trevu, a United States &l\'ings and Loan League official. Nevertheless, sornc S&L ,execuUves think prepayment loan r«hactJ.ons are "a great idea," he says. OJnsurner reaotioo has · been les,, enthallastk:. Cticago's Fin Federal Savings and Lola tes-marteted a discount plan this suaeer and got "a mt very good ~." an officer says. Other S&L offldlls report that mortgage holders' flowed out ol the S&W in record amounts beta: lukewarm at besL TD DISCOUNTS are part of a savings ond loan lndustry effort to fund finds for new home-mortgage loant, The · deposits on which loans are based have flD\\·ed out or the Svt.a in record amounts In recent mooth3 as seven seek the higher interest rates available on cor- porate and government notes and bonds. S&U, the nation'1 largest single source of home-mortgage money. lo6t $1.2 billion of deposits in August, 'lbat wa.s the third largest outflow in the industry's history, according to Federal Home Loan Bank Board data. Because their depol'lits v.'ere down, the amount of money S&L's committed to home mortgages ln August wu down to $3.4 billion from $4.84 billion in the same month last year. As a result of reduced mortgage money availabi.Uty, the housing industry has suffered severe- ly. FOR LENDERS the ad\'antage ot prepayment schemes is clear. They recei\'e funds that can be relent at a muc h higher intere5t rate. \\'hich is expected to offset the cost of any prepay· ment discounts. For example, Dollar Savings Bank of Pittsburgh rectfltly wrote holders ci 5¥• percent mortgages asking if they \\'anted to negotiate a reduction in their loan balance in return for an agreement to prepay. New home mortgages at this bank go cut at inte~t rates of 91r1i to 9~:a percent, sayt; vice-president Jim Hulick. Oct. IO i•i Newport Re<lll<d-hlgh mortgage """' art not e1pected to slip substantially in the foreseeable future. Federal Reserve Board chairman Mthur F. Burns told an economic presummit meeting last week that mortgage rates are "sticky" and \A"Uuld not come down markedly until ''the market perceives that the Fedmll Reserve is no longer pursuing a lonely struggle against inflation." WHETIIER OR NOT a borrower benefits from prepayment depends on a \'ariety of factors. The size of the loan redudloo. olfered in retlD'n for prepayment, the · Interest rate the mortgage carri~. the rate of return received on funds that would be u!ed for prepayment, and the importance of the st.ate and federal income-ta.1 deduc- tion available on mortgage Interest payments all mu!ll be weighed. htortgage holders with available cash ·"'wld probably cooside1' attractive some savings and loans offer of a 15 percent mortgage reduction. l..e5.'I sizable reduc- tions "'OOd have to be weighed against the more than 9 percent yield currently available on scxne goveniment agency securities, where a saver's money ls about as safe as in a savings instiutlon. The long-term benefit to a mortgage holder is "much greater" il be prepays his mortgage rather than placing available cash In high interest govern- ment securities "for ayear or two," contends John Guluzi.an, president of 'Floating Seminar Residential S eminru· Slated A floating real estate · seminar for management ~ staff of the Real Estalers and their wi\tes ~ill be Achieving h..igher va lues for residential development is the topic of an upcoming seminar on Oct. IO, spoflS(lred by the America n Wood Council in conjunction with. the Orange County diapter ol t b e American Institute of Architects. "''ashington Post and other newspapers. ae\•elopment with a range of housing types a n .. d con- ventional subdivision in tenns · oonducted on a Caribbean · csul.ae this rnooth. .;Randall 1ttcCard le . l!fesider< ol the !inn, an- !pm<ed that the -wtll be «lllduded lboord ·the MIS Nordic Prtnce and ~I visit ttie V i r~ n &lands, Puerto Rico and lfauau in the Bahamas. .; of economic a n d en- vironmental impact a It'd livability. Orange County AJA chapter iresldent Art Danielian feels that all those· attending wtll benefit from participation in the program. "It Is our hope that each and everyone taking part will come away from the seminar with some new innovath1e Home Savings Bank in Boston . IF A &10R.TCAGE bas &e\'erat years to nm , intett.6t payment saving can be substanllal, he notes. At Home Sav· ings Bank prepayment reducllons on fn9rtgages vary Crom 5-15 percent depen· -. ding on the terms <A the indJvidual Joan. Conllumen• Nlativel;y a:mall cash sav· ings and their unctrtt.lntf at>qut ln- Oation'1 course a.re the main reasomi mortgage-reducUon offers g e t a lukewarm response. Even Home Savings Bank's 15 percent muimum reduction has produced a "modef'ate" r~pwe compared wtth cmllar ollen the bank made In 1966 and 1971, Guluzian says. Peacefu.1 country living in the city San Juan Meadows In Tustin Is-ethecountry ceilings,~ dllhwashers, tralh cornpoctors, mee1S tile city .•. right acrose the street from llJ!omotlc geroge door-and-moot 47,000 acres ol geen llelds-ogalnat !~-the choice ol guor electrlc Saddleback Mountain. You ant only one for yoorlllt-deanlng, double_,. and block from rrllea ol bike trails that wind --<I~ hook--Now 18 tile time to through Orange Counti'• Iargoot rendl. At the aetect the hOmo., ,_._from our fut- same tlmo, alltlle~olcityIMngare setllngunltl. During our prHeleclionphase, you only a fowblocl<s rNiB'/. In ttils unique also hoYe thechok» ol lourfully-coordinated setting, our two-and three-bedfoom edult Color schel!1e8 toryoor homo. we've built townhomes are something special. The Interiors each ol out'22 homeo to meet tile moot exacting . otter many exciting standard features: standards-yourst central alr condltlonlng,..carpeting and draperies, So visit San Juan. Meedows todly and see how you, wood-burning fireptaces, luminous kitchen too, can live where the country meets the city. priced from $38,850 with So/,% Interest Butler Firm The American Wood Coun- cil, an alliance or numerous national wood industry trade assodatit>m, -conceiVed the seminar as a resu1t of dissatisfaction w i t h con- ventional deveJopment pat· telll! "which make wasteful use of land and also to interest bWlding professionals tn new lanq planning techniques and approaches to housing design . KJNG ~ present more than 400 slides during the seminar that feature txamples o! 1 multitude o( plannlnc and design conoepb taken throughout the country . Features illustrated include stimulating design roncepts, designs for private lndoor-out- door living, use Of cluster for all housing types, better circulating patterns. ope n space planning, variety with housing mix and <n!t savings ideas for tWntl -products. lt cmcludes with a.. cmn· pari30ll of a planned unit ideas to asslst in pJannlng -::======================================:. the future of their own com-r munitles," be conclmed . . Picks More . "Arthur W. A-tore, fonner ~ject manag~ for Pacific Lighting Properties, has been named general superintendent ol· Butler Housing Corp., It "is announced this week by Merill Butler Jr., president of the lrvl~based borne building firm. More will supervise the rum's construction. develo~ ment, and service department activities in eight Southern C·a 11 f o,. hi a. Communities: Escondido, V i st a , San Clemente, Anaheim, Palos Verdes, Redondo Beach, San Olm.as, and Hacienda Aeights. He alJO will supervise &n· slruction at two other Arizona projecU. Sunday is FllllE>AY ' TO DATE mE seminar has been presented in 29 cities throughout the nation answer- ing such probing questions as: "How can growth be mn- trolled by demily regula- tions," "What will be the im· pact or different development dcru;illes on public facilities," and "Can environmental prob- lems be alle\':iated wllh stricter controls of density". The answers to these and other questions, the American Wood Council feels , will help in establishing realistic plans and policies for local. state, regional, and even national growth patterns. Seminar leader for the pro- gram is John ~1. King of Washington D.C., the na· tionally known land planning and housing consultant. For the past several years King has written a weekly column "TilC Housing Scene" for the New Firm For Irvine The seminar will be hel<f In the Caroi.,.I Room of the Newporter Hotel. Cocktails and dinner' -will be served. For additional iriionnation call 833-0m. Plans to relocate to 11 new 35,000 square foot facility on Murphy Avenue south of Alton Avenue in Irvine Industrral Complex have been announced by the Connector Division of Gulton Industries, Inc. '""'""" so WHAT~ HEW WITH 'YOO? A manufacturer of precision designed electrical headers and connectors plus cable and cable harness assemblies, the Connector Division of Gulton Industries will nearly double its present 18,000 square foot facilities it operates at 6400 Roland SI. in Buena Park. Employment at the n e w Goulton plant will incease to about 130 employes from the present level of 90 during the °"" tllo Dolly ---,... whlt't MW In your toe.a communlty,,,.,.rydef next 18 months. '--------- Come home ID Buch walk. a Master-- P'b:nrwd Community ln .-.clw;iw HuntiJliton StKliff. YCN can Mlk to Onnge County'• bnutiful huchtt, to night-lighted tmnls comb, to golf COWMS, 5Nrlu, md the MW dvlc ca1ttt. And. you11 be adja«nt to supt'fb Khoo!• (Il.,,,.,,tuy, I•-High, ...t High Schoolo, all lrnnwcliatt:ly nm to Be•chwalk}. YoutntwBuchwalkTownhomegiway'Ou Jwn.uioul llO--illlrlllllCI Jiving at a swprisingly 1fford1ble C'Ol;t, Otoe. a J,, 3, 4,or5Bedroom,2-UrGuaseT~ and you'll start njoying the fun and prtvacy of entry 1triurns, full.fmttd patb, lush J1n1lsc.aping, an\hbuloi.it Boot pl.ans. 7 Swimming Pools, 2 Oubhousttand more •.. They'tt all at BeKhwA!k with the thrill of living .tit th' beJth. Come home to the beach tod.yt: Fn>m only Ul,950--$62,000 fiim!Shtd modrh ~cl.lily 10 A.M. b~llfnt fanancin& ,.,.u.bfe. (714)5......,1 -i--... o.. c-...---... ..... n..r~--• ..:i.. • ...-.....-_ - Alone ... """' To Your Own Thoughts This is the l~e 1'119 always wonted and finally found at SedMnd A location that Is near enough to be port of the beach scene, yet for enough away to be private. I con rcw enjoy oil the tax benefits of owning my own home without the bother of a lot of upkeep. For onJy $45,000 I bought a home at SedNind !hot includes coroeflng throughout, spacious master suite, pool, jacuzzi, trash compactor and eve!) a nEll!I washer and dtye!l This Is Newport Beach IMng I . '"" . ._.,, slylel Ground and exterior maintenance ls'loken cate otyear-roOOd~ ~'''\ ·;"' And there's a pleasant .camoroderfe flare ot SeoWlnd which Is <i 1 • more Ilion abuut:in feature. ll'sP&tol.ttie h'oppyf~~g!j · , ', ' when you knew lhlngs c5re Just tlglji.~cind 1fl6v ae fieie·at ~1 •· " f · Priced frotn $45,000 201SUpMof11WS. HeillpOlt ~ ~ ta.o-:7.. ..... MI' At I~ Comtf Of~ AYe.'and tlcot•ota st. • • • See11rit y at Casta Guard greets visitor to Mission Viejo' s all adult neighborhood, Casta del Sot Aroun.d:the-<:loc;k security service has proved a popular feature with residents ~d visitor~ alike. ~xecutive-lengtb golf course, which will be open to the pub- lic later this year, JS located directly north of casta de! Sol, Huntington Landmarl{ Units Feature 24-hour Security · An attended entry with 24- bour security is a highlighted feature at the Huntington Landmark condomioium com· munlty in Hunt ington Beach. "Our residents are thereby 331Ured both protection and privacy," said sales director BJU Markas. Sales voulume in excess of $2.25 million has been recorded at the site, Markas added . Sixty-five units have been sold in the second phase at the beach-<:lose con· dominiwn homesite. Five floor p I an ar· rangements designed by R. J. Marvi.ck &: Assoctaies are offered featuring from one to three bedrooms, and one or two baths. All units. except tbe Dunes (Plan 11) are available on either-the fttst or second floor or the two- IUlry building~ ONE HUNDRED eighty units comprise. this second building phase. Prices within the community range from $28,490 to $37 ,990. Conventionel financing is offered. Each Huntington Landmark unit ls allocated an enclosed garage with built in storage, as well as an additional park- . ing: space. Markas indicated that the sales price includes shag wall-~wall carpeting in REAL ESTATE the living room, bedrooms and hallway, and efficient forced ail'-beating.-Other features are walk-in closets in m o s t models, all-electric kitchens, and utility rooms within each unit that include a washer- dryer. Lower level homes have private enclosed patios, while upper level units enjoy view balconies overlooking the e.I·. pansive greenbelt areas. A VARIETY OF recrea- Uonal amenities are a,vailable at HunUngton Landmark, and eenter around the million dol- lar recreation c en t er • Realtors' Chief Says Facilities for llOdal activitl" are provided In a large clubhouse that features dining and card roorm, a billiard room, art studio, photo lab, pottery and wood shops and all purpose rooms. - Other recreational amenities lnclude a swimming pool; bot swirlpool bath, gyrmasium, putting green and two tennis courts. The condominildlt conoept of carefree living is provided, with exterior maintenance, landscaping and care of the greenbelts and recreational facilities provided by a p~ lesslonal firm relained by the homeowner's asaociation for a monthly fee. THE AIL-ADULT nature of the-community-is preserved by !be re<julrement that all residelb be at leaat 40 yean of age, except that one lpOWle of a married couple may be under 40 il the other Is over 40. Complete details ol !be age requirements are con- tained in the Declaration of Covenants, Conditions a n d Restrictions for the com- mwtity. Models are located at 8641 Atlanta Avenue. The sales center Ls open dally from 10 a.m., and lnfonnation may be obtained by calling 531>8847. Low Income Homes Periled there. New construction bas been curtailed. Zoning Is in doubt." Mayfield sald that marg!MI properties needing rebabilitll- tion are also "being priced oot of reach of low inrome people who used to go there to enjoy the coast, either to buy or rent." The twO mm agreed in Jn(lioting that the decline in new housing starts will have the strongest elfect on low Income families. "It takes at least two and a hall new housitlg units to add one to the Inventory and even rmre ln the central ci- ty," Mayfield sald. "There, you usually have to tear down old bowing to put up new. Inflation and the financing •iluation rlgbl oow makes that a l most tnr PQSSible." SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - A combination o r en- vUmmental restrictions and inflatlon over a Jong period oould adversely affect housing for low and moderate income people, a leading realtor says. • C. LruTy Hoag of Downey, ~!dent of the CallfortUa As9ociatton of Realtors, held a joint news conference with Joseph Mayfield 0£ Inglewood, president of the California Association of Real &late Brokers, a black organization. "Right now , scarce finan- cing and high interest rates are taking their toll, but on the long range, environmental actloos are going to be even tmre disastrous if they aren't brought l n to perspective," Hoag said. Ma nager's Seminar Se t "Prices l<r Musing In the coastal mne, (Of' Wtance, · have styrocketelj. People are biddilc against each other for the booslng that Is already On Oct 19, at Saddleback Inn in Santa Ana, a lecture course and panel discuss.Ion will present "Rent Schedule Teclmlqu" -and 'f'enant Retention.': Those attending the!e balf day courses, starting at 8:30 a.m. may also, at their optlon, r egister for certification as an accredited a pa 0r t men l manager. Thia aeminar is part ol a to course .program !hat oflfn !be opportunity to be designated as a registered apartment manager with the local chapter ol the Calilontia Aparfment Association. Diplomas and I.D. cardt'will be awarded. Call 838-5550 for information. lODAY'S HOMES AJ YESlERDAY!S PRICES. ONLY 5 LEFT! A few111C1111hs •BO we bull! a number of lnfluenllal Kome$~ Anahtim. • 3 and 4 bedrooms • up to 3 baths• ce1pel ing throulllout • fireplaces • rear ya1d encing • beam ceilings • continuous clean double oven • dishwash- er & disposer •concrete drive- way • 2-car llfllt with automatic door openers • full , lnsulltlon • bl.lltt to ri1ld rHA/ VA standards. The hom!s sold ve11 well be· ' caUH 1verythin& was ristit - Including the 7~" f111t11C• 1111.• And It still is on these flve homes. When they're gone. that's the last of thij great value group. No more wil be built So hurtJI These five are the last at ')'esterday's" pricts, from $40,400. FHA/VA. Conventional f inaocin1- Dlflct1011s1 Take Newport ind Rivtrside freeways to Imperial Kwy. Go north lo °""Rtlho'1lf. Turn west to Orana:e thorpt and Bubach Sl Rl&ht to models.. 'l)plcal ~~ 13 .. _ MD~al) Cash pr ice $40,400. Down payment, $7400. 8'~ "'" to be finoncld. $33,000 OYer 29'h years. Manthly PIJ'" mentr $236.28 lncludlnJ P I L Appr111 Ann 111I P1rc11t111 R1l11 1%. Granada· Units· Popular Eight ~· """ now moved into Villa Granada, Jusury ad u 1 t condominium development above the San C1emente pier, according to representatives o{ Co n d o r lnt.ernatiooAl Coqxration the developer. "We are now over 8 per- cent 10ld out," the spokesman said. "We feel !his i~ a remarkable record , particularly since the sales of. lice opooed only 90 days ago." '!be newly oompleted 64-unil project con 1 is ts of t\'o·o buildings of Clas.'! A firepl'Oof concrete and s t e e I con- struction. Each has su~ terranean parking. T w o elevators serve each residen- tial floor and the parking levels. The re.!idences have large decks oo the ocean exposure, as well as large private entry courts. Li~ rooms have complete walls of nOil:_glare glass lool<in& out to tbe Padlic. Kit.chem are coinplete witb disposal. Luminous ceilings and W8l:m~linisbed bardwood cat>Eets are also standard in titcbem. Automatic washer and dryer are also lnch>:led. VIiia Gnneda ls localed at lbe CXl'Di!I' d. Ave. Del Mar and Ave. G<mada In Sao Oe:rrwnte. 'lbe sales office is open daily IKd cmsJt. ~ nfluential Homes in Anaheim .;.. , {:'j, .. -...QI,,•· Butter Housing Corporation El Builders of a better life (714) 993·5551 'l;;"o/.l: = • • • I . . Sundll, Octobef b, 1974 DAILY PILOT (: 1 . Luxitdo•• c. ll'• hard lo belle~ that you C•n llnd IO much luxury -0 With IUCh. model! p1 ice \fig. Phe:u•nt HUI la an Coul\]...r.y ti•vm• g exclusive community of only 20 home•. ln$\lrlng LA' p1ivacy u well u value. Your new condominium comes comp le le with a weallh ot teatu1es including ••• at a Price . ~:::;:: ... , You CaitAfford : ::;;n:;,:-;~:;::~ PlteaBCJll! Hill Jlward Winning Homes In mission Viejo :: & 3 Bedroon1 -11: & 2 Baths S/.\'GLE STORY CONDQ.111.~'/UMS f rom onlv $33,450 to $38,990 • Attached 2-c81" 9119 Pfivatt patio Ceramic 1lle bath & shower Italian tile kit4;hen • ,Sma41h·top r1n9t Continuous cle1ning cwen • Futlv insulated • Decorator carpet I drapts • Individual waWw/dryer hook-up.-;. I 8~4" Interest I T,,KE SAS Dltoof1t'A"Y TOMJSSIO~ \ 1.-..111 t:XITO" LA l".o.!ROAO, E.\:ol l tll..OC-K TO MU1Ml.ASOS u:M'O~ ,lo! UIJl,l.A,\ Ob 1U PHEA!iA.V? HIU.. •j .. ... . ' I 1 . ·I :j ·' '• :[ • -~~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~-------~~~~--:j i . . l Fro"' ctte Pacrttt: Coatt H~llo11l\f 11~• Suo..i•~· -'W I() P!1c:.,.1ia Av1 I.ti Qoll l~fl Sl!eet F '°"' 1l'!eSlt<'l 0 1•oll fr41oway etl.,• H•rt101 8 1 .. 0 1111'11 0<1 •O!h ~ tllfo w...-10 !Ml M O 1'1" f,•&.&OQI * !1l!OUN1'1\)1'!~\lt~at' /lllre . i ) • I! . • t • . ' '' ·\ ., . Gr . -. " ,' (,' 8 DAIL V PILOT Fi1•st Floor Last · Hereule§ Sold Building Starting -at Top ' · De ve loper Buys To,wn NEIV YORK 1AP) -Whal the neighbors call the "upside d o w n building" is rapidiy going up or coming down -dependin g on your grammatical point of view -in a v.·ooded ·section of the north.,.,-est Bronx. It's the new 20-story apartment, "" entertainment and shopping center for 240 families connected with the Sovi~t Mission to the United Nations. • ,,,-'>~~. ZERO LOT PLAN AT UNIVERSITY PARK Zero Lot Concept In Irvine Tract Like most of the new ideas In housing, zero lot line land . planning is finding its besl expressjon in Qllifomia. An ex.ample of this oew con- cept is at Deane Homes- University Park, a project designed with zero lot lines to make maximum use of preciouS land in the Irvine Company's University Park Village. Development Co mp a n y , builders of Deane Homes- Uni.versity Park, also provides full side and rear yard fencing for complete privacy and esthetic appeal. ;'Using zero lot line plans is the only v;ay to provide single-family residences while at the same time making the greatest possible use oC one of our most valuable natural assets, deSirable b u i l d i n g land." T<Jday's house k.e e p_i n g methods don't require "hid- den" yard area!: r or clotheslines or trash disposal, Deane points out. What's so different about it is that the pre-fabricated 20th story was jacked into, place first. The lower floors are being added Wldemeath and the first floor wlll be the lasl put In place. • "PEOPLE CAN'T believe what the hell they're looking at," said Bob Pym, a construction manager. as he talked about tht'! patented building teclmlque. Last January two plllar.s of ooocrete, each containing stairs and elevators, were erected in the conYentiooal manner, from the ground up. The individual floors, complete with plumbing, electrical wiring, windows and enameled steel exterior sheathing, are assembled on the ground and raised into place by eight hydraulic jacks. , ArchlUlcis !pr th< 18 mlllloo building, which y,1Jl take about 15 months to complete, are Skidmore. O\vings · &- Merrill. A NEIGHBOR said r "there is no oppos ition now to lMbµHding, except the usual opposition to bl~ consiructton> in this area." • • 1be site had earlier been sla,\e<f for city-eubsi~ized low-cost bodii:µg, but this was ' dropped_ becaure ol 1 s t o r m y objet.1.iOos in the upper; nliddle class neighborhood. ' OAKLAND (UPI) -The tiny company 1<>1111 of Her- .cutes will be purchased !or $9 million and developed into a suburban community, accordlng to spotesan for Centex Homes COrp, . The spokesman said that the flnn bas booght an ' tnkial 533 acrees and is in the ~ of obtaining an- other 1,900-acre parcel. This land would be used to build a. community for 24,000 ~sons, the firm said. Hercules, located on the San Pablo .BaY. north IA Pinoh), had a popt.Jation of Z50 persons ln 1970. lt wu incorporated in 1900 and consists of a Hercules plant, Gulf Oil's Seqooia refinery and a 200-acre parcel owned by Signal Oil and Gas Co., which will not be iacluded ill the purchase. -~~-= ---·~ On1the-Palisades-oJ San Elemente· · Technically, ~ero lot line plaoniog means that OOmes have rommon, specially in- sulated a n d soundproofed walls built along the lot line, with air space between each house's waU. These walls are solid with no openings. Oc- casionally, b-e-c-a u s-e-of architectural design or the shape of a lot. a portion ol tbe walls may be actually at- tached, but if so, each is the same thickness as freestand- jng walls. In addition to the e:tpanS!on of usable area on bis_ OYm lot, the homeowner gets more with zero lot line planning. Deane says. By placing homes side J;iy side, land is freed to be use;d for greenbelts. ""C'Onunonly owned 'landscaped areas which enhance the beau- BECAUSE ~HE D ~ a n e ty and liveability of the entire hopes are desJ ed .!'I~ -~oommunit A c;rand Openinq e]l'.traOraiiiMY amoun or glass · looking out on gardens, patios 1¥J.odel _hom~s at Deane · and other are.as of private H~es-.Uruvemty ~ark are Y~n! fil)3.ce, the fact that one built with ze:o I~ ~-.Four "·all has no windoYl'S is not models by mtenor designer noticed. With the zero lot line Carole Eiehen are on view plan, there 's · an a&:ied ad-daily from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. vantage in that the house The two, three and four looks on its own grounds only bedroom homes. in ooe and -not on a view I){ its two-story designs, are priced neighbor's property. Deane from $60,000 to $80,000. •I Rea l Estate ;.) ' QuestionsJComntent ~ By Realtor Randall Mccardle .. Do you think interest rates will crecline in the near future? What about the aYailabillly of money for real &State financing? Wiii II be plentiful? · Thank you~ !\.I.A .• Newport Beach The-future of interest rates is not a bright one -if you are _w·aiting for ·the cost of our mortgage.money to drop. Some studems of the money market are predicting that sooner or later interest rates will decline, but they don't say ';'"·hen" they will decline and they don't say to what "extent" they will decline. It is possible for a slight decline in interest rates for single family d1vellings in the first quarter of 1975. But nothing that signifi cant. The money costs to mortgage lenders has risen so dra· matically that loan demands will ha ve to be satisfied at t~se present prices. The fact that people are "'il!ing to borro1'' at the present rates suggests that the structure , v.·ilJ probably remain at the present rate looger than in prior cycles. Does it make · se nse for us to O'll'tt a borne? We're a young couple. We have no chil dren, We're not planning any children for the next three to four years. At this time . v•e ba,·e no need for a large house or yard, nor a lot of storage space. Bui argue with us. \\'by should a young cou ple like ourseltts 014-'tt a home? Thank you for your comments. ·""--< , R.J.M., Cosla M,.. --x-·men"t" sruay shov.·s Jhat over 90 percent 'Of alt Americans who have SI0,000 or more in savings_ acquired those savings through ov.11ersbip of feal property. As an e:.:ample, I sold a young rouple like you their first home about 20 years ago fincidentally. this was one of my first sales. and thafs \l'hy I remember it v.'ell). This young o:>uple bought a borne on the east sii:ie of Costa lt1esa for $3.500 with ~!i(I down. Years later "·e sold the house for them ag&in. Thef made a Sl2,000 profit. That same house today has again doubled in value ... adding to the saYings and equity of !he couple that ~'Tls the property. I am not negative about people living in apartments. lt's just that from an eronomical standpoint it makes more sense to o-w·n. Equity building through real estate is one or rhe surest \1•ays of building a savings account Over the )ears that I haYe sold real estate, one or lhe greatest enjoyments 1 have experienced was placing a new n1arried couple in their first home. I know lt ffif'llllt a lot t.o them. I can say this because I have gone back to visit these people and listened while they boasted about the trees they have planted, and the flowers. The covtt they just put 'Over the patio. the paneling· they put in the den. It seemed to giYe them a relaxed atmosphere 1n their o~·n private v.·orld. Tiley seemed• very secure in the walls of their own home. F'urther. they were develo~ "ing close relationships wilh other couples ln !he c:tim· mun 1ty, All of which deepened the.ir enjoynlent of life. EDIT.OR'S NOTE: Ran<ia/L R. ft1cCnrdlt i.~ un itivt$L1ne11t a11alys1. college lecturer, mid nut/1vr of ··1-eeai E:Rt<ltt-01 CiJ/if~11./a." Ser1'1 yuur cori~1ue1i1.s 1J-1111 .QU<t.!&tia11s to R.ur1doll R. J\lcCa rdlc C/O the DaUu JJ1lot. P.O. Box 1san, Cosra fllesa 92626. • ~Equal Housing ~ OpP<>'!Unities • " -Mita CostaVillas~,A; granCI new oceanv1ew wayof living. - Big. handsome townhomes that let the sunshine and sealireezes in to fill your days with pleasure. Greenbelts, open courtyards, private patios. Shake roofs, fireplaces, ceramic tile, even wooden French windows!Your own Fun Centre complete with swimming and hydrotherapy pools. Yours to erijoy at prices you' may never see agam · on the Southern California coastline. One and two story homes, .2. 3 and 4-bedrooms; from · $50,500 , . with excellent financing available. Make this the day fo.r the buy of your life, We'll make it easy for you to do it!. Sales Office: 399 Calle Borrego, San Cle mente. Open 10 am. to dusk. Telephone: (n4l 493·7602. ....... . . • - ---- • - " . '' . ' '.• ·, ·- ' . .. • 1' ,, • .. ' " '' • ' r r- '" . " ., I I I Thc 1 rtctde1i tenaci cl1ang are f Africa madic1 co,..res refuge AG in dee figure of Sah quick: olive refresh the mi and d The aware did not Shes "Las lament watch ing a and si t to fight ''But \\'hile I they V..' ''LA Ataka Alt ty sel!· within nomadi Sahara, patheti drought animal Witho jobs, f savings they ha The dence ~ta Uri is eati have le sugar, the fina 10--per has for 300,000 beg for they c Allho lack of ·'11 do I ' ... ~ rot remain tion. 111"'11 qualilie for a outside "It "TIU !he have repla · games their l '""" in the nurse posses M thal J96o's, their brielly autooo nation such Tu are are u IO e of de f "" ..,__llle TU " '. '" ' ' .'. -. 1 r and 0 in.stan in tllei 1o sh cusat Btrr · l \Vare Due · other feudal territ passag . . _s_,~--'~~·-o_"~°""-'--"~·-"'-'-'~~~~~~~·o_~_Lv~•-1L_o_r~JJ::....._,.l j Sahara Gwellers Stave Off Starvation • . The sllifting siuufs of the drought.. ridden .sub-SaJwra art bring;nQ o tttiaciou.t peopLt to the brink of chm1ge. H_uuger and depleted litrds ore /orcino tli.e Tuartgs of Nortll Africa to abandon their age-old 110- madic Ufe. At a camp in Niger, a correspondent-talks wit1& Tuareg 7'e fugees about tli.tir uncertain future. By ROBIN WRIGHT CllflttlM kt.Mt Mtlill., let'Vlct' AGADEZ, Niger -Exotically wrapped in deep royal robes, Ataka's vibrant figure starkly contrasted the bland tones <lf Sahara sand surrounding her. The quJck &nln:!ati.pn-of her black eyes ~ olive bands representing soffietbing " refreshingly alive. sofuething hopeful in fl' the n1idst or a desert rull or hwig'~ f and despair. The young Tuareg woman was well aware of her haunting beauty. But it did not console her. She sighed . "Last year it was the animals," she lamented. "We could do nothing as we watched them die, ·watched them wither· ing away until they ""Ould just stop and sit down and wait, l'.'ilh no strength to fight it any longer. "But for some reason there '"'<\:i hope "''hile they lived. \Ve knew tha{ alter they "''ere gone "''e were next "LAST YEAR IT was the animals," Ataka repeated. "This year it is us." Although historically tough and clever- ly self·Sll<itaining in their own "nation" within other nations, the Tuareg, i:he nomadic desert tribe of the southern Sahara. have in the last year become pathetically dependent because of the drodght that has CO!lt them innumerable animals and people. I. j • ._t.: .. • • •• ·( \IP'I Ttl~ll W. Beng·a l I n Gri p Of Fa1nine Dy EDWARD CODY CALCUTTA . India (AP) -Hunger officially described as the v.·orst fn . a decade has gripped 1he back-country 1~1\ages or \\'r•st Bengal, raising fears ot widespread famine. The president or the state's ruling Congress party. Arun K. l\laitra, estimated 1,1100 ~rsons already have died bl>cause of rood shortages and diseases connected to malnutrition. Thousands of villagers have quit their huts in hard-hit isolated areas to beg fo r food in cities and tov.11s, their babies in thelr arms :i.nd their possesssions in bundles on their IM>ads. TilC stale go\ ern rnent has lattnched an emergency rrlief operation lo keep thent alive. ""'[ SllALL Df'.:AL "·ith th.is situation nn war footing," pledged Sidhartha ~h·1nkar ·Ray, \Vest Bengal chief rninister. in an interview. Sca rcity also has attacked rural pockets in seven other Indian states. leading to predict iOM th.at Ne\v Delhi u·ill have to gel massive food imports soon to avoid famine in the countryside. 'T'he predictions are reinfotted by estimates from agricultural experts that the fall crop. mostly rice, will be sharply do\vn in \\'est Bengal and the rest of India because of broad areas suffering from drought and lack of fertilizer. Without animals. which ";ere their jobs. food. transportation. investment., savings accomtt. and status symbols, they have no means of support. CAMEL CARAVANS FINANCED BY THE UNITED NATIONS CARRY FOOD TO REMOTE AREAS OF NIG ER, CUT OFF BY FLOODING Prime Minister Indira G a n d h i ' s ,eovemment already has signed deals for importing about t'"·o million tons of foodgraim through December. mueh of it from the United Stat~. The only alternative -total depen- denc;e on the governments of 1~tali. ~1auritania, Niger, and Upper Volta - is eating away at the one thing they have left -their legendary vibrancy. "TBERE IS NOTIUNG to do here but v.-alt ... and beg. And I v.'Ou)d rather die than beg," Ataka said bitterly, sitting ootside a crammed Tuareg refugee camp In Niger, one of-many flooded with drought victims "''ho have overwhelmed the few cities of the Sahel during the past eight months in search of in· tematiooaJ food relief. The strict Tuareg social code has traditionally allowed begging only of tea, sugar, and tobacco -never food. But the fmal los.! last season o fan estimated 80 percent ol their-goats and caltle has forced the majority of the estimated 300,000 nomads to camps, where they beg for all the pov.·dered milk and grain they can get. Although hardly responsiblll. for the lack cl rain, these fiercely proud people 'There b nothing to do here but wait • • • and beg. And I would rather die than beg' remain embarrassed about their situa- tion. 1be yowig spoJteswoman in a style tvp!Pying the freedom and outspoken qualities of Tuareg \\·omen. explained for a small group willing to talk with outsiders: "It is htmtiliating for us to beg, especially from lhese people who do not like us or \\'ant to help us. ?tty sister, my father, they were lucky; they per1sbed out there. They were never forced into this nothingness." "TIDS N0110NGNESS" specifically is black tribes har<lly feel loyalty to the nomads. And the Tuareg now fear revenge. Both United States and United Nations officials deny such a pos.sibility, saying that the tensions have actually forced the government!: of Ma1i, Mauritania, Ntger, and-Upper Volta-to go overboard to prevent this from happening. Many black residents say the Tuaregs' present posltioo is not so destitute. com- paratively anyvi'ay. As one Nigerois head of a fanning: CCjllUllunity commented: "They are not so badly oU. Just look at us, \\"Orking hard for ..,.,·hat little bits ~e get. I have little pity for tbe Tii3reg, being fed free \\bile we must work for everything ..,.,.e get." BUT WllE'l1:IER the Tuareg charges are valid or not, Ataka and her people still sense antagonism. As a re9.llt tttis most recent stage of the drought, the total dependency, has created a f~lng of defeat and a general gloominess quite uncommon to tbetr traditional-gaiety and stubborn detenninatlon. Although there have been indications since the drought became news that the Tuareg would have to change their life-style and settle down, ithe way lo bring this about has yet to b& found. Over the past two years some Tuareg have sought new lives in agrirulture, uranium mines, oil fields. and towns. But now there are even rewer employ- mC!rt opportunities, fewer lands to cultivate, and no means to reorient more than 100,000 families.. One major UN project in Niger, for example, could acconunodate only 300 of the thousand that applied. With the hiss of driving sand in the background, Ataka made it clear that the remaining. members of her family "'OUld. rather work than rely on others. the boredom and feeling of futility that "WE HAVE NO choice. We would have become the lot of the refugees, work if \\'e could. This is certainly replacing the merriment and teasing no fun. And we \\'OUld fight if we could." games that used to be a feature of she added, referring to ,the ·warrior- their lives. There are few roles for marauder tradition of the Tuaree. "But thefn at the cainps and even fev.·er oor swords don't do any good against in the cities; so now they just wander, this enemy." nurse neighbors, peddle their last few possessions, and wa.it for food. The abstract nature oC the "enemy" "I am a prisoner," Atak.a moaned. inakes it all the more frustrating for the nomads to cope with. this desert .. Nothing to do ... no place to go ... We "war." Thousands coold not believe have no will left," she rambled. drought would conti nue for so long and What makes It even harder is that waited to go to the camps until it she is dependent on a government her w~ too late. Children were those most people have Jong spumed and a culture gravely affected by the delay. Many they have neither understood nor ap-were In too weakened a state to be proved. saved by the nouri!hm.ent supplied them A Caucasian people of Berber origin, when they finally reached the camps. the good-natured TUare~, had generaUy The loss of children, the cherished ~-~-ihemselv~!_nimal herders_ focal point-cl-~TUmg oonin'llmltles, movi.ng in smRlf groyps through t~c is another reason for the loss of hope. grazing lands of the Sa.he\, the Sah~ s "We are Toiing all -Ole g .., " arid southern • strip. Purposely avoiding~ • . you~ 0 • contact "'1th and allegia:qct: to the in· Ataka expl.aJ.ned, .~ing specifically of dependent black governmthls In who6e her o-:m s1".1er· One whole generation jurisdiction they lived, the 'niaregs forn.t-of being ,wt~ oqt ~~ .. they are ed loose COC)fede.ratioml° with their own oot strong enough' yet to fight. Jaws and t.heJl-·dwn boundaries. wmlotJT ~-m AT generation th e ltANY OF THEM had even assumed Tuareg fear they will,_ further diminish that once the French left In~ the early in numbers and the c&tfederationa will J960's, they \\-'OUld be allov.·ed to form fall a_part and force the few left to their own ·states. One band tn Mali as'!nµlate into other cultw:u. briefly rooght for their claim of .smce relief officials no~ estimate It autonomy, but Jost to the French-anned will taJ:.e 20 to 30 years for the Tuai:-eg national troops. to get their herds back to productive . strength and for the lands to be able Such historical CCllfllcts have led man~ lo support herds again, tile nom8ds TUareg. to charge that the S.'.lhel nations fear there wilJ be no conunon occupation are using the ,d.rought as ~n excuse to bold them together until a --'ace. to exterminate the Tuareg m a sort 1 ">'' of de facto genocide. ment generatlt;>D ha~ matured. . Although ram briefly returned . to the A& Ataka answered, questions on how region this summer it Is far from -ineTUa:reg are treated by loall people adeqtra:tV llfii<!dllic:ii: tbe~TUareg have and offidals, other Tuareg appeared Jost moet of tbe anl.mals that were ~t.a.nt.aneously from huddled posltlons their sustenance.. And ev-en if u.u. were m their tents or grain sac.ks and stlcb enough animals, there Is none 'ti the to shake fists t.ngrtly and shout ac-vegetation. cus.1tlon.s ahout lreatmtnl The Tuareg lifestyle Is by no means BllT THE NOMADS ore oomewhat extinct. NOi' "Ill It be If Alai<> and · aw.art that the resentrnu1l li1 tv.·c>zided. the other young people carry through Due to two Tuartg tntditlons -raiding their pledge of returning to the tenacious other tribes for slaves to support their desert. But the centuries~ld Ttiareg feudal s)11tem. and lording over "their" st ruggle for a separate existence depends territory to the point of taxing for rlglit now on a lot more than the vlbrafi· pas.ciage or \& of re!IOuroes -the C)\ ol its people. MEMBERS OF NOMADIC TUAREGS , MOVE SUPPL IES Sou11 Kitchen1i 111 111dia F ecd 20,000 a Da y BANKURA. India (AP \ -The bns\r>essmcn of Bankura are \\'aging a riuict battle against 11tarval\on among destitute local laborers an:l !housands of landless peasants driven into tov.11 by hunger. They are operating kitchens that dispense curd..read and lentil soup free or at rt'duced prices to more tha n 20.000 persons a day. And !hey ·are opening more kitchens in nearby to\\'TIS. Landless fannhands and their families are quitting their rural mud homes in thi<i ciistrict 160 rniles north>A•est of Co.ilc•Jtt. 'T'hey cro\\·d the buses or lurch a!orig in the <lust \1ith bundles on th.cir beads and babies in their arms. Thin brown anns stab at the bread spread on flat lea\'es for the hungry in the middle of central Bankura Street. Several thousand squat in lines for thi; dole, making sh.rill cries for more v.•hcn lhe man with I.be SOlr.tp buck.et passes. Mothers stick food into lh('ir babies' mouths. Children eat in quick llandfuls. Old men eat in stunned silence. "It's been si x motnhs since "'e had any "·ork or food ," said 32·year-old t\loo- dandra l\1andal, who walked 2.J miles from his village. "There was fa rming in · the 11il\agc, bot the plants have died .because there is oo rain." The chance to find jobs is bleak Wltil the fall rice harvest at the end of October. With governn1ent food slOCks inadequate and prices on the open market out of reach, businessmen say the food situation v.'ill be desperate Wlless help comes fast. The situation is the same all over India bec<luse Of drought and lack of fertili zer. Government food bins ;;arc dangerously near the empty n1ark . But the International '\\rtleat Council said last "'eek she will need a total of th.ree million to nve million tons 1.0 get the nation by Wltil next swnmer's wheat comes in. ~1RS. GAND ID'S envoys abroad have quietly made India 's needs known in the hope of getting aid and concessionary food sales or 1·oans from the United States, Western Europe and the Soviet Union. President Ford pledged last u1eek that !he United Slates 'A'ill increase its "·orld food aid but the quantities available ar.e .expected_ to be disclosed only at the \Vortd Food Conference in Rome in November. Indian offi cials in New Delhi and state officials here in Calcutta have been reticent to cry publicly for help from abroad because 1he Indian public has been told since the good crop y.e.ers of liro-71 that the nation ill virtuall)r self-sufficient in food. Nowhere has the scarcity hit harder than in the backward villages of the \Vest Bengal countryside \\'here landless farm hands have been caught in a vicious grip of high prires and Ulij!mploy· ment. Press 'Distorts' lndui Fan1in e? LOS A.NGELES -Ametic:in press report$ of JVll,enlia.l wide- spread famine in India v.'ere gross :iii::1ortion.s. Indian Foreign l\Uo- ister Sadar Swaran Sing! said. .. \Ve face a shortage of only fi\'e percent of our food grain needs." Singh said. "TI'lis makes the base larger beeause of our population, but I ca n co.tegorically say that there has not been one death in ln· dia because o! fantiaa." • (llrb!!tot S~lllt Ntt'lllitl' ltr•~ ....... REFUGEES CONGREGATE IN A DESERT SETTLEMENT, CAMP TEVREKZENA, IN THE MAURITAN IA REGION OF SAHARA i '. .. f ; .. t • ' ~; .. • .- I~ .. I DAIL v PILOT ' .. I For the I '. Births I: PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTI.CE I Ll'·'Ufl MOTIC• TO ClllOIT•ltt I Ul'alllOlt COURT .,. TH• ITATI 0 11' CALll'OllNIA , •• THI COVNTY 01' 01.f.Ne• "'--.. ...,,, '"" ""' 1!1111• "' JMllS I A M lJ E L lt081!1150H, Ott1111od. • NOTltl 15 ltlltllY GIVIN to l'llt • 11:rwlror1 ot tllto •licw• Pltmed H c-=!•"1 11111 llt "'NH'll 111"4119 <ltlm1 •f<ll"'' ftlt N !f dKlde11t 111 rtqU!rllli. ta• flit • ,,,...,.,, wl11'1 Tiie rtt Ct>l"Y ~. Ill 11w otllc• et '"-tletll of tilt '""'' ltfttlfllod court, or ta flAlfflt ,,,.,,., wllll the llK-ry ¥0Ulllw.. ~ IM ~ •..r.tla~ 11 tflt La-.. Ottl t, Df JAY w . -.ieHDElllOH. "' ..... _, ~Ctrttw Df .. Ir. 1J10, HtW)W't htCll, Ct lllon1!1 .,..,, """''" 11 ,,.. .... ,. .. blnt ..... • Df 1"" ~ 111 tU ,.,..,._,. ,.,-. ttllllN to "" nlllt _, t'., d.,.;""'1t, , wltlll11 '-"'*""-t lltr fM flnr llYbllct-• "°"' • tNt Ntlct. : DetM .......... ,., lt1• DEM>llAH LVNH ltO:r•oo• llKll"l1 of ,.,,. ~!II tM .__.. "'""" elk...,,,. ,,,,., W. MINOllltON # tit.,_,.,,. C911tw ~ .. I" 1Jlt ........ " ... ,11., r.1111w1111 " ... , .. , fftfl ..... ,. 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IOCS Appllt ll(" . , ............. , .•.•. tclO Aucllon .................•.. 8015 WITH THIS BEAUTIFUL HOME ONE OF A KIND. pride of ownership· i1 reflected in the artlst!c decorating; new kitchen appliances; cnthedral ceil., mirrored .... -alll'l, atrium; J bdrna., 2 baths, dry bar, patio, dbl. car ga.raye. Prtced at ONLY $61.500. OPEN SAT/SUtl. l·S 4511 SANDBURG WAY UNIVERSITY PARK "C" THOMAS REALTOR 224 \V. Cst li""'Y· 548-55Z7 N~'flOl't Beach Eve. 56-5643 LAGUNA HILLS POOL HOMES 3 Be:drnom & den, "'ood pan. elled fireplace with "'et bar. Covered patio & BBQ, !Uper clean, tile roof. Owner will sell VA, F1i.A. Br1ng otters. \Von 't last. Call 646-t111 Walker &lee •••l ,,,.,.. 12 Units Plus Pool Eastside Spectaeular hill1op estate 3-Near INch FROM YOUR PRIVATE DECK 1tory, tantastic view of san-rree lined-Cul'..de-sae. Prtv- SIX BRAND NEW QUALITY CONDOS. All dy "'"'h & coutline. •-· .,..._ ll"-~.,.,m inlaid \\'OOd wans, ate en ... ,,. ~ ... with 3 BR, 21h BA. Up to 1840 sq ft, bltin '-" room. Separate mua:tw DUPLEX R/0 , dsbwshrs,· compact·ors, b1.·g dbl gar glau front living room, family room with cozy :fir. Cocktail patio deck. Huge kt HEADQUARTERS \V /sep lndry area ... and much more. If master suite, drawing room, ~'!.:~ C::1:f dme~b~ you ever wanted the FIRST SHOT at a super Quiet street rountry like at-,..... T\\.'0-2 BDRJ\1 UNITS. Beam . NOW . Ii PIC n>o•phor•-PRICED SIZE bedroorn1. COMPLE-·1· x 1 N investment. 1s the tne to act. K .. TELY n~ECORATED 60' ('('I 111gs. , trll 11 1arp. ear UNDER $60,000 C n 11 n.i:.u • \\'esfl•IHf ShOpplng Cen1er. YOUR FAVORITE, sit back and watch your 645-0303 VERANpA with manh- $44,950. . money grow. mallOY.· fire rlna'· BIG T\\'D HOUSES ... A 3 DR and $44,850 TO $57,800 TREE.S. BWlt·ln mountain a 2 ·an, Eas1slde Coita WITH ONLY 10% 00\VN. YOU OWN THE waterta.11. FARM SIZED J\1esa. Only $8500 down. YARD. "bandoned and re&• Balance at 9~% interest. LAND. Call. dy for )'OU. Hurey on th1a VA-NO DOWN. Extremely JACOBS REALTY one. Call now! IG-2535. •iuu"p 3 BR. 2 BA + 2 · - -0Pf1intl7irsfii<m•_, ~f;i~:~~:;;~ 2919 N-port ,,!~5;!!1.~ ..... of JOlh St. A=o~::::m ~11 11~11111 Triplexes, 4-Plexes, 5-Plex· I 9'l"!!!!!!!!IO!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!O!!l!O~!!'.,.,,.~~ !Lovely Pacific view; lge. 3 I ~~ !!!!;-!=!!•~=~• ·~~~=:~!1 e1, S-Plexe1, llnd woula you Gen,.ral R.E. 1002 General lll.8. 1002 bdrm .. 2 bath home. Specl· Ii believe a 10-Plex? ally offered 11.t $114,000. l,..Quall ~ liii•Plac• Prap.,.ti•• · . 752 .. 1920 1400 OUAll$l. NlWl'OllT ltACH Own Your Own TENNIS CLUB *Tenni1Court60X"120, to• fence, championship siie * Swimming pool r.lu1 jacuzzi * 1pece or putting gr•en * 3,000 sq. ft. 4 bedroom, 3 beth, den, 33 ft. rum- pus room, form•I dining room, me1ter bathroom with romon tub and out. OPEN l10USE l·S ELEGANT 11 STORY HEART OF ••• We've A Site _SAT ~L.SUN. __ .'.l'.lWi Bil BAAU!l!Ul.lloroe b _COrnruc . Mu. Love I> 2622 Creatview located in an "OUt of Town" notne, close beac on Bay11hores Npt Sch ntrnosphere. Open rollinK l~ lots. Owner will aJTange A beautifully, ias~y deco-hills. yet cl~ to new Dnanclng. 0 fl er ed at Hilltlde panoramic view R..l Taled, channing, warm schools k slJ:>pping centen. i u 7.soo lar&e ittezuiar lot, m ocean home with flowering vines Gorgeoui landscaping com-Ontu id I Oce Blvd. t adornJ f & tio Ql plete wtth 2 patios 8c s e o an a plele ~ i:e1y ~si ~ sprinklers encircle t h t 1 "' HeUo~40,~ ~ = tn rMr _ fUBt t'Mldy tor the outatwxUna 4 Bdrm beauty, "21' !:U.. ldd1, rueci. c.-Crandma. h~e fa'}\.~&· te famfo ·rmi ~ c~•rs Two cu gar + fenced • In ¥1 we1r.......-sep. nna ~ I I . -• "" P:il"ldrii for ·2"'more can, or ~1:;t !P~mci·'· ~~ CORBIN·MARTIN . & boat 4 camrao. Priced at a true · ti~ooratora toueh! ! Realtors WALLACE 16<.950. <••h to loan on A GREAT BUY AT 157 900 * 644-7662 * · REAL TORS 17trai~~:71 opltton. ~ co:Ts . HOME & INCOME '62A4S4 Plac• . w WALLACE """"" •tighlty Spao;oh LOW % LOAN Prapft't:i•a . ·: REALTORS ~~'.er~~e~1·~~~ Thl1 )'Oung select property 7J2-1'20 -54'"4141-dcl!iht. Your own priv. on a quiet cu!-de.sae bu 1400 OUAILSt NIWl'OIT llACH (Ope:n Evening•) patio garden protected by ~.=~ JA ~OM~ ,: orsore ·Eyes LUSCIOUS massive slumpstone walls. cn!ative owner ha• spent Se!cluded ms tr. suite loft!!! i..lortune on window cover-POOL HOME Just Listed Alt applian"' l\i yean tnp ond wall "'"me•"· Just put on the mlll'ket. Hard to find ea11tside units \\1th side atrium. l locle• .Im l ulldlno Mt11r1111 ........... IO:U C1m.,11 lo Equlpmtnt •..•.•... l030 ,,,, ......... •"•-'··· ....... 60)1 a good inc.-ome. 10 • 2 ~ J\IR. CONLEY AT Oov• . . .. ...... 10.0 bedrooms and 2 1 8.12--6800 bedrooms. Beamed ceilings, WALKER & LEE some with patios. 1-"or in-Real Estate Frtt Jc You .................. IOU Furnliurt .......... , ......... ii050 G1r1;e Stlt .•... · .. MU H...-... .•.. ..••.... .. .. 1060 Hou111llold Gmd1 .............•. I06S Jtwtlry •. . .•. • ••....••... ION Uvt'llodc .............. ., .••.•. I07J Mtcltlne..., . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . .. I01t W1Cl lltrwou1 ............. IOIO MIKtlltllffUI W111led ........ Kiii Mullut l"-l""....,.11 ..•.. Nil Offlct Furn!turt a. E~lp .••.•• IOIS formation call w 646-TITI. ,,,, ..................... "''~.::::;::::::::;::::::;::::=:::::I Pl1not a. Orp111 ...•........ &l)fO S1wl11t;1 M•c1tl1111 ............. torl 5PQt'llng G-1 . . . . • ltlU S!ort . Rt111ur1nt, l1r .. ····'°" '"''"' ........ . .......... ~. TV, Rtllfc HIFI. Sltrto . IOH l~-~_ ... _•_"-_ ... ., ____ ~l(• ll l Call us about this desirable . Mf"'I"'..... . 1'.. Corona Highlands 2 br 2ba G111er11 .. . ... 9010 pool hoine "ith I a r g-e 1or11. M1lnt. a. 11 .... 1c1 .. t020 mastl:'r .suite private beach ec111, Mt•I"" fqulpm1n1 •. \ICJO access und very special Bot••· l"owtr · · · '°'° f I n anclng aIT8.11&:ement1. Both. llltntfClttr1tr ...... ·. · '°50 t l!fl lott1, Sill ... , ... , ... '°'6 .,,~,500 lotl1. lllpa, Ooc~1 .. .. ..... 9010 Call ti44-72U Botll, SPffd a. S•I .. 90IO ·~ .. =--11;j elm Alrc,111 •• • ........... tllt ''"'"''· S11t. !lent ......... fllO IE!tclr1c Ctr1 . . . . . . . . . ... tl)ll Mtltl'-~I ..••.•. tUO Molwevd11/kooltn ........ t!50 Mol9' Homt1, Stlt·lll..,l ..... tLloO Tr1Utr1. T••""I . ..... ..... t 1l'O Tr1U""' Uf!Ul'I' ... . •.. tlto Auto ltrvlct lo ~'"' ......... t«IO REDUCED $3000! MU8l see fantastic 4 + family room + private office. Gigantic mas1er aulle has room-size clOiet and big balcony. "B'llt big hon1e buy at $51,900" Catl}l7-Qll0 A&C I .,,,'~ II {;11 ASsUJ\lE $254 total paymenL ~=:;----~ 7~~% VA. POOL HOME! ;. Best lfunlington Bea.ch buy G•n•••I .. ·•· ··· •flo at $37,500! Ot:IUl, &harp and AllfhtUtt I. Cl111lc1 .......... t520 RecrttllOl'lll Vthlcl•• ......... tSJO ready to see. Call now SPOfh, ltttt, ltod1 ..... ,. .... tS-0 847-6010 Ai:t. 4 Wlllll Oflvn •. , •••• ,....... tUI -,,..-..-.-."o,---:-;--· I '""b ······ .... ··· ·· •uo 1. FH,A A1sumption V1111 , ........................ tl10 Aui. L1111""' ........ , ..... tstO 3 Bdrm 2 Bath. Tot&l Pay. Autot Wffllld ·· · · · · · · · ····· · '"° ment $155.00 month, New Avtot, Im,........ ..•.......••. t700 I I t and dra .tu1C11. ,._ ..................... ,..,. pan, carpe I pes. AulOL Uttd "°' Vacant Call Hacienda Real Dlel Direct 642·4321 Cell Collect · Sult1cribe to the newspep•r that cownyo11r homef9Wn best .•• YOUR Hometown hltyNewspaper DAILY PILOT Se.U Idle: Items ,.11h & Daily Pilot 0•11Uled Ad. C.JI 00-5618. Estate Inc. 542-5656. LIKE NEW! Soaring vaulted cellirig1. Open spaclousnes1. Triple garage. Big 1p1trk· lln& pool. ~lu{'h more! Call now to see. 847-6010 Agt. 4 BDlli\TS., 3t1 b&., tamUy nn., forml\I din, nn. & spuk.llna poot. $l49,GOO \'le Stuart Realty ' 49.1-7531 $27.llOO! .U.11me 7'i~ loA.n. F'ull !Hl..YfnCnt $153 pe.r mo. aean llnd 11hRrp. T .... -o 1tory. Call now to 11~ 847-6010 Agt • SAVE TI10SE APPLE PEEUNGS 11nd boll In aluminum pans and pot1. n.ey Wi.11 brllrllten the metal to a ?."jlke-ncw" f'flndltlon. Have anything 10 11ell? U• " oally r•11ot C111sitil'd Ad. Call 642-5678. Don't drop U!e till.JI •• , Get a joh with a low-coat Dslly Piiot Ch1salncd Ad.! SiZ..0078 6 UNITS OCEANFRONT Deluxe 2 Br., 2 ba., Sw@dlsh frplc1., sundecks or patios; 5 unit& furn., on water/summer; one. unit, yearly. unfw-n. GoOO rental historv. Cull for details. Prtcrd a! s:tio.000. Call : 673-366.1 642-2253 Eve1. associated BROKERS -RE A L TORS 101 ~ W llolbon 1171 16l l Fast Oc:c:upanc:y East Bluff Call us l'boUt this extra neat 3 b1' family room home In Ea.stbluff with large park like yard and pou!ble bofl.t, trailer storage a cc e • •. Quick occupancy a:::I 1hort CICTOW desired. Owner wlll tielp fiMnee at only $64,950. eau 644-rzu , .. MOVE IN NOW $263 PER/MO. PAYS ALL 7°/o LOAN-POOL $31,500. Ope.n be111m l'tllinp. C1-xy flrti;lBC9. FBmlly I.ti. Bl& ahodft tnott "tUM'OUnd· In-;, Pf'rfl!Ct 11a.rter horne. nil llO\'', 8-17·6010 Ag!, Pr1.m \Ya.nt Ada! II now -&12-5678, W·th < t 1. _, new, including trash com· Jt Y.1.1.1 M!ll ~'kly al i •ep. ,acuzz' tre-••ll:. Irvine Terrace pac.tor. Plus, 2 lxlnn. in· ~ c It<= huge yard, room for boat come home. $68,500 & $51,........ 11 ~ f 1:~~· 1f~~1;ee~':y Owner Will Carry. 0wner wtu help finance. §:SELECT · "'ak' roof ond !amily room. An "'ra ,..,,, 3 BR Home f[RGUSON·HESTER T'PffONR llD Lots of space & privacy. on a large ll0x135 ft comer Only l Iii: years new. Can be lot with warm natural wood 90Jd sut>ject 10 assumable and brick textures, seU 7% % loan at only $316. cleaning oven and much RHltors, Inc. 1401 Dovo St., Ste. 22j) total per mo. 897-0321 mo~ WALKER & LEE RF...AL ESJ'ATE PLUS Newport Beach The owner want• a rast sale &33-9781 STOP YOUR WORLD and iet oCf kq: rnou,gh to call U1 -We will lhow YoU • Supc?r U.tinK. Adapt· able 3 to 5 BR home, Eut- side Colta lttesa. $46,500 VACANT 11nd WI LL CARRY TifE ht --~B~Y~O~W~N~E=R-.--1 TD. This ·I bedroom pool home is vacant & "'Rlting for a faniily to Jo\•e i!. OHert'd 11! $36.500 with Cl &Fl l A tern1s available. Ca 11 s.ia--&191 Only $87,500 Cal I 644-7Zll ,. 1/3 ACRE Walker &lee RIA L llflf l Back Bay t~ixer-Upptr Don't give up the ahlp! You'll find Jt in O•r '.fled 3 Bdrrns., ofllee: beamed cell. Great for hol"9el, dop, ete. $41,950 DAVID D. CAR.LroN REALTOR 833-9293 Ir FOYNIT 11 1· I . I I I· HUPRE.L I' I I I I I DACAFE I I I I ~ I, GAYRET I I I I I I C OP I LE I I I I I' ' I N E Y N I T I I I I I' .... l'~lblf NUMBflEO I' Q'•tfllf'S Now that there ere no I more gas lines people are demanding services like having their tires checked, their front dhd checked, I •heir window ciHned, etc. One gos station deeler closed early end I a~ktd I ;f ho w•• ovl of g01. "No," he replied, "I'm - of -." 10-C 0 ~l.te fhe tlto,,c~lt qVOted by l1lh1141 In fftt ,,.tllfno -di you dtvelop JtOtll af*P Mo. 3 btlow. Olft• .. -...~ .... I' I' I' I' I' I' r-1 I I I 1°•1 I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS Answer1 In Cla1slflc1t~n 8080 EXCL. Bayerest. Attractive 3 bdrm home, 2 bu. Dining rm, brft area. Covered Pftlio. Large landscaped lot. Move-In condition! Only $79,900. 642-2393 o/ REALTORS 6)S.SS 11 -' OPINHOUSE CORONA DEL MAR-Sund1y I to S 202 SEW ARD DR., SHORECLIFFS: Quality custom built 4 bedrm; rich in detail with beam ceilings, polished wood floors, shut- ters, lovely garden patio. '140,000. 217 JASMINE A VE: Just a hop; skip & jump . to Big Corona B_eacb. King size family home, 4 blJ bedrooms or 3 plus a studio for the artistic minded; owner will ca.r,Y trust deed. $139,500. ' 231 LARKSPUl,I: Another "close to Ute Big Beach''; Two bedrm & lanai room, ez· ceptlonal patio area. Convenience plus - walk to all shops, banks, markets, etc. Owner will finance at $67,500 or will lease furnished for 9 montbs at $435.00 in· eluding gardner. _______ .... __ _ "FIRST OWNER" Your choice elUter ao 1 tar shelter investment or a home with Income in this Corona del Mar dupler - 3 bedrooms each unit. Owner will help finance. $119.000. BREAKERS DR: On Ute sand at lllg Corona Beach. Owner will le11e, lease option or will finance 1or you. A hidden tnasure. $150,000. I tOLI OF NEWPORT, REALTORS 67.1-5511 '1515 : • Co11t HJghway, Corona del Mir. • ! ' • • •• ,, '' • ' .. :- .. . . .. '· • ' '• ; ' •• .. :· ' .. ' •• ·; • , • DAILY PILOT D 3 ! PG:"'~.,.='~•;;;I ;;;R;.E;;·;;;;;;;l:;:;;;G;;•n;•;•;•;;I ;R;.E;·;;;;;;';002;;;jiG~•~ne~ra;il;iRi;.;;·;;:;;;;;;ao;;Ga~~n~e;ira~l;R~.;E·i;;;;;;;;i'00~2~ 1 Gener•I R.E . VALLEY ·REAL TY PRESENTS 1002 Gener•I R.E. 1002 Ganer• R. , 1002 "Abondoned ' ' " ' • • . ' ... ;,. • -HAPPINESS IS _ A HOME WITH LOVE OPEN SUNDAY 1.5 2524 OCEAN Duplex with diaUnct!on. 3 Bdnns._up, 2 bdrms. down; outstanding ·view of harbor ,190,~ . 308 POINSETTIA •3 Bdrms. & family rm. I-Block to Llttlo Corona Beach. Large lot. New carpets at buyer's choice. Sll7,ooo 1907 GALATEA A home with originality; one you can't beat tor a l,arge party; retractable roof, private pool with fountain & jacuzzi. 5 Bdrms., den + outstanding vie;w of bay & ocean. '2351000 2709 SETTING SUN DRIVE A rare find ! Owner will help with financing this exciting house, wi th a view that seems to never stOp. Full burglar alarm system; 4 bdrms., 4 ~l baths, poo~ jacuzzi; sunken conversation pit & very unusual lighting effects. Reduced to $245,00Q 316 OTERO Tl)e finest Bluffs townhouse ever offered! }fodel ~ecoration, view; lge. family rm. A1ove right 1n! Charming patio & fountain. 3 Bdnns .. 2% baths; owner will carry !st T.D. at 9% %. $107,500 103 BAYSIDE PLACE (OPEN 3 TO 6). Best wateJlront view on lhe harbo~, from almost· all rooms; beach, pi.fr, charming courtyard, artist's studio & separate office. $365,000 DISTINCTIVE RENTALS AVAIL. FROM $350 Month -Spec ializing in Homes of Distinction HUG HOMES, REALTORS 567 San Nicolas Orlv•, Suit• 102 Newport C•nter 640-4050 Gentrel R.I!. 1002 G•neral R.E. 1002 ti Coldwell Banker .. IDEAL BIG CANYON CONDO A treasure of a 2 bedroom !!lus family roo.m Dover model. Exquisitely decorated and landscaped. End unit. You must see this. $139,500. OCEAN VIEW --11-3 Bedrooms,~3 bathsr-forma.l dining r.oom , _ custom decorated. \Veil landscaped patio \\'ith pool. Jn immaculate condition. $159,500. ' . ' LIVE IN BAYCREST Use your own immagination on this one. 4 Bedroom borne with great lot, ready for your own decorating and Jandscaping.,ideas -outstanding financing available. $78,900. SENSATIONAL LAGUNA ESTATE 11h acre prime hiJJsKle view site. Unbeliev· able custom 3 bedroom home + large sep- arate 3 bedroom guest houses. Beautiful grounds. $650,000. LINDA ISLE -ONE STORY 4 'Bedroom, custom built home on· the la- goon. Family room. beamed ceilings. Pier & slip for large boat. $235,000. LIDO ISLE SECLUSION Treasured location on quiet tip of Lido. Spacious 4 Bedroom borne on lot '•:itb 90' frontage. Remodeled in great taste. $175,000, WAN'I'. AN EXCLUSIVE ADDRESS? Better take a look at this large two story 4 bedroom ·home with formal dining room. LOcated on corner lot providing views of. Newport Beach lights at night and water during the day. $185,000. ATTENTION INVESTORS Owner will consider 10% down on thi s 4 bedroom, 2lh bath home in University Park. Features fireplace in master bedroom, beam c~ilings. Located near pool. Land Included. $56,950. SPYGLASS FOR $13',500 Super View. You will love the way it's decorated. Owner hates to leave. Come see this home and be prepared to buy. OPEN HOUSES 319 POINSETTIA Great C.D.M. home, 1800' ol quality character living. Old brick. llrepface. 3bedrooms, giant kitchen and family room. $92,500. 1607 PORT CHARLES Beallti!ul two story four bedroom :Palermo model in Harbor View. Super backyard, with best patio in the area. View of Big Canyon. $86 ,495. 121 l BAYFRONT On Little Island, perhaps the best Bayfront area in town. l:xecuUve home, three bed· rooms. furnished $850 a month. 40' boat slip available. 424 LARKSPUR Choice two story duplex in C.D.~l. ren1odeled kitchens and new carpets. Walk. to every· thing. A rare chance to bu y one, two, three or four duplexes at $85,000 each. 2:00 p.m. on. 711 GOLDENROD One of the cutest older duplexes in C.D.tlf. Two bedroom home with one bedroom aeart· ment and a one-of-a-kind guest unit. $74,500. 4425 W. COAST HWY. Sparkling 3 be<lroom to,vnhouse in like new condition. On the waterfront \\'ith fee land, private slip and one block to the ocean. Lease or sale. $595 or $82,500. Newport's best waterfront buy! 4 POINT LOMA DR. Spyglass Hill in C.D.M. Beautiful details .in trus Spanish style villa. Red barrel tiles, lush carpets, wallpapers and 'vood paneling. Four bedrooms with a floor plan that goes to seven! Five baths. $149,900. Call 675-7225 CALL US FOR A FREE ESTIMATE OF VALUE VALLEY REALTY A BERG ENTERPRISES CO. Ganoral R.E. 1~ General R.E. 1002 BIG CYN DEAUVILLE ·VIEW · $149,500 NEW! Spectac. 4 BR model wtbonus rm & DR. Luxurious cptng, ldscped & rm for pool. 2 RUE CHAMONJX SAT/SUN 1·5:30 CUSTOM SPANISH HACIENDA New split-level 5 BR hon1c with den, DR & huge rumpus rm. Big Cyn C.C. View. $325,000 8 OAKMONT LNE. SAT/SUN 1·5:30 $129,5001 HOTTEST BUY TODAY! \Vhy? Because owner may carry 75 o/b loan 8%, 25 yrs. Big Canyon beaut. Bordeaux. 6 RUE CHAMONJX SAT/SUN 1·5:30 THE "BLUFFS"· CAREFREE LIVING Brand new I-story 3 BR 2 bath beaJltiful "Linda" model. Cathedral ceilings, lovely greenbelt view fro1n this choice end unit. 2701 VISTA UMBROSA SAT/SUN 1·5:30 VIEW · POOL · REDUCED TO $1 79,500 One of the best in Big Cyn! 4 BR. FR & Dll. Beaut. custom detail thruout. o~·c lsetoption. 3 CHERRY HILLS LNE SAT/SUN 1·5:30 EXCLUSIVE LINDA ISLE • $250,000 Bayfront luxury! Perfection in 5 BR home. FR, DR & 41> baUlS. Pier/slip. OMC loan' BIG CANYON COUNTRY CLUB· $295,000 Brand New luxurious 5 BR I-story wtgolf course vu. Fine appts. Air-cond. Lge ct-yd. 49 ROYAL ST. GEORGE SAT/SUN 1-5:30 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 HOMES OPEN 1·5 THIS AFTERNOON A UNIQUE HOME In Dover Shores. Best p rice in the Dover Shores Area: 4 bdrm, 95:<135 pool size lot, clean. top condition. $98,500. See Ji.Jn Valentine at 1235 Santiago Drive, Newport Beach. A UNIQUE HOME In Irvine Terrace--New Listing! 3 bdrn1 on a pool size lot, backs to _park. Harbor viev,r to front. Unique price of $88,517. See Jim· Vnl entirtc at 724 1.1alabar, Irvine 'ferrace. A UNIQUE TOWNHOUS~ In Univers ity Park -The scarce Stan ford l\1odeJ witlt 3 delightful bedrooms and fai11ily room-next to Green Belt-$62,000. See Gil Ide at 4691 Royce Rd, Villa" Spanish-$38.~50 2 Story-Pool-Beach f'om1.1i1I tluublt' rf·1t't' ll\lry lO l!of)<IL-io\J5 lh \111: l'••lt•l 10,·tlh nour to 1'il llino1 :1., pl~l1'. r~orninl dln\ni; i~ ~<'l'C'J h) h~I' ga1'fl(•n l'fl'I\ J~ll,•/)o•t' with brcnk:fit~ rn t11•;: 11r,.o. t11o'!il& Pllf\Y tOv1n wl'h cun1· n1111Kli11~ 1j('\\' VI lu1h lCJ' race in ll'lllled L'OU11.o:•r 1. :-:11't'<'Plll'i: i<tnil'li 11'1 l!"fll1rnr" n'W~lo.)J' ~u.Jh• & 1·h.l1'1,·c•1·-; 11·ini:-. f"tl)lll~'O & .1t1l cl tmJ· ('()!"~. llUl'l'}' !'tj3.7\S1. , OPfNTIL 0 • lr'S FUN 10 fJE NICCI ~· THE REAL ESTATERS OPEN SAT /SUN. 1-5 600 E. OCEANFRONT Balboa Penh ~~uli1. A p 1 . 3-H; 2 brlrn1. t'Ondo; 011 nr1· 111ll carry ]~I T.D.. of' lea~e/oplion, or trade". Vie11· of (l(.'Can, Catalina· & bay. $65,(XX) 113 EMERALD Balboa Island, Fin;! lime l)f· fe1'Cd: :\ Bdrnu;., J1, ba., imrnaculate condition! A UNIQUE HOME ln Westeliff-3 bdrm- - pool home, clean lines. lots of \\'Qod, nr. shop- ping. schools and open space. Unique price REALTY 31~ f\!Alll.NF: AV!-: BALBOA JSJ..AND * 673-6900 * ol $74.900. See Zoe Ann Rhodes at 1400 Westcliff. HARDWOOD C.F. Colcsworthy & Co.-Roallors .J HARBOR HIGHLANDS-5 BR. & POOL Enlarged home \.\.1th new carl>cu & paint; close to s~hools, park, library & shopping. A great fan11\y home at only S64,500. An extra bonus is an assun1able insurance loan at U~%. AN l~Y!TATION TO GRACIOUS LIVING Da rling family home: custonl detailed Carn1cl 1110<\el: 3 b<lr1ns .. fa1nily rn1., din ing_ rm. Jlric· ed Lo sell at $75.500 & you O\\'n the land! C. F. COLESWORTHY 640-0020 Gene;i1 R~E . 1002General R.E. ***OPEN HOUSES*** lOl CATALINA, NEWPORT HTS. 1002 Charming 3 bdrn1 .. dining rm., fa 111ily rnl., 3 frplcs., family home, tree lined corner lot. Open Sat/Sun 1·5. $69,00. 115 BALBOA COVES, NEPORT :\ '"at.erfront 3 bdrni. "'ith boat slip; shag carp.; sharp! Open Sun. 1·5. $143 ,500. 2107 VISTA LAREDO, THE BLUFFS Open Sun. 1·5. Original section. of th.e Bluffs . Linda n1odel. all on one floor. 3 BR 2 ha, end unit. Exposed beam ceil.: adjacent green bell, near pool Reduced to $69,500 DAVIDSON REALTY A UNIQUE DUPLE X In Corona del Ma r- Recently refurbished! Colorful and ne"'' ! ~1odern kitchen, FAU heating. income units, $89,500. See Louise Peters at 608 Acacia, Corona del !\far. ~lined, !.~~.~b~!1 .:::======== Dl'f'a ls .,~•hrre !his line 1002 5801 W Coa\I Hwy . N_ B 645 -7575 A UNIQUE HOME In Newport Shores - Catch this! \Vaterfront home "''ith a sandy beach just 2 doors from a pool and tennis court! Really! It has 4 bdrms. 2 stories and is vacant and Lldo Isle o•Nner wants to DO SOMETHING! Sale ($79,900), lease (5550/ nlo.) or lease option. Nev,r on the n13.J'keL. See Marilyn H. at 488 62nd SL, Newport Beach. A UNIQUE HOME In Corona del Mar - "tree house" feel. R-2 lot1 owner will fi- nance, south of the highway charm, $64,500. See Jim \Vood at 418 Dahlia, corner of 1st. A UNIQUE HOME In Mesa Verde - The UNIQUE Featur•s of This Home Are: It's immaculate! Clean and bright. 4 bdrm Pacesetter model 750 with exciting land- scaping, central Me Sa Verde location and in perfect condition. Being sold by the orig- "ina1 owners, -thru UN IQUE HOMES --.t $56,950 .. P .S. a· 5lf.z% loan is assumable, if you have $46.500 for a do"'n payment. See Sogn at 2845 Ellesmere, h-Iesa Verde, Costa l\1e sa. A UNIQUE DUPLEX In Coron• del Mar- View corner of. Ocean Blvd. and Carnation, enormous 2 bdrm, 2 bath units, courtyard, fantastic views. $210,000. See Lou King at 2.500 Ocean Blvd. A U.NIQUE HOME In Big Canyon -Best Price by Comparison Test-Beautiful 3 bdrm Monaco with soft color carpeting. sunny kitchen area, warm French doors and practi- cal features too! A 3 car garage with stor- age, landscaped patio wiU1 Char-glo barbe-- que and a floor plan that has the lu xurious master bedroom suite do~·nstairs. At $135,500, th.is property is best by con1parison test. Try it! See Vergilene Hul l at 22 Rue Gra nd Ducal, Big Canyon. A UN IQUE HOME In The Bluffs-Beautiful Bluffs. Hey you've got to see this one! Plush pale yeUow carpeting, lu sh draperies and lovely wall treatments. It's a decorator's condominium yet priced no higher than the others. There's 3 bdrms, 3 baths, porches, patios. and a cute r ear garden. This is a first class, hi ~h quality, uptown townhome. And it is Umquely priced at only $67,900. See Vergilene llull at 68.S Vi sta Bonita , The Bluffs. A UNIQUE HOME In Mesa Verde -Car· riage Estates! 5 Bdrms, 2 stories, po ol & all in good condition, a large !an1ily ho1ne for $87,500. See Nancy Simmons at 1828 Samar Dr. U~l()Uf. ti()Mf.§ ON TOP OF THE REAL ESTATE MARKET WITH THE NICEST PEOPLE SELLING THE NEATEST HOMES CORONA DEL MAR. 675·6000 custon1 2 bedroom homl' is --------locuted. Formal 12'x15' din· i,nt: roon1. l:1rge livin~ 1·111 \\'/brick fireplatt & big double garage. \V.ho'!> n with $34,500. 2211 Ne"""'J. ll· 64'g'!8si'i Sun/Eves • 646-5855 LOW INTEREST LOANS AVAILABLE FOREST OLSON REAL TORS I N C . an· --nounced !odny--they htr11e obtained a spi..'Cial lo.1n <..'Olli· mitment thro~h its af· filiation \11th Co I d 1v c 11 Banker, fo r guarantl"ed mortgage loans at a cosl to the buyer far below the going market interest rntc!I. Any U.S. 1°L'Sident ~ eli!{ible for the loans v.ihich hn\'e very lo\\' dov.11 payments. Loans are 11\·ailahle .,..•hile the supply last~. Jo~or niore details call 645--0303 between 9 a.n1. & 8 p.m. 7 days a week. HIGH ON A HILL OVERLOOKING BLUE PACIFIC Private and qutl't . Panoramic vk'"' of Pa<"'iflc. Courtyard entry. L a r g e kitchen. family r o o n1 . HUGE LIVING R 0 0 t.1 \\'ml A BREATH TAKING VIE\\'. Large bedrooms. Covered patio. Priced at 011· Jy $69,950. Oll•ncr \\·ill tinance. Call to sec 963-6767. OP£N Tit. g • rrs FUN ro 8E NICE' ~ .. ~. THE REAL ESTATERS BUSINESS FOR SALE Prime Newport Blvd. LOCATION Card & Gift Shop run inventory i n c 1 u d i n g Greeting CardB & Fi.-.:\urt's. Low mon!hly o v c r h c 11 ri, good v.·alk·ins, next to R.E. OffiN?. 646-:1928 545-3·18.1 Lachenmyer : Realtor TURTLEROCK BEST BUY 2 SMALL HOMES in ~fC!iR Vrrde. Rcdu('(!d In One 11·!rh hardv..vod noor~ S39,JOO. for quick sale. 4 & fireplace. Ea~tsidc Cost.~ l~R. din rm, unique !pl. ?.lesa. close in. $46,500. 3145 BarJmdos. Roy McCardl• Realtor OPEN SUNDA'' :? to 5 1810 N•wport Blvd., CM D. J. FEENSTRA 541-n29 642-4513 Inc. ~9-3162 1 ~"'""'"!!!!!!!"l""'""'"~~I G•neral R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 macnab/ Irvine realty · ANER HGMES Priced From $49,500 to $535,0DO I BEDROOMS-LIDO ISLE 2-story home on dbl. Jot-100' from teMis courts &. park. Separate children's quarters +maid's room. Lg. patio-'"et bar. $185,000. Lynne Rothell 641'6200. (S35) EXCEPTIONAL BUY 4 bedroom Camoo 11ighlands home. Locat- ed on extra lg. lot w /POOL. $8.'i,500. OPEN SUN. 1-5 P.M. 4818 SURREY. (S36J "COUNTRY.LIKE SETTING" Upper Bay VIEW. Like new 4 bedroom ho1ne at end of quiet cul-de--sac. 571,500. Maxine Williams 642'1)235. (S37) SHORECLIFFS Prestigious location w/private beach. Lovely 3 bedroom home '"'/view of wa ter & canyon. 5115,000 fee. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (S38) VISTA & VALUE Combined in thi s elegant Versailles A1odel 4 bedroom, 41h bath home w/superb view on gOJr course~ $169,950. Bob Owens 642-g235. (S39) EXTRAORDINARY QUALITY Superbly built 2 bedroo1n home w/magnifj .. cent Bay view. 1'.tany amenities. $169,500 fee. Ken Ha rtley 642-82.15. (840) THE BLUFFS W/A BEST VIEW On Avenida Cerrit.os-3 bedroo1n home w/ commanding vie'v of Upper Bay. $98,000. Tom Queen 641'6200. (841) YOU CAN SEE FOREVER ! Catalina, Ne"''J>Ort Harbor. sailboats. New- port Center-from this-4 bedroon1, 1-story Spyglass home. $164.000 fee. Joyce Edlund 642-8235. (S42) QUIET ELEGANCE • " EXCLUSIVE GATED COMMUNITY \Vhere curved and rolling streets, rambling fairways and lush greens create an ideal family atmosphere; see this lovely 4 bed· room home with family room ·and dining room. beautifully decora(ed-and ready for occupancy. $159,000. " LIDO ISLE BAYFRONT ~--_-••I R "·-1-~.neral_R.E. 1002 MESA VEROE. !>46·S990 • CALL us Qiarm~ " BR. 2~:i BA, 11~~:~~~~..,.i-iiiii~~,.,,,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-==~~~~-~~~~-:~~~lliilThT<J(' 00n1i. ---rtii'ShOnfe--.,--. ---,.. -----------Gtneral R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 is imn1ac:uta1 e .and v.·aiting .,!lWlLSIWhL ~ ZWW.<LWU --------for ~'OU to <'llJOY cnrefree JEFF BRIERY, REALTOR· 4 BEDROOM C,D,M. AAS ~:"!:~'i;:~~:\'.'~~ l\lost outstanding condominium in the Bluffs. Sin~le'level 3 bedroom w/every imaginable ·upgraile:-$94.500:-T.Ofs"l\Uller 642·8235. (S43) LINDA ISLE New 4 bedroom + maiC!'s rm . & bath. lleated & filtered pool & jacuzzi. l\1aster suite ,,·/sauna. S42S.OOO. Catli y Sch\veickert 642-8235. (S41 I ' : i • . :· .. " '. • ,. '. ,,._ • . . .. . Where do you park a 70 ft boat? Right in front of this gracious bayfront residence! 3 Bedrooms, maid's room, S'h baths, den. Located on 40 fl lot. $295,000. , SNUG BAYSHORES •potentlaJJ_y one of the most exciting proper- ties in this treasured community. 3 Bed· rooms, 2 baths towering beamed ceilings. You don't have to be rich to buy this one ..• Just smart. $75,000. 60' ON BAYFRONT Beautiful large home wiUt pier & 51ip. Fam .. Uy room & hobby room. 6 Bedrooms & 4 baths. Quiet area. Best buy at $210,000. BIG CANYON -BEA\ITIFUL BORDEAUX 3 Bedroom, highly upgraded, and 1973 price. Great location, big lot. air conditioning,. corning cook top; son1e view, privacy. $124,500. Submit, quick occupancy. CALM, COOL, CAREFREE CONDO 3 'Bedrooms, large living room, delightful conversation flt. Only yards away from awlmmlng poo & grammar .ochool. $66,500. DIAL 644-17'6 2161 San Joaquin Hills Rd., N.B. A COLDWELL BANKER CO. • " --.. • FAMILY HOME SOME NICE "'"' "'169.""' WEST BAY -BAYFRONT Financing is back In circulation again for home buying. 1 am vroud to present a classic bayfront 'vith pier & slip for a so + ft. boat & a sandy beach. This solidly built, home has 5 bdrms., 5 baths. Excellent floor pl~n & ready for decoration for that buyer with good taste. At this price. there is no competition & you own tbe land! A must to see at '265,000. JEFF BRIERY, REALTOR MOST ELEGANT OFFICE IN TOWN 2602 N•wport Blvd, Newport S.ach 675-9111 24 HOUR SERVICE On larg@ cor~ lot in Ir.inc TCJTace. Lm'f!ly 4 bedroom, 4 bath family hon1e V.'ilh separate dining roon1 and big screened lan11.i. 2 5epe.ralc yards -many ex· tra.·Call~. oP£N Tll. f • IT'S ,UN TO fJi NICtr THE REAL ESTATERS Assume 7112 °/o V Loan $223 Per I MaVacant- Near Beach Tree lined Cul-de.Sac. Pri\'a!e t'nlry ~1llmm()nth llv!nv nn. Sepamte mau1\'t" fttmily ~-I R E 1002 room v.'ith cozy frr't'plact. II ;-;;::;"':;'::1::..;;::;• :;· __ ....:.;::,: .:c:.;;;;c;;;..;;;;;;.:.. __ ;.:.::: I Country ldtchtn. Sl'pt1rnte PRIZE 35 ACRE RANCH Near Sm JUAn Cnplsfrnno. Comptcte wfth fl.1rn , rliiifc.h hou11;e. honk house, OOrn11, ho r 1 e 1 , rldinsi: ring, pnstutts. $250,000. Pr!<.~ "·Uh )Cini lemu. BUI Gntndy Rlir. 07!'-.-GIGI BEAUTIFUL IRVINE 2 ()dm1, I bl\th, fantasllc ltillril'f'Rrtinc: 12x20 p.'\tla. A grp.tl f'Mhf, home only Sl:i.OOCI. C11n be 110ld subje('t lo R~!llTOl!lble 7~~ !();'tO. Cilll tlil'r 7711 WALKER & LEE H~il 1':S111tt! ,, • lormal tilt'le. CIA?lo'T SIZE bedroorn' C'OMPLETE.1. Y n1-:01·:coRAn:o. so· VER· A..'lDA \\'ith n111~hmn.J IO\\· 11~ rinsf: HIG 't'ru:ES. Built· In n1oun1 al n wtttrrlall. J.'Afl~l !:17.ED YARD. Ahnn- tlOJ\('d And rctttly for l'11u. I furry on this one:. Cnll now! S.12-2.i.t.i . • "~~~~~~.s ~U!,.: · ;, I •· IQuail l· the nil·est. Jrl'I on a quiet Pia~• ·: !ltlWI. It has O«'llll and Prapert••• C'Rnyon vii'"'!· F'ini!!hed with 7$2·1920 the finei;t ffii\teriaJi;, ·It's a uoo QUAIL~l. NIWl'Olt tfACH Jewel! But don't listen lo>!--------- "'· ""' !or >~"""'"· Call CAPE COD 6-M~ . Upper Bny-4 Bdm1, 3 BA. ',,, ... ,,,. •••••• ''""'' "' ... u. \.\LL~:,· HE .. \IJ'Y A 8EAO ENTERPRISES CO IT'S IN THE WOODS Fam-rn1, f(lrn1 din..r1n. CQr· ner lot + boot (::Ah'. :!'J,lllkl · Sq. ft. of Elegance for 1 '"·""· I ~21 1 173.1 \\"es1cll ff Dr. I IRVINE TERRACE-YOUR CHOICE (1) 4 (or 51 bedroom home on lg .. pool sl1.cd grounds-$88.500. -or-(2) 2 bcdroon1 home on ·quiet street. Perfect for the sn1a1J .. er famil y or couple-$70,000 fee. Ton1 Queen &!4-6200. (845) NEW L.ISTING-EXCLUSIVE Ne\rport Beach 3 bedrootn. 2 bath home ~·I hrk fircplacl!. Lg. corner lot. $-19,500, L)itne Holl1ell 1~6200. (S-161 BLUFFS TENNIS \/ILLA Nc\1 . 2-story, 3 bedrOo1u l'Ondo111iniun1 11·ith- ln "'al kin g Wstance NB Tenni~ Club. O\\'llCr anxious for QUlrK SALE . S76,950. Paula Ba1loy 6l2-8235. (8471 ENTERTAINING? Beautiful Callft:>mla cu~tom "'·/primc-Do,·er Shores view. POOL. $219.500. OPEN SUN. l.S P.M. 1500 GALAXY DH. I 48) t01 Dc'ffr Oflwe 6'2•1235 1644 MICAtthvr lt4·6200 ' Nt:•porl Beach, Cldi!ornl• 9m.t J ' - ~·~o__:DAl:;:;L~Y~PIL=M::_~~~~~~S='~='~'~°";,;;;'°";:,.:'~··1~1~7•~-,.,,.-:-~--,...,,,.,,..~..,..,,..,,~~..,.,,~~~-,..,,,....-~_,,,,,,,.,,_... ...-~--,riMi\it:::::::iiiir"~-;;;;;;ir,t;:;::;~('.I'.""""~"liiiii GOn•rol Ill. 1002 O.nor•I ii.E. 1602 1 ~G~·= .. =·~·l~R~. E~.;;;;:;;;;:1~002~o~•=n•;:••~l~R~. ii:~.;;;;:;;;;:l~002~ Ii ;o~•:;no;;•;;•1~1i'~.~I!;;. ;;;;;;~1002~6~·="'='~'1~1\~.~l.;;;i;;;~liii!;\,~;"~l~,~~~~;·;RY;-· "jHiiiQHM[~I~~~ l~~~==;;;;~~~~~~==;!;;;;I BEST IN BLU ffS * Balboa Bay l'rop•rti•s * oo You WANT TO l lVI IN THI CORONA DEL MAR , OCEANFRONT DOVER SHORES ;INEST 'P RIV1A1~5~i'E~OMMUN ITY e1s cANYoN Panoramic view. $115,000. Seller offers xlnl See1hor• Drive llanoramlc View. Jvan END UNIT, nearly new, comp. cust. & enlarg·' Vacant lot. Seller wlll Wells cust. bit. 5 BR, First time olfered, 4000 sq. rt. Liv. area, 5 OPEN TODAY ed. 3 BR., SV2 ba., Cam. rnt w/v.·et bar & 2nd subordin ate. lge. fatn. rm ., formal BR1 5 Baths) 5 car gar,, 1400 sq. ft. Msfr ... South of Rwy. -just ~ stoM'J ,tbiO• from Ocean Blvd. Rustic Si,iio, beamod,cell. 3 bdrm. home: with huge falnlly rm. & 1/lew deck. Lot Is "Fee~ !not leasebo!dl -& " 5 It. wider than standard. •99,500 !rpJ. No expense spared In th is spe<lacular 675-7060 d . . / urt d Suite w!Fi'plc & Deck. 2 Fam R~s, Ll!dry. ASK GATE GUARD home ~·/extras too numerou s to n1en1ion. 1 n 1 n Js ''' co ~:Q Rm, largest lot w/lge lawn patio, 50 ft. FOil DIRECTIONS TO· llOD SQ. FT. "E"-PLA~. BA:YFltQtjT EASTBlUFF pool. $1 ,000. 642-1. Plll• trees, aviary. 2 BBQ). Only 100 fl, lo_ 'O. RUE OU PAR~ CDM-s·f). m -HOME' terms. ~ Super clean 4 BR. home prtv. Bch. $195,000. ultimnte condomlnlurn _ Nf"~ •-O~E N l..S 201 NATA (Off Vitti Nobl•11) ~~~!v ~:~~~in6wnre~~ LOW DOWN OWNER 2672 Clrcl• Dr. ~ol~~-~Wl~a~~ ~-suitable for con\lerslon to duplex - HELEN B DOWD · $ 2 Bd~~:.~,950 541-7116 Opon Sot & s.., J.5· bdma .• 4% baths,,.. ... ,. R·2 Jot (no t leasehold); very livable 2 bdrm. • :.a~~~B~ us! ?O,~OO. 556--8800-BrolCer Partl~ipatlon invited. Full commll 1l_on den. tt1tracf! pool + a 70 home. Build addittdn later. Located OD Or .. RE .lTOR MlS .... 01., · · · · ·n. vlow «k directly on chld Ave . a choice location, Only $63,500 1973 Top lister & Top Salesman . ~ -----·--· .. --~ ·-···-··---__ !I •Y . ot ••• .. :~~::' ~r:1u~:·r:ih A:i~1 I JUST USTID ~ --rn REALTORS EB D 1a: Pll Cl 111-.a the 10th fatcway & ....... ' ' , . N1wport/Co1l•··Mo1 .. ·Bo•rd· of·1'ntton ;-.. 4 Local Offices To.Serve You ORANG I COAST'S IEST """'· . . .. l.ovely duplex (home & income arranJ .. DIRECTORY ..., "'" IHJMw MtMffrf _.... ,.. tMt .... ..-• .,. ... llNtMl...tt ... .u ... ltc•I•• llttM M l•• .,. •. tcrlllff la ff_,., ffhill ily ll'bettftl1t etMwMN I• t.fty't DA ILY PILOT WANT ADS. Pm...c di•wlflt •pe• ._..., fw .... or t. tHt er. 111fto4 t. lht Mell !of~• lo ttils ceh1• t-11 ,.,...,, Sotwl&n -4 s...-.,, HOUSES FOR SALE 4691 Royce Road, !University Park) Irvine 675-6000 $62,000 (S un 1·5) 2 BEDROOM 225 Agate, Balboa Island 673-1200 $69,000. (Sat & Sun 12-5) 17666 Ironbark, Irvine 675-7080 $43.750 (Sun 1·5) 830 Park Ave .. Laguna Beach 494-9473 $78.000 !Sun 141 416 Dahlia, (Old Corona) CdM 675-6000 $64,500 (Sun 1-5) 17871 Acacia Tree Ln. (Univ. Park) Irvine 644-1766 $64,900 (Sun 1·51 716 Malabar ~rvine Terr.) CdM 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 231 Lark,spur, Corona del l\tar 675-5511 $87.500 (Sun 1·5) ••3306 Marcus Ne\vport Beach 6754-060 $89.SOti ' (Sun 1-5) 4846 \Vindvale Irvine 646-7711 $35,000 1Sal & Sun 1·5) 424 Los Robles, Laguna B<ach 494-7551 S75,000 (Sun 1·5) 3432 Santa Clara. Costa Mesa 546-2313 $49,000 (Sun 2-5) 4062 Loma, Irvine 646-7711 $40,500 (Sun 1·5) 2 BR & FAMll Y ROOM OR OEN •IO Rue Fonlainbleu (Big Canyon) NB 644-1766 $139,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 214 Orchid, Corona del Mar 644-7662 (Sat & Sun 124) 2622 Crestview (Bayshores) Npt. Bch. 752·1920 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 1000 While Sails (!l.V. Hills) CdM 675-3000 (Sal & 'Sun ·Sf 2816 Clill Dr. (Npt. Heights) NB . 548-i211 $85,000 (Sun) 14361 Gibraltar, Irvine 645-7221 $13,900 (Sun 2·5) 3 BEDROOM 2960 Zurich Court, Laguna Beach 4944439 $169,500 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 820 Cotlgress St., Costa 1'·Iesa f>48.3209 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 22 Rue Grand Ducal. (Big Canyon) NB 675-6000 $135,500 !Sun 1·5) 324 Morning Canyon (Shorecli!!s) CdM 642-8235 $155,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 113 Emerald (Balboa Island) N.B. 673-6900 (Sal & Sun 1-5) 246 Walnut (Newport Shores) NB 546-i290. $55,000 (Sun 1·5) 1070 Baja St.. La guna Beach 494-9473 $75,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2701 Vista Umbrosia (The Bluffs) NB 6444910 $78.500 (Sal & Sun 1·5:30) 6 Rue Chamonix (Big Canyon) N.B. 644-4910 $129,500 (Sal & Sun 1-5 :30) 1318 Santanella (Irvine Terr.) CdM 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1·51 17952 Butler /U niversity Park) Irvine 646:7711 $52,900 (Sal & Sun 1-5) 6161 Jean Huntington Beach 642-2535 $52.900 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 21622 Hanahai Huntington Beach 545-2313 $44 .950 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 546 San Bernardino New~rt Heights 546-2313 $54.900 (Sat & Sun 1·51 1601 'Pitariners Dr. Newport Beach 646-7171 $61.950 (Sun 1·51 1427 Priscilla Newport Beach 641'7111 $52,950 (Sun 1·5) 322 Vista Trucha /The Blu!!s) N.B. 644-1766 $66.500 (Sun 1-5) * • •420 Via Lido Nord, Nev.•port Beach 646-7711 $198.000 (Sun 1·5) 2407 No vice. Ne,rport Beach 646-77!1 $53.900 (Sun 1·51 8462 Pol der, Huntington Beach 842-2535 $41.900 !Sun 1·5) •40 Rue Fontainblueau (Big Canyon) NB 644-6056 $135,000 (Sun 1.S) 3 BR & FAMll Y ROOM OR OEN . 304 Buckn ell, Cesta 1'1esa 5464141 /Sal & Sun 1·5) 3150 Barbados (J\tesa Verde) C.~r. 546-5880 $41.500 . (Sun l ·5) 2992 Andros !Mesa Verdel C.~J. 546-5880 $45.500 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 1168 Bismark (Mesa North) C.M. 546·5880 $38,750 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1502 Orange Ave, Newport Heig hts 548-0520 $42.500 (Sat & Sun 1-51 1789 Hawaii Ci r. !Mesa Verde North) C.M. 5464141 $51 ,000 rsun 1·5) 5772 Oakley Terr. (Turtlerock) Irvine 644-1766 $105,000 fSat & Sun 1-5) 1787 Tusti n .1\ve. Co!lta f\lesa 540·5!40 $~8.500 !Sol & Sun 1·5) 1106 Sandpiper Corona de! ~tar 673·8550 $95.500 (Sat & Sun 1·51 923 Goldenrod Corona del Mar 673-8550 $78.000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 609 Patolila Dr. arvlne Terr.) CdM 833-9781 $66,000 (,at & Sun t-5) 17631 Rockrose (U niversity Park) Irvine 642.fl235 $48,500 fSat & Sun 1·5) 2716 Vista Umbrosa (Blu!!s Tennis Villas) 642·8235 S76.950 rS at & Sun 1·5) 501 Catalina (Newport Hei ghts) NB 645-7575 $69.000 !Sal & un 1·5) 724 Malabar Orvine Temce 675-6000 $68,517 (Sun • 1'100 Westclif! Drive (Westcli!f) NB 675-6000 $74,900 (Sun 1·51 19421 Sierra Santo (Turtlerock) Irvine 644·1766 $61.450 (Sat & Sun Hi) 133 Shoreclilfs Rd. Corona del Mar 644·7662 (Sun 1·61 308 Poinsettia, Corona del l\tar 6404-050 (Sun 1·5) 315 Driftwood Rd. (Shorecliffs) CdM 675-3468 $92,500 (Sat & S~n 1·5) 936 Coronado, Costa l\tesa 545·8424 $43,950 (S at & Sun 1·5) •1935 Highland (Harbor llighlands) NB 642-5200 $69,900 (Sat & Sun 1·51 ·917 l\1acKenzie Costa Mesa . 646·7171 $45.950 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 3225 New York (Mesa Verde) CM 546-2313 $43,950 (Sat & Sun 1.S) 1921 Trade\vinds Lo. (Baycrest) NB 646-2414 $79,500 (Sun 1·5) 1951 Aliso, Costa l\fesa 540-!151 $64,500 (Sun 1·5) •1821 Toyon (Baycresl) NB . 642-8235 $124,500 (Sun 1·5) 616 Narcissus, Corona del Mar 673-8050 $85,000 (Sun 1-5) U2 Collon, Newport Beach 646-7711 SM.490 (Sun 1·5) 29 Rue Grand Vallee (Big Canyon) NB 644-6056 Slll0,000 (Sun 1·5) 341 E. 20th St., Costa Mesa 646-811!1 $48, 750 (Sun 1·5) 2001 Centelta (Co r 22nd St.) NB 642-32.55 (Sun 1..1) 4 BEDROOM •2709 Setting Sun (H. V. Hills) CdM 6404-050 (Sun 1·5) 1577 Skyline Dr., Laguna Beach 494-7531 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1235 Santiago (Dover Shores) NB 675-6000 $94,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2 Rue ChamQnix (Big Canyon)·NB 6444910 $149,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5:30) 202 Seward Rd, Shorecli!!s, CdM 675-5511 $140,000 (Sun 1·5) 217 Jasmine1 Corona del Mar 675·5511 $139,500 (Sun 1·5) •25512 Grissum Rd.,_Laguna Hills 646-7711 $58.000 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 2332 Fordham Costa ?tfesa 646-7171 $43 ,950 (Sun 1·5) •4818 Surrey (Cameo Highlands) CdM 642-82,)5 $85,500 (Sun 1-5) 3145 Bdtbados (Mesa Verde) CM 540-3162 $39,950 (Sun 1·5 ) 4 BR & FAMll Y ROOM OR DEN 22662 Pine Lake Ln., Lake Forest 585-5731 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 4471 Robin\Yood Circle, Irvine . 5514579 ~1,500 (Sat & Sun 12-li) 20412 'rfdelana, Huntington Beach - 846-1371 · $68,900 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 4501 Hampden. Cameo Shores 644-7270 $159,000 (Sat & Sun 2-5) 1233 Somerset Ln. (Weslcli!O NB 642-8235 fSat & Sun 1·5) 67 Montecito (Spyglass Hill) CdM 642-8235 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 3108 Coolidge, Costa Mesa 636-3760 $42,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2399 Tu stin Ave .. Ne\vport Beach . 645-7211 $75,000 (Sal & Sun 1·5) •21081 Leasure Ln ., Hunl. Bch. • 536-2235 (Sat & Sun) 9022 Christine, fluntington Beach 545-4141 $51,950 (Sun 1..1) 9 Cherry Hills Ln. (Bi g Canyon) NB 644-1766 $175.900 (Sun 1·5) 1215 Key West (H.V. Hills) CdM 644-1766 $122,500 (Sun 1·5) 1800 Sandalwood Ln. (Westcll!f) N.B. 494-7531 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1400 Serenade~Terrace, Corona del-ltiar 673-8550 $08,500 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 16491 Ross Circle. \Vestmlnster 546-4141 $.19.950 , (Sat & Sun 1·5) 62nd Street (Newport Shores) NB $79,900 , (Sun J.S) ys· e Pl., Newport Beach 64G-4Q,5jlv (Sun :J.6) 1133 Oleneagles Terr., Costa Mesa 673-6510 $68.000 (Sat & Sun) **319 Morning Star Ln . (Dov. Shrs.) NB 642·8235 $275.000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1201 Highland (Weslcllff) NB 642-11235 $125,500 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 2845 Ellesmere Ave. (Mesa Verde) CM 541>5990 $56,950 (Sun U.5) •3 Cherty Hills Ln (Big Canyon) NB 644-4910 $179.500 (Sat & Sun 1·5:311) 5561 Sierra Verde, Tu rtl erock 752-1920 $69,900 (Sun 1·5) • 1101 Berkshire, Newport Beach 646-7414 $115,000 (Sat & Sun I.SJ 1839 Pt. Barmouth (H.V. Homes) NB 675-3000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) 1401 Seacrest (H.V. HUIJ) CdM 1144-1766 $120,000, (Sun 2-5 ) • •321 E. Bayfront. Balboa Island !144-1766 $2-19,000 (Sun 1·5) • 31 surnJni Tree· (Big Cnnyon/ NB , -•552-7500 '155,000 (Sa & Sun 11) · ment), 3 BR, 2 batlu & 2 BR, l·ba. ·Choice NO. s2 ROYAL ST. location So. of Hwy. -Property clean as a 3451 Aboe, Orvine '646-.7171 $62,000 . (Sun 1·5) 1876 New Jersey {Mesa Verde) CM 546-2318 $47,500 (Sat .&. Sun J.5) 3106 Warren Lane (Halecrest) CM ' 5464141 $43,950· (Sat &·Sun t.S) • 1500 Galaxy Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 $219,500 (Sun 1•5) 310 Orchid A venue, Corona del Mar 675-6600 Jl42f.8~ (Sun 1-5) * 1520 Dorothy e, NB 642-3255 2450 Bowdoin, Costa Mesa 645-0303 $45,900 . 5 BEDROOMS (Sun 1·5) (Sun 1..1) 705 W. Bay AV•. (Balboa Penin.) _NB 644-1766 $97,500 (Sal & Sun 1·5) 5 BR & FAMILY ROOM OR OEN ••2238 Channel Rd. (Balboa Penin) NB 644-1766 $215,000 (Sat & Sun 1-5) • • 1921 Bayside Dr., Coroqa del ?tfar 675-3331 (Sat & Sun 1·5) ••4062 Humboldt Dr., Hunt . Harbour MB-1371 $185,000 (Sat & Sun 1..1) * 1628 Samar (Mesa Verde) CM 541>5990 $87,500 (Sun 1·5) 1907 Galatea Terr. (Irvine Terr.) CdM 64G-4050 (Sun 1·5) 49 Royal St. George (Big Canyon) NB 6444910 $295,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5:60) 8 Oakmont Lne (Big Canyon) NB 6444910, $325,000 (Sat & Sun 1-5:30) • 1824 Santiago Dr. (Dover Shores) NB . 642-7491 $135,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) **107 Linda Isle Dr. Linda Isle) NB • 675-6161 (Sun 1·5) •82 Royal St. George (Big Canyon) NB 640.5560 $174,500 (Sun 1·5) 10 Rue Marseilles (Big Canyon) NB 1144-605!1 $162.500 : ($wl 1·5) 2672 Circle Drive (Bayshores) NI) 548-7116 $195,000 (Sun 1·5) 6 BEDROOM ••626 Via Lido Nord (Lido Isle) NB 642-8235 $300,000 (Sun ~) . I BEDROOM JIO Via Trieste (Lido Isle) NB 1144-6200 $185;000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) · . CONDOMINIUMS FOR SALE 2 Bl'OROOM , . , *JO IVeslcliff ·Villa, Newport 8'!4c~ 646-7414 $74,500 (Sat &·Soo-1..1) 500 E. Oceanfront (Balboa Penln.) NB &1MOOO ;"fii,900 · (Sat-& SUn ·1..1) _J*lt l\hodlllitii (Edinger & Euclld)-F.¥. •. M6-8811 .. $34,000 (Sun 1..1) 8412 El Arroyo, auntington Beach 847-6010 $27,500 (Sun 1·5) 16675 Arbor Circle, Huntington Beach 846-8496 $23,900 (Sun 12-5) .3 BEDROOM 2107 Vlslil Laredo (The Bluffs) NB 645-7575 $69,500 (Sun l·Si 316 ~ro (The Blitf!s ) NB · 6404050. (Sun 1·5) •4308 Spendrill (Park l,ido) NB 6754-060 $43,500 (Sun 1.S) 2204 Fiesta (off Flora) (Bl uffs) NB ll40-8672 '$72,500 (Sun 1·5) 3 BR & FAMILY ROOM OR OEN) 201 Nata (The Bluffs) NB . 644-0134 (Sun 1·5) 4 BR & FAMILY ROOM OR OEN •5 Rue Du Pare (Big Canyon) NB · 64G-504ll $225,000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) •4 Mojo Ct., Newport Beach 642-0268 (Sat & Sun 1-li) 2413 Venier, Costa ?t1esa 6424811 (Sun 1·5) DUPLEXES FOR SALE 2 BR & 1 BR 502 Poinsettia, Corona del Mor 6711-6510 (Sun 1·5) 2 BR & 2 BR 2500 Ocean Blvd., Corona del itar 675-6000 $210,000 (Sat & Sun 1,5) 608 Acacia, Corona del ~far 673-1103 $89,500 (Sun 1·5) 3 BR & 2 BR 2524 Ocean, Corona del Mar 641M050 (Sun 1·5) 3 BR EACH 712-14 & 16 Poin settia, CdM 675-3000 _. (Sat & Sun 1·5) • 4 BR & 2 'B R ••1109 E . Balboa Pl., Balboa Penin. 67t>ll008 $199,000 (Sun 12-5) 4 BR & 3 BR 119 4Sth St., Newport Beacb 645-03113 5BR&2BR (Su.n 1·5). 428 Goldenrod, Corona de! Mar 675-6$21 (Evecyday 10-5), HOME . & . INCOME lBR&I BR 418 Femleaf.Jiorona del Mar 67!!-0164 "''·500 (Fri & Sat & Sun 1·5) S BR & 1 BR 521 Iris, Coroua del Mar (Sat & sun· 12-5) 3 BR & 2 BR 20&-B Cecil Place, Cesta Mesa 1133-9781 $63,500 (Sun 1:311..1) HOUSE FOR RENT 2 BEDROOM 4819 Brnce Crescent, NB 642-3255 *'Pool tt W•torfront ' *** Wotorfrent & Pool (Sun 1-5) • G E 0 R G E . Broad.moor's ll f 't •••s ·•ouJd ·best _ the on1y plan 1 now whistle! Please ca us or app .. WJ au. • boh>& •U•""· s ""'""" 3 sell quickly! '114,900. IMths. htij:e fami1y rm. with FER LEAF • "•lt.00.,," view of '"';"' 202 • 4 & 6 . N . 13th fairway. Y~nu-very be1t view home value at $114.~. fhaa: a $124.000 ex- i!ltlng loenr) •. HASTINGS & CO. Rlt" Ring 643-5560 REAL ESTATE ' SAUSPERSONS 140' VAC LOT $2-4,500. 2 HOMES ON A LOT. -e1s1os =$<43 ,soo- MESA VERDE 3 BR $37,900. NPT BCH +PLEX $115,000 BEAUTIFUL BIG CANYON View lhe golf cours e . Fuhlon Island &: Back Bay from this large lol, '>'1th 1pac.ious 4 bdrm. h o n1 e , Warm & inviting fan11ly rm .. oonVttSalion pit, 3 lge. baths; great kite.hen &: formal dining rm. A per:l'ect home on a poolsb:ed lot. S155,000 CAlL 552·7500 •VISION• REALTY a red hill company Univ. Parle Center, Irvine New l'arkplace Always A Winner Ntw Parkplace. Fu 11 y upgraded. Owner transfer- red. Must sell!! Large dou· ble door marble entry. H111c master suite, 3 large ed· dltlona1 bedrooms. Larte f&mUy room overlooklna: huae paUo. 12tge palif1ike rear y!ll'd. With $20.000 down owner \vlll ca~ balance nl o n I y 8~~ 10 lnlereat. See it i!.nd you'U • WNlt It, call now. 963-6767. Ol'tlN Tit. I • IT'S FUN t0 BE NICE/ 2 V•can t-,HA LMn Tobi! paym.,,t 11;;.oo PtT month. Two 1tory. Priced 1111 US,_,, W .00 Total dottnpt¥rnent. Seller Pll)'S clolln& costs. ~ti and clean. Call llaetenda Real l"AU'lle tl'IC. f.1634316 -• l?l\'>"t ltlve up the 1hlpl 'List" lt in claQlf\td, Ship to Short-.Rfaulll! 60-5678. I ... just off Ocean Blvd., near Big Corona Reach. Your choice of 3 duplexes;_ 3 bdnns., 2 baths each unit. AU three will nave oce:an views. Your choice of colors i! you act quick- ly. ,152,500 Each. ' --· ·--~ 'l ' ''"d I ~l·~. \('I llfALlV 675 JOOO /\NYTIMf --~----- ll02 Gonorol R.£. 1002 A great lillle building in C.D.M. with a 1000' store, or 3 smaller units AND an upstairs owners apartment or 3 smaller units. In great condition. '107 ,500. and owner will carry a giant lst 'J.'.D .. Call 675-7225 " Open Siinclay I -~ 21drwi 401 Santa Ana. Newport Jlci)!h.ls Jldrwi lalllS Normandie, Irvine $45,500 644·8750 3Mnw•"-lly• .. WA 22 St .. Newport Beach $97.000 644-li~ ISM Port Abbey. ff . 8'. llarbor View 171.500 644-8750 3 ldrwi & f""'4y & DOii 5022 Kron. lrine ·S47,500 ~.()070 3 '*'" & Fcmilly & Pool. 18177 fl!esa Verde, Ftn. .. V<1llcy S41.SOO 962·1373 41-& FOllllly•M 3li1 Port Bristol, NB Fee Lot SS!]:K>O 1144·8750 l!Gl:.I Sanla Melinda. f\n. Valley S7Z,00l MZ·~l 41drwi&Fllllily&D011 SOO Cliff Dr., Newport Beach 587.500 "44·8750 4 ldrM • ftlMlly • D"""9 "32 lsabfolla Terr, Corona'riel i\1i1r S139,SOO 844·81~· Rodocod $I 0,000 Beautiful executive 4 bedroom in NewPOrl Bearh on a \ii acre fee lot. Within walklna di11tance to the finest 1chooh1 Ir harbor. Includes ZL/• baths, Oen, ramlly room krmal dinin.e N>Om. 3-car •11ral(e And lush· park·like 11'.f'OUndli. Sf!7,50ll. Call 644-8750, ' M ... V-41odro°'" Exti:emely sharp! You owe It to yourself lo irp1*1 thi1 lovelY 4 bedroom, 2 balk home !'1th ramlly room ~•-full dining roo m. li>R·burnlnR tlr:eQJ1re. !,~ctrte built.-ins. JmtnactJl•te taridse1pifl (. tfl,800. Call 540-1720. -'-· ... ~ ... :... .:_ · uo.qo'o. 1.Jl;;:r Beautiful hlllt~ .. \1te i'n COmna •del Mar J'ilh a "mUllOn dollar'' view J!I the way from Dana P9lnt to' PyP. J400 1q . rt . fealUJ'e& 4 btdr0on11. 3 balhl, l•mlly room Ir fOll di11inR r.Oom . 'Surrounded by ~~sperln•' plpt1.'.., And i priy~i~ beafil. '....,,600. C.ll 8*1?Jt.. i • ---· -!~""T ~ ..... t • $34,Ho.;..o.. et fflo fli!o1t ~lithtful ' bedloOm, Z bath Mme in Cc>Jta flte>e. WUh ~lct.urt1tqttf' l1J'dR:apttt1e . On a klvely lr~·llned 11trett. IM'ludfl Kttehtn bu!ll ·lns. (ireplace. FA heat.lnR. F'rt11hly P11nt«I &. ready to •ell! Call $44).t72o, ' Mo ... rMlllllploUoti.. Mo ... r l~llJ •otocolloo s.r.i,,. .... 4001 C:lllH I , .. ~ "°"410f'O 2955 Harbor Blvd. 540f1720 600 Newport Center Drive 644-8750 . M c R K 1 s • I c J c " ' ·- • I Su11day, Octobtr &, iq74 DAILY PILOT D ~ l•O.... __ ,_•l_R_.E_. ___ 1_001....;..G..:•..:•.::•..:r•.:;l.:;R.:;';:E·:._ _ _:_l00:.::_2 General R .• ------------------------' -----1002 Corona del '' ' 2 General R.E. 22 C.osta Meu 1024 rv ne ** ** ** Heritage Coliecti~n CORNER SPLENDOR YOU'L~ LOVE THE wide open feeling of this C0<lJ.LMesa home. S-Huge bedrOom•. i baths, -2 brick fireplaces, family room ·and much, much more. No 2nd car nMded htre -wal k to everything. A terrific value, call for full det.Jls, S46·5880. JUST REDUCED A SPECTACULAR HOME' AND INCOME UNIT -on Balboa Peninsula Point. • Un- usual • Unique • Neat • Inspirational • Comfortable • Private • Spaciotis and cozy. 5 Bedrooms on a corner lot with 2 bed~ room rental on separate lot. It's bard to de- scribe this ex~t~g and classic home. \Ve• want you to ¥e it. -we know you'll love it . NoW priced to sell, call S4~11Sl . MESA VERDE SHARP 3 BEDROOM + DEN. New carpet. &-paint. Garage converted to large bonus room. 1 oo;. Down and owner will carry 2nd trust deed. Priced only $41,500. C•ll 546-5880. COLLEGE PARK BEST LOCAJ'ION-dose to shopping. 3 Bed- ~m. dihing1 fireplace, covered patio, park- like yard. Owner wlll htlp finance. Show anytime. Vacant. Asking $38,750. Coll 5411- 1151. REMOQELED . 4 BEDROOM $37,000.-Talk ,about valu~. imagine 4 bed· rooms 2 baths, beautiful front kitchen; com- plete with new appliances, large enclosed paM, new carpets and paint. Located on safe cul-de-sac. Vacant and owner wants action. 546--5880 KffOTTY PINE LOADED WITH -THE .REAL THING-talk 3.bout prime Eastside location , this is it!! Talk about size, you'll get lost in it!! Plas stor.ag~ iµ-ea for.boat.or camper. ]iow down .tp-bas1c• . 1 . S h1g bedrooms, 2"2 baths, and super ,large famijy room .. P.S. Very good flpancl"' avalleblo. c.11 541151. .. . COLLEGE PARK YOU'LL LOVE THIS 3 BEDROOM -2 bath with heavy shake roof. reel h1rdwood floors; used• brick fireplace, dining room and sepa- rate b~akfast area. Take advantage of this -5¥4•!.~INn. Owner anxious, best offer will take! Call 546-5880. JUST LIS.TED NEll\_RL Y NEW-upgraded 2 story with 5_ ,bedrooms. 3 full baths, 3 car garage, brand new wet bar. large family room on quiet cul-de-sac• in Greenbrook. Area for boat ar ~fM'· §.ee lhls now at$§J,50Q.~1U *_JJ$J • ERITAGE ---"AiiJ:NDbNtDTsf.lTfi--- 4 BR including hld .. away master suite "'th private garden patio. Huge living nn w/mas· sive fircpl & cathedral beam ceili'1gs, formal candle light dining, gourmet kitch. and fam rm. overlooking entertainers patio and park- like grounds. Unbelievably priced. BA,KBAY CUSTOM POOL ESTATE $59,9.SO Large 3 BR & fam. huge !iv rm & firepl. Wall of glass brh1gs outdoors, indoors. Entertain- ers dream, nesUed under to\\·ering trees on cul-de-sac street. Party ratio overlooks spark- ling free-form pool. Ac fast. NEWPORT DUPLEX $12,500 DOWN · Xtra large deluxe 5 BR & 8 BR, formal fam- ily dining and elegant liv rm vtlth coey, crackling fireplace. Privlte park~ 1llld beach· es in prestigious area of Ne\\rport. Chance of a llfetin1c. COSTA MESA ••. COLOSSAL Rolling green la"'llS and stately trees sur- round hits picturesque old world charm, ar· cbite<:ture, rugged beam ceilings, tavern kit- chen and cozy living qtrs. l!fother-in-law house plus 2nd guest cottage. Won't last. THE GERRIE CO., REALTORS 645-4400 General R.E. 1002Gener•I R.t . 1002 Open Sunday 1-5 107 Lind• Isle Cr. Lovely 5 BR., 3 bath custom home. Large courtyard. Pier & slip. $2251()()(). Custom Spanish Hom• 5 BR, 5 ba ., art studio. Elevator. Pool. 7000 sq. ft. Ramp & float. $450,000. 70 Lindi Isl• Drive Prime 45 ft. lagoon !or -$150,00G For information on All Honies & Lots Call BILL GRUNDY , REALTOR J~I P.oy•,1d•· Dr•v· N B 6 75 6161 Gener•I R.E. 1002 B•lboo lslond . 1006 -------MAGNIFICENT DUPLEX ELECTRONIC . TECHNICIANS Asstmbllng &. testing OPENHOUSESAT/SUN.1·5 1121 BAYSIDE DRIVE 5 Bdnl1s .• ~-'h ~aths. Fabulous vie\\' of har· bor entrance. Beautiful beach {ro1n house to water. Lovely patio area. Exceptional family horne with large. family roon1 &. blt·in kit· Chen. OUered at $249,000, SPANISH HIDEAWAY Winlam Wi.nton Real Estate Oel igh1 rul 2 BR, 2· BA TO\\'llhou~e. Complete '>''itl1 secluded patio. Steps to pool, jacuzzJ. and t.c1Ulit. "£3.s.y-l(l. buy al $..a3,750. 22t MARINE, BALBOA ISLAND 675-3331 GRUBB & ELL IS Real Estate 675-7010 Cellege Porte 1020 Coron• d•I Mar 1022 Huntlngtan Beach 1040 Huntington tseach 10-40 e 3 BDR. 2 tlteplace • Lanai with &rB Q Large lot & Cardtn Patio • J>rtme loca- tion· Priced right at $441950 0....'tltr anxlouJ • Submit temU.. 643-$51 Bkr. Corona dtl Mar 1022 Don't Call Me A Duplex!! I'm a de!lghttul 2BR and den ov.neni • ·sld •. .ce 11ith beau- tiful pri\'lite ~ PLUS A cbannmr 1F ~ ttntlll 11.'ith prl.1-ate yard r.utTently pro- ducing 225/mo. ALL on a generous 47xll8 lot in the be:.t south-of-h11.1• loca- tion. $89.500 firm. Call 644-7211 /Jn NICU l!AIL[Y & ASSUCIAT[S INSPIRATION POINT I YR WAAAANTt INCLUDED "The people wilh fn1ne Kno11.· I-low" EASTSIDE TRIPLEX $56, 950 319 POINSETTIA ' ., • 1o1. Prin" "P"' Channing 3 bedroom l800' Ne11l)()rt Bo.y ~ntal, area. home old brick firepla~ L.Vgc 3 Br. O\\~er 1 unit giant' kitchen ~ l~ plus tv.:o ~ Br, uruts. ~Ut!r II •·1 I must liquidate. Xlnt fuian- OPEN TODAY ' ~~ ~sMJOO e or ease eing. ·lli;h ilk.."Ome potenlial. 12 i E. BA YFR 0 NT ~reoI'""""' f " d 0 ' . Be-auliful. lu>.'UJ'Y 3 bedroom home, 11uper master suite v•ith fireplaoo. 40' slip avnilab!e. For~ $850. 711 GOLDENROD A ~at rental property - cute :! bt."<iroom honie. and ACOl.DWELLIANKEftCOll'd'f a neat I bedroom rental l-'-'--==~----1 11p11 rt n1 en t , AA'D nn $34,950--adorabl&f1u~~~~~ $74,500. Inflation Beater On a lo\·cly tree-lined r,1rcet. F'reshly puin!l'd 4 Ix.Inn, 2 bath home. !·las bu1J1.tni; & "' "' "~ • '"" > ,• ... ,, '.A.ul TOP SALES WOMAN \ .. \IJJ~).' HE .\IJ'Y fr;:ilc. lnunaculate y~rrl.~ .t· MARIAN PEREZ ~ ·~bund:111l'e of plants. Congratulation~ 10 1-L-\R!.AN A BEAG ENTEAPAISES CO Call a40-17:_IO PEREZ. Village Re a I DON'T judge by the outside! mftBElL. for September. ~1.ARL\.'-" is only a block ao.·ay from Se'! lhe kitchen, fam rm, IUI staned her (.'areer .,.,·ith [ ) Estate's Top S;:1.les Person this terrific family home. & )Td. of thJs 3br. 2~; ba., ~ \'illasc Real 'Estate in June Equipped wl.tb all the SHORECUFF'S home. Open , W.W~U~~ . of thi.: year and in1- $38,500. SUB~11T OtTERS ·I Br, '.! Ba, new shag c_TPt!, pnin1 rhru out. \·,\CA.'-"T. Take O\'er 7' ~ klfln ~"2J. 1no. Close to Oougtas, ~la11in11. lligh. Ov. ner wtll il<'lp fUUi.ncf!. Broke r S12-llll, eve ~~ Hunt. Harbo\lt 10-42 1 -~-~----PRIVATE BEACH . I002 Huii1oo.td1 Or. Open house l·J, So.tJSUn. S®.000. All tern1a Cu!:ml bit estate honloll 011 elite llun1bo1dt Jt-lund. A deNrator's drean1 \l'ith 5000 sq It. a 5.'.!' lloot dock and your 0-v.TI sandy beach. 5 BDRM+ POOL 3SOO sq h & 200· of bOyU'Ont on an island. ll-2 7.Qllf'd. Thret> unit potential. Ari f'X· clting \l'atrrfront Invest n1en1. Sl 19.9'30. HUMBOLDT OFF THE WATER S{)aciou! 4 BR, 3 BA. in quiet loc:a!ion. lk'aulll.ul family home. 0 ...,. n er 1ransferred. $81.500. amenitit11. only 2 years old. Sat &. Sun 315 DrifN·ood 1nedi.'\tcly bt. .... "'Bme one or Thls crisp, charming 4/5 "R::d::•..:CD=>:::l...;!::92::,500=·..:0:c•:::~;:';.'_l '-==2'15:;=c·~·°'H°'"ru-_Lo="'''°'B=l'°',.u~.=,,-I \'illage Real E.~tate's Top S.'6-lJn !163"-+llS . bedrm home is prtced o.I SNEAK PREVIEW Sales People. lf you h.a\'e ~~~---~---1 TOBIN REALTY $142,500 • OR your best Costa Mesa 1024 a tu:-a.J 1'.:siate need. \l'hY negotiable oUer. OPEN -$41,~ 3 Bdnn, 2 bath view not call ~ of our in· SUNDAY 1-5. of r.t.V. C.Ountry Oub. dustry'!I t.n1e profe~ionals, 6'rrt-8600 F'tesbly painted inside and ~lARIAN PEREZ. Village VISION out. Nev.· carpels T/O Real Estate. 962--4-ITI Fenced ha.ck yard. F'an·: J.,.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,. WATERFRONT $79.500./20 <'f. dO\l'fl. 2 BDR.:\f, 2 bath in Hunt. '.\larina, Private dock, ex- cc-pt'I. 1·iew. Agt. g.~ YOU'VE GOT TO tastio """ Nam• Y•'l' 4-PLEX REAL TY t~rn1s. or a11sun1e V .. \. loan BE KIDDING '· .aJ !197.00 °"'mo. Call H•-SALE OR WATERFRONT ciendu Real I-:state Inc. ,1-1· Boat dock ai1d inside WEEKEND WONDER That's vohat )'OU ~\ill MY ;,.~-565() EXCHANGE pool. The sn1artest 3 bdnn,:? bo.th "·hen you see this super NEWPORT BAC K BAY . 3 BEonoor.1s. :? SATilS home (some vie-A•l, · you home in Eastside Costa . ExN!'ll.C11l llu11t1ngtl)n Bc-::!.eh r-.ia.gniflc-ent 11 ,. i n::: 81 have seen in months. Built f\tesa. lt'l'I got e\'CT)'tlting! Large,_ Quality constructed locr111on. •1 ". Tl'IO .Betll"O()yil, $1 10,COO. A:;t. 846-&~ by an architect ror his Ol't'n Creal backyard ·~:ith fruit ! a n1 1 I y ho n1 c o n I Bath uruts .,..·1th pat1os =s°"Y~O:C\\co'N7.ER2'-~,;.=0°"R'°'.-'-=,_,..,,; I home. Just s12.500, lreeit and room for a cul-de-sac: th•a\_)' 1'ht1ke and crrrport~. O~r~;ed for ha, 'T'to\\l lhouse, Bo<1t Slip OPEN SAT/SUN AFT. garden. Big sha(]e trees. root, rustle extenor. ThrH! S69.COO. C:lll fi.~. inc. 80"~ finan avail. <••· '"' ""' ..... ,,,. ... ,, ,,. '""' •28 Morn inn Canyon Rd. fo'antastic location. And bedrooms, ru·o bo.rhs, fa1nlJJ $67.000. Call s.16-f..-1-1 ··• n1orc! All for only $31.950. room and hooted pool. Coroua llighlai1tls Call li46-0CJ,j5. ~7.~. -·University Rtalty -3.S9 ~lira Lonia, Costa f\fe1Ja 3001 E. Cst. Rv•y. ' 673-6510 Call ~2-lQ;O lot appt \'.\I J ,.:'\:' HE \IJ'Y Irvine 10-44 OPEN HOUSE I A A D I ff Principals Only m up ex.. MESA VERDE HIGH ON A HILL A BERG ENTERPRISES CO I'm.,..·ellki.."3.tedinold · TURTLEROC K ---+-'eorona-del 'fU, -V.1th a --..JPJ~_(JAL_ Poo 1---4-eR-"ERESIDD;'"T..:.:....HOltE...-3 charming 1 br. &. den home __________ 1All ne .... · inside, \·cry elean, L • BR., 21; ba., 2400 + 1q. in tront &nd a SUPER I Br. Mesa Verde 4 Bdrm ready lo mo\'e into. 3 BR. ft . beauty. Defiigned Ac WEST CLIFF lol'oly 4 ll<!nn POOL Hom•. GULTON Lru-go oountry .. ,.1. ki1d10n. INDUSTRIES See to appreciale. Open Sun 1644 Whittier Ave rear wtit. New ,........,t in Great location, excellent 1 ·aa.. & f'am·rm. Good finan· detailed for i:T'&Cious living, ~r~ ring. Open House Sal. & $39 900 v.il.hcolorcoordinated den and lretih paint and nev.• ,se~~s!,_~et;· Sr~ 4 1':""'ij '. Sun 1-5, 32'12 Colorado, C.~f. I f<tbrics. paints & \l'ailpape:r carpet in new unit . . . ..,...,, nvme. -.-.Eoe am ~ BKR 833-3380 Sound in1po<;siblr? H's nor? Th do ~•-- AND PRICED RICI-IT roon1, v.·ood-l lrni113: fire-·• Tiiis has 10 Ix-tile lx>st .+ ~nna r .ap~ ....... at $89,SC(I Finn. Call us for p:ace. Elcctrio:! built-ins. BEAUT. Collt'gf! Park pool pool honif' you'U find in in the kitchen. Extras , 1101'1' a sbov>ing. Picturesqu~ I 8 n d ~aping. borne, by O\\_ ncr •• ;'lbr, 'Jba, HI<' beach area u n de r about a Parakeet aviary. $48.800. Call ~{).1720 tam nn, $18,500. ;iJ7-l978 S·IOOOO NE\\' PAlr.:T & a_ dog run .. 3 \!Al' garage · c P.Pi'TS \\'Ith automaue opener. wet ( TARBElL ) 01n1 Patnt _ 1026 ,\ ~ Mr. 2 lrp1cs., a very pri,-atc PAJIU( Pl.ACX, solar heated PoOl & a VIE\\' ' ~11NtITES to harbor, Sh.1TP "8.AL'l"alm\!', DA'i" OR NIGHT TlIAT·s ~ 48H. 2 SJOr)' lune . .$:;$,500, 142.J461 A BP.E.\Tit ~'l!ORTENER. 1-5. 1520 Dorothy Lane '?!!!i!i!!~!"ll'!!!i!!...,.~~"""'""'l~""""""~!i!l AOO £.17" • FOR All c .. 1a Mesa 642-2400 ~· . " C.M. uus , ..,e,.;"""...,1 .,°";,;""'...,· .,Em,.,;,•.,1"';,.".,. I 1 General R:.E. 1002Ganeraf R.E. 1002 i ~ t Balboa Peninsula 1007 ~ ' ' .-~---~~~---~~--~ ..... Bkr. S31-:ai00/·191r&:kiS SEE ITS~ 1-5. JU.NESS forc.~11 1111.lc· of high desert 3.96 ucrei; and house. Al!io Cbltf. pines acrt 968-1979 LARGE Oct-antront duplex. EZE ' BR. 3BA & ,.,, 2ba. SEA IRE :!.l:ia Harbor Bh·d. Eoistbluff 1030 ------~-19211 EDGEHILL '2 °"s",.-,'. °"B"a",">n"g"l•°'l·7""•'"1.°'N""•-··,: ,::.:::.:::.:.:_:__. __ _;,::;::: 1 International Fl av or Tunlt'rock H.ills Bock II.a~ 1004 CUSTO!i.f POOL BY 0'\.'NER Beaut 3BR 2BA Univ. n)()(j. Prime loc, Lg patio &: deck. View. Prof ldscpd, jacuzzi, lg atrium, Roman bll. cpts, drps, eath ceU. Only $73.500. Open 2 lo 6. Prin only. 18031 lipen Tree. 5.5l-fi629 P\'t !lnaneing traMferrable. This ctuinning homC Is Reduced to $179,C:OO !or Joeated ln a prln1e areu. quick sale. Open House _Sun Oversized betlnns. s t e p l!Hl. Or call ttrs Vicks saver kitchen, a crackling 641,.8961 days, 6'5-8008 e\'et./ fireplace plus a lush priva1e weekends patio! Only $&5.500 • Call Orleans Tov:nhouse "·\Ui -~R C?ndo split le\·el, p1aia .... SPANI~'H red tlle root. .f '''OO<l burnin~ l i r e p ! a. c e . ,.. 0 \~king park S47.ooo 011·nr. spacious bedroon1s !.ncluding Karden ptt.tlo, eenrral gas 532-4543 or 838-9367 n1aster i;ulte l'lith Ja\ish heating, enclosed garage, 3 BR. 2 BA rondo, plaza, sunken RO?o.lAN tub, &tep- pool & club house. No $50,IXXI. 0v."ner doll'tl fom1aJ living room, "Ll11l(l 1i·lld , ---,-H11111!11 r children Wlder IS. South 5.:2-4543 or 838-9361 gartlen-\' i e .,,,. k i t ch en. East Costa r.1esa, bordering El Tora 1032 Dining_ patio lot PARISTEN-PENINSULA-f'IXER. for Details. . Isl Western Bank Bldi. This 2 Br. 1 Ba dollhou!e 675-8600 Nev.-port. 1 btoek rron1 NE st,9"le entertaining. FOR University Park, Irvine Days 552-7000 Nights needs TLC. t blk from v ISi ON OCO•n. Xlnl rentw atta. F<O land. R-2. Ta.kt ad,·ant.age l'IOI\'. Principles only. MILLER REALTY \\'('!;tcliU Shopping Center. Sl.JPERSHARP' A.V APPOIN'ThfLNT TO Other unil s listed h".lm. • 3 BR. 2 BA · !'EE, CALL. .. only S..19.500~ S::9.000. 10 $11 .000. Askin~ Faniily roc1111 The Real Estate Fair Balboa Island 1006 8% FINANCING Charrnlng :? BDR~f llon1e, 1~ blk to bay. Lri;. from yd. Great Su1111ner/"'inter rental reC"QnJ. S 6 9. O O 0 , OPEN house Sa1/Sun. 12·5: 225 Agate. HURRY, TI·US \\'ON 'T I.AST. ISLAND REALTY, ·198 Park A\>"e. Ba.J. Isl. 673-1200 6-12-481J Balboa Peninsul1 Lg. 4 Br., den; I blk lo bay Try 15% dn., ba.I. 8o/o Open Sat/Sun 1-5. $97,500 4'..!4 Belvue Lane 6T<>-4fll0 a.gt OCEANPRON"T Duplex. :xi cond. $149.':ill. Onr. ....·/fin. Coast Properties 6i3-fl.110 College Pork 1020 *BAY VIEW* 5 BR., 3 baths. tam. rm. FOOTBALL YARD '\l.'/1\1!t bar. Lge. P8ti9: 40 Room to pass, kick & scaim- ft. lot. V11.cant. $164,500 n\age. This 3 Br house at (673-166-1 E,·enh~l-CJS Real Estate, 548-1168. °"<ner 6Th-27U I ~.:JOO. It 's a natural. call General It.£. 1002 General R.E. 1002 4 Canyon Specia~ • OPEN HOUSES -SUN 1-5 40 RUE FONTAINl!LEAU -A new listing. S BR. 3 Ba. Pool, Jacuzzi, Prof. Landscaping & Decorating, 3 Car Gar. Sl35,500. PG.500. By 011T1Cr. Land Dri\e b;-.· 2173 2 Jubl!o. El 839-6133 or 536-2551 GOOD AS NEW int·lud~. 17-11. Tustin, l\o. T?ro ant~ see. for yourself 1 ,Qy,1icrs sa\I· fit to put la 20C. (114 1 5-iS-5696 1\ha1 $-l3,500 .... 1u bu~. llon~e 1 EXEC POOL HOME I new dishv.·asher. new water Enjoy the depreciation 1: WANNA PLAY re.atures bit-ms, t1s.h11·~u· 111 -OWNR heater, ncv.· furnace & nev.· other tax advantages of this HOUSE 1 11t'1 1-t It l'!d k 111:h en . floor t'O\·etin"s · kit he ne\I' duplex, great rental . l\all-10-o,1·all carpt'ling. drJ1:t r2600 sq ft of lu'\, h1~ng. + • , .. lJl C n location. 3 Bdrm .. 2 00.th Thc~rc's O/lC bl'tund thi:: & frp\c. See roclay'. J-:i:lniore Jat'U.lll, J;..1S 1).1}.q, llr€'nng. 1 f>:. bath. Hard, 1~0 beat that -t :.l bdrm .. 2 bath. 90'0 eharmi~. remodeled home Bkr. c an (7141 j.36..3138. fotml din nn. v.·et 00.1'. prof in a 4 bdrn1 .. l ~ batl1 home loan a\·ail. l'.Ull price only on the E&~tsitle of Costa • dee & l<lsepd. 1:. mi to I fur a price of S6:l.COO. $100,500 ~lesa.. lluge P.-2 lot for Fountain Valley 1034 beh, 1 }T o\ri. Open CALL 552.7500 University Realty future developmen1 . Call 11. , .. VA. 5 ~ 3 ... --nini Sat/Sun, 2lOSl Lea~ure Ll1. • VISION • !>-11)..5140 :/ U UI ' UJ., '-.~ • ' 536-223:> ;:oo1 L. Cst. Hv.j• 673~510 WALKER & LEE pool. By O\ITier. $:):1,::lX) .. 1.=::..;='------WALKWAY 008-28>6. TAKE OVER TO BE°"CH R.£,\L ESTATE Huntington &each 1040 Government Loans REALTY 418 FER.NLEAF ON Gou· Course In ilt~sa --3 & 4 RDR~I OOmes in all a red hill company Open l-5/Th'un thr1,1 Sun Verde. 19'21) Kau&i. 2500 ft. areas. No q ua 1 i f )' in g. Univ. Park Center, Ir.·tne 2BR 1.:iouse plus 1 BR Rent:i!, 5 BR. :t BA. btfl view, LAKE PARK $10,00'.I. to S-1 5,000. \s all l:il:il:il:=-::l-:=i=====:I corner lot, Xlnt Una11ci11g $82.500. Low do1vn. O\\'Tler o· R BEACH you 11eed. For ntOI'l' in-.... i..,_, 1 RI v.i.ll earry paper. Open Sun. furr11atio11, ~·a.II BK H.. OPEN SAT /SUN 1•.5 D.T.n.mgs.., ... :1 nc. tr. 1 5 S 1 .,o, • 675-0164 & fZlSl 245-280'2 -· Beautilul oldrr :'l bPdroon1. _1.:_:.;..,.!_i___ __ 17815 Oak Tree Lane YOU \\TLL LOVE !r! :-;,.11 , Costa Mesa Realty :-eparntf'. t't'n1aJ in rear v..ith OPEN HOUSE 11 siriry :; Bel.Jin .. 2 ha. end al d , 1 • B Since 1958 * 548-7711 pr1_\·Rte ('tllrliflCl'. J>i:est1~e Sat &. Sun 1.:i un11. un 1h!' •'Omer. ,\11 unusu up.ex. ;i R, ,.,,,.,. ... bo,li····' A, 1,, 1 , 3 ba house & 1-2 BR. 2 XE\\WRT 1-1.r.-rEfi"A , ... e.:' ........... . 119ffil l-tan1dcn l,.1n1~. 4 er..1 r1.,1c ... or. & reatlr for !>'OU ba.. \\'ood pane!i~. stained lipgr:ided 4 Br. 21{: Ba con-~utl10 .. Bo..11 g.i te a_n<I 51~~· Fan1·m1, Dt:n. 3S ft. Sun)Ct ' in n1 .. 1·r in ! t•ln1c N11.. thi!. gla&1. t 'rple's. Beach foot-do. Fa('H. incl.: Pool, I :: :~.~ 1~1 Jl.1.rk. J ~locks! j)O(lr and e'.l.tr:i lart,'l' )11r.t. 11un t l'..l~t 'tl1 Sun.'. $58.000 bridge 1 blk . 428 billiardroom.putting~n. 10rC1.:k~"·o1r~~.~.~~l~i1~·[°''.n('r\r.P.:1 p1,;;_l'll.\/~'\ CALL 552-7500 Goldenrod, Owner(Bullder. ! IO\lfij?'.e & ntueti morc.1'.(l}l)r, r., tru·t o;k!eJ at 9.1 ,.. . l'ril ..... I In s<•ll S..i •. OOO (,,JI • VISION • 67>$21 Open I0.5P~f. t"Ountry elub ti,1ng at a s :; • '· • lt<'ahor , l'n11J Coad. 91;2.r,1 1:? BY O\VNER. DUP'LEx-1 low,?.~~Ll.b?cer.E ·\LTY !lfiiW1Qjjfiml1iEJrtJ1-BEAUT . LaCUE_S_T_A_ REALTY Drast!C"Qlly reduced to ! ' C ; ' · ! -·::.-·-----4 BR. :; r..\, lui;h "h".:; $85,DXI. 3~. 2ba. home l'..!-tSU lf62·4471 ( :;:; ) 544·1101 carpet~. bo:1I gale, q111e1 a red hill l'On1p.i11y "''llrg lbr lbit.. kitchen, din EASTS! DE ubl'l1ood. $..i.~J•JO. OP~, l'ni1'. Park Centtt, Irvine rm & liv np area-rental. ~'ice 3 Br 11 ~ 83. 4 PLEX Sat IS u n 1·J: :x>-ltl ENecything Uf)l,"'l'aded. ne>.vly cul-de-sac. \'el)' clean, fruil • Tideland. TOBI:\' l~EAL'fY, Jn Th~Ranch REALTY OOLLARS FOR YOU painted. Good inlere51 rule. tre<>s. l'rplc, Assw11e S31.000. SALE OR S1fr.13TI Drea111 hom<.'' 'lt,' )'ellJ"S old 22 RUE CANNES -2 Bedrooms, den, pool OPrn HOUSE SAT & SUN. at 9';'u loan, payments SZ40. TAKE OVER t & sho11.s nke -a~ model ~ and spa, custonl entrance and fountains, U.S. 521 & ~1~ mts nio. P.t. Pr1_;c $38,9$. EXCHANGE GOVERNMENT LOAN I bdrms, :: ba1hs. hnck tri1k·: spectacular master bath $!25,000. Sho"'n * 718 GOLDENROD* ()y,'f1Cr a.gt 494-9::34 Exeellf'nt lluntln.gton Bea"h 3 & 4 BR home~ in Su 1 ~It-ins. Cf'nTTlll au-rond. by appointment only. ' Open SaVSun 1-6 *DUPLEX BY location. 4 -1-..--0 bed1"00rn, areas. No qunlifvln~. r or St?r11.ge spar~ gal ore! \\'~.paneled lh'ing 1wm. O.WNER * I bath unils v.·ith patios n1ort' !f.!fofnt11.tion C-1111 B1'Jt, s.i:~.:i00. Call 641-87:..0 10 ROE MARSEILLES -5 Bedrooms + Ne~ 1dtehe~, 3BR. !ba, ~ea.r beach, ne .... · condition. and c~rts. Off4:1't'd for 846-331 · [ study. ~t arble master bath, Roman tub, 6&U(\~~·.1:;~· ~~Tkj()O'forl9-i·k('·~3h~~!..s:i~ $69.000. all &t6-0C"l55. SUPER BUY!! TA~RROElL.) custom carpeting and drapes. Pool size yard . BY o''"NER Dlstin.:tiv.? old 6-H-&,91 ~ Gr, coxoo. 1111111;11·. Cl'n Sl62,500 . eharm:r., 2 br. l h:i.., So.• I BR ltOt.:SE \V/fr"'l. on R-Z 11'.11 Air, ~ Yr<. t•lrl. Ill of H1\y R-2 101 nn lor , '' n\tn t·J bo·h. s~~.!i(Vl. s.1~~s1r'6 • 29 RUE GRAND \'1\LLEE -overlooking ' ' '1 . '1) I 101, ~i0;. Ai•;u·la. Ptin. only. !)fl() ~C\l f"'>rt Cl'ntt'r Drl.ve • 01" .. txrm. cm r.:ur. rln., 100.COO. fi?.>-8109 by &.ppt FREE LIST --· - lOth green. Decorated in soft earth tones,. onJ~. Ch~cr v. 111 tinht 1~1. nl li" r· 0 \~ F n ",, F ~ T 7°1e FHA As sumable landscaped. 3 BR . n1;ister suite "·ith JtaJian SGT,500 6 • .>-0CiOS 1 ~2.:_-----1 -----... ro ~ · c · 1 Bl:.~"':"" 0111111 • Hni. C.'en·1 1narble both. Easy m.aint. Lease •1000. mo. WITHLUcK 6"< AS.<;U}IABL~; \',\ II.Nin. REPOSSESSIONS i ~I:. 1~ iny,()r.iii.:,, fl;~rity. 11 :,1 :iir s~·•": 1 r lj ., • l br, ~ bn, bu:;.:: yrd, best. unr '"\·• "Tl.'.!'rr<' l\f'r !hr u l1J.:h"11 1. '\1,·t'ly or lease option. $160,000. Q\..,ner '\'Ill C3rry )'O\ll' oflrr may r-..Jle lhls I nei;:ht~)rhvod, cult UaLi 1' ''r ln!ur~n .• U· 11. :.n. I JU< 11•)!: UP!K'ni. BIO' S.1~-•-l'ti tan·l~(·;,.,.;.1 nn , ul·d~:Wc ~~~~~5"!~;;;;. 40 lot. Ov.n~t'I Ill a hurry -----; contu1:t,· . . , -~ --__ --L :.: ~ ,, BIG CANYON REljTALS FROM •7••, -wUJ 6\'en financf. PrlJne BEAlfrlf'UL 3 Br. Mesa d~ KASABIAN & pool, f~plt. h:u-, (lr<"..-"Ull! I ti:O.l\"ERSIT\' Paik. f'lt'\I' ~ ~ -location s:s&.500 ~lnr, SlO,CXXl. ~1l. O\\·ner tms, ~ Br. 3 Baths. fonnrJ Deane hom' t~t 118. 4br f tst TU at 9¥4 ~;.. 1 , &.: 2 BR duple...: on a ~. Mfr.!f'.41 t,f t!u-~l· l•ll\ .i.. \.\ 11\)n1~·f.• La Cuesta San Miguel s 11.:iOO 0 11 rit'!t'. :h>l 1~'19. ~ ~-(Furnished or Unfurnished) DmUon ·Aaeoe. · 67J..73Jt v.'ill carry balance at 9~ '~. Real Estate 9'2""44 dining m1. No. 1 ru-ea. C:ill 3ba, Ul./DRiF'R. f\M ncln.i ~"' Totlll prke $-12,SOO. 9'J'9.-36.$1 --Tod&.y •b1 96.1-4rl6 1t\'1lil, ready No\'. $°l!).OOO \O'Uli CUSTOM LOTS FROM $1f,000 Hom:~".':. !IO~t..nn. OPEN HOUSE-SattSWll-4, A GOOD ~UY TODAY STUDIO CON~O 507-4936 . Gl' ~ ~~ Today t to !PM (m..2)9~ 820 Conitreu St. l BR. hie. $37.!"J()}. 9'1 l..oen. lOOJ yds from I 'VAl..NlIT~SQ=U~AR~E~Tlo~nlwo~. hcifteM.C~lnc..dtoollaf*', ~~I "' a ~ ~tanruerite, OOf.) 40' kit, Fann~ Price, Rltr. !)$8...3209 ?Jew t.'tl~s, orw dnlpe11, ~a<'h. $2.400 Min. ~··II Air Cond, Rettig, ~My lloDeltH.G!.ntCOf'p..~mnlrattot .._.... ...... le& ti 6llc. Bis OmlM heh .• ASSVf\IE $16.100 FH.A 7~ just painlt'd, 3 Br. 1"1 ~. rr\C't'. $23.9.JJ. Bia. ~2-7.!86 uvadM. $~.~. 61~\S'J 1 $117.000. Gkr. ~7.t'.).1 ar 2 BR 10\lnhous~r-.lesa Ve-rde, rl~ to .11.mool.t; If !ihOp~. ~ Br, hr!i·h ri;H I•~. rH'\•' ·:!_t 6_& ~ikn.ls. -·-' ~ 6~t1 front unit, p.i Uo, pool. i\g1 ~3.-SlU P:!l'f'tl~. 11~·11 ll:J 1nl. llh'f' XE\' I Bn CoUC'gt-PA.Mc. ~60 NEWPORT CENTER DRIVE OGEAN \1.f:'V. Cu ~~Onl S29.!':bl. o\\·c ~'nl"I, 833-l\:97t -~-~ --(llt"h ;\,.,,. it1"t'1, ~~.MO-L'l"~~ \'T']'l'T"" • '>t.000. I De sign Plaxe ~twport 8tach ~inc,.~~· ft. ~1.i.1.0()0. Sellin~an,;tlliri:t'>'ithl! D·i!l)i OPEN HOUSE , 1.,,,•Jr't11· nv1rkt•1 ~1,;->-'.:"-'I l't\\ ,,.1 1.111 •. ,rf' r,1~lJI -64~1156 j' fff. ,~/a Sdn1111, •~r\\·rrn. PUii1 Classl!iM ,\d l<t 11 SUN l·S 1 nnTro:-.1~, \1111 \'•111•1 s1~.!(Jj,). '!tJ . .:~. ,~m,,-dr., ·-Rec·rm, Pool. O°"·nrr !!llmple n1~ttt•r Jlllil 3 BDR..'I. "'lltf'rta.11 l!tl:i1 1 t~'OL Tcrn1s ;l\:1tl ~:!LOO.l 7 11~ .. un1. !11, ~vJ1t111l»')l,1 1--------------____ I ~ m3033 Xlnt flnond~ · ('J)I 6e..ti678l _' \\'w.Jv.11?'1.l. BkT. S1.t-11~; S~·:!Ol::. ~.:·~in.11. l""E~l'\lP.'I' 21 6-\:,...i'Z'Jl . ' '-> LEASE LAND BARON SPECIAL CYP RUS SHORE \\'hltewater vic\v from this fantastic 1i1onarch Bny Terrace pool home. S "BR, 3 DA, 3000 sq fl .. \ va ll at 600 per mo . GRUBB & EL~I S,,. Nice custo1n homesite in one of f\'ey,·port's most desirable areas, O\'erlooking 14th green of Dig Canyon Country Clu b . .<\skiug $70.500. - GRUBB & ELLIS Rul E1t1t. S\reeping vle\\PS of the coastline from thi& ideal oceanfront building site. Private beach plu!I: 2~ acre pnrk. Re al Estate 675-7080 GRUBB & ELLIS 675-7080 Rt1I E1t.1t1 675-7080 Laguna 811ch 1041 Lagun1 811ch !--=-------1041 Newport ltleh 1069N•wport Bffch DEFLATION SPECIAL TI1at \\'Ill bt your JST tm· pressl()n. 'l'hf"n you llt.'t' !his m:lQUt: :t .<i\'TOJl Y HOt.IE, BUILT ON 1 1 ~ IDT!\. Df>tn.lle11 Zlll \l'Ood exterior, h11.5 l11rge son drc k encl~! y, /post & mll11. THA'r OFrt-:RS ,, ~NIC VU OF TllE OCEAN. Spray,·Jing .i Bnn:i-1. &: OF.N floor i)\3.n. IUIS y,• I w c11rpetlni: Thru-out. Is.land lYJ'IC kitcht'n, hnli RILT·l:'ll RANGJ-} &. OVF.N, DISll\\'SllR .. GARB. DISP. & F.XTE~SJ\'E USE OF DE E P ST AINED ?.L\HOGAN'I' CABINETS. Open s1airc::111e lends lo 2n<I l(!vcl, \\'/2 BDRl\IS., BATI I & LARGE DF:N. APPROX. 23 F"T'.. \\'i th dbl. 1diding glnA." "Ill!~ 1hnt open 10 sun derk. TfK're I! no better ~11 In Lngunu. for only ~5,950 FULL PRICE frUHRY ON TillS O~E! MISSION REAL TY 985 So. Coo11t Jl"'Y·· LalilJna PHONE 17141 494,0731 SPECTACULAR LAGUNA ESTATE READY FOR OCCUPANCY Choose your o"''" rolor achemt' 3 BR. hug~ tam. OPEN SUN. 1-5 545 Windsor Pl•ce Hetti the money market; the ""'nf'r \\ill carry the entltt llit T.O. at ,93 lntetttt. ::i Bclrma., Jge. den with f1·p1<·. rnmlly nn.; 4800 sq. It. Stunt!lrg coastal vie11o"5 tron1 F'11l°" Vcnlcs to O<llla Point. $169,:JOO EMERALD BAY \\'Uh a rare loca,ion on t."merald Bay's North Point. \\'Ith f11buloua ocean. coa11ta1 & city vlev.1:, Is this spaci· ous home of J bdrm1., den, fonn. I dining rm. Recently remodeled kltr-hen. Quiet cuJ de sac locatk>n. SZi0,000. EMERALD BAY Great white water view; 4 bdrmA., 4 baths: den with frplc .• tonnal dining rm., BeCludcd, radiant heated terrace; central location near tennis courts. $155,000 MON. BAY TERR. An attrsctive split·lewl con- tl•mporary ot stwmlng de- sign. 3 &lnns.. 3 baths: convert. den, billiard roo1n \\ith \\'Ct bar; RC!uded swimming poo!. $145,000 FOR LEASE Fantastic 2400 sq ft Executive un it with full baf view. 4 Bn, 2lf.! BA, across from sandy beach. Avail at $1050 per n10. GRUBB. & ELLIS RH1 Est•te 675-7080 rm., din. rm,. 31ii ba. This _ _ ~ ------· ---- complclcly rtecked 3400 sq. Laguna Buch 1048 Newport Beach 1069 n . hi·lt'\'el ho1ne h n s 1 -;;;,:;;;;;:;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;I W'l()bl;tructe-d OCEAN &1,-------------..... BLUE LAGOON VILLA CANYON VIEW, f'PI"'. in •OPEifiili(flf.5 Prim< locstion, '""" 2BR. tiv. rm., !\luster BR &. fam. 2~~ BA, all nppl!nnre~. nn. POOL. Gigantic decorator furnished. Serious C•mmic Tllo ROMAN TUB J J 572 MONTEREY ,.11.,._Fl,.,., llm• oft.ml. in l\lasl<'r BR 36,000 sq. Only ·;m,500. terms. JlED ft. of lnnd lJNL.Y $169,500 CARPET. H. E AL T 0 RS .<\bMllutely no way thi~ In the heart of South Lagurm. 640-8612 or ~l how•c -·' 1 L----'·'ccd New custon1. Ocean view, ._vtul ,,... .... p.vuu .f BDRM. home} ·lge. lot, al !hi~ price. OPEN l!OUSE Lgc. 3 bdrn1., 21,4 bath CUI· My"stlc Perk area. IT',500 SAT SUN 1.5 2980 Zurich !om home. ready for occup-Vic Stuart • Court ru1cy•! Has lge, living & Howard Johnson tnmily rooms with beamed ~R::••::ll:::or'-.,.,..--_;•:;:"'-c.753::::;1 R•alty ceU. & frplc. Lge. ylll'd, Laguna Niguel 1052 49,_,.,,, roon1 fur pool. Mature na---'"--------~............. live trees. Short walk lo CIW{MING C.'ONDO be11ch. N'b FINANCING 3 BR. + den, 21..i ba.. 2 PROBLE~1S :FIBRE, 10% frplc.. dining m1., priv. 00\VN HANDLES: MAKES patio: dbl. gar. Po o I , TilfS AN XLNT BUY AT clubhou~. $5'1.500 -$87,500 fO\n!ction!: \\'llfch SPECIAIJZTNG IN OCEANFRONT tor signs on Const H\\')'.) Beuut._sa•t~ IJc!S_h· <1 B . ~Gl!N~o~iGR~ VJ.EY Z°"ba. + · n. guci1 uAC. ~llWtil1'fn-SEA TERR C Lge. level lol. $215,000 ~-~ A E OCL\N SIDE OF lf\V\'. -~,.., PRIVATE GUARDED AREA 3 en.. J b11... dining nn., . lovely patio: fantru;tic v!C\\', 494-1611 499-2100 OCEA..V VU to\\nhomes, 2 $11.5.000 ~ or 3 BR, $-19,SOO -$75,0CKI DF.Ll.JXE 4 BR. . • F11m. rm .. ~p.icious !hr,, 3 • VACANT e $64,500 wilt buy this 10\>ely bn .. lrg. den, b.ir; 2 f-rplcs.. V•ry Serious Seller upgraded garden Ix> me I YR. WARRANTY INCLUDED huge deck. view. Owner Tu·o slory Colonial. Ocean w/atrium. 2 :n. den. carry 1-0an. i139.500 view. Palstlal, 4 BR & tam. 4 PEG \Ll EN BUY tlUs outstanding 4 BR • REALTOR ' • 49.;..757s rm., n12 BA., lJ' llving ocean vu on contra.ct w/ Builder offet'!I a neat litlle 10M N. C'..oi111!, Lllguna. rn1 \\.Jth stone fireplace, all $10,0X> dn. Move ln loll¥>r-duplex in Newport Shore~. bltns, dsh\\·shr, ceramic tile row. Ft"(! land, gocxl condition. OPEN SUNDAY 1-S & lndoot<-Outdoor carpeting. 2 bedroom and 1 bediooin 421 LOS ROBLES Beaut. Shng carpeting and L"Ustom E • Th Good Lii · $62 ' dra""s thruout. l{ug• patio, "1°Y • e unns. ,500. bench home; 2 bdrms.. 2 ,~ Call 49° """ 5 1069 · • LIDO REALTY • 1\:~\1,1t .. 'll *673 ·7300 * "' '< .... '"" ......... ' •• ' \"\l ,LE). HE.\1:1 ') A BERG f NTE RPRlSES CO oversbed y.'.l.rd. d o u b 1 e ===7";.;;.~r:;:~""'""'='" I ha., pcgaed floors; f'lJIC., garage $7" ~ Terms PANORAMIC OCEAN VIE\V • !rench doors to ma&11ive CALL s.io-8612 . in this new cu11om built T\10 doll J-.ouses un one lof "ONE LEFT!" deck: lge. gnrden. Trees. 1 in C.D.l\ot. \\'11.lk to beRches privacy, \\'(Ilk to every. 3 BR 2 be. home; qualty and shopli. Separate pl'.ltios. Newly. completed lhlng. $7.i,000 stands out as You enter this Reduced 10 S65,000. liWTY DUPLEXES. Live In one, Lower Thre• Arch Bay beautitu.I home with beamed on this~ i·~nt the other. 3BR, fn1l. C I I . celling &: expansive living C 11 61_ .,.,....,, thn.. rpl . Come h y nod on en1pora1j' mas erpLf'«' ill I ''"" of ,,.,.ood & glas.11; oceanfront Rrea·1• u°""""g "' eA&e op-a r disi"Over RdvantngC's o[ J ~ 1 llon ,(Xll O\\'ning inoomc property; sttwt,; ,,._,rm~ .• n\al'lls ve LINGO REAL ESTATE Mobilt Homes 4'or 11lt 1100 4.9-J-ijjl 49+8al6 499-1397 Snt/Sun 1·5 at 214 Palmer 29,500 sq ft. c-2 ione. Xlnt beam1; gr<'t1l vie\\'. $165,000 I .~~!~!~~~! ·ALSO avail for lease. Open lOOl N. Co.1st llv.·).,, Lllguna EXE c UTIVE-HOP..tE .. J\to-BALALIS & ASSOC. nelghborghood, 100 Ft. narch Bay Tttnce, ocean Se,.,-port Beach &C>-3343 Frontage at 2770 catllbed OPEN HOUSE . 4 BR, I J •-1 ~~~~~~~~~ll"'iiil:"'li"'i~";;::;;;:';~;;,;' Blvd. & 100 It Frontage view am rm, "" on side st. Beach 1 Bllc. SAT&: SUN 12-5 home w/pool I: Jacuzzi. ., 3 BR. 2BA.""bonu~ h.11.!'l' C0"J'"5 e.a.L.<cr 657 Alta Vista Xtra sharp cu11tm \\'/many Frplc, FA hC'at. 512,500. Rear house rwta $200 mo. 11iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiii ... iiiiiiii• I 80'7r LOAN avail. and pm;s. amenities. Owner transfer· WF~""l'CLJFF VILLA No. 10 $5000 1l0\l,-n. ~20 or ~Nm:L &: CHRISTIANSEN. I' 10•,1. d\\11. Imunatic Roor red. mus! seU. $l~1¥K>. Adult 2 BR, pool. $74.500. 5-IS-1319 Owner. 2976 "~rl•"·d Blvd. PICTURE THIS! Lo1s t•( pl:lnl!<, \1'00rk'11 frrnch doo1~. dc<"ks, OCCHn \'lew tn littli', nnyy,·ayl &. l'eClnr shini::-lf' l''1rt·lor. Evrr;.1hin1? thut I! lalics lo have a n1tt f'l•l.,V ('!l1·lmn1nrn1 111 Ulls 3 lxlrni. llr,mc. s.'i.J,OCO ...40/an REAL ESTATE !l!'YJ (ilenllC'\·re S1. 49-1-9-11:-1 :'>19-0316 --skY1ine or-. -- N~'" 0t•1•:1n \'It'"'" IX':in1<!<l c1•1lu1gs. In•~ .. r \\Oflt'l anrl i:la.'i...'-. :I lx>rtm1, ;1 b:1, 3 lpl!'l', Jll'JOI t;ible i;l..e <lt>n, g-ourn1<"I kir i !1• ll, .SI 1:),.--ilO, 0 1\ rn•i 1.1 ill iw JJ nn huld 1'(111· IJ'i1('I at)(':. plan. All y,'<JOd Int. v.·ftrg LAGUNA NIGuEL 0\\11f'r \\'ill carry 1st m . ..... ""' beams & posts. 20 ft. glass Realty 400-4040 830-50:;Q DOVER at 17th Sl. Op SIS CUST0~1 Homi:--Bcaut. 4Br. I __ Ca:::,:r:::l•::be::d:~· .::C°"A'-t::29-::_;:230:::1'- ,\·aJI \\'/!Jeaut ronstal w. 3 ,,,,. patio surrowid1n~. !l~prox 9 OWNER WILL BP., gan1c & util rm. 2200 LEASE/OPTION \\'ESTCLIFF'S BEST roinilv )'r'l'i old, by O\\'ner. & 5-l074. CARRY 1v,-;. S'1 fl. hJnny extras. $110,00J. BeauUful condo on Nlgu,,.l's fun ho1ne, 4 BR, pool. 1101 Newport Shores 1072 M· x !05' lot on Nev.rport 1059 Balboa Golf Cout'!lt, 2 DR, 2 Ba Ilcrkshire. o.,n. SIS. * NEW LISTING * Blvd., Ne'll.'J>Ot1 B e Ac h. $.xn:l 00"'N on contr11ct o1 U' 1-s~·' I"" ooo 10 •-·-sale. Ne\v \\"OOd & glass. pt>e'r. ~ + .~,.., '1 ""! · % uvwu, owner BR f be month. $41,000 full price. BLUFFS CONOO I Story 2-St,._ A-Frame. New carp., wiJ carry. Call tor in· " + am rm, ams, ·i91-3805. 3 BR. $TI.OO'.I. , vrry clean: .3 BR., din. formation, PRESTIGE frplc-& 2 <~eeks. Great ..:::.::::=:o------:-:-:-: ()c(oan view Call now area, 2 pahos. Walk to J-IOMES 645-(£46 coastal vu. _150 sq ft. L•k• Forest 1054 Uniled Brokers REALTORS ~R~ pools & tennis. I °"c'°'o"nd~o'"m'-""in"i""u"m"'•----4i·r~;~~1 1 Laguna Beach * LAKEVIEW 2 Story 4 John P. Carey S46-i'114 CAYWOOD REALTY for sale 1700 nr Deane Home 2 w/trg FINAL CLOSEOUT * 548-1290 * lam rm. hUge ma!lter suite. * MODELS * r.ep dressing areas I n and chlldrens wing , 2~ ba * NE\\' HOt.lES * Beautifully decora1ed and 8~t t;'~ Fin..incing 11\•ail . maintalncd. CM'ner wil l help HARBOR VIEW \\"lllTE \l.'ATE.lt V I E \\' finance. $59,900. TOLI.£ HOMES 1r.1r.tAC. :1 br. 2 ha. 2 bJk. ... to O<'CRn, tennL~ crt~. ni-. rrotJOS('d t.111rlna. must 11ell, Try nny offer. 5"~40 San Clem•nte 1076 OVERLOOKING ROCK REAi.TORS, 58&-8500. 1.1-:DGE. Ne\\·ly cons1 4 BR. UNJQUE TRILEVEL. 4 BR ~-1 L ~t'f.· Co. *SUNSHINE FRESH* 3 1 s B.A \\•/beamed T&G home w/convenRtion pil Port ield Larsre 2 BR. J ~ BA. ~le, t'C'ihrt2~. plush crpt, Un!e<I around floor to Cf!iling stone Nev.1X1n Beach 8.1.1--0780 luxury Cl'Jll!i, 1-01nplctcly LEASE OR SALE Close to \\'estcliif. 3 Bedroom adult Condo. $45,00'.l, $.350. pe.-mooth. $50//credit. By o"·ner. After 5 Pr.t 00-2225. Condominium, for sale • 1700 ~li1s11, rn:i.rble frplc, tUcd !lreplace. T r emendous NEWPORT SHORES redro:ir:i.11'1'\. 4;:<' CO\"Crerl BY O\\T1er, xlnt buy, ~ut Ultra Super hath~. 32' ree rm \\'fbar master 1ulte on ground Co1nplelely rf'done :~ bdnn. p11Un lt-nrllni: 10 fncd. \\'ell upgraded Aliso V-tlla Con. :? BR & drn, 2 l)fllh. orrnn & Jl'rill, i;pacious def'k & level. If you like your ho1ne + bonus rooin, OC\V carpclll manicured yd. \\"alk 10 fO:l"llf domlnlum, ?-fusion Viejo, un!I \'ie11, Sl1.J)() ,\~1111111° pntio. enrl J!:M & carport, in the woods, call to S('t! nnd paint. BBQ, 1Vnlk lo <.'OUl'Se "-licnch. \\'111 \'i\, nssum.ci.ble 7~% rnA loon, :11\11• i' n lr..n. lt1un1•d. ·...:~-:. rt•d\\'(l"Ki <'Xl('rior. room for 1~~1ED. $67,500. TOU.E l.ieaC'h. (1001 & I~ n n is Only S.lS,000. Bertha ltcn1y 3br, l \;,ba, pool & clu.bhouse An11>r1•·~111 41(,nu• 1:r11HQr ~1\1rnn1ing pool, quality ron· RF.Al.TORS, 5116-&iOO, fncilU!ei;. ~·ncr hru; bought Realtors, 492·1121 . fac, $30.500. 830-2403 ·1'11-i,lJ:l nr <1•11-1 001 structlon thnlbut, ! e c I LAKE FRONT HOME r\\· home. Call for ®PL South L•guni 1086 OCEAN VlEW.-Likf! -New I ---'-~·'~'~· Cnas1 l .. h:"•·>,,_· =-!Un."f'I. $116,900. J.•(lt' nppt 646-7711 -3 ba N INCOME! INCOME! ~'c.:'::.11 .::":.:m:::k':.:''-· .::493-=='°?'6:;1.::1. __ I ~~~~ d~~ :m~$is~~takc~ WALKER & LEE LOWER 3 ARCH BAY B:r~er 4~f:.8 llu.el. Yoor 1cn1ln1s fil"ll' )Ou buy Laguna Beach it on a contract. Open House REAL EsrATE &:ru1t lful ('Ounlry style 3 BR Duplexes/Units 1hls jC'n'cl n.nd you 11u~r!. By OwMr lD/5114. 22662 Plne Lake. B•yfront Peninsula h..mi" nesUcd rn1 lrg. lo! llll.I'· for Ille 1IOO <.'f'lun!ln,g. T11k<' i!.d\'a11114g1• 2 Jf~s on One Lot-8 Ln. Agt. 586-6731. •ONE or A KIND • rounM<I by mAny mnture _;,:;.;..:;::;.:.. ___ ..;.;= of IC'£1ll 1l'l0p l\0!1·i;. &>e This ·park Ing Spaces-Fc11Ct'd ~L:;:1c1o""""1,'i1e-"'""=-~10~S~6 6BR. Den, 4na Charming t1'N'1t, step:t to prlv. beach, OCEANFRONT. Reduced to big F.0h<'4191~r1;.1ur a b~1rg11.in Ba1 ck Yd-Fruil.rc. Trees--000 ,, ~ ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I Oldtt Home. Dock, nr jetty, 11o1·~~i0001'1 co u rt 11. ~ p.11.rk $120,<XX'.l. 2/2Bn, \V, Npt. t1 rlet'. 1· 1!1 B ks to Ocean. •'"• uJUl.n. be h • I · ~" 000 ,, B 64"mt / Red Carpet, Realtors cln"t nvail. ?rinclplts only. Golf-T..,nlt Country 0.:;. &iurt~;is. b;kfs . LINGO REAL ESTATE w~!~ •. t ·rm.s. ~ e\'e BY OWNER l'.O.RQx 191. LH. mll. Esh1t(l homn 673-1())1. 494.,li(ff; 499-1397 ...::.::::::;;:. _____ _ . • C11 !1 49-f.~liO • on Hie fll1N'R)' B W I 1098 HOUSE + 2 ~i-ulor~,mu· ~:u'lrfleback Vil'W. ~ 1.t F.1 Nl,..•cl Count1"\I Club B/\ YCR EST 1'-:AUTY estm nt ttr Jhr, .1~1. l.1111 nn, frplr, -o bi"tl · •~ .,1 Xlnt Jttref>I locntlon. l.lp;hrl---------Nev.· Tr1plex, C.A-1. &4&-+t14 Jikr 111'\v r 11rr1cr heatuu; & EMERALD BAY 1 . · 11r n ti"" rag cs le niry, lrg 3BR -+tlv/ltl:f.I HUGE LOT Income Pro.,.rty 2000 1~·f~1~1·r:.ii11t~ Xln1 111nrl 1 r.~cellcnt Jruuily ho?W" \\ilh r.~~Jt~~sT llUt'$t hlic or gan1e rn1. N~1" USE FOR BOAT _ ~.9'11_!91-3J91 I hll,11~ r.un.m1. Jonn dln l'ln, (i14) <1~1860 Bkr. ly decornted IMldc It Ou!. Poot ~nlen! Super :r Dr 2 S1'fJflY , 2 Br "'/QCl!Rn· 3 Bdrm, 21;, 8.'\-r.tuch, ~~"""""!!!!!!""""~'l:"' Nt'\\' 40' pool ,. fl!»,OOJ. 3 an. Jyr nu. den plul fl\mlt\: 4 UNITS v\l"\\, t,i,;. sundN""k & 2 C&ro :\1~h ?!lore. $130.00J. NEAJt new 3200 Ml fl •bf. Ol\'llr/Agt. M2-Q51 l'O'Om. ·3 ttll' lfl\l'aJre, form.al $89,999-Xlnt ports. S·l:l.t'ro. !til-11t'11 B•rr•tt Re•lty 642-5200 ofllcelaiftden. 3bn, Sou.th Pttto. tn."M' BCOUYNDOIN TOWN l ~~d~ln~ ... ~mo~m~, ""1~~8C-8311~~~ Inv~stment Jf )'OU have n E "" ~-"~ 000. oc..J • $30.CDJ.. cash, other PfOptrty SAVJ'.: S1·Acr \V It N ~~ nlcc! oy nvrm:r • ......,, BAYrRONT OCF.Ai~ VU up to SlJ),00) agt Mi-44d MOVING by wrap p I n 1 .~ ..... ~"'NT• , "nil 873-8760 appt. prtne only -n..rn. pool 1lipa, 2 Bdr L I~'"'""""""""..;;~""""" dl1hc1 and otk<>r f1'8ttll" """'-LIU•rn.u " .., -N "--• l~f r u • ' ' .......... 11 ilem1 l.n ~·ash cloth.I, towf'lic Apll ~rt~~~~;;..._;..;__ 2 BR. lM. Opt. $5&5 mo. _ ~ COVINGTON ftorf oOl"r llnf'n~. you Rt' •LAGUNA BEAOI • OPEN l..S ll~2000~-~dj•·~64H7~~·~~. {-~~l :.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:liii~ I' .•Ide, chok:e MB Joe. l& morP 11p1h.-e In th(' ll:llnlKl' ~ Dn Finan Avail NEWPORT CREST come $830. mo, xlnt cand. 1,,..i C'IO!l"llll hy lllr'llini.: liflt-$197,$00 Ou-ner. 53&-0321 1427 PRISCILLA LANE Jlard to flnd, f"lAn :;, 4BR, Mobile Home1 by agt CR.ll 846--07S2 itr<n1 111th l'I Dnll)' r llQt 1 t.AGCN.\ (.1fAR~1ER·3 BR. Vacant; comer 3 llR.. M\\'ly tnm rm. ,trf'tlt tlecornl\~1 for H ie 1100 VERY nttractlve tJ&ht_2_BR C111,.~lf1('(! J\d. Call f..t2-$8 fr p I c, -s e p . u rt It redone. )l{Lflnl'n School. Secr!Ute b)' 0'!\-11Cr. Tt!mlJll--------'= 11nlt8t F.uttdde Coiita ~fesa. now! rlii\\n!ita1ni. S!ud\Q In rtl\r. Lf:~. lot. f'lL\fVA.' t52,!00. avail, &IZ-0288 BUDDY 12'x.U' PATIO f>l.~1964 !\fl 6prn f!)r •ppt. OCl::AN VIE\I,' SS9.:.:0 t-'O -GEM-VJ!i~' the httrbor from lhla rurnil'hcd. !jynt old ClBR) Don't rive up thC' ~!Pi ll111'r °"'·1n1rr "'·l'ilr >'UU llB\f.' 111110'J)wn? ~II U fas! '\\-Ith n D11ilv Pilot C'1noi.,lflM .Ari ! ACEl\'TS "9-1-3367 IDF Tu1tln Ave., N .B. gotg('l()\_18 llvlna: r o o n1 , NB: $i500, 6'13--0l73. "Utt" it in d8Sllfted, $hlD You'll find It 1n C111111~(fitd RF.J\LTOlts 842-ltm $.\J.000. Jlrn~('r f>~-1211 Cfas,lfied Ao!ts . , . , .. 6-12.&iTII. J.gJhore Resul!I! &U-am. " .. • • ' J Income Pr0perty UNITS -UNITS! 10.8°/o SPEND AILE 2200 I-IA \'E 25 unit111, &a.le/trade. \Va.nl TD'!!, smlr unit!!, h£el, l l~1~,~,,~1·~'~'~-·~·~,~-963-:~~'°!'~'~~I I~ - Houu1 Furnlthed Gtner1I 3102 $85/115 UTIL pd, bach• at ~:h, ideal 1tudcnt1, l..quna $150 lITIL pd, am rear oot· tage. Yd, patio, Corona del l.lar S200. UTIL pd, oceanfroot l bdr, beaul Joe! ~ $230. 2 BDR. ocean/city vtcw Apt \v/gar. Laguna NU-lllEW RENTALS m.4030 or $32-18 VACA.'IT 1 Br $130. lllm· tlngt.on Beach. Singlet OK Newp:.rt $150. houte. Ocean· f1'0nl hOuse Laguna Seo.ch $225. Walk to Wl'ter Balboa. 1 Br + loft. UtU. pd. Alt· Fee. 979-8430 For Rent • Power Yacht, sleeps 4, 11.U el@CttiC pl)ey1 ref/lrffzer. !loaUn& apt plus acce1s to excl111lve ·Ya.cht Club. Call 842-030 Bolbo• l•l•nd 3UM so. Bayfronl, winter ftrltal; 3 Bit, 3 'bo. Tle--up b' small boot. $395 + Util, $al1'bury Reallf m.GX' . HALF blo<k 10 hay, 3 8', 2 Ba, !rpl, 1 "" ........ 673-::sl · Bolboo l'tnln1ula 3107 BA\JFRONT Plu, lloo• ·; !!!, I Ba, wln!tr or ~. .,,.20.19 . l;C:;•::r:on=•=d•=l=Mo=r==3=12:;2l I CORONA DEi. MAit I 2 Bedl'\)(l!TI, l.n.nRI, ~~ pllllo1 Top rondlUon. Nt:nr berich. $<1.'lS.oo. 9 tn(lnth les~. 1 lntludea gnl'dCn~r. Cole nt Ntw~1 Rlll'I 675-5511 Co N Li 2 BR vent 1325 1275 67"">- 3 B pier, 121 24th 4 B win! (213 2 Br. N.B. H Gen BA. !450. Cop! 2 BR fncd ,,,.,, LAR rn1 Coro ... any """ hoo Bay IRVI ••• &d 67'- LOV n•w gara ~ ~ B slngl 2 br "" 3 BR, fire ,,., 2Br, s.. lllh LAR stv .. ">\du! 3 BR 2430 Adul NICE '""' 1110. • '. Sundll:)', Octobtr 6, 1974 Houses Furnished Ao"'-'-"_O_n_f_u_r_nl_lhOd __ .,.;H:;.•:•:,.::•_U:.:;";;'"::'.:;":::1•::.hed::~i -:.:.:•.:•::..,::...:Uc;n::.:;u:.:'":;;'.:'c;;;;...I Apartment• Furn 1 eel Apartments Furn 1hed I Apartment• U n urn. 1 _....;P_•_rt_.,._•_•_• __ "-"-'-".·-l·-A.;.p_•_rt_m_•_•_•_• ____ 1 c,-';;"';'."":"•;-;;d:•'-M:-:n:::~3.::12::2: I ~C::·:··~·.:_Mow~~--..:'~224~ lnolne 3244 Ntwport •••ch 3169 Balbo• P•nlnsula 3707 I Huntlr'lgton 8each 3740 Balboa Penin1ul• 3807 Costa Mau 3124 Irvine 3 Br. 2 Ba, 2 story horM, NEAT bn h 1 LEASE IT NEW OCEANF'R.Oh'T Du pl ex, BEAUT furn. aptt iua A: SUPER DUPLEX i:L.:;\Jl:.;:;G,.;E:;.2:.;:;B,.;R_Sl·7l.-.:5".:<e:..te;IOO::::Z::,:-. -""-... -:-_-:1-,n-n..a-:-· ..... --•• I Magnl!lcent •lew. Yearly c un l noo. Stvf 2 BR Condo • .•• ~/mo Lle v•lnttr Mttal. Lziz 4br, 3ba, SIT3 ~ 11t)'le buildlne, 3 wt, 2 BA. paUo, frple, ilory, btam clnc, c:rpt, 2 UR 2. BA, furnll dln, S!IOO. 61~ r.~'enutl! pd. StudcBRnL 11 BRBR ~~ • .... ~ ~ ~ • Wit~ Octan View .,_.(), ala;o 2hr. 2 bl.. S300. P'\'I. •nckit;•d pr., pool, )U A \\'bl &y Aw. ilt'Pll. l.illn1, t'flrPUrt. Infant i:'.lr, paliO, pool, cent air • ....,. home l nt>. ......,...._ ,.,,._... • Crttt kllcbeM. 3,,R.., S b4., Optn I loose Sun or call ~tn. aaurta. )11.undry, adlt• ll30J a.i~'. ""''" ~·. eve olc. 646-41243 or 6M-ISS2 ~ ,htg, cablr _TV. aaa.. , L1gun• Beath 3148 }'urn, oltler •lnele, ,_,..., S BR ll.JmH • $300, ~ tlrtplaet, wet bit, tennll.. \'lcl..'11 "'"8961 "-, s--K 1 ' -t bt I" ~ tll -.... ~, .. 1 •~ 2 BR Sl!C. 1m --~,, ~ 3 BR Harne1 , ~'. · "w '"'Y • ·-tt llOl'I 6-A!M k .. etit 9G'U1'21 TO\\'NJffiU.:>F. ... b ..... u '· .~ .... ~....., --...... ~" Jacunl, swlmmlnr, • • l c · l'\'tl/v.·eekcnds of Be::i('h off Sinter ~"~TS18 -"' ·· ' r., i.:,,.., • Dlt;J?.ALI> BAY chld A couple, nu I' 'BR Hom•... 3t:5. "215 tl''EW.OOKlNG NtwPoRT BA\' ~.-R~0-.·------1 • . -YRL \' 2 hrtr. St1 vt. l"r. drlJi., gur., •undeck. adults, L•guna Beach 3141 House V.'tlT rurnl&Md or WI· 2 llR S.185. in EO.i, OOW RANOI :r"l BEA.Of! rrom $fOO month. .~. l-'OR JlE:''T Slrij::le apL.. i.~.m. •ho{W. A~iul~ nu ~ pel •. Sl~ per too. _________ , furn. 3 Br, 2 ea, oc-ean ~-by p.r, nu Cto • Ml·D>O * Call g.15-4147 GOOD IOC', 11"<1nd vill\\'. ;reat p!'l.'fer eJd .. rly ur 1llt•dlly pels. s~. fiT 5-4 1 7 2, 61Ht23 \\!Of; ocean \!'\ft\\'ti. Oo• 6\;!!~~·.69 be.11.ch 1ld11. $.'l50. LOVELY 2 BR, R.uan R $260. R.ANOI RULTY N•W,JlOl't Cre1t Rffl!l_ )T·"'.•und deal. 1 U rt e.!'1p1oy~I ndul!~. N~. Btac-h, ~l _ 2"'rnt-u11fun1 r.111·,1r 11 A111.s. to beach & Mhopplug. Acto1 ,,,...... 6' tenco, cuatom C/0, 1.v • ~ '* l...EASE---o;i'Uo.t1 1)1' )T !e'GsL $:!.il>/Bach. S2'l:i. Aill1 i>. no :Xlnt. 1r,1ns .. no '"hlld. or 1 BLOCK lo BC'h, O.luxe F'l"flll'. D/\\' pn\' Pfilln, ~:.!l'IO ut jJard('ni, .. ~talf' livlna:. SUN'SHIN'E fright 2 BR. 2 MESA V. J Ur, 2 Ba $300 ,. 'l'USTIN REA11l'Y .sr;r;o, mo .. 3 Br. 21Ai Ba pets.. 9:.'6 r;. Balhoa. tiia--.ta:l3 r::t 111~.~ire 114 Pil.cific 2hr, 11~ bl\, [rplc. Ask for NI', II'\ Inc .lndu.i.:u•!..il ;u•t>n: °l"ool k spa. U11 usu. I - Ba, 2 frpl'*, beaulltul der.k POONu J>R3tn8t,R.ap2plBA1. fncd, l(llr • 8U-5lll • rondo. Aa;I. 64._7002 2 BDR~1 t. 11hJ11; cpr.\,divs1, .. •i·N' ·11 •-1 ~1!1f',.,,, t~n 714-S.lG-33.'.ki, r,.·,7.~11 µ1:h·fl<:); Seµ.'\.r1tt1 1 • hi: u ••I patio. rec room ru· 19.rj:e l.. : $355. Oar, BUY-LEASE Option. ~. carpor. \\'n' 1rm., ~ till ... 1 ~' , sn111. .,.-a('h hole . 71......,.,_,o -2 ni-.;Dnoo~t NF.AR NE\V houll('. 2 lxh·111. D g w11sf'IM', BR, 4 blkt to beach $-l50 deck yard, single. mo. New 4 bR O>Uege Newport Shortt '272 to btt,y or bch. s:'JO. mo. fwoni:i $21.50 \\'t!Ck. Aplli \\'AU{ to bay & bench, 2 C 1 d i '"Cf:d' . he 1 dual O\'{'llll. Also h~e 2 Ur, yrly. $3$0 Wint. 497-2141 or See us far what you need PlU'k. VPlt'd crpt•, oor lot. 1116 \V. Balboa 673--1~ $~/n)(). a.16-7m8 Br, l \i Bo.. 40T-D Jhirdln!J. ~ii v.~8,y.1.1110·:30·~~ J:3o: 2 Ha. apt•. i~h <.*llina;1, 2l:H9&-i930 ALA Rentals 642.UIJ _644-503"'-="-l-=-----~= STJ!:PS TO OCEAN, 3 br., \'r~RLY 3 br. Clean. iib Laguna llaach -.11• $235.~ly, Re.ft. requl~il. G-~ forn11d din.Ina: room, tlr&-1 L h N .. -• B•• ~--M "L' II •241 • ~ rte!"-dupl•• Te-;• ds t m •·· •-d -•n ,.,_ '"'" R•s ··••7 "1•ce & n\ru\y nthci· anienl. 1guna C 1rm Hou1e1 r:: ~· """''• CM tgunt •tcft " • "'"" ""''" ~· '"' ' Y • r V<V , .. ., ""'~ • _.. or ;n -.-. 2 IlfJ. S:tovt'/r('f, Nl!w carp. fir.ii. s.~. to SllOO. nio. 111• 1 1 Br. $1t:)..2 Ors. $195. Y'AM11 .. lES, &inglet, i Br. · 0'ifi!c ~~\~t~. $200 J;,~~~n:: m.m:x>~t, ~ OCEANFRONT I & 2 BR O(EANPfi0 NT YRL Y & 1tr1lr>@'s, l1u11111. Jo'R.:. \\'nlk eluding udlltltY!. NO\\' de<» Salarl{,'d le F.11tabll1hed kld1 & pets OK, Sl8S. fncd $1:..= c~r.nr blt!:h, •yr~'-·-"-·------Utll $300 &: 2 DR. STUDIO. Part. tum. l Br . 2 S., bel\ms, ffVI, to 1hog. Quiet 1tre11, no pet1, rating, chOil':f' of t."tllors k No Peta Or Chl4)ren p~ ~:oome 2 Br. pvt home, S230. 2 oti ocean/~iew 1tpt. Stn Clemente 3276 ~~ter~asMo )Tl)'. ~T& Avill. now! M6-037l dAh\\·hr. glll"llgl', pa I l u lmby K $1M. 642·3697. papen.. ~I At u rt.' adult•. * •l9;l·8lTO * $ Bltns &aJ'aie Ntwport Beach 3769 &&2'-6193 E!<..'TJtA Lri th!lnxe 2 Br ap11, -i9'1"'6M. Newport Beith 3169 F~h.~~~'.'fl:'11"', $275. '2 BDR.. frpJc, oeea.n SPACIOUS F•m. home, 4 2&BR,~3ICOl'lyl.;,J'iMl~.~acUht'u' OtAR!'tUNG 1 br, 1 be, rr11ta:, drpoi, bllln1, No pet1,l .. iii"""""'"iiiiiiiiiiiiilO;ol -Yk!w. Oilld/pel. So. 1 ·-·-a hr., fani. nn., 2 ba,. lf. · ,.,..,pe, •w. •aa. • \1.'INTER-RENTA.LS bt'&med cell. Ron1an tub. $190. &16-118\ OCEANFRONT fncd yd, dplx, atv/ref .._ ... , d :o Id f $~ 204 &t2 3519 NEWPORT B.EACH Homeflnder1 * 642·'900 $32!_ CHA,, )'dru,',',"!f!. 2N""'o. ,· ... '"". c ~Ue c~~ra.'":92.;,179 'eves, ..::::.-=::,.,~N~I=='---Step1 lo Beach $3)). Singh~ only. &12..stS4 . DACllELOR, 1 br .• · w/ref. 2BR. 2BA, yc11rly l<'UC. Llnda Isle &. Lido Jalc "'"" .,.... 493-il U QUE Lee turn Ocean View 2 Br LARGE 2 Br., \ blk 10 k stv., adults. no pets. $160 Se\;:urlty. Prlv11tc beach. W ..J-..__ .2 HOUSES: 2017 htaple. 2 Br $400. l!TIL pd, 3 Bdr. 2 ...,~~"=d~'''°''=~~--&lboa J.nn. Pool, utll pd. a_p.,_ Ideal tor ~ple or ~ Beach S2GS. Lelllt" rcq'd., per mo. 644-4423 Pool. l.owl~. Garn!:' l'OOOl. · ate1uunt numes 2 ha., den, shop $250., Or Ba, frplc. beam1, 60' decic 3 I: 4 BR.: S300/mo It up .$"t"00,_1,,,o_,l"'1::=:..· 81WI=~'°;:;..~-•ln&lea. ~ Utll pd. !St Rllr., C&11: ~JOll Llndn. 3-BR 2 8 1., rom·rm ~1AIW'fl adult• nu llt't:t. AL<;o 929 Capito!, 3 Br, 2 ha.. S275. $450 LOVELY S + den + RED CARPET REALTO RS ""Oc FNftt & y I &: Jut mo + Cle1udng dtp. t ~~~-~~===~ · a, · t-teuna Udo Ap•~ 2 BR. condo .• view ~ furn No pets. It )"OU like exfer-lam nn, ae p dinlna m1, • 49'J..9100 • •an ••r Y Call ?tlr. Pattlaon tor key. Ctpl•trano Be•ch 31\8 = n~~~1Klds 0.K. lli55 Cuiu1 !I\\')'., .so. ~llUlla Bill Grundy Rltr. io1-A rarOOllng, call 494-trple, dbl garace, vie.w 2 k 3 RR, 2 Ba. Bltin1, 6-12-:>;=-:::::::"::.·~~~--- ,75-6161 ln.9 to see, $415 3 DOR, fplc, pool home. Sin Juart (rplc & '>&tlo. 615-T?il~ FuRN l Br, lie llv. room, OELUA'E cuitom duplex: 2 SJL\RP, 2 story, 2 bedroom, 1 BR. rtdeeornll'<f cpt/drps l"'""""""'"""""""""""I CALVARY tan1Uy nteds 3 Beaut. View. Capls:tr1no 3271 st1JDJO APT., ptlv. beach, bltns, nice paUo. Clofit to BR. 2 BA. Oen 'r'\ew V.'/~un· 2 bnth, crp111, etc. ~e llt'.,.,. rotrig, •h·1~· .. \lll'LT ATI'R.ACTIVE and con-or 4 Br, family nn. CM NU= :m~ls AU.JOST &w duplex, priv s11~7~nc. u!Ua. 77~115 beach. Sl.85. mo. ()pc!;n 1u d!Ck. Adults only. 496--0356 polio, $185 mo., 4EM-8795 COUPLE, 3 btks to r-.tatn venlent l bdr. on \\'nter. high ruu. $300. mo. pool ==~~~~===' 1 __ , •·-·k yd 2 1 __ , -'='-"~=-----June 15. 1975. 124 4~lh St., C nl d I M 3 ,11 ALL utll. pd. l.ge 1 llr. ~1'11l1·h. hn1nt'd .. ,~ ~ l~J. S325 mo. Doc! v.•/tv.:o sl\pft. $350. 2 adults 2 chi.ldttn, &\lAU.. 1 BR CLOSE.IN S205 111-u I-.; ; car c"""" GORGEOUS Vltwa, Bayfnl. Weal Ne-Yl'JlOl'I:. Call 884-1858 oro • ar u Hlln1, Ttl'rig. $1 35, No pelt. o .... ·ner on ptt.mis,•s tn.!'i & $215 w/o 11oek p r iv, 16-19. Need 1115174. xlnt Inquire 1030 S. O>Mt J~IV)' pr: 2 BR, 2 BA, tam nn: t br, furn, utll pd., 1u. betwffn 8 & 5, 615-329-1 CONTEMPORARY llOl\tE J:>ll Chlll'le. 646--0ll2 fl. ~-63l1 01· 1~LH lJj .ijltlli 6T':rn56. rel S66-8'l5 after 5. 494-&4S =~~enr1'; whicle $250. 673-67911 &nY1ln1e. 3 br, 2% bft, J)ftllo. ·1a~ 2 Bdrm •pt, You.na: chptlld. No TOaft4 ~Pc'c;''"'=~.--~~-I 3 BDRM. 2 ba., nr. Nv.'Pt. NEWLY DEOOR 2 br. best La9un1 H iiis 3250 ~="""~=-~~~ BY THE BEACH *STEPS TO OCEAN* B·B-Q, iar, part f\.lm. Da.ya: A:Rragt>, 110 pelt or c ren, \VNHOUSE 111•\\' 2 br. pier, &\'al.I. now ll1ru 6/15. locatlon. C10fl4! to Harbor -~-------2 BDR?o.t Vtu.A, $1!10. mo. lbr tum, PlO n10, lncldlni De.J 2000 ft l b 64·1-&IOO or 640-01ti7/E\'es: Sl4.S. 5-i!Ri146 oc.·1111 vlt>w, WRlk lo lio.>ach. 121 24th St., $250/utll pd. Plaza. Adulta pref., no dogs. 3 BR ·air cond., beaut. view. g:in~ U ~~ 5 :ri~ss~ util, yrly, ref1, ~n4 2 :~ den. :r .. ·~d:k: 644-6404. LARGE cleflJI ~ er uppl'r, rnn1. rm., v.tbnr:· cftt., 963-64S2/ or &ff Mgr. 108 :MT \V. Wil800, ( 2 1 3) $2.SO. mo. .,,.1 N'!Nl' -C ona dal Mar ,.,.,..., trpl., d1hw1hr., v.•ash/rlry,. I c5,;H.;.Ao;R"P""'t-Bd~~,-.. -1~1 -~, Cplt, refrig rnngto. Adults drf»C., frpl, tile pal10!'. ·11).J. 24thSL,Apt,"B" 447-5260 96i-3883or894"'5391. ~;>II or ,.,,.,, lhuttcr8. Wint. $3 50. r . 1 ap . O • 35 1135 5(8-2407 29-l,296WaveSt.,81T-tsn !'On I 3 BR 2 BA QUl('t adults only -no petK. \er · · • BR 2 llA be h .. A .. SPAC. 2 BR. 1" ~ , ..... ,, Logu • Nlau•I '252 ea&e • . 645-SJT! '=~~---~-~='1 BR "'-I · t' r ' I · ac uuult', ">W .,.. .. uiu• n :ii: .. 3 t t d trpl BAC1-I unit, w/kl·1Chen, ,;,~""=-..,,_,--,,--:c-·I Fresh paint, new Cllr'pel. 2BR, Pool, cpt..tfdt'))S. S17l'i · ••.-1·· 11 :1 i;,:i. winter $350; Yr round $400; Nfl'W decor, patio, pool, sau· ........ ,0 NE\" BEA'~IFUL s1~s,,orymo, ~59-.,,,l'pl, c. betov.' hi<>hway, iwtm-1M~ $35-WK UP. 1 Bdr., 2 Ba. Sl!li. mo. o,•"' 644-T2U mo. 2'$F Canyon Dr. CM. Refl1g./Stv. l\ln!ure aduJ/1. t213)T91-~~~~7573 ~.1-:~~'=iat~~!O jt;,~ 2 1m.'T Cowih~;: Oub s.:~, A;.;n-...,.. 3280 ~52.!i1U D&.hlla, $~;. :~·~I.~ ~SA':1~~ OUPLEJ{ 3•~r. 2 ba, ~h, 8l\-8M3. Non·sn1oken1 S21 0. r~l8·6232 2 Br. 503 38lh St., Npt la., Dana Point 3226 4t~~~&lise~o ~u~~1'fo!: 3 Br 1" •-2 S ......... ItOOr.fY 2 or 3 Br 1 blk N. Newport Bl., N .B. roti~ha:nri'zr~ ~ J~l·D_a_n_1_P_o_ln_1 ____ 3_1_26 l19un1 Nl9uel 3852 N.B. l·:lU-3T1-4640. S251}, fuaint. l&roe111, trpt'. + Pool p~ tl:''2 try II~ oc-ean. no kids/pet.. ?-.fr. _ ..... __ oos~1. _______ , tum. &is-roa7 .. PANORAJ\.nC OCEAN Vl!:W A ?o.1ERRY CHRl$Tl\1AS ,_.;H.;;•;.:•:.:•;:;•:.•.cU::;n;::f;.:u;:_r:.:n::l•:.:h::od::. I BRAND nt>w Dana Bltilis many elrtnl#. $4M include11 w/rsec 8 dej,. ~_rr· now. Kelley. 6Tl-4ii55 or 752.()J.OO. BAYFRONT, 2BR apt, South of Hlal\way, Lg lBr duplelC., 28' Uv rm. Free T!:nt mo. ot O,.>c. ~ 1· condo., ocean vitw &: poun-dues. 831-1453 or 49].-0;28 6t0-8226 _ B.o\OI a pt, avail tmmed. nev"1y decorated, 2 bfdnn1, dt'JMJ. crpts, slove, tttr1g S310 mo. Ad1ta. 493-la6T or for 2 ~-eekA only,. Tenn1li ding surf overlooklna: Dana "TEE" for two. Uase prlv U I • p k 3 _4 l'ttonlhly lea• $150. 2 ba.lhs, view apL Boat lllp S2TS mo or $26:i 6 mo leasE -4g&..2-fl3. ~~. ~!~11 men1benih1p nvall, Point Harbor 1800 Ill ft n ver11ty II" 1.-r avaU11.ble. S500 yrly. VISION 213-632 Soos .,...er-._..., per mo. No lease. 1 BR house Newport $150. 3 Br pool & 'j z1. $3T5' 3 BR, 2 Ba Cbndo on roll 673-9403 REALTY fir>8600 • 2 BR v.·fvltw, pnllo. cpta, Ne.,.,• trg dlx vie>.\' 2&3 bdrm, v:'alk to beach Laguna mo. (7141496-Smcuz · ~. · .::'..i~'..., ol71.m4t~ !lfl\2Jd 3 BR., 2 BA, atrium, dbl it'!'· SINGLE Bachelor Sl75, pool, BEACON BAY NICE 2 bl' duplex. avail Oct drps,_ ncnr ™;.\\', $19 5 · 2'-:: ba, 2 pools. 1't'ntral air Beach $225. Kida pelt. =---~~---.,............. ....'C' ·-" ".....,, On Q1'eenbelt nr adlt pool. sundeck, ;::29 ~larguerite, 1. 426 Acacia. $2:i(l.· nlo lo S.10-4533 or 49&-iGG•I 1'0nd, fpl, 23821 Hilthursl Dr. Fenctd 2 Br Col!la ?o.lesa lBR. 11,iba, 2 ltory, frplc, or 4~ A\•11..U f'IO'W. S385 mo. Ph. Apt lA, Open Sat & Stfti pn1 2 BR furn. apt. \\'inter or mo. 6-~300 Etatbluft 3830 IOfl Cro...,·n \'<illl'y J>kv.')'t. 11~ 2 B•, 2 Ba T·ho"•• crpt~. drps, patio, e< itn. co""'N°"oo°"'""'--,N"•~--.,.1-...,Go~lf 5$30911552-7500 yf'arly. Pvt bea('h, Util pd. R~OO't-Y 2 o• 3 Br. 1 blk (7141 ·1~1760 olficc, if no ..., ' ....,.. pool, l~i milff from Dana °'1 ....... ~-~-~....,-....,= LARGE studio apt $150 J.100 67~ 1947 " • Sl'lS., Newport Beach. Al90 Point ?-.farina, S 27 5mo, Course, 2Br, 2be., drapes/ H1e1 Furn/IJnfum 3300 nionlh yearly. ' · · ·mo. ,,. ocenn. no kids/pets. ~tr. e DELUXE e nno:"·cr 4!19-l625. 2 BR Hlllltthg1on Bcflch, 4!!4--0-62 crplng, $290 mo. 494-3838 613-1055 ON the beach, bat"helor Kelly. 6T;,-T900 or 75~100. 3 BR, ~~· BA apt fur lea~e. 3 Br, 2 Ba, Con<io, Golt kids, pell, singles OK. Aii. BEACH home 180 dtgree 494-3&18 NEWPORT Cost• Mesi 3724 singles, froin S12S 11fE DESIRE Chris1ian lady for lncld spac. ma11 ter suite. Course \i1·v.', 1111 extra&, 2 Fet'. 979-8430 oceen vlevi, 2 Br, i u ea. 4 BR, fenced yd, frplc, SHORES SECOND STOR.Y. J03 l\lc· charm. l br., lg. sundeck. din rm & dbl garage. Auto cur i;n.r. Call 819-1 104 9e.m LANDLORDS! New .cptJ, drpe, 1udener. sprinklen. Lease $350. mo. $30 WEEK• UP Fadden. G7a.JS65 613·6274 $100 door o(>('ner avoit. Poot &. t , Gp111. 879-.;.'::"'c.'---·I $350. mo. Ei40.-ro18 · 831-2099 or 49-1-USZ Cute 2 b@droom home. \\'alk • S6.50 Night&: Up. 2 BDR. apt. Ocean vie"" CORONA de! Mar 2 Br. 1 HN<rea.tion .area. Adults -,-BR. corido, t .yr. new. "'e Spedatut in NE!WJ)Orl ..,.,.. t bea h and ...,.... •"'"" Senior Citizens. $195 mo. Ba •-I lo So 1 h only, no pets. Ocean viev.•, priv. be3ch. SJ7IJ n--~ e ~--del 'I e BEAUT. Home nr. Dana H1 3 BR. + Di:..n, 2 ba, trp1, o c 1'"'Y"'· ....._ e Studio le 1 BR Apts. t ttf · 673190~ 9 · ... ., c, pill · o wy. • $321 e ,.......,.,. ....,,v,.. "ar util. nn. cpt/drp. S350 a Urdumlshed. e 1V & ?-.la.id Ser.".ltt Avail. Pus ut lies. · UJ { to $275. 547-0993;4!1&-1981 Alo. Agent~ " Lquna. Our Rental Ser· ~·,!:P.1~.!!~1bltns, cpt't· rno. 495-4128 eve1 Ir wknd, WATERFRONT e Phone Servitt -Htd. pool S) 6'f5.0000 eVes. RCJ?.IY ~ or 3 B,, I blk 8G5 Aniigos \\'lly, l\"B Lido Isle 3856 vice i. FREE to You! Try ~"" _,, 't:i.>-U"N V!E\V . ?o.fanagt'd by t----------l Nu·View! FOR Lklo Isle 3256 Spot! d lo 3 bed e Children & Pet Section ocean, no k1ds/!)CIS. l\lr. \VII.LIAM WALTERS CO NU-VIEW RENTALS LEASE. 4 BR, 2 BA, room~~. ~t sup: 2316 Ne\vport Blvd., CM 2 Br., nc\\•ly dec'd. gar., Kelly. 673·455.'i or 752.0100. LIDO WATERFRONT G't.\.4030 or 4...,3248 ~U! 1>;:1n,:1:f:. 4~i8s-r1Kd.s, LEASE Option, $$0 per mo. Funflture opttonal $595. 548-9TS5 ar ~T 100' to bel\ch. \Vntr. $290 B \QI 1 $11'5 • 1 111 Huntington Beac" 3140 3 Br., 3 Ba .. r>.vnstrs. on ~ Y•" -··d. Ne" ne"', ,_ H $160 I BEDROOM yr!y. S.350. ~S-1607 ' ll.Jl ·'· inc· 11 • \\later 41'' 111. Lido Soud ·-· . ~ c ANNEL REEF . & ..... 673-72';6 "&14-2273 WALK TO BEACH " , c • BAOIELOR duplex $95. All El Toro 3232 sq ft. 3 Ba, 5 br. 673-8160. $1"5 1 BEDROOM l BED-pool-blk to oce3n-703 A · Avail Oct 1. $57 .. mo. yrly. util pd, tingles welcome Btst location on tM bay 1n ° ' , tngl ndlt-yrly-$t55. 646-26!:6 caC'ia. 1. 2 & 3 Br, crpt, drps, Jse. AppntJnt. fiTa.'.'...=.51 PVT home, bacheb', $100. 4 BR,· 2 ha, New Home, Ntwport luch 3269 C.D.M. Giant 2 b@droom lad~· cov d. g ~r 8 f 0e 2 1 0 or 6T5-&121i Cost• Men 3824 bl~lns, gar. 2n 16th ~t. or \V AT ER F ltONT, sanely all utll pd. Fumlahed. Lake Forest Lae $350 mo. ctrrE bach WI.It ..,.,,,, now condo. Fumtahed. S600 a s. no pe s. 1 BR I ·1 t I I 205 15th St ., llunllugton l)('t1ch 3 bedrm 2 bath '"OS pet• ot-2 B• 581~68 • s~ -· •~ CHINA "'OVE Fullerton A\'e., (1 blk. E. -ap avru o emp ye HACIENDA DE 1.tESA B<:h. 8•17-3957 , , ·. , , "j;°vt home, si.75:-"~~11 nm~: -v• • ,,.,...,.....,.,. RE>'1m;ALL·-.titYnl~l·-B~ll~~lll'"" --"'1' --··otf ~~2A86v.;:·-l·-bl}f -S. _man . .Yt!Y ... SteP!I to bch. ..160.\V._,\'?[son, C.?o.t. 01"• ORD A~• StoA11·~,-"",11 .. v.,•llyh toVvellySld1'CO~ H f.nd * 642 _,. Founttln V1llty 3234 .. ~ • "" "" Moet unique apot in C.D.M. ··~~~~>~~'.:·~=~-~~1"°'""~0"'+""u:;;til".,;6"1'.l'~'CX:O'C:'-'::--,-:: .. ::-BEAUTIFUL ·c rtOONDs · · · IW,··-· .... ...._.._ ·-, -J .. , •• ·• ..J..' Om• I •r• •7TI,IV Ocean &: ""·-ide. util pd ~ K.!3-1 Atlanla f!I· ALTY 67.r!!61Xl V<V• 2 bedrnom cottaa-e on Jhe ADORABLE ] BR., Ne-.i·ly QCEAJl;f"RONT winter rcn-Adults -No Pets ? • • FREE r ""'E 2 & 3 BR N p-~ • OLD Jofn. houe 2 Br ·~x ·--' ~--•-1.....0 ""·-I ta! I 7 2 & 3 BR. 10 · 1 n-1. .. & 3 BR. Priv gar., pool, M V d 3863 '""" · r """' "" -........ r ""'"""'cu. ......,..., es furn .. walk in closet, near . arge , mmutes to 01.:etu1 • ..-..ge wnsher~er Close es• er • •Proteuiona.I Service e golf ooune. 2 Ba, bltins Basic furn, be.yllde, oow only. $215. __ l'lhops &--OC'C.'; adults, no {'ll41-61~ or 5.21~ l &-2 Br: J H'." $175., • _ c-~ -..,.,,_ •. ND"'o·1or-..1...-c" •"· New:-NoCli!Jiftii: 'GREAT-21lr "°"' aptx UTILE ISLAND 2 BR 1!90-wHh Pallo ll!<i rea<n. . • HOME ATMOSPHERE ""~ "' ~x .... ,, ....... $250 Ccmf -olt dogs. $164.50. 642-71~ or NE\\' \\inter 4 BR, 2 BA CONDO I b t I fl ~. • -· ' gar. ~5114 $315. Also 3 BR, 2 Ba Sl35. Gas &. \Valer I nc,, . r. nr. Jeac i. Del wee 2 le 3 BR. Rental Ofc. Homt ndt~1 * '42-ftOO 3 BR, l 'ii ha; WJ!ur., 2 CHANEL 2 Br, 2 Ba house 3 bedroorn luxury home on ~==~~~~~= 'I~ blk to ocean. 675-8038 Draperies, carpets, g a s S:l!O. 8151 P a wtu cke t , 3095 ?ilatt Ave. 546-1034. Callfornla • t..arrest car encld pr. 1S9l'.N SWUni Can havt sl:tp, frpl &: BBQ E. Baytroot. Completdy EXTRA lge 1 &: 2 Br, $115. heat. gas •love, 6 I r ~1087, e>:wner 2 13 + DELUXE 2 BR, 2 ba. crpls, •Rental Service! e Court. 546-lla:> SHOR.ES 3 Br, 2 Ba $325 yr fun'IW>ed. 40' &.lip alto avail-& $225. Redtoorated. new \\'ATERFRONT 3 BR. firepl conditioning, 11 w 1 mm Ing 355-0378. Refs. u-s. ·b:tlns. enc. ....r. "RENTE S ha. all xtru-singles ok ablt' $8:50 crpt. Ideal for bachelors, Duplex . \\'Jnter or yrly. 1 h • ., .. ~ R 11" ttuntlnpton a.ch 3240 POOL 3 Br, FR., 2 Ba $550 · · adults. 1993 Oiurch 548-9633 Dock 11,'ltil, G75.61S9/Tl4-4.184 PoO • rec. room, "''U era LARGE 2 Br apt near beach, $11(1/mo. No oels, 557·5-160 You Get All The HOUSH -3 Fn' DfW Uo. :S POINSEnlA & ctryen;. clean & ~ Garage: 2 BR.. 2 ba. Fenced in patio. avatlable fol rent in o u R CLE.AN 1 BR Trt $135/140 Vlm~~ or y; rental~., ChAnnlne'n 1 "", ~..:.£:~ bricktam, ~~~~pts~ ~. ""~~~~ * STEPS TO nr~\CH * Off The Beaten Path Jauadry. s21 0. ~11 E ngland, szi:i l\looth. yearly. BUl.l..E'J'IN UPDATn> 3 Nu paint, nu C&D now ALA Rent•ls 642-llU rep see, uc::un~ .... ,..., • Sw~ish frpic. 1 adult. Util 3 Br, 2 ~i-~.:ii· ~v~~~ ~or 847 7346 Jones Realty 673-6210 tirnea/week. NICE gent we ha~ a large Uy room great kitchen Un-JJl'Olc:J:llit!80~6<>-~:!:1960~-~~-l iiN1'iJE-'I~~t°!b.;: * 2 BR. 2 BA API'. ne14·ly N B h 3869 Homefinclers * '42·'900 be.dh Stz. tum, uUl pd ~ fumlthed. $415, fumished L . F. II F 2 B ON THE BEACH, 1 br, Adults · No Pets dec'd. $210 2 kids OK. 110 ewport tac ,,. ""brlllo C.M rAMILY 4-Plx, 3 Br DJS WATERFRONT N-$5l5.. 9• u Y urn r Vt'inter $115. + utils. * Lw.;urious shag carpets pell Nr Murdy Park ~,...::-:;:c~~:;:;::!'O:::~' ~ 2 mt beach, close to all -.. ~r-· Call 675-7225 Bltns, \V/'Vt', drps, "'pool. ~=~-•::c":::""".=;"'--~ * Blt·lns incl Oi1hwasher · · · Vista del Mesa •. 3 & den. TURTI..EROCK BALCONY off 2 Br ~ D/VI', Shores, del!tbttul faniily . Adlta, M pett. $190. &12-t520 ~ * Lrg Pool & Gas BBQ'1 a46-3TIO Aft. 5 ADULT GARDEN JIO?itES Sep. house din nn, lt'E. fam frplc garqe now home & pa , 3 Br, 2¥.i STUDIO apt, Ocean view, l & 2 BDR~I SIT5-$l9; LGE l BR, 3 blks from lRVlNE AVE AT lirESA nn, petlos. $475. . LOviLY 4 B'r 2 Ba $3215 Ba, near Pools It Tennlt LG 2 Br tum, clo&e to Winter or yearly. Gas & \Valer Pd • Gn.rni;e oce~. Utll pd. Sl<Ml & Nr. Ne"'POl1. Bl, F'\\'Y & e 3 & lien, MESA de! ~ f'.P., a.II sp~~. patki, pr Court. $550. mo. Elaine De-iihoppln~ Adults, no pet1.: ~-~c-'8-"73-'--"-2'"93'--=" LA MANCHA APT$. !!!_rig. $1%. mo. 831-9950. Irvine Ind. Comlx. I Br rp;. ta m rm. la yd ~325. bfany 2, 3 1 4 Bri available nipi~RRETT Inq. 17 · Rochester, rea.r. San Clementt ln6 778 &..'Ott Place, c .M. NEW CONDO, 2 Br., Plush $100. 2 Br S230. DRy & • No pels, adlts pref d C.ALL US OR COME BY' $125 to $155. 1 &: 2 br. trln.. ~'-'"'-c;.;...;..:.,._ _ _;_.;..;. 642.2007 or &15-63l8 Oe<:or. Nr. Hunt. Hbr., bkr. night sec., pool, jucuzzi. Bkr. 642-0200 ALA Rentals 642-lllJ REAL TY mat. adulls only. 645-15:i0, F ,\NT ASTIC v.1lite\\·ater 846-:1;48 ret·. bldg w/gyn1, liilll&.rds. 8 Ibo 11 d 3206 .... ------Ef\IERALDBAY.t.AG BCH.l -'13::2,_W::..:_·,;;W:.;il:::"':::"::.·=~-~ ,;ew, hid pool, .2 BR, l NE\V CARPETS, Fr e.:hEXTRA Ira: 28 2& dl color 'IV. Ea. apt ha• a a s an VAC. 4 BR, 2 b&, crpt&. drps, z+eftF~ OCEAN VIEW Lrg U l BR, Pool, $115 ~lo. Util BA. Paint •. 2 br, 1 bn, clean )Xl'li ide apt nr ~ch adultx dl!hwhr, rerrtg, !!hng cpt & REDECORATED 2 Br. Priv tpl, tncd yd. Nt ehope, tchl NEWPORT BE.AOI, truly w/frplc, din.~ 2 'aR_· ~ paid. 2265-F Canyon Dr. + 498-001 * &. quiet. gar w/IAundry n1 6 $165 ~2s pvt patlo or ba I c on Y palio, ye1rly, $290. 556-6610 & pk. ?o.lagnolia A Ad~ beautiful ee-. 1,........ be, priv. beach, t e n n i Ii Cl\!. 833-8533. NICELY tum 2 & 3 BR. hkup,. Aldde.ll for \\t . .,,~·g. 2° B'-'n.'t"°=~~"~,-~"~· ·~-~':1t:r~·j~>~l~~-~-:..,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili., """'· 675-3008 Eves. $325 .mo, lit & la.ct. S50 -.. ~ .... hr r-~-< ,.._ ,V lk 1 bch & coup e. u ts, nope s. ~tr. !:' .. .,_ ...... f'°'• no ee. Ba~lboa P-lnoula 3207 :;,,~,,1 &: $85 llf'lC dep. Ph. 3BR, family room. poll.lhed courts, ~ . ~ ... ,ty. Dan• Point Jn6 ~-\l\ll>i>l"'a""'m: 49"2-S-l60 ~· $185. a mo., lst It la!!I. SlOO. mo. ~~k lor Bev. or PROMONTORY POINT .... ""->'VI wood nooni, beam ceillngL ,;A~D~U~L~TS~"!!.5'"'~·~......,.,'!:'!~,,...-1 ;;;;-.;~-;-;---.;--;;;;:--;;;;-;::, •J.Jt S50 d n ~· lee. E&At 20th DaJe. 963-4567 APTS Yean Ltue $575.00 mth. 3 BR, 2 BA, furn or unfurn. SPACIOUS 2 BR S~ Apt 1 BR w/garage. Suitable for St., 642-1264. Ref's. Re<fd. CO~l1'""Y 2 BR. cpt~. drps, . pO~'T. 1paclou.s 4 en. 3 TW01upersharp,3BR,2 BA. Cole of Newport Rltni J ust Ttdtt0rated. Steps to B z:lJ91 La Cresta, Inquire melure or ret ired. CASA VICTORIA APTS enrl. ,gnrnge.·$165. No pets. l uxury Adu~t Apts BA. block to beach, view new cpls, drps, ~ pa.int , 67~551 I beach. 7~1 . 1030 S. Const Hwy, Lquna $160/month. 492-81.73 , Diii s:i.6--0S-16 Fron1 S350 $450. mo. 6!;,-1002. tn &: out. $265 &: $285/mo. Condos Fum l400 Beacll 4!M-684.S Adults. I, 2. l BR\\'/ pnllOlt 200 Promontory Ur \\'e1l Capistrano Beach 3218 {:~ ~ or D&lt. No BLUFFS CMdo, 3 Br, 2~ Huntln9ten luch 3740 Apartments Unfurn. Fror:of.1~ rni, ele\·~t~~ets 2~~ 2.ri~te~. ch~~M 00S::~ Nev.-port Be11ch. 6ii.SOOJ · ~-~~1• ~1'!'.'.!:· v""o 1,· PAU.t SPRINGS .2 Br, 2 &elbot Island 3806 SK. gate. Gas & v.·atcr pd Blvd, $165. 842-SllT. 002-6.":12 l\irwlela open 9 to 6 2 BR. 3 yr old h&e. Frplc, BRAN DNE,V-Never li .. 'ed _,., ........ ,. -~ Ba I t · .u.tma 1 Br apt n~r heach, fJ.35. tncd yd; children, pet.I ok. in 4BR, 3 ba. sep. fam Gddern., Hug Home I, ja~z:'. 8' W~~. wk!~: I "'p001u:::,s,::u:::lil:;;<::I":;_;,· =900-:::...:27'-'6"--• YEARLY, 2 BR., priv. patio. SlS Victori3. C:O.I, &IZ-SffiO l~t~tAC I BR. 2~:i Blks from FANTi\STIC 9 ,\y FRONT S'l!IO/mo. 496-3587 + dinln& rm. <2500 sq ft) 640-4000 monthly. (213)547...{)209 or 3 BR. 21,2 8.1, con1plet"ly All elec. bltns. Garage *MODERN DUPLEX* Bch-, Set-~ow. A_pt F. 4l)j Apt. View New·port & LARGE 4 BR. 3 BA. frun Landscaped, drpl, gardener. OCANEANFRONT. Charm-~83~t-<-=8'°1tl"°"-==-=-,---.,.,,-f'llrnlshed $300 mo. 212Sl BROKl:R 675-6700 Tth St. HB J36-215i. Catalin11. fron\ f'l'ery room. $52."=. Own892-1512or89:Z..473J • ..., 2 br. w/pvt. yard. Near 2 RR t--' AU 2 B 2 B Bo t ·1· olt rnl bluff home. $100/rno. ing <u>R, 2 ha, furn or CONOO 2 BR 2 ba (ell!O Free Part Ln. (213) 4'14-0J'jj Balboe Penin•ula 3807 ryth' $200 19 4 4 . rnc ..,,...,, garage. t ts r, a. a s 1p av . * 496-7~1 * LARGE 2 hr. hou&e w/gar. unfum., $700. mo. yrly 11.vall unfum) overlooking Suffenng' a stora." crisis?' ~~hei:G'St A.di:..tlll only No pc'!S. Sl75 TC'rr. Pool. &>c. Bldg. 2 Corona del Mar 3222 $175 Vacant. alllO 3 br. home lease. Avail Oct. 15th. xlnt LAGUNA NIGUEL GOLF Sell l'IO-longer n~ !temt DUPLEX ~ii block to ocean. n o p e i I• K en :' ~2877 Ca~ gar. Carey, 67~, S233 siniles OK. Of. Agt.. loc, 675-8702 COURSE O"'ller 495-G'i6 with a Daily Pilot O assiC!ed 2 Br, ref. &. stove, gar. 67'~1644-&194 Huntington 8eo1ch 3840 ~1cc~-.'--------1 FOR RENTALS ~'=":::·o-=979-8430:::c:.o;:::=~--~1 NEW 3 Br. 2~~ Ba. master Condos: Unfurn. 3415 Ad! oo-~18. No pell. Yr!)'. $225. 673-Ttm N'E\V BREED APTS -3 BR, 2 BA, lJltns. cpts. 11 NO Smog QUIET new well suite, bltna, fam rm. laun· , l72' Coote Mooe •72.. l BR & 1 BR II f f I dl'J;s, ~undet·k. Ne w I y ... any llize, pleAse ca !ICt'Ubbed 3br Townhouse, dry, patio, ocelUI vu on Cost• Mesa " .. " w 0 t. rp c, ON BEACH I puinted, closc to bench. Ro.emary Sle tz .. ~he \ s areenbe\t. Newport Terrace BEAUT l br, 2bl\, sgl story I-'--------~---------cpts, drps. pool. jacuzzi, • \'cur round lease. s:~z:i. mo. ~~~dl~Be~~fi rure;te~ = s2s1'':::;~ 111~~ ~~'. Condo. $365. Mo. 6#-1351 f:ndt~t o~n;i~~ o?rBrutn~~ ~~: fi~s~~ ~~ ~a~i1." ~~ 2 BR Unfum. Fr. S267 ~.11~~;j~!~~Y:~1~~-c~~~.1 ~~i~ IRVlNE Terrace. 4br. 4ba, LARGE 3 hr, 2 bl\ Hom&, $295 QUIET, Clean, O:>ndo, Newly decorated in earth Who's the new k1·d Hnn1ilton, 64.>-4411 l Bil Oce3n Vie\\' $282 SL, \Ve11t Ne .... ·port fenced yrd, lnclds v.·asher nr. bch. Cpts., trpl., bltns .. nr. Hoag. 2 hr, 2 ba, patio, tones .&. re~nn<t wood . e Tropical Poole Covered Pll.J'k1ng. Large & dryer,jardcner, $625 mo., S325 mo. Avall. now. 968-MSO pool, trpl. Vacant. Owner. •83>-"'-•24_!=-l=-,;==--="""' en. crpt.~. rll'Jl", bltns, lfeatcd Pool. Saunas and VERY SPECIAL 673-3262 3 BR. 2 BA, enclos'd. gar., 640-5583 eve, wknd. l BR 2 hR CONDO on El i;:piral staln:n5t, re A. I Recreation Roon1 . h I Br,t,195. . LOVELY 3 bdrm, 21~ bath new twnhou!M!., pool, kids NEWPORT Shores, Canal Niguel Golf Co ur.•, e . on the block? flrep!Ace, refrlg, lge patln, HUNTING TON l'pew I ' •<,"•' ·~PCS, piun, t. 0 1\. •'l10 ......... mo. 645-5071 front, beaut 4br, 3ba home, dl11hwashtr, garbage sp., pd "'8-tl"" 1~..,. n y n1cr p;..'Op c. new pe.lnt, crpts, dsh\\·hr, ..., ..... steps to ocean & pools, k l ear gar. $:t00 831-007-1 gas It V.1\ler '.,.. "" PACIFIC 7~.11 Tu!it!n A\·e, {Nl'll!' 161h garage. $375 IP.1111e. Barbra Irvine 3244 tennis. $450 mo, MS--0143 e\·ei. 3 ER. 2 UA, (1uiet. Aitult !'\! 1 &1;,..19.14 Agent. 673.&5.l}Q .~~....,==-~ o\·er 16 Condo Co1nplcx ill Oif:•\N /Ive .. 11.0. ----·~-----HARBOR Vu, 2 Br, conv 3 BR 2 ba CONDO on El It ' C . . 1714l !>.~1481 F.L1':V,\TOR btul<lin g on ~ BR. VACANT hou . ..c, * RENTALS * den, ltnnla/pool priv, Jeeae Niguel Golf Co u r se . Al bt"k"t' inhotorn&r. S. I.:. . l\I. Ofc. open JO Rn1--0r>n: fJ31Jy br3t'h. Pvt bn l1'0nics. Pool, single• OK $235. Al90 lg. Vill a11"' 1, Univ. Pk. $495. n10. 67l-87Sl day1 dlshwa.~her, garbage dtsp, A M B Ass A D o R I N N _ a.is.9a.~r, ~r ~., j 1';;,~lauranl s \t !Lt.I.\ \I \\ /\l..Tr.:R~ co. i;t'Cu1i.ty. adull l1v1nc:. Ultlrn:. 2 br .. ga.r. $115 HB, A.gt. 2 BR., 1 bath ...•••.•.•. $315 64+-2696---2 cargn.r $m'S!1-"90i4 ·eve. -· Harh. 1·2 BR. ~JW !liver 1 ,.:.'';::"~.,._~ .. :.,'°o:---~-,--,-1 vm ... " Univ. Pk. OPEN Hou. .. 1-o; Udo Sand• 2 & 3 BR "°"""'· Adults BRAND NEW . •t..\t!GE R,CH, Comp.-k;o. LUXURY APTS ~·!!''~0.~6~1,..~~~-~-~-~--.-'I 2 BR. GAR., snl [ncd. yd. 3BR.,1-~ ..... ,Hii.~·········~Z bN.ut. furn a BR-. -bel\n\ onl.y. HWl\lna1QJ$. B (' h ' I ---& Ua lh. U1 1I.&. :"-oppli:1ncc~ . -., L>UPl E.:.'I\ 2 B..lr. 1 bath, no children, am pet OK. ~ ceil'a.. 4&19 Bruce Creccent. S200/~. 962-2m>l 0 r hrrn: l!:nrlos 11 g11r. I .utu~~· Jult.t hl'tl~ l'Otnple!M. J, ~· b(:a tn ctiling~. c tl r n t' r 1-'C"PL:..ed<'P''-"'·'-· "''"'°"-546-=~"'::500:::..,~ I 4 BR., fam, 3 bl. •• .$575 MOO mo. Aft, 646-3255 963-2832 •• Cl•••••• s34so &·~U"'C'P ..... ~::.. no ~fs. $1GO. rr.: rn'). 3!13 & l bt'!trwn1s, flfl'Jil!ll't'll, f1rrr!11('t', ga.r:1~c-. I blk $350 YEARLY Duplex, 3br, The Terrace. I =;;;;'=~="'='="'°--I 'T"'o"wn::=ih:-:ou=o-:-o-,U;r:nf;:,::n,.--,3!""25' 1 ......... .._ Han1 1!ton, C~f &t.i-1411 '°• "," I \\lllc'-n,l"A.,T""', ~•Ar fron1 IM'rH·h. $.\2:'J ye3rl,y. 2ba, f:rplc, dbl gar, blllns, 2 BR., 2 baths • ......... S!'l?i nlE BLUFFS. SP 0 t I e ' 5 • ~::";~.:.:·~ 2 BR. living nn nc11ly crptd, 11 L'On e~. • . ~ .... · 6T.i--l·t97 or S9-l-007i. palio, pets? 642-9918 3 BR., 2 IXL •.•.•••• $0J/42S barely uaed; 4 BR., l ba., BRAND new TOWNl~OUSE u.-..,.... ~rick frpl c. jth l p;1in!rd 'rlON IN Tiii~ r.r :,\CH ()N ·rl!F BAY ! k t Greentrff Homtt tam.. hon1e. nr. pool. ~ thruqut t>ncl 11111in ~??5 Al'tl-:,\. r1-111 X0.~2:ll 1;1r .: • • 1 Of' op ·· QIAIDtfiNG 2 Bdrm, ne.w .2 Wt., 1 bath .......... s:ns Ptr_mo. &40-6560 Aient in H·1nU1~!.!_~n l~_!>Orl 2baBRk. u..,,._....,. Swittllk.-4 inn. J:'.-i7 Bak~r. ~-19'-;)9';~-~~ 839-r.133 :o:ck r.11· All t'.'n\! Ul" ... , b•,·. 2 bf al.I 'w,,Kiec.k. u,~r Crpt.s, ttrepl11.ce, yard. $325. Turtlerock \VALK TO DEACll l~I bl., ut1•C, "vnt & c lltc-...fMIHM..,. ......,,... 673-~1752 ~lurlur1. 11 ~t\!X. 11 'n. nn, l'tv '' mo. 6Th-60Xl or 673-9224 4 BR. 2~' l.Mltht $-;s(I 3 BR. .~,~~.~ 1 pal\oll, Pool, Jacunl &. 1_. i..lt -Jo< 1 l ~'-'--'="""===~=~1 --00 -ut1 !I. inrl. S4M 11..,, y:r y., " J ....... 75 ; ~·a"°"'• year Y 511unn. ~ blk !!hopping, wo.lk ' _,,, m • t':l,1\J GARDEN ,\PT!' 2 Bf.;DR \I dt>lu~c Condo. rurn. 1n-ull. r.7~r·1~!fl{J Cotti Me11 3224 4 BR., 2 balha ......... $4 C~I Renlly 548-1290 to beach. \\'kdays S:30-S Wtf'-0.•119'5 Unfun1, 2 Bil npt In tnmtly l'on1~nun~lY,.,,nhn?s1 new. ft!':AUTlf'tTJ, 2 RH nrif, Pt•· 3BR.,2bA ••••••• Miaw/gdnt 3 BR, 2 ba, fam rm. fp. <213JG.':1,6.IOTI ves & "kndll 1't$t•l~••ttiWilt •Hmtto.1-sectJon. Pool. no ftt'l :'I. 177 Bltn!<. 1rl11,.., )Clur 01111 11. , 1 rl S:.'211 J\t e 3 BR·S240 ri10., Gar .. lrg CoUegt Park 2 cu gar nr bch M50 (1l 4lft.1G.l2'16 e ' Dncftffll,..........11. W ...... • Drrw•' I·:. 22nd SL, C.:'11. 6 t~:i6·1.). "·a~lil'r ,t· 1IT}Tr, [)\\ ... pntil 1l;;:r J:1~'.~ii .-ai:~~1 rytil{).J'.n'2 ll· tnc'll yd, p11Uo, B-B-Q, 4BR.,2~ii b8. ··••••·•••$450 mo.IAe.6~9att6'pm. ===---~~~ ------, . ar\l'I i;li1bhnu11e. 2 Chilrlren ___ ·~·~-·~- treeit. 642-2'lll (msa-. Parle II UNIQUE, new, 2 bdrm, WATllfAU.-ifllAMS-U.GOOHS Al"f'. ~ten ror 14-2 hr. ~!i n. Oh'.. S:t'fl. n10. Ask fl'.lr r.rv P.'lnl\ Nf':\\'P(lrl, ~uD-le,118C 64EHl006) 3 BR., 2 bath& .......... ~ 3 BR. fam rm, 2 ba, covd 11plrlal stRh ... p\1. patio, dutiC':S. $.SO. oU rt~nt. PMI. or f'Jnlc 003 .. 1;.m lwll·hc:Jc,r, $.:!15. GID-j.'!J1 or 3 BR. ·2 BA, huge back y11.rd, Garden Homca patio. Nr~ &; schl. $400 ~· ... .e!!cillties, s:DJ, H.B. 2277 HARBOR BLVD. !~~~~n~&l~.;~2J>rcrer olttcr S S-FREE MONEY 67~1'-----~~ lin'plaet! S300 mo Cnll 3 BR., 2 bl!.. '""" ••••• $385 _mo_.~-~--·----~ """"'i'·"'" Sl<Pt'tt di • ll · · · Udo Jole s -w1~s • bd "d •1 ES -EISTSIDE c '' 1 1 \\'u .... n1 PtlY vvu s~,o. '" · ~ '< n('v. "' r 5-16-9521. llousf! Is for snlc. · ·r . io r 1111. ~a SF.CURIT\' cont, 2 Br, 1~ COSTAM · A 't -1 B h~ ·, ,'""', e IU· ll't(l\'f" iilllJ our' hrnt1tJ nl'W \r /hH)tr !It.Br i;u11r , frplr, 2Br. Cpl, no pt!• or rlngles. 3 BR., 2 b.< ............. $500 ba., l\\•11.11 Oct, .}j th. $31'5, Ba, No child under 16, Xlnt 64"4840 P1" .',· dnc..,..!11 • "P'-'1· ritu11h 2 I.·:: JIR stu.lkt fl "l!i. d)<hv.hr. S:l t.'1 yr!~-. :<'.l-1 288 \V 4 bR., 2 ba ••••••••••••• $600 644·74'.ll tacit ~ mo 536-&G ~ f l'):l~. Utl • ' •• ~ ..... mn. 1 t I k f f I Rt'' -See mnsr. Apt A. 9MJ CALL 552~7500 ~~------~ ;-.,-~7.;'::'-""'"'-~7-= adult no pets 612·1960 i Cl''' n)n1 Jf'r\l'.'1. ltLot, C..:I.OSF.. rr, QC"f'nn, :!hr, ne"' ITth st. CM. LRG 4.Br 2bl., tam nn, din LAG. HLS Nu \Vorld JSR . . -rtlsh\\·n~tw~. [m!('11 l 2 cnr •'flrpt"l1n:i: 5z:,o ~·lll'ly, 1•1211 LARGE 2 Br. home. Crpt.. • VISION • nn. dbl pr. No peta. S315. 28A, dbl ll\T, view. ~. CHILDREN K 1tRrn1;"C'!I. Llnns 1''.s1. 5."J>...?.iiO 47th !'1. :'.:-it>-4it111 stv., ref, ,.~11nced yd. Car. 6-'6--14°" e.vet only. 831).9752 aft 6pm & w1'ends. Ln Z Br $170: 3 Br I' J DOG-RUN SiJ~\JtJ>""IB~11.'\:·,-00-2-b·tl-<•. -Adults $190 675-1~. REA:lTY -LOVELY H.rbor 1tighland1 Ouplewe1 iJft#Urn 3600· 1la l'T90. D1.111teX" G.: ·~1ilt'; s11•1,. '..! u r. :1rit. <'r•r, drps., (ha~. llf'\\ nppln~. 1:;1,.1~. no 3 BR• otrJee or shop &f)tt.ce. 4 BR., tam. nn., 2¥. ba. I _!pools. rrr1s, drps, f>I_-~~'!' hlfn• .. l'~ SHH' f't'11m J1(·1~. :1~:-i. ~rl~ fil.O,.t~i\'ll_ 2A30 Nowport Bl. mo. Uni:. ~~nb:r. ':vui. $450 Mofltue. Al\. 673-2222 + SI'EPS TO 8 EA0t + Z BR. ~t. drn.pcs, stO\'I! & s·;ri. 11 blc,.,..k \\'et of fl f'l'.t.'h, tJOO Shop·a. ;i n·:i, Opl,.;. l Adult!, no pe~. 548-TOO-l ... .,. 2 Bedroonl. Fl replace, i'0'1>1ihouff, 2 + Ortn. f'rplc, j refni;::. N(I J*I"· "l'C t,, 1·1.-an s.12-0::~ I.I'. ~ 1111 • ~-:i.r. !f"\'ll. pa!kl _ --~ prue, larte kltcht'.11. YR· tile Deck, Blt·lns, $2"1'5. yrly ric>p req. 706 J an1es St. A111. H H bo 38 .. 8:.IAO 111,, iTh fiT' ~;·, NICE 2 Br ho\lsr, w/pr. LARGE \\'ell dtoorllted 4 LY. ~ 6'13-<1171 lR. ~9 Rl\~r. Apt, A. I o. ~\lSO. uni, ar ur .. 2 • · -·-· ·'::' '---lncd )-<!, f>rettt mlddlll ~. BR, 2~~ ba TWNHSE in 1-i:~""=""'="""'' ='° Newport Beach. ~ ---, , . _ • 1',\HK '•·111~oi r l nr. 2 b11 , SlTO, li:1l111.111. 646-12'13 Unlwrslt)' Parle". cittA/drpa, NEW BA\TRONT a:>NOO """~-""~="';=7-:C-: 2 BR. Dl It~-·"'· n~lh1 C\nl~·. BCAU't'JF' 1 • .2 l•r., 'l b.1. 1"•1u1·\\,.1'fl i 11·11, /\\ail No1· ~ 2 ,_1 _, I Inc 2 Br, 3 Uta. 35• Dotti Sllp, Apartment• Furnlsh.d no rt•ls, $210, • S1:1 n.•f11n1l r •inrt11, ,,11 llw \.\ntri·. hli" :~1. $~~a ·i1 ,~\I l".fl:!. j:?Cll~t'.l~1::~~·o'ii~'~1~ ()f J,:Xi~: l~~nn~1'"~·&: ~:~=,;SSOOo=;;:.c· "'°=·<'~"'~'-.,;;1002°"'~" 81lboa lsland 31~ ...:-;('(...::_ &_ .. _h: dl'p. r.lf.i.,~-.-111y,, "ID. 1"Rtl\.-dlsp, .... &. \·nu don't nl'f"f\ ""--,..,-,-., l 196.1 We.llAct , ~.~I. S·l2J mo. 5.\2-8490. BLUFFS ooll!iO, 5 DdrtnC 2RR ll':hl\, IO\\'TlrlflU .. I', C'rpl-<. tl!ll1"'~hr. J'°Rl 11ollJ1 l\\llil. . Univ.· ~·11~1 " .... ht•n \'OU ,_ --·~--,~-GBR. 1~ 1 d~ lmm!:'tl. occupancy, $650. \VlNT&Jt 1 Ur. szoo. ino. •in· drP"'· hHlns. nr 1-·n1n.i .. \\' CAii tor nppl. 213+2tl-4116 p!A!'t' .111 ad 111 thr DAiLV ,3 BR L'ONOO, adult11 on · '-"'• Cl'J1 t · • 'il2-J4l) or 494-ffM _& 81i.ker, Sl7:'J. ;-.q...1~_ or 2ll~_2 1!1-\0JI r1Ul'T' \\'~nt ,\cl.~! c ,11 -· J ti il>l1t/USI.'. pool ~ t • c I . nC\\·\y lodaepd, 1 e~ 1-';:;.;:;:::~==c:..,.~= gle. 122~ r o for 2. Utll pd. r: _ .... , """ $Zi0./mo. ~o Dob. ..:;.,='=-1~='-T ______ Sell tdlt Items ••.••. t4).$fS "N"'o'-"kl:::••'-..J:!":.i:P':.:'::'·..:•:.:'~:;;3&13::::::...• ~======.,.===========~1 ~=::i,:~SSTF~'.!l!:E!!D.c"~1~11..! .. ~·~· _!'.h:._, _1s•'h i{llC ltenlit ...... G42-56iS -r,.12.;,Q';S. General 3202 , • • • • ' 8 DIJ• V PICOT Sunday, Octobtr b, 11174 • .Mediterranean Village Apartments A Ring Brothers Project • ·' ' • UNFURNISHED l Bedroom • • • • • • • • • • • • $221 . ~.- l Bedroom & Den • • • • • • • • "$245 2 Bedroom • • • • • • • • • • • • $255 2 Br. Townhouse • • • • • • • • $320 , __ , ___ This Js.__the Setti11g_ .!.. • __ _ Outdoors -a country villa with majes tic trees and quietly running streams. By day, a magn i ficE;)nt~home • and recreation world . By night. a mag ic wonderland . INDOORS -light and brign! witn tne added spaciousness that extra large private patios and balconies afford. Each room decorator designed. Begin with fireplaces tO warm the cool nights. aoo wet bars. beamed ceilings. wood paneling, lush wait-to-wall carpeting, color coordinated drapes and spec ially imported grassc\oth wall ooverings. Provide private garden areas and a sense ot real pri vacy fo r each apartment. PRACTI CAL CONCERNS? Notning nas been overlooked. The finest in bala nced power built-in appliances. AT THE MEDITERRANEAN VILLAGE. tn e frenzied pace o f urban life is left far behind. It is hard to believe that the city is so close by. FOO OUTDOOR RECREATION, !nere are four night lighted tennis courts. and three swimming pools. And even a well equipped gymnasium and separate health clubs, With saunas. for men and "WOmen -all dedicated to your wet! being. CONVENIENT TO ALL of Soutnern California all of this is just minutes away from the PacHiC Ocean and N ewport Beach . overlooking beautiful Costa Mesa Country Club. · FOR YOUR LEI S UR E HOUR S a half million-dollar recreation center---with spacious lounges. handsomely appointed rooms for billiards. ca rds. ping pong and meetings. A private party room for your own special events. FIREPLACES -•ome "''" WE T B ARS -Md BE A MED CEILINGS -Wood paneling_ Fashion desigfled color-coordinated interiors, wi th carpets and drapes . Private pa t ios and balconies. -Community Center wit h spaci o us loun ges. billiard & ping pong rooms . - 3 swimming pools. outdoor whi rlpool. 4 night-lighted tennis courts. -Hea lth spa wit h gymnas ium an d separate men's and wo men 's facili ties. including sa una baths . - Security Systems to insu re your privacy. -A special section for those with small pets. -Fai r housing. OP EN EVERY DAY Mo n .·f'ri .; 10:30-6:30 Sat. & Sun .; 9:30·5:30 DIRECTIONS to Mediterranean Village: From the San Diego Freeway: Harbor Blvd .• South 2-miles, Or from Newoort Blvd .. turn North on Harbor Blvd. .Mediterranean Village 2400 HARBOR BLVD. Cost" Mesa. California 92626 Telephone <714) 55'1·8020 > • • % v • ~ 0 z 0 -Q > " Medt\enai1cai1 Vil\a~e "'F.~"I :ioe 11AJ180k 111.\'n. ~ l':USTA MESA, CALIF. :: ,,...... . lONC 6lACH MAllNA IV;; ORANG( COUNTY AllP'Otl , Apt11 furn/Unfurn Apts u;n/Un urn ...... 4000 Office Rtnt1• Pf.AUT decorated room in CORONA del ?ilAR oftloe pr:lvat~ bOme located in ... apace now available. Full choice Joe. Costa M~. $30. k1'1ce. Be•t location. Call "'k, 10t. pri\'ga. r..1ate or &l•i.tilll ROOM AVAIL lo a '""' IRWJN&RWIN Chrisrlan 1irl, P\'1.. bath It k,lt. pMvtas. $90 a mo. ftmale. Jl'l-96?6 -R£Al]'ORS ·lq• BALBOA ISLAND. Qulol l--=====~-1 ·:i·I out.skle room w/p,1 "n-WATERFRONT I tran«.6 bath. rum Tdrii. NEWPORT BE4CH ::,JI(. • ~" t:l students pref. 6'fl..5132 Execullve offlcet ~ -~--~.<i"·~:.:;.o;-,-·,·.~ Private roon1 !: ba!h. kllc.h 2 Oi.· 3 Room sulle' r~ ~~~;:i>_:-:-1-:,~·~ ,:· .,,..,.~_._.,. privl, my hoine. good loca· Viev.· or boats & water -..;~ :tit~}~~ . jtoll, •also ·Gara.gt? Sale, l Sn1all ofHce $165 In a eomfortablewaYofllle ••• In• fresh new t rwlronmenl 54S:.3932 Biii Grundy Rltr. • '· • • ROOM In le.rge h01ne, utll 67,5.6161 offering man)' advanl~es aisoc[alltd \lflth beach llvlng. pd. Kit privgs. ~1ature M ** Enjoy aolld, ok;l·l.t1shloned amenities SIJCh 11 the murppy bed lemn.I~. $100. ii:io. 557-1580 **Coro.,. del. ~r (one In each bactielor's apar~ment). • pllUJh i::arpeUng eves. Professional Olllces and/or • beamed j:eilln;'.s. • tin roofs • pool and re<:realion cen11r k with Retail. Deluxe, alr cond., ROOMS $20 "" qp, ample prkg , jan. serv •. utli • no1 ott found economy, completely fu1nished bachelora,$185; kitchen: $31), \\'k up apt. pd ~20001 ~hvy frontage unfurnished 1 bedroom, S21S. lndulge.'You can affofd ill MS-9755 or &1~3967 & '200 Ill'. Rates trom .4R'. , d · 1433 Superior~ Avenue ROO~t for liln&le girl, pt-1. Chvner, 67~. 2855 E . .... Newport Beach entrance &: bath. Nr. OCC. Coast Hi&h"'B.)', CdM ~e Eli~s Take Newport e1vct: toward &6-4293. ~1 Eh'EClJTIVE Sulle over\Ook--~, p1'R1fA 1 the ocean.Tum right at UVE AT TI-IE BEACH, ,ing Newport Harbor, 1024 AOU'-1 A 646--8453 ~~?o:;p1H~~~~ta1 ~t~E"t.:ffi"~t~i> ~,:i~ ::e~~~'.~i ~ ' · . to Supenor Ave .. look right. NlCE room n1a~nificent \'ll, IU~h\\"BY at Newport Blvd. I :::;:::::::::::;:;:::::::::::::::::::::::.c::.1 overlk2. hbr. &: ocean. $35 642--4&1'1 AP.rim. I. U I 3900 .... ·k. 2500 Seavie\\', Cdr.~ i..:.. =co~RO~N~,,.-,D"E"L""'M"A°"R,----t n _ n urn. Apts Furn/Unfurn BEDROOM. linen .&. kit. 350 sq n uj,l;talrs, ror ottlce Newport Buch 3869 prt"'" pvt. home. Students or shop. on C. HW)', -crpt, 'PA"'"·.···•EW" PORT 1-=···-7"~--+J·~re~l'd~.~ss;~··C'mo~·~.-~· !:'°"~""I-· ad jaoenl apl. Ill\ N n· ROO~t prtvate balh, nr OCC, .640--043'.l/&44-l053 , APA~TMENTS 1 .. ~e · ~ i!r t=:i~1~moker, Bu•in•ss Rental 4450 on the bay :,Y, FOR 1 or 2 people, men NEWPO~T Beach, Cannery or wcm1en. Kitchen priv. Village, llm aq tt. retail L:e~ki~rt~=n~1~t~ 1 ~~ BIG' Outside pet OK. MS-44&4. ~~ 8!~~!.5$4fslo~rb~~ joy $750.000 health spa, 7 Rentals to stiare 4300 673--0535, 64~965-l i;wln1ming pciols, 7 lighted · ~ tennis couns. plus miles of. • 2-rnr .. 1Al.ES to a"'e 30 need-1 C.P.1. Storefront & Office + bi") -I• •-JI• tll h f _, 1 -' 4 b • xt . lg 1500 sq ft renced area. Total ~· .... u ... • pu ng, s U· N.Oe.k-MX>CS GardenApart· "'"-' 0 ~, •. r. r, ta. · 2750 ft. Heavy toot traffic, fleboard. croquet. Janior l's ments. duplx, ,11 blk to ocean & C 1 6.Jl;.<;9Gl' G46--U.&6 froni $224.50 ,monthly;' also i EC EATIQN· bay, ?-.'B. caU Gary or Joe1=:·..:c·==7.~'""""'7':-~I l and 2-bedroont plans and G~EA. R A ' 64>-4665 SPACE AVAl(. for leMe in " El swilTWnlng, saunas, heallh n -..... ·-'k ~-· ~ 1 .vslory tov.'ll houses. cc--dubs. billiards. tennis. pro SEEKING progressl.ve gal to pUl:U,,..,..... """:I· "-•r. 8 tric kitchens,• pi'ivate patios I ..,.,. lhOp. golf driving share 2-br hse at heh. 1 Hunt. Hbr. C 0 all . 846-2366. or balcof\ies, carpeting, .,.... fil rod 25 STORE N l p t Ott d r a peries. · Su,bterranean range, party room, etc. am a m P ucer . yrs nr p . 06 ice p_.·kJng with elevators. OP' FUN ACTIYI TiES: .f\lll· «t tra''d a lot. No strings. & Greyhound depoL 581 Sq. tional nlaid service. Just time director. free Sunday 673-2011 ft. $150 l\fo. Agt &t&--2414 north (I( Fashion ls.land at brunch. BBO's. trips J?Br· PARK NE"'PORT 1\1/e.xc. 27a SQ Ft. Ofc, storage, bus, Jamboree and San Joaquih ties and mor~ w!U shiµ-e 2 hr, 2 ba, tum. elc. Pacinc Cst Hwy, CdM. Hills Road. ·BEAUTIFUL APARTMEN· apt, prefer F. $25. "'k. Alt. Call 6Tr2ffif. Telephone (-714) 644-1900 T S : Sin gle s. 1 & 2 4 Pt.1or1\·knds. 640-0742 Industrial Rent•I 4500 for rental information bednxwns. Furn. & unfum. \\' AA'TED mature straight OCEANFRoNT 2 BR, 2 ba, furn S400 \Vntr . 2 BR, 2 ba, winier. $300 1 BR, 1 ba, fUI;n $250 winter STEPS TO BEACH 2 BR, 2 ba, "'il\ter, $2'.l5 2 BR, i ba. \\'fnter, $235 . 3 BR, 2 ba, 1\inter $275 CORONA OEL MAR With all the extras. Models n111le to share lge honie Small Shops-All Sizes apen daily 1~ to 7.' Sony, In il.B. $150. mo. 962-8668 HUNTINGTON BEACH 00 pets°' children. SINGLE Girl to share 3 br., Oakwood condo., in Balboa. $12:J a $151).1\tO. & UP E """' .,,..,., P.fO. TO !1.10. OK Gard. en mo. _='v"'"=-· -"0'7"~=c--~-1 1.VORKINC gal to share love· r.rcFadden & Producer A-~--·ts or Gothard & Hell ..... ~•-• ly 3 BR home. $150. ~Id ··• ~ -uuts. 64H319 • 5 ' ; WESTMINSTER · 1Mnit ~6lh · t.L\LE, straight age 35 to $135 to $150 Mo to !l.1o ok. 64s-os5o ' · liO share 2 BR a_pt. $150/mo. Nr. Edward111 '& Industry Way 4 BR, I.inf. hbuse. Fam. rm, .6{5-3761 or .646-4136 _ -A·Lwill-Burke & Co, 2 ba. $550 lsi! ·or Jse/opt. .....,_. .._. S..tli ~ • an NEWPQRT CREST 16Ch at Irvine , . G•r•g•s .for Rent 43.50 n4: !97-ZlOO 2 BR, 2-ba. Condo. $525 642-8170 " FOR rent-One half of COf" N-LE ••1NA COMMERCIAL Uft ... w OtLi" . ..,., N' """_...., CHOtCE lo1esa double garage $15 mo. Huntt-ton Be.tch . ..,. >w,-,; Pl. -LAK~· Fll'ONt 6.JU865 NEW ,.._, I Ml LOCATIONS GARAGE Single,"''""' on-9'1l SQ. "· l UP · JlilJL VEO~~LLES· ~R:.: .. ~· : If••:~~~~. ' At s. uth Coil.st Plaza..: . • · '* COSTA MESA * DELUXE, ~rivate 3 Br. 2" Ba, Swedish.frplc, gai;age, sundeck, pool, nr. Fashion "· Adw,., 1 to.,.;. $335. 6~415 ~566-t8&>. . ' PQol • Ae11.pult..'O Aqua ·aar N1nost ne"' M-1. & Jacw.ri. Spectacttlat '8 ~ sq1J_L $~ lol!J .. Acre Lake iv/Tov.·ering 6'W·231il .Foun~a\111 • ¥.! li{Illion Do/lilt INDUSTRIAL' STUDIO 1,(0] Clubi10U9C, Gym. SaWla, Ill(.· tt. + Iott. 220 v . $125. Total Secur'."·. ., · a ,mo. + take· O\'~ Jee1 . . lmnaedlate Oc:cupancy •••t.•tl ... , •fflt.• ~ All, 646-7821 C.\J AOUL:TS S~1<1""'r1=,.co·..:.=-· ----45=50=1 Solrry, No Petll BAYFRONT-Exciting view, ~achelot:, 1, '2 & 3 Bi's. vEARW-' 2' ' Sr,1 ! 2 Ba., Ne'NpOl't. Shof~· 2 blks oceun. $260. • Mf-8912 ·ot 67.>"600 . C in rllr Hovia1d 645 6101 1 -• 1 4 B 2 Ba from $175 , .... ,. ·mo. MINI-WAREHOUSE ge <:0<fg!ln r • • S I •A-Private, locked individual """"'' beams. , Ip'' patio an ill n• G~n!t , ., OFF I CE SPACE & s1orage Wlltli. From $7.50 \Vt».r'CL,Uf 2 .bf .. 1 ~~ ba. 3700 Plaza Dr. ~ta.rial· Servicell. Ex· per mo. (Wnho"••. 1~ a''''· Ad"''' 714-55-'-_ .. .c.· perlenced/Professional lie-ALLSPACE 'U" ~ ...._,... ensed real estate broken: 9-'-" 1970· only, nO ·....,ts. 1728 Bedford only ~ C 1 '1 -, ... 5-1" rl:;:.~ ----·-~ .....,....,_ . . rr1me QS a ,. esa1 "!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!l ...,., """" location-deluxe oilices-per-1~ LINK' 2 .Bl' To"1&use. Park Lido -centage lease. For addition- area, frplc, pool, neY.1ly -al lnfonn.ation -1vrite STORAGE UNITS decorated. ®· 1110. I~. · llCITlllC, 11£W.i:owu'1! Associated South Co a 5 t A P'2rsonal, busineu, recrea· 540-1266 nr &14-5.,;91 i QYlT LAll.ESlll UVIK Bl'l}kers, P.O. Box 1595, tional storage. From SS. OCEANviEW2-br., den. 2 SM~nu ACCll'TIO Ne\\llOrt Beach. Ca. 92663. Jamboree&: San D~ep f'tte. ba. Condo., ref., \V/D, ' •locheJors OFFICE SPACE FOR w;y, C11.'ll 979-0150 \V/\V, drps., pool. $350 per • 1 BR 2: BR RENT. Costa. P.ft!!ia. Hart>or STORAGE Space, 15x30. 217 n10. ;Hs-$379 • •2:.BR !& Oen at . Adams. Beau tifuJ · Avocado St, Costa Meaa, VIE\V n¥)d~. Air' m u B I c ' ~n4 . • • 2 Br., ·neivly dec'd., g.M.. F rom $175 -$435 janUot1a.l, Class A. Walker Re t1ils W t-• - 00, & Lee Bldg. Call Gene Hill, n an 9"' l to. be_ach. Wntt. $:9l Mesa V.rde fast & Adorns 557--0136 642.{)200 yrly. $350. 548-lliO'l 540·1800 or ~~=-''''ATERFRONT l br .. un- EASTBLUFF sharp 2 Br. 1501 WES·TCLIFF DR. furn. apt. on Nwpt., Lido .211a Ba .. trplc, patio. pool, --NEWPORT Flnancittl CLnter or Bal. Isle. R e 11 a b I e 2 car garage. Adults, lease. MESA Leasing Office Space non-smoker. Call aft . $325. 644-6400: 556-6880 CALL · ON-SITE ~1ANAGER 1.:_30~~ 997-5574 DUPLj::X, 2br, l ba, garage GARDEN (TI4) 642-llll ext 246. WANTED·~, °'ba~o"ky~,-.... ~.-,-v-,·_I reL~nlly r{'().l'COrated. $290. APTS 1 MO. rntE RENT cant area to put 9' x 12' 644-6.~ or 644-7326 No lease req. Dix. oUil'Cs Green.h?"se, must ha v. e 3 BDRi\f 2 b " 1 1 2 & 3 Bclm1~ .• ci-pts. drp11, adj. Airporter Hotel. A/C. electr1ct1y & v.·ater a'•all. 1 ·" a., 'P ·• bk. utilities · pa.id .. BI t In s, run ~"rvi"'·'· ~0, !145 Mo. _re_asonable rent. 673--5947 to ocean, $300 a 1no. yrly. 1 nd f Iii ,,... ... c •v 202 42nd St NB. roo'" mcy 1,:;:;1 ",'~bl Rec · 2171 DuPont, Room 8 FAJ\11LY reunion, ear I y \\' .~ a e, p:ynt .. S33-32'Z3 'Ti! noon ,.. Christmall. Need furn 4 Br 2BR, lba, upper unit, roon1, saunn, pool, blXJ. DESK space avallable $50 pool honie. Nov. 23"rd thni Y~~~yti,o:Wu!'S1d.~~i..1Jl 6 S a288ref. BA~ults only, no pets. mo. Will provide furniture Dec 2nd. All adults, no pets. S4!'Hi700 nstol, COl'lta ?<.fesa, at $5, mo. A n 11 we r I n g, 8.'U-iS92 after 6 pm. UNFURN Apts, 2 Br, 2 Ba i>ervice available. 17875:1~~~~~~~!!'!~~1 \\lestcliff area, small pet Beach Blvd., Huntina:torllil ~ OK. cal.I &12-2-152: &15-9000. Beach. C1213zt. n,anclll l • BAYFRONT !i Br, 2 Ba Oil ~ -FOR lease; approx. 1,500 sq. nWn bay, pvt bch. w/pier ~ fl. Ideal location in art p 979-1935: &14-4510 'Tl center, ~na Be'ach. Business Oppor SOOS OCEA.i~ view, yearly 2 ·Br, Vic Stuart - l Ba duplex,' ·S'275. 100. 2 BR · T ho 1 1 Realtor 494-7ri31 WANTED ,,,,,,.,. d "'~"""'n · oi\·n use. rpc, l '-PER SQ FT ...,.,...,1 ays, .,..,..:n.>J eve. fron1 Szil. I BR. 1rom $193. ~ ?!fan. \\'Oman or couple tor SUPElt Prlv, sepuno1 ... t Ur. Pool, tennis, ..&0ntinental 16~17 WESTCLIFF-NB Orange & L.A. C.ountles. for mature male, 1 blk to b~{lldast. Se,parate family Cp drpt, 'AJC. tree pkg., Deoorating e x p e r I e n c ~ bch, $T:MI. yrj,y Gf.1-5760 sett.ion. ,Close! to shopping uU, 10' clfllP!, A&f,_54.l·S0::2 .helpful, but not nece11Al")'. OCEANVIE\V 3" br., 3 be.., .. ~!J!!fino!!!!J!!!~be~ac~h~.~-!iJi!~2'lli!li!!!!!!!J!llCDJ\.l Ol-""nC'Jo:S l50' r.oo· Co111p1rny wtll train. Annu1.l • condo., l\'tbar., jrpl. ~ ---Prkg, air, cpts, drps, ~uslc: Jnoome potential $20,000 to 963-1094 THE EXClTlNG elevator c r.1as 1er 11 $25,{0]. Small investnient 2 ROOr.1 ~tudkl apt, kilchen- ette, xlnt 1u-ea. $185. After 6, 642-303.1 PALM MESA APTS. ownr/rlir 673.4120 • necec llSlll')' for equipment. 1\.tlNUTES TO NPT BCH ' ' all !I.Jr. ·Carroll COLLECT Bach, t & 2 BR. rm;.;, $lSi OFFICE Space, 800 sq ft, bet\\'een lOAM i: 3P~t. J\.1on- Ad It . N p 11 d0\\-1,llown Hunt Ing-ton day throUgh Friday at (602) Newport Heights 3870 ~t 1~1~ Dr.· ~ti;· $250 per m?. tG7-9231 •. !5 blla tro$4t9ll60e~rt Blvd.) UPto~wqfto!offlcespa~ * RESTAU~NT * 1802 HAVEN PLACE • , bt'., trw, 1210 • 493=6319 iii N ' Fi August iJ'Oh $10 700 *LA Pr'1'-l~i~·NNE * Ce:J~: ·F le~~le "j~~ Seals 110. Dinner Ml.it only 2 J:lr. lu.m .. All l'!lectrlc. i'lre-' &«•1866. Ov.t$~~irlng p . ..1ce. Heated JWJ. Adulls. COSTA J\.1ESA D\VNTWN, RIVIERA ' REAL TY NE .... 1-1~ blk fron1 b<?ach. $200. & up. s•~ N Jy d -"" ·~ '97'-1268 -· •w ""'• •-t. -* 642°7007 * Choice of a-: BR, 2 BA aplll. A 1· Rochester, '64~2-l~oo;;~-~~-1--;;:s't.;n;;-;i;;;;i<-;;;;,---l l L'Om Jiletely furn w/ocn \'U. Cro8~ rnni gp'f CO\ll"lc -----c!: A SPECIAL KIND OF For inspcclion & tcrm11 sec 2(W32 Santa An!\ Ave. C.D.l\1. 2,400 Sq. Ft/P.C.H. RESJ'AURANT n1gr, Aift B, 236 ,V, B1e11· FROl\f $139. 'h n11 to be:i.1·h & MC./2nd ':'~ $700. mo. N~·port Beach prime loca· IMl'll~ 492-5038 or 11Jr1 492-7'190 BEAUT!li1JL POl~YNESlAN .or trade f~r · 557-JC!l2. lion. Smnll, ch arm 1n 1 COi\IPLl:..IELY redecorated • 6 POOLS, TEN"NIS, PRlV. orFtCE~f· r rent, 8\'Rll Oct. rustic. Ample p.q,r:king. aee_; :z BR, 2 BA: quiet neighbOt: · PA,TlO Garden Apia. S3un9JI lMh. $6.). mo. & 11.•ine llctnlit'. $55,(00. Cole hood. "'alklng <listance , to jaami. 2 car pr k 'I· 642-2833 of Nell.'JlOrt. Rea.hon. evt>ry1t1tpg. Lchild ok. $100... 846-1:\11 lhl(ltina:ton Beach AVAlL.-Share lux. 0Ulee1 Gr.t-6511_ "9'R.it1bl; 400-0911: 49'1-4793 IBR lurn/unf\lrn, yr\y, uW w~~nial party. NB, LIQU9R STORES F' A NT ASTlC 1•»hltewater pd, UlO mo., Newpon 645--l•OO G r . $21,000. Mo. vi~·. Otd pool, 2 BR, 1 BA. Beach. 67)-7219 evtl ~ 32.> SQ ft. 2 ornce~. 1 ba. $107,000. • tnvrnto * 49&-04&1 * R00m1 4000 AU walnut paneling i:. Cl°"'ts. othen IY South Laguna 3886 r.RC. ROOi\f, pvt. ba 1 ·m-fu35!)trio~~:, S:~ so s ~~AN~~SI~ FOR RENT: 1 Br. apt.. ts7oo' c .r.t. ·~~~'~1 penon. lXI SQ ft, crpt/d~. $9:5 DRYCLE •NERS drps., rarpt'g., 11tv/ref, a mo, ~ per mo. 00 ~2130 or "' 1 dt>c::k. orcan view. Mature ROOrwr tor Rtnl male. only 679-3700. and plan!, Hunt Bch. S28.000. I :1dut1s --~m~·-""9'.91 • Moun! lilltii • net s12 ooo · • no r-• or ,,, WTn. ~ BANK of Co~ta Mesa Plata. an aml dn po.ymt · ..... ; _s~;J(] ln<'l, util~. 499-2S6S Have 5QmcthltJJt )'OU want to o.t f I c e fumlahe<). NI c e 592-5388/~ • ,.. •. ' \Vnnt a '°""'priCcd ~t atll? C1ossifled ad• do II re«pt. t1re11.. $9'3. 3900. &!oil 1ttle ite:1 · 1 .. _____________________________________________ .... ! Read loday's t1a"sUied Ads. "1111 • c:1tll NO\V G·f2-5R73. C1as11lrted Ad! C11Jl 642-56711 'Piiot Clnssifl~ ~!~ 612~~ ,, \ I I • ' • ' • Buslnou Oppor Jiili5 Lost & fioulffl 5111\day, October h, 1'174 CA.llV PILOT D • 1---'-'---iiil Tekvlt lon Repeir '890 Help Wented, >;UJ! 7100Help Wtn ted, MiF 7100 Help Wanted, M&F 7100 Help Wented, M&F 7100Htlp Wented, F i10i BEAT INFLATION LOST-Keys & wallet, Ln GtR.wtCKASon.BldrCorur. TV REPAIR BUILD A FUTURE fJn~.i. ~~~: ~ Add rtn~. St. Ile 81-114321 RODGERS Et.EClitO!\'lCS N= has lo tf'll .....,, what t I 0 k 613•11. · $~217U '2121 Plat"tntia, CM ~""' o .. I eys. Thanks. 'E°'J:..:;"i;:..::;=.-'=-~= '* 642-8>29 • inflal n bu done to YOW' 642--698;; -•ctr. CAI '932 __ _;;-'-'"--""'--'--- famlly'1 bu)'ina: Po"''er. but Tll litre'• a we.y &round 11. \Ve LOST Blk addrus, lOOH ELECrnlCIAN • O Id • otftt )'OU an exclusive pro-lea1 book J\r. NB Cl'C)'htad Jobt-New JP, Suviot ---------eram ft"tlturlnr the new pop St. \\'.ed. 10/2 Call ~vid ca 11 1 All)rtiine-Anyplace CERAMIC nLE Works, ktt., top hot fOOdl, such as beet Ball. 213/472-9500 & Iv lnfo. 542..a829 · bath, entry, Jlr.l.T, pan ltew, tpaghetti &. nieatballa, ftlo\\·ant. , fel*ir, Frtt EIL •M-2135 macarorU & cheeRe. All na-LOST BLK \\'ht TrnW:r mix. ~RJClAN-UctnH: No. se.Gl87 ext m UQna~ adve~ brands, ed female, lost 9/23 3Slb .. ~~bl. ma.Int CERAMIC TILE NE\\' It \Ve Ml up· )'OW' Hol Food & Balboa: · 675-6015. A · · remodel. FrM estlma1u. Vel1diog ma ch I n es ln 6'1HW. Fenclnt 6031 SM i:Jbl welcorne. 536-2426 Industrial, co111n1erclal, A1ld LOST Bl k ?lot le Coe retail opcratlol\li. You slnv'-: ac 8 kapoo. NO job too 1mall or I~ Top Solt 6092 1 11 he " \'le. ~e & Del 1'.lar, Chain link our IP'clalty ---------Y cp ect t nXlney. F'act, O t Reward. 646-3$61' o. ..... mld F•·-"0 -Lie TOP SOIL C0'fP0ST we 1guanintee tha1 ')'GU \l.'lll 642-9107 'h~' '='";::::;..:..:::"::..·~-::..;-=;;:;, • • ' • (.'()llect at 'lf'fl 51 10<7.., over G•rdenlng 6045 •AIULt!l * REDWOOD* YQU1,'. investment the nr3t FOUND: Poodle ?t1esa Verde -,-,_..,.Cal"=l-'-58&<930'-'-''-'-'--- CIRCULATION TRAINEE The Daily Pllot bas an opening in the cirCU• lation department for a beginner to· manage a small district of boys and girls, delivering, collecting and selling newspapers. Full time. permanent positions with regular raises and full fringe!i including personal use of com- pany auto. Apply In person lo Milan Leavllt, Daily Piiot, 330 West Bay Street, Costa Mesa. CLERK TYPIST E I " c troru4." n111J1ul1tcturt>r net"da accun.t"-1ypls1. 60 v. .p.m. E\e<:uic l)-pe11Titt>r, filing d1\·~ntlfit'd du1k1. Call f or Appl . l'tid11'1ri11 I ne111110111 (714) 494-9401 - TELONIC INDUSTRIES Lagun1 Beach Equal Oppor. ~:n111loyl'r ' year fll8$umlng you tollQ\v urea fem.ale, Posilive ID *LAWN SERVICES* Schoolt & O!Jr dlrectlonl, or v.·e buy ~= Phone Evenings Y•rd Cle•nupt lnttructlon 7005 CLERICAL back' lhe m11chlne11. If )'OU c.,~'-="~------1 j\1ost areas. ?tfow &: ~~~. * K h An Equal Opportunity Employer will de1:ote a 1nlnlmum of F·ouNo : Dog, male. f.tcd. New 1awn 1 , sprlnlden. t N v Es T 1 N you R eypunc '10 hours per "'eek, ~·c \l.'111 11!ied black and \\'hi te. Home s/Apll/Commercla.L roruRE! Roston Mon-Help W•nted, M&F 7100 Holp ·''•nted, M&F 71 00 * Secretary show Jou how lo build in· 560022 C.~l neu Harbor Reas Rates. Prompt : 1 est tessorl Institute for teacher w = r:tl?y, fo!hll~tak~ and Gisler. 534-3144 .534-71t7 ~~ :! Tn s~~t:~ ----* Typist the bite ou t of Inflation. FNDB ',Turquoise Silver EXP. Japanese American of education. VA approved. ASSEMBLER BEAUTY OPERATOR * General Office " ·~· do raoe et Vic; Safe v.• a y G ~--•I ~ 1 No following nee. Comm .. 1m • ....,...:;,32 wn1 tern1a parking kit , ......... n Call to ardener. "fUAI ty ......,..11p ete Call about our 2 v.'ttk TRAINEES guarn. ~1050. * General available. can To I Free ~ ... -Garde"1"'" Service. Bonsal survey P""°""'"l. 532-"'"1, identify 494-Jns .... .., •vo·-· ~ BOAT~AIRMA 1~ 432-7021 or \\Tite Tra!nin&· 548-!N79 53+&161. Apply in person N Laborer C.A.B._ Enterprises, 179'J5 LOST: 8 mo. Fem. Shep/ EXPERT Japanese ..::;:Pc;lo;A"°N~O~l.~E~_S~S~ON=s~-VOLT \VATER YARD£.\'.. Sky Park Circle, Irvine, J-lusky. Name -Timber. Gardener: Complete yard PER. REQ 'D. ~lust be \VE NEED YOU! California 92707. Gm collar. 548-8326. ST~ service, clean ups, free elil, Begtnners, Intermediates T empor•ry Services C'lean v.'Ol'ker v.· I g 0 0 d Long & Short Tern1 --A----..~.....___ ~2661. 752~323 3848 Campm Drl\'e rerord . No l. 0 ser11 ! ! As.sigrunent11 Avallnble -.-.--..--"''=""c..,-~~~-546-1:7~1 Bl Id · Boat ard NB TASK FORCE AFFILlATE. 11•1 LAWN Sef'Victo Res&: Comm (Across from Q.C. A1-1 ac es ·· y ' ' ' ' TEJ\WORARY SERVICES PwtoNill monlhly malnt, cleanups, Major l\fedical pj~';j''' 673--6834 12344 Harbor Bl\'d Service St•tion M1ps hauling tree est M!H142 Now Available * .BOOKKEEPER * Garden Grove *. FIRST TIME * LNOSCP/GAROEN/MAINT ""'' "' oxpd w/"11 "'"" 636-1052 Personels .5350 Sod, Sprinklers, Cleanups, · \Ve have a complete package or office bookkeeping, per1n .. 1z=:=:::::::::: Soil ed, 642-333l·646-490S ~ob W•nted, Fm•le 7050 of employee benefits. \\'e position, lull or part thne, Ii $'5. EUROPEAN GARDENER pay top ~·ages. All office }(oocl salary + benefits, DIVORCE NEED help ·w/yoor monthly &. industrial skills are NeY.'J)Ort Beach area. \\'rile (Plus Filing·Fee) re=l!.pl= ~j425 1talements! I can handle needed. Classified ad no 311 c/o Dai· lmn1<!diate openings for in· • Offered CLERICAL l~\··· -' ~., w ~. i', 't ., .. -- rAr.!'::.L !. . . -· -..... r.,•· •• '~: • .,_.(, J ~) ' -~ ~· HEl,P WANTED W• _.. lool&1nq fcw fMr9tHc:,· per11all:il1 ed Wllpil1 y~ ~ to 111M1t t11 19 9-riltg tilt Int Sttvice to ow~ We Offer: * Rapid Advancement • Plexlble Schedules (Students) * J\leals • Excellent \\1orking Conditions \\le A:;k Thal You : * Be 18 Years Old • IJe Willing 1'o Work \Veekends •Take l>ride In Your Work l.pply In Person Monday & fyesdoy twtwttn l & 6 P·'"· '~s Ice Creom P..tour lestaur•nt I UO I hoch ll•d.. Hunllnqlon ltoch Equal Opportunity £mp~oyer ~:t~ ... ~~ Help W1nted, M&F 71001 tielp Wanted, M&F 7100 , . I General Ofc to $7100 E.l.ECTRONIC Tl'(:h1uc1an for ENJOY VARIETY? audio &. vtdro ser.<\ehu.:. , . , . . . . l\lusl be f'\n1!1i nr 11·/VTR. \ou II ln\e rt11s liu~~ office. cnn1<!r.1s & CC...'TV e1iuir-I U.11~ of puhllc ronlrict f()I' n1e11t. SllOp & licld M'l'\il,;o. a mnjf1r l'<l:J. Ad vRnce on Xlnt su.lary Jor ri~l pel'S(ln. n1Cn \; • CnU °'-"'"n" Da_Y f ov.·lt>r As!IOt·latell a-Ji·:i!OI 8-IS-t!i\.~. ~nru.,. & Dl'nn1s FOE' Pt'r~onnel Ai:.:cnl')' of Mi,in· • ~ ti11gton Rl•a ch, llilfi.~. &!al'h Bl\'d, 11.13. -GIRL~S-~GUY~S -ESCROW Vending Distributorship Guarentffd T ie Ina To Provide Proven Succets PRlt.IE TERRITORlES NO\V AVAILABLE FOR Tl-IE FIRST TThfE NO EXPER., WE TRAIN $1,800. to $5,650. 100°/o Secured GUARANTEES \Va1Tanted equipment Completely reliable ' ' all your Accts/Rec. and EquaJ Oppor. Employer ly Pilot, P 0 Box 1.160, dividuals V.'/lu10\\•ledge of S.SS-tOJ3 Gen.r•I S.rvlcet 6046 Accts/Payable with fast Costa 1't1esa Ctt\if 9'l6~ 10 key adding n1achine. No SECRETARY PREGNANT! B RlCK\VORK-F1replace, ~~k·u:on~~ ~~:eryw= AUTO Bookkee~r P /time l>'Pi.ng. i\1U!it like Y.'Orki111: 18-Z'J Ca in;:. confidential COW\Sel· Pl BBQ p I LOT MAN $3 hr, 4 hrs a dey w/flFouor"''A· ppl Co-t•c.. Arc You r rt't> To T1·3vi-•I ing & referral. Abortion, anten, ' at 0 •' 5-M!-2981• Cos ~1 I Need " ",. lnunt'<.linte opening for St<Jblc \\ I t h Sh II I' P G r o u P adoption . & keeping. AP· repair v.'Ol'k. REF.'Free est. BUSINESS Lady de 1 ires GM DEALER pe~n.esa oc. 5 exper. Carol Smith it1dl\·idu1li v.·/ 111in 5 y('11r!' Thi'llu~hlrut U.S.A. lncludit1~ CARE 6424436 --::,:;,;,:""'·=~~--~~ night care of confined Used car experience BETTY 833-Sl45 644-5800 experience in fir ld relatrd . H:nvuil, Pue1·10 ltico I< 'THINGS" by !'11oose. Gen'! pen;on 7 pm to 7 an1. up necessllfY Person••I Resources A'•co F'tnancial Service to E sc1u 1,11, loa n p~s,;ing i Hc1un1~ No ~x!J{'r. UL'Cl$S. REALEstateTrainlng. lndiv. r:irn1>n1ry, repairs, plum· to ,-nights a v.'eek. 11.75> CALL BOB ~IAY ,,.. i;,. _, 0 E 1 or,, ... Ac<ur•tc typ>"" -I 11:12 ~·k ex•vorf!i;e paid l truction Periona.I ttn ~'"-Ag"><y: 1151 Do\'f' St ""luw ppor. mpoyer ... ...., ..... ,.. ns · a • bing, elect., 6t2--56l3 hr. 6'1S-2469 eve. 540•9640 .,,.,...., ... ~.,,..,;;;,,,;;,;;;,.,[ quired. E..'<cclll'nt \\·orking training progran1. A 11 No product selling Assigned territory Locations secured Sales or broker exam 2-3 PAINTING-Steam Cleanftl&: iMA;:;,TU,:;T,RE~~.~_,,;;;;:;;,looldn;;;;i~·=g;-;;to:r [ ___ :'.:~::.'..~~---1 Suile ll2. Nev.'Jll)rt Beach l! COOK· l'Onditions & c 0 ni P 3 n y tra11sp. furn. l\l ust be neat, wks. Academy 548-1192, ?t1alntenance...cleanlng P'rmanent live-in, child AUTO BKKPR F /C to $650 ben<'fits. eai<y to l'On\'('rse ·\\ith & PREGNANT! ThinkingAbor· Scott 5f6..1009, anytime Non ~1oker/Thru T.B. Salary acl'Ording 10 e.\'J). Please Call or \\'J'tte able to le;iveo inuned. For lion? Know all the facts care, it. housekeeping. Haye MECHANIC WESTCLIFF Prefer 00 students. Exper. THE IRVINE CO, Pt'rsonal uitervk'w &c P.tiss 11-t. cau LIFE LINE, .,, H•u_li-6051 references 646-1484, prefd., but \\'ill !rain. Apply , -" ~1 T & \I'~ '" "" ··• Busy shop. PaJd vacation, Personnel Agency be 2 3().4 5."il Ne~'J>Orl Ctr Dr, NB ~,.,_,:;, 1' nn, ueos · ~"" For personal intervll!W hni. 541·5522 *l\IOVINGANDHAULING• ~~~o t.\~m~~~~ insurance&: uniforms . Ill.lark nr Center! H~~~';ger :,ll11~fe1. ~·~~ Ann: 1\trs. Curril'r H! thl' S.'\dSrllC'l:ia:k Inn. 1660 \\'lite &: incl. phone n(l. I "v~IO~LET'°'""'°"w~;-,---~55~-.~,-1 • --,. d" ~n··-O"'Y apply •-'th 1651 E Edi-r s \ Ad C\l A k ( ., (7141 ""3389 .... l1't 'I, ~11113 Ana, · · · · · x tractive w/gd job, v.·ould 96:Hi(52 0\\'11 tools. Cl.rFF'S Atrl'O ~ ..,,~ 9A1\l '1il NOON s ~I DIST p O Bo 1887 • ' • ......:a >Ol' "' -2 pe19C>id. Re&:-6't3-i918. ....,........, ,...... "' ' ... ·=A" ~ ' ·1 · ""~"'-· ' · s or 1' r. _..,. I S>~N:G'1llRILIAS--GJ\l-5Pl>RI LS • COSTA MESA, CM.IF. 926'.lG like to meet sincere man COLL grad 1ttks travel REPAIR, 1747 Anahiein -===,,:;;;:;_;;o;_,.=~l..'.~!:";------...:.'.1 Eq l 0 t-• J ~ ~to date. 638-7661 1-:;cy ~='1-1! ~ck.ba~in"g oriented job. Rep, Guide Ave. C. ~r. 642-3372 ? B3000 K,K,EEP,.~RforF/NCB COOK un ppor .• nip oyer Easy fun JOb. Day or night. GIFT & CARD SHOP e COSP.1ETICS FACE LIFT• Barry 5:11.i23°56 · pret. Outgoing. 573-89-6. ·R.ealt~, :!'11an:g';ment Otc: P'.l11 time/~sibly f u I! ~XPt-.:HI ENCED Full time No. exper. nceess. \\'e train }lallmark. in new prinie T-1.B, Techniques from Vienna TYPING-my home. Exten· AYON Hrs flexible. 6-15-1260. t1n1~. A1;1ply in pe~n. llE saleslr.dy, \\'om:1n's \\'ear. you. \'ou n111s1 like people SOOpplng Center. $l2,000. 5.J&-0.169: (903) 5-8329 HAULING and clean up, 2 sive Secretarial b:u:kground BOOKKEEPER full h ~lain St at the ~lboa lnn Top pay, frin;;:e benefits. & be At least 18. Apply Bkr. S-12_7486 hard V.'Orklug students y,•/ Please call 962-1218 . . , c arge, Next to Balboa Pier. Ap11ly Sil \'erwoods. 4 5 any 11 ft11 or e\•e. 1930 \\'. A;.Ri;:ru~:;::oJie~er, .. _*81 , truck. Res. rates 640-1749 DAY Care. my home, days. TIMELESS ttiru1 1 f1inancial1 '00otljt,ements. COOKS lnen. or women F11sh'.on tslu nd. See i\Jr Coast H \\')', N.Il Invest Opporl'y 5015 ''" He_att'n• & At'r Cond '"" d I Mar niu 1 Pe set 0 s. ~tin ' · \Villiar11s -~~~--1 Stanton. 527-~ • -~ Corona e · Our new sophlsllcated, rla· 2 yrs exp. Salary open. Bkfst exp. Top \\'age.,. GIRL FRIDAY TraVel 5450 GRAIWl BROS. 54&-l6S3 673-1580. t I o na 11 y adve rt I Ji e d 833-9432 Apply in person. Carrow's EXPERIENCED \.1'uitresses. Typing. liling. lite book- 50•/. PROFIT? Helpi Y!•nted, M&F 7100 tragranre. \Vhat a good Restaurunt; Pico turn-off; Apply in pe~n. Cam>w's keeping. S-125 to start. Yes, as hleh ._, 50':l"o profit ENSENADA F'un bUs·N~v. 8, ~-=~~ ~~;en1i; d!!! time to become an AVON BOYS San eiemente RC!ltaur11nt ; 620 Pico: SC Takata Nu!U'ry, ;so Baker ln ONE year,* Absolutely 9, 10th. l.v/N~v.wrt Fri it' .,. .... uts, pre5ea110n furnace ACC.OUNTANTS REPRESENTATIVE. or COOKS. mt'n or v.·01nen, FAR"OUT St, Of No phone calls. RC\lred by Tru1t Deeds on ....,... lntereste<l'!' GIRLS b prnn-t;•, Tax Shelter Too! P~1', ret. SUn 6 P:.1. l:lountl check. Call Gary for $2. Call 54G-7041 O klast exp. Top v.•ages. Ap-E ·Z MONEY GOURJ\lET Cook/lloust>keep-C~'ii'fur details. ( 71 4) trip Bus, tv.·o rii¢it.s ~·11otel-discount Paper Routes pen ply in ~rso~. Carrow·~ f or your verbal capabilities. er. L rg family, ll\'e out. To p ~"1!!09 s:•'.l llrr pPnOl'I D/O'\'i:•Jp. HouieclHl\lnt 6054 OVERLOAD Jn Laguna Beach in Restaurant, Pico turn-oU, Earn SlOO + + pcl' v.·t.~k 11•agl's. 5 12 days. i\'iust v.·ork Cocktail party. 1't)t xmas. BABYSIITER· Ille hskpg, Many Locations. San Clemente for part·ti n1e 9<1111·l pn1 or "·kods. Refs needed. N.B. Mort, Trust Deeds 5035 l"'°""~~Att C~lly l ours RELIABLE domestic ~lp. ;:1. ::r~~ysT~e~~· da~ Cell Mr. Lambert CREDIT/$500 lpm·5pcn or 5po1·9:30pn1 in I ~a. ~l~t ~r~l'ebetOthe~ LOANS Up To •-. ,-~-~~~~~-~~-~~="':j•JA~vaila~~bl~•~·~·~M~on~-~-Sa~t.~days;,;·~pS~poc~fl•!llsts In Providing (all day) for 2 .girls. 9 &: 642-(rn Irvine Complex l'\)n1fortable spacious offi~-t & g1 ,'lle ;71~·1 &i6-l982 "'" -11 ·$20~ q:y.,546-8012. Temporary Accounting lL ~'ear Bushard &hi, H.B. Equal Oppor. Employer Type 50, clear credit & ap. across the su~1 from · . rn. · · 1--1-ro -t--..-..-.ns WANTED . {(Ms· ~J€a:n1n • PerlOhritt---~tust-be mat-Jl'l!'-Q-d('penct. -BOYS"'C"GIRl:S "l)T'O\'e -cn'dir applications: -OrSJ~4-County--Au:porl.--E°"i lL\.'\.D-owcn1hly_\l.'Q[k_ DO • .ua II~ _,.,.. local, references. $3 hr. able. 96J.6S62 11ft 6 p.m. Stable int'! corp pt'r.sonnl intervie\\'. C<ill J.lr. I e:oep rn'C'. 330SI calll' Perfet" ..,_ 842-0077 HAS 1 ~B=A~B~Y~s~m=E~R~,~,~A~N~TE~D-The DAJl.Y ~ILOT has CJ\ROL ~:0-91 45 Keyser, S::1-S09S. 1 to: S.1 11 Juan C;1p!s1rano. 2nd TD Loans EXPER ex! refs, s.i. hr. tor occ. babysitting, my ;.nJ'~ ~i.U:GE p~r~ Personnel Re50urc~s J.'E\\' GOOD OPENl ~Gs l Appll•nc• Repair 6004 prefer working adlta, no IX1me, Beach & Talbert EAST ' & WEST COSTA Agency: 1151 Dove St t.111.. POLICE: llSG 17-28. HELP WANTED Lowest r•'tes Or•n9• <;:o-,, child cour·area. 536478( MEDIATE area, H.B .. 8-5 pm. $35. MESA. 642-4321 Suite U2, Nt"WPOrt Beach N1'? exper.,,."''",~sary. Excel. Large Company A PPL1'ANC'.E Londocept'-,... IM · ~·k. 84.S-8880 Equal Oppor. Employer CUSTODIAN·. Immd ope ni n"' ringl' ne its. ~re 1~ S•ttler Mt9. Co. •,. ••• --.. ~ 1 __ , .,::!".: Denl /i\1l'<l. Pd \'ac. \\·e pav , E d ' '42·2171 54~1·1 RSP:AIR · ,, BABYSITTER, LITE BOYS & GIRLS ,...,,.p exp pre en-.. ..... :....,, while yoo train. St t. • xpan ing \Vasher!-Dryetsl-'Refrig. OOUEGE traJned &: expd, HOUSEKEEPING, llv-ln. N , Carri ~f Clemente General Hospital. SM4 OI • ai 8 I Senl.na Harbor area ·24 yrs. Call Jilek 548-:0m Lahdscaper desires add'I OPENINGS 830-6373 ·aJter 5. ~fission :~s~r.ruoo lsl~~·Bal~ 17141 49&-ll22 ext 224 npJ)..l~l~ih;x~1~ri~n1;~ NOW HIRING 15 °/.RETURN B•byslttlnn... _,.,• 6008 mtce. a~ts in area. Low _v~;~•l<>-::.,~~------I Peninsula. Contact f.1r. DAY H.ELP ~·anted. t.1ain\. Cu r e e r C o r ps . P er n1 ii n c 111 v.·o r k in SeasOned ~2nd $Z7 572 p _ ··• rates;Cal1Jan551-6417 BARYSITTER ~"11111etl. my Backslrorr at the DAILY 5a111-1pn1. Day Help. 111J 548...fia-17/968--9171 ninnufacturing, tllstrlbuting S400 mo. All due' oci. 1;.r; CHILD CARE.?\!>.'. home. Le. M•sonry 6070 home or yours. 5 Da}'s v.•k. PILOT or call 6~ 1311 & shifls. 1\pply ?-1cDonnlrls, ~r ht Off' & installation. No experience Sell for $2fi,OOO. Pvt Pty. play yard, toys. Costa Mesa. _ CPA's 7:30-SPM. Oka Sehl area. leave apnhcatio.,. 'iOO "'· Coast ll~'Y. N.B, 0 '.9 h >&ce necess:u-y due to excellent Box 782 Co!!tn Mesa 92627. 557-4665 btwn 6-9pm WIU..WIS A S 0 NS, BOOKKEEPERS 968-6092 Equal 6ppor. Employer before 5Pi\1. isp~tc tr;i1111ng progr11m !or n1en & Ann-•-coments 5100 Cl'JLD ... -my borne>. Brkf Mll90nry Lie. no 283046, ACCTG. CLERKS BABYSl'IT':R, teachers 2 Busboy/Dishweshe.r DELTVERYl\fAN, p e r n1.. Accounting Clerk 1von1en 18 & O\'Cr. ....... ~ "'" Brick, block &. a t one ACCOUNTANTS . p/tlme. Early morn deliv Ornnge Co. AirPo1t & lunch. Lots of TLC. Fair· ~71 children in Im hornt'. Lite Part tl~e .. Apply tn person. •.{ L.• Tun , to \J .• 'i~ ;,:3-1300, ('XI 40 TOP WAGES PIANO LESSONS view/Adanis. 5"t9-07:;:? MACHINE OPT RS house ke e Ping, $65 wk lffi ~;1un St at the ~alboa areas. No collect. l\l ust hR\'c Bobbie Boltoli Beginnen, Intennedl<l'tes C •• 15 Brick, Block & Stone 96Z.491 4 Inn Next to Balboa Pier For i\lore Information Call. • 752-1323 erpe:iter ""' 66-8266 TEMPORARY BABYSITfE'R, ~sekee""r, 2 · · . depend. car~i&-~~1:....__ Fl l\IS~I Efl: ror Dry Cleaner~. (714) a98-3S4I I ~~--°""~~~-= r-CASHIER. &: Ho~tess. exp D~IAL Receptionist esp Co1nhinu1Lon pl't'fen-ed. C II M & T Onl FREE-Learn t.ieditation, in REJ\TODELING • GENE;-;AL Pelntinti/Papering 6073 children 13 & 5 yrs. $30 ni>cess, apply 1n pl'~son & e n 1h 11 8 i 11 s 111 ' a" e 6'1•Hk19.l I a on U(I Y ~., C.yc. SI .. "•'• Grou"' REPAIRS, Painting, Doors. ASSIGNMENTS a wk. own trans .. Ci\t area No. 59 Fashion Jsl:.nd, Ne~·· Al 1 · .d f'LOR \I 1 . 1 \Al • ;>15-3451 port Center NB m1:1sis. so soni.e ciair:s~ e 1 • c e~ignet'. ".XP or -HOSTESS/CASHIER 6T;;r6979 No job loo small Uc. * WI LLARO · abil., a l'lia!li>n1:u1g position ~ID A· TF; shop 111 San 298390. PAINTING * BARi\L\ID in a new practice in HB, C.1L·nlC'nle. 4!J2-i123 9-5. Ch·er 21. n111tu11". Exper. Ap-* 9W.7776 * SANTA ANA EARN UP TO *CHEM LAB TECH* 84848932 --. ply Hamburger 1-tamlet. CARP EN TRY-Master 2700 N M • S S200 WEEK StartSSOO F~D sen ·ice. t'ull or part I:1 l:i Adan1s A\'e, Cl\f a[t Cr attsman-remodellng • THE FINEST o. 11n t. Free B S Chen1 Local ln· DE~IAL . Rc..:l'.pt /!'..•i:t•et:J ry, t1n1e. CRILL COO K S ' 2:30pm. See l\lr. Hagen. Suite 402 · ' · ~·~tt..i· f/t1 n1e. Xlnt sal & benefits. S AL AD PREPARATION ---- ----fin ish \\'Otk gull!'llnteed. 17141 .. 7•7631 strument co. ex.-. .... 1ng. Call "'" ::.r.oo. ('\SHI "H.. ._ 11. \l'fRL'" .' J-IOLlSECLl::AN ING FREE ESTIMATES 4*-nOS l'f No Exper. D11y. Nite Free/Fee Jobs Also .,,...,-._,,, ' r. c:s. '" ' "·· ~ H · ?. f CARPENTRY .PAINTING HOMES .. BOATS· PIERS lnterviev.·s 9 A.l\I. lo 4 P.l\!. Shilt Avllil. Costume. ,.\n 't:ordon Personnel DOCTORS ASSISTANT J-.;s, Xlnt oppo1i 111111y ~r;r ouseii·i~·es .,l .& O\'er. ~r CALIF. ANI.'fAL co•~nc '4Un5 BUNNY PATCH gus housev.•r\·rs &-n1n1!1rr .• 1\ho domestic cleanin~: ~!lruce s 1, • nv RD10DEL &: REPAIR * Agency &U-6720 Young lady (18-281 lo \\'Ork • . Ra·-~ed~· ,\nnr 6'.~l53 Huntington Beach Shelter &l6-307'9 2233 W, 1st St. 33.1 E. lith No. 15, 01 as doctors 11 s s I s Inn 1 / are inrei·estf'fl in "'•irkin~ -.!'!. ---. --~ --8321. Edi!IOn St. S36-65Sl $7.00/hr. • S t A 547 0473 ~_,.,..,..,...,.,..,..,...,.. recep!. in heal!h !'i))a. No l:mitcd or <''\lt'ndOO hr.u1 s, H 0 US E KE E P 1NG-asst Back of Humane Society RE~JODEL. add-on, gar CUSTOM PAINTING ANAHEIM an 1 na • OIILD CARE &: L g t e~-pe-r. neCl?Ss. U'e tra in Y"U .. \lon. thr·u F'"i. supervisor, 3-11 P n1; A.~IMAL ASSIST. LEAGUE conversion CUS1: & ne'ol.' Exterior Specialist. State 600 N. Euclid BEAUTY OPERATORS Housekeeping. \\'oman 43 10 Apply in person aftn or eve. . . . Apply at: . . 11 /ho~p exp nec. Sa n adoption, spaying and const. 25yrs exp drav.· plans, licensed. No. 254931. Bond· \\lith tollou.-lng for only Bel· 60 to care for 7 )T old 2112 HiU'bor Bl\'rl, CJ\! Un1~crsi1y o f Cahforn1a, Oeml'nlc Gt'nel"lll Hospital; · lnl ~2900 ed Uab>'llly Im ~-Color Suite 280 T-" · ~ I t 1 C Ii i-I) 496-111'.! e.\1 Z24 neutenng onn.,,.,.,... CUSTO?tf carpentry of all . • "'""' mont ..... a1 a equip""u s10p boy & lite duties. 1:30 to DRIVER tvme, g;1 cwa,.v on1n10ns --~-·~=~--ANI~IAl.S t~1POUNDED free est. 645-34l9 Consu!Ung &: Estimates. Open 9A~1-2Pt.t in N.B. area. Best equip. 4:30 pm. l\lon thru fr!. . . . litdg., lo<ll't se1'\·1ceofhce, lllSKPft. l'l·lilll!.'. mnture, ~fixed_ Shep/l.ab, blk/brw, types, cabint'IS & qu:Uity Low Co1npeUUve Prices. !Cal Fed Building) Be a 11tif11 I l y modern. Schooldays only. Own trans. u.an1ed f(lJ' part hme pr!Sl· f.lllnday or Tuesday f;()n u• in\·alid r::ir11. Ney,·port. male concrete. 96'l-1961 642-00'L (714) 991 ·3500 54S-52U or E\'es 5-lf>-1025. Brookhul'Jii/Hazard. $27 lion. Aflernoon, v.·eekd~ys, 8 A.i\1. lo 11:3(1 A. 1\1. (1r t)i .t--i?AO:\ :ifL 11 it.!ll. Alixecl Shep/Lab, blk/brw, Interv-ie ..... 11 9 8.m. to 4 p.m. BEAUTICIAN 1\·kly to start. 531-6254 aft & early i\,l\I. Snt. & Sun . l:30 P.f.f. to 3 P.l\l. 111o c,;F\\'Ol'K· 1• I · 3 · female Carpet Service 6016 PAINT &: Varnish ttmoving 5 Should h_a~'e own plck·up -, ,' ", -'. : , ~ t 11YS. :.; Shep l.ttb, mixed, 7,pup. fn:i1n \\'()()Ciwurk, Kitch cab, -=::::::========I JH~•~"~l ~Sa[lo:"~· :So:":":.,.:'°:l:lo=w~ln:g. · or va11. fr.r 1lell\·ery o( * 1000;0 FREE * "~t kl.'.: ~.x<~!h nl position. Terrlpoo, brw/blk, maJe JOHN 'S Carpet & Upholstery rum, etc. 531-8393 0 r i 833-253-1 Sell idle itcn1s ..... .,fH2'-5678 ne1,1•spapers 10 c arr ie r s , 0 1111 11 •11b l! •• HS-571 I. f.fi."ed 'l'enipoo, grey mHIC Drl Shanipoo, {Soil ij.e-531-614.1 before 8:30 am ACCOUNTING Help Wanted, M&F 7100 Help Wer.ted, M&F 7100 Contac1 Steve, at Th(' You Never Pay A Fee ! I I l\ll'<ed Bull Terr,. tan/\\•ht , tardants.' Degreasers & alter 7 pm. --'----c..,-----'----'----...;.1 Register. 1260 Logan, Costa * 833-9770 * nspec• ors l•male all color bri&:hteners &: 10 .---------------r.1e!IB 54()-3006 PURCHASING nlinute bleach for white PROF'. painter, honelil work, ' 1st & 2nd Shi'fts Collle, br\1•f\vht , male R 1 t t ~-DRIVER cn"""IS. Sa\·e ......,,., money eas, n -e x • uo::c AGENT Doxie miJ(ed, blk/bnv, male -r-~v-ti t .,_,__ ... ,, ~ Altra 1· f I 'I th by saving nie (').'trll trips. · es ma e. n.o::ua. ~"'"""• c i\-e ema e. u us ave SL ~man!. b r w I w ht • Will clean living J'lll., dining &12-3913 c I driven. lie. 5 Day v.·k. Apply $900 ~m .. ale ... 4_ I b I k rm .. " hall $15. Any rm. PAINTING & repair, 35.,,... "lany ~.m-~ om I u er in person, Costa ~1esa Car 1-;F.\\i NE\\l'ORT BEACH 1'1.1~ o..<Ultne, tan , $7.50, couch $10. Oulir $5. \\'Orkmanshlp guar. T~; "Openhwsf~t~ \\'ash. 2m9 Harbor Blvd. STOCK LXQl,\NGE FI R'.\l. ri!:i~e blk/brw, female 15 yrs exp. la what count! advantage ot my exp. Experienced Personnel Costa l\lcsa. PRES. OE:C. 3-4 YRS l::XP. Gen111in Shep, white, n1nle not lmf e~~.i I• do531 •"1""'01 5.'&7056 I Account1nt1 ELECTRO", 'ICS ·',,. ·1~C1· N Os '''. L E D G E o r G D /blk n1yse .uuuure .. ~ . *W II H '* Bookk " .., ... IA ING S YSTE '.\l. reat ane, & re y • c ·1· 601• • p.eper •no• ., Hpers Pe -h · 1 BUIX'.;ET COi'\IHOL r:i:ti:u ... red. fom •I• .. ..... c. Ri;BKO ..... ,.., Pio ... call . r1 I era Techn1"c1·ans • t'Osr ANALV >IS. blk b l I EXTERIOR PAINTING. A7''1''4;Freds3en5 .. ck41'o'f' WILLIAM R . MILLAN Cockapoo, I nv. cmn ° ACOUSTIC CEILINGS d d r T CATS Lie' , Ins' , Re a, enn!. & ASSOCIATES Sh Hair, ver/">tit. teniale BY CAt OUSTICS Richard. 979-3:l35. Anytime. Due 10 OUl' nipid gro\\1h. AGENCY Sh domestic, grey, female APPLlED, PAINTED • 10%' DISCOUNT • An ~al oppor. employer .--Sales l\fSt Data Corpor11tk>n has 4£119 \\'esterly NB No. 101 Tabby, kitten, n1ale & female GUARANTEED Wallpapeliqg & Painting -several hnn1edin1 ~ openings Killen. black/\\111, n:iale &: FREE ESTI?tlATF.S Free E!lt. 'Call 536-m48 Advance l\fgmt Troe SSKO for Technit ians. \\"e 11re female rnEE GU'I'TER PAPERHANGING & pain-Top Corporite looking for individuals in I.he * GARDENER * Sh domestic. black, male $5 OIT_,_l~~~ AD Urig. Z1 yrs Harbor area, foll01\1ng aN!ll.S: Be yo~:r O\V?l boss! Part or Tabby, sh hair kitten, femnle """'""'~-~~~""'""'" tt,ts tum. op 183281. 642-2356 ~:;~ty PRODUCTION TEST t/tin1e. Your own area. FOUND: Yourrg fetnn.le cat. CAL 1st CLASS Ext/Int Paintlng. Degreoed, self assured lndlv. High lncon1e. Gu..-anti>er.l ri•~een~-Vl~~a CaltM: Appli::-~~4i-reJ'intcd Paperhanlini. Airless IJQU.ghl for rapid ad· You can enloy the benefits of 1n e11cl11ng i nd CUSTOMER SERVICE Cus!oniers. Earn NO\V. Pay .,. ~. _ .. d~rywa~~·i,.;.w~all~t~ex~,~~~~~ l ~·~•;""';f,'~(:f25jf.Y"';;,;i'""';'-'~91>-529-l"'i'ifil v a.n c ement Into line rew1rdi"O career Alling CalComp m•liS memoiy DEPOT Later. .,._..,.,.,, -:: Pl t /R I 6077 management w/ooe o t disk end tape 1ystems. CflComp la a world leader 534-7187 o r 534-3144 LOST, Shi. hrn. Bi1rplf'!le kit, Cement/Concrete 60lt •• •r •p• r America's top corps. Call ln thedeslgnandm1nulaclureot 09mputerperlph· FIELD DATA 8 mo., vie Doi l\tar & PATCH PLAsrERING Sam Rider. 84&-1288. Al!IO 11ral equipment Our sa1119 growth from 111 million ENTRY LAB illSI Dal a Corporalion, a lead· l': In "Field Data Entry", hn_!l iinn1crlia te op(!nin~ in oor Rt>ttll·ing lnspec1ion a r(•11. lnclividuals selectt>d n111s1 h.'\\'e rl!«!flt related cxperlenc ·e 1nt·luding famil· l.a1i 1v \\'ilh ('IC<'tmnic l.'Oltl· ponl'nt!l, l'C l•)Qrds, lf'(c. \\'c RIC' a "'.,.," 1n~ 01-ana:e I\ L'ounr~· b.'\~er! ~lectrvoics !11111 off1•r1 ng you: • Cmnprruh1• 1'·1 v • ;\loden1 r :tci!10es • llJ dari:. f\illd \ .1<·ntion • ti Tmid holir!:1 ~·" 11n1·ludin&: 1 v.·eek <1t (11rl~11n~s~ • !.l<isic & l\lit,!Or ,\lcdical Plc;1se apply 111 person or conti:1c1: MSI \Ve li Im In 1 t c r Pl., C.~J. WE \Vll.L GIVE YOU nn All types, frtt estimates Pee Jobi. Dennis &: Dennis in 1967 to OW!f $100 milllon in liacal 1974 Is most 979-1738 Rev.•o rd. estimate °'1 yoor concrete Call MG-6825 Personriel Agency ot Hun-conduclYe to yaur career auCCftss, To continue this FOUND: Corona clcl f.1ar , ~re~mod~~·~llr>g~~job~. ~-~~''=~ [iipiii~u;m~b~l~ng;:;--~-,60iii7i71 lington Beach. 16168 Beach growth patt11r11, we are expanding °"' Newport Gen. Ofc/Tel't'porary ADVANCED lrvlnt" lndtuc. Contplrx DATA CORPORATION DEVELOPMENT 1'YI"' 40+:' Llle JO Ke~; ll'i Bl1k<'r SL Black Lab, 4 mo. old. f.1alo. c usrol\t CEl\rENT WORK [liBliiviidii';iHii.Bi;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;., eeach ollico. 6i~ Pt\.TIOS, DRIVES, WALKS L.R. ems Pl. U ~f Bl NG To quail"' tor these positions.""'' must hawe a rec· Call Don 64..."-S;:r,4 n&_.._.._ n4r.'!: w ANCIENT MARINER " ,--~ mole kitten, pan SI· ==,;;;;...:;;;:;:;::=-:::O::-;:;::. nc:u""'"'l1 I n.o:: . ater Otd ol su<icasslul sales pertormanc• rn •UNIVAC amese \\·hite long hal r. Bak-CEt.tENT \Vork, llflY kind, h c a • er s, d 1 po•· I Ii. C\JJTenll y Taking competltlYa mariletplace. Wa would prater lamll. ier-Fe.irview. ~723. Co mmerciAl, rtsidentia!, furnacet, dshwahrs &1~'\13 Applications For llrily wi1h UNIVAC toms>uler users and lf'lltall1tl0na Ll='=-'=A=bo~oo~ro""', 63&-=.~10l""'5,,.-,-I ~l/C &: BIA Co1npltte in )'OW' arH. ' PART Stl nJOyan puppy, J7!1l'I ~n:>11.-w~-I _,. 1.:....1. P1umbinl SeNlct LI c. DISHWASHERS v.iilte, curly tAll. \-et')' prelty ~, • UIA o ........ ...., 272t&l____ In tddilion 10 lhe ~unity for career growth, we Vi Cotsta l\lci11 557-0936 Rutionabll!; fh..-e tstimatea. ,;;::;;:""'===~=~"" offtf ••celltnt fT•ng• bentlll• and ~!Ion c. ' ~---'Call::::::.c:;6'H325=..c='-~= I RAYS PLIDimTNG ZERVlCE ~ly tn PtrtOn 3-5 P'l\1 WI lht lorm of bite ul•t'J ptus-commlltion&. FOUND. Pankctt, green, C t t •••1 Repatn.tn1tallaUona \V. CollJt ll\I."'., N.B. Coll~ Park, Costa lites.a. on rac or I ~ "H!,hr!!:_-!,.~rvlce~~-..,.="""631~~![•~~~!"'"""'!.,~"'!"' Ctll 54~147 bath : • ,;;;;:-"'?c:.:;i-::-::;::-::->=-::;, I h.'JTCHEN A: rtmodel· Remodel & Repolr 6081 ANYONE 1nttttsted In bein• 'i.oST:1Amelhyal ring In told in1 additions. a1te:ratlon1, -traJned for porttlain nails? 11'.'l'g. Cd~f area' 2 mon's. g:la.u alld lnit doors bu:talled, NEW O>nttrue.-remodeli.na:, Here ls your oppor, For REWARD 644-8608 Palombo Con. since 1923, home Imp. Uc. ~.i. ~· more into, Call ?.fagi'• l.OST: Ft.m. Olk . .t.ab., 2 tiicrnbel' BBB ssi:.1961. J. Lei;ttt 5-l~ml r.1eg1c, Ooeta ~I e Ii a, )1'!1. 11in1. to "D-0-0 " RE-GENERAL Contractor, new •R~ool~l~"ll!_ ____ !60l~2; I ;~i;'i~~-~:;;:--.;;;:-o;; \\'AR.D 646.0S2l ('t)'1~lructlo11: mt'!chc:il & .. ATTf.:NDAN'r, exper. tor rollifu: 41:. Slamtte mix. dentaJ 11.1lte 1.m Prov. REPAIRS. all twea. Ree.a. ,...,·ey11.rd ahlh. Good pa.y, l\lolc flea C'Ol~r. m-ott4, Uc. No. ~ J · Ltstu F'rff est. l.i!c'd: A&k for frln~e henefltt. Apply ffittU Ford R~<-'-'N"B.""-----;•1.1@ "'alt. S».5020 a1 ln1e Slnllon. 1COO ll'VfrKl, N.B. .. P ... H lend tffUnM I llmlnp history to: ProfeaMon•I Employment 2•11 W. LI P1lma Ave., An1h9'""' CA. t2I01 CAllrOJN!A COMPUr[• ~OOVCfS, INC. """""" .....,.,..,",~'"' __ ....,.. r .\1uous ,\s.s1c~;i.1 1::;).TS I eu..111 .11l,t, <-n. Applicantit n11at h:i.ve 1 to S FOR CO'.\TPl.ETE DETAll..S +7111 :Olrt.6f.IJJ )'eA-1'5 rtl'l'nl rrl111ed esperi-Call Corol 833-9145 I Equnl 01,1101111n11y rn1p~·t>r enl'e and have 1trong rtti;::I· ~rsonncl lle'1'.Jum<r: 'llF · lltl bftt.'kgrow'l(L Techn lcl\1 100'~ r n'f! Tl'n11101•11.1')' M.'hoollni or 2 Yt<ll"I J C pro-1151 Dove St. no 112. Nf'1,1 pon f~'PECTOR~ r Tm\.....,, fm-ed ~1ll!ll be v.llllng to -------, :--• o . .,. \\"Ork 'ovr nlmfl y.•hrn re-GENERAL O~FICE I fnl' .111 . .;hilt.&. Prnn, jobr; uin..'<l. P/time. 1'>'.Pln,g, flhng, ~ 1'/JUU\\'11\;t lirm ;\f fg q -ptiont ,,,;~. M..\1-12: ~P!l.1 j d 1 i. po .o. a b I r b10-1nedlcal Apply in pi!non or call: "'ttkdl )1L A)'\pl)· Na!tonnl pl11&1Je producti; Apply In Systl'nl' Corp .c.~, Birch pM'llOM "" p110nc Croon Msl St, N.8. :~i&-7360 !:-Ocar Ens::\n('('r1°' Co. ;,;,s1 O.C. ,\irpol1 l ;\lcr ncl1len 1\ \'f', JlO., DATA CORPORATION A O~B or PETHOLEU M 893--0i<l----~---I ,,.. J ELLY 11pttl1i"I t11 ,.,,, CJ11..q,1rff'll an~ :«-II hi~ Utms. ....... lM ker Si. thN>ad!'i ol flngtmllflJll'lll"lt Snl11\I firm!! or 11ny item. l'mlt\ ~1"11n: Ca. and e:iue bottln 11.·111 kl'('p t Jll!T Ch ll 64~ ;._,~, iil lt 5I0-6ti00 lhr lifts frynn sric:kinl' ·rcy ~n)Oy 1n111<r clnl'l('l !pll('(I by f'.11u:il 011ponunl1y en1plt13•f'r a Dally Pilot Cla~g,tfff'<t Ad i M.>llin~ "liflo"l nl'\'d~" y.•\lh ~1~r tn huy, ~·11 •>r r en t a Dnily Pilot Cla$S-lfltd 1\d, l"mlC'\hhljt. I ii-12·!.l]j~ --'----- • .. • •• D 10 DAILY PI LOT Sund.11, Octobfr 6, Jq74 Holp Wonted, M&F 7100HtlpWonted, M&F~HolpWontod, M&F 7100 Holp W onted, M&F 7100Holp Wonted, ~F 7100 Holp Wontod, M&F 7100 Holp Wonted, M&F 7100 Holp Wontod, M&F 7100 Ht tp Wa nted, M&F 7100 , SALES TRNE"SIOO++ Sorvlco Sto. M1n09or TE,!; EPHg'E ~ IMMEDIAT E & FUTURE OPENINGS ' Machin• Shop H•lp J~rson cApo.ble or runnina' & 1e1tlrw up amnd1trcl 1nftch.l11e tnols. L a t h t 1 , 1n\Jlll, dr11h; ttc. 11tu&t be t'.\l>t'-1". & have iood ~f!I. Good \.\"agtrt + ~·netU1. To applv Cull ~tr. Sh!\'t'UI, &12-T'~I. C~'n 1llarn.tfnt"- l11r1111r ro. Delivery-Sunday Only Receptionist ~ DL&a. F.d. Top M1tur1 Only/$700 Mo. ~=·Fri r~tr;..~ Nation&I Comp&JQ! No meeMrUcal v..· o r K • 12 10 'aam It 3 or S eve1 W iii Tr1ln -Enlf1tm1nt -Bring Ad OF DAILY PILOT TO CARR IERS. RE· QU IRES THE USE OF A LARGE STA· TION WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR . BENTON WILLIAMS, 330 WEST BAY STREET. COSTA MESA. TELEPHONE 642-1321 FOR APPOINTMENT. WESTCLIFF IOAa.1-IAr.1 Sliltt. a-v.'k )'OW' cllOlce 541>-lm E X' p erlenoed Rtttptlonlit ~['IOflf'lt'I Aaeney BE'rrY 833--9145 or a' ply 2991 cfac. t.n, t..aw Enforce1nent 1958) Cook (9481 Leathur Hepa1r ~4:i.\1 i;rucke1. (fi.I C. OtC. el Pressn1an ~831,.l Drafts1nan lRl :\l Boal Operator 1618) Rad io lntelligence (98G) S1eet Work., (5 1Cl ~J,\I[) 11n111ed. Bfl)'rrc-11 r.tnll•I, N~"l>Ori Bttach. 6Jti-l26;) - lllustrq!or (Q_lE) \IAl"'"r ENANC:E nu1n,. full 1\n1pl1ibian Opr (610) I tln1~. 111.'llde & ou111lde 11·ork. r.1cL>.>11QJd11, ~7917. 2036'.! Boat Rc1h.1jr l61F) _Beach BJvd_:_Hun.!:__ Jkinch. MAITRE 'd prefernd w/pleuant ~ (llla.rk lll Cen!trl P•r&onnel R•aourCll c~t P pelln.nl'f' & t e It D hone 1£31 E. Edlnel'l, $.A. A,;:Cncy; 1151 Dow SlJ;iii;i ......... iii;;;iiiiiiio;;;;JJ pe,,.,~llty 10 handle buKf --.,,.,..~::;'::;~~"-=.--l=SUO'lc.;tt,_l:;l2C''-'';:";:"""°::N:,-:B<;::•:;c;:h::;I TEMPO '-'" swltchbou.l A SALESPERSON SERVICE St&. Atleodant * * An Equal Opportur.lty Employer m~t tho public. Good typ. ~t11.ke S2f"I • IOO. wk. Trade f/Unie. Ute mechanical. ~~le~~lU req·d. V&ricty o1 ShO~v •d~rth1lr11 &: •P11ce, Nea.1 appear. Alto, older NHdS You Nowl son1e experience 1'1!q. (714) 1en1l retired man p/tlme. * Fil Cl k Holp Wonted, M&F 7100 , H~lp_Wonled, M&_F 7100 New t.LcWt,y In Irvine Indus. Complex. GIRLS & BOYS 10 yrs & older P.\RT tln1e countrr girl. 11rill lrnln. Apply ln peM1011 to Con1uct l\Jn. \V' 'te One Hour Man lnl'1H<, 2''00 PAUL DOSIER Harbor Bh'd .• 0 1 · ~13-tmlO. _Mr. Tyler... • Apply, 2.fJO Fairview, C.M. ~ •r I ;;ii;;.;.;iii;;iiiioiii;ii;i..,..,;JSERVJCE-;~18• S&leanl3ll &: * S•cr1t1ry Jr & Sr lubt' 1110.n. '1'011 pay & fringe * Typists SECRETARY benefits. El(fitr. mun pref'd. * Accounts Clerks Cot t• M1s1, 542 W. 19th St., 645· 11 63 110.liT trw N1•11,·port Bench Rt·Ktfluntt1l Pn!Cerably \\•Ith lfundJ(lbctr n10W1tllt.:hc. ~'lu1t be 11.bl-e to Y.'Ork e\'f'A. Should ha1~ n ptpf,l(ant pcraonalll)' & 1.._. R.bl~ tn n1lx 11•toll ~·Ith flf'Oplt'. Call Corrion Gt>lfOrid. 12131 273-1440 r.1on u1ru ld 9 ff\ 5. DAILY PILOT P•,.onn•I Supo .. tt or ASSOCIATES ~! Familiar w /a 11 Co1t1 Mesa F\111 or p/t. Shell, 11th A Your Ume 1' valuable. Inwtil Aulcultural trnde 0.190Cin· Irvine, N.B. It ,.,.Wily w/hlgh hourly tlon Ms cpenlni: for n SERVfcE Sia. 11 tan d rote1. C11JI S&ndy, 540-&450. Sccratary to the Insurance ialesmen, expei . Neat a.p. NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO I mAnager. Risk &: health tn. pearing. Days. Apply Union Tempo Tempora ry Help Join the poeple \\'hoJ'\·c joined the t\rn1y Help Wanted, M&F 71001 Help W1nt1d, M&F 71o0 INSPECTOR In-P rocess I :'\Tin. G mo'11 t's-P<'r •n ln- Pnx-ess. All clt>1'tl"1!11l' h1-, ••• JOB OPPORTUNITIES 100°/. FR.EE TO APPLICANTS MANAGER TRAINEES Ha s routes open In San Clemente CALL Mr. Hyde 492-4420 NEW FACTORY Branch ou tlets jus1 opening 111 areu needs the folloY.'ing: ,.lgmt Trne $185 \\'k Servmen (2) $3 hr suranct experience helf:f\ll. Stat.Ion Go I de n W c I t & I Genernl aecreterllll skll i . McFndden, \Vestmln1ter. Tooling C1r,.nttr1 {2) personnel dutJes. InlC'restlng 556.7075 rmltlon W/A growing co. Equal Oppor. Employer Also Fee Jobi, !~~~~~~~~~! J Jiaon Beat •-ni y· Exc•llent trln2e benefit• & ...,.. RECEPT/TRAINEE v•ol'ldng oond!Uon1. Salary 17400 Broolchunt, F. Vly Fays $400 10 start &: provide& commensurate with abUlfy. Sul te 213 !m-'71!'i a real chance 10 lee.rn & PLANNER SCHEDULER Call E. P. Panley E'or Appolnln1ent 10 KJ'OW Into a better posl· lk>n. Type 50, be attract!~ & eager to learn he'ft' things. CAROL 833-91'5 WESTERN Personnel Resourcos GROWERS Agency: · 1151 Dow St .. Jor FiOOrgl11.51 Boat Builder . SHIPPING 2 to 3 Yt1. e.'(p 1n tht • CLERK tlcld. blaooor Yach" 171 , \V. 17th St.. Ci\f TYPISTS i<PN'tion. ~lul11 knoy,• 1'f'llor ~IAf\',\GE'lE::'\'T/CLERICAL C'odes. blu 1•pr1n li, e e e · schen111Ur~. X!n't co . HELEN SCHAFFER bcot·,~111 irn.·lud~ I ~ks PF.HSON NEL AGENCY vnca11on nrtcr 6 in o s · ~262 Co.niPu!\ Or .. B-1, N.B. Full & p/tlme Salesnten Open Int e r v I e .,.,. i n g No1v for Pref O\T 25, muTied, car. p081tior11 tn Orange Co. All benefils, career posiUo11s. Sulle lt2, Nowport Beach ASSOCIATION To p18n. sc~ule .& RECEPTIONIST, cheerful, 1111 QUAIL ST. Immediate opening for an we Need You Now! For top Individual IW/min. 2 yrs, paytni jc>ba. Lorl4: & short exper. in PftCkaging & ship-term uslgnments. See Ua ping 1mall J>(lrts. Electronic Today! Bene.ftt.a lnclude exper desirable, but not vac-ations, paid hoUdl.yl: & req'd. hlull1 be IR.mlliar NO FEE. Ouistn181i y.·k olf 11'/f)R)' 557-ml ?ifust be 01·cr 21, bondo.ble &. '""""""4•94-'"'•106ii;iS;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ln good J'lh.Y!lcal cond. lla\•e coonlinate p rod u c t Io n needed for phones, typtna: & phases for ni, ma.nut ot cverload. Casual atmosphere NEWPORT BEACH small plulJc molded & Experience needed. $52.)/ 133-8384, ext 239 v.•/blll1 of ladlng tor surface I ~--------, I It air caJTlen;. Co. paid ti medical &. lire insurance. . .t:~..J Croup ins. starls r!11y of J "'l~~~~~~~~l"' car &; telephone, Go to Tic ntaclUned parts. Work from -"m~o.:,c:83::;:~~-="---=--!!!!!!!!!~~~~~~!!!!!! •1•ers::,•R;;,umo To' .RETAIL SALES SECRETARY Modern a/cond Iacilitiet ym convenient to freewa-j. LJ 21ah,.. ... "'"o';;~"u;,0;~,or JUNIOR SALESMEN Toe ~farket neattNt ~'Ou or Division Addressograph Multigraph :.1921 S. Dllhnlcr, S.A. Equal Oppor. t.:niploycr A.i:'C 11}-15. Earn S20-S40 J)C'r 1\f'Ck gett ing new C'U!<IOml'NI for the DAIL'{ PILOT af!er , Sl'lioo! and Saturdays. i 'ou ntust be out 1..f school by 3:00 pm 11nd he :ible lo \\'Ork Bt l~:ist 3 days per y,·eek. !ilo dell\·erlcs or collecting. Trnnsportation p r o v id ed. C' II ~·t812. Equlll Oppartunily Employer telephone our o((lces ... {TI41 835-7417 For Inrormallon TIC TOC SYSTEMS Equ11\ Oppor. Entployer MANAGEMENT TRAINEE Starts •t $S7S A reaJ oppcrtunlty to learn & grnv.· In both money & responslbllity. Some college or v.'Ork e"-per. pref'd, BETIY !03-9145 Personnel Resources .\gt'ncy: 1151 Dove St Suite 112. Nev.'PQt"t Hooch Clai;sl!ied Ad No. 234 Ptrman~t full time position c/o Dally Pllot 111vallnble 11.t the Fashion P.O.Box 1500 Island Store of The Red Costa ?ifesa, Cn 9'16~ Balloon Ltd., fine children's Equal Oppor. Employer apfH\rel. Musl be able to 1::-:::;l:ii:::-:.:zii:: I \\'Ork nights &-weekend1. Call Bar~ra at ~. NEWPORT * CCU'S Print Shop Coordinator Personnel Ag•ncy Full p-time. 3,u &: 11·7 Am.pie !rec parking. Man ·ouNCAN . . ELECTRONICS TYPIST/MCST OPER. One girl office. Full tlme poaition open for neat or- dttly girl In ttmall deslitn oriented company. Know· ledge In bookkeeping hn· port&nt. Must be experienc-ed In general oftice dut1r1 2865 FAIRVIEW RD. Fast, accurate typ.lats. l(d. payroll, Invoicing, etc. Ex'. S:OSTA MESA skills In ttpell'g .• , gramm~ perlence In office manage· (Corner Fairview & Adams) & ,J>roO! read a. req d. ment & sa.le11 helpful. Start-545-8621 Exp d. or will train. Ing salary $600 month. 'Val-Equal Oppor. Employer OCTD ton Corkwood. 934 W. 11th l2JO N. htaln. Sth F1r. Santa ~t. &15-&m. Ana 92702 An Equal Op. portunlty Empk:J)'et Newport Beach 642-3870 D\Je to our rapid expnnslon, Excellent Bent;fits ri.rsr Data Corporation ltas Good v;'Qridng cOndiUons SECRET ARY NICE OLD LADY (95l needs an immediate opening In COSTA MESA SILK SCREENER lh't'·in help In mobile home, our ln-house print shop. \Ve M1morlel Hoapltal ADVERTISING Immediate opening for .11.n TYPIST/TEMPORARY --~ lndl Id··" "hgood Ind i vidual famlhar . IRYINE PER.50NNEl SERYICES•AGENCY LEASl~G REPRESENTATIVE 5 da)'s a v.-eek. Call daugh· •i=u an \' ...u WJI 642·2734 EOE Are :;ou a notch above t!W! \\'/mMual silk screen Irvin~ Indus. Complex MANAGER TRAINEE J •l•o~r·;;'•'""i;i;""iii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;..,;;;;;;; v.mk:lng kOO\vledge ol ache-I ===~ rest & looking tor mol'I! 1 Thi k Ill vanoua Assignments dullng, the ability lo v.'Ork then Ju•t a '""""tartal """I-CC[d.,u;~,·.,_ c in exper. Call C•rol tU.91145 P/Ume leasing rep. need· Train w/B progres11!\'e co. Ind -•· u nnd lamill ~ • ~ 0 I t d NURSING epe • ....,n )', &r RN tion. t"-you"r• our gi•I · For ~n>pl•t• ~ta"· ('({ for allrat'ti\'e apt con1· PP o r I u n t Y or B -I h •= II ul I d """" "'"' \.N ......, .,. G L---~··-SADDLEBACK u· 1 ........, w m l an """"' "lu•t hav• good shorthnnd DUNCAN P•-"-1 Re.,·-• pie..-. in Newport BeaC'h lo ''lln(_'cment. real ""''~11... A/11-f ?-.fed-Suri. unit 11-7:30Ar-.I '' '""'"'"" ,..,"" Prod Con1rol \\tgr t<> SIS!\: 5 )'I'll PC Brd J:::...;per. show Apl'l & handle \e11.slnp; lfl<'h1de pen.~!on &:· prorit · 1 & tYPing slOl\s. Send f'6Ume 100o/e Free Temporary n••-:111,,entcnts. Ind iv !dual shflting. COMMUNITY If l u t u ·'In sh ft, I/time. Xll'l.'t benc-::t5• to Classified ad no. 193 c/o 1151 Dove, no. lU Nev..'J'Clrt ;;;!', "be will Ing to \\'Ork Jfson Best Agency HOSPITAL ~. h::e a~ta~~ .... v.:~k ~~~ ~~:ct?.~~ ~e:irani ~:~ rr~~. t ~~x 1500 'ELECTRONICS TYPISI', EXP~ IO.·eekends & have adaptable 17400 Brobkhurst, F. Vly history and V.1'.>Uld like to Hospital, 301 Victoria, Cr.I r!<:heduh·" 1 Year public-Sllile 213 003-6175 \\'e Ha~pe~~:ollowing join a growing Orange 642-m.I Secy/Recept. to S7200 2865 FAIRVIEW RD. P:,~~e,p~~. hf&x or s!lJ. Exec. Secreo.1ry : $850 Loon Shippln~ Clerk Aforlgage expe1" 10 S800 ~;1,:f~~:11~~J>C~·P::;c~lonf ~-~=~-~-=:==:==:==:==:==:= eOR Supervisor 0~,u~'!. based oom°pany lhat ~'"''"'~""'"'""""""""d Fantasia Wiid Blue COSTA MESA Annhelm. Ca 92806. ~ M Nu f AC ... RN & LVN/\liknd relief. I d pcrsonalit)'. A • Head Nurse w/3-5 yrs \Vknd or all. 4fr6 Flagship . Yon er . !Corner Fairview_ & Adams) WAITRESS Bookkeepers F'/C IU ST:tO AIP A/ll T.B. type lo $750 Le""I Se1.."Y/Prob.'lte fO ~i50 Supervisory experience • Competttive Pay R 1 N 8 642-SO.l.:I Dynamic oppor. for v!vac1oua 545-8261 . PLEASE CALL el CU Charg• Nursi • ~lodem Factllties r' · · · personality + indlv. to joln Equal Oppor. Employer N1tes only. Apply In penon. THE IRVINE CO. TURING 'Third Shift • 10 dayl'I paid vacation _ RN, full tlme or wknd relle.f, exciting ~w 00• Jfandlii!A: ?-.tust be over 21. ID3 Main Bkkpr/r.lort Banking lo STOO Rccept/Sec-retnry lo $6JO Rccept/J!tc type $!'~1() :Hedlcal Bek 0(1· lo $500+ Hen!al Agent S4.\l+ <..-u1nn1 ~ E:. 17111" !111 lli:lnel C~I Suito 224 642-1470 644-3389, 9am·Noon •Central Supply Tech • 11 paid holidays (including Conv. hosp. 1 wknd or all. VIP clien tele. Beautiful new Silk scret'n Shop, good · hrly St. + at the Be.lboa Inn. Equal Oppor. Employ('r ENGINEER Previoos exper, in Central l week flt Chrlstmas) 6-12-8044. olc. Cul l Nn.nci Ford, wage, Eve. hrs. Apply 226 Next to the Balboll Pier. Supply. Rotating Shifts. •Basic & ilia.jot" l\ted.tca.J ROGERS' GARDENS 8<\S-"WS, Dennis & Dennis Chlt1uila, Laguna Beach WAITRESSES LIQUO!t STORE Cl.ERK ALSO ~ -Please apply In person ls lnNced OfA ~~~ne~:c~~"l71C:r~r~:i; SP~AY PAINTER Exper. Neat Appearanctr !-lrin Clen1en1c. Exp only. Stnff Openings on 2nd & ~rd or contact: Spray Opiirator Blvd If 8 For dtsplay co. No Pl'!> 71 Or Ch·~i· .,.... '\f\i ... "' ... ., JACK IN THE BOX, lmmed. o p e n Ing s 9Pi\1-111ldnite, Also, 12AJ\1-M\\1, 1205 Bilker S1, Costn i\le!>n. r;;~:lil~~-Call ov.· n er Tc~~~,i:e~:iui~'i~ ~~~~ts~ Shifts tor espcr 'd T~rsp~i'ts~h~:~~n &~= ' . ' ~uJ1ti~~· Exper. preJ'd. Apply Surf &: Sirloin , ~ protecting basic d e!lig n RN's, LVN's & Aides MSI I SECRETARIES a 5930 \V. Ola!t Hwy., NB L\,'.N. S ... l.per shl!~. paru.melcn 10o·hile n1aking onJiia~~l~ew Rd. C.~t. Sh & Good typing. Benefit~ STOCK CLERK WHO \VANTS TO "''ORK? N~ .... Es,. Aid~. F'/ti!1'e.: changes req'd for manulac-E=::~~5 _:_:vrking __ DATA-.COR~ORATION i"""""""iiiiiiOiiiO ... ;;;;;;;;;;,t~-~~e .wcations..-pa.ld Exper'd in-&11-phaaes-ot --DRIVE A CAB!- JANITORS NEEDED: EIGHT GOOp QUALITY PJ::RSONNEI. .2CW-Tb~i.n.-DJ._G42..-35Q.). -+-tore Rhilily C)r small elK'-Apply Personnel Qf[lce 335 Beker SL ROBINSONS holkta)•1, & NO FEE. &tocki~ & killing in a GHOOSE )'OW' hours, work lro-mechanicnl assembll~s. 23561 Pn.<w0 De Valencia Cos!a t.lesa, C.a . manuf. co. call Nick· GTI tor yourself. be your Ol\'Jl i\lACHIN,ISTS nWntaining intended cost, Laguna Hills cn•O 540-tifJOO Chrli .• 546-(1.111. bou. ?-.!en or l'>'Omen. Can For full &. p.i.rt time 11'0rk nt a modem facility In SJC. Good V.'ll,I.!~. MILLING qunlity, schedul e & rate. Eq al Op Em lo 11 Fashion lil•nd ,..,..t::J STOCK 1'lan or \\'Oman be •l.iihtly handicapped. Upcr 'd in writing u poi-, Pyer rn Equal opportunl1y employer J·(pu. 21GDlr.tlP. t/tlme. Mon thnt Fri. l..zg Neat· Clean Appearance. documentation, work station ~~:;~:m=:===:=:==:=:j ;::.::•~t~/F~.::::~1 FITTER/ ri H.B. Druss lon!. Min ·age Vla., retired. Age 25 to 70. ll Leadman, 8 hrs 21 i\laids, .}--;, hrs 3> J11niton1. 4·6 hrs MACHINISTS M'lups, tool design, pro-NURSES SE•usTRESS ......... .,,. :5. ~7-2561. Supplement ~ income. duction llne t r oub le Want P /time Work? PRINTER/PRESS~1AN. """'"' -lJan . Orive a nb6hnor mona i;hooting, CO&t reductions. H0~1E?o.tAKERS/UPJOHN ~fust tlave exp operating Exper. Only, Full-Time ~ .. D~t' :;;ter:f?'pttt:e dYayell, Apply ln ~non. 0.11 9':!h"IG52 !olcchanicn.I englneertn(; or Aµollo preM. $2.75/hr to . · . ' ow Cab Co.1 186 E. 16th Profile Expcncnce Preferred llldu111 rinl engineering 01. urgently need& exper'd, start, Call for appt. 493-Slt.! E:rrcellent Benefits -& JOb for n ribt Pe r s on · St . Cost.a ~fesa JEAN MARIE BODY BOUTIQUE Minimum 3 y•ars IX· P41rience. SO + Hours cquiva!Cllt essential. I Prac. Nurses Llbernl Diacowits SECRETAH.Y-GAL rnIDAY 675-918-t ' · ,( Nurses Aides PRINTING Press operator Challeng'g. opp. for an In-WO~tEN, earn ful l pay lot ~ 0 \\" J NT E R\'11::\\'ING 1-'0H.: Westminster M all Westminster I As1i1tant Managers ./Receptionists /Service Counselors \\'ork In An Elegant Atmo!llJl1ere Jn A Rc11·11rr!· 1ni::-Position That Olfers C11allt·n~l'. Xln't Pay ,t: Cnreer Opportunlt~·. ~luRt Enjoy \\'orkln~ \\'hh \\'(>n1rn, l:io' Tlirn & 1-:nthuslastk. \\ l' 1~rerC'r i\i::e 01'£>r :t>. E\prr. In S.1IC's Or Puhlic RPlllt ion" lfl'lpful, Bu! Not Ne..·ps~:11·y 1\\"<' Truin Youl (pr111ntly) 12 Wffks Paid Vac 110 Paid Holidays /Semi Annual Reviews- /Life & Health ln1 ./Retirement PIAn I P a id Sick Leave APPLY IN_PERSON OR CALL 546-8030, ext ISS 3333 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa , Calif. Equal Oppor. EmplO)'t'r ?.f·F Call !II 687-lTilJ I !\l1u·h1ne Shop JOB COST CLERK I TOOL CRIB ~ Dny \\lotk \\"e<'k. 40 Hr.'I I ATTENDANT 549-3041 l'.:qual Oppor. Employer MASSEUSE F'/tln1e for men's spa. ?llusl be llc'd. Apply Tue1, Fri Ai\!. Balboa Bay Club 1221 \V. Coast Hwy, N.B. ~IECHANlC, exper. prefer· rubly w/Cl1111s A lie. Snlery OfX'n. Olntact \Yalt, 184RO Brookhurst St, Fountain \lly. Apply In pen!On only. MECHANIC ~oreign Car. &12-5133 MEDICAL CLINIC Office niaJJ~cr and back office girl required for ex- ci1ing aspect of medicR! fi('!d. i11ust have pleaAAnt peNOnaHl.y and a.ppearnnce. F:xcellenl salary and bene- fils. CALL for nppoln1 n1ent. West Coast Medical Group 1714 I 640-6420 f.'(pc>r. in Joh ('().;I, ll:111tl RC'flllh'('s gl'neral kriowll'<lge l'o~t. anrtly~f' j..1h~. r•on11111IP I or ll .l'h. shop 1001.s & equip· \\"JP inl'rn!nry. 'ln"! Iii;" I 1n~·n1 f..· ~nod 1-er'Ot'd kcep\11£: fi~'IJl'CS. T}111·. t.:illf'Ul61nl' .... kl!J..;. Th(' 1l•'<:h'f' !ll l'>P Qf ___ ..,,...,...,..,,._.., C•>Orl prnn1un~hln. '''t'\ j, ... f<J othl·~ l~ p:1rli<'t1· J\IEDICAL RECEPT. Indus. i\pfllY !11 l'1·1 .. ..,.u1 l:1rly 1n11~1rta11t. \\"t' llllike t•linic, N.B. Spanl.sh helpful, Edle1· Industries, Inc. ;<1!'•·1•afl p111111 in t•11r fin<' but no! req'd. Exper'd. 110\ l>\11·C'. Nt 'l\"l)(ll'I f)r:u•il < 1·!1•:111 ~h0p, \le hll\C ;1 liU"t;I' ....'~.'\:J-252$1,_,·CC-,...,"°"'.,,-=.-"7 1\l'l'O~~ frn111 n.r \1rt••1 I hsu•:.i,.:.!' 1>r ·11•lrk in.;uri • i\IG:'\IT trnt-21·30 Sl.50 11·k F.11ual Optllll". E1uplo,1rr lf'litt: !1•1111 1•m plro\n1e r11. :'\'(11\' ~uttrn st. College prf'd r<lr. ii;)' ; iu·w ·7 1~ y,,11 r "; t..:i· 11"1"d111Z 111 hr. rrn,~ .. \~1· lit !:ic-ham~. 711/S-IG-~1jj n" l.itTl\'I'. l'lf'/'lSt~ C('llllllt't: n1udl"I 1·11r 1Jli in i • .; rf••111<11i.I ~IUT~:L 1n11id 11'0rk. NeRI, '-II '' I··''' ,, •lit ., \l J:11'h11'ffS1)n . ""'". l'flt.•1·i.:cru· \1·0111iln. l.n.~n1.1 Daily Pllol Clo:s~1!1ed Ad' VARD NEWPORT Heach H('liOrt. 494-1100 G-1~.)6i.~. I ~:-:· I ~"-\\",1111er Ave .. Siinll'l f)on't give up the 1hip! na~~ificd Ad ! CJ.IJ tH2-;.6T.~ I ,\n:~ .. ~l.1·71:.ll. An Equlll Op-··1 .. ist .. It in cla.ssilled Shi p tOl'l:\y!_ _ 1,u1u11iry P.n1plfl)1'r ~l/F to Shore Results! 642-~;i;TS. R A 0 0 ~I fl I C ltBUISI ES SHA H[ CAR RE L~NTI PAPAL OVA T A C rUJ A L l 0 Y M A 0 E S M E A R I E@m}j] S I C R t EMU REACT SOOJ..JTillT O T R I P L E S A R E B R I A R I COA L S TROM DETES T CRAN N IF TY T UB ER RE...i Rf RALES IR O TERA I NU I IDEATE NEARS R I GOR fl l A-S FEPERS 1.JA IT E L ENIENT! -~~1-I '+·~..::.L N E I G H 0 I L L p R 0 IT E c T 0 R s E R u M r.:C+cL~o"'s=E '"'T~s ~~TIGER S ERAt SPINET u N lJV LTO LELDE 11 ND SENOR NEVER TEH S 111 111 I l I V E ' LLAHA LETTER I -l SP ARE T E R R UR EE ~ftiUTE AT I '-~ES ~L HAO "ii Q . E fl I N E Al L E R T R E M I S S l N f'j !i ( T R I "'"-'l"-"c;N;i..:i ( Infant Nurses PXP only, xlnt v.vrking cond, Apply Personnel Oltice. di\•idunl \v/good organlza· SUM&KR P~ time v.·ork with Celebrity 67~2133 days, 551-5619 evt>ll. lZ.lPhl, Mor1 thru Fri tiol'lfll ability, who cai1 type mt; Jey,·elry {The PfU'ty plan). Car Nccess. Refs Req'd 00 10 6J \VPi\1 & take dlct. No lnvestn1t. 968-180 PAY NO FEES No. 2 Fruihlon Island, NB 7fi2--0992 QUALITY Ef""ual Oppor. Empiqrcr tn/f /.lust be R.hh?' to 'l'Ork Y,.'t'll FALL \VO~!AN who need• $500 + NURSE/COMPANION \l.'oold You ~ interested In llving in a nice home, help- ing nice people, earning from S;-i00-$600 ~ mo, & have benefits1 If this in- terests YoU & you have good refs, then Plee.sc Call 110l\IE~1Al ~ERS/UPJ011N 752-0992 NU R S ES A I DES & Orderlies. CaJl Ik>tv.'tl 8am· 4pm, ~-~. J\lcsa Verde Conv. llosp, 661 Center St. Ci\I PRAC Nurse, li\'e-in for 2:i yr old fem invld who works. Rn1+brd+sal 539-T:iOO. NURSERYMAN £.'(perienced or horticultun> bkgmd., Hunt. Bch. 842-$866 Of'F'ICE IRVtNe COMPLEX Pays Up To $600 Need typing ot 50 & some bookkeeping ('Xpt'r. for this inlcl'C&1i ng int'! ro1-p. Should hn,·e 7 yrs expcr., be rcrsormble & attra~tive. CAROL 833-914.l Personnel Resources J\grnc)•: 1151 Dove St Suire 112, Nel\'pclrt lle11cb Of-'Jo,C~: ~L\~AGl'~U GIRi FRIDAY-Blight and l'lletl(elic "·Ith capability l<> \PUnJ, \l.'e l'oilJ lnt.in. TI!l'l H.ed Balloon U d. Call Afr, Jter110lds. 8-16-0011 for appt. 0 1-·ncE All e ndanl, aJ- lernoon~. No l'lt'riC:'ll duties in\"h·cd. B11.yviev.• 11-!anor, C.i\I. &12-3.'.iO:-.. Optometric A1sl1t1nt \\'ill 1ra in. ~fatutt. ?.lust t~·pe. llll\'C car & live Jn area. MS--0~. wkdys, 7 • - PART· TIME SECRETARY w/people & handle detail mo 11t. Salet oriented. Mr. ROUTE SALES p1'0CCd11re11. £t<p. not nee. Lycns. TI4/~ CONTROL \\"Ill Train, Salary,. Comm. il wlll'g. & quick to leru·o. WINTER Y echt SolHmon Bo V hlcl Fu All Approi1:. ~ per mo . nus. e e rn. 641}-l4lO Bany \Vood YtLChta, 300J \V. Requires exper. in QC, !o.fRB, Exp. Pd. E.!ltab. bus & J iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..,;;o;J SPRING Cou.t Hwy., Newport Beach V.'Ork: setups, v.'litlng ln· te.tr!tory. ?.fed. cove.rage, SECRETARY 645-9696 sect i 0 n pro<'t'dures & Pl'Otlt Share. Retlre at 57. related documentation. Ex· l'\o Str:ke, l..ayoff.!I 75 yrt. Free! Work In pto.rsonnel. YOUNG i\1AN able ro \loU'k 5-19.3110, !\fr. Tucker, 7-9Pilf Ne\-er 11 dull moment. W H mornlnp. Light Factory per. w/electro mechanical IV -• ~.1 "· e ava -~ 'I ~ will" devices deslrable. Equal Oppor. Employer mlt 011ue11u people to V.'On• .. "'"'"'' "ust ""' In& to STACOSWITCH, INC. "iUt. A1!o F"' """~~•. Immediate Jobs work hard. M&-27112. . ll39 Baker, Costa 1>1csa SALES Jason Beat Agency fo y I YOUNG 1t1tn needed for 549-J0.11 Out.irtandlng potential for J7400 Brookhun;l, F . Vly r OU. f1ov.'t'r Shop. Wii i train Equal Oppor. Employer person w/sorne sales exper. Suite 213 963-GTIS , right pe.,."IOn. Xln't op- Indiv. mus! live in O.C. I ·~""""""'"""""""'"""I 'Edit ponunl~ f{EAL ESTATE area &. be v.-ell established *Sec'ys, Bookk••pers "' ora ~ E:e~::SI ~~:''~~~~~~~ ~-o:~ily.j. ~~fe~ 'ti~e ~Ind'::."~~~ ITtch. lllu1tr1tor1 I •dwwMlw Jri;'l dependant slntus in delwce n<ldition 10 full training pro-4020 Birch St., Suite 104 /Repro Typists . -~ oftice11 with c ompet e n 1 gram. Some college pref'd. New;xirt Beach 8!3-8l!kl secretary. Percentage Je1:1.se. AAMES 100°/. FREE Dial A Job U3-0l55 /Composer Oprs For at.lditlo n a l In· Bureauof N Ch T y formntion-write A11.'!0Ciated Employment Agency 0 arge 0 ou IS1er1t1rl11 South Coo.st 1Jmkeri1, P.O. ~In Mesa S:.iG-1100 --•E•••ta•b•Uii,hiiediiiO;;l!l65.._;;;;;..,I Box 1M5, Nc"'fXl1't Bench, 2700 llarbor Blvd Suite 707 S , /Bl LI I /Sr. Typists Ca. s~ Anahm 600 N. E\lclld 776-8120 ec Y -ngu1 I REAL ESTATE BROKERS Free! ?.lust speak Spnnlgh /Gal Friday • • L 1 c. ' · fndustrinl, com-SALES fluently! Wol'k In plf!RBl11lt nierchi!, re!lden1inl, con· office 'v/conwnlal JX>Ople. /Clerk Typl1t1 solidate }V11r Independent or TELEPHONE Also Fee Po61tions. sniall hrokcl'llgc bu~inl'ss I! )·ou are capable ot earning Jason Be1t Agency I Acctng Cltrka inlo a f:"T'OY.ing, Irvine.based SJOO + '>l.'eekly, hard work· Su~~~~rrookhurst, F n..Y1¥rn /MTSC/MTST Oprs Hr o kl' r 11 ge-lk\'t'lopnit>nt ing & looklng for a position ' "'""":::'J~::'l~~~l""!!!!!", Finn. Prestige ofricrs v.•i th whlcl\ crrers co mp any 1 SECRETARY IMachlnl1t1 I 'enrity. Assoelaled Broker benctTts. ruture, slnt v.·ork· or Broker·Snle1;n111n Rela-ing conditions & job stablll· Santiago Bank hM en open-/labor ers Uonshlps ovallable. \Vri te !.)', plcll.!le call ing tor 11 Sharp Lonn Broken, P.O. Ao" Wl07 NATIONAL Sect'1!.tary. Experle n ee IA11embly Trnta IOOS COLLEX:J'OR PLATES, Nonnan Rockev.·eU 1st Edi· tlon GorhAJn 4 Seasons !Boy & His Dog Plntesl $185 &: n1atcWng tlgur\nes $300. HR\'e all Norman Rockwell Plates, (Streakerl, (Tiny Tin1 J, <\Ve!ghln Jn), also itav!lnnd. Ch r latma1, Haviland Pan'On Unicorn, B & G, Roy:il Copenhagen, Lt!nox. Hunmmcl Plates, fig ur i n es. Hun1mel Chrl.strnns Ornament• & Uadto ligurb1e1, Ca I l SJS.<292 Santa. Ann, Ca.. l'r.!70Ci. helpful hut not lleceA..~flry. , R•,.-Estatc Sal" OFFICE SUPPLIES Wiii ""''tho right I""""· AND MANY MANY MORE! ANTIQUE Dynan1ic Ne .... · tean1 \l"ith 001-m1 or :..12-2432 good r leriNil skills a n1ust. SHOW & SALE ~ k rd .,.,. Co n t a c t ri.rr:s. FeTJCUl!On, Pr"O\<tn " .. c · reooo · '" to SAJ~F..S !::::?(JO Interim 80 E'.'<hlbiton. A n a h e i m 90% co1nmisslons. Person DR. & ATTORNEYS i~:.Oiii""""""'""""""""i Con'lentton Ce n ter. to ...... rgon tra1nin!? for ne..... Personnel Service ~... · ~--soo w lice~11. Call ~l!aclenda \VIJ I be your clients. Cover *SECRETARY to $IOO ........ onua rwuna. est Real Es!ntc 963-8316 or the 0. County area. Preftenl Free For treasurer of loclll 17511 lrvlM Blvd. K11.tella. Oct. 4, Si 6, Fri-Sat 542-5656. a business stoMce l'Om· mfgr. Req. mature. 1ndlv. •115 Tustin l -lO Sun ll-6pm blnatiffn ""'Ck•<>e, S800 Pt>r I Sf:KULJCH PRODUCTIONS REAi E!ITATE sales: Ex· ,.... ~ w/h gh 11cills & II.able work IJl..5460 Derlenced professionals on-~11ii'n. ~uS°~a"~ l+ yr~: bc~iFee Jobs AIAO ' Equal Oppor. Employer ANT I Q U E -c o L-Ty. If )'Ol' have a record expcr. Ani.>tJs Gordon Pcnonnel ~ CE.'Cl'ABl..ES. Sho\11 & SD.le, o[ O\'er $20K we can show BE'ITY 833-9145 TEAOIEft, dR.Y care center. Oc t 5/6. ~mle Age Lod~ ~'Ou ho1\· ro double )'Our In-Peraonntl Reiources 333 'l!ency 642-6'7roC 2-GPJYI dally. Year around. Next door to Disneyland 0~ come. Call Sun!lel Rcalton ARcucy: . 1151 Dove St i:· =:==:=;";i"~thCN:o:. :":'':;':'=I Expcr. w/~pa 2-6 yrs lfarbor. Blvd. Sat 10 to 9. ~84""'8--0""'100""==-----I, Suite u:z, Neu.p?rfBeach or ,early~ c,, lldhood classes Run 12 to 6. $1 11.dm!sljion. HEAL ESTAT1':: Sal~ Re!a.U J\lu.slc * SEC'Y EXEC. req d. 64~10 !ree prkg. Save Zc with SALESPEOPI..J::. \\Thy n o I I Bellev1 In Music Edltotial & 11nles cfflce. lhls ad on SUn. 11m·k in th'! hotte~t aren.!I, It ynu tu"e musically inclined, Educntional 11.udiovisual co: TELEPHONE SALES PUBLIC AUCTION Otrl'ltn.nt1ln1t opportunity tor Huntington Beach/Fnuntnln Jo~i o dynomlc gfoo\ving Lyceum l~uction, Im:. Part time v.·ork 1l v a· I I , ?-.L\NY JTE?.1S OF FINE highschool S?'ftd v.•/xln'I \ ulley1 Let u11 lniln yuu. tlrm offering rapid growth P.O. Box 1226. l...agun::\ 9am-2pm. Selling the Los ESTATE JEWELRY ART skills. Sh JOO, 1yplng65 wpm. Cull Phil l\l <:Namee 963--IM? \\"/fun co. Ciill Nanci Ford. Beach, Ca. ~. AngeleK Tlmtt to pr'O\q>ects 0 BJ E CT S, ANTIQUES, 1·0 work p/time. 1'tusl be I =''~'il=l'~''°"'-~R<::::.•lc.,;,E=fl~•="~·--843-12M, Dcnnl11 & DMinls 49-1--0747 In C>range County. We pay nr-..'l: fo"'URN. ETC. PHONE '11'<'11 iN>Omcd & h a v e Rt-al E11tate Sttle!IPf"fllon PtMIOnnel Agency of Hun--w11ge1 It comm. Call for ron INFO A BROCHURE. plea11ant personality. XLn'I WANT A CHANGE? linrton Beach, 16168 Be:ieh Secretary/Recpt. detall1 1..:M&-='::::!lOO::;;,,,· ==-~~-I v.-urklna coodlUonll. 85% COmmJulon 81\'d, H.B. Xlnt typing, tront outce Los Ang1l11 Times Ar.tERICAN OAK Call Or ,rnc1 ltesumc ~. Llecn1lryg SctlOOI SALES appearance, p I e a LI a n t 540-().1)1 HauAer'• decor The REALCO, REAL TORS !\tan or .,.,,,man. p/tlme for perstttm.Uty l'@qlllred. Beilul.~ l?J)protunlty emplO)'U_ 413 SW St., N\a..irt. Sch. IRVINE COMPANY 4%-ISl> or &11..mD 1 t ho 1 1 5 2 O Bay1lde office. Chttllt.ndlfl8 Can_..., vo.11.,. e. ep ne SA el. -\\'Otldrl;ll cond. Call Barbfuii. Telephone Sal-SS ·-··:· SSO Nowpo" Ctr Dr RECEPTIONIST hn/.-k. 1Iourly ,..,. + M111> • "''~•only; 642.l!W -~·-8IW Not-1.-<uh ,...tsl.,., Newport Beach lncentJYe, Pleaaant phone ' · VI'!!')' crnate &: perfect lfOtk. Ca 92663 U~t orn~ v.-ork tor· Ana· voice A pel'IONIUt)' 3 mwil. SECRt"TARV-s.I~s °'flt. Costa M111 Ar11 Ing ordtr. sm: &as-nsz hf-Im ofc. Co.. bene..fit• Exptr. helpful, but will new rt!:90rt 1iot~I. Shorthand ANTIQUE ~ •p Attn: L. Currier V11ca1lon l"lc. lnl.en•lftw 9 tr1tln. Costa ?.ftu location. k Hotel f':q>er, pttf. Xlnt Wark From chi ~ S TABLE, (714) 644·3319 A1'-f Mon. 1011n<1. Sun1n1 tt Phone ~7-SEm. bonefl11. MlrZOO Yot1r Homt ~8862rack, tt1ckl 4 diet, 9Af\.ITll Nt!On ?o.fiu-ketlnr Co, 911 E. Un-S!-;.u.fSTRESS requiri!!d, SEC'Y LECAJ.., Christian, Top Comml11fon1 A II ~-11•1 Oppo E plo r '°'"· An·"·1·m. 1 I pP •nett IOIO .!.\j r. m )'f! ="='=~"~'re="'---.,....-1 •ln•le nl'f!dle., ('U,.tom Jlry,·. 1111 ure, a rport ares. • 558-731 1 * .. R.ECEPT. conVlt.!~ntt hosp. Ing-, \Voric 1n plea11nl 1hop • 7UUIOO Equ11I Oppur. En1pJeyer ROYAL CAs Stove. 4 Bllml2". CROSSWORD PUZZLE , ANSWER Like to ""'de' Our Tmder'o E><por. ~ "h<aclt. P"m•nen1 ""169.1 S 11,,... $ •.r• tor i:;. C.11 In wnrkol(ortler $2S ' •-----------..:....:..:.~.:.:..::;;:.:=.;.;,,,;.:..:.:...:.:.:.:..:. ______ P~d~ column•~ for >WI ----""-""------' for aepolntment t.odor • , • &l:J..,$673 Cluilned Adt ••...• &U-667& ~l · . ' . . , -· . \ .. - • • I I I ... ,.PILOT •Jl. I Appl •nces totO -C1t1 IOU Fr .. To Tou ..,.5 O•r• 5ale ..,.,5 Mf,celt•r'tMVI 11WU \lfC. Furn. & £quip • .!!,_.. ts, mm1nt/S.r. twcyc1M/ , MOtor rtomet, 1-'-~--------------S-len '150 -S.t./R_Oftl 9160 F!lEIGllT DAMAG}] SALE PAMPF.Jt Your cu Ust FREE lclttPl'lll, r.t 'l~. Halt PUBLIC AUCTION SALE n~"F. 0111 on 111toc:tc: ot elt'C-HJGltLY quaJltlt'd rotlrt'd tn.1-------,--~ew Hotpolnt Rmigeri.11on:, Thrkt> .... .,.kly CA'l"l''BOX ~ ---. ~u •:., NJN1 In U "' ,_. Cpt ltat1k· calculkion, Cannon, dlvidual wan ti part lin1c/ ' 1JT3 TIOCA Mlnl-mtr . borne., must RU. r..iOO ml., b ""' ....... _,""" """' _......._,, 1.., !ANY 1~·1s O>' FIN~ . i>iUe Aery..... ' ovtr Ad fl ~ • • u ... W,•1 er 1 . Dryer1 , Scr"\'1tt. J>hooem.62'1T Irvine •u.. R 40 ;tdi, ti., yn. ol(\ ST;a, 'er, , erm . fu Urll'"-)'8.1.'htma t~ni..-e ot1hw a 1her1, New "Euit-.;;y-i;;;n;;;;;::;i;;;;; F.~ATE JEWELRY. A PorlablH.. d e1k Of 111::\pll@ra job.~~. WUTan()'. CttdlL B f lll~IAL\Y~ adult mtll~. NEED hoppy hon)j •/kid• 0 B J E c T S-, ANTIQUES. 6 pl~ place set'g-, Edme n1odel~ 81Dl. 1.n.~1. --~=I 3623 W. t:j,; San ° A, Cl-A rt>.1ti~1ereJ. 11arniI1ce. for Doll:le>~ ~ rooa .. FINE F'UJlN , ETC. PHONE China + xtru. "l&lchbox ext"C ~Titer. on gki, Bo.ti, M•rlM e,. to:J0 I I .. x ...... "" .......... I .......... 67HtlXI near Jiar:.~~ Ana, $50 JI~ h'brkn..J»OW" Jn ap1. 841·1074 FOR INJ.'O A. BROOfURE. e11..r•, z tp°'.,_ 2'< I & 1 •c-1 lkttch S1at\onfn, 1803 Ne-A'• ..... K'·--~ boo.• -• 5 <'" ""''" t't'!lllOl'IH. ....-"''h Uf t11 . "4 C'I ..... ~-.... ..~, .. near n111w REBLT K11:nmcn Modtt TO Dot• I040 ...,,. -.....-..... Prov. chn. $4~. 0 Id • po." •~ ~ 7 trailt'r Jm, Marlin PQW, Trallen, Utility 91• UTILITY "t~ILEll \Vasbtt, $8:5, Speed Qu~n --'--------Furniture IOSO J:'"\OHMOUS GAR AGE ~·:uncraJ $L to $12.. (l(ber 0£$1': I. C R E D EN "" A 10.0 Penn ss,;. ~ ~ •~ G E ~-e PUPPY WORLD SALE L~••<>e, :i ~hui;hi ~I 1·-•·n<f --1 i>role1!Uonal lize. lt111twr oo m 831-»at ru ... ,,.... ..,.,. . '"'"'tr e ..... -• _ea. ...u .,.. c .... , e, f·"k _,,,,-,.,., ''"11 .... 8o.1t•, Power 9040 pertone wuher S85, Guar 8 u 11 Te r r 1 e r La b BLEG.Qrr Banquet Oinl:!,li serecrnt, bookl, elecirlc L'Oiu ...... """ .... ~ VlU • dtl 546-8672 Welmanuier, nuu :..... .. Sib'. Stt. C\llJtom P.tode (CJ'n!l(' orgn11, rneltonorne, l'f!ll.I' POCKt.71' -1"'u\11IOl'll, 6 di•"· IK'Vf'J' ultt!J. Pel(! SU'i32. \V :n· R.ESTOR.£1.> -Mere. I ' Auto Ser. & Pam - REBLT Wuhera, Dryers, Ii: Jfuskt)', Chlbuah~" nny I: Chilfftnl Contemp 10' v..</~ vie\\• mlrron, kltchf:n sturt 4 rune. ft~ ile<>lmnl, 9v Ink<' $19'S. tm-R300 . ctl1s\r, Twin • c r.e w • • F 0 UR l 3x T 4-•Poke Dishwuhtts. Guar. up 1 P o o d I es , Plt Du.Ila, eXtens:lons. 8 uphl.ltrd Chi\ Ir• brk Ii brae. shelves, =illde $19.95: 9 d!alt, 4 1ur1<' 9v 6 BUSINESS bttnd mdiM, ptrled 1*.>' launch. Blmlnl Americana for O.taun and ~Do,1--•.5•6-521!, Cocl<a-100 >l lX ED \\ith a.rm•. 2 Ctederu.11•. 1 projt'ttor, clothe5, etc.etc. , .. --•· S"btr "•quan;y, 3:illtC., wilh S p ... :r :unpt.. top full 00\'UI I·~ . Toyota_. Wheoels only·U20. 1 •a""' .....,. w/dNT•, 1 w I r.e c ord llOl Bcrkllllre, NB. l0-5pm. .. ... '"""' .. ' "" · · & ant4:!fluaa, coax & maat. ru=._'m ..,. or ·~••t ' · tm SU:ruld 125. llUI & Trail \\'ith Coodyear A.Qlit.$180. 1 76» PVPS Stud Servlct Most pltt)'Cr A record atoro.gc. on-0tf 2 place dedmol 0 Y Value over socoo. Sell $1300. u..rv•~" .,.,,,,---,..., rtan, J)trlitct 111111 blko, Al"° alottl:d uilOY1·$lO ('Och. I LARGE lllde by aide ncfrl · ~s. Roller Canaries, Xlnt for Ii dining nn or ANTIQUES. PI• t t 0 r nl S:?i:OO. P IPnR t1pet·\fy 6 or Olll s..7.fl4S momlnp. 23' UNIFUTE. 9 mot al,,, nlao •tr-et Jelfl.l s~. 1911 642...({{]6 reiw.tor. : •t Point. White. Rt>ptlles & Turlles. Open conference rm. $800 or bat H.ockl!I', LaW80n Oak C'hnlr, 9 dlirlt & •end check or ac."t:f!~ lnc Qy bt•ldge, crtni l)f\\V l~ Gre11o1 1ra11 I ~==~-~--~--1 $150. 673-1P25 {9·5 p.m.) ~E:.:•.=":.:·..:"";;;::..(11117.<'==---otter. 673-$67. ~fnboi;. Drop-Jes! Tb I, 1'.10 "plus $1.:S poll&!(\! I< DF.SKS $75. k m~ CAblneu1 \l'alnut In!, twn ltO ChP\'Y bike Good condition $295. V\V motor. ISIXI cc, M h.p. I E 675--0009 -, ALASKAN • $45.-$!\i. E1t2llsh Set of hndl; to: KolAr, ~ 2 2 3 $75. Tablf!I $4). Ph(1to O~IC. Bou1tht fnr $23,TJO. , i&ll5G Just prof. reblt., atroog, LA~DER ~II rim tub. MALAMUTE B~~~~<f°R1~ h I ~~cn111":i ~:~~r·s:. ~n1:.~th St. c.~I. Pwnona,No.IBUYC·',1 ~ ~~ Sl50, &: m ,. c. ~13•500· 646-4182~~ {z 450 JIONOA. ctr1111. Ul ~= ~· 0 . N . 0 . matehin.2: pedestal link, & ~m . l2 wks. AKC regfa. cu11to1n KOfll. flor<U f>rlnt, LANDAU fbrgl&. Cantf)C'r • Dmo Elcct:rostalle Copltt '74 19' G~OOE TRI nil. !{el.met &r face11hlrl!I 2-tOZ, pol~tied m<il wlieel$ commode. $150. Gas sto\'e Very reu. to right party. ~~.~·~1· d~nlfl~i aheU lor lnip. P .U."s ~Olit Cood, w;OO runiitur\.l 5. I & aper S!ij tl-IG--03.37 or HULL., lJO omc, UIM.'d twice. lncld. Ask tor t-1 r • '" or rt~. f4). rtal US. 673-lt8Z7 54G-0184 completa. giu k>tr'I &. '"'Rtl', $.100.-sell $175. Vuporlu-r, ;.iimllan1.'t.'ir or .... 111 ae.11 lor you &I'"~ • · Coat $5295. uc. $4Ul\. llar~·e. 006--0-IOO be t ~. llu~aln. e\'e 832-l «7 2 year old washer I: dryer. C 0 L L I E PUPS AKC case cork 36xlh1. fiip1l' mln'OI' pie., clothes 11).I Z MASTIRS AUCTION [ ;,· 846--3575 a.ft a call gn....w1.. I -11.,,=''°cc~v=w~ ... -.-0-~-1-no-·lud~l"l-t ru, Wf!llUni;bouse, x J n 1 S.\BLES Shottr, 1\'0rmed, dresser &: nite tablr, lite BBQ. Bike 'rl\ck None O\'et' 64, 1616 Ul-'6lS I Pl•nos & Org•na 8090 71 Sklp)•ck 1&72 JIARLEY SPort1ter. acceasor!eA. cond $21)). &ICH»GS 0 1· 14'£~.~h,eck Champion lioe blue. 003-5363. $4 . 9-5 SAT/Sun. 556-0316 or • l'IANOS 20' Open 165 hp, 1/0, "'ired Blaelc' 8 in t xtentkln Pull ~ 83&-3596 ~ .....,., aft. 6 or Sundn,,y 83$-0974 f radio, xlnt eond. $5,900. bftcks camel seat sissy bat KINCSlZE Bed new 5 pc;: nntiqlX" OR -!!et, plantl, t · I I-'-ENGINE Tune-UP, Aulo to Rent Wa1her1/Dryer1 PERFECTLY Gorgeous 9 mat1rea11 box ~pr\na:s k baby cloth('8, lll\K'h mnre. WANTED • ORGANS Call &t2-9259 llghwll.Y IJoei'I \VI I COJtSU'Cr LawnnlO\\'t'r cngints. Low $2 \\1c Full i t month old female Irish St't· frame. Sttll packaged, xtm. 2'l1 l\1ontt'N-'y. SC: 492-5720 TOP CASI-I OOlJ.AR PAID $5 ~\Psin.A!l.:E Runabout trade. S\800. ~9-1690 Ra ~l , tt • ~ .• -s3!P-1202m!n . ter. Papers, Sae price finn. $115. (worth $425) \lt'R .. Iron hbd. coU thl, FOR 'YOUR JE\VELTt't', Rentals fr Ct>ntw.'Y Cla.ulc. Clean " 1970 'mlUMPlf Bonne\.'lile tes. • c\eaa . ..i. li;fil<ill'iAinE:ii;~io.i;;;;;;~ l -~642~~~1'5~--~~~--Queen $155, Hereulon comer cl.othe1, misc. SaUSun. ~. WATCllES. ART OBJECTS, Miid, full CO\"er&, n."duct"d ~;n, TA'<', Stoek, 4(0) orig '&I VV.' parta • tloon. "'In· ~l;ri::·freezer. J~ lkrMrd Pu~ ~/s ce:·~s~risshome, alley SIM NattlllUS CD)f ~~·}·~~~-:;,nA~~~~: ~.~.~:rs~~ti~! 12-5 1~~1~11~R~i:-:~ :ttc~·lelc":,:';;'k,_;;c";;:·,,1si,,xln";°'' "'°"nd=.°'!162-=-;;:ml;::-~_' ~~1~' lkllv f.llLn, MIN I AT u RE Schnauzer Horlff • '°'° 645-21JXI *,: & G nd.* Ov-11•n . ..S900 i;i·ltti trttl!t"r. 1 llOI>AKA, Rlr1ee<1 for Dirt. Antiques a-Cl111lc 9520 tREE PICKUP-Refs PltPI. AKC. MAnRESSES • • • 16' SAILBOAT ""' trlr. 14' I ••nos r• ..i...,. ii7J.:N57 11.fte r 6 p.m. I suzu1-.; )!£C. ready for , Appl's &: Scrap ?-.fetal, 53!-"'"" REG. ASB. Champ Parade CANOE, blk/ •ht dR..._._ Baldwin · Co.ble • Chlcke ... 'l> JO' '' ~ ll'"'I •ablo $2'""' tl!rt. &14-MiiJ t>ves 6'1(}.-1631. *"56 T BIRD, Prthlea., C.On-Can --.-.1-e -·-· ~~ MATIRESSES 110-0 Id• I Child'• <-·'tn \I "-'"'""m • ~'1$cher . Kawai. Klmball L ,,, "'' ,, -... --.-tlnental <>cl ,-··· •!700 ... .,. ..... v•.,.. ~ • • • ...... a ......,. ... • equip. Wuher I!. d~r, • KM.be. Mn-on & Harr''". 40' i'\'avy Hull $4500. .. _ 72 YA)W!A .250 ' " · """"" •· ~~O~~~io d :if~:~ ~!;~eJ::-~· ~t a :i~: Queen, Full A Twin Seta ~o:!ie.1-!Ma'tchr:das b\0a ~ toaster, 22 Cnll~r nfl(', l\tusSE"tt • Sohmer . Steln· 675-S945 $6.i~~~21Sl Ill, 3.30Pi\I or ~~18;;;:~ ,55 ckaiNll ~ homt. $65. 562--3l39 lines. 54!).9005 PRI~ .... 'f2 &M~ .,.!,OW!! Sht'llanda. (714l Ul-2218 or dinette se1t: ~hie boobe<kl, \\ay ·Storey & Clark -\t·i~ Electric B•y L•unch • ·s mpg Slr::ll V'IV""OQOV .,.,.........,.J 338-100!. dre~. c u1u1\\arc, II. er . \Vurlitze:r • Y&nnha I , ltl EDISON 20 n1u1t SUZUh.l 125. DIRT~ R\J!'.: . . ~ ,..,. 15 cu. ft. GE Refrigerator-SILKY-TERRIER Puppies, J!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!""""J!!!'""'"" J Any rea1t offtt. Call !'ta?-32'22 New Splneti t.. , • , •• ,., $:-i9S s~unc;;iu S fo a 6-l&-4t8T C.000. $2:,0. 642-:..".!51, (lr 67...........,J freezer. Good oood. Free AKC, 6 \vb., 11hedle,s, BASS1'..TI King or Quee:n iiz TB Gelding, 5 yennr, blood aft 7pn1. Bob. UHCd from $95 ..:.._ • ~ 673-0138 afL 6. Rec Vehicles '530 dcUv. $99. &""519-1. odorless, adorable. 962-8377 Bedroon1 set. Dining nn buy. Jj,3 hnntl~. very 1'10VING out of I t at t', 1'11\Ycn " , '.'.'.".':.':.:·: $S9S 211· FAIRLINER, f!Ur'.t, mnny '69 SUUKf ST, :l'ilcc NICE SERVAL CAS REFRIC FOX TERRIER, 2 )'I', AKC. w/O\ina cablnet11, Herc:ulon ~f'~:fl! t~ 11~. ~ Everything goes. Custom 10' Grands ,, , ...••••. ,. $395 xtras. $1500 ()!' ~st ort€'r. S2Ta ClllNOOK-TOYOTAS round tripper now on dlspla.y .•. Ready tor vacation trips .•• Dtzy now! ••• Inspect and 1lrive out . . Reduced to S5499 at Bill ~laxey To)'Ota, 18881 Beach Blvd., Hunting- ton Beach. 847-8555. - $5000 male. All fun. to tam or \'elvet llOfa1 & loveseats. tlfter 6 sofa. uphol~ltted h!·bnck *ORGANS* _Pvt pty, TI4-89J..5737 ~f>.87g.1 after ;,pni ei·c's 675-5258 '4'/kitls + yd, 557~ eve. Hide-a-beds It chairs. ,Userl chalr. end tbls, coHee 'h!· Baldwin. Conn. Hanunond . '&I :r.?' LAPSTRAh.'E l~yznnn, TRAILER for r.tolOf'('ycle, ALMOST New white GE ST. RE RN ARD AKC for Dlsplay only, West Coast 3 atBC>~F Sha1~~snl~r!vK~ Bl'M\-n ! Jordt'n set, p11\nl.!', Kawn.i. Kimball -LoWT'f!y . V-8. S/~. outriggers bnlt holds :I bikes. Sl75. refrigerator. SI SO. ca 11 rcgistel'@d, 4 months old, Construction. 638-1&.n See r.tr Grant, ~:l-86?9 chest (lf dray,·en, twin 00!11. Rodgers. Thomas . Yama1~ tank, S3950. 673--3826 96S-50T5 496-0061. 111'male $25. 962:-4732 TABLE. NomAr lop, Walnut glassware, dlshl"ll, toy11 .• "'urlltzer Gulbransen . ''T'J REJNELL21' Spoi1snia.n. -"'7."°'=·""'""'==;-- SltF.LTJE PUP Fem. AKC legs, 4 chra, 49>!:35 + 2 Household Goods I06S _r.ta~mlae. &14--0103 J\!:en. c.c.. O:\IC, l/O, X1 nt. · 'i3 KAWASAKf Z50 ~!8~ ~~nly~~i::: rog, 8 ¥.·ks, Cbampioruibip 10·• extensk>ns $50. Sora Singer 400\V po14•er tnachine: Optigan , ............... Sl!iO $6500. 673-3826 l cyllnde~irrt, ST:iO. $65. m-5839. 1todc 4!J9..-051 ~t!'. $t:i,~ x~~e~~~ 8~~U~I :~. g$l~.& fin~:j ;;.:::imer;nJ°b81 of !abrlc: Lowrey Spinet , ,, ,, .•• Sl95 17' GLASS Do1-geU Cabin. l\IT E l lnore 250 , 7 4 Sports, Race, Rods '540 FRIOIDAIRE electric dryoc, :w;..1140, 1883 J\laui Circle. recun·g. chr. It. blue $00. Y gr Pano: queen \Vurlltzer SJ1ine1, new .. S499 8.iH.P. ~I e r c. Outboard, i lh be" • -·· mil ' Upholst'd. rocker grn l\l'eed size bed; d r a Pe ri e • : lfammooJ A-100 ••..•.• Sa\'t" trloc, $1250, 673-38:.'6 .am .'.· • l.LIW cage. 'i'.! PLYP.10UT1{, 3 "indow cpc, Oirome tube, set up for Q\e1TOlet. l.t'55 eng & trans. $3.iO. ?ttutt tell. 968-ll28 white. iJ;. [ I[' 1.,,C1,,.,_•-=-,.----,.,.-..,...-, Al Fannt>r1 Jo.larket Butcher ~ WIN FREE * 3.,. C I Cr $7j(). l·::i:!l-5601 002-7686 ,,.. t• Y9W . ALL W!Ute provencial de5k $25. All Xlnt. rond. RO Blu Block· Victorian 90fa· -I-IP. S ufl T · S · ·-~ HONDA ELSJSOl'lE ":ii F"ROSTFREE c 0 1d 1 P01 . 6 hair $50 2 rwin beds Caraie sale, Oct. 5/ti, Roll top w!sk 49-1-8'779 ' RGAN LESSONS .Surveyed at $13~1. Best ofr ' X1 · $800 B 01 - refrigerator botlom freezer, ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;,~;. ma~treas. ix;x 1 p r.,i n g s : ~~:.tt~lo~~:· e~:. P 87U -PUBLIC AucT1~ FULLERTON MUSIC !hi~ wknrl. 644-5389. 0149'l-Wl~ afl6~. r. 14 cu tt. Sf6. ~15i Fr .. To You I04S f!'ame1:, headboards &. fool Page Circle, HB. !168-5177 ?-.L\NY ITEP.1S OF FINE 18191 Euc~~{~16in Valley 11ohn~"!;,1~75.wtth 20 hp ·n TR1 U~TP11 TIG-ER T-.iO. ll'°"ley"-'"c;,;IM;.:.._; ___ ~O A ·-00-RAB'--LE--,-mal-l--bl-,.-, c~~-='"'~· _N_lgb_l_lable __ $15_. HOUSEllOlJ) SALE, ref., ESTATE JE\1lELRY, ART 122 N Ilarbor Fullerton 968·9181 ~_ml. SltUI. Xl nt Cond. AUSTIN-COOPER, S '67, Cosn1lcs, new tranl. radials, e--:tra1. X1n 't mech & body. 551~ -=-\\-asher, stereo eqUip., 12'x OBJECT S , ANTIQUES , . 17111,05 16' GLASPAR Fl h" & kl 8-16-;,t,10. -USED Rebullt Bicycles 1\ke puppletr. Personality plus. QUAL Kinglize Medlt bfd· 36" pool set, picnic tbl., 1''INE F1JRN. ETC. PlfONE • 8 ing Ii 1''A~ y A.\IAHA l7J ~tX new. Approx \~ Or\11" pr1ce. f<'ree to ltOOd homes . room set, Maple bedroom tbls., bucket seats, . cur FOR INFO & BROCllURE. FREE boat w/To>hp-Johnson. ?-.lake $200 Durie Buogy, be1t offer. 2-4 p .l\t &u-8610 10, 5, 3 spd1 & Stingrayt. 493--0789 · aet, P«an coUee &: end partii, Jot.a of"1'nlsc. 962-65(19 m· zm oUer--551--6417 979-4884 1'1oto-cro.u equipment &: Jo'REE to good home Cennan tablt1, davenport, retr1g. ff ~G ~z headbrd. trir.le Adult Or.sian Cl·a11~1 Buts Sall 9060 Bead! crull!en. Sl>eph·-• pup, -·le, bla•k 646-;,::~2693::::~--~~-,,,-T\\'O uphlrd chrs, lg co ee d 3 1 NO\\• acccptutg reservations. ' _ '70 K' ·\SAKI 500, I! C C CLES c u .. _ -""' tbl, 9' coueh, a.ssrt lan .. •11. res.c;er. tncl lab cs, e ec For infonnalio t call custom. Muat sacrlflct-. R CY LED Y & Ian, l mo, papen, W'HITE Lawson Sota. $50. e~ "'S.-3137. . dcyer, brcnkfst table, coffee . n P c:i.se 34' Express Cruiser u.• 929 ·73 FORD Bronco, A-1 cond. 4 Whe•I Drives 9550 "'~ W ~--H N.B •~1659 T 411" lll t nd t ble vo 642-2851, ut Collta ~:lesa. or F City I Lo n. h -1 tr1J11 • .....,..,,. wy, • .....,... wo e ope a s. WANTED: table, 2 desks, pictures, pool 963-6733 in 1''ounlllin Valley. ~:'c':e Boat~ Po~~a~ BUU. TACO ALPINA 1~ ?-.lust sell. $3600 or b!t otr. 66-8288 "PUMPKIN" needs a kid S15 ea. Rnd . dln1ng i·m Maple or Fruitwood Hutch, tablP, plng-pona: ta b I e. Olli' Instructor requests that l1rrysler V·8. Xlnt ,J Late '73, Xlnt cond. $4:;(1 (Zlll 822-1913. fl) 337-4951 10 SPEED Male & Fem. &. yard. female dog,J_)'l'... table. 4 capt chi'H. S6tl. Rena. 962-1989 ~8--8168 only thole 11lncere. ly interest-!l•h'•• • dlvlni-Xlnt --•. 4!J.t.!'l844 '63 ~'lU..YS "Jeep. Very nice ridden 6-tlme1. Mu It full ot love, ne1.1tertd, 673-4S39. 20S Coral Bl. * PLUSH cd In 1 1 the .. -'f'i a; ""'"" {152KLFI SU99 be SacrWce. Car rack lnclded 97S-M12 LRG Hutch, antlq'd walnut, Jewelry I070 eammg to Pay Sharp! $8250. Pvt. pty. '7·1 JIONOA ST-00 Ne\I· 1 tHG-444S (dl j' st 01· ~ h bet ,_5571.,.,.. _ CARPETING* Organ .should take advan-G. w. Singletary. <n4) new 73· mll•• u .,; or bsi er. r . ..... eac or 1 o.r -,.,., GERJo.t STiEP/HUSKY, 4 $60. Dining rm table, cane Ar-.'TIQUE DIAMOND & Df!corator has 196 yds o( r111t lage c this free ofter: 683-2450 dn,y1. t 'r. irr2929 ' ~· * 1974 BLAZER• 23" PEUGOr. White, Bo>.,_ mo1 old, shots, trained. CaU seat 6-U $S(I, T\o.in frame SAPPHIRE RING, unique plush carpe•ing. Super buy!! Coast Music S.rv1ca 0 r. .. ~ Like New $95. Phone 673-41 .. fl or 6T":>-anytime. 968-oo17 boxspring .&: matt $20. 75 .,.. old ladies nng· , in 642-22i>5/S1!J.46S4. •""'FAMOUS wooden 5.5 meter 1970 SL 350 lo mileage 979-l?97 l·'m-le-tt :.'896 548-7938 ,,. -;;,..-;.-::=-:==::-== FIELD'S w~house sale, 'Ml sloop, xlnt t.'Otld, many snU!i. ,.,,,.... 646-siis &t.:>-:ll63 S!Afo1ESE Kittem, l'.-eaned &; ' family for generations. \VALL.ACE "Grand Baro-piano& & organs, new & latest hard\I·~. Inquirt! il<J',N, ' Trucks 95'0 RALEIGH Grand Prix, xlnt Litter box tmd. 8 wka. FORMAL SOLlD OAK l\1USTSELLAppral i;ed que'' 5 pc. place 11ettlng used Spinets, gra n ds, Lldt'I Shipynrd, 900 Lido 1974 S~ZUKI CT5r50.Perfect cond, $100. Leu then 1 yr fi..6-3!Kl. Dlntnii Table w/6 cane price, but Y.'ill take offers tor 8. plus extra pc1. ~I playenr. Going out for Parle Dr, NB See Pat. t."Ondioon. $1300. Call after n FORD \'2 TON Plck--up:-Automatlc-trana., rKdio, heater, po ... •er atttr· Ing & bn1.ke1. Step bumper. Nc'4' paint (75J88M) old 64:h1851 ~ . . 2 1 -•· back chn. $9Xl, Spanl<1h 494-4779 eve. · -~ •• ,.,. "---•--· • 30 ~ ... '"'" "·-·-• •1 pUon 5 p.m. s,ao,2974 · 1'-!P.I!le&. Pm~, i-bedrm-Rt-$-t50:-Spani:i;h · WANTED pnce ................ ~"' ": ~ ·-:u=~n· .0 llOBlE ?i-1onocnt. a.1-m o ll t TRIUMPR 26" women' 1 w ~' Sheplierd, Lil>. la tble hrs 49!}..4266 pm. $-3554 att. 4:30. to buy. K~w~, Ste1r.iy,·ay, new, xlnt cond, s 4 9 5 . urn. PIDI, 125 MOTOCROSS. bike. Coastt>r brakes. $25. Phone 98S-26U. mps, 1' c . TOP CASH DOLLAR PAID '73 4 chi PANASONIC Al-I/ Bald\\'1n ~ h 1c k e r1 n g • 213-330-4742 art 5 y,:eekdays, AcressorieS available, Xlnl 548-5159. Kttp Ringing. DAl.i\fATION PupPy, male, NEW Pillowback Queen sz FOR YO UR J EWELR\", 1'~M. 8 track, & gold fat-e Yamaha. Kimball. Wur, ~c. wkcnds an)'llme cond. $350. 640-5243 GIR" 3 F I I d bl·-•y·•, ~. d;.-...1'"""n. sleeper i;ofr Spanish <Je. BSR turntoble 1~ 18" FlELD'S CTI41 638--2'TIO ---·~ HO . . ~ ... a sp, a r au y . ....-"'-' A" ..,...,.._...., sign, cul 1.'elvet cover, WATCHES, ART OBJECTS, ,MN. 12072 Brookliurst St .• G.G. JIOBIE 16 \\•/trlr. 1 Yr Old. ViJ ND,!-Dirt ~. ,. ...... $26" Burrundy Schwinn. Xlnt 644-1612 540-Tf.R1 GOLD, SILVER SERVICE, Gerry SaUboat & traller, "50 Jmmuc. $1850. Call Mon cood. SUS. cond. $49, S.l>2&13. FANTASTIC shepberd/lab/ FINE FURN & AffflQUES. sq. ft. of ADii $@), 646-9228 1967 KN~~ baby GrAnd thru Fri. Day or nite. alt 6, W.-2739 MAC HOWARD Cemerai I Equip. l030_ Irish setter pups to good Folding Screen w/arch tops, MS-2XKI ROUND game table w/4 Plano. S 11 Walnut. Beau 645--0f).;7. .69 I-I 0 Custm bile &: .... homes. Call 496-4210-walnut panel1,i_. ant. gold SlD GOLD piece watch, chain, blk leather, 2 lrg Cond. New $3500. Sac S2300 32' PC SLOOP chro~. Sports~ innt.. Auto & Truck S•le5 NIKON n'N, ~ ?.Bf. 1.4 BLONDE Cocker Spaniel, 3 ~Cost PJJ. Sait l 1S. Favre Leuba. movement: contemporary wall plaques ~~~~ otr. t.iUST SELL!! Dae Salls · · Sm:! or otter tlOC.O. ln<ll 962--wi! Corner lit & Herbor Ima. $3,50. VMt.tar 90-P..O yn. Friendly w/ehildren. cost $3100, sell for $873. blue &: green, ladles golf , · • -309 Fernando Newpt Bch HODAK.A lOOct, fiat. track --ua N. Harbor Santa Ana > 55 <M 1 _:.i,,. .. ~m. New $125. Shots & lie. S40-41S7. BEAUTIFUL comf!r groure 8'16-TI92 cart w/Beat,-545-4885 T \~ O l\lanual. Thom a. s 213-886--0710 racing bike, (Irick), 531-6000 5J1·342·1 C .,_ -·~ 2 BEAlIT. cats, 1 yr, &!· ;::gie.2 ~~chea, map e 1 'o'°w.'"'"'"'ro'°ND"'°"'m"'N"G,,-..U"""'"to-,"'et-RE~I~-~· 1:,efrloii :~ ~P~~-8 & e~~~~ ~~J: 470 . xlnt rond, 2 sets racing 962-4046 aft 8 eves 'li6 FORD %.T Camptt att ~ fectlonatc, neutered, good tic est.ate. Center stone 2~; ... ,. .. , cab. 1375~ 644-5725 1 675sa;l~~~ "'< trailer. $1800. ''i<I YAJ\IAJ{A 115X.X,' Brand -s.p e c I a I , c om i;>_ ~tely h 979--54l2 1'.llSC. furniture, bdrm set, earat ,12 small stones. down 11pring1 & matt $40. Oaby -..... ed II::£! Bob overhauled s,cm miles, 4 SIA?-.IESE kitten, registered .:c:•~m~•~·..:::::.::""-'-~--dining 11el, paintlnp. etc. the slde SBl-2377 tum. Valet stand $5. PRIVATE PARTY WANTS Ne\\'. Never us · · spd V·S, ,68 Open Road with ahots, c b a m p . POODLE. white toy, 6 yn. X1nt cond. 642--0590 645-2399 TO BUY PIANO FOR ~· CLASSIC \Vood Racing at 675-1003 Ca Sl .f, $1950 be.ckrrountJ, 536-7962 old, spuyed; needs 3 good 2 CHESTS of drawen, 1 Git p~:m.r~;h~ ~~~a!~ STUDENT vlolln % size ex-CASll * 547.9445 * ~~P·~=r. 3~=kcr, KA\VA. 1970 300ce Bighorn n~Uo7 Pl . MALE Baby J.,eopard Cnt bot'ne. M4-?7M .double bed, chea&67l-$600. 642-2845 Cf!l. cond. ·cruie incl. S4;i. Gk~LBY...._~s~-t 2 h~e~1i 18•1r-.~RCURYorClM" Sl~p. ~~pe~~~(?'N~~t~s ·~ RANndCHER 1 , 4 ..... ~ Automatic talnf,:une. potty tra~OO. {n4l t.~,l;L: ~~ ~~. ~ 4t8in Larkspur, _M:-=...,. Misc•ll•neou• IOIO Boys clothes. sz. 11).l2. "'oo~s"u'oo' .. ~u2-~ da_cron aail1, ttir, Xlnt day t>ve air co ........... p ower l>-4282 . 77 DRAPES and rods $25. Fren-----------84z..6330 Cu • . .,., vJ<JU sailer/racer 836-0089 l 0 CB 350 1 . 1lt'Crinic,. landau rooL (7'.$. .0a11y Pilot Classified Ada w Ids. watchdog. 548-3l ch chain $50. Roll-top desk SCRAM LETS 1'10VING boxes, wardrobes Til01'fAS Palisades Organ ' _;__ l NOA • 0 • mi., exc 481.) $2999 f!Y'l!rt dayl CLASSITTED wlll sell it! $150. 556-6331 ' • dish puck1, glau pack11, 111-··/rh.yth se:ctlo 2 Yrs old COR. 25, tully equip'd .• sips. cond.. sl.~sy bar. S-IOO or SUNSET FORD FREE tree free free tree. 4eu ft clean. S l • S 3 . 5 O iJke ne~ $800. ~7-8990 · ~· O.B .. VJ-JF, $5950 •. offer. 0 536-1'04 El tr! 5440 Carden Grove Bl1'd. For en ad tn Woman~, World Call P&ffY 642-5671, axt. 330 lnternalional Designer lbrrmr A :" I ' - t . J "'\ I • . ' . ' ., • • ' 0 • . • ~ -"" • •, Spadea8outique·~72754 \ • 8 fL blue couch, come and ANSWERS 54~27'9 ORGAN AHe C 1 68 H NDA 350 e<: c \\'estmilll!lter 636-4010 get It! 843--8111 Ar-.f car rad S40. lv.·hl bike ·1~-1 • _,n arodua~ 26' SLOOP, OB, xtra11, alip start, Scrambler plpe1. $325 73 CHEV,, TON ,..,., """" • Pf!••ect con .• P 11.vail. Xferd. need Qy,1k Sale 54·1-3417 • ~• •SOFA le Loveseat • very Notify _ Rumple _ Facii.de ~ ::~~'ru, ~~5. ply, ?-.fust sacrifice. 540-7083 $3300. ~9-0ll2 HONDA OO, T;iO ml only, Ask-pickup. automadc: trans., rd qual, c;tltom ma:: never _ Cyrat.! _Police_ Ninety CONN The11.terette 5 5 2 EXCALIBUR ~·. $6900 l.Dad· Ing $300. 494--0193 or r.1r. radio, heater, power 1tee~· ued. U5t1 ly hrn. 1910 _ OUT of ENERGY PERSIAN RUC, Imperial y,•alnut. Just 4 months new. ed for rac·g. slant crui&'r -O'Keete 833--mJ. lng, power brakea. Air LIKE NEW. Roll top deak, Now that there~ no more Palace Kmnan, 16'4"x10'7" $2400/~r. 646--0333. Acti ,. ... ~=., oond., H.D. C&Jnpl!I' step ~. Hkle--a-bed, per f, gas lines people are demand· lvoi-y, w/putel border & l -:5~-oo1-4~Good--.,----.8094=•l \-'e IJlllO<:. ~ ?tflNI Bike. Honda Trall 70. bumper. Low miles. No. cond. $300. 640-0777 Ing serviees like h.11.vlng their medallion. Pvt pty, 541)..7(gl port --~ HOBI E C1\T 16' 11o·/1ralltr X'L 250 Honda. 8'17-QSS or 373Q7?.1 ?tIARGE> Canon 8' sofa. gm. tlre!I checked, their front end SURFER House Sleeves, Gd. CUSTl-1. bit 300 \\'inchester X1nt condit ion $1700 .~-""'-'='~'-~~~~~-,. t"-ecd. nrly. new, rost $650, checked, tht>lr wlndol1·1 clean-cond. Smnll $20. l-'lng !\lag. Ulm. th urn b h o I e 491-9'".>83 TI Penton 12'; t.tx !~ $37" MAC HOWARD sell $250 548-4189/556-1258 ed. elc. One ga1 statiGn dt'91er Johns, fair cond. $1 5. stock. See to appr. $350. 21' FIBERGLASS sail'r. docy clean, many extras ~ clo&ed early and I a..<iked il &l;,...3·139. '100-5123. & trlr. gel. cood. $700. _llm1=;,· '°;:;51:;,--C;l687::i'i--;;;;;--::= G•rane Sele IOSS h r "N .. h ' • e ~as ~t.o gai , o, e CURVED Gold sretionnl S3JO SLATE.TOP Pool Tbl. \l'/a!l 49-l·-tS7D '68 YAHAr.IA 180, ex~l. AU'to & Truck Sa lea Corner 1st & Harbor FRIDAY thru Sunday, mllple bar &: stools, 2 piece 9-holder aun cabinet, an- tique glass, misc ltema. 8816 El Preaidente, FV. 847-6656 SUN. SALE: 2'15iS Bristol, c.r.f. 1-lundreds of Items, Jo'urn, GI.as&. Ollna. Sliver. Tools, Hardware " T. V. etc. FANTASTIC Go.rage SaJe: De•k model sewtng mach. car partll. mrfhoardg, akla, small appliances. l T 2 Ramona Way, CM 646-6760 SAT/SUN 1~. Oan l ah wAlnut din. set, Vlkina' teW· Ing roach., Scuba. equfp. aid boots, misc. !MS f\'.lrt Shef- field, N.8. ~ Day Guage: Sale 12-6 1'fajor appliance"' clothes. etc. 3T7 E. 18th St. No. 2 6-1!>2451 • replied'.. I m OUT of EN· Antique \Va.II La1nps S50, play'g. equip .. excel. cond. LIDO 14. complete \\1th side co!1d .. lo mi., $225. or offer ERGY. Stud<"nt E ncyclopedia S35, $325 Vogue Slalom Water Ue in Cd~1 $Sj(j. &l:>--ri018=~=-oc-7."C", SALE : Zenith Stereo Phono 80" S!croo Cab 556-2!w.I ski s:ll. 644-1576 6-W-:J270 '73 ltONDA 350. Excellent 12-1 N. Harbor Santa Ana 53!-6000 531-3421 $9-:J; Marble coffee table SH OTC UN Wlnches1er, POOL TABLE, like new, '71ltOBlE16 fl Cat & trlr. condition. $650. '.56 t'ORD 1, ton P.U. New 11lab $8.'i: Rolle! 214 with model SO, 2 ban'els, full reg. size. <I cues, $125. Aft. $1350 or h$l ofter. M8-97ot. ring• and volves and clutch. 35-mm alt., len.~s. fl1ten, & mod!tled vent r I b !I, 5PM/y,•knd 551-5911 5$-6700 ·12 rAMAllA 100. Xlnt con!!. An~n 1nl\gs. 4 11peed. $600. $150: Lav. 1tnk. fittings: ot-leather ca.!ie, $12S. 963-28'14 !llUST Sell 1-:nelssl Skis, 185'1 22. INT. TF.1\IPEST. incJ. Bas:anl pipe and olher extr11s 898-lT.""JS. R39 25.J. flee chair, desk. 552-73'.!4 CE NU IN E Ivory fro1n &: Marker bindings. spin~ 1rlr. Great tor ram. Never raced. $325. 54Q.448-t 'i3 FORD CouriPr, 17000 ml, t.10D 870 \Vlngmn.'iter 12 ga, Africa, lamp, set of chei1t!I 96S·2Ta9 aft 8:30pm use. $2000 6T.rli!li6 Motor Home"' 1ie11>· tire11, R/H "'/stereo 3" mag vent rih $100. ?-.1ec Jc elephant. All heautilully 2 NE\V fiberglass Surlloords. Boats Slips/Docks 9070 Sile/Rent 9160 k Campersht'JI. Slnl. &: shotshell reloader S 3 7 . hand carved, 871).0636 $75 or best. 552-7097 or ---'-------·i TOP. J ~ nft. 3 Victor cutting torch, gages, EARLY Amer din s '. B\r.::h 963-5905. \VANTED: ?>.looring forl.;;;.;;;.;;;.;;;.;;;,;;;.;;;.;;;.;;;;.;; $1545, '73 OIEVY ':sT PU. ti~&::~ S~~T:i Yi;,18& serving tbl. Rugs, lamps. Store, Re•t., Bar 8095 111..l!boot, In ouler . Ne"1>0.i;t DALES MOTOR HOME cusr. deluxe x· bed. shell. OI er 001. -:>-· Rea!IOnn.bly priced 646-4293. ----------Harhor,: ro.1r Sosk1n, t2~l RENTALS Xlnl. 20.600 mi, S.t7-79;'il WILL BUY PRE 1964 EXPERT Carpet Jni::taUcr CASH REGISfER, Pool tbl., 674-5.1.ti ~ p.m. ·73 DATSU~ pic kup Dl~IES FOR 25e. QTRS. YOW'S/mine, repair. relay. 2 draft beer boxe11, !IO forth. PO\\'ER hoot up lo 2.)'. "\\'e're 10..~at and \l'l' ln1·e 11·/camJX'r .shell, nt'w lires; FOR 65c, HALVES FOR 21 )TS exper. 646-$15. 500-ll42 Chal'VICI hon1e r.:ev•pot1 . It" 65 ol UM? tJl!st-~linis, lo mi!eagc-, <1!16-Hl87 fl.25. PRE 1935 SILVER IRVINE Coo.i::I Fam. Golf TV, Radio, HiFi St, I091 6~ J.'1111 Size, It C~IC'1, Open '74 R.A."ICHERO GT, bm DLRs. FOR $3.15. a>-3974 t.fbrshlp. StriO + tran!!. t~ . .:..;~~~~~~~~C..:1 ~~~~~~~~~~:1 l\fonday thru Sat 9 to 1. v:/orng stripes, auto. air, 26 gallon aquarlwn, equip-6Tr594t/5M-74.~ BANKRUPTCY [i] 8lS-.(}OO'l. Redhill S: San ·mi. Ser!! s.c-..oo. 960-1102 ped, including tiAh. Also PORTABLE Butane (l:ll5 B-9 Color Iv's, t hlk & 1111t. I ; I f I rli Juan. Tustin. •63 rou.o TRUCK bni.M new bird ca2e and g.~.. ,,., roll•. -~, 'Ike 1 11tereo. All below "'hole-rampor 1 '°" , 00 ~-~" " [i~~~~~~-~:iiii["'fRl!jj~5\'ili6"'f;;;?.1;." ,t. ton, XL..\'T <"Ond, $7 , \\'OOdCn chess sets. Best new. $95.. 847-S990. sale. full gun1·antef'. Call 'r. . m s.i2.a.t;>i orf<"r &15-4240 540-01~1 -'73 \\'lto.~ERAGO r111V.J.'. I CANOPY •-•, l\\'in 175. Dou-"'ood & \ITOURhl Iron dinlni: . . •mpers, Silt/ LQ,\IJF'.D • 51·.>.~f> n 1e 'astelt rlrnw in lt1e West .,._..., ANTIQUE GUN·l887 ?>.lnrlin !!Cl, ss:>. Benut Stiver Corlee SHERWOOD SSOO Am Fl\I Rent 9120 -. · ' · ' ble bed $50. Dinelle table 2.r-<!O. Le\'. !1(.1.lnn rilll•. lie:< service St"I. $l2!i. S.<;(1-4,1"'67. Rrc. Duul 1009 Tnilhlr •&:-l2-!l?.:ii • ... a Dally Pilnt nas!!lned w/4 chain $35. 910 2 • ..., __ _, -t>.fadeline Dr. H.B. 962--0007 ~I $200. Xlnl .....,,,... PICAS.50 \\'oodcu! $95, Smull W/B &: D.C/ 2 .. TBL Lancer CHINOOK il4~J)5-1 aft 6 p.m. nils $45, Etching11 o[ Paris 44 Spken. $500. 675-7920 '72 FOH.D CAi\1Pl::R VAN j 1' ' MANY Items Including old l-~-~~~~-1--' STAR G Ao'7E-.>',jt.I< radios. &: nilac parta. Sal/ AtllANA Refrig. 6', rz sep, $2D. Others. 53.'i-fi59!'1 \VANTF.D! Ml\fantz & 1\tac sll"t'p~ 5, r adio & heater. ~i.tJT If\ ra_~ ~ ._. ~-9run. 6191 Fenley nr. ~1;t1m~~~~s2i~. ~;Q c~~~;~~~i~~,!~ ~A~~~\n'¥Sn~~~:: b:;";~~ ~~~!i i:a~tl~' t~~~ Al"~~·~' i:;.. :~.~~,:-"1:~~ ~ u,,~1~rl,, JUNK FROM EUROPE. El Modena. NB. $100 the pflir. 5.1G-9662 <213)894-2600 (91981:11\l ":A ,. ,. Atfflr<J/111 ,. ''"' si.... oci: H~l.Q) d FARFISA ORGAi'l ?ttUST GREAT 8""• ~IV't'dcre Sly!-PACKARD-BELL col TV SAVE f')~~.J.i.1 To d'"''09 ~1s119". fot Moriday, ,_1j.1,_17: clockB, ro\Uop u5'1:. etc. SEU. $200. Surfboards 5'8 .. lng ha! ....,S12!i Be tld conllOIP w/G e r 11.r<l l't'C MAC HOWARD ~n-n.7)-rrocl-...otdl!~'"ttorunbfrc. ...._.UI 621% )ll'lrizuttlfo?, Cd).!. SJJ. 6'11" S15, PAIN-chill~ sti.' st.Hms au IUl5 chanl{('r, Ai\1/1'~1 strrro. ~TAUIU'I '~'CIVf'Zodi~~h~ .ii ~ KOfli~·· Sat/Sun. TER ln/<•1 <199-4326 l\NJ '8""" A''.·" ,,... ,,,,... •>"---°"'·"' ' ' r., • 5 PC dlnr-1'" 11r-t l\'e\I• '""""'~.)..) A t & T k S 1 ,'!""", ,,,,,...w.. ·•;,;:;:::: GARAGE SALE. re r r I a:, rJNG PONG I able s1: .. I ~ N . f!(i s·.o o .k . . CB Radio. 23 channC'ls, JI u o rue • es n.1a.;t~;,_f .,:,;; . ,_,~ M~ '""'· n !!lct"!O, <'klthN, mllc. Sat surt boanJ 11•/tin $18. ~!Cll\I ~~rsi'OO 551~ 11 exec. mo old. $00 Corner 1st & H•rbor ~Jll-31-1'.i svo .. ·... J5$1~ 1i~M:.r._._ 10.12-IS ~~n 10--4, 316-8 Popllll'. tool. slietl $20. 638-8684 Mu5icel ln1tru~'t1 IOl3 t 5-1~ f' I '~~1 ~~nrOOr s~3Ja ~ii ~c~r~! '' ;~:v tt~ ~~ . SAGITTA~"" SAT I: Sun. :lit B l!th St. 1..ARGE BOXED TR~'. A'1n1irnl ('(l{fl' TV t:'ll .\·it · · ~", 0 ''"' J'll~ .,,:: "'~"'' Pines, Cami• lz.. __ L1qu_ld Cood plctuh' $."5. ~LL ,\lu1ninunt C a n1 p e r c ')''"'' 1 100....."'.... ,.g0r 10 Hoo,)w • ote. u 11.B. atl~r 11 ~11111.! an-Nuber Very tt:ui ~ CAJ::U'.-NEt-li;C)N PI 11 n n MS.6'J32 11.hi·ll Tintiffl 11o·hidov.'1 \ k•i. 1-a. •·2 11 ,_,. •1 .,.~ 11 ~ -~ J-"»7S t~ues. hooi;ehold, r ea l ' ' -$300. GE.\IEl!':llAftllT r.1-1 1 ~ · _. • · ' loJ~t-41 111> ~1t.?f'lf!..., 1'1~ .... d-4J variety, t>OOL TA BLE +.R~•:SM. Ftore, nlck~l Jiil\•er $73[~ ~s:l2.i.~.IJik>n.Ot u.1tC11 :~~ :!~ ~~t.,~ Ulatc:OIM "1«>USEFUt==. ==.L,-•"r,..,ni"m=u-Utt"'", I • .. ,~. ""-" -~-'$30tra MS·8961. [ .. u Ind -j{t,f} DT vw .. ~f!N.Dlt!; re,,~}!; ~! '' ,','~; ...... ,~.. ~.~....... N(;o ,, ~ ·~· -·-TV CB . ~!;>I.I', '11»..1 ~ a " t B II" t ...,.._...____. ~ng .. nu LU-Cl IM l\el. • .NV ''' ~· ._... ~ Jl>lf, n ..., ..... ~ ... ~ • Place, eo.tA ?t1eA. nniv. u ~-ex ra key . ~,..,,. . ~ 11i..o.c;i.no, .,......_ n ~ ,1._. bf.If ni.dlO and m i I c . $DJ.la steal :::::::.:::-; 1 -.-.---;-f'\.~ •t!-t '•A. 41 Ycv 71 "'--~. e\'l!t')'thlns aoes. 546--mt nEFRtG. 2 door Cen El. 548-5-47& G 1 -.o"iO Motorc:yclet/ ~:.37 ~~ =~~ :~ ,:;'•M BAR. BARBER om. Old !1~':-m~· Ei42-9l&l after Ok. Fum •• Equip. IO&S ener• Scooter• 9150 ~NL' 11 n~ ~;!!:i.. ~~ '"~--~· ch~st. CalciJBml!IC. SUn. 3!'i8 11· no~GLASS "· hp ,.• ,, nAr.t SJ.-...-.ii... tJv.,... ,,, ,, SllARP ' ~ bike i:.r. • ' ,.., ·74 It d F"n I I"-_..., "'""-" ..... I•"• .. w,, '"-,_._M Prollpect, manll a s'"'"""" • OFFICE °"k, dbl ....AeM.111. JohnM>n. Elf(', s I art er , ()!~ a "-~-nnn? •·'· i,: • ...,.. i~ ' r -• .,1: • -... -t II"' , ... ,, . , ..... ,, l••-n I ~• ·•·31 »Mot-• ,i......,. ~S•tN ,.,_,. GENE{i.AL f\ttSC Oof'l\l:I" .,.,.,. ""'"""8 "' \\·:\1nu1 Nomnr top, 66x:.O. f"NflJnit lop 1t•fcurtaJt111 &1 "" ' "' ' ••:>. "'""""' ff-10J• n\..«•f\J ~~ uveu ... &ti~. ~ti n a1 1686.\ 960--1'.l;!S $100. Mll-t-140, Lft83 ~Inti! rxtrn romplet~ c:o.or--e--r. 'iol ~ J.;,_i;;1sonF:, r~1. ¥i.. -11.win. V "' •1'-men Nlcl»OI~ llB. 8-18-0264. S Plttcc S('!ting C h ina. CIN'l(', ('~! !<461800 1-ontl. f1f"an, l•J 1nl. Sf01 ,-1Ml~.u J:~, ~~ =~!c:...-"'l·"~) *LOTS Of" COOOfES ~ Norltak~ \VhU!!.haO. Silver EXEC S'WVI chn $1Snf, tO' P'R,;\~I \\'TTJI (l1\RS C1:11I 960-..'31-4. "'1''"'· '' JO........., .oo... '°'~'"' "" W ()cf 1·8--9. ttcm1. Pol1rold. 613-1l-1S 1ecy chr1 $8/2.t, Oki, acc... $Ji>. &oil Idle ~ten11 wi th e Dally 1:= "1,~G«id ®AdVIN ()1'h~~~.1 f:f4..!: Ml lr\-"ln~(())mef J~t\) NO. Cl1t1:~1flt'd ........... 6-12·~78 Pleret, 867 W 19 0 1, 645" 7411 &1i.1··,1. Clll 673-0l,.38 lilt. 6. Piiot Oa.Plfled ad. M!--5tiil , . • -· .~ • -· ' $l.(Jld1y, Octobtf 6. 1974 I D J 2 DAILY PILOT ~ V•nt f570 Autos Wa"t" 9S:.:90:.:B~M~W=~===;'~7;12;:fD•••un f720 I Fiat ms J erct:dtt S.nz f7 0 ! lluick oyota 9765 Volkawag.n -'------~~1~~~"---0 'tt..EORD VAH q, auton~tlr, t.f•a whff.I•. ~ oval tire•. 11peclal 11l•le ~Ww.1, cu.tom inlerlar. ,.{lt)IT,l[{) ------~'f-1 t"h\'J';-850 8-p t-d ..-r ~ -TOP DOLLAR '"" """ "' 1 si •• .,,.,,, ""'· """ .. ..ii 1 fii!ElfCllJES-=I PAID BAVARIAN I """· C•n 1-18'7. '74 230 SEDAN '"'410Y OTA ..,. vo=•""" sos n aurcK'tuxu s -1• 7 pui;e~er, 4 speed tranll-• Cpe. aulo11'u1llC. rad Io, IMMEDIA TEL y M ~-i ~Hondo 9727 f 11.,.,·•« o.~•· Low 36 mo. Best Deal Anywhere! n1\lliion, rlldkl, ltt11ler. (IJ6S.1 healt'r, po11.·t.'r :i11eerlna; ~ F1R 1 bM\k~. J>o\\•er windows. • . $2489 0 ' e NEW DATSUNS e -1 opeo '"' , .. ,. $163.;;/mo. FOR ALL T • IMMEDIATE • 73 Honda .,., '!"'· rs.r. No. 11581 i29TT \'lnyl root wu • tire&, lipot> FOREIGN CARS . iif ,' • DELIVERY .• • Civic Jim Slemons LEASE OR BUY All Modolsl l ty. (O'llllSCt ;o • $16ff • ~OL:f' i MAC HOWARD DAYllOSS POMYIAC a•...._,.,. •. c... ........... , CALL OR COME IN e Hwidi·ttl:. "' e I tt00t·beer "'lbhu.'k 1nto:tiur. Imports TO SEE us Now In Stock • ~·e\I' & l.:.t'<l Can; • U.Uh)lllill1c, 8300 ntUes I.: ul· ' 1$01 Qullil NEWPORT IMPORTS , e 21.JOZ 'it . ·1 .. ., i; • ll)Ofl 1niw 11•/f11c l01j' 11·111·· :-.;ew;Klrt Beach : ~i~:roii ~ ~'t~ • 210'i·Gto·~.Tio·~ .~ ranty. !No. ?14001 833-8300 e ·74 BAVARfAS • -....... ~ • H<\t~·llbuck.. ·.\\3gon11 • Only '$2295 I fu~TER FROM l\lacAflTHUR , Ii':"",. e P1ckU))li · :)l't.18Jll1 • , '::;c;.::~.:::;:::;,::::::::.::!.'..'.= ~Ult lb.Di& 1966 Harbor. c.~1. &ttJ.9303 ~ Auto & Truc\J•lts TOYOTA V\\r. with flberglass ou.e 1 Corntr lat & n•rbor . Buo:gy body, ktt forii'f. ready 12-i l;ll. Harbor Sanla Ana 1fl66 Jlarhor, c.~:. 6t6-~l·3 to put to&etber. ~. or S31..6000 .531·3421 NEW 1975 :UOO W, CoMt llwy .. N.B. 642,.'40.5 e ,74BAVARIM ,tt.uLU. e Stlek;·Aloniullclll •,CALL OR COME IN ICLASSIC'59 Mercede 111. e 74 3.0 S I SA• TO SEE US needs upholstery &. body • XLNT LE~SE PLANS • work, xlnt runnirtg cond. -,?l TOYOTA CORONA bftl olfcr, SU..9183 before '72 Buick Est•t• W~ +' STATION \VAGON U or nfler 6· 9 pass. Full po'A-'er. Alt. : SURFER VANS EXCELLENT SERVICii: s:ioo. 6ra-863S c.Ul af\ s. Automatic lranJ1111l53ton, A!II/ Volvo 9772 Stereo, J..uuage-carrier. F'?i.l radio, heater, air condi· Ttlt wheel. Nice waton. · • • O'I a Dodt:"e Chassi1 CADILLACS e . '63 190fil. Roadster. 5 )'ear ·!I0.000 rn!le \~'UT1l111)' 'T3 t• \TSL'N PICKUP 1:-'~di; Y."Ork, !l~. tionlng. Squire trin1. (628-'71 Volvo PT&OO Coupe (~1'~) · JMY > 12677 1 ,,...1ranom1u100 . MAC $.1H3099WARD A..\f/F?t1 stereo radiG, Anti· Harbour V.W. 18111 Beach Blvd. Hunt. &:h. &ti-4435 • 'it Dod1;1:e Tnulc1>1nan 100 i\.'an y,·ith rustom Surfer • 1al interior, air cond, e O\'ats, mag y,•hffl!, ARP~ Gas ir.aving 3 11pd )I.uh slant 6 enginf', Y.ired 6:or sound. S3195 !8811J) : • Robw.telll l\lotors 4 e Jjl(NI Beach Hunt Bch ~ &48-1255 ' 1'72 DODGE 12 pass.. Van, )>lb, pis. auto traN, trier hitch. amlfm tape, a/c, 111hite spoke rims, 36,<XX> ml, $1400. 557-8699, SU~ :SS-FORD Econoli~ i pop. 1opJ Travel-wagon. $999 6 cyl., Auto.. Air t'Ond., N'lrig. & R!ove. !llN'flS 6 ldlr.) IOTU936) &16-4448 Lar,.st S.lectlon == 4 11rirecl 1r:i nsn1i.-sio11, hcu.tcl'. I 64• 1811 or 66<1203 In Ora"le County ~ _ 115,323 n1ilcs. \3-1~7tiTI ' 3100 \\I. Coast llY.)'., N.B. '69 28lSE Coupe. Fully equip- C.00,pe DeVilles · Sedan De. S:?·l77 642·940S ped, low n1lleage. Xlil! Vllles • El Doradol . Con-cond. ?.lust sell. 64-'-'"157 ~bleai. Also n1any other ltlr.,,.,,.;.,. nl&.i'"a ..._ . 'f\8111111 l•n~•:, 19tl-260 SE 4.5 aelect OtdJlac Trade-in.•. ~ .Wf'. uu" -Sedan Immaculate WE PAY TOP DOUJ.R FOR TOP USED CARS FOREIGN, DOMESTIC or CLASSICS If your cat is utra clean see us first. BAUER BUICK 2925 HarbGr Blvd. Costa rtlesa 97!)..2500 -Junk Cars Wanted- \\ill p<l)' {';,i:.h. 5·1S.1915 A UTOS lMPOR.TEO VOLVW --...~; grg...1i97 or 1-73,;-1611 2!tO' ""''"'rit< Pa<•~ay U ~ti:ision \liejo MG 9742 t:SE A\.Ell,. P\\'Y &\:IT. t!l&i Hnrlior, C.l\t. 616-9::03 831·2040 • 49j..49 l:l • • • • '72 Dat.'lun 510 2 Dr, yeU°'1· 1 & Y.ith black "inyl roof, radio, I ~....::==="--°"'=I heater. auto tran.-.. 33,000 Jaguar mi\M, 1180FPQ) A '-"'-"C...------' DEMO SALE S\\'EETHEARTS DEUGIIT $1999 -e Groth Chevrolet • * 2.•73 Bavarlaa <I Spd + Auto * J.'74 Tll * 1-'73 3.0 CSA .. * 1.•74 3.D CSA SAVE! 18211 Bench Jiunt Bch 8-17-Gl87 549--3331 • • • • Wilt BUY YOUR • DATSUN, TOYOTA OR VOLKSWA\;~N PAID Jo~OR on NOT. \\'lLL ·13 .CHEVY :ac. van, ce Gen•r•I 9701 Crevier BMW PAY TOP DOLl.AR. C\LL radio, c1t.mplng gear In-!\ENT ALl.Ei.'l, :>ro-o+l2. clded. $4500 or n1ake oHer.1 ·53 r.!ORRlS MI N OR 208 \\'. Jst Street~-., l9n DATSUN 240Z. Thls -==, :=:::::=-'~~~-- _SJ0..5939__ _ "Woody" \\'ngon. A classic. Santa Ana 83.r .. 171 ~·on't last long. 19,000 miles. 71 XKE V12 ~pe. 1972 Ford Super Va n j Ccme see It &: make offer! I , , A1f/F~r radio, au to1natic Only 36,000 Miles w/custon1 interior, lots of 646-4448 fdlr.) & ;f\ t ransrnission, coiniietition , Faclory air . t'Ond.. ~u 11 'TI r.1-G li1i<lltel 33:000 miles, $1700. Opel 9746 exll'as, mechanically sound, I Alfa RorTMO 9705 \II or.ulg"e. r7411JON 1 $489:> I lt'a\Qer intenor. •I ~peed $3095. Aft 6pm call 846-1677 • JOHNSON & SON , trnnS .. poy,·er s t re r 1 n i:, '7t vw v ·.N-;-T pas5, A·l 1 Alfa Romeo ORANGE COUNTY 'S Lincoln '-!ercUl')' A~t/Fi\I. r.adi:l.I tire.s, Blue y,·/natunil interior, 4 t.'Ond. $'.!600. Crill 83i·:Wl OLDEST X26 Harbor Bh'd. n1any dbc xtrus £: .1n1-speed, 15.320 miles. This car__ 73 OPEL GT 1\ L que KQld 'A-'ith blac.k~ieat.her - Ull, uui& lnterior.' This is the lw;t TOYOTA th•I !hey made. Mml <'OTI· dltion. <75.tCXHJ 196G }[arbor, c.~[. 6-,!G-9303 $3789 973 TOYOTA Coronal Deluxe .-----..---., coupe. Sa.\'anna Be I e e • Virtual.ly ne11· used Cilr. 9,000 1nlles. Automa tic, W h a l more can you SR)'. (750HPP,) S28 75 JOHNSON & SON Lincoln ?.tercUJ)' ai26 lfarbor Bl\'tl. Costa rtfesa. 540-5630 DAVEllOSS ,.r.~.: .. . --........ , • • '74 VOLVO Best Deal Anywhere! LEASE OR BUY OVERSEAS-DEWVEil SPECIALISTS Auto & Truck Sal" Cor~r 1st & Herbor 124 N. Harbor S&nta Ana 531-6000 531-3421 '63 RIV1E.R.A k>. m.I., per. cond. $600. : ...,., ... !adillac ff15 '74 Cpe. do Ville CABRIOLET TOP Factory air cond.. f u 11 powt!r, full leather interior till & telescopic steerin;:, stereo v.ith tape, door lockll. cruise control, all the extru & looks & runs like new. (208JGG) . $7495 PICKUP 7'2!> TOYOTA, Blct ~Wt.lb.Di& seats, mags, radial1, tape VO' VQ · d"k, •he<), sh•• '""'""'· ~· ~~OP:.;:EN"""..::SUN::::O:D"-A~Y~-I many xtras. Mint eond. '74 Cad Cpe D• Ville ~m:o;:'":::·..:""::;:.::"="'·---..=;i·'~"':::':.H:.="'c:bo:;'°''~c::;")::;I:.,. _::&16-:::::;"°""° Full power, air tilt v.·beel. Triumph 9767 '73 VOLVO \~u1yl roof. Sterto No. !1073 STATION WAGON $7699 ' .after 6 p1n. An1·ti1n on Coata l\1esa 5-ID-~O IX' cc ab I e con d It 1011. is iminaculate! (99JJEX) ... '"', Berlina & '" noADSTER. "" """ tGuEon Only $3495 Auto & True" Solos STEP VANS. l·01t\' ~• T. 1·, I 9y 10/6. ne": In')' dty lires. $5'°495 .., IntemationaJ 11.. T. Private · fdeinot bau. radiator. shocks/sus-,.~~~~::':::':'~~ CALL OR COME IN 1\ l Corner lat &. Harbor Party. Principals on l Y, I Priced to Sell ~nsion, headers, exh sys. _.. -...-.... ra.1'11.U.•. a C, TO SEE US -fOlt aai& 124 N. Harbor Santa AM please. st&Q'l.J ('4952 ten1, 2$l1pg, reblt eng & "'~"""""""' VOLVO S316'000 .531.3421 i97J CHEVY: Cruss."lire top, ., I SALES-SERVICE !..EASING t .. ~ ..... 11.·ith proof ol 11·ork. ~ ....... ...... '72 Sed. De Ville 16, 7'>'.l mllu. Automatic. AM/ MAC HOWARD n.I 1tereo radio, a1r condi· Uoning. {645HDE) 14m cooking equip S 190 0. OVERSEAS DELIVERY 673-S:ua. t•O.t1 Factory air cond!Uoning, tun 673'9400 . I [#201'1). ROY CARVER · I 'T.l. DAT.SUN • 510 ll'ag. Air, OPEN SUNDAY =""'=~'7-;&16-="'9303=· powor, '(ieyl top, t ull "Tl G~lC Wlndou· \'nu. P.S. 1 ft(, ral•k, lundau ! 8 6 6 Ji. t' H l 1 --~-~~----e • • leather 111terior, tilt l: P .B. Auto. S:Z::OO :r in11 , ROLLS ROYCE B~f"' $2399 'G9 XKE HDSTTt riu pnt. '71: Volvo 1J", Auto Trans, telescopic steerinr. :fie~. fi'i5.4~A~. • 234 F:. lith St. SUNSET FORD S· tp .. lu". rack. "''ire y,·hls., 3100 \I' Coast H•' NB ~===~,...,.~-~1 •·d'-' lte·t••· Wh>·le Sid• door locks n1any dlx xtras vw .64~amper, liOOec, re bit Cosla ?i.lesa • 546--4441 s.i.io Garden Grove 1 Blvd. 1\r.11rr.1 ... lo n1i.. inust sell · 642-9405" ·• · · ~:n1~;f~I ~g:!fi:,g pc~~ W'aJJ;.' nadi;l ·Tires, \rlnyl & nice .. tzi3EYY) . ' trans, oil cooler, 12\', clutch "Oh ec!ly acrns.s f/\)n1 th<> '72 BAVARIA \Vestn1l11ster .' .G:w-i010 ~~~ ~~~:~~ Ask'g. S2995 or "·o;"· -,O'°P'°E"L:.:.:,,::=,.:: . ....,\°'v~,-,-. tires,' SO thpg. Aski~i;: .$850. Roof, light Blue,. <l~ID?I $3995 brakes. Best offer. 673-1883. I Ba!Loa Bay Club" 4 11pd. ,\l_• Cond, Sterc.'O, (732_ '7·1 :!60 Z .steroo. 1:1-ir, i11ags. 000-;.'640 882-2.lol3 ovei·hau!ed by ex~rt. ~. Call &t5-03G2. -~~~1smnd1tion mside '71 Dodge Van, auto, pis, 1 Sales • -Service . f 1JT) Sale$ 6 p., 1 ·, 9 ,. 9 1 · 6~r 111~:US~t ~~~11 1~~~ i '-'='0.7'-t 7J,~,G~'U~ .• ~'1~<~X~.r"'12C'L== :"'='=-·..;!5.Sj='=--.:."..;·•:::0:::;•"'<•:...::0nl:::>o;··=~ TRIUr>lPH GT &-'73. 50CJO mi. i JU Groth Chevrolet e 36,COO mi, xlnt cond, ·.any I 645-6406 .... -eekend. c 0 111 ac1 ~Ir Llke Ne1v * Loaded Pantera 9747 like new. pert cond. f\lany 18'211 Beach Hunt Bch xtras. Bestolfer. 968-5882 J9'72 ALFA SPYDER, SllVft' Crevier BMW !;'e t e r .s__,on 71"6832-1021.,979---ITil7 t-7:»-1611 xtras.Pl'tpty.551-4119 847.J,086 549-3331 '69 F'ORO Super V:in 302. paint, an1ffm 1tereo. xlI1t , 114-963-:x.i!S ·11 XKE iw..1dster. 6 cyl 71 Pantera Volkswagen 9770 •, e • .e Rblt eng: Aprox. 20,00> mi. cond. 644-9311 days, 67S-74t0 208 W. Jst ?· Santa Ann 'i-1 0,\i'SUN :l(;()Z. Stl'reo. C.'Wll', 18.000 nii. $•1500. ~I tar t /bla k · t · Custom mt-ext. mags, etc. e"es 8.:.;i.-3171 "'""•'· ,,.1,., •. IG,OOO 0,,.1.,_ <•"' """'~·. 830 "-·'''' '·. , · " ic rus& ... •1' ' r'zzz" '"rp") e • • e VOL\'0 'iO. 14-JS, 4 spd, $2500. 646-1519 " • "" o.w-v~-V'V"l\"7 '"' stereo, · ...., · · · ! '69 VW Bu 4 pd f r/h, air, i'tfust ste. $2100. '66 FORD Van, camperized, Austin--HeaTey ·9709 Ca pri 9715 i 7~fi:~~s~rFoR·o Maida 9738 Only $7795 Alpine J'iiite" (:,~i,l~"'""""''i'i;;'°T;;;,,.;,:r""'-:;;:-~ cond. Auto, 673-1074 '61 A.I{ 3000, lo mi. Alit/F'?.!, ·73 CAPRI V6 j-ldQCP.rden_~.B4:d.. ____ _.. __ CALL OR C.QM.E_IN_ s.EXTRi:ME..RRIDE' ,·,TyQJ.,y~ SEO~ l ,~ _.,.,,.., OfD, no worll:-needed,-alSo l~:-;-sh":il"'Jl."$25. • \\'estniinster 636---1010 ' TO SEE US · OF O\\"NERSHIP • ·set apprec:ia '· ..,..., 'i2 FORD Supervan. M:tgs. '67 parts cnr. all ocig both 494-noa Alt TP,\I & \\"knds FOH Sale 1972 Dutsun 2-WL, _.. MIW , e Groth Chevrolet e 1 ,,:83:;7_;·S005=co':...,=~~-~- carpeting, new tires, i:d ~oc,'~,.:o'"'-'77"2-<m:...:;:.:'=---,= '73 caprl V6, 4 s~. f:ictory air conditioned, A~t/F'~I . 18211 Beach HU11t Bch Voh -o ·ss l2:lS Station Y.'agon cond. $2800. ~ BMW 9712 warranty, 900) n11, 5!1-0077 radio. Stick shirt, 8 track &47~ :>'&3331 S900/ Bet.;t OUer OPEN SUNDAY * SUPER BUY!! * '72 COUPE DE VII.LE Lil«!! New --Xhrt Cond IAwMi ~2 '67 CAD. De\'llle. 31.000 oria:. mi. Tan/~·h.i1e \inyJ top. Sorr;'. no alr. Like new Auto LPsint 9580 ==-----'-or 842-9513 t:ipe dt.....-·k. 4 ne\\' radial 1ROTARY PICKUPS e e e e &16-3615 WE BUY USED CARS FREE -~~~~1~sfr;11~Wt:!an~~ ~~ ~~~o;i ~\\·ard Sansom. l YIM~ hell.I B~FORE YOU BUY ~~~~? ·~~~ cob~·a1k~t~r; ·~~UPE, clean, Nnl ANO TRUCKS 673-56:.!t '7-t DATSU~ ~.all e:-..1ras. MCToaY !WA~ JlOO \\'. ~2~M~S'Y" N.B. * A NY VW * 4!»-b896 alter 5 pin. &12 ... :Wl Come in for a free appraisal l AIR ·n CAPRI. HiOO Serie:;. Custon1 paint .t· seat <'O\'er· GET OUR COUNTRY DEAL AUTOS USED '67 SED Ov\'llle. All the ex· 642-0449 tti GROTH CHl:vROLET, ?.fake offer. ings. 1500 ?\liles. Sj.7:.0:, -... di ... M•-. -Por~ -____Jf50 OPEN SUNDAYS -'••c 9905 tras. $695. ))vt. pty. Phone ~7.flJSJ3.FA:WEh s. rBvUYd., Hw~19-~~ I, CONDITIONING ' Datsun* -'9HS03 * 673-Wo'•cco______ -· :4 , , 1970 9ll T . llA).f/5Pi\1 ~ &1·1·2951 9720 'i2 :!40Z. -1--sp., air, Ar.t/f;..1. 'i ,.1< l\tu~t see thls in1n1ac Porsche Bill Yates In; '70 M~lBLER r:.ebel SQ.I. '69 Cadillac Coupe de Ville, ::.;:.;:.::;.:.. ____ _,;_:.;:.: US ?i.Tngs. on new Steel BEAC~ Red 11.•/blk. Elee sunrr. 837-1800 & 49~5'1.l 4DR, air, auto, nict. (~ 4 .door, A·l <:ond. ;2100. or IMPORTED' AUTOS 1·! with every 'i lo 210Z fully ~q11 i9;,•:l, t:i "" !?ds .. ~Xtrag, r>ltt:keo offer .. ......._,...... n·;~ h:onii:, app. :rrJ>., am/fm, *" ·72 \l\V SQUAllEBACK BMZ1 Sl•t99 best ofler,must sell842-121 3 8EST PRICES PAID S.:pla brov•n riaint Joh. 1-";.;s..<;I~~'~'------·,....IV U.t.~DA " 111ags, 1.ierfect cond. e\'tS *· XJnt Cond. !\lust Sell!! M su.NSET -FORD I *1969 COUPE DE VILI..E"ll" O.an Lewi• l~port1 BMW • S.12-8730· '72 DATSUN PIC1WP """~r" 673-5028 or 55&-'l2S4 days. lie &l1Ja11.· * .0.1 VHlA 5410 Garden Gro\·e Bl\'d. ~ PRIDE OF OWNERSHIP l~ Harbor. C.~I. 6·'6-9.:::G: '74 :JJO z. g re en / b \ a c k , Orig. Owner-X1nt ~nd. 17lll -re• -11.. H•111· 'Gil ·912 Pofllche, 3000 ml CPE ,.. Collectors llcri\ lie V.'estmlnster 636-IOJ.O $2100-$600 CY.ill finan) WANTED· Metropolitan that 'fsold Uiru Oct. 15., 19741 ~n1/fiu. 12.00J 111 Iles, S2300 &i~90 . a.-_Dil,.•:~.Mi.,.;S•s.,. 'C on rblt eng, a1n/fn1, new Onllil18. -. ·n V\\' CA.tiff.ER Buick 9910 ** 536-2419 ** runs. Will pay $150. ROY CARVER, Inc. S5600/orter 557--4936 -n· Z10Z. Auto, Loaded. Lo ··-1 tires. Xlnt cond. 0 fr. * Priced to Sell. lie 057dllC. ,73 CADILLAC, 2 dr. Coupe 1 ____ .,..=cc-~---BMW ROLLS ROYCE ·74 610, 4 lJr. su)X'r clenn, inl. r.tint Cot~. Dover ~8·411•6666 673-t?Zi af 6· Call Vic Cra11.1ord. 837-ISOO '69 RJVlERA GS. Orig. de Ville, Bus. Exec. car, CASH FOR I 0000 ntl, wxlr Y.Titty. $3300 Shore.s. $4975. 6--l2-99SO. '-•n 914, Appta:rance Group, <ltr. O\\Tir. ;\bsolutely loaded E1'1ras. ex1.""el. cond. S.ST:iO. YOUR CAR SALES.SERVICE LEASfNG &.1·~74. '71 DATSUN 510 \\":igort, • A?.l/rl\f Stereo, 4600) mi., ·n VW BUG. Pcoo.•dtr blue, wfx"ti:as. $1600. ltfust see. Call: 567-6755 Wkdys. 9 to 6 ~7070 OVERSEAS DELIVERY "\\'eed it & 1~eap" yC'llow. 1 spd .. P./lf, $l-IOO. ~~ ~t. &,,_,;~~~w body. sharp. <034DQV\ $179!1 968--4500 alt 6;30 pm. '70 COUPE DE VILLE, all 1c-~,.~t -,r!~,_-,-,-lhe,,.--,,lti,-,.'7p! I Fron1 treasures to trash pi·t.pi y 832-1697 'i 2 l\L\ZDA RX-2. ''<'llow I ,.,.. rm. ""~ SUNSET FORD BUICK 1970 Elei...1ra Llntlted. Xtrns, leather, very gd. "List" it In classified, Sltip '234 E. lith St. Turn the111 into cash You 'll find it u1 Oassified and ~'h.itc, air. fS:..16GIS1 i1 91·1. App. Grp., ~hrome ;,.i.w Garden Grove Blvd . F' pov.·er. alr, Rm/Int !tereo, cond. Orig. owner. $2500 to Shore Results! 641-56!8. I Costa Mesa • 546-41.W CALL DAILY PILO'T' Ad. Cnll 6-12-5678, tl0'.:19 J ~·hls .. A.\f/F?.1. lo fl!• .. best \\'estminster 636-4010 Xlnt cond. $1995. SW.1.t32 Days 5-16-S991, nltes 548-8.1.68 •n•ral 9701 'General 9701 9701 9725 SUNSET FORD ofJer o\·er S·Mnl 96S-i6-IG ·10 V\\', Rebuilt engine, Volkswagen 9no Volkswagen 9nG BEACH IMPORTS • '74 FIAT X·l/9 Beauhlul red. AM/FM stereo. & mags w1tn radial tires. (411KKV) • '69 ALFA ROMEO SPIDER New red piunt. AM /FM. & radial$. (YXA644) • '72 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE X·lra SHARP! {l9250l • '72 TRIUMPH TR·6 New radial hres with mag wheels. (96CGRSl • '72 VOLVO 1800ES SPORTSWAGOM Ecoriomtcal over-dnve. AM /FM . l air cond1!t0n1ng . (111 551 • ' '72 SA.Al SOMETT Ill AM/FM & X·lra SH ARP! (380EOJI • '72 MGI Beaut•lul r11d. radial 11res. & low rntles. C57tGAZJ • O•er 80 Sport Cars In ln•entory • BEACH IMPORTS AlFA ROMEO • SAAi SalH, Ser•lct & Lte1h19 1200 W. Coast High~oy, Newport Beach 645-6406 I'-_;.-------;>I 10 G:1rde11 Gro\·e Bh·d. '60 ROADSTER b k t d k riii9i~~·~iiii!iiiiliiiiiiiiiil '"6-Sl650 ne\\' ra es, ape l."C • 72 FIAT \\'esuninster Mil~ Gl3-ti:il9 b'""3-l'-tS j Rrally Oea:n! $1650. 850 Sp'ider i-Mmedes Bent 9740 ! ' ~ 67~--6745 a!t. 6 ) 0el1011.· \l"/bnck in1e1ior, \'el)' I OVER ' ·' spd, ~k'·.1· mags/Ures/trans. econ car. l9'il, xhit cone!. I ,~'GS T ,\RG,\ i!Ten_g, an1(fn1, I\!"\\' Pop top camper fninlly 1011· miles. Really c·lean & I _ S-~~n. · many A'"tl':ls, immac. S29.:i0. original. r;;o1G tTI 35 USED "i0-911 TARt:A j spd. S. •492-1222• Only $1995 MERCEDES appo., A.\lt>'M. tapo, lo mL '6.1 BUG-00-.-.=.,~,h-.,-,~-1 CALL OR COME IN 6-t>-206:!/6i::r-S?.tl ~·/rblt lfiOO. nc11.· brks, TO SEE US ON · DISPLAY Rolls Roy<o 9756 drum•, ball•'>" '"" & House of Imports 523-7250 'SS R Type Bentley SiJOO 673-0019 afl 6pm clutch. $850. 546-3790 Brian. '64 KAR~tANN GHL<\ Cpe. N?: ney,-. 1500cc. SObp Cf1i. ne1\' radials. 1 own. :-.1nt 73VWBUG 4 @Uc.~G 5895 52595 NEWPORT IMPORTS '71 300 :'iEL 3.5. \'('ry clean . Con1rl,..1cly S<:'1-..·i<:ed. Aslc for illr. l larg1'0\'e. 900·0.l-IO bC'f :,, af1 ~i cull 6iH2:~7. s ub 9760 Brand New 1974 SAAB 99LE cond. in/out $975. 968-4793. ...--------1----------11 '73 V\\', Ud Edition Sports Bug (blue•. 1'"'?.I strrco, radials, wa1T11nty. 644--6457 I "L1~t" 1t in <'lassified, Ship lo Shore Resull'1! 612-:-£78. 9560 Trucks 9560 19 7 4 .. UV'~ 25 TO CHOOSE FROM $91 ~;,' $91:..... 4 speed. decor package. MlkadO trim. stk ,111059' SlJIZ.71 k .._ ..... cull pric• IML tn A lie.. t.n. DltwTff-,,_.. price h S-44lt IKI. tu I k. fl1M I ....,..... ~' fw 41 ...... -.,,.., .... ,.... ~ """' ., ....... • MOH. THlU FRI. I AM TO 10 PM • • SAT. & SUH. f AM TO 6 PM • GROTH CHEVROLET 11211 ilffc:h lhd. 847-6087 Hwftthtgtoa.l••ch 549.3331 '67VW BUG U:. I JlA-:11) 7!'t!'S or 6'B-1074 5 1195 52795 '73 "Tif1NG'1, custom inter., P riced to Sell y,'hff]s & top, stripes wllh ._ __ _. _____ 1----------11 a hinge, y!t! .2;AXI ?.tlleii. $2,950. Sil-6510 S4384 '69 V\V Squ:ireba.C'k, auto, (#7386) Al\f/Frtf. new tires. battery, l:'l:lll•lli•'ll;·i··m··1·1• I lo~· miles. Sl.4:i0foffer. Pvi I i Si:: i _·urt~~~·~-G°"'~"~,.;;=Zll=,:~~2~~-- BaJOOa Bay Oub" =~-~Si;=':.l-6689;c,:=---~ Sal" 64.9,.06 Service '73 V\V BUS. 7 pas~.. bed, ~ curtnins. 1 <l'A'ner, 20000 1nl. l ~T~o~yot:;.:•:._ ____ ~f7~6~5 _•cc~:.""':."~1Y..c96>-4663=.c=--- ROLLED 64 V\lt BUG, eni; e e • • in gd. cond. $300 or bcsl '73 TO)-ula Cellcn ST, Auto .;O;::":::':..'.:>"l"'3807c.:;:::.... ___ _ Trans. only 21.(0} ntlles, 1969 vw Squareba.ck. reUJt ?.IGg y,·heels, 1730.JEX) FOR & lo mif T H E DISCRJlttlN;\TlNG eng . tra.M, au ' 8 in, BUYER $2999 new paint. 962-6164 • Groth Chevrolet • '63 V\V Bug, 4. spt'al, mdlo, 11.1211 Beaf'h ltu11t Bch beater, $399 COLV06 3) 8·17-6087 54!"t-3331 .;w;..""""'l'MSc;:._;o<tl;::k..;.1 __ e • • • 'i Z V\'' ouS 'TI TO\'OTA ~lark IT St11 t $3000 f~'IT C0};lJ°slM3b2 \\':;n. auto trans. Rill a/c, lo n1ilt'K)lt'. x1nt corn!, $2100, '74 SUPER BEETI..J::. TOOO pl't ply. 5:>7·7714 mi, 11Ul\roof. nm I f m f 'U TOYOTA CX>ROU:.A gOOd ·'-t""°-~·~""'°=:.·_6_,,.~7~""~·--1 eond. $1375. or best oUer. '71 VW, ,\.\l/fl.1, Rw111 v.·ell. Aft, Ii P).I &r.>-3608. Clcan.---ll400 or bst oUor. '67 TO\"OT.\ Corona Deluxe. ="""""'~;::;.;;,·===~--1 Gd mllea,(f'. r.fkt offer. '13 V\\' CONVERTIBLE. xlm * ~ * CClhd. Lo mlleagr, coco '73 TO\')TA Coron" y,•agon. malts, $2,700. 61!r-ti003 Air conditioning, 12.343 mlle1 \T\\' But, '67 ene. w/ln1 L"'Om• <OSOJ ti.J1 S:S:OO pletel.v tini~hed, m~, $"1000 SUNSET FORD or best otr. 536-mro l-7 pn1. :il·IO Ca.iJen CJ'U\'C Bl\ll.. l!ITil VV.' BUg, auto, ori" \\'e.tn1ln.;tcr ~IOJO I Ol\11cr, lo n\Ucaet, nm of· 157 1'0YOT,\ C-Orona I cyl, ltt f!62i.ml 3 "peoeci SS&J 1:?91031 dtr. "ci"•~ .. "u",.""'••",~,-.~ •• ~ ... -,,-,-..,-,,1 6~ a1nall Items ol' am' lt~m. ' .• '68 VW !mG 73VWBUS AUIO Lie. *3"14 £ AllllO, Le ~•11...tfO sl ,395 54299 'tt.~,!Y: ~ltf.!Y~ s1495 53199 :1.!~~~-~~ 7,0~!!)J 5 1595 52999 ' 7.l }'!!,!~ '69VW BUS ~Std. l<, ~$4-AOC" 5 1795 s2099 72 VW BUG •Wlll t~ ·~ '61 .. V'f! f~tx s1495 • • • C• I IC 9t15 · hevrolet •. nlo- '73 Herdtop Cpo, OABIUOLET TOP AIR CONDITIONlNG FACTORY' , Full power, fl.Ill leather in· terior, tllt A: telcsoopic steertnc 4'-M·FM l'ldlo, door lockll. excellent condltlon in- side &: out le 1ow mile1 11">.IGIA) $5495 ·OPEN SUNDAY '72 EL DORADO Cpe. Full~wer. Air Cond, Stereo. lather interior. Cruise control (63JBF8), $5099 MAC HOWARD 'Auto & Truck Sales Corner lat &.Harbor 124 N. Harbor Santa Ana 531-6000 531-3421 '72 Cpo. de Ville ELECTRIC SUNROOF Factory a.tr conditioning, full ~er, vinyl top, 1 u 11 leather interior, dual com· fort 1eats, stereo with tape, tilt 4 tdeacoplc 11ttiering cruise control, door locks, etc., etc., Every ooncelvable "tra Cadillac makes truly a "J~w:l" in every respect. cl30GrrJ · C1maro 9917 .. '71 CAMARO Automatic trana., r ad l o , heater, ~'er steering & . brakes. Air cond. mags., Xtra clean. (261EAE) $259t MAC HOWARD Auto & Truck Seles Corner 1st & Herbor 1.24 N. Harbor Santa Ana 531-6000 531-3421 Chevrolet . 9920 '69 OIEVROLET ThlPALA 4DOOR HARDTOP Automatic, power steering, radio, heater, aJr condition· Ing, IZNV234) $1177 .nt41l lewi4 • TOYOTA ·n STATTON1Wagon. 9 pftS!, a/C, 8.Ukl tl'n.M. p/b, pl1, n,OOJ ml. m"'6820 CLASS SELl..'l -..,.5078 171 MALIBU •n Corvette St!n9r.1y . '72 FORD PlNTO Le11 then 35,000 Miies Autom:~J::erA ~~~f'.nti 4 11~u~,:~~. air n . 2--0R. HARDTOP CPE ~ nil)' wi.hi widu ool'ldllloninf, roor rock, low -.9.utlM !Junbunt Yellow • 1. ..6 ' "" ooo' ntlles <WT) matchlna vtn,yl bucket aeat1 oval tiret, "f•• tuun ON, • $.2317 va engtnp ~ •tffr • ~tual i.nllK. 103214> , power brakfl auto. tra.,:'. $4889 -i'l••• lewi& ndki, heater, 1tereo tape-, lUWA •por1 Wh .. 11, etc. 4 j"" TOYOTA like new {5550IG) _ _ OPEN SUNDAY '56 CHEVY. Stick. "6" R e I i & b 1 e tran.sportatlon. Runs rood. Best otter. £73-29&4 Can be seen at 201 E. Balboa. Blvd, Balboa. 1977 CHEVY King sw ood wagon. Full poY:cr: rack; gd oond. $2800. 49'A.#86 Chry1ler 9925 1006 Harbor, C.?it. Lincoln . . ..... Ml&.tlt ... ~ -,J:···· .. Or,.... c .......... t ._. .......... ....,_ .........__ • j • • • • • • l>AILV ,!LOT 1974 VEGA'S . 1 0%MCTOl~~msT : 51 TO CHOO$E FROM $84 ~ $84::.... 4 speed, r&dlo, tinted 9tass.. d1x. b&.111_pers, M'llttwalls-i sttt. I 1101. $SG41.70 I• tM tot•I <••h JWlce lnc:J. ta:a I tk. fees. , Dlf,rr ... 111mt, prk• is M 116 1ncl. to.-; & lie. fffl A lerryl"f er..,.., 1.,. 41 """""'on •ppro•al of y.ur ufflt. A.P.l 15.tl'.4 · .• MON. THIU UI. I AM TO 10 PM e . e SAT. & SUN. 9 AM TO 6 PM e GROTH CHEVRQLET • Hunt....,,...leoch 549-3331 Autos, U.1ed 9900Aut ... Uted "°°- • OI005e from Orange County's Largest Selection 10 TO ctfOOSI HOM 1t•r • ..._ 1t1•·· ""'*• ..... , :hs: 1973 Cpe DtVill~ .......... 1.000 .. ···""'"' S1>1cow , ..... •IUI _,. 'Atlyl too & Full .. .irw 1.._. fl(llory .it OOl>d~~ &w-.i -1-. 11• f. T....,_ a..troo. Ft.ti ~ dDoo-loc:l<9. ~ ,...._ d 1"9 XlfA ti. iulC tl'l"Q90lll. (611HPC) 17 1973 Cadillacs to choose lrom IZM-,....12,000..U. ;, Cadll•c Y .. PN+ectiCMI ,._ ·, .,... ~Ol'--1•7ttl'lrultT4 .:::;.,_ ffAB~RS: ' . .. . 2600H-111.CMhlM-, Open Eves. a. Sunday 54Mlo6~ 11141631 ·4110 , I • I ' ' U -1 AIYPIL T .,. -.. • s: I .,. c • ~ s z - -- Sundav.Oclober6, 1974 \ , ' ~ . B~T Till RISIJIG ·COST ::I llewi '7 4 Mocleh DIS.COUNRD ~ AS -UCH AS s1400 BELOW '75 = MODEL~' 5 DARt . sPo J \97~H Ill 'T ... ,~Ll\~f.026761 .. =· I Ill ·• Ill .. - ·~··--·· , ___ , ... ' ----- '72 Pinto Special Automatic. H1 Back seats. radio, heater, w.s.w. t327GBV) FULL $1376 .. ~~u s4313 ,.. PRICE rlEfER MOH'TM HOT SATl~FIED WITH SERVICE? Try VICTORY "You're the Winner" SERVtCE HOUJI$ MOllCMy 7:10 •to t :OO p111 T11t1.-Fri. 7:30-.1' 5:oo,_ We occepl all Worronly Work on All Chrysler Producls · DODGE • CHRYSlER • Pl YMOUTH Molor Home Service Too! """ ft>'fll ....... ...:..e.n. lill1191' Ow,. c..t. .....,.. ~ l•--. ~ 0.-., ......... ' • ' ,.,.._ Air conditioning. automal1c, power steering, vinyl top, \lllOitewatl tires, Low, Low miles. (176JTUJ IMMEDIATE $ 34· 76· FULL P'llCE DELIVERY + T&L 1974 OLDS -2 DOOR "Special'' Automatic, air condilioninQ, power sleering. radio. healer, 'lltllle waU !ires. (700JUL) IMMEDIATE DELIVERY . 111Vfl!SlDl ~ FULL PllCE + T&l . ··DEAL WITH YOUR FACTORY DIRECT DEALER . '1 . ' • . ' l ' • • :I: -c • t ... .... • c -c • 0 •• ... ... • ,. a Ill • I -... • ,. a Ill = c • • • • .. ,. -a ... 0 • 0 • ! I I • c -~ = c • I I z ... ' • < • ... ~ ... COSTA MESA SADDLEBACK LAGUNA BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH NEWPORT BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY IRVINE SAN CLEMENTE WEEK OF OCTOBER 6 ·OCTOBER 12 THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, OCTOBER 6, 1974 = = == = ~ ;;; -=s ::= Frieodly AMC/Jeep ""'· ~ Dunton Fo~d Dove Ross Pontiac == = 1969 Harbor Blvd .• Costa Mesa =z 2240 So. Main St.. Sonia Ano 2480 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa = 645-7770 546-7070 546-8017 ~ W d S L I Theodor~ Robins Ford _ or . ee, nc. == -== 123·4 S. Main St., Santo Ano ~ 2060 Harbor Blvd ., Cosio Mesa : 547-5826 -642-0010 "" : == Chick Iverson Porsche-Audi = =: 445 E. Coast Hwy. : Roy Car er Inc =Un' .t Old b.I Newport Beach 673-0900 a v . 1vers1 y smo 1 e = -~= 234 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa ~ 2850 Harbor Btvd .. Costa Mesa -= / = 546-4444 21 540-9640 =Cr~~rfi:\~;'s1 , Santo Ano = Roy Ca rver Jnc. . = 234 E. 17th St. = ~ Gustafson Lincoln-Mercury = Cosio Mesa 546-4444 = ~ Sod?lebock Volley Imports = 16800 Beach Blvd.. 5 = 28402 Marguerite Parkway = Huntington Beach = = w ~ Mission Viejo 495-4949 s 842-8844 = . --::% == = =-=Deon Lewis Imports = Sonia Ano Lincoln-Mercury 1966 Harbor Blvd .. Costa Mesa = Nabers Cadillac = 1301 No. Tustin, Sonia Ana E'! 2600 Harbor Blvd., Cosio Mesa == ~ 540-9100 • ;; Chick Iverson Volkswagen !§!! Connell Chevrolet 445 E Coast Hwy = Connell Chevrolet · · -2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa Newport Beach = 2828 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa = - E3 546-1200 = 546-1200 673-0900 : - = " ~ == Dor Datsun .... University Oldsmobile Deon Lewis Imports = 18835 Beach Blvd., 2850 Harbor Blvd .. Cosio Mesa 1966 Harbor Blvd .• Cosio Mesa ;;;;; Huntington Beach 842-7781 = 540-9640 646-9303 ;: ~ == a == = ~~~~~~~ -~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~ I I TV. !PORT! Hlf1Hllf1/IT! SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6 9:30AM fJ @CD CIJ Pro Football Washington at Cincinnati OR Minnesota at Dallas. 10:00 I· I Ci)'° Major league Baseball Divisional Playoffs 1:00 · Ci) Pro Football Denver at Kansas City. Pro ootball Minnesota at Dallas. 4:00 CLA Football Bruins at Utah. 7:00 : The Way It Was "Giants/Dodgers Playoff'' NBC's coverage of the American/National league Baseball OM· slonal Playoffs are tentatively scheduled for Monday-Thursday, times & teams to be announc.ed. MONDAY, OCTOBER 7 6:00PM D <a Ci)) (]) Monday Night Football New York at Miami. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10 6:00PM IJ Kings Hockey Kings vs. Philadelphia Flyers. 8:00 tij World Football league Houston vs. So. Calif. @)The Way It Was "1958 Colts/Giants.-NFL Championship" FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11 6:00PM 0 World Football l eague Tape delay. Houston vs. So. Calif. SATURDAY,OCTOBER12 T)le World Serles of Baseball Is scheduled to open today on NBC, with the opening aame In the best-of-seven series. Teams and times indefinite at our press time. lO:OOAM i Wortd Series Baseball H :OO · · @ World Series.Baseball 12:30 I (j)) (1) NCAA Football 2:00 1 CBS Sports Spectacular 2:30 S Sports Spectacular 5:00 Kings Hockey Kings at Montreal Canad1ens. (tlj (j)) CJ) Wide World of Sports 11:00 USC Football Tape delay. Trojans vs. Washington State. TV 1 ~r Evening Movit}s 7;00 8:00 9:00 10;30 7:30 8:00 9:00 11:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 11 :00 7:30 8:00 8:30 11:00 7:30 9:00 11:00 8:00 8:30 9:00 11:00 7:00 1:00 9:00 11:00 SUNDAY, OCTOBER 6 9 (C) "Th• Bis Gamble" (adv) '61-Stephen Boyd. Juliette Greco. 11 "Ora1net" (dra) '53-Jaclt Webb, Ben Alexander. 7 (,29 8) 3 ''Th• l.Aat f'Jcture Show" (dra) '71-Ben Johnson, Jeff Brldaes. Timothy Bottoms, Cybill Shepherd, Cloris Leachman. 9 "The Oublder" (dra) '62-Tony Curtis, James Franciscus. MONDAY. OCTOBER 7 9 (C) ''Elephant Walk" (dra) '54--Peter Finch, Elizabeth Taylor. 5 (C) "The i-aleface" (com) '48-Bob Hope, Jane Russell, 4 6 CC> "Salt ., i-epper'' (mys) '68--Sammx Davis Jr., Peter Lawford. 10 ''The Spy Who Ceme In from the Cold • (dra) '66--Rlchard Burton. Claire Broom. 23 6 (C) "Tell Them Wlllle Boy Is Here" (dra) '69-Robert Redford. 9 CCI "Ferry to Hons Kon1" (adv) '61-Curt Juraens, Orson Welles, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8 9 (C) "The VI,.." (dr11) '63-Ellzebeth Taylor, Richard Burton. 5 (C) "Tomb of uaeta" (hor) '6S-Vlncent Price. 4 23 6 10 (C) "Where Have All the i-eople Qone7" (susp) '74--Peter Graves. Verna Bloom, Oeorce O'Hanlon Jr •. Kathleen Qulnlan. 7 (29 I ) 3 (C) "Hit Lady'' (dra) '74-Yvatte Mimlaux, Dack Rambo, Joseph Campanella, Clu Gulaeer. ' 9 "The Restltts Years" (dr11) '59--John Saxon, Sandra Dee. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9 9 CCI ''The Tamtna of the Shr-" (com) '67 -Elizabeth Taylor. Richard Burton. • 5 CCI "What Did You Do In the War, Daddyt" (com) '66-James Coburn, Dick Shawn. 7 (29 8) 3 CC) "locusts" Cdra) '74-Ben Johnson, Ron Howard 9 "The Secret Ways" (dra) '61-Rlchard Widmark. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 10 9 (C) "Rhapsody" (dni) '54--Elizabeth Taylor, Vittorio Gassman 2 J 7 3 8 (C) "The Oood Gu ya ., the -.,d Gu ya" (wes) '69-Robert Mitchum, Geo1ge Kennedy, David Carradine, Tina Louise. 9 "Mr. Belvedere Goes to Coll•&•" (com) '49-Cllfton Webb. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 11 5 "Tht Youns Llona" (dra) '5&.-Marlon Brando, Monteomery Cllft. 13 "The Bravt One" (dra) '56-Mlchtel Ra_y. 7 (29 8) 3 42 ~C) "True Orlt" (R) (wes) '72-John Wayne, Kim Darby. 2 l 7 J 8 (C) 'Aloha MHna Oooclbyt" (susp) '74-Sally Struthers, JamH Franclscua, Joanna Miies. Henr1. Darrow. 9 (C) "The Saaa of Hemp Brown" Cwes} 58-Rory Calhoun. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 12 9 (C) "Rio Conchos" (wes) '64-Richard Boone. 5 (C) "What Did You Do In the War, Daddy1" (com) '6f>-J1mu Coburn, Dick Shawn, 4 23 6 JO (C) "Showdown" (wes) '72-0ean Martin, Rock Hudson 23 6 "God'• l ittle Acre" (dra) '58--Robert Ryan, Aldo Ray. -THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEfK, OCTOBER 6, 1974 ---- - - --- - - I ,_ -·-- JVC~s STEREO TAPE DECKS with RECORDING STUDIO QUALITY JVC's mo del R- 0 1552. A superb 3 motor. 3 head unit featuring easy threading, feather- touc h controls . au tomatic stop. sound on sound. and Quality con- s tru c t 1 on throughout. A IEST IUY AT s399's MODEL RD-1652 JVC Hi-Fi MODEL RD-1555 JVC's model R- 01555. A profes- sional quaf ity 3 motor. 4 head auto-reverse deck with all the great features that make JVC a prized ad- d tt 1 on to any stereo sy stem Oualtty look and features o f the 1552 (above) plus auto-reverse both in record and play See 1t today JUST 5 49995 AA&D Bectronics 275 E 17th STREET COSTA MESA 642-8182 Hour~ Doily 9-6 Thurs 9-9 Professional Service for all your home electronics TV · Radio· Stereo · Phono ·Tape Page 3 I 1 t 1\ II ... 11.. I 11111 11 lltll on h . 111 J Iii I . h d , \ IH \ll\H~t,,lJt\( -.f ' \\I l I l IC I'' { 1 [ •n< II I I. \' d 111 111 ot f 1. "~I ~\lh '( 111 'I '' .. 1pplic' rt 11 < h l l 11.t fl ~ \ ) !11.l .~ .!. r • 1 m ·• rl.1 d I 1 I 1 h I\ u. \\ .111 1h1 \\ f,,f "·1rr11 ·r.1ph) rt \i1 J tr d 0 tt 11111 l l>t I I \II <HU J) I OH I\ \I Ii I II ii It{ lilt I I Ill I d< ·I .. l I \ .... I I-.\ ,I, "-,1 i \(,,I t h l1111IH1 f " THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, OCTOBER 6, 1974 REGULAR DAYTIME PROGRAMS M 0 R ~~ I N L NBC's schtdule Is subject to dl11119 wlttlout notict for eover119 of tht American and N1tlon1I UlfVI 1 ... ball Divlslon•l Plarolfs tentdvely sdteduled fOf alond1y -T11ursd1J. 10:30 1J @ (]) (j) Love of Lift D Q1 @ ®lm Hollywood uare& 6 Donni Reed Show (~ (j)) (1) (D Brady Buttell Hazel Wandertust World Business News 700 Club 11:00 (i1) CI) Cf) Youn1 & Restless '-------. _____ ___., @ oo [Q) m Jackpot 6:00 I Cf) Sunn• Semester 6 Ozzie ' Harritt • Knowted1e (~ (j)) (1) a> The Girt In My Music Appreciation Mon., Wed., Life Fri.; University of Ute Air Tues., I News Thurs. Youtll Scene 6:30 I New Perspectives on Alcohollsm : Electrlc Company · Not for Women Only 11:30 @ CIJ Cl) Semh for Tomor· 6 D1ybreall row A Time to Grow Mon .. Wed., CJ QJ @@J m CelebritySweep-Fri.; Environmental Impact Report· stilles ~ & &alu1tion Tues., Thurs. ct) The Farmer's 01ugtlter (I J o Educational Features 0 (Qj (§)) a> $10,000 PJrl· Bullwinkle mid : Yor• for Health I lefs Rap 7:00 @00 ~ (i) News Features • ~ 16' [O) m TodlJ Show : Villi Alegre 6 C1rtoons Michael J1cbon Show Davey l Goliath New Zoo Revue Stock ucll1n1e : Seume Stmt ( (I)) Mornin1 Comedy Thne 7:30 6 Lassie Rllph Story's AM Tennenee Tuaedo Burs & His Buddies Gumby World Business News 8:00 @ !iJl CV C1pt1ln K•ncaroo 00 Colle~e C~dlt Courses O The Gallery (i) Sunup 1n1n1 Splits l Friends e Fllnbtones Ip & Woofer 8:30 I ::El :: ::time Movies. Romptr Room Yori & Friends ~Manna fE Mister Rogers' Nelgflborhood Ii ) The Flintstones 9:00 ,1 (I) (I) The Joker's Wiid • Sesame Street ~@ o m Name ThltTune (6) Leave It to leaver ( Movie: See Daytime Movies. Jack LI Linne I Love Lucy Children's Prorrams Features (i)) Mike Douat11 Show 9:30 I @ m (I) Gambit . el) @ ®) m Wlnnln& Sb11• 6 The Flylna Nun I Features Green Acres I Dfeam of Junnlt 10:00 (i7J (3) Now You Set It 3 Muriel Stevens Cooking Sllow ~@@) m High Rollen Movies: See Daytime MOOJies. Anythln& You Can Do The Mornln& Show Mothers-In-Lew True Adventure Stoel! Eadlanre 6i It's A New Day Em Educatton11 Profr1ms a> News/P1noram1 def Vallt Af fl HNOON 12:00 I Nloonltim~tm Jeopardy ( ) al Password I • Newt Movie: See Daytime Movies. CJ) Noon Affair/Joe B1r1th Health Show 9 Tennessee Tuaedo I Features 12:30 !UJ ffi I As tfle World Tums ~Ci) m Oa,. of Our Lives i Father Knows Best <tit (j)) (3) m Split Second Features; fforia Grey's Pet Ha. ven Fri. m•;,... s,p,;,,.,,.El""1""AL"""l Cll1mpionslllp Base- ball Tues., Wed., Thurs. KTTV wlll pre·empl regular programming (to J:JOPM) for coveraae of Dodgers vs. Eastern Division winners in Na· tional League Play-offs. I!) Diallnr for Doll1r1 EE Market C!oslnr tifj Underdo~ 1:00 I !l1l m The Gulcllnc Ught . Q) Cil m T1tt Doctors 6 Dltin~am• (Q!j l.IJ) (3) tii) All My Chit· dren DID Features @ Movie: See Daytime Movies. 1:30 l @CI) (i) Edge of Nl&ht ' @ @ @) m Another Wortd 6 Phil Donallu• Show (~ ) (I) al Lefs Malle A Deal I Movie: See Daytime Movies. 2:00 @ 00 Price ls Rtpt Gomer i @ 00 o m How to Survive A Marrfl(t . fJ (Qt) lt)) 00 al N e w I y w e d Game I!) Petticoat Junctton €t) Features 2:30 I ~ (3J Match Q1mt '74 . m Somerwt News 6 Hazel (~ CI)) a> One Ufe to Live @) Movie: See Daytime Movies. Ex· ~t Mon. W Ben Hunter lnttrvftws I Fea- tures Ninny l tilt Professor 00 Movie: See Daytime Movies. : Yop for Health 1:45 Wasllinflon Debates Mon. 3:00 @ 00 Tlttletlles ' Truth or Consequtnees Set Hunt 6 P~ Cartoons (t:HJ Cl)) (I) al G1ner1I Hos- pital Movie: See Daytime Movies. Porty Pig Get Sm1rt Btverty Hillbillies · Df1m1 • Not for Women Only Movte: See Deytime Movies. Mlle Dourlu Show Ozzie l Harriet (1) Movie: See Daytime Movies. Ban1111 Splits & Friends Yoet & Friends Tiie Munsters m New Z" Revue Adctams Family : Features ( Cf)) Comedy Cl1sslcs • Mille Doutlts Show • Muriel Stevens Cooklnc Sllow The Rifleman Superman Pufnstuf & Lldsvlll1 I Dream of Jeannie (1) Movie: See Daytime Movies. 4:30 5:00 Simpltmentt M1rl1 (Qj CI}) The fllntstonn : SeSllM Sbfft · Sube Pel1yo Futures Felil tfle Cit F1tMr Knows Best Gilllc•n's 1111114 • Lewe It to B11ver Q) (!)Merv Griffin Show Buis l His Buddies Prize·A-R1m1 81tm1n Cl)) Stu Trell Underdog DO EE News 3 News Mon. The Big V1lley 6 @ I Love Lucy • Beverly Hillbillies The Flintstones Gll.lig1n's lsl1ncf : Mister Rogers• Nelgtlboftloocl · Dr1m1 • • Tr1vel the World Wild Wild West; News Mon. RocllL' Friends 0 (1) <iatl Cl)) News Trivet Films EJCcept Mon. Moran's Herees Didi Yin ~e Bewltclted Courtsllip of Eddie's Father 1 m Journey to Adventure Room 222 : ~111 Alegre • Don Wilson's Town Tall! Three Stooges SUNDAY OCTOBER 6 MORNIN C 6:00 m Biblt AllSWtti/CMstoptiers 6:30 0 The a.rlstophera 6:45 (j) Cllristopller CIOst•Up 7:00 f1¥0rtt. M1rti1n1 · ~ @ This Is the Ufe Mormon Tabernacle Choir 6 H. R. Putnstuf Rex Humbard People's forum NFL Game of Ult Week JabberwC>CQ W1mn Roberts 7:30 B•lley's Comets The Jetsons Clllpl1ln ot Bourbon Street 6 Udm11e Billy J. Harli• lnsl1trt on Rtll&lon ,._ Elementary Niwa W Ru Humbard 7:45 1 Sacred Heart 8:00 lamp Unto My FHt . Rei Huml>ard 6 Mbslon M11ic • Jolin~ Barton Show @ lV @ Old Time Gospel our Wondtr1tna Christian Crusade (j)) Gospel Slnters' Jubllte 1:30 look Up & live Strtndlplty 6 811 Blue Marble It la Written let Thert le llpt MHtlnt Time at Calvary @ Cl) Kathryn Kuhlman 9:00 lelieT aiall'..!!.P My Sermon (9 (I)) Day of Discovery 6 Real Estttt Open House CampVI Profile • Cl) fD Ci) Oral Roberts !rewsm1ilrs I ~. of Mlradu CJ) QOS9'1 Country Rex Humbard Mormon World Conference 9:30 @ (I) Cl) Pro football Wash· inaton at Cincinnati OR Minnesota at Dallas. Vok.e of A(riculture NFl '"'" of the Week Rewrend Mu Rap With Rabbi Ml~e ~mulnt '10phecles MMt ttle Pr1SI Old Time Gospel Hour @ First Baptirt Church ( 1 (j)) Town Hall Mettlnr • Maslca y Palabm 10:00 Acdon de I• Comunldad · @ @ (10) a;, Major Learut B11ebaU Oivb lonal ""°"' Teams to be announced. Time subject to chan1e without notice. I Hour of Power Home Buyel's Gu!de Domln10 He111ld of Truth 8astb1ll Dodgers vs. Eastern Dlvls1on champions for National League title. . I Tht Hum1nlit (I)) Of. Norman Vincent Pule &ti Es ,. Yidl 11>:30 0 <9 @ ) (j) Ci) lassie's Ru. cue R•nrers/Sdtoolhouse ROck I filth for Tocl1y Tony & SuSln Alimo Mideaat Analpls P1ntlll1 Domlnlul 11:00 0 Church With A Villon Cil Movie: ''Rotd R1~ra" (edv) '59 -Joel Lawrence. Sally Fraser. 0 (fli Cl)) @ Ci) Ghost Chawrs 0 Untamed Work! 0) Movlt: ''lost In A Hare111" (com) '44-Abbott & Costello, Mari· lyn Maxwell. 48 Churdl In the Home ®First Baptist Ch11rdl 11:30 0 (~Cl)) Ci) Ci) Mike A Wish/ Schoolhouse Rod D Movie: "Francis Joins the WACs" (com) '54-0onald O'Corr· nor, Julie Adams.. Af T fRNOON lZ:OO I~~: :,,Co~:::r:~tball Hilh· Vision On Mews Geoc'1e ' Oline Ivey lnslfflt 12:30 0 Mormon WorliLConfvuu @ Movie: "M1c:hine Gun Kelly'* (dra) 'SS-Charles Bronsoo, Sunn Cabot. 0 Held On lO Movie: (C) "Don't Riise the Bridge, lower the Water<' (com) '68-Jerry Lewis, Jacqueline Pearce, Terry· Thomas. I ::n'd~C!~ebratlon Public $eMCI Travelure 1:00 Camer1 Three 9 @ @') m Pro footb1ll Denver at Kansas City. I (~ Ci)) Cil m Dlrectton1 lntematlonal Hour Safari to Adventure (])Pro football Minnesota at Dallas. 1:30 I Tod1y's Rellglon Canldlan Football Hi1hll&flb (Qj 00> Cl) a> Issues & An· l~r1oct Holmes Thutre "The Pearl of Death" &) M1Jor Ad1ms 6lf Dly of Mir1elu tional Town Mettin1 2:00 ovle: "Roman Holiday'' Crom) regory Peck, Audrey Hepburn. (3) forum O MOYie: (C) ••rrve Mllllon Yurs to b,,h" (sti·fi) '68 -Andrew Keir, Barbara Shelley. 00 Dattari O Movie: CC) "Brfradoon" (mus) ·~ene Kelly, Van John~rr. Cyd Charisse, Elaine Stewart. Ci) MOV:e: (C) "Gold for the Cus· •ra" (dra) '&4 -Jeffrey Hunter. l ne Oemo'ngeot. hith for Tod•r ( (])) Outdoors With Ken tall•· way al Celebrity Tennla 2:30 (J) Youth & tfle I.AW m Movie: "The Sf)lrit of West Point" (dra) '47 -Glen Davis, "Doc" Blanchard. IHl&fl Ch1parral Flres of Ev1npllam Consu ltltlon (j)) World of Survfv•I THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, OCTOBER 6, 1974 ffl Alm featurt 3:00 w University Dlaloru• 6 John Wayne Theatre • Movie: (C) "Twlli&ht tor the &ods" (dra) '58-Rock Hudson, ~d Charisse, Arthur Kennedy. 9 Jimmy swauut Sllow ED P!!:f Bridce With the Dperts ( CJ)) Celebrity Tennla 3:30 Tiie Bir Cout1try I Star Trek The Virrfnl1n Greetlnp from Gennany i ReU1ious Town Hall : Blad Perspective on tfle Newt I (j)) Untamed World fnslfht ,entecostat Ttftlpll 4:00 Newsmakers Movie: "Damn Citizen" (dra) ' 8-Kelth Andes, Magele Hayes. 0 lnsl1ht "Happy Birthday, Mar· vln" Bob Newhart and Anne Francis star in a comedy about ~an's en· counter with the cri~ of middle •ie. I UCLA Football Bruins at Utah. T1rz.1n Theatre m Cot1t1e Football Hl&t\liatrts Hee H1w m Movie: "Test Pilor' (adv) '38- Clark Gable, Myrna Loy, Spencer Tracy. D.@m A Discussion wrtti ... KOrun Variety Mett the Prtil af Heu : Inner Visions ( (j)) Celebrity lowllna · Toros • This 11 the Ufe Ple111nt Grove Wq 4:30 @ flee the Nltion • Sundar Paul Moyer & Kelly Lange host. EE News " 00 Gamer Ted Armstronc Hour of Dellver1nct : Washinrton Week In Review ( Ci)) Gre1test Sports Leaends • Movie Matinee 5:00 It Tlkes All Kinds John McKly Show ITTil Mews The Avengers 01nlel Boone 1 (I) Jolln Wayne Tht1lfe Korean Drema C1) N1tlon1I Geocr1phlc Green Actts : Los Angeles News Review ) This Week In the Nn • Roller G1mes Wild Wiid West Corona Now 5:30 Hogan's Heroes UttJe R1aals Tht1tl9 News I Sin Oie10 tt•ws Conference tfl>) Movie: (C) (2hr) "Smoky" (adv) '66-fess P1rker, Diana Hy· land. @ Survival Ell) Wall Street Week m Viewpoint on Nutrition EVENING 6:00 O Newt Special "Fed Up: lhe High Cost of Ealing" A special re· port on inflalion and Its impact on the grocery store. CI) Movie: (C) (2hr) "lover Come Back" (com) '62-Doris Day, Rock Hudson Cl m Meet the Prtu 1J Movie: (C) (Zhr) .,The 1tn11I Tla-r" -Edward M11lhare ll'trretes this nature documentary. I m Reaaoner Report ffl"Rtpor11 The World at War "Franee Fi lls: May.June 1940" m Movie: (C) (Zhr) .. Hen1ts of Telemark" (dra) '65--Klrt Dou1tas, Richard Harris, Ulla Jacobsen. I Nlfflt ~allety (]) John Wayne Theatre Cfilldren's Clrtoou @ film Mo>M: (C) (2.hr) "Robbery" (susp) '67-Stanley Bake/, James Booth, Joanna Pette'f. ' film Futu~ • Cl)) Till! to the M1n111r News P1nor1ma L1tlno Three Stoo,es 6:30 8 t<NXT Debate L.A. City Council· man Edmund O. Edelman and John Ferraro, both candldales for the Los Angeles County Third District Su· pervisorial offlce, debate current is· sues. 0 Anlm•I Worfd "Camels of the Andes" Bill Burrud's cameras travel to the Peruvian' Andu for a looll at the South American camel family. @ Movie: (90) "The Littlest Rebel" (adv) '35-Shlrley Temple, 8111 Rob· lnson, John Boles • 0 Movie: (C) (90) "The Presl· dent's Analyst" (adv) '67 -James Cobum. Godfrey tambridae. i Paul Sand Show Sun~ list ot the Wiid ~) Bobby Goldsboro Show e!:J 00<umentary "Un Hombre Sin· cero" ~ Journey to Adventu1e Travel film "'Ski Alberta" Roller Games 7:00 8 News 0 MUTUAL OF OMAl-iA'S * WILD KINGDOM 7:30 stars Marlin Perkins D Wiid Kln1dom "Brink of Wine· tlon" Marlin Perkins travels to the Peruvian Andes to ~how how sclen· lists there are fightin& to sava lhe vicuna from eilinctlon. 00 Trt asurt Hunt 0 Milllon $ Movie: (C) (2tu) ''Th• 811 Gimble" (adv) '61 -Stephen Boyd,· Juliette Greco. I It Tabs A Thief CI) Tr1Velln' On Ja •nest Lanruare Proar•m 6 m Wild IUncdom The Way It Was "Glants/Dodg· ers Playoff" ( R) (Q?l (j)) Hee "•• a'jSpukmy 0 START SUNDAY NIGHT *WITH APPLE'S WAY!! 0 @ (]) Apple's W1y "The Returning" The son of an old friend of Georga Apple's, 20·year·old Ben Haggerty (John David Carson), ls paroled from prison in Apple's cus· tody with the hope that llving In the Apple family wilt aid his rehabllita· tion. D TENSE DISNEY DRAMA * COUGAR VS SETILERS 0 ~ @®)a;, World of Dis· ney "Return of the Bl& Cat" Part I ol a two-part wilderness adventure concerning an 1890s frontier family whose llves are threatened by a killer cou1ar. Jeremy Slate. Jett tes lls: of as, ii· n OS U· S· e et al I" ·. s East. Rat Crowley, David Wayne, Kim Richards and Christian Juttner star. ID Can1d1 Week at Cluiut1uqu1 Am of three concerts taped at last summer's Chautauqua, New York festival featuring concerts by Cana· dian musicians backed by the Chau· tauqua Symphony Orchestra. el Chesplrito &) Armenl1n TV Hour 8:00 U Best of Groucho . 00 M"ovle: (C) (3br) "Guys & Dolls" (mus) '55 _. Frank Sinatra, Jearr Simmons. Marlon Brando, Vi· vian Blaine. 0 <9 ) rn al Th e s 0 n n y Comedy Revue Barbara Eden guests. m Movie: (2.hr) "Dr11J1et'' (dra) '53-Jack Webb, Ben Alexander. Three Passports to Adventure NipPon No Uta/News Clsey Santos Show • Axel Andenon Show • • Cine d.el Domlnao News 8:30 @ (I) (j) Koj1k "Wall Street Gunslinger'' Kojak poses as a Greek multi-millionaire with less than honorable intentions, when he goes in search of the marr responsible for a $20-million rip.off of stolen securities and the murder of three victims. O @Cil®HE NBC Sunday Mystery -Columbo "Neaative Re· action" Wealthy, successful photog· rapher Paul Galesko (guest Dick Van Dyke) plots the slaylng of his wife Frances (guest Antoinette Bo· wife Frances (guest Antoinette Bow· er) by carrying out a phony kidnap scheme. Galesko cleverly frames ex-convict Alvin Oeschler (guest Don Gordon, who becomes Galesko's sceond homicide victim. Lt. Colum· bo, disbelieving what appears to be an open-and·shut case again.st Deschler, pursues the Investigation. Joanna Cameron, David Shelner, Vito Scotti, Joyce Van Patten and Larry Storch also gues1. O Frldured Flickers I!) Pauport to Travel m Masterpiece Theatre * SEASON PREMIERE! Mobil Oil Corporation EID M11ttrpiece Theatre "Murder Must Adverttse'' Ian Carmichael ap· pears again as Lord Peter Wimsey in this Dorothy Sayers' detective story. Wimsey goes to work for a publicity firm in order to Investigate the death of a copywriter who died under mysterious circumstances. al Korean Variety 9:00 0 Oral Roberts fJ ABC SUNDAY MOVIE * 2 Academy award winning performances! The Last Picture Show 0 (Qj CiJ) (]) al ABC Sund•J Movie: (21,4hr) ''The Lut Picture Show" (dra) '71 -Ben Johnion, Jeff Brldge.s, Timothy Bottoms, Cy· bill Shepherd, Cloris Leachman, Ellen Burstyn, Eileen Brennan, Clu Gulager, Sam Bottoms. Sharon Tag· gart. Two boys who are high school seniors and Inseparable buddies, discover more about the beauty and pain of approaching manhOOd than they are quite ready to handle, trusting in the wisdom and under- THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. OCTOBER 6. 1974 -''Tiii SMALL CAil IXPIRTS11' FACTORY AUTHORIZED SALES-SERVICE -'PARTS PIUONALIDD UASING -ALL MAICIS & MODELS j lllE SEUCTIOll Of USED CMS 142-7711 540-0442 Servillg _Aff B eac/, dtie~ 5 MINUTES SOUTH OF SAN DIEGO FWY. ·. 18835 IEACH ILVD. (Hj9~woy 39) HUNTINGTON BUCH standing of a former cowboy who -Tony Curtis, James Franciscus. owns the local movie. theatre, for I Action: Inner Ctty security and guidance. Mission: Impossible ., I Gamer Ted Armmnr News Safari to Adventure Cil Yaney Derringer Japanese llnruage Proaram : Flr:ng Une The 'One WaJ · Nadlvllle Music Noche de Gala 10:45 EE This Is Japan Korea!' Drama ll:OO IQ Cl)@)@ (I) News 9:30 fJ @ (I) Cl) Mannix A woman Pacesetters friend of Mannix's aslls him to find 6 Rodi Concert out why. attempts hm been made m THRYN KUHLMAN on the hfe of her daughter who re· * (IN COLOR) cently regained consciousn~ss after being in a coma for a year. Pamela I!) Katti~ Kuhlman Franklin, James Nau1hton and @ @ D11logue Katherine Helmond guest. 11:30 fJ Movie: "BlllJ Budd" (dra) '62 IJ It Is Written -Robert Ryan, Terence Stamp. fJ 'THE KING IS COMING' 0 9@ Tonlfht Show * GREAT WHITE THRONE U Movie: ''One Heavenly Nlfht" DR. HOWARD C. ESTEP (muC> 'Jl ) Jo~~_:oies. I The Kina Is Comln1 ~ r!p~ (I) The Bir Que~on ~ Movie: (C) "C.ptlln Newman, Evenlna at $Ymphon~ The Bos· M.D." (dra) '63 -Gregory Peck, ton Symphony Orchestra is conduct· Tony Curtis Angie Dickinson-. ed by S~lji Ozawa in an ~11-Ber1ioz m Movie: '"Drapet" (dra) '53 - concert: 'The Roman Carnival Over-Jack Webb Ben Alexander Stacy ture," and "Symphonie Fantas· Harris. ' ' ttque." Ii) Movie: "The Purple Qan(' (dra) 10:00 Day of Discovery '60-Barry Sullivan, Robert Stake. • Dr. Norman Vincent Peale Im Rock Concert EE News Wirren Roberts 700 Club ( (j)) Spanish Movie • • Ptalse tfle Lord Club 11:45 Movie: "Rapture" (dra) '65 - Lou Gordon Show Melvyn Douglas, Dean Stockwell. 10:15 Royal Family of Japan/Chai· 12:30 I Rlrtrt On. lenre Golf 1:00 . Speaking FreelJ 10:30 I Follow-Up Movie: "Clstle of Evil" (susp) • The Tlmt ltln1 '66-Scott Brady, Virginia Mayo. Mr. Gospel Guitar 1:40 IJ Movie: "The Most Danpro111 The Protecton Man Alive" (mys) '61 -Ron Ran- • Movie: "Thi Out:Mder" (dra) '62 dell, Dtbra Paaet. MONDAY OCTOBER 7 For morning and afternoon listings. please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 1:30 9 "Advent~re In Dl1monds" (mys) '40--Georie Brent, Isa Miranda. 9:00 0 (C) "Biiis Are Rin&ina'' Part I (Com) '60-Judy Holiday, Dearr Mar· @ (C) "Out of Si&hf' (com)-Jon· athan Daly, Karen Jensen. 0 (C) ''8entlemen Prefer Blondes" (rorn) '53 -Jaite Russell, Marilyn Monroe, Charles Coburn, Elliot Reid. •:OO @ (I) "81n1n1 Rid&t" (com) '42 -Robertson Hare, Isabel Jeans. fV£NINr. 1:0011m m News • ~@~@ News lonlnzt ( (j)) (]) al ABC Monday Ni11tt footb1H New York i.ts at Miami Dolphins. Whafs My liner tin. Jean Stapleton. 10:00 9 "B1ron of Arlzon1" (wes) '50-'- Vincent Price, Ellen Drew. ''The Tr1il !eyond" (wes) •M -John Wayne. I Shot Jesse J1mes" (wes) '49 - John lretand, Preston' Foster.·· P1rtridp flmlly Mod Squid Muslul Comedy ShO'lr · Stair Trek : Electric Comp1ny Speed Rater 12:00 m "Above Susplelon'' (adv) '43- Jctan Crawford, Fred MacMurra~. Conrad Veldt. 1:00@ (C) "M1d1me11 (com) '63-So· phia Loren. 1:30 0 (C) "Dauehter of Rosie O'Gr1dy" (mus) '50 -June Haver, Gordon MacRae. Debbie Reynolds. 2;30 a) (j) (C) "$eflffllt Ryter" (dre) ~ee Marvin, Bradford Dillman, Vera Miles. 3:00 Ci) (C) "A Covenant WIUI Duth" (dra) '67 -George Maharis, Katy Jurado. 3:30 ~ (C). "The Lost. World" (sci-Ii) 6G-M1chael Rennie. David Hedi· son. Claude Rains. Page 8 6:30 I Raymond Burr Show Andy Griffith : Zoom! • The Pioneers Little R11c1ls 7:00 Io tf9) QJ oo m "'W1 Bowfing for Ooll1rs 6 Mod Squad ITruth or CoAsequeacu I love Lucy The Flt Cil Ho11n's Heroes Esmeralda Big V1lley I Chant to ai1nce Dr1m1 Three stooges 7:30 IJ M1squerlde P1rty A Police Surveon "The Militant" 9 Help Thy Neipbor 00@ CI) To Tell the Trutfl ,A Million S Movie: (C) (211f) 'Elephant Walk" (dra) '54-Peter Finch, Elizabeth Taylor. Dana Arr· drews. (iO) let's Mike A Dul I Bewitthed @ Wild Wor1d of Anlmala WHllln&fon Stral&ht T1lk m Jimmy Oun Show m Little RISCllS 8:00 fJ @ (3) CU Gunsmoke ''Thirty A Month & Found" Gene Evans, Ni· cholas Hammond and Varr Willlams guest as three trail cowboys whose frustrations lead to robbery when they find their way of life coming to an end; David Brian and Fard Rain!t_ also guest. 0 Q~ 00 @! ~ Bom free "Afri- e:a's Child". When an ll-year-old clrl finds an infant in the bush, left there by the Boran tribe as part of an ancient rite, George must decide What to do with the infant without insulting the Borans. Dawn Lyn t!L'S!S. U Movie: (C) (2hr) ''The P1lefac1'• (com) '48-Bob Hope, Jane Russell. I Best of Groucho Dealer's Choice The Bold Ones Teltro def Aire Movie: (C) (2hr) "Beloved In· fidel" (dra) '59 -Gregory Peck. Deborah Kerr. Eddie Albert. i Film Feature Penthouse Movie: ''Crime by Nipf' (mys) '44-Jane Wyman, Jerome Cowan 1:30 @ Get Sm1rt THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. OCTOBER 6, 19'74 a Job with a small publis'11n& firm and ends up deliverln& the eulogy at the funeral of an author whose ic~~ ~:s ~::t~~ books. I!) Dr1m1 10:00 fJ UtHI> Ci) Med lea I Center ''The Shattered Mask" Cameron M~chell cuests as a man who mys. tenously refuus to let his dau&h· ter have the heart operation that will free her from life in her wheel· chair. Deborah Winters also guests. ~Gomer Pyle fl 8\R/Ji:O."' Pep A mu· s1c11 documentary filmed at the Monterey lntema!ional Pop Festlval starring Janis Joplin, The Mamas & Papas, Jimmy Hendrix, The Jetter· son Airplane, The Wha, Country Joe & the fish. Otis Reddin& tnd Ravi Shan1tar. I £due1tion1I Ecoloe.y Serles Tiie Untouchables Political C1ndicl1te1 "Secretary of State" A series of political de- bates between major candidates for stat~wide offices, presents Demo· crat1c Assemblywoman March Fong vs. Republican Bri1n R. Van Kamp both candidates for Secretary of State. (~ Ci)) lon1nz1 aJ MO'lle: "The OVtr·the·Hlll Gana" (com) '7~at O'Brien. Chill Wills, Walter Brennan. • Journey to Advtirture Bill Cosby 10:30 I Saf1ri to Adventure -------::...:=::=::__J la Cludld Grltl • Musical Comedy m Merv Grfftln Sitc1W m Specl1I of th• Wetlt "The Gar· ll:OO l rn De>!""" den Party" This dramatization of • 00 ®3 EE Cl) News Katherine MaMfield's s11ort story Best of Qro set In Vermont in the late 40s, l~ll; • NYPD. 11 of a young girl's fim encounteT Movie. (C) Ferry to Hona with deatlt when someone she 1(0111" (adv) '61-Curt Jurgens, Or· knows dies. son Welles. 9:00 tJ @ (})Ci) Mtudt Walter Find· 1=:':'to~~111~:ulblt lay and Arthur Harmon ao off on a @.Peter Gunn fishing trip ·~~ land In Jail while Wild Wild West Maude and V1v1an stay home and : Y~ for Heiittl ~on a calorie blner. ( liJ) W1nted: Dud or AJlve U CI) m NBC Monday Movie: (C) (2hr) "Slit. & Ptpptr'' (mys) '6S-11:30 fJ !J1) (I) CBS late Movie: (C) Sammy Davis Jr., Peter Lawford, Mi· ''The Woman Hunter'' (susp) '72- chael Bates, Ilona Rod&ers. The two Barbara Eden. Robert Vauahn, Stu· o~ners of one of London's smartest art Whitman, Larry Storch. ~11ht clu~s become involved in sofv. (}) Movie: "Blast Of Silence" (mys) 1.!!J a series of b1ffllnt murders. '61-Allan Baron, Molly McC1rthy. u <9 Cl)) CV m 1\e Roolles I ~ @ ffij} m Johnny C1rsoc1 "Death at 6AM" Chris narrowly es· Fl'KturedFUoers capes death at the hands of a ttio 6 Movie: "I Was an Actventu...u" on a wild crime spree that leads (dra) '40 -Vera Zorina Richard to the killing of a policeman and a Greene. Peter Lorre. · doctor. Rescheduled. D Movie: (C) "Blood of the Vim· @) Movie: (2hf) "111e Spy Who pirt;' (hor) '59 -Donald Wolfit. Came In From the Cold" (dra) '66 Baftlart Shelley. -Richard Burton. Claire Bloom. IW1nderlust OJ Dl'lgntt : Humanist Alttrnatlvt IU @ Movfe: (C) (21ir) "Tell Them ( Ci)) Science Fiction Thtatre Willie Boy Is Here'• (dra) '69-Ro). ert Redford, Katherine Ross, Robert 12:00 9 Movie: "Crosstrap" (mys) '00-Blaktr. Laurence Payne. Jiii Adams. tE lnfl1tlon: The Money Merry-Go-m L,1ncer Round 1:00 O Q.j Tomorrow ~ Muy Aeradecldo 9•30 1:45 tJ Movie: (C) "Meet Me Afttr the · SMw'' (mus) '51 -Betty Grable, tJ RHODA--COMEDY HIT Macdol'l'lld Carey, Eddie Albert. * Rhoda finds work! 3:00 IJ Movtt: "Kiil Me Tomo"ow'' e @ CV (I) Rhoda Rhoda lands (dr•) '57-Pat O'Brien, Lois Max· well, Tommy Steele. firm ulogy hose nt•r eron mys. ugh· that heel· sts. mu- the tival as & ff er· Joe Ravi tary de· tor nf Or· (C) X· TUESDAY OCTOB[R 8 For morning and afternoon llstlnp, please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 8:30 IJ "Tiie Masquerader" (dra) '33- Ronald Colman, Elissa Landi. 9:00 fJ (C) "8ttls Are Rincint' Concl (com) '60-Judy Holiday. 10:00 IJ "f1llen Idol" (dra) '49 -Jack Hawkins, Michele Morgan. "Wllcl; fir•" (wes) '46-Bob Steele. "RI· tvm of Jeue James" (wes) '50 - John Ireland. 12:00 m ''Tocetller A(lln" (rom) '.44 - Irene Dunne, Charles Boyer. 1:00 9 "th1 on the ltun" (dra) '58 - Efrem Zlmballst Jr., Erin O'Brien. 1:30 0 (C) "Call Mt Mister" (mus) '51 -Dan Dalley, Betty Grable. 2:30@) (C) "CounterPolnf' (dra) '68- Charlton Heston, Maximilian Schell. (1) ~ (C) "AnJ Second Now" (dra) 69 -Stewart Granger, Lois Nettleton. 3:00 Cf) "Mr. lutky'' (adV) '48 -Cary Grant. Laraine-Dey. 3:301J (C) "Ha" Ancer• (com) '51- Loretta Young, Joseph Cotten. (!)"Wells F1110" (wes) '37 -Joel McCree, Frances Dee. fJ (C) "Slnitn' In tlte Rain" (mus) '52~ene Ketty, Donald O'Connor, Debbie Reynolds. Jean Hagen. 4:00 @ (I) ''Blue Peter" (dra) '55 - Kieron Moore, Greta Gynt. 6:00 EV E NING · U (l)mmmNews o !.UlW~(t)(~(j)) News Bon1nu W111rs My Une? Partriclp flmilJ Mod Squid Muslul Comedy Sbo• Star Trell : Electric Comp1n, Speed Racer THE DAILY' lllLOT, TV WEEK, OCTOB~ 6, 1974 • the People Goner•. (susp) '74 -charming man who manaaes to rob Peter Graves, Verna Bloom, George banks and elude the police with O'Hanlon Jr.. Kathleen Quinlan, his smooth talk. Larry H11im1n abo Mlchael·James Wixted. A man and stars. his family fitht for survival after a Im m NtWI deadly virus produced by a myster-The Bold Onu lous radiation explosio~ kills most <9 (j)) CD al Marcus Welby of the people on earth. M.D. "The Outraie" Stan Kelly CI) Mike Douatas Sllow guests as a boy who has been Ult fJ ABC Tuesday Movie victim of child molestation and al-* Yvette Mimieux stars thouch Injured and depressed will as THE HIT LADY not reveal the name of his attacker to Or. Welby. And she never misses ®The Untoudlables fJ (Qi Cl)) CI) al ABC TuesdaJ EID S.11 of Western Man "Christ Is Movie: (C) (90) "Hit Lad(' (dra) Born" The story of the wanderlnp '74-Yvette Mimieux, Dack Rambo, of the Hebrews from tbe time· of 6:30 IRaJmond Burr Show Joseph Campaneffa, Clu Gulager, Abraham and the birth of mono· Andy Griffitt! Kennan Wynn. Yvette Mimieux stars theism through the desert soJourn : Zoom! as an elegant. cultured woman of Moses. ( @ ) Dealer's Choice ~hose job as a profesilonat a~ist 10:30 I JourneJ to Adventure • The Pioneen 1s the cover for the real occupation Bill Cosby little Rast1l1 s~e now can't quit-a successful La Cludad Grill 7:00 l (I)Qf)Q:g)ril(i)m a> News hired asS'assln. • Noches T1p1tlas Bowling for Dolf us m Merv Griffin Show 11:00 0 fJ 6D !&) News a Truth or Consequences * FAR·REACHING DEBATE Best of Grouc 6 Mod Squad m SROWN VS FLOURNOY !Ci)@>@) @ News I Love Lucy Ell) Polltit.al Candidates tor Gover· 6 NYPD The Fii nor (90) Edmund G. Brown Jr.. • Movie: ''The ReJtleu Yura" Cl) Hoean's Heroes Democratic gubernatorial candidate (dra) '59-John Saxon, Sandra Dee. Esmer1lda and Houston Flournoy, Republican Mluion: l111posslble The Bir Valley candidate, meet In a debate taped ~l_etit Gille,, : Cipltcbers at the L.A. Convention Center. CI) Peter Gunn ( Cl)) 8onanz1 9:00 1J @ CD Cl) H 1 w 1 11 r i v e·O Wild Wild West • Drama When the State Senate crime czar's : Ahora! Three Stooiu limousine explodes with killing force, < I Cf)) Winted: Dead or Allvt 7:30 I $25,000 PyraflNd McGarrett uses handwriting analysis 11:30 .. @ ~Cl) ~ Late Movfe: (C) Gomer Prl_e and psychiatry to find the twisted C.nnon ~dra) 70-Wllllam Con· · ®l ~(!)Hollywood Squares mind responsible. Wiiiiam Windom rad, Vera Miles. I Help T1Jy NelPbor guests. 0 i3J @ ®J m Jollnny C.non R1Jnbow Sundae "Over Seven" @!) Los Grandts Anos del Rodi Norm Crosby auests. @(])To Tell the Truth 9·30 I News IJ Fr1ctured Fllders MiUion $ Movie: (C) (2hr) "The · Safari to Adventure !]) Movie: "Misslnr Juror'' (dra) VIPs" (dra) '63-Elizabeth Taylor, Afldonaclos del Norte 4.4-Janls Carter, Jim Bannon. R·~h d B rt Lo · J d D fJ <9 Cl)) (}) al Wide World 1 .. ar u on, u1s our an. · ram1 · MJSilfJ "Lady Kiiier'' (R) Barbati Day at Nlrht iJ BUDDY EBSEN-TV'S e dwon1:dn:rf.~ert Powell star. I Bewitched " 10·00 f I R Outdoors wttb Ken CaUawaJ I un Animal world * BARNABY JONES-HIT! : Acclon Chlclno Little Rasuls IJ @ @ Cl) Bamiby Jones ''Odd 12:00 Movie: "Men Wttllout N1mn" 1:001J @ CIJ Cl) Sood Tlmei Young Man Loses'' An Intricate plot (r'rlys) '35--Fred MacMurray. Michael's school assignment to write hatched by three car-pool members m Movie: "Her Twelve Men" (com) about the man he most admim sets to hijack $300,000 of an indu&· '54 -Greer Garson, Robert Ryan. off a chain reaction in the Evans trial company's funds used In illicit EID Buritar Proofln& "While the household. deals aoes awry when the courier Cat's Away · • ·" O~@®Jm Adim-12 "Team· of the mo·ney is accidentally ki11ed 12:30 1 · Yoa• for H111tt1 work" Officers Malloy and Reed be· In the otherwise successful robbery. 1:00 • ~ TOfllorrow come Sll$picious when the same wit· a "POLICE STORY"-QJ m News ness and the same tow truck show * A REAL COP SHOW l :45 ovle: "AAa~g tfle Grea1 Dl~e" __ (wes) '51 -Kirk Oourlas, Virarnf1 ~at two different traffic accidents. B eij CJ) ®J m Police story Mayo, Walter Brennan. U Movie: (C) (2hr) ''Tomb of LI· G m I ,._ .. W •" (hor) •65 _Vincent Price. " lamour Boy'' Tany Lo Bianco and 2:00 All·N Pt Show: "uvublt Ute," Btst of Groudlo Don Meredith star as detectives "Death C..11e of Tartu" (Qj @)(})al H•PPJ Dip Tony Calabrese and Bert Jameson 3:10 IJ Movie: "The 8t1ln" (scl -fi) '64 "R.O.T.C." Richie's leadership ebil· in thlS' story about a suave and -Peter Van Eyck, Anne Heywood. ity is put to a trying test when he Is put irr charge of the high school R.0.T.C. unit. I Dealer's Cllolce The Vlr(inian Qorrlon Movie: (C) (211r) "Dtsperltt Mission" (adv) '64-German Cobos. Ell) Amerlct "Home From Home" Part II. m El Julclo el) Movie: "Garden of the Moon" (mus) '38-John Payne. 8:30 1J@ (3) (j) M•A•s•H The en· tire MASH team of surgeons facu an exhaustlna 41J.houra In the oper· ating room, and amidst the wise· cracks and the reality, they each learn something new about the other. B U [i) ®l m NIC Tueld1y Movie: (fj (90) "Wlttre Htve All Dawn Lyn guest stus in the "Africa's Child" segment of NBC's Bom Free, Monday at 8 PM, es ll·year-old Regan Mallory who comes to Kenya to visit her granctt.ther. While there she unknowtngty comes upon an ancient rite concerning Infants and It takes the help of Georae and Joy Adamson (G1ry Colllns and Diana Muldaur) to bring the situation under con• trol. The series Is fllmed en· ti rely In Kenya. * * * Anne Murray, a aln,er who Is as popular In the United States as she Is In her native Canada, performs on the ABC Wide World: "In Concert," series Friday at 11:30PM. TIHD Of CAI )AYMlNTS? LEASll O•DU YOUIS NOW 1974 MODELS All MAKES Pa1e 9 WEDNESDAY OCTOBER 9 for morning and afternoon llstinp , please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, tor your convenience, are the cUy's moviH . DAYTIME MOVIES 1:30 O "udy from Kentutky'' Cdra 3~1 Ellen Drtw Gtorge Rah 9:00 0 "Sntn AAVJ Men" <dra1 SS-I Paymond MaS\t1. Denn s Weaver j Jeltre1 Hunter Dtbra Paget I 10:00 O "Run, Prycho, Aun" tdra) '66- Gary Memll Elga AnderYJn "Siem Sue'' (wes) '41-Gtnt Autry "1'1and Of Lost Souls" <dra) '33-Bela Lu gos1, Charle1 Laughton. 12:00 Q) "D1ndn1 Lad(' Cmus) '33 - Joan Cra.,,ford. rred Asta1re. Clar~ Gable 1 :00 ~ ''Wrthout Reserntioru" I com) '4&-ClaudeMe Colbert. John Wa1ne Don Ol!fore 1:30 O (C) ''Slnttrtly Yours" (mus) '55 -Liberace Joannt Dru Dorothy Malone 2:3010 "The Sltndtr Tllru!f+> Csusp) '66 ,,. -S1dne:1 Poitier, /inne Bancroft cl 'A '6 (C) "Boom" Cdra) '68 - Fhtabeth Taylor Richard Burton 3:00 'i., "Bl1ckburd the Pir1tt" <adv) 52-Robert Newton, Linda o,,nell 3·30 f) "Stran1trs on A T11in" (mY\) '51-farl;,;Granger. Robert Walker Ruth Rom (3 "Bir roadcast of 1931" (com) '38-Bob Hope. W C fields 0 (C) "P•I Joey" (mus) '57 - Frank Sinatra, Rita Hayworth, Kim Novak 4:00 lft (J,, "Conflict of Wines" {com) ·53 -K1eron Moore. John Gregson. 6:00 EVENING ~m mmNews 't fi)@(OV(i;) News on1n11 • What'a My Line? Partridae F1mily Mod Squad Muslctl Comedy Show ~Stu Trek m Electric Company a) Speed Ricer Old Blue Eyes has one g1r1 tnend too mall'f f1w4k SfNATRA RiTA HA)W()Rlft KiMNovAk PAI.JOE}' The 3:30 MOVte Wedn~sday (?) 6:30 IRiymond Burr Show Andy Ciriftittl : Zoom! ( ,,, ([,) Oul~t's Choice • The P»neers little Rascals 1:00 fJ@ofJ®J~mm Hews ; Bowline for Dol11rs Mod Squi d Truttl or Consequences 11 love Lucy The f'BI ~ Hoian's Heron m Esmmlda eij Big V1lley 1Ch1nt to Chance (jJ) 8on1nra Drlma Three Stoo1es 7:30 1J Lome Greene's lut of the Wiid Ken Berry and Karen Valentine are the hosts for "Bachelor of the Year," a spoof of beauty pageants In which men are the con- testants, which will be seen as a Wide World Special, Wednesday • at 11:30PM. Page 10 nit DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK. OC~BER 6. 197~ '3 '°'9er Pyle I!) Notr1 D1m1 Football Hifhll1htJ Q Name That Tune Tom ~nnedy fE Clrmin1 hosts 9:30 O News D Help Thy Ntl&tlbor m Hollywood TtlMsion Theatre Q ~ ~ Make A Deal "Gondola" Alfred Hayes' timely I 17: ~To Tell the Trvttl study in dltferinc human values fof. O M Ilion $ M~e: (C) (2hr) "The tows a lawyer u he tracks down Ta•ln1 of the 5'1rew" (com) '67-and questions the only witnesses to Ehubeth Taylor, Ri<:hard Burton. a crime for which two black youths 10 Price Is Rilflt have been convicted. Norman Lloyd, I hwitchtd . Sandra Locke and Bo Hopkins star o., at Nilfrt €!) Drama Other People, Other Pl1e~s lO:OO . =~°;;'1"' S ZOOM INTQ-ACTION a.1>0 B 1L m Sons & Daupters * WITH NEW MANHUNTER "The Aa:ldenl" Jeff's-close rnend· e (IX(]) Cl) M1nhunter "frack· ship with Stash Mtlmck Is abruptly down" A killer bank robber gets transformed when, in a cruel twist away with a strongbox full of 1old of fate Jeff's mother Is seriously but loses it as he heads for his injured by a c;ar drrven by Stash. backwoods hideout and an explosive 0 ~ 'IJ o m Little House on family feud. the Pr1irie "The love of Johnny 0 @ @') m PetroceUI "A Johnson" The puppy-love bua bites life for A lift" Petrocelli defends a Laura (Melissa Gilbert) when a new young man (guest Geoffrey Deuel) boy comes to school But when he unfortunate enough to be in the comes a·u llln1 at the lngall's wrong town. at the wron1 place, at house. ti's not Laura he wants to the wronit time. see but her mler Mary (Melissa ~ m Q) News Sue Anderson) Mitch Vorel guests The Bold Ones 0 Movie: (C) (2hr) ''Wllat Did You (Qi (!)) tl) Get Christie Do in the Wu. O.cftty?" (com) '66 Love! "Death on Delivery" Imper· -James Coburn, Die~ Shawn Aldo sonat1ng a 1lamorous courier for a Ray counterfetl nng she has Infiltrated Bttt of 'roucho Cl1nsl1e discovers she 1s also er· Pected by members of the sYnd1cate fJ "THAT'S MY MAMA•." to execute the drui rin1's chieftain * FU NNIEST NEW SHOW ~The Untouch1bles 0 (~ Cl)> XI m That's My M• 10:30 I J~urney to Adventure ma "Clifton's Bi1 Move" Clifton gets 8111 ~sby tallltd mto moving away from mama. l1 Ciud1d Ciritl and into a bachelor apartment with : Inner Visions an old Army buddy to en1oy lhe • Comedy sw1n11n1 single ltfe. 11:00 I 3 0 I m m m "ews I Oe1ler'1 Choice · o EE Ci) """ It Taht A Thief Best of Groucho Variety ~ NYPD Movie: (2hr) "Morituri" (dra) • Movie: "The Secret W1ys" (d11) '65-Yul Brynner, Marlon Brando. • 1 -R'chard Widmark, Sonja Zie· EE! The Men Who Made the Movies mann. "Frank Capra" I Miuion: lmpos.slble @'!) Ch1mplonship WreJtllnf '!!iflt '•llery &') Japanese l 1ncuegt Prorr1m (J) Peter Gunn 8:30 Mlh Dou&fas Show Wild Wild West • : Y![I for H11ltll fJ ABC Wednesday Movie ( l!J) W1nted: Deed or AINI * Two Against Billions 11:15 m Cinema 34 fighting an endless 11:30 1J ~ ffi CBS Late Movie: (C) ARMY OF LOCUSTS! "Cutter (dra) '72-f>eter Oe Anda, 0 (Qi ) (3) G) ABC Wednu-Cameron Mitchell, Barbara Rush, day Movie: (C) (90) "locusts" (d1a) Janet Maclachlan, Robert Webber. '74 -Ben Johnson, Ron Howard. 19 CI) OOl m Johnny Carson Katherine" Helmond A menacing Frldlll'ecf'Fllcters swarm of locusts forces a young 6 Movie: "Riot in Cell Blott 11" Wor1d War II pilot, dischar1ed as dra) '54 -Neville Brand, Leo Gor unlit to fly. to try to conquer his don. personal tmor and dispel his 0 (~ ) CIJ G) Wide World father's shame. Sped1I "Bachelor of the Year" Ken · Q) Merv Griffin Show Berry 1nd Karen Valentine host. ~ r.t"I (j) I!) Wander1ust 9:00 e IJ..!) l..lU I fPICtAl I B I n a m Festini Films Crosby la His Friends Bing Crosby, · . .. ., , the man whose firrt or last name 12:00 0 Movie: Human Clr10 (dra) 36 alone Identifies him around the -Brian Donlevy, Claire Trevor. world with a special brand of ar· m Movie: "Blick Hind" (dra) '50 tistry, plays host 10 Pearl Bailey, -Gene Kelly, J. Carrol Naish. Bob Hope and Sandy Duncan In a EEi Video Vlalonarits musical-comedy show. 1:00 I ~ Tomorrow D ® Cil ®H?:Huco Tanner 3 Cl) fil@News 'Winners & Losers" When an appar· 1:45 ovle: (C) "Snow Tr11sure1' ently mentally sharp but physically (adv) '67-James Franciscus, Ilona clumsy s1udent quits school, a con· Rogers. cerned Lucas Tanner ruffles leath· 2:00 m All·Ni&ht Show: "Ora1onwyct," e1s among parents and faculty "The Jualer'' members in a determined effort to 3:10 IJ Movie: "Brimstone" (wes) '49 learn the reason. Andrew Parks and Rod Cameron, Adrian Booth, Waller Richard Jaeckel guest. Brennan. ER rack- gets gold r his osive ''A ds a euel) the e, al istie per- or a t!d. e.c- cate a1n. ra) ie· C) a, n l" r· Id n 6 ,, 8 THURSDAY OCTOBER 10 For morning and afternoon listings, please see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below. for your convenlenc.,-re the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 8:30 O "Shadow Mi n" (mys) '53 Cesar Romero, Kay Kendall. 9:00 O (C) "Sp1nlsh Att1ir" (adv) '58 -Richard Kiley, Carmen Sevilla. 10:00 O "I W1nted Wings" (dra) '41- Ray Milland, Wiiiiam Holden. "New " frontier" (wes) '35 -John Wayne. "Sien• Pusege" (wes) 'SI-Wayne Morris. Lola Albright. 12:00 m "The Berefoot M1ilm1n" (com) '51-Robert Cummings. 1:00 ® (C) "Merry Me! M1rry Me!" (com) '68-Claude Beri. 1:30 fJ (C) ''The World in Hi5 Arms" (dra) '52-Gregory Peck. 2:30 o (C) "Night Gellery" (susp) '69 -Joan Crawford. Barry Sullivan. tn 00 (C) "Wort Is A four-letter Word" (com) '68-0avld Warner. 3:00 (i) "The lfttte Minister'' (dra) '34 -John Beal. Katharine Hepburn 3:30 1J (C) "Rally 'Round the Flaa B s" (com) '59 -Paul Newman "Centennial Summer" (rom) '46 -Jeanne Crain, Cornel Wilde. O (C) "Gyp.sy'' Part I (mus) '63- Natalie Wood, Rosallnd Russell. 4:00 @ (I) "The flying Squad" (mys) '40-Stephen Shaw, Phylhs Brooks. .. . THE DAILY PILOT, "TV WEEK. OCTOBER 6, 1974 EVENING al Jueves de Gila puts both the drivers' lives In Jeo-m Japanese l.ln2u1ge Program pardy. ~mGJNews 8:30 00 Mike Dou&11S Show The Bold Ones 6•00 I 0 00_®) al mm News 0 (fij Ci)) @m Piper Moon 0 ITICS HARRY · 3 B@rn@OO<fijOO> News For her forthcoml11g birthday, Addie say 0 Kings Ice Hodtey (3hr) L.A. tells Moze she would like to "cele-* is like BOGART-Smash Kings vs Philadelphia Flye1s brate big," by placing a phone call DAVID JANSSEN HIT! I Bon~nza . to the President of the Unite~ 0 <9 (j)) @ al Harry O "Coin- Whit's Mr line? States. Addie places her call to age of the Realm" An unresolved P1rtridge f1milr President Roosevelt from a small -police case provilles the bizarre twist Mod Squid town courthouse switchboard and to Harry's efforts to save the life of Musical Comedy Show causes a small commotion on which a critically 111 little girl and prevent Star Trek Moze Quickly capitalizes. a gangland murde1. a!) ~ectrit Company m Merv Griffin Show Ei) Dotument111 From Melfc:o m Speed Ricer fI) Politit1I Candidates -Governor fI) Citywetdlers 6:301·Rlymond Burr Sllow Guests for ~ polltlcal debate. are Ed-10:30 I Journey to Adventure Andy Griffith mon V. Kaiser or the Amencan In· Bill Cosby : Zoom! dependent Party and Elizabeth Keath· la Ciudad Grill ( (j)) Dealer's Choice ley of the Peace and Freedom Party. fI) International Performance "La ffi little Rascals 9:00 1J (i7J (3) (j) CBS Thursday Mtlv· Sylphide" This Paris ballet recreates 7:00 8~00 o ~@mm News le: (Cf (}hr) ''The Good Guys & the one of the great choreographic W Mod Squad Bed Guys" (wes) '69-Robert Mil-wo1ks of the 19th century; Philippe Truth or Consequences chum, George Kennedy, David Carra -Taglioni's story of a young Scotch I love Lucy dine, Tina Louise, Douglas V. Fowley, nobleman and his love for a wood-~The FBJ Lois Nettleton. Marie Windsor, Mar· land spirit. @ Hogan's Heroes tin Balsam, An aging marshal and an al Los Dies Fellces Esmereld• a~ing outla~. once bitter enemies. 11:00 I rn ®) m 9 00 News @ Big Villey fo1n forces in order to thwart the , 0 (!) m m al News 61) Joumey to Jap1n efforts of a gang of outlaws. .. Best of Groudlo (~ (!)) Bonam 0 ~ (}) @) m Ironside Cross 6 NYPD m Drama Ooublecross" Gary lockwoo~ guests • Movie: "Mr. Belvedere Goes to ffi Three Stooges as . the hoMemp~red boyfriend of College" (com) '49-Cli~on Webb. 7:30 fJ Candid C.mer~ office~. Fran Belding, who becomes IMission: Impossible (3) Gomer Pyle a fug1t1ve after ~e fatally wounds a Nilht Gellery ~ ~@ Price Is Right vengeful ex-convict. 1 3 Peter Gunn Celebrity sweepstakes ~ Movie: ~60) "It's A Gift" (com) ild Wild West ,@ (J) To Tell the Truth 34-W.C. Fields, Baby Leroy. ( (j)) Wanted: Dead or Alive 0 Million $ Movie: CCJ C2hr) 0 BIG HIT-STREETS OF 11:15 al Cinema 34 "Rh1psody" (dra) '54 -Elizabeth * SAN FRANCISCO--TOPS 11 •. 30 .:;,. ,..,..~ (j) CBS, 6•6 M~ .. e·. (C) Taylor, Vittorio Gassman. -u.u ....... .,.., 1o) let's Mike A De1I 0 (fi!I Ci)) (1) al Streets of San "Don't ake Waves" (com) '67 -m Bewitdled Fr1ncisco "I Ain't Marchin' Any-Tony Curtis. m Day at Ni2ht more" Detective Steve Keller en-I@ @@) m Johnny C.rson t!E Bobby Goldsboro Show dangers his life by going undercover. Fractured flickers m little R1scals posing as a draft evader, in an at-6 Movie: ''The Dirt Put" (dra) 8:00 tempt lo locate the assailant of a '49-William Holden, lee J. Cobb. 1J THE WAL TONS-THE deserter who was slain in San Fran-0 (~ 00> (])al Wide World * FAMILY'S FAVORITE clsco. Michael Burns, Renne Jarrett Speci.11 :·Geraldo Rivera: Good Night and Don Stroud guest. America ' 1J @ ® 00 ~he W1,ttons John-m Festlv1I lnternacion1I GJ W1nderlust Boy talks Ohv1a into go1~g to night m Acompanlftle fil) Bergm1n Fiim "Smiles of A school to develop her artistic talents Summer Night" and her young art teacher becomes 9:30 0 News 12:00 0 Movie· "Th Scarlet Web" ( ) stro'l&!Y attracted to her. m Drama • • e . . mys 0 ~@@) m NBC News Spe· 10:00 0 QJ Ci)@) m Movln' On "The 50-Ha.zel,,Court, Gnfflth,!ones .. dal "Tornado -4:40PM: Xenia, Trick Is to Sl ay Alive" When Will m Mo~ie: Flfhter Attadl. (dra) 54 Ohio" Giant windstorms struck 100 takes a shortcut despite Sonny's • -Sterling Hayden, Joy Paige. communities from the Gulf of Mex-protests, he discovers a bullet-ridden 1.00 0 ®l Tomorrow ico to the Canadian border this auto and stops at a remote garage · 1:30 tI) Yop for Healtfl past April. One of the hardest hit to report It. He is greeted by a gun-1:45 IJ M~e: "Rhubub". (com) '51- was Xenia, Ohio, a town of 25,000 carrying convict (guest Aldo Ray), Ray M1ll~nd, Jan ste~!mg. ,, Just east of Dayton. The special his trigger-happy buddy (James 2:00 m All-N11ht Show: l1tin lovers, shows what happened to the town Keach) and the eon's thrill·seeking "Road to Glory" and its citizens. The tornado created girlfrle~d (Marilyn Hassett), who 3:15 IJ Movie: '':Wolf Larsen'' (mys) '58 a path of destruction about 10 miles takes a liking to Will-an event that -Barry Sullivan, Peter Graves. long and one·and-a-half mites wide. Ci) Best of Groudlo 0 (~Ci)) CD m The 0 d d Couple I Dealer's Choice Boxln2 from the Olympic Variety Show World Football league Houston vs. So. Calif. fI) The W1y It Was "1958 Colts/ Giants NFL Championship" The 1958 battle for Jhe NFl championship went into a sudden·death playoff between the Baltimore Colts and the New York Giants. It was the areal Colt quarterback. Johnny Unitas. who engineered his team's stunning 23 to 17 win over the Giants. Other guests include Unitas' teammates Ray Berry and Lenny Moore, and Giants players Charlie Conerly, frank Gifford and Kyle Rote . Jodie Foster, as Addle Pray, is wheedling In her most winsome way, to persuade her partner, Moze Pray (series star Chris Con· nelly) to stop In the next small town so she can put through a call to the President of the United States by way of celebrating her birthday, in "Birthday," on ABC's Paper Moon, Thursday at 8:30PM. KOCE-TV ORANGE COUNTY TELEVISION THIS WEEK ON CHANNEL 50 SATUROAY: OCTOBER 5th (P.M.) 3:00 Dimensions in Cutturu (C) (KOCE) "Culture" 3:30 Dimensions 1n Cultures (C) (KOCE) "Archaeology" · 4:0a Connie's Clothing Corner (C) (KOCE) "Preparing Fabrtc, Lay - out, Pmmng. Cutting'' 4:30 Connie's Clothing Corner (C) (KOCE) "Sn1pp1ng, Marking, and Tailor Bas't111g" 5:00 A Time to Grow: Hum1n Devel- opment (C) "Fact and Fantasy" 5:30 A Time to Gu1w: Hum1n Devel - opment (C) "The Orama of Btrth" 6:00 A Time to Grow: Human Devel· opment (C) "The Sense of Trust'' 6:30 Big Blue Muble (C) (NET) 7:00 A Season of Cetebr1tlon (C) 7:30 Orange County Review 8:00 lntemational Performance (C) (PBS) "The Spellbound Child" 9:00 A World to Know (C) "Samoa: E Sis1fo" 9:30 Journer lo Japan (C) (PBS) "Nature in Japan" SUNDAY: OCTOBER 6th (P.M.) JjJO h Man 81~ (C) (KOCE) "Perception" 3:30 As Min Behaves (C) "Extra Sen· sory Perception" 4:00 Freehand Skelthlng (C) (KOCE) "Alignment" 4:30 Frteltend Sketching (C) (KOC.£) "Shading As Darkne~" 5:00 From Chant to Chante: Muslt In Western Culture (C) 5:30 From Chant to Ch1nce: Music In · Weatem Culture (C) 6:00 From Chant to Chance; Music In Western C111ture (C) 6:30 Men Who Made the Movies (C) (PBS) "William Wellman" 7:30 Voters Plpellne (C) (KOCE) 8:00 Evening at Popi (C) (PBS) "El· la Fitzgerald" 9:00 America (C) (PBS) 9:30 Focus Or1nge Count, (C) (KOCE) MONDAY: OCTOBER 7th (P.M.) 3:00 A Time to Qrow: Hum1n Devel· opment (C) 3:30 freehand Sketching (C) (KOCE) 4:00 from Ch•nt to Chance: Music in Western Culture (C) 4:30 EJectric Company (C) (CTW) 5:00 Sestme Street (C) (CTW) 6:00 from Ch1nt to Cliince: Music in Westem Culture (C) 6:30 As Man Behaves (C) (KOCf) 7:00 Connie's Clothine Corner (C) 7:30 focus Or1nge Countr (C) (KOCE) 8:00 A Time to Grow: Human Devel- opment (C) (SCC) 8:30 Our V1nlshlne Wilderness (C) 9:00 Video Visionaries (C) (KOCE) 9:30 As Min Behnes (C) (KOCE) TUESDAY: OCTOBER 8th (P.M.) 3:00 Connie's Clothlne Corner (C) 3:30 Dimenslona ln Cultures (C) (KOCE) "Evolul1on" 4:00 free1t1nd Sketching (C) (KOCE) ''Preferred Angel of ViS1on" 4:30 Electric Comp1nr (C) (CTW) 5:00 Ses1me Street (C) (CTW) 6:00 Big Blue M11ble (C) (NET) 6:30 Dimensions in Cultures (C) (KOCE) "Evolution'' 7:00 freeh1nd Sketching (C) (KOCE) "Preferred Angle of Vision" 7:30 This ts Mr Land (C) (KOCE) Page 12 "Allan· Nationalism, Pluralism or ASSlmilation" 8:00 Dimensions In Cultures (C) 8:30 Special: (C) (PBS} "The Unquiet Death or Julius and Ethel Rosen berg" WEDNESDAY: OCTOBER 9th (P.M.) 3:00 A Time to Grow: Human Devel- opment (C) "The Infant Begins lo Know the World" 3:30 Freehand Slletchlng (C) (KOCE) "The Drawing Compass" 4:00 From Chant to Chance: Music In Western Culture (C) "Venetian School" 4:30 Electric Companr (C) (CTW) 5:00 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) 6:00 From Chant to Chance: Music in Western Culture (C) ··venetian School" 6:30 As Man Behaves (C) (KOCE) "Memorizing -Mnemonic De· vices" 7:00 Connie's Clothing Corner (C) (KOCE) ''Shoulder Seams, Neck Facings" 7:30 Voters Pipeline (Cl (KOC£) 8:00 A Time to Grow: Human Devel· opment (C) "Infant Begins to Know the World" 8:30 Masterpiece Thutre (C) (PBS) "The Unpleasantness at the Bel· Iona Club" 9:30 As Man Behaves (C) (KOC[) THURSDAY: OCTOBER 10th (P.M.) 3:00 Connie's Clothine Corner (C) 3:30 Dimensions in Cultures (C) 4:00 Freeh•nd Sltetchlnc (C) (KOCE) 4:30 Electric Company (C) (CTW) 5:00 Sesame street (C) (CTW) 6:00 Book Beat (C) (PBS) 6:30 Dimensions In Cultures (~) 7:00 f'reehlnd Skelthlng (C) (KOC(? 7:30 Orange County Review (C) 8:00 Oime11sions in Cultures (Cl 8.:lO·Wllen Who Made the Movies (C) 9:30 Video Visionaries (C) (PBS) FRIDAY: OCTOBER 11th (P.M.) J:OO A Time to Grow: Humal' Otvel- opment (C} 3:30 Woman (C) (PBS) "Female Sex· uality, Part I" 4:00 From Chant to Chance: Music In Western Culture (C) "Early Op· era" .4:30 Electric Companr (C) (CTW) 5:00 Sesame Street (C) (CTW) 6:00 From Chant to Chance: Music in Western Culture (C) 6:30 Our Vanishing Wildemesi (C) 7:00 Action Chicano (C) (PBS) 7:30 Peoplew1tch (C) (KOCE) 8:00 A T1me to Grow: Human Otvef· opment (C) 8:30 Festival Films (C) (PBS) 9:00 Aring line (C) (PBS) SATURDAY: OCTOBER 12th (P.M.) 3:00 Dimensions in Cultures (C) 3:30 Dimensions In Cultures (C) 4:00 Connie's Clothing Comer (C) 4:30 Connle'1 Clothing Corner (C) S:OO A Tlme to Grow: Humen Devel· opment (C) 5;30 ~ Thne to Crow: Hum1n ~I· , opment (C) 1 to Know the World" 6:00 A Time to Grow: Human Devel· opment (C) 6:30 Founder's Dar Parade (C) 8:00 lnter111tion1I Performance (C) 9:30 Journey to J1P1n (C) (PBS) THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. OCTOBER 6. 1974 FRIDAY OCTOBER 11 - for morning end etternoon listings, plNse see DAYTIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. DAYTIME MOVIES 8:30 1J "Thirteen Hours by Alr'' (dra) '36-fred MacMurray, Joan Bennett. 9:00 O (C) "Desert Son(' (mus) '53- Kathryn Grayson, Gordon MacRas. 10:00 0 "Warriors Five" (adv) '62-Jack Palance, JoAnna Rally. "Sin&ine Vaa· 1bond" (wes) '35 -Gene Autry. "Jet Attack" (dra) '58-John Agar, Audrey Totter. 12:00 m "Oriental Dreams" (adv) '44- Ronald Colman. Marlene Oietricil. 1:00 ~"Red Lleht" (mys) '49-George Raft. Virginia Mayo, Rarmond Burr. 1:30 (:J (C) ''Three Slilo11 l A Girt" (mus) '53-Gene Nelson. Gordon MacRae, Jane Powell. 2:30 o (C) "The 6re1t Caruso'' (mus) 'SI-Mano Lanza, Dorothy Kirsten. ll (C) •1Jie, -Sii•~ Gun fn tlie West" (com) '68-Don Knotts. Jackie Coogan, 3:00 (C) "Stolen Hours" (dra) '63- Susan Hayward, Michael Craig. 3:30 I) (C) "The Last Wagon" (we~) '45 -Richard Widmark, Nick Adams, Felicia Farr. Susan Kohner. (3) (C) "Munster Go Home" (com) '66-Fred Gwynne, Yvonne De Carlo. 0 (C) ''Gypsf' Con~I. (mus) '63- Natalle Wood, Rosa1ind Russell. Karl Malden. 4:00 @ CI) ''iihost ot St. Michaels" (mys)'46-Will Hay, Claude Hui· be rt. EVENING 6:00 ~~JF&~~~~:~s 88onann @ World Footb111 league (3hr) Tape delar of Oct. 10 game between the So. Calif Sun and Houston I P•rtrfdge Family Mod Squad Musical Come.tr Show eii Star Trek f'I) Avi1tion WHthtr . ffi Speed R1eer 6 :30 m Andy Griffith Ell) Blact Perspettive on the News (tjf) 00> De1llf's Choice m The Pioneers m Little R11cals 7:00 0 0000 o QJ@mm News llowtlng for Ooll1rs , Truth or Consequences I Love luey The Fii (3) Hoe1n's Heroes r.lmeraldl Bil Valley : Chant hi Chance (~ Cf)) 8on1n1• @!) Dr1ma ffi Thrte Stooges 7:30 0 Treesure Hunt Geoff Edwards hosts. I Gomer Pyle @ CJ) (10) Hollywood Squares Help Thy Nelpbor . I 00@ Ci) To Tell tlle Truth Bewltcfltd Washlnaton Week In Review Untamed World World of Survival Uttlt Rascals 8:00 I) @ CD Planet of tht ~ ''The Legacy" Ga~n. Vlrdon and Burke eA· ciledlr st.arch a ruined city for the hiding place of a vital collection of human knowledge, only to be sepa- rated when gorilla patrols capture Vlrdon. 0 @ Ci) m Slnford & Son "There'll Be Some Ch1ngei Made" Lamont tries to rid his father or his hatred of M"licans. Chinese, fat people and others, when he holds a sensitivity meetin& and gets the group lo work on Fred's problems. 1J Movie: (lhr) "The Yount Lions'' (dra) '58 -Marlon Brando, Mont· gomery Clift. Dean Martin, Hope Lange M~ Britt, Maximilian Schell. 0 (Qj llJ) @ &) Kodiak "Cap· turad" Three seal poachers get In an argument with a fur buyer who refuses lo buy their poached furs and in the ensuing scuffle, the buy er is shot. Kodiak places one of the poachers under guard wtth Mr Im hook and goes 1n pursuit of the others. i UUn rrorne Duler's Choice Movie: (2hr) "The Brave One" (dra) '56 -Michael Rar. Adolfo HoYOS. fl) Western Fight of the Wttk ~ Movie: (C) (2hr) "Thoae M1anlf· icent Me11 In Their flrin& t1bchlnes" (com) '65-Stuart Whitman. Sarah Miles, Robert Morley. EJl) Los An&ales News In Review @!) El Show de Roalll Peru m !!Paneu l1n(Ulll Proaram S:SO 0 Q1 Ci) ®) m Chi~ l tha Man "Bocrowed Trouble1o Though Ed Brown is reluctant, Chico convinces him that borrowing money is a "g_ood old American c11Stom," and he knows just · the bank where JI can be done. 0 (~ ) f3) al ABC f r Id a y Movie: (C) (2l/2hr) "True Grit" (R) (wes) '72-John Wayne, Kirn Darby, Glen Campbell, Jeremy Stale, Rob· ert Duvall, Dennis Hopper, Strother Martin. Ron Soble, Jett Corey. John Wayne won an Oscar for his !>Of• trayal or Rooster Cogburn, a one· eyed, down·al·lhe·heels gunman • who helps a young girl seek out the men who killed her father ii Orson Bean lo Other People Mm Griffin Show Will Street Wteli 9:00 fJ @(I) Ci) CBS Frid11 Movie: CC) (2hr) "Ai0h1 Means Goodbye" (susp) '74-Sally Sltulhers, James Franciscus, Joanna Miles. Henry Darrow. A roung, rnldwestern school· teacher, suffering from a mysterious blood disease. is Invited to Hawaii for further tests and to recuperate there. Her idyllic dreams of an Is- land holiday turn Into a nightmare when Jht learns-once on the island -that's she's to be the unwilling donor for a wealthy Islander's son who needs both her rare blood and her heart! G @ Ci) ®) m rtoc1itord flies "Tall Woman in Red Wagon'' Rock ford poses as a coffin salesman, a psychiatrist and an lnlarnal Revenue aeent as he pursues a strange trail left by a mining beauty. Sian 811 ruth ew "The rite ex· or the ion of sepa- apture & Son Made" of his e, lat olds a s the I ems. ions" Mont· Hope hell. "Cap· et in r who furs buy- f the . Im· I the One" olto Min Ed nces ·s a and e ~t vie: is· re nd ng on nd es k- a ue ail r- bara Allen and Georae au est. i Mike Douif 11 Show Rims Hlahll&frts M1sterpiece Theatre (R) "Mur- der Must Advertise" @I) La Cri1d1 l ien Cri1d1 9:30 fJ News @I) Drama 10:00 0 "POLICE WOMAN " * EXCITING NEW t OP 0 9 @) a;, Police Woman "Anatomy of Two Rapes" Suzanne "Pepper" AnderS'On (Angie Dickin- son) lnvestiaates a pair of purport- ed rapes: ont by a wealthy woman who claims she's been sexually as- saulted; the other a girl of the street who is found dead and also appears to have been raped. Guest stars are Rhonda Fleming, Angel Tompkins, Philip Carey and Hal Williams. I The Bold Ones Ii) News El T1con110 The Untouchables ED Polltlc1I Candidates -Attorney Gener1I Debating campaign issues are Republican incumbent Evelle J. Younger and Democrat William A. Norris, both candidates for Stale Attorney General. 10:30 I Journey to Adveftture Biii Cosby La Clud1d GriU ll:OO Ii 1·1 s ~ ==! Best of Groucho NYPO Movie; (C) ''The Sica of Hemp Brown" (wes) '58 -Rory Calhoun, Beverly Garland, John Larch I Mission: Impossible ~t Gallery @ Peter Gunn Wild Wild West Y!_(a for Htaltb I (tif) (,f)) W1nted: Dee'd or Alive 11:15 d)"Cinem1 34 11:3011 U1J (3) CBS Late Movie: (C) "Live A Ditle, Love A llttle" (com) '68-Elvis Presl~ Michele Carey. 0 @ o W Johnny C1rson D Fr1ctured Flidters 00 Movie: "I Am the Law" (dra) '38-Edward G. Robinson 0 (~ (i)) al In Concert Anne Murray 1s host and featured performer. Special cuests lndude Suzie Quatro, the Spinners. and the Ohio Players. The program was taped irr Saratoga Sprin15, 1'1ew York. Ci) Star Trell I Wander1ust Changine Rhfthms 12:00 Movie: "Headless Ghost" (hor) '59-Richard Lyon, Liliane Scottane. m Movie: "Captain From Castile" (adv) '47-Tyrone Power, Jean Pe· ters, Cesar Romero. Qi Roct Concert 12:30 (i) UFO 1:00 O @) Midnieht Specl1I Jose Feli· clano Is host to Buffy St. Marie, Main lnrredlent, Hot Tuna, and Jesse Colin Young. 1:45 II Movie: "Another Tlme, Another Place" (dra) '58 -Lana Turner. Sean Connery. 3:00 m All-Ni&ht Show: "EJeht O'Clodt Walll," "Tarawa Beachhead" 3:15 II Movie: "The Outust" (wes) '54 -John Derek, Joan Evans. Take a motherless family of four children Jiving in a house with the most unique father ever 10 invade a• television screen and what do you have? ... The Texas Wheelers of Lamont. Texas (localed near the metrop- • .:;ii ~ /J .. ~ n Gary BUffy and Jac:k Elam 1 ~ olis of Bluegum), seen Fridays at 9 :30PM on A BC. Veteran actor Jack Elam stars in this half-hour rural contem- porary comedy series as Zack Wheeler -the most slothfut. in· dolent, no account, lazy BUT loveable scoundrel in the state of Texas. Zack is a ra(t: person - he's his own man and a free ~pirit enjoying life to the fulle'lt. He may know many words in the dictionary but one -work -and he avoids it like the plague. This is the problem that the Wheeler offspring must con- tend with. Gary Busey stars as 24-year- old T ruckie Wheeler, who is ac- tually the head of the family. A <ielf-employed jack of all trades. he wants to better himself and the lot of his family but most of his energy is spent coping with the funny and sometimes poig· nant situations tbat his family gets invol~ed in. As the eldest son he is more stable than Zack but ' realizes he cannot possibly fulfill the father image and tries hi s utmost to make Zack face up 10 his paternal responsibilities. Although Truckie and the ot her Wheeler children may yell a lot and disagree vehemently with their dad, what really matters is that they also LOVE A LOT! The sixteen-year-old son, Do~ ble, played by Mark Hamill adores his older brother and tries to emulate him in every way. Truckie offers suggestions and does his best to serve as a good image for Doobie but also rea- THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK, OCTOBER 6, 1974 'THOSE WHEELERS' lizes 1hat "you have to learn with each other and their at- through your mistakes" and does tempts to deal with their laves. his best 10 guide him. A typical Although the locale for the c;eracs energetic teenager, who acts i!> i.et in the fic11tious town of La- w1th emotion, not logic, Doobie mont. Texas, it could be situated gets in10 many touching and hu-outside of any United States city, morous si tuations. for families like ahii. exist any- Boo Wheeler, the 12-year-old where. Zack may not conform 10 uistaff member of the family. is the image of the "average'' father. played by Karen Oberdiear. A but he i'i basicall y a good man feminine little girl with a bright who adores his children although outlook on life, she tries to fill his love comes through in strange her late mother's shoes and take and unique ways. And, in his care o f the men of the family in own way. he has a heartwarming her sweet fashion. philosophical approach to life The youngesc member of the which he share'! with his brood. Wheeler brood is T .J .. a mis-In carrying out the rural west- chievous I 0-year-old with an ern theme of the series, John insatiable curiosity about why Prine, a country-wcMern lyricist- things are the way they are and '>Inger i" doi ng the mu~ic for The goes through life with a smile on Texas Wheelers. He sing-; the his face. • opening and cloc;ing creditc; for The Texas Wheelers is a warm. the ~how and more of his mu~1c affectionate look ar some very will be u~ed in subsequent cpi- real people and their relationship "odes. B•<'karound, ld t, ls Jack Elam wbo stars as Zack, wtdo"er·falbt r of lbt dan: backcround. rlabl Is Bark Ham.Ill as Ooob6t, ffcond soo: ba<'k· 1tround u nttr, Is Tooy Bttktr, ti T .J, Seacflf Is Gary Bw.t)', u Tru<"klt, the oldftt son, who bouJdel"§ rupnoslblUttfs du<"ktd by Za<"k. Al rilthl I\ Karen OberdJnr as Boo, tbt only daughttr. Page 13 THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK. OCTOBER 6, 1974 SATURDAY OCTOBER 12 MORNING 6:00 I Sunrise Semester Christop her Close-Up 6:30 Sunrise Semestar 1Y I Clusroom Introduction lo Proptrty Min· a emtt1t let's Rap Steps to Lurnlne 0 00@) m Add•m• Famlly Bu11winkle (Q!J (j)) (}) Yo1l's Gane Brothar Buu m Unit Three ! Newi ti) Movie: "Frands In the Haunted Movie: "Honors of the Blade House" (com) '56-Mlckey Rooney. seum" (hor) '59-Mlchael Gough. I Voice of T~o fD fllm Future ~~meStrefl • 1:30 !~(]) Sc:ooby 0oo 12.30 IJ @ I F11 Albert 6 (lg) m Run, Jot, Run 0 (Qt) . ) CV CE NCAA Football ( ) CV Adventures of GU-nm.e I sub1ect to change without liian notice. m Ad Ub "How Women Can Make I ThDalrtlur1t ch bl Mon!l'._' e n ou 1 es 9:00 6 01.l@ (]) Junnle : Mr •• W'111rd • @I) Vanety Show WORtD SERIES 1:001J CiZJ @ Children's Alm Fn- Tlle World ,Series tf..laJtball Is sdled· tiv1I uled to.open today on Hit, With ttie 0 Movie: "Operation Warhead" optnl111 pine In tha btst-of-sevtn (com) '64 -Sean Connery, Alfred Mries scheduled for the N1tlon1I !:)!1ch, stanley Holloway. LN1ue tum's home city. Gamtt 3 '· (j) Movie: "The Gentle 'unman'' and S will be played Jn U\e Ame~n (dra) '52-Joh11 Mills, Dirk Bogarde. Learue winnet'a city. Te1ms ind time 0 Movie: (C) "Seven Ways From Indefinite at our press timt. Sundown" (wes) '60-Audie Mur· 1 ~ Mission: Mt&ie 0 @ Ci) @) m land of Ille Lost 7:30 : D~ ~:::O:iflbofhood 0 Movie: (C) "Epitaph for A Fast phy, Venetia Stevenson, Barry Sulli· van, John Mcl11tlre. (19) This Week In Pro Football Eii)NaUonal Town Meetinf • @ CIJ ~ m Chopper Bunch Gun" (wes) '67-Michael Riva, Al· 6 TennesSH Tu.,do bert Farl~ (Qj Cl)) CV Bua• Bunny 0 <9 ClJ) 00 Devlin Gloria Grey's ,et Haven m Movie: "The Red Danube" (dra) E:Mmtnttry News '49 -Walter Pidgeon, Janet Lelfh, m H.R. Pufnstut ~Peter Lawford. , . : C.-rrascolendas : Mister R~ers ffetehborflood 8:00 i!f m Sf>ted Buaa · 9:30 @ @ (!) Partrid&t Family: • (I) t101 m Enttrpncy + 4 2200 A.O. : "Westward...,. <wes> •35 a @ ~~ m $t•111•d -John Wayne, Shella Ma11ors. 00 ':'°Vie: • LadJ Withocrt A Pass· Ci) Movie: ''Titfielcl Thunderf>olf' PGrt'. (dra) 50-Hedy Lamarr, John (com) 'S3-St1nley Holloway Hufh Hod1ak. Griffith. , I (~ (j)) m ca Kora 8 C9 (I))(]) Honf Kone J'ttooty County Music Movie: (C) "Blad! Shield of Fal· : Villa Aleere worth" (adv) '54-Tony Curtis Janet 10:00 @CD 00 Valley of t.ht Dino· Leigh, David f1rrar, Barbara ' Rush. lsaurs1 ~.:ft • t::.i:1 f'ink Panther ( ) (1) &) Super Fritnd1 • Movie: (C) ''Joe Dllloll'' (wes) .COLOR ' TELEVISION WHY BUY ONE FOR $4so· ·? You can lease a brand new color lelev1s1on for as little as 513 a month Full Guarantee , "Option to Buy" AS>V Al« AGlS TO ltASIHG If Y°" ... fy ' No lA198 Qutl1y OI MoN!Y • No Y\OlrV 1b0ul Aeoe1r Boll• ''No s.a.n1Y o.owi , • Oel.-y R19h1 Away G•MFOlll Trodf..ift .UO-n'-r- okt TY. Cati How to lntt'"fe Your Set R.OYD'S LIASIHG 714/533-6730 Oatly t<>il. Sal lo.& &.n 12·b 1rc1uoes 2 Yeen Full Servic. ....... Page 14 '57 -Jock Mahoney, Lu1na Patten, Charles McGraw, Barbar• Lawrenct. (10) Wor1d Se Itta @ Movie: "Rocky Mount.In" (wes) 'SO-Errol Flynn, Patrice Wymore. l ~~e~·,::i 10:!0 @ CV CU Shwm! 0 Ci) m Star Trek Movie: ''lllls 5un for Hirt'' (we$) '42-AJan Ladd, Veronica Lake, Rob· ert Preston. m tilth Ch~rral 11 :00 IJ @ C3J (!) Harlem GlobetrotUrs Popcorn Machine 0 @ 00 m World Serles But· ball Game lf l. Teams to be en· nounced. Time indefinite. 00 Tijuana: Window lo the Sovth 0 (~ (j)) (V CiD These Are the ' ~Electric Company 11:30 IJ @ Cl) Ci) Hucbon Brothers Razzle, Dazzle Comedy Show @ Movie: "The Bir Hancover'' (dra) 'SO-Van Johnson, Elltabelh Taylor. fJ (~ (j)) (]) CiD A m e r I c a n Bandstand 0 Movie: (C) "No Name on the Buller• (wes) '59 -Audie Murphy, Joan Evans, Charles Drake. I Roller G1mu Safari to Adventure Nfl Came of the Week Zoom! Championsftlp Wresttlnc AFTERNOON 12:00 IJ@ C3) Ci) U.S. of ARhle 0 This Wetll In Ult NF\. 1:30 m Soul Train m M1j .. r Adams 2:00! Dusty's Treehouae • The Bralnworu The Lone ltlDftr o Sin Ole10 H1ppenin1 I (3) C8S Sports Spectlcular Wrestlinf Movie: (C) "Sereunt RJ· ker" (dra) '63-lee Marvin, Brad· ford Dillman. ~ Rolltr 5•mes EJi) 011 It "Selection & Location of Trees" Landscape architect Tom lied orters ideu for turning drive - ways and parking areas into lnvitine parh of the landscape @m Vlsltando 1 lu Estrellu m U.S. N1vy 2:30 IJ CBS Sports Spectacular D Wlldllle Theatre ''This Enaland" A look at the beauty a11d wildlife of the Engll5h countryside. @ Movie: "NIPt ta My tUnrdom" (dra) '53-Jean Gabin, (fQ) lnafpt I Outer Limits Hip Chlp1n'al Rim Feature Africulture USA l :OO 0 A,rlculture USA "Creati\41ty in Youth" The program features young people who have prepared projects for exhibition at county fa irs. The demonstrations include a memory quilt, tie dying, wood carving, needle· point. and desi1n1ng and building a rocket. 0 Movie: "The Princess & lhe Pirate" (com) '4S-Bob Hope Vir- ginia Mayo, Walter Brennan. · 0 Movie; (C) "Deltty'' (wes) 'SS-- Audie Murphy, Mari Blanchard, Lyle Bettger. QQ) Nft G•m1 of the Weel @(])Mr. Chips I Soccer From Mexico Wttstlln1 Envlronment1I lmput #5 El Encutntfo Movie Double Feature J:301Medl• • Focus "Woman's Center" The Adventurer Movie: (C) "Savap Guns" (wes) '62-Rlchard Basehart, Alex Nicol. m Movie: ''The Hum1n Monster'' (mys) '40-Bela Luaosl. ~ The Vlr&.f nl11t Cil Fiim F,.ture Envlronment1I Impact #'6 4:00 (i) World ol Survival 3 World ot Adventure lmp1tto C«lebrity Tennis Star Trek 3 Roller Gamts Education at Work Porter W•1onar Show : Fiim feahire ( @ > Nashville Music g) International Soccer Sweden vs. 9ul1aria. ca Wally' a Worbhop m Voiee ol Alrlculturt 4:30 il Name of the Cbme I Sports With Bertlla What's Goin& On Other People, Other Places Celebrity Bowlln1 00 Voice of Alriculture Hink Thompson Show (59J ) Anlm1I Wor1d ~Coron• Now 5:00 II Inquiry King5 let Honey (3hr) I .A. Kings at Mo11t1eat Canadlen!. 00 Mike Oouitu Show • 0 (Qf CJ)) 00 CiD ABC's Wide World of Sports Ci)®) Newi 0 Wild Wiid West m Movie: (C) "One More Train to Rob" (wes) '71 -Georae Peppard, John Vernon, Diana Muldaur. I Bflcbn's Wortd @ Survlv1I Boltlnc tn 00 Other ,eople, Otlltr Places Ci1' Nuhville Mudc ID Firin1 Une EE Little rt1se1l1 s:30 o @ m ""' 09) Movie (q (90) "Where The ies Are" (dra) '66-0avld Niven Auto R1cln1 @ N1me or the Q1m1 flop! Goei the Country ~ Three S'toopa EVENING OEEEmmN•wi Jeop1rcfy My Partner the Ghost Nigtit '91llety (3) Western fiaht of the Week Hee Haw : Ahor1! The Scene 6:30 O News 3 (Qj (i)}Jle11oner Report · KNBCTm Conference 6 Vince Lombardi on football 8 Planet of the Apes : Electric Company • Box de Mexico • Film Feature · Ski Sttne Didi Vance Show 7:00 IJ Other People, Other Plues "Busllme11 of the Kalahari" A visit to the bush of Afnca's Kalahari Desert where a sto11e-age people are being ushered Into the modern world. I Wild Klnedo'" ThrillJtekers Boline from the Olympic t Am Somebody Movie: (C) (2hr) "Rio Conchos" (wes) '64 -Richard Boone, Stuart Whitman, ,Tony Franciosa. ~ The future of Houslna: Boom or Bust m (~ (!)) m Lawrenct Wttk L.A. s he $ t e THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK, OCTOBER 6, 1974 (j) Jimmy 011n Show 811se1ndo EJtrtllas CilNtws I It T1bs A Thief m JODY MILLER SILLY I Wild Wild West (dra) '58-Robert Ryan. Aldo Ray, * ON ALL NEW HEE HAW Eveninr at Symphony Tina Louise. Premier Film @ 700 Club I Hff Haw 9:30 tJ @ (3) @ Bob Newhart Show m Cinema 34 ffiii111 Dt1n Show lnttmatlonal Ptlfor111nw (R) "La Sylphide" The Paris Ballet re· eteates one of the great ehoreo· 1raphlc events of the 19th century, J>hllipPe Talfloni's "l a Sylphide," Which features an nrlal ballet. G) Fiim f .. tUN Championship Wrtstllna Howard l$ about to introduce his (!I) Rode Concert ~· T~nol son to Ellen (Bob's sister), and 11:15 (])Movie: ''The Sound l the Fury" Sa&~ of Wmem M1n "Ch isl Is practically tries to .re"!lold her into (dra) '59 -Yul Brynner. Joanne .. r an image the boy will like. Woodward. · land and 1n Rome. the story tells Coll · of the wanderinp of the Jewish 10.00 ,..... ~ nr\ Ca 1 8 tt Sh 11:30 8 Fabulous 52! (C) ''tome Sep· people. • u.v C.V \.!!..I .ro ume ow tember" (com) '61 .... ock Hudson, @E Super Show Bobby. Soklsbciro Show Gina Lollobrigida, Sandra Dee. m Japanese Lanru11e Prorrams 6 Ctleb~ Tennis 0 Nancy Wilson Show 7:30 U Wild Wor1d of Anlm1l1 "The New A&lerlcans" A look at how ani· mals relocate to new environment$ to fill an ecolo1itjl nlcbe. Born Fll~ed throughout the Holy I fifth for Today (~ @ ) Huthdlfft & Co (Qj CIJ) @ G) N I k I a ' ' N o @ Movie: "Barrier of the Law" 1:30 6 @(}) P1~I Sattd ,Show Robert Place to Hide" Nakia defies his (dra) '50-Ros~no Braul. falls m love with a pnmt ~alterina superiors and launches • one-man D Movfe: (C) ''The Seven ,.lnutes" JMpardy m ID Ci) Leri Mike A Otll lliine That Tune durlna her performance as C1nderell1 war against hired assassins as he {dra) '71 _ Wayne Maunder Marl· and soon learns th at 'happily ever hell>S a former crime syndicate ac-anne McAndrew Phillip Carey Wild IOn&dom after' Is not all that. It's made out countant find a new way of life. [i) Movie: "Dawn Patrol" (adv°> '38 to be. Andru Marcov1ccl guests. Re· G~be Dell, Ray Danton and Marc =Errol Flynn. David Niven. (]) Hanle Thol'llpMln Show Bobby Sold1boro Police Surceon Tiit Movlt Ma•t11 8:00 @ CI) (j) All In Ule Femlly @ @ (l§)m Emerrency "Communication Gaffe'' The para- medics run into 1n unexpected ob- stacle, a policeman who Interferes with them In a llfe·and·death situ•· tlon. James McEachin and James Elerick iuest. scheduled. Stnger ruest. @) Toni&ht Show Cl) Candid Clmlt'I I Community Feedbac:t m Movie: "The Lady Pays Off" 9:00 e @ CV Cl) Mary Tyler Moort News (dra) '52 -Linda Darnell. Show Tensions mount and morale Japanese l.angu1re Prognim t1l) Berim1n Fllm d~ops when a youn1 consultant, . loalnr From the Otr,mplc 12:00 m Movie: (C) "One More Train to hired by Lou to boos1t the ratfn~, • SP,eclal of th• Wetlc The Garden Rob" (wes) '7l _ George Peppard, ~~gins usurping Mary s responslb1!· Party (R) John Vernon, Diana Muldaur. rt11s and orderin& chan1es In Ted s I Lou &onion Show 12'30 e Happy Goodmans on-the-air delivery and Murray's 10:30 Nashville Music 1;00 , Spedusy ~y. Richard Masur guests. 6 Celebrity Bowline 0 ad Company Stars on 0 9 Ci) ltOJ ~ NBC Saturday m News • 0 Movit: (C) (Zhr) "What Did You Do In tht Wu, OadcfYl" (com) '66 -James Coburn, Dick Shawn. Movie: (C) (Zhr) 'Showdown" (wes) : 11i111t1on: The Money Merry-Go· * Kirshner Rock Concert '73 -Dean Martin, Rock Hudson, Round O Rode Concert Guests are Renais· Susan Clerk. One time boyhood 11:00 IJ0000Ci)®l(9Ci)) News sance. Rare Earth. and Bad Com- 00 Wrtstllns from Vie Olympic D <9 (I)) (]) m Tiit Ntw Land ''The Word Is: Alternative" Bo, In St. Paul on his weekly mall run. rescues and becomes emotfon1lly Involved with new lmmi&Tant Danika, enroute to Solna for an arr1n1ed marria&t. frien~s choose opposite sides of the D USC Fwtball Tape delay. Tro· pany. law, tflen find themselves face-to-Jans vs. Washington State Cougars. ~Movie: "Curse of the Stone face in a confrontation over stolen Poli~ Surreon Hand" (hor) '64-John Carradine. money. • David Sussldnd Show 1:20 8 Movie: "Return of October" (i) Rolltr Games MHt David Sachs M.D. (com) '49-Glenn ford. Terry Moore. 0 (~ (j)) Ci) G) Kunr Fu "My Tony l Susan Alimo Z:OO m All-Nidtt Show: ''The Mart of Brother, the Executioner" CV The Virrlnien l orro," ''The Last Hurrah" fJ Ruts Coach's Show Samurrl Story 2:40 8 Movie: (C) "Peart of the South m Misafon: l111posslblt Cl) Movie: "God's Little Acre" Pacific" (adv) 'SS-Virginia Mayo. CHANNEL LISTINGS lnform1tlon for lhue IOf S la furnished by the televlslon stations. TV WEEK Is not reapon1lble tor lest-minute chanaes in proaram ll1tlnas. Ch1nnel Cell Key a..tte,.. AfflffHe l.oc'allon KNXT KEYT KNBC KTLA XETV KABC KFMB KHJ KGTV KTTV KCOP KJlV KWHY KERO KMPH KCET KBAK KMEX KMIR KPLM KBSC (CBS) (ABC) (NBC) (Ind.) (Ind.) (ABC) (CBS) (Ind.) (NBC) (Ind.) (Ind.) (CBS) (Ind.) (NBC) (Ind.) (NET) (ABC) (Ind.) (NBC) (ABC) (Ind.) Los Angeles Santa Barbara Only Los Angeles Los Angeles San Diego Only Los Angeles San Diego Only Los Angeles San Diego Los Angeles Los Angeles Bakersfield Only Los Angeles Bakersfield Only Visalia Los Angeles Bakersfield Only Los Angeles Palm Springs Palm Springs Los Angeles Star ( *) preceding a log lis1ing Indicates it is a paid advertise· ment. Channels 22. 28, and 34 are UHF in Los Angeles, with 28 being the educational (ElV) station. Channels 17,3: 23,6: and (29,8) are UHF in Bakersfield, with the latter numeral in each double sequence 1nd1cating the CABLE stat ion. This mepzine Is published weekly for this newspeper by TV WEEK 1 division of Griffin fl'T'lntln1 and Uttio1repti Co., Inc., edltorlel end pr0duc- 11on ottlc11, P.O. Boll 1190. Glendale, Callf. AddreS$ •dvertlsln& inquiries to the dlspl1y edvertlsln& d4'pertment ol this newspaper. ' t ' t t t t t t t ' t t t • ' ' t t ORDER YOURS TODAY! 1000 • Penonaliud p.autfful Stick-011 • Effidw LABELS • Stylish Order For Younelf er 1 Friend' May be uled on envelope& as return address labels. Alio very handy as id•ntification labels for marking p•r10MI itema 5udt as boo~•. recorch, phote», et(, Labels sti~k on glass and may be uied for marking home canned foGd itemi. All label• are printed with atylith Vogue type 01t fint quality 'flfhite 9ummad paper. \ f t t t t t t t t t t t t t t ' ' t t Page J 5 THE DAILY PILOT, TV WEEK. OCTOBER 6, 1974 Stereo Shoppers Buyer's Guide ~ AUTO TURNTABLE 3044 The some West Germon precision you find in Dual is now ~ ot o t'"l'l()(e oppeolinq price. Jt' s c.ountetbolonced tonecrm is ready for CO-"! ond this week Atlantic ,;,m pre·instoll o ~ Grado F3E+ ond walnut base FREE with o PE3o+4 01 req. pice. ·~ Priu '~~:.-~ SALE s 1 099 5 $17 4.40 PRICE CD-302 DOLBY CASSETIE DECK Wrth the Doby ~se Reduc tion S~tern b..elt '"· the CD- Xll hos o record playback proc~ t+.ot is virtuOlf.;, un· detectctAe from its SOl.f'Ce. :::.~ :..~ s 13995 M.EMOREX Buy two ~ Get one FREE! ~ ! _ Oiromium l • Dioxide ,.., t."' ' 90-Minute ... _,IO --...... ,. .. ,. -·-•• () -·· ,. (/ -·oo & • LI I · {\ \~~t<-,.. Cassettes Y' Reg. 3/$1 2.27 SALE b ~~!!~~~~ue ~~:=~d~n:,,:~~.... 3 Is 6 99 s o N ~ Brought to you by e=SUPER#OPE~ TC-45 MINI ACTION-CORDER Small eroucji 10 frt sruc/y into hand, ~ 01 onoche case. the pehfe TC-45 ~ , a true lnend rho! stid s wilh P.' oll doy \orq-<JI ~. school and ploy .... Mc. SALE s 11 s Silt.ts PRICE CM) PIONEER. SM20A OPEN AIR STEREO HEADPHONES Unlike conven11onal dosed boded head- phones, the SE·l20A employs rhe new opeoor de~ for a roll.rd, widely disper sod SOITd. ._..Price $2f.t5 PRICE SALE Tho best economy topa you con buy •S Scotch\ K<µonc:lef Cos~nes. "' our lope dinic the Hiqt.londe..'s out- performed oU but the most expemive .. Mc. SALE q,esrmde. 3 lfS6.00 PllCE @PIONEER > z 0 en (!J a: w cc c z ~ N • I I ! " DAILY PILOT ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFOIU~IA OCTOBER 6, 1974 A SPORTS DOUBLEHEADER: •Baseball's Best Hitters Pick Baseball's Best Pitchers • Our All-America High School Football Forecast .. sk Them Yourself W•nt to Hk • tamou• per80n • que1tlon? S.nd tM quntlon o. a 91Mtcertl, to "Alk." Famlly WMkly, 841 Lulngton A..e .. N8W Yori!, N. Y. 10022. We'll pay SS tor publlehed que1tlon•. Sorry, we can't •ntwer otllere. FOR BARBARA WALTERS Which haa "been your nw.t memorable interoiew, and which ha. had the man lading effect on your per1onal life?-Lillian Shep1, Reno, Neo. •It was one of the 6rst I rud when I began on the "Today" program. I interyiewed deaf-blind poet Robert Smithdas, FOR MICHAEL DOUGLAS, star of "The Streets of San Francisco•· When were you 6rst aware you were the son of a celebrity? -Betty G., .Kingsport, Tenn. . e At six. We were visiting my father, who was maJcing a film in Paris. There were other children on the plane, but when we got off, all the photographers made a mad rush toward me. They asked my dad to lift me up and kiss me, which he did. I remember being blinded by all those flash- bulbs and asking my dad what the funny lights were. FOR ANN LANDERS I've beard that you and your twin sister, who does the "Dear Abby'' column, b~ven't spoken for years. If you do talk, do you ask each other for help on reader problems?-Mrs. J.B., Buffalo, N.Y. •My twin sister Abigail Van Buren and I have a very good relationship. in spite of constant rumors to the contrary by people who love controversy. We do not counsel one an- other, however, and keep our worlc out of our social and family Jives. FOR BiLL HVDS~N of the Hudson Brothers Is Hudson your real name, OI' were you inspired by Rock Hudson?-R. Jeffries, Mans6eld, Ohfo • Hudson is our real name. We weren't inspired by Rocle, and only met him once, on the MGM lot, where we were introduced by my uncle Keenan Wynn. The one who did inspire us was Elvis Presley (I was six, and my brothers were four and two, when we saw him at a concert). After that my mother bought us ukes and drums, and that's when we got started. FOR LORETTA LYNN, singer Is it true you were married at the age of 14?-Kelly Huener- gardt, Amarillo, Texas •Absolutely. I was married right before my 14th birthday to Mooney Lynn. Mooney is five years older than I am and was fresh out of the service when we met. He worked on farms and was a garage mechanic. He started me on my career by persuading the manager of a local club to hire me. Mooney's a better manager than he was a mechanic. Look what's happened to me since then! FOR T H E ASK THEM YOURSELF EDITOR Whatever happened to the fa bled millions that Ma6a chief F rank Costello was said to have accumulated during his liletime?-Frances Scott, San Francisco, Calif. •The IRS would like to know the answer to that tool Ac· cording to Leonard Katz. author of "'Uncle Frank," a biog- raphy of the late gangster (which Antliony Quinn an- nounced he11 make into a movie). no one knows what happened to all his wealth. He died intestate. He and bis wife Bobbie were childless. Mrs. Costello, wbo claims she's flat broke, now lives with her brother in New Orleans. The late Mafia boss had a passion for collecting gold watches and gold cuff links-he had thousands o( them. At the height of his power, he named judges to the bench, owned real estate on Wnll Street, gambling casinos in New Orleans and Las Vegas, and was reputed to be the head man in the na- tional gambling empire. CotteHo Oulnn Coyer Photo by Morrl• Warman who teaches those with simiJar handicaps at a training cen- ter and home in Broolclyn. He's the first deaf-blind person to have earned a master's de~ee. We oom~unicat~ ~y bis putting bis thumb on my lips. No celebnty, pohtici.an or leader I have ever interviewed moved me as much as that meeting with Robert Smithdas. More than bis courage, I was impressed with his humor. ' . -: FOR MARY BACON, jockey I'm 12. Pleue tell me what training I need to become a lady jockey like you.-Cindy Love, Elmendorf, Texas • First, learn to ride at your local stable. When you're 16, go to the track and get a job walking or grooming horses. Your trainer will teach you to gallop horses. By this time you'll know if you want to make riding your career (it takes from one to three ycan). It's fun-till you break that first bone. And remember: Even though you're a man on the horse, be a lady when you're on your own two feel FOR C LAUDE AKINS, star of "Mot>in' On" Is it harder to play a bad guy than a good guy?-Dan Trent, Utica, N.Y. • No, it's almost impossib~ to sneer badly. But try smiling for a photograph and you'D get an idea how bard it is to act the good guy! FOR JERRY STILLER Why don't you and Anne Meara have your own TV show?- .. Lany Freund, Los Angeles, Calif. • Just give us the chance, a.i:id we11 break the speed record as we run to accept! Unfortunately, we have not yet had an offer that we could not refuse. We've made several pilots together, but they never made it to the series stage. Our dream is to do a variety talk show, and if that ever happens, Anne has given me her solemn promise that she'U let me get one word in at some point during each show. FOR GOV. RONALD REAGAN of California U you should decide not to continue in politics, would you consider returning to acting? U not, what would you doP- D ick Macie, San Leandro, Calif. • I left my film and TV career for good when I entered public service as governor. Two things I do plan after I leave office are to speak on coll ege campuses and do the "mashed potato" circuit to try to clispell some sdcial and economic myths that are hurting our country. And, if I have time, I'<l like to do some ranching too. October 8, 1974 /iun1()1 ~ The Newspaper Magazine A publlceUota of Do-C-11lcatlottt, IM:- Edward R. Downe, .Ir., Chairman of flte Soard Rot81Kt 8. Tr9mble, Ptw•ldettt A. Edward Miier, EHc. V.P., Publlshlnt MORTON FRANK., p,.•kffnf Md Publlah# LEONARD S. DAVtDOW, C1'almtan ROBERT D. CARNEY, Enc. V.P.-Auoc. Pul>ll1Mt PATRICK II. LINSKEY, V.P.-A.d Director SID LAYEFSKV, V.P.·Markettno Director; a.raid S. Wroe, Eastern Manager; Joe Frezer, Jr., Chicago Manager; JOMPfl K.U,, Detroit Manager; L C. Windsor, Promotion ftUBUIHIR 11!1.ATIONS:LEE ELLIS, V.P.·Dlrector; Robert "· llanfott. Mor. f'UBLISHER IEllVICIE&; Robert J . Chrt1U11n, Mgr.; Jamee Cl. a.ti.r, Buslneu Manager; Robert BM*ef, Promotion; c.r,1 Eller, Merchandising Headquarters 6-41 Lexington Ave., N.V., N.V. 10022 1) 1974 FAMILY WEEKLY. INC. All rights reseMld. llORT PERSKY, V.P.-Edltor-ln-chlef Aernold9 Dodeon, Managing Editor Richard Valdetl. Art Director ROMr,n Abrfteya, Women'• Editor Merttyn HanMn, Food Editor Associate Editors: Joen Henr1ckMtt end Hal Landon E1tel'9 Walpln, Art A11t.; Glorta 8rt9f', Plclutes. Contributing Edltora: Larry lortat.tn, Rot..ft Cumin, Patnela Howard, PMr J. ()ppenM11Mr, Anita Summer f'RODUCTION: Melbout'M Zlpprlctl, Director; "ldwd WeMt. Mgr.; Roberta Coll ... Makeup. - ~ ~' Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 18 mg. "tar," 1.2 mg. nicotine, av. per cigarette. FTC Report, Mar. '74. • B y A.my Vanderbilt Especially tor FAMILY WE£KLY Amy \Onderbilt on the Lighter Side of Being --connnissioner of EtiqueUe" Recently~ l received a letter from a reader whose let- terhead announced him as Lucifer 0 . Satan. It read as follows: Dear Miss Vanderbilt, In the event that I will be taking a long trip to Heaven over the holidays, I will be faced with a problem. How do I address the King, saints and all of the other Heaven- ly beings? I do attain a dif- ferent set of manners in my humble abode and am not familiar with the situation of life-in Heaven. Could you please send me some helpful hints on how to act in the presence of lhe Heavenites? Fashion is another prob- lem. In light of the fact that you have much knowledge • of current fashions, what is the latest fad in Heaven? l know that I will have to buy a whole new wardrobe, but I don't know what to buy. Please send me son1e infor- mation -on fashions too. Thank you for your time and help. His name was signed with red ink. I don't know whether Mr. Satan fs a,put-on artist or sim- ply some strange variety of kook. But the point is. etiquette, like the pmne, can be fuony. And, in the course of my c:ireer as an etiquette authority, r have been on the receiving end of a fair number of funny (either in- tentionally or unintentionally) stories A very funny question from a reader was once quoted in FAMILY Wt:SJCLY. It read as follows: 6 • FAMILY WEEKLY, October 6, 1974 ·"How do I address the King, saints and all of the other Heavenly beings?,. Dear Miss Vanderbilt; I'm an unmarried mother, but that's not my problem. I don't know about correct table setting. Can you help me? -A.B. One is not born with a sense of etiquette, of course, and some of the most embarrassing gaffs are made by children-in- cluding (I'll admit it!) my own. Once r was traveling with my cbildren in Denmark. We were invited to a tea given by a charming woman who had once been the premiere danseuse o( the Danii;b Royal Ballet. A royaJ princess was to ~ at the tea. 1 explained to my children that they were to be on their best behavior aod that one does not direct questions to royalty except in the third person-for example, "Would Your Royal Highness like to have a cookie?'' My middle son practiced this awkward circumlocution all af- ternoon. When we got to the tea, he looked around for the royal princess, but was told that the princess couldn't be there because of an accident My young son was then presented to a baroness. His disappoint- ment showed in his face'" ""X,ou mean you're just a baront.u?"· he blurted. I do get some strange mail from abroad. This amusing let- ter came from England in re- sponse to a question of mine as to why people feel they must say, "Please excuse me; l want to wash my bands," instead of expressing their more basic need quite frankly. Dear M iss Vanderbilt: I want to tell you about an instance of false modesty that almost caused a respect· able middle-aged married man to be picked up by the police. The man l refer to was visiting my apartment. When he arrived, be said something about his car, held up his hands with a few grease marks on them, and asked where he could wash them. I directed him to the kitchen. He seemed a little surprised, but I thought nothing of it. Soon afterward, we were shocked by the arrival of the police. A neighbor had called and reported seeing a man in the dark just inside the iron gate that leads to the back of the building. The neighbor didn't know if the man was a prowler, a Peeping Tom or an exhibitionist-but he; cer- tainly was not acting proper- ly! It took us a while to put two and two together -but when we did, we all had a good laugh (aU, that is, ex- cept the disgruntled police- men). Of course there are letters that come to me that I can't an- swer, even with the help of a big law firm. a friendly psychi- atrist who helps me or other ex- perts. Here is one: I hq_ve a friend whose sis- ter goes by her fuSt hus- band's name. She divorced him and was married twice afterward and then lived with a man for many years before he <lied. Now she goes to Florida with another man and goes by his name in Florida. Otherwise, she signs e verything with her first hus- band's name. ls this legal? What name should she go by? rt is hard to know how to inLroduce her. Also, she has taken another first name be- cause she doesn't like her own. It is a mess. Her sister thinks it is wonderful !bat she is having such a good time. I think it is terrible, Al- so, this person I'm writing about drinks and smokes. Some letters from mothers are very delicate. My daughter is now J 2 years old and started matur- ing quite early. I started her shaving her legs and under her arms when she was about nine. I bought her nn electric shaver to take care o( herself but sometimes she negle.cts to do so voluntarily. Some- times my husband tells her to go shave. Do you chink: ii is proper for tbe f:ltber to tell a girl to go shave·~ And here is one that really doesn't stump me, ~ause I don't believe in old maids. We are arguing over tile age of an old. maid. We say che age for an old maid is 25. They say 30. Ple¥e answer as it is important. Or how about this o ne'! Dear Miss Vnoderbilt, When we purchased our home, the real estate agent showed us an area that he re- ferred to as the "butler's pantry." We are thinking of acquiring a-butler and won- der how lo install him in this pantry. Aad a mother gets her syntax a little confused in this one: My daughter is being mar- ried. As I paid much more than I feel like I can afford to buy the most beautiful gown, I would like for every- one to have the privilege to see i'c walk down the aisle. Please advise. Perhaps the classic funny question that I received is this: My husband and I are al- ways arguing about which side he should walk oa when we are out. To settle the argument, please tell me the proper method of street walking. And I can't end without this rather strange letter from a New Jersey man: Dear Miss Vanderbilt, Please iaform me on your public affairs. fJi1IJ Very truly yours, etc. "1JI 0 j l • ; • PMMIMIZlllo• ........ , •................ .C ...... &MM1 ,--..---._io.-,i ~·-~,.. I ; ..... I ... I "''* I wc.e.. : 'O,_.. -·I ... WI ......... HI<' .... • ..... I w • ' c .......... _.._...,_UftUt.C-U.ILI&• i a-~ir .. ,..,_,..,...,.._ I '~,,_, : ·~-~--~~~----~ CllY ''"" ___ l.,. I .. __ 4-__________ ._,,. 1313 W. RANOOU"H ST •• Ct41CAGO. tu.. e<MI07 ';/.MIJ,r ~ if 1lfMI. • The NEW SSO LOOICf IOQ PWOMPT ~1.ivlRT R1J\H IHI\ ~u Roi• ((Ju'''~ HIAll M•llL .. °""' N11-1' I ,,,, ....... , ... ~ .. .-07 ~ .......... io.-..1 ,.....,Ov<fir.I I l ·k I ... I ··c..1 .. '* f 1 o ..... .-~ ............ _I _ _.... ... __ ..,.., __ :::""-S.t.¥(( 00 ( s.. --" -· 1 f!!:' .. c.u. I .. 111 __ ,..,. ~ .. -' I Nome (Print) I .... Addru'-------- .... -City_ Slot. --Zip-1 ·-------i-.-" People Qui% With Their Mo11ey ••• With Their Lives ..• What Makes People Live Dangerously? By Jolan E. Gibson - ,1 \ True or False: People who risk their lives in sports that involve extreme hazards-sky-diving, etc. -are the most susceptible to the charms of the opposite sex . (See number 1) TRUE OR FALSE? 1. People who risk their lives in sports that involve extreme hazards -sky- diving, etc.-are the most susceptible to the charms of the opposite sex. 2. People will take greater risks when they've been drinking than when they're cold sober. 3. People are willing to take the big· gest risks when they are feeling dis- couraged and depTcsscd because they figure "What have I got to lose?" 4. People with the best balanced per- sonalities are the least prone to risk- taking. S~ U you're driving aJI day on a trip, there is a three-hour period when you're most likely to take chances you shouldn't and thereby run the greatest risk of accident. ANSWERS 1. False-as shown by a psychological study ef participants in cxtrcrT\,l:ly high-risk sports done at the University of British Columbia. Investigators found-after administering a battery of personality tests-that devotees of such extremely hazardous pursuits were kss susceptible than others to the charms of the opposite sex. One might say that they tended to prefer courting danger to courting love. 2. True-however, the type of liquor a • • FAMILY WEEKLY, Octot>.,fi, 1874 ' • ' \ ; ~ '\ '·: ~ person has been drinking plays a sig- nificant role in determining bow will- ing he is to take chances. In ~oc uni· versity study, for example, it was found 'hat subjects "who were given bourbon took significantly more risks than those given vodka." The findin~ of other investigators indicate that the person who's been drinking doesn't actually think of himself as willing to. ta.kc greater chances than he would if he were sober, but the liquor causes him to perceive various @ctions a;s less risky than they really arc. 3. False. Studies of hundreds of men and women from various walks of life, conducted at the Institute of Psy· cbiatry, University of London, show that people who are feeling depressed teod to be the most cautious where risk-taking is concerned. 4. Falu. Studies show that people who arc cautious in the extreme, who arc afraid to take risks even if the odds are clearly in their favor, tcod to be afraid of life itself-which, of course, is also a gamble. They do not, needless to say, rank among ~best balanced personalities. Neither do those at the other end of the pole, who regard taking high risks and courting chancy situations as a way of life. The best balanced personality, psycholo- gists have found, is likely to follow a middle path between these extremes. S. True-according to findings of the Medical Research Council, Applied Psychology Research Unit, Cam- bridge (England), which showed that for an all-day driving period -12 bours-"risky maneuvers were found to be initiated 50 percent more often during the last three hours ... I( Po an Want to strdcll JOIU' 1-tptT Yo.'ve Pt it m•de with milk! (P.S. For more ......,._saftq recipes, pick ap "B•4 pt -Meal• wltll Dalty Foods"-at ye9f' ~ clah7 case. It's &eel) Favorite Cora 'N Cheese Chowder Yi lb. sliced bacon, cut into eighths 1 C. chopped onion Y2 C. chopped celery ~ C. chopped celery leaves Y2 C. chopped green pepper Y2 bay leaf, crumbled 2 T. flour 1 (12-oz.) can whole kernel corn with green pepper and pimiento 3 C. milk l~ t . salt Ya t. pepper 1 Y2 C. grated monterey jack cheese Fry bacon, and drain. Set aside. Pour off all but 3 tablespoons bacon fat frQm pan. Add onion, celery, celery leaves, green pepper and bay leaf. Sautc about 8 minutes or until vegetables are tender crisp. Mix in flour and add undrain~ com, milk, salt and pepper. Cook, sttrring, until soup boils and is slightly thickened. Before serving, stir in 1 cup of cheese. Pass remaining cheese and bacon pieces to spoon over indivjdual servings. Makes about 1Y2 quarts (4 dinner servings). Menu suggestion: Serve with lettuce wedges with blu cheese dressing, apple pie and milk. ChlCk Owese So.Ille 2cggs ¥3 C. whipping cream ~ C. grated sharp cheddar cheese ~ C. grated romano cheese Beat cas lightly with cream. Mix in cheeses. Turn into 3-cup baking dish. Bake in 450° oven 25 minutes or until a pick inserted into center comes our dry. Makes 2 servings. Menu suggesrion: Serve with mixed green salad, French bread, fresh fruit and milk. Baked Cheese Sandwiches 12 slices French bread, cut Y2-inch thick 1 (6-ounce) package sliced monterey jack cheese Y2 C. grated parmesan cheese 3eggs 1¥4 C. milk 3 T. minced onion 1Y2 t. prepared mustard ¥4 t. salt Ys t. pepper 2 t. minced parsley Trim crusts from bread. Arrange half of bread in 9-inch square or equivalent baking pan. Cover with sliced cheese. Sprinkle with all but 2 tablespoons grated parmesan cheese. Cover with remaining bread and sprinkle with remaining parmesan. ' Beat eggs with milk, onion, mustard, salt, pepper and parsley. Pour over bread. Bake uncovered in 350° oven 45 minutes or until golden and puff ed. Serve promptly. Makes 4 servings. Menu suggestion: Serve with marinated green bean salad, ambrosia and milk. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. I mml(V~ Worltl Series Sports Exf nt By Larry Bortstein How Baseball's Best Hitters Rate The Best·Pitehers The American League's Best, Lula Tiant, and Its Fastest, Nolan Ryan. Jn the National League, the kingpins are Andy Messersmith (see our cover) and Tom Seaver (fastest). [ st March 3 1, a FAMILY WEEKLY panel of top major-league pitchers compiled hypothetical lioeups of the batters they would least like to face. With the pennant play- offs now in full swing in both the National and American leagues, and the opening game of the 7 lst World Series only a few days off, FAMILY WEEKLY has turned to big-gun batters to evaluate the toughest pitchers and rate them in various categories of effectiveness. These are the pitchers ~ur panel of top batters rated best: American League Best pitcher Best left-hander Best fast ball Best curve ball Beat change of pace Jluls Tiant, Boston Red Sox right-hander Vida Blue, Oakland A's Nolan Ryan, California Angels' right-hander Bert Blyleven, Minnesota Twins' right-hander Mike Cuellar, Baltimore Orioles' left-hander • • Seven top hitters from each league comprise the FAMILY WEEKLY panel, listed elsewhere on these pages. National League Best pitcher Best left-hander Beat fast ball Andy Messersmith, Los Angeles Dodgers' right-hander Steve Carlton, Philadelphia Phillies Here's how the panelists rated the top pitch- ers in the major leagues: Continued Best curve ball Best change of pace Tom Seaver, New York Mets Don Sutton, Los Angeles Dodgers Andy Messersmith, Los Angeles Dodgers FAM tl..Y WEEKl..Y, October 6, 197' • t World Serles Extra co111in"'" · Blyleven i1nd S11tt()D Throlv the .. Best"C11rve Balls Andy.........,,,hh Vida Bh,. Bert Bty1even BEST dVERALL Right-hander Luis Tlant of the Boston Red Sox was voted tops in the American League in a close race with Nolan Ryan of the California Atlgels. Rigbt- hander Andy Messersmith of the Los Angeles Dodgers was an overwhelming choice for best in the National League. Ironically, both T iant and Messersmith came to their t>res- ent clubs labeled questionable. After winning 21 games and posting a league-leading 1.60 earned-run average for Cleve- land in 1968, Tiant faded to the minor leagues by 1971. He ---e-v-entuallYreca pturEd lits elrec- tive.ness and was brought back to the m ajors by the Red Sox, whose mainstay he bas been for the past three years. No\¥ 34 years old, the 5-1 1, 190-pound native of Hnvana, C uba, is a master of deception. On the mound he rarely even looks at a batter, but gazes skyward, all around him, to either side- cverywhere but straight ahead. Then, from behind a high leg kick and one or two bead feints, he delivers a bewildering assort- menl of pitches. Last August 23, Tiant-son of another Luis Tiant who was a lop pitcher in the Negro Na- tional League a quarter-century ago-became the first pitcher to reach the 20-victory mark in the mafors this year. Number 20 was a sparkling s ix-hit, 3~0 shut- out over the defending world- champion Oakland A's. Tiant also won 20 for Boston in I ~73 . A 6-1. 200-pound, 29-year- old from Toms River, N. J., John Alexander (Andy) Mes- sersmith c;\me to the Dodgers from the C alifornia Angels in a pre-19 7 3 season I rade. Andy won 20 games for the Angels in 1971, hut the former pitching • 100% solid state. All solid state for 22%-66% less power consumption than conventional tube sets. And longer component life. First true, self-adjusting color set. Not one-button color tuning. No button. Exclusive automatic circuits keep flesh tones natural without messing up a lot of other colors. New Dark-LitEf Picture Tube. New Sylvania tube produces rich, deep colors. Even in a brightly lit room. GTmATle .. (iji§t SYLVANIA star at the University of Cali- fornia never fulfilled all the promise that was expected of him in the American League. With the Dodgers, however. Messersmith struck out the first six Philadelphia batters he faced in one of his first 1973 appear- ances and has gone oo from there. Combining a powerful fast ball and a change-up that is regarded as th«; best by far in the senior circuit, Andy has re- corded low earned-run averages and low hit yields in each of the last two seasons. He was the National Lcague'sstarting pitch· er in the 1974 All-Star Game. Ste.-Cullon Tom SeHer Don Sutton 10 • FAMILY WEEl(LV, October&. 1974 BEST FAST BALL No one today throws a ball as hard as Nolan Ryan, the California Ange)s' 27-year-old flame-throwing right-hander, and perhaps no one ever did. All the Amet"ican League bat- ters on our panel conceded that Ryan threw the fastest pitches they faced all year. lo 1974 Ryan became the first major- Jeague pitcher to strike out more than 300 batters for three straight seasons. He fanned an American League re<:ord 19 Red Sox batters in one nine- inning game in August and fol- lowed-that-with-a I !ktrieou1 --- performance in an l l -inning game against Detroit-which be Jost. 1--0. Despite a below-par 1974 season, Tom Seaver, a two- timc Cy Young Award winner as the top pitcher in the Nation- al League, stiU drew the nod from the majority of our NL hitting panelists as the hardest thrower in the league. Seaver, 30, an eight-year veteran with the New York Mets, throws a • risingl_astEall tha~in the words of Mike ~chmldt, the slugging third baseman of the Phillies, ''comes al you belt high and winds up at your letters with plenty of smoke on it.'" BEST CURVE BALL Bert Btyleven of the Min- nesota Twins was a virtually unanimous choice among our panelists as the league's top curve-baller. Rod Carew, who has won four AL batting cham- pionships, says his Dutch-born teammate .. has the best break- ing ball in the league. It's com- mon knowledge." Carew says that Gaylord Perry of Cleve- land throws the best curve ball among the opponents be faces. But Blyleven, who won 20 games for Minnesota in 1973, was the choice of the rest of our panel. Jeff Burroughs, the strapping young outfield star of the Texas Rangers, says Bly- leveo's curve is "hard and fast, witb a quick break about tbree- quarters of the way down to- ward the plate." The Dodger pitching staff customarily ranks among the Co11ti1111td TERRY BRADSHAW IN THE ''EVEREADY'' SUPER BOWL/PARIS SWEEPSTAKES. 4 FIRST PRIZES 4 "Magnavox" Color Portable TVs. 25 SECOND PRIZES 25 "Magnavox" AM/FM Stereo pe Players. ~ OFFICIAL RULES 750 THIRD PRIZES 750 "Kodak" Pocket lnstamatic Cameras. 1. On an otf1c1al entry form or plain 3" x 5" piece of paper. print your name. address, zip code. E:nter as often as you wish, but each entry must be mailed in a separatl !nvelope to: "EVEREADY" SUPER BOWUPARIS ~ NEEPSTAKES, P.O Box 713, New Canaan. Conn 1)6840 Sweepstakes begin Septem· ber I. 1974 and entries must be postmarked by November 30. and received by December 14. 1974. 2. Winners will be selected 1n random drawings conducted by V.I P. Services. Inc , an independent 1udg1ng organization. whose dec1s1ons are final. J. Grand Prize, to be awarded to the winning entry, includes round tnp air travel for two from winner's home city to New Orleans. La .. hotel/motel accom· modations m New Orleans for three days and nights 1ncludu1g meals Two reserved seats at Super Bowl IX on January 12. 1975. plus $5,000 The Pans portion includes arr travel from New Orleans or wtn· ner's home city lo Pans, return to winner's home city, hotel accommod3hons in Pans for 6 nights, 7 25 Second Prizes -Magnavox Stereo AM.lfM Re- ceivers with 8-T rack Player, Model No. ED 1900-Re- tail Value Sl59.95 each; 750 Thkd f\Ues -Kodak Podet lnstamatic Cameras. Model AlO·RE -Retail Value S24.95 each. 5. Prizes are non-transferable. Only one prize to a family. Liability for taxes is responsibility of the winners. The odds of winning will be determined by the number ol entries received. All prizes will be awarded. Winners may be asked to execute an af· fidavit of release and eligibility. 6. Sweepstakes is nationwide and open to all resi- dents of continental United States, Alaska and P'awail, except employees (and their families) of Union Carbide Corp., and of its subsidiaries, af- filiated companies. advertising agencies and judging agencies. Void in Georgia. Missouri, and wherever else prohibited or restricted by law 7. All winners will be notified by mail. A list of win· ners will be furnished. two months after the close days. including meals. Alternate Equiv. lent <if lfld Prize IS $ 10. 000 4, 779 add11tonaf prizes will be awarded· 4 first Pri!H -MagnavoJt I 9" ( d1ago- n a I) Color TVs. V1deomat1c Model · CD 4360 -Retail Value S457 15 each. • of the contest, to anyone who sends a· stamped. self·addressed envelope to: "Eveready" Winners. P.O. Box 203. Pound Ridge, N Y. 10576. Please do not send entries to this box number. NO PURCHAS£ REQUtRlD GRANO PRIZE. Vacation trips for two-first a three-day stay in New Or.leans and tickets to the 1975 Super Bowl. Then a one-week vacation in Paris, France. Plus ~5.000 expense money. You can spend it on football. spend it on fashions. Just fill in the coupon. ALTERNATE EQUIVA- LENT GRAND PRIZE: Si0.000. The "Eveready Super Bowl/Paris Sweep slakes 1s brought to you by the new ·Eveready He.J•Y Duty Battery MAIL TO: "Eveready" Super Bowl/Paris Sweepstakes P.O. Box 713, New Canaan. Conn. 06840 Enter"me in the "Eveready" Super Bowl/Paris Sweepstakes. NAME ______________ _ (Please Pn nl Clearly) ADDRESS ____________ _ CITY _____ ...,TATE ___ _.....IP ___ _ (Required) NO PURatASE REQUIRED -enter as often as you like. Entries must be postmarked by November 30, 1974 and received by December 14, 1974. ·-------------------- World Serles Extra co111inued ~lessersmifh and C11ellar Display Best Cl1it11ge <>f P11ee Biii LM best in the National League. This year, Messersmith has drawn most of the raves, but Dodger Don Sutton has not been overlooked. According to our seven-man NL panel, the h_andsome nine-year NL veteran throws the best curve ball in the league. Others whose curve balls were rated highly in the NL were Lynn McGlothen of the St. Louis Cardinals, Jerry Reuu of Pittsburgh and Jack Billingham of Cincinnati. But Sutton's curve was the consen- sus choice. Richie Ziak of the Pirates says of the Dodger right-hander's breaking deliv- ry: .. You "Can practically hear it speaking to you. It's a quick one, and it bites." BEST CHANGE OF PACE Andy Messersmith throws a change of pace that is the scourge of the NL. It is his best pitch, according to the batters who face him. "His fast ball is very good too," says Ralph Garr, Atlanta's 1974 NL bat- ting champion. ''But he sets up his change-up with his fast ball. He gels this change over all the time, tmd he throws it with ex- actly the same motion as he does his fast one. Messersmith's change is pretty fast, too-about three-quarters as fast as hh reg- ular fast ball." In the American League. Gaylord Perry, Luis Tlant and John Hiiier, the classy left- handed relief specialist for the Detroit Tigers, were praised for their change-ups. But overall, the nod went to Mike Cuettar, the Baltimore Oriole southpaw, for his deceptive change curve. "It goes up before it finally breaks down over the plate," says New York Yankee out- fielder Bobby Murcer, "and Cuellar throws it with different speeds and different breaks. All of them are tough to hit." BEST MOVE TO FIRST 8111 lee of Boston, one of the best left-handers in the AL, was rated tops at keeping base runners on first. Others men- tioned in the AL were Ken Holtzman of Oakland and Clyde Wright, who arc also 12 • FAMIL y WEEl<L Y, October 8, 1974 FIX 'n FASTEN IT FASTER, BETTER, CHEAPER II WITH AN Whether you're potting up ceillnr tile . . . tacklnr down weatherstripping . • . installln& Insulation . . . re.uphol- stering a chair . . . repeirinr a screen . . . c:Overing a cornice ... securing an antenna wire-lhere'5 no faster, easier or more efficient way to set the job done than with a one-hand operated Al«Y# automatic staple run. Just position gun, squeeze handle and pr8$to ... staple Is dflven into exact spot desired In 1I10th the time It · takes to hammer a nail! Your other hand Is always free to llold material in place for a neat, professional job! left-handers. Rod Carew cites Steve Busby, the young right-hander of the Kansas City Royals, who has pitched two no-hit games in his two-year major-league ca- reer, for bis move to first. Busby is the only righty mentioned in this category by our AL panel. One of the big stories this past se'asoo was Lou Brock'• chase of the single-season rec- ord for stolen bases. This makes Brock a man to be listened to on the subject of pick-off artists. Brock mentions Don Guttett of Cincinnati, Jim B•rr of San f rancisco and Wayne Twitch- .. JJmKHI Dick Ruthven Mike Merahall ( elf of Philadelphia among those who tend to inhibit his all-out stealing style. Overall, though, our NL panel selected the Phillies' 23- year-old right-hander, Dick Ruthven, as their league's most effective pitcher at holding men on base. Our panel of top batters rated these four pitchers best in two additional categories: American League Best move to first Biii lee, Boston Red Sox left-hander Bettfielder Jim Kaat, Chicago White Sox left-hander NatJonalLeague Best move to first Dick Ruthven, Philadelphia Phillies' right-hander Best fielder Mike-Marsh8tt;-t_os Angeles Dodgers BEST FIELDER Over the years, veteran J lm Keat in the American League has dominated the fielding sta- tistics. Kaat, a 36-year-old Jeft- hander who spent. nearly IS seasons with Minnesota and was dealt to the Chicago White Sox late in the '73 campaign, ~draws the praise of our AL pa nellsfs. "Wilen ne pitches, bis learn bas an extra infielder in the lioeup," says Baltimore's Brooks Robinson, himself a master of defense. WKaat is ex- cellent at getting off tbe mound to field bunts, covers first very well, and never seems to make a defensive mi.stake." According to our experts, the best fielding pitcher in the NL is Mike Marshall of Los Angeles, who established new standards this season for appeManccs by a relief pitcher. A scholarly doctoral candidate at Michi~an State, the mustachioed Marshall throws one of the most baffling screwballs in the game, which results in opposing batters rap- ping a lot of grounders to him or to members of the Dodger infield. "He's a terrific fielder," says Mike Schmidt. ''That's just another way he has of beating you. He can start the pitcher-to.- second-to-first double play as well as anybody, and he's quick off the mound to cover first. His pitching is tough enough, but he really works on hia fielding." BEST RIGHT ·HANDER Lula TJant of Boston edged Nolan Ryan in the American League balloting, as be did in the "best overall pitcher" category. Bly1even of Minnesota was the only other AL rigbt- hander mentioned, though B~ltimore's Jim Palmer, who sat out much of I 974 with an ailing arm, drew praise for his past efforts, in- cluding four consecutive 20-victory seasons, 1970-73. Los Angeles' MenetWnlth, aJso ci~ as the NL's best overall, was the choice as best rigbt- barider in that circuit. Messersmith's two Dodger teammates on our panel, first baseman Steve Garvey and center fielder Jim Wynn, tabbed Tom Seever of the Mets and Lynn McGlothen of the Cardinals as the toughest rigbtics the Dodgers faced this year. BEST LEFT·HANDER Jn the closest contest in any category, Vida Blue of the Oakland A's was named the AL's best left*hander over 8111 Lee of Boston and Blue's Oakland teammate, Ken Holtzman. Though be hasn't duplicated his sensational 24-8 season as a 22-year-old in 1971, Blue at 25 has become a more mature moundsman, ouLAmerican League panelist& i><)int out, "He-- may not be as fast as he was a couple of years ago," says Bobby Grich, the Orioles' second ·baseman, ''but he still throws very hard, and he mixes up bis pitches better than he did in the past." Steve Carlton of the Philadelphia Phillies was rated the top NL southpaw. "He throws very hard and bas an excellent curve and slider too," says Pittsburgh 's Richie Zisk. a to p hitter Garvey Here are the great hitters, sev~n from each league, who took parfTn FAMILY· WEEKLv's search for baseball's best pitchers of 1974: American League Jeft Burroughs, Texas Rangers Rod C.rew, Minnesota Twins Bobby Grich, Baltimore Orioles Reggie Jackeon, Oakland A's At Kaune, Detroit Tigers Bobby Murcer, New York Yankees Srooka Robinson, Baltimore Orioles Natlonal~eague Johnny Bench, Cincinnati Reds Lou Brock, St. Louis Cardinals Ralph Garr, Atlanta Braves Steve G•rvay, Los Angeles Dodgers Mtke Schmidt, Phlladelphla Phillies Jim Wynn, Los Angeles Dodgers Richie Ziak, Pittsburgh Pirates FAMILY WEEl(L Y ~bet 8. 1974 • 1J to all fields. "H e sets up right-handed hitters like me with his slider. The last seven or eight feet down to tbe plate it moves a few inches in on your fists and makes it very tough to handle." Other senior-circuit SOlllhpaws who drew special praise were Jon MaUack of the New York Mets, Don Gullett of the Cincinnati Reds and Jerry Reuss of the Pittsburgh P irates. "J don't think Matlaclc i.s as good yet as he's go-- ing to be,"· says Steve Garvey of the Mets' 24- year-old lefty. "He has the ability to work in tight to the hitters. He needs to improve his confidence." Coratiruud ) • ' Why you should b~y a chain saw from a company that cuts it With -lumberjacks. Homelite is the largest maker of professional chain saws in America. -Which is a great reason to buy their new homeowner's saw. Because it just makes sense that the company that can satisfy the demands of the professional logger can make a saw to meet the needs of the average homeowner. And a perfect example of '/lat is the new Homelite XL which sells for uilder SlOO. The XL has a tough, lightweight engine which allows you to feel liker1 lumberjack without requiring that you be built like one. It also feat ures an all-weather ignition system which •1..ess bar and chain. Free C8J'1)'QUC offer good at participating dcalen only whiJe supply ta.wi. Eitpires December JI. 1974. Suggested Retail Pric;e.,: XL $99.95: Xl.. 2. SI t9.9S. makes for fast starts. And automatic chain oiling. For S99. 95, the new XL is really a great chain saw. But th en again, so is the Homelite XL 2. which sells for Sl 19.95. The big thing about the XL 2 is that it has two trigge rs. . A trigger up front which lets you get right up on top of your work, wh ere you need cdntrol. And a second trigger in the rear to give you leverage for the big jobs. The XL 2 also tips the scales at a light 7 1/.i pounds~ It comes with a 12" guide bar. And the same Power Tip«> sprocket nose that professional loggers use to boost their cutting power. And right now, to really make a case for buying the XL 2, we throw in a case, free . This carrycase regularly sells for S 10. 95 and can ac~mmodate the chain saw plus all its accessones. Of course, another benefit in buying a Homelite chain saw is that we have more dealers to serve you if something should go wrong. More than 7,500 of them in the U.S. Homelite's XL and XL 2. Considering everything they come with, it's hard to believe what they go for. HOMELllE. For the Homelite dealer nearest you. check the Yellow Pages under Saws.. Homelite. a tml'Oll Division, Port Chester. N. Y. 1()573. "11974-R.J. l!E'l'NOLDS TOBACCO en -r --... - ' Sure, I've heard it all. I'd light up at a cocktail party. And son1ebcxiy would remind me of what they've read about sn1oking in the papers. Well , I read the papers, too. -l 've beara all that stuff they say about high 4tar' and nicotine. And l'd be less than honest if I said it didn't make me concerned. So I went the whole route. Tried one of those low 'tar' cigarettes, and got as much flavor out of it as a-toothpick. But I kept trying . Guess I enjoyed sn1oking too much . That's when I ran across Vantage . And what do .you kno\v. It tasted like a cigarette. . Now Vantage was n't the lowest in 'tar' and nico tine. It didn't clain1 to be. Just the lowest 'tar' and ·- nicotine cigarette that still gave rne the full VANTAGE tobacco taste I'd mi ssed . May be it's the Vantagt filter. Frankly I don't know, and I do n't care. I ju st kno\v I can cu t down on 'tar1 and nicotine. Without cutting out the flavor. . ~ No,v I don't have to rnakc any excuses for smoking. Not sin ce they n1ade Vantage. Maybe yo u'll feel the sa me way. ~m~;:CM Warning: The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. MlNHlOl ll.=.r 0.9~ Filter: 11 mg. "tar''. 0.8 mg. nicotine. Menthol: 11 mg. "tar". 0.9 mg. nicotine. av. per cigllrene, 'flC fteptin MAR. 74 . . World Serles Extra Continued What01tr Pn.nelists Said Reggie Jackson on Lu19 Tiant: "He's the best right now. When he gets into ' a groove, he's tough to beat. But Jim Palmer of Baltimore, who missed a lot of the 1974 season, is as good as anybody when he's right. He bas a great Wl hall.-great oiLspeed .pj~ and-- control." Al Kallne on Bert Blyleven: "Blyleven's curve is real bard and sharp. He has good control with it, but the major feature of bis curve is that f)e throws it harder than anyone else. It breaks v_ery sharply about three-quarters of the way down to the plate." Bobby Murcer on Lula Tlant: "He has every pitch there is. And he's a very smart pitcher. All the head motions h~ goes thfougb on the mound aren't done for effect. Every one_of them h A.meaning and_caa really confuse you if you pay too much atten- tion to them." Jeff Burroughs on Nolan Ryan: "I bate to faco him, even though be throws mostly fast balls and I'm a fast-ball hitter. He's quite a bit faster than anyone else. When he's right, you can't touch him. Among left-hand- ers, Vida Blue is the toughest for me. I've faced him since minor-league days, and I've bad trou- ble with him from the very first time." Johnny Bench on Andy Me11ersmlth: ''He developed a lot m_ore consistency with his change-up this year and became awfully tough to hit. He is able to throw his change all the time and get away with it because you can't anticipate it. He throws his changing stuff with exactly the same motion and delivery as his fast ball." Jim Wynn on Tom Seaver: ''His ·effectiveness was down this year, but he still throws as bard as anyone in the league. The most impressive thing about bis fast ball is that it rises as it comes in on you, until it's about letter-high. It's very tough to time prop- erly. Lynn McGlothen of St. Louis, who came to the National League this year from the Bos- ton Red Sox, throws a good fast ball and a hard curve. He's going to be real tough in thtt next few years.'' Ralph Garr on Steve Carlton: "Whenever I'm up at the plate, I'm just try- ing to make contact with tne ball. We're a power-hitting team, and I try to set things up for the homer hitters who follow me in the lineup. Carlton, with his hard slider, gives me trouble, and so does Tommy John of the Dodgers, who throws a good sinker." Steve Garvey on Bob Gibson: "He's still one of the toughest pitchers around, especially with men on base. I wasn't in the league d uring his real big years, so I didn't face him at his peak. But he's still very fast and very tough. You'll get your hits off r.-.MIL Y WEEKLY. Occober 6. 1974 • 15 Murcer -~ h im, but you have to work hard to score. He's an excellent fi elder too. Very quick at getting off the mound on bunts and on covering first." cause he's on a staff that has several very good pitchers, be probably doesn't get as much credit as he should." Richie Zisk on Andy Messer1mlth: Rod Carew on Nolan Ry•n: Garr "He bas the best overall stuff. His fast ball is good, bis change-up is excellent, and he knows"" how to pitch. I was more effective against him in 197 3 than I was this year. He comes right at you and challenges you. Be- "He's the fastest in the league. But Jim Bibby of the Texas Rangers isn't too nu be- hind, and Jim Palmer always has been one of the hardest throwers around." An Air Force skill gives you a new point of view. Ina lot of ways. You develop a close-up view of your job. Like the Air Force electronics specialist above. H e can read every line in a printed cir- cuit. But whichever of the more than 250 job areas we teach you-you'll learn it from the ground up, Be a !tpeeialist in it. And get paid while you learn. You discover a wide view of your coun- try and the world. Because you get to travel. Work in different places. M ove around freely on your 30 days of paid vacation every year. Enjoy low ra tes on commercial airlines, or fly free on Air Force planes that happen to be going your way. And you even look at yourself differ- ently. Because you have so much going for you. A good job. Good pay. Medical and den- tal care. Food, clothing, housing. Wide-open opportunities to continue your education. Plus the skill and experience that could land you a good job in civilian life-should you decide to go that route. And if all this gives you a new point of view about the Air Force, see your local Air Force Recruiter. For his location call 800-447-4700, toll free (in Illinois call 800-322-4400). Or just mail in the coupon. And see how everything starts looking up. r -------------------~ I A-FW 104·, Air Force Opportunities I BoxA I I Randolph AFB, Texaa, 78148 I Please send me more information. t understand I there is no obligation. I am especially interested in : I I l I I 0 Air Force Training O Air Force Academy 0 Air Force Reserve O Air Force ROT C O Pilot/Navigator Program I Name Sex OM OF I I Address I Cit I ~....._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ I State l I Soc. Sec.# Zip Phone I Date of Birth I L-------------------~ oo up. up to. r -orce. Dave wears a 14E, Phil a 6E. They're both Wolverine.• Which goes to show you that just about any foot can find comfort in a Wolverine• Boot And the comfort will last Because Wolverine• Boots are built to be tough. They have hard-wearing soles and heels. They're water and acid-resistant fad they're built with some of the best materials available. To be light and flexible. There are 84 sizes of Wolverine• Boots. In 14 lengths. And 7 widths. Which means prac- tically every guy will get a chance to find out how good Wolverine• Boots feel on their feet 6 6~ 7 7~ 8 8~ 9 9~ 10 10~ ll 12 13 14 -A -• ... .-:-.~ ,~. .-~ ... -.-T -.-i B • • • • • • • • • c • • • • • • • • • • • • D e • • • • • • • • • • • • E e • • • • • • • • • • • • • f.2 • • • • • • • • • • • • • EEE • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I WOLVERINE® BOOTS.-., THEY'RE IDUGH. VvGLVERINE·DEALERS ARIZONA PRES CO TI Steward's Family Shoe Store SAN LUIS Charles & Frank. Inc. SOMERTON Char1es & frank, Inc. CAUFORWA ALAMEDA KanesSh.>es ~EJM_ . Nl"'v'-' .i.... Oennys C>port AUBURN T 10 Heel ~~ .. Jc C n r CH!CQ .,..;--~·-- -Joh~ns .}iO£:~ CITY OF INOU~Tf'f The Gr "t Boys COSTA MESA The Grant Boy$ EL CENTRO Odom's DQcl.5 and S' .o • rnESNO Al.htr BtoU11:1~ HANFORD Brown's Sandys Shoes LODI Burtons Shoes LDSANGru.S Quality Shoe Service MARIPOSA Stroming's NEVADA CITY SPD PINOLE Kanes Shoes Pl.ACERVl.L.E Combellacks & Sons ~ Shoe~um • Tows rA Shoes SAN fWl.O Shoe Ylbr1d SONORA EUtcs Shoes sroacTOH Marianis Mens We,ar VISALIA Brown Shoe Fit WIUJAMS Endotnan's YUBA aTY O.V.Shoes Sports Extnt Co111inued FamllyWeekly's High School All-Ameriea Foreeast By Larry Bortstein College coaches see these high school stars as tomorrow's football heroes on university campuses THE RUTLEDGES OF ALABAMA: Proud Papa Jack with his two quarterbacks, Jeff (left) of Birmingham'• Banks High School, and Gary, who does hi• quarterbacking at the University of Alabama. Football recruiters for col- leges across the country may 6c wearing out the roads that lead to Birmingham, Ala .• by the time the 1974 high school season winds down. The foolball bird dogs have an un- common interest in Alabama's biggest city this fall. T he reason? Of the more than 300,000 resi- dents of "the Pittsburgh of the South," two are considered among the most prized high school senior prospects in the nation. They are Jeff Rutledge, the quarterback at Banks High School, and Tony Nathan, a running back from Woodlawn A quarterback who passed for 2, 178 yards .•• A running back who scored 19 touchdowns ... A lineman who stands 6~6 and weighs 250 •.. Will one of them be tomorrow's Heisman winner? High School. Along with 28 other highly touted youngste rs, Rutledge and Nathan drew rjlves from a panel of men rep- resenting seven of the finest uni- versity football programs in the U.S. -Alabama, Maryland. Michigan, Notre Da me. Okla- homa, Southern California and Texas. · Jeff Rutledge's family has known its share of athletic ac- complishment. His father Jack was a scholarship baseball play- er at the University of Alabama in the early I 950's and spent six seasons as a n infielder in the Chicago Cubs' farm system. Gary, the redheaded older brother of brown-haired Jeff. is the starting senior quarterback for the current University of Alabama football squad, a nd is considered an o utstanding can- didate for All-America honors this year. Last fall, in leading the C rimson Tide to the Sugar Bowl , G ary paced the South- eastern Conference in comple- tion percentage a nd was voled the conference's "Back of the Year." The Rutledge home in Bir- mingham's South End is onl y two blocks away from Banks High, where Jeff has thrown for 2, 178 yards and run for another 1,046 yards in leading his team to the state chompionship ~fie past rwo years. Banks has won 25 and tied one without losing at all over that 'Span. With two University of Ala - bama products in the· same household, many expect Jeff to Co11ti1tm'd FAM ILY WEEKLY. October 6, 197' • 17 .. - Tomorrow's College Grid Heroes Football Continued join Bear Bryant's troops at Tus- caloosa in the fall of 1975. "But be hasn't ruled out other schools completely yet," says Jack Rut- ledge, a buyer for Stockham Valves and Fittings in Birming- ham . "He'll probably wind up at one of the Southeastern Con- ference schools, but not neces.- sarily Alabama." George White, who bas coached both Gary and Jeff at Banks, thinks Jeff, his current field leader, "has more physi- cal ability than Gary did. Jeff is 6-2 and 190 pounds, and Gary is about the same height and 175 pounds. Jeff may grow some more too." For his part, Jeff hopes to en- ter professional sports someday, either in baseball or footbalL He baited .385 as a shortstop for the Banlts baseball team last spring. He also averaged about 15 points per game as a forward on the basketball team, but plans to abandon basketball this year to concentrate on boning his other sports skills. "I like both baseball and footb~" says the youngest Rutledge. "And.I'd like to stay with both SWING-OUT CHROME-PLATED ~~.._.._,...._ HANGS 8 PAIRS OF SLACKS IN SPACE OF 6NE This ingenious slack pole has 8 slip-proof arms. Each rotates 360° so you may hang or remove a pair of slacks instantly without disturbing the others. Your entire slack wardrobe hangs in just · inches of closet space . No more searching, each pair is right at your fingertips. No more .crushing or wrinkling either! Chrome plated, floor-to-rod pole fits every closet in seconds. Men-women love it. Order now-Only $9.99! GREENLAND STUDIOS 6984 Gteenland Bufldlnc. Miami, Florida 33054 as long as I can before I have to make up my mind which one I'll concentrate on." Right oow, Jeff is concentrat- ing on F riday evening, Novem- ber 8. On that night, his Banks squad takes oo Woodlawn High at Birmingham's Legion Field in a contest that could have a large bearing o n the Alabama state title. Legion F ield, the home stadium of the Birming- h am Americans of the World Football League and the site of many of the University of Ala- r--------MAIL 10-DAY MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE COUPON TODAY-------- 1 GREENLAND STUDIOS 6984 Greenland Building, Miami, Florida 33059 I Rush Slack Rack(s) #14060 @ only $9.99 + $1.15 I I poslage & handling. Enclosed check or m.o. for$ YOU MAY CHARGE MY: I : O Master Charge• O Diners Club : I Name O BankAmericard -O American Express I I Adress Acct. # I I City Exp. Date I : State Zip •it using Master Charge, also indicate the four numbers I l-~~~~~:_:eside~~~~~~~~prl~~le~~--~~~~~~~~-------------~ bama's top games, has a seating capacity of 72,000. The Banks· Woodlawn clash is .expected to attract more than 20,000 fans- an astonishing number for high school football. Bui they may well be watching an astonishing contest that night. Last year, Banks beat Woodlawn 17-7, after Nathan, the ace ba\)carrier from the school on the east side of Birmingham, reeled off a 68- yard touchdown run in tbe opening two qi.joules of the first quarter. "Luckily, our defense held Nat.ban in check the rest of the way," rccalli Banks Coach White. "But there was no ques- tion that he was the best back we faced last year. He's really something." Tony scored 19 touchdowns in all in 1973, running from scrimmage and on kick returns. He scampered for more than 1,000 yards. Of the 6-2, 195- pounder from Woodlawn High, one member of our-panel or college recruiters says. "H e's just a big kid with great speed. Everybody wants him." Jerry Pettibone of the Oklahoma cC'aching staff points out lbat the Sooners rarely have looked to the state of Alabama as a supplier of football players . .. But in Nathao·s case, we hope he'll consider us .carefully be- fore he makes up bis mind." If Nathan isn't the best run- ning-back prospect in the U.S., the only other candidate for that designation is Paul Rice of Lewisville, Texas. According 10 a FAMt..Y W EEKLY recruiting panelist, Lewisville High, about 50 miles northwest of Dallas, gained prominence in Texas prep-football circles only in the past two or three years. Rice, a 5-11 , 195-pound lad, will see to it that the school continues to be highly regarded this fall. Paul has rushed for more than 1,000 yards in each of the past two years and has been clocked at 4.6 seconds for 40 yards. In one 1973 game, Rice picked up a whopping 328 yards on the ground aJI by himself. , A total of 12 running backs 11 • FAMILY WEEKLY. Oolober 8. 1874 were cited by our seven-man panel of experts, the ·heaviest representation at any position. The most prominent besides Rice and Nathaoare227-pound fullback Greg Blelko of Lake- wood, Ohio; Ron Bonner of WestwoOd High in Mesa, Ariz.; Billy Sima, a lad from Hooks. Tex~s, near the Arkansas bor- der, who sprints 40 yards in an eye-popping 4.5 second~; and Markey Crane of San Francis- co's Galileo High, the same school that turned out 0 . J, Simpson. Top senior quarterbacks on the national scene, in addition to Jeff Rutledge, include Thom- as Lott of Jay High in San Antonio and Turk Schonert of Servile High, a small Catholic school in Anaheim, Calif. Lott, an excellent runner and passer, coolly runs Jay High's wish- bone-T offense, while Schonert, Continued -Tfie NatlOn's Best College Prospeets- PlekedBy Our Panel Our panel of college coaches · selected these 30 players (listed alphabetically) as the best high school senior football prospects ·· in the nation for 197 4 .. (For the. names-9f.the coaches on our panel, turn the page.) NAME, SCHOOL ' fltzgeraJd.Jlenson, Haddon HeJghta Greg Blelko, t.kewood John Blue, Edgewater Ron Bonner, W•twood Miu Burt, Mendel Markey Crane, Galileo Richard Dimler, Bayonne Alvin Dixon, Conroe Tom Domin, Wiiiow Brooke Dan Farrell, Chrtst.lan Bmthers Mike G9lther;Memortal Dennis Grlncflnger, Jesuit Mack Guest, Central Jerome Heavens, Assumption Eric Hodgson, Mt. Vernon l:)an Kennelly, Spalding Louis Kollar, Catholic Central Thom• Lott, Jay Jonathan Moore, McKinley Tony Nathan, Woodlawn P-..1 Rice, Lewlnille . Jeft Rutledge, Banks Emle Saenz, Culver City Mark Schmef'ge, St. Xavier Turk Schonert, Servile Dan Schultz, St. Ladlstaus Biiiy Sims, Hooks Ronnie Smith, Sterling Kevin Thrower, Valley WHiie Young, Lincoln CITY Haddon Meighls, N.J. Lakewood, Ohio Orlando, Fla. Mesa, Ariz. Chicago, Ill. San Francisco, Calif. Bayonne, N.J. Conroe, Texas Lombard, Ill. Sacramento, Calif. Tulsa, Okla. Dallas, Texas Macon, Ga. East St. Louis, Ill. Alexandria, Va. Peoria, Ill. Muskegon, Mich. San Antonio, Texas Canton, Qhio Birmingham, Ala. Lewisville, Texas Birmingham, Ala. Culver City, Calif. Cincinnati, Ohio Anahsim, Calif. Detroit, Mich. Hooks, Texas Baytown, Texas New Kensington, Pa. Jersey City, N.J. HEIGHT WEIGHT POSITION-~ 6-2 6-3Y.t 6-3 5-9 6-5 6-0 6-6 6-0 6-3 6-2 6-2 6-6 6-4 6-0 6-1 6-3V2 6-3 6.:0 5-11 6-2 5-11 6-2 6-2 6-31h 6·2 6-31h 6-0 6-4 5-11 6-2 250- 227 190 180 230 195 250 240 198 200 215 230 230 205 250 242 250 180 215 195 195 190 190 230 196 265 180 240 190 225 Tadcfe Fullback·Llneback.er Defensive back Running back Tackle Running back Tackle Tackle Running back End Running back End Defensive lineman Running back Tackle Tllclcle Tackle Ouerterback Running back Running back Running back Quarterback Running back End > Quarterback Tackle-Middle guard Running back Oftenslve llneman Running back Center - Football Continued To1> E11ds i111d Linemen: Big a11d Tale11ted 23 mg. "ta(.'1.li mg.l'llCot1ne ev.per cigaraue. FTC Repon MAR. 74. a drop-back passer.threw for l 2 touchdowns a year ago. FAMlLY WEEIU.Y's experts point to some highly talenled, huge prospects ar tbe end po- sition in this year's crop of senior high school stars. Dan Farrell from Christian Brolbers A cademy in Sacramen10, Calif., is a brilliant student as well as a top-flight pass receiver. Today, a man needs a good reason to walk a mile. Start walking. Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. J J .. .. __ a:.:.;. Thomu Lott of San Antonio, Texff, IS one of the nation'• three top high school quarterbacks. Jesuit H igh of Dallas is turning into a factory for great tight-end prospects. This year's senior standout is Dennis Grlndinger, a strapping 6-6, 230-pounder. Top line prospects include two from the state of N~w Jersey, which has sent many big blockers and lacklers jnto college and pro ball. Lincoln High of Jersey City offers WHiie Young, a great center, and Bayonne has Rich- ard Dimler, a 6-6, 250-pound tackle. Ronnie SwQlth of Sterling High School i~ Baytown, Texas, Dan Schultz, a 265-pound lad from St. Ladislaus High in Detroit. Mack Guest of Central High School in M acon, Ga., and AMn Dixon of Conroe (Texas) H igh School are other leading prospects among prep linemen. The Talent Scouts Who Chose Our High School All-Stars Here are the universities and football people who took part in FAMILY WEEKLv's search for the best senior high school prospects in the country for 1974. The names are those of recruiters at the schools mentioned, except in the cases of Maryland and Michigan, where the head coach was the man presenting his school's views: University of Alabama- Clem Gryzka (head coach Is Paul "Bear" Bryant) University of Maryland- Jerry Claiborne, head coach University of Michigan- Bo Schembechler, head coach University of Notre Dame- Brian Boulac (head coach Is Ara Parseghian) University of Oklahoma- Jerry Pettibone (head coach Is Barry Switzer) University of Southern Callfornia- Dick Beam and Wayne Fontes (head y-oach Is John McKay) Unlverslfy of Texas- Blllr l!lngton (head coach Is Darrell Royal) ff • FAMILY WEEKLY, October 6, 1974 > THE HAMILTON MINI PRESENTS 711eWaslri11sto11 De f3ice11te1111ial Co111n1issio11's United States .. Presidents Ingots -~ ... Only 25,000 persons will ever own this prestigious silver ingot series of major hjstorical, educational and artistic importance. l>du.e Option: l4 KT. Gofd Layemt OYer .999 Fine SDvu At your option, you may order your proof~uality U.S. Presi- denrs' Ingots in 24 karat gold layered over pure silver. The 10,000 sers thus offered will be quite rare, extravagantly beau- tiful, and avidly coveted. This collection is the last wo rd in elegance, and each ingot in collection will aJso be individually serially numbered a nd hallmarlc.ed. Each will cost only $16.7S. A Strictly Limited Edition of 38 Proof Quality Ingots in .999 Fine Silver only $13.75 each With this announcement you now have a rare opportunity to acquire the only President's Ingot Series authorl.ud and ap- proved by T• Wuhtn;ton, O.C. Blffnteno.lal Commlaioo Al"ID WHAT A dramatic and stirrin$ series this is -a panorama /"\.. of our great and unique history that will inspire all Americans. Conceived out of deep respect for the most impor- tant office in the land, it was created not only to honor the long succession of 37 really remarkable men who, since George Washington, have led our great country, but also, our future president, '1lie Bicentennial Pre.,ident of the United Stutes" who will forge our great futwe destiny. What more fitting time to recall the essential greatness of our presidents than now, as our nation nears the excitement of its 200th birthday celebration in 1976. A MAGNIFICENT TREASURY OF FINE ART A glorious example of the engravers' art. these thirty-seven Presidents ingots are each gleaming mirror-like ingots that will be is.~ued two per month. And as a Special bonus a, 38th ingOl commemorating the inauguration of the Bicentennial President will be struck and sent to you Free soon after the nex1 president is known. Each will contain 480 grains of the purest silver available anywhere. In 19 months. subscribers will have amassed over 3 truy pounds of .999 Fine Silver - 18,240 grains in all -more silver than the average family accuml!_lates io a lifetime. STUNNINGLY OF.SIGNED, METICUWUSL Y CRAFfED lt is unlikely that you have ever seen pure silver ingots such as these before. Designed by master sculpter Alfred Brunettin, the surfaces glow with a duality of finishes, e"'ltisite satin bas relief sculpture dramatically highlighted by brilliant, mirTor· perfect backgrounds. The illustrations above only suggest the PRESl0£NnAL REPIUUtNCE VOLVME INCLUDED P1lU A bnu11ru1 full-<:olor, richlY tnuttrated and c:aretully retearehed refettnoc book conlalnln1 per~n•I tJ&ckatoU11d and achlev~ ments or the Presiden11 compllmtncs thjJ collection. superlative detail of these ingots. To hold them in your band is to almost experience all the history of the Office of President. ISSUED IN STRICTLY LIMITED EOmON Tbe Hamilton Mint, officially appointed by the Washington. D.C . Bicentennial Commission to produce this series, will mint but 25.000 First Edition Proof sets in .999 fine silver. Only one complete set will be struck for each subscriber and no more will ever be minted once the edition limits are reached , thus' protecting the integrity of the edition. YOUR PE~NAL SERIAL NUMBER Before sendiog you your first two Presideots ingots. you will be assigned the lowest serial number available. This number is your exclusive number and will appear on every ingot issued to you. In nddition, the Hamilton Mint Hnllmark on each ingot will attest to the integrity of the series and to its full precious metal content. SIGNIFICANT INVESTMENT POTENTIAL This important opportunity to acquire ingots of artistic and hjstorical significance in gold and silver com-:s at a time when economists and investment advisors are predicting gold and silver will become even more valuable in the years ahead. Col- lectors have already realized bonanzas. A 1970 Christmas Tngot, for example, was issued for $12.00 and is now being re-sold for .$18S. A 1972 Thunksgiving lngot containing 1 oz. of silver originally sold for $4.50 and is now trading al about $22. So please act promptly to share in the excitement of own- ing this magnificent collection. GUARANTEED PRICE PROTECTION Under the terms of this offer, The Hamilton Mint is officially comrriitted to deliver to you the complete set of 38 ingots over the nht 19 months, regardless of how high the price of silver and gold climbs. The Hamilton Mint does reserve the right to limit the edition below the published maximum limits, but once your application is accepted, your subscription is guar- anteed. ~ ~ Si>ttlal Collector's Preseotatloa Case ltKlacled wltla 1Ubk'rlpdoa. A hendcratted walnut ches t, luxurio usly lined and fitted foe your ingots. will be included IQ display and protect your entire collection. .. ------·OFFICIAL APPLICATION------1 I The Washington, D.C. Bicentennial Commission's 1 I UNITED STATES PR.ESIDENTS INGOTS f Mau to: ~ Ha.iallto. Mint I I 41.IE. Unlvuslty Drfn, Ar11qfOll R~(Sllts, m. '"94 I Plea.M: accept my application for n complete Limited Finl Edition f Proor Set of The H amil\on Mint Presickrus lngOls Serles as Ip-I I proved and au1hor1Ud by the Wasllinaton, O.C. Bicenlennial Com· I mjssfon. I understand I wiU n:«lve my flrst two Ingots soon aller I my order is accepted. Theruftcr, I will rcoelvc an Invoice once p I month ror the prepayment or the next two ingo11 In my collection~ I I Further, I am assured 1ha1 once my application is accepted IMI my f cost ror ln&otll will never be lncruscd reaardless or silver and aold I price increases on lhe lnlern»lional Metals Market. I also under-I stand I wm receive 31 no addhion:al cosl, lhe watnul dispt:ay chellt I and Presldenli:tl rerercnce book. I further understand I will receive ( nbsolulely Free, sooo after the 1975 clccllon. a 381h Ingot com- ' mcmora1ina lhc inauauralion or 1hc Bicentennial Prcslden1. En-I closed cheek or m.o. for . I j AN OPPORTUNll'Y TO BUY THIS SILVER SERJES &<SA VE f 0 Send me first two in11()(s in .m Fine Si!ver (a fuU 960 1trains) I ror only $27.SO (pll.ls 7S~ for postaae and inaura.nce). I f 0 Scn<I me first lwo in11ou with Gold layered on 960 grains of I Pure Silver lnaots for onl)I $33,$0 (plut 75f J)OM. and Insur.) I I CHOOSE TO CHARGE MY ORDER TO: I ti 0 Master Charge• O BonlcAmerkard I Account I Ellp. Date ___ _ I • // u.sing Afoster Churgt, also u11Jica1e four number appt>ari11g I ~I abovt' )'Our 1r.1111e I ~, Nam• f ~I Ad.drm I ~, City I :zol ~ I Stale Zip _____ _ ti I Slg"aturr I i I (Must be slaned to be v1lld) I ~, I WANT J UST SINGU: INGOT CHECKED: I f.ll f I under~tand I can order lusl OM in'OI In lhc sc:ries (Gerald Ford) I :c bu\ then I do not aet lhc savinas, mao1 will not be serially num-~ I bercd and no ru1urc lna.ots will bt reserved for me. I O Sina1e ingot @ $14.95 ln .m Plae Sliver. • I I O Single inaot ® $18.00 In 2-4 KT. Gold on .m Fine Silver. ~ I LIMff: ONE PROOF SET PER SUISCRIB£R -I I Applkadoe 1a11Jttt co ucepCaett b)' The Kamlllo. MbU. ~ I L.,_ - - _ ~l,!!!O!!_ ~d_!!l!..!l~!_!d~~ '.!!!~&. __ - _ j Our new Burger Dinner with Cheese Flavored Chunks is the newest dinner Lassie eats. And dogs are just plain b@zo over it! As you can see, there's no other dog food quit.e like 4t. (It even smells as good as it looks.) You might say it's sort of special. 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It works by acting as a sub- st It u te for the nlcotlne In your system. Get It at any drug store without a pre- scription. • ''When we found out what AARPdoes for people over 55, my wife didtlt ntind telling her age~ ... "After a friend of ours told us about the American Associatwn of Retired Persons, I said to my wife,' Irma, Everybody's having fun but us. Lots of people out there are having a marvel<>U8 time and we're sitting home co1tnting the years.' So I picked myself right up an4 filled out an A ARP coupon ju.at like the one o·n this page. I want fa tell you it was the b~st thing we ever did." WHAT'S AARP? AARP is the American Association of Retired Persons or as we Jike to think of ourselves-The new social security. Non-profit. Non-partisan. An association of more than 6 million people. Anybod_y who's over 55 can belong. And all it costs to bea member is $2 a year. Wh ich is almost like buying a whole new life for a few cents a week. You can stay home and enjoy it. You can be rich. Poor. Healthy. Not so healthy. It's probably one of the few organizations iri the world that offers you the opportunity to give so much of yourself, if you so desire and at the same time proyides SQmany.benefitsand serviceS: Simply because its one purpose is to help you continue to feel vital, important and involved in every part of life. WHAT YOU GET To begin with, you can continue your education. You can fill your leisure time with hundreds of new mearui'lgful activities. At home. Or outside. You can meet new people. Make your voice heard in government. Be assured of reasonable prices on medicines, travel, on many of the necessities of life including health insurance. You'll receive two fine publications written just for you. In other words, you're going to have fun again and find that life is more than just a way to pass time. DON7 STOP LEARNING AARP's Institute of Lifetime Learning offers a full program of education courses in music appreciation, psychology, creative writing, literature, government, and a variety of other subjects. There are home study courses or you can attend lectures at regional centers around the country. BE REPRESENTED IN GOVERNMENT AARP's legislative program represents your interest with state legislatures and Congress. Its 33-point program is a Bill of Rights for all older persons retired or not. We let you know what's happening.' So that you can know about all of the legislation put through on your behalf, and what remains to be accomplished. FEEL BEITER w1m HEALTH .INSURANCE Medicare doesn't cover everything. So one of AARP's most important benefits is eligibility for supplementary Group Health Insurance Plans. They help you to pay for the best medical and surgical treatment, and include a Skilled Nursing Facility and Home-Nursing Care Plan. You'll feel better just having this kind of protection. PHARMACY SERVICE Because of the buying power represented by more than 6 million AARP members, AARP makes it possible for you to get over- the-counter and prescription medicine and supplies at realistic prices and have them delivered to yoar home, postage paid. GO PLACES Where would you like to travel? Around the world? Across the country? The AARP recommended travel service can help you do it. You can choose from a wide variety of quality tours and cruises, ranging from luxury to economy, escorted by experienced tour directors. The world is there. All you have to do is go into it. FEEL LIKE WORKING? Just because you're retil'ed doesn't mean you can't work. Mature Temp~. an AARP recommended service, may be able to help you supplement your retirement inco~e with part-time. or temporar y employment. There are offices ma numbe~ of maJor metropolitan areas across the country. Just call. Their service is free. Irma anti Peter McNulty PARTICIPATE IN CHAPTER ACTIVITIES Chances are there's an AARP Chapter near you. (There are , over 1600 of them around the United Sta tea.). If you'..d like to g-0 to a meeting and find out about the inside workings of AARP, just come on over. It's a great way to make our association grow stronger and a fine opportunity for you to meet dozens of vital people your own age. WANT TO GET INVOLVED? AtL<>cal Chapters you'll Jiave fhe op.portunity-to find out about community services in which you can lend a helping hand. You can learn more about the Defensive Driving Courses, the Consumer Inforr:nftion Desk or participate in the Tax Aide Program. Or just meet new friends. NEED ADVIQE? AARP provides its members with a ih-ies of booklets that guide retired people through areas of particular concern. They cover everything from how to get personal help, to health advice, moving, diet, and all Uie little problems that trouble you from time to time. WORRIED ABOUT AUTO INSURANCE*? As an AA.RP member ...you will receive information about how you may be aple to actually save money on your auto-insurance with a policy that has guaranteed renewable and limited- cancellation features. LIKE TO READ? When you join AARP you automatically receive subscriptions to AARP's official publications, Modern Maturity and the A ARP News Bulletin. two_.publications filled with news and features of special interest to you. Your annual membership dues of $2 help cover the cost of these publications, which meaM for as long as you're a member of AARP your magazines will keep coming. There's so much more to AARP than we have room to tell you here. And really, the best way to find out is t9 join .. The coupon below will enroll you so that you can take advantage of all the AARP benefits and services. There's only one requirement. You have to be 55 or over. We don't think you'll mind te1ling 11s if you are. •only statutory coverage available in North Carolina. Texas and Massachusetta. r---------------------------~ I American Association of Retired Pei:soos I I 1909 K Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20006 I I Gentlemen : I am 55 or over. I I Please enroll me as a member of AARP. I under~~a~d that I it makes me eligible for all AARP benefits and privileges. I Enclosed find : O $2 (one year dues) 0 $5 (3 year dues) I 0 Bill me later. 11 Name-------------------~ (Pl-Print) OCRY I Address, ___________________ _ I I City ___________ Bi rthdate. ______ -=.. I State· ___________ Zip Code ______ _ I One membership entit.Jes both member and spouse to all AARP I ben.efits and privileges. (Only one member may vote.) ·----------------------------· Join AARP. The new social security for people 55 and over. "I've Never Seen .Anything Liloo IL •• " ... ...,._.,. •re _...., Ill .. llos '1t7, Pr-. CA .ts"l•l r._ H&JW"°"' ~God fOC' a.au.. Ka,.._ ...s Proepertq! People jiu& Ike )'ee -bel-r ...._.,. .n• -~ .. bdt.er jobs. -OU'9, ....,.... ... ' MNac prope..V. ~ .._. ....._...,.. and happy~ WllK God .. ~ fOC' ....... a .. wUl do for,.-. rut Goel ftr9' Ill ,-, lfe ......... wtttl ... lleaH!ll .... ..,,., ,_ ...... wsELOVED. r wrsH ABOVJ: ALL THINGS THAT THOU M.AYDT PROSPER AND BE IN HE>.t.'Mi, EVEN A8 THY SOUL P.ROSPERETH." m JOHN 2 MAil TO lltOTHH Al., P.O. BOX 7'11, FIESNO, CA. 93761 Wrlto,.... _...,...._ ,._. _,_,.. ...... ...,....,.GM .............. Al...,._,..,.. -"*°''..._It,. GM i.. ,...,.., Mt "'411--...... .,.., Mt wllll Iv. -.. -... ._ - .... fMM ,..,, -... ,..__., -le F..., r-.. -"G<Nra HMIWI ..... ..__ ,._. ,... ...... ,_ wwy -, ..... -.................... o..-................... .-..... r-........... i.. .... Me. MAllC WITH AH "X" lAOf NAYB NlllD YOU MIOHl' HAVI. I K n fl JOI 7 I AM N()l uoQIS1000 f IAMwOIUO • ... -RNN<l$ 'J ~ TO CAAl !Oil olll " ... ~ -1" I!>"'° "'-'ME ~------------------------------------- ..ooltiSS OlY----------------ST'-TE _' ____ ZtP __ _ 0. OUT ANO MAIL TO llllOnm A&. '· O. IOX 7fll, IUSHO, CAJ.JI. '131'.U Y-• ...a i.CA'JllER G'k088 WIU\ & ,_Illa,. lllrap II '"'°"I to .. -t.o ,_, 'nllo .._ ""11 _ ... ~ to 1 .... ~ It am ... hold It II\ your """4 --· "O<>d I -t"7 -.... of ...,.1111. lloppl-....i ,._,.111" FIEE ~ -.... w. .... ""'' ,... -pnr ... bl•-1...,· .. ~ lo red -u.u.c• ""t..._ Now you seel1er . .. • Thor's how easily d-CON• tvbuse-Prufe may rid your home of fom1l1es of mice Mice occepr 1t readily They ear d-CON hungrily r;~ and, when they've eaten en~ugh. they go "-'"»· ::o-owoy ond die' Cleaner, easier. surer thon moose traps. cl-CON tv1ouse-Pruf e is o high-potency f ormulo, now better !hon ever wilh on exclusive refined 1ngred1ent-W1ncon.w tv'louse -Prufe hos been used by mil lions for years with excellent resulls No wonder d-CON Wouse-Prufe outsells oil other mouse killers combined Now better than ever with Wincon'" anti ·coagulant. This Gold' n jade Butter! ly is almost free - It's only $1.98! Tiiis JOfden-ffnlshed beauty has a "wingspread" of 2~ inchts, hand-set with a "body" of 1enuine Oriental Jade. Jade . the "Heavenly Stone", hu long been highly prlztd by the Chinese as 1 tolten of 1ood fortune ind for its lustrous 11dl1nc1. You'll prize It, too, for the hl&Mashion touch it &iis to your favorite outfit. At only 1.98 (91us .35 postl&• for hlndling) y04l'll certainty want to order several for yourself and to &ive IS &ifts! MOPIUlS MOUH, lllt. ..,l TU I Ct•..nlal Strtft Mlclnlllt, It. t. t1IOI Pltast send me Cold'n Jldf Butterflies It $1.98 pl~ .3S p0sta11 and llandllna. I enciou $-----check or money order. O SAVF:'lift 2 IJutttrnlff for Onl)' $3.75 plus 4~ po&ta11 and llandllna. Satldactlctt C:i.mrantted or Your Money Back I I I I I I I Na I Addm -I City I Stal•--Ip I \ lie• Yort sr.t• rt11de•t1 pl.aw .,. •Ult ••• Ioctl laaH. / , __________ .,.,, Those Horrid Age Spots "I was so embanassed, I served luncli with . my gloves on!' "Then I found Esoterica. The medicated cream that works below theslcin'ssurface, in the pigment-forming cells, to help lighten and fade age spots and other darkened skin discolora- tions on hands and face. ln a matter of weeks. my skin looked clearer:' Esoterica• H elps Fade Embarrassing Age Spots. • .., • • CL • "C 0 u ii: I NICOLA NAYLOR Blind, yes, but ••• Nicola Naylor'• life changed the day she met a spirited horse named Storm Haven. Pretty blonde Nicola, almost totally blind since birth, is also a will- ful wisp of a woman. For some reason the combination of --Nicola and Storm Haven was the right one. They struck up an immediate mutual under· standing that has led them, as· toundingly, to show jumping, ribbons and silver trophies. How does a girl with tunnel vision in one eye and no sight in the other manage to guide her horse over a jumping course? Easily, is Nicola's reply. She walks the course with Storm Haven before the events and counts the strides between each fence. "I memmize the turns and discover whether the obstacle is a wall or a gate," she says. Her form over the fences is so good that judges arc gen- erally unaware of her problem. MARY JOHNSTON Oldest "paper bo~" Next Saturday is lntemational Newspaper Carrier Day, namccl in honor of more than a million newspaper carriers throughout the world. The vast percentage of nC'wspaper carriers are boys, generally in the 12-14 age bracket. The "paper boy" in Coalgate, Okla., is not a boy at all. She is a woman, Mary John- ston. She is 88, has been deliv- 2t • FAMll Y WE EKLY, October e, 1974 ering newspapers for ·~4 years, and, according to the Interna- tional Association of News- paper Circulation Managers, Washington, D.C., is the na· tion's oldest paper carrier. Daily, Coalgate residents see Mrs. Johnston striding brislcJy up and down the streets qf the small town delivering the Ada, Okla., Evening and Sunday News. Her route covers 6ve miles, and she walks it six days a week, rain or shine. She ad- mits she is occasionally tempted to give up her job . But she al- ways reconsiders. "Kr''("' me limbered up; she says. 'Tm old, and il eld people don•t do something, they start to set. They wind up setting in wheel· chairs. Not mel" Su111u• ...... Hissing back at a hooded-cobra radiator cap m1 a car that once belonged to Rudolph Valen· tino is one of the w ays 17· year-old Nancy Mcintosh likes ~ to c lown at work. Her job: IJ car polisher for · the 85 antique Nancy automobiles at the Merle Norman World of Beauty at San Sylmar, located just outside Los Angeles in the San Fernando VaTiey. San Syl· mar, completed only recently, houses a large collection of "f unctionat fine arts" (that is, everything there was designed for use, and can still be used). The (.'()bra radiator cap was a girt to Valentino from Mary Pickford and Douglas Fair- banks. BIRTHDAYS (all Libra): Mon- day-Andy Devine 69; June Allyson 51. Wednesday-John Lennon 34; Joe Pepitone 34. Thursday -Helen Hayes 74; Th elonious Monk 56; William A. Anders 41. Friday-Jerome Robbins 56. Saturday -Tony Kuhek 38; Joe Cronin 68. ....._ ~ J , BIRTHDAY PEOPLE: Andy Devine a Helen H1yu Quips & Quotes ARMOUR'S ARMOURY By Richard Armour NO SNAP You'd take my pictwe? Prithee pick A pose, then take that picture quick. I've stood '!P strai8ht, I've Sfl'!iled, said "Cheese," I've fought against an urge to sneeze, I've stared into the sun till blinded, Pretended notbi~g ~Uy minded .... At last that click. The picture's taken. As from a spell, a trance, I wakeo. Forgive me, friend, if I ignore Your fervent plea of "Just one morel" Our neighbors have a ma1Tiage of convenience. The only time they re- memoo'r that they' re married is when it's convenient. -Robert Orben If George WasJ.ington uever told a lie, what's his picture doing on a dollar bill worth f orty-t/iree. cents? •. -Conrad Fiorello My wife sympathizes with Eve. "What would you have done," she says, "if every night your husband com- plained, 'Oranges again!"' -Robert Brault My doctor says I must gioe up those intimate little dinners for two, unless I have someone eating with me. -Lillian Kos/over Warning : The Surgeon General Has Determined That Cigarette Smoking Is Dangerous to Your Health. 0 llOWN I Wl\llA#iSON 109ACCO CO.,OIAOOH THROUGH A CHILD'S EYES Kids see life differently. Send original contributions lo "Child," family Weekly, 6-41 Lexington Ave .. N.V .. N.Y. 10022. $10 If used-none returned. My four-year-old <laughter reg- ularly watc~es a puppet program on TV in which the main charac-. ter is King Friday. 01'lc day she asked me, "Is King Friday a pup- pet, or is he real?" I replied, "He's just a puppet." She then asked, ''You mean he's not real?" "No, he's not," I _reE!_kd. She thought <iliOut this for a while, then askC'd, "Does he KNOW he isn't real?" -Mrs. Richard E. Powell Morgantown, W .Va. By Frank Baginski ,. 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' . ' FINAL SPORTS LOCAL EXCLUSIVE · ORANQE COAST -WANTA S NEWS SUNDAY, OCTC>alll 6, 1974 . I featur[rt~ . .. olr .,tall.it 8r•tm ~~ ~_ !?c!ltJtz.. -~-- T~IS 15 TME 6REAT NEW EXERCISE r'VE DEVELOPED.-.. .. I lT'G 6'30D f!OR '{OUR NECK ... NANCY LOOK ---I HAV E TWO NEW DOLLS IRMA BURNS ME UP --- A LWAYS BOAST! N G I 1 . HI':. . . I HAVE. MORE DOLLS THAN A N Y GIRL HOW .I N TOWN ~ ,...---· _ M ANY ~ HEY . !RMA --DO YOU KNOW HOW MANY DOLLS I HAVE? I ,, , ' I ( LfOU HAVE TO DO T~l 5 FIFT'1' .Tl.V\ES A DA'< ... ~UMP! BUT IT RUlN5 '{OUR 6004' ... By Ernie Bushmif fer 27 135 \ ... • • \ • . ,._ !rlA, rT'? HIGH 11ME w~ DID YOU HONOI?. WITH A T£5TIMON l/\L DINNE:I< .' AND! MfAN OL IR L.17~1AL , f31G 1 NO-EXPE.Nt;E.-~PAf<EO Ft,.11.1.r · '7C A t.f: GAL.A £:.VEN T .1 .· . '4...,1)1 • I ••• I> ,) rJ] DEN NIS THE MENACE l · I · f DID THE T /vO OF .. f' WE TALKED YOU tiA\ E P1-ANS ABOUT IT! re> M1\P o ~ . ..., • -f'Mt KE!rL-Y ~HOO'­ ~'fvP~Nf~ -AN D L.A~f Jt..1NE, OIA~ <SAL.A T£5i/MONIAL DINNE~ F"O~ Lc5rE~ C05i IA<S IHe IA~lAAL ISO OOL.LA~~. THE ONE. FO~ ~~E IL.,A 1 IN Jt..fLY1 AL?O COST l-1? 150 DOLLA~~ .... lAH, MA~C IA, cVErlY MONIH THI~ Ct.vl B iH~OW~ A H 1-1GE I GEH~, !~A'' !Zl&Hi ! ~O FA~, VV~'Vi HONO ltEO fV~~y MeMaf g OF= fl..JE Cl-1110--~XCEPT HIM! . $oc1fr'f . ~ ,MONTlhY hi Ee., 01 G NtiW 1/J MO~rH1.Y ~E'E1•N' NOl.J 1,.) LAV~H TESTIMONIAL.. DINNe~ FO~ ONE OF lT7 MEM6~~S -- SLAT l 'Vi N~ve~ HAD ONE .... Plt6'.t~> WE'LL. HAV~ LOT? OF POMP ANO CE f<EM DN'ft AS ALWAY~. r , PERSONALL.'I, WILL. 00 THc 11 IT GIVE? ME: GREAT PLEA'7lA RE lo E1CETE.RA '' KOIATINE.. 1<10 1 WE'V~ N£GL..E:CTEO YOL.l LONG E.NOLAG H! ' Pnti,~S NOW, TO TH~ NliT'f-GgrrrY: l..1N DA 1 HOW MUCH MONE.'/ 00 W(: HAYE ' FO~ TH€ OCCA,ION? EXACTLY TH~e~ OO L.1-A~-S AND l=ORTY CENT~ • IAH , MA~C.IA --I~ THI~ MY ACTUAL.. iE5T/MONIAl- 01NNE~? COOKIE5 AND M/L..K'1 HA ~iJL.Y EATEN IN THE Al.LcY rr GIV~~ ME GREAT PLEA~lAllE. iO 16.~L.. YOtA ra s~ur UP ANO i.AT YOUfl .,T~1.E 9tSG'-4 I~ •1! £3fHIND THE ~CHODl. ?? ~;:,:::r,:~~~- I . By Hank Ketctaam . ~l.JD GE PARK ER AFTER YOU WHAT DO YOU TOOK THE CAB MEAN , WHAT HOME LAST NIGHT, WHAT D ID YOU DO? • • <j <l <1 LOOK, I DON'T THAT 'S R\GHT, HAVE TO . AND YOU CAN ANSWER CALL A LAWYER, YOUR Ml55 BLAIR! QUE5TION5! • • O .. H4EN c.fOU'RE Pt GUIDANCE C..OONSE.lOR , 4l0Ll'RE THE ONE 11-{E. .STUDE.ITT.S COME. TO WHE~ THE.4'RE I~ TROU BLE AND NEED HELP'I · · J-r--......----r 'GORDO DOC·TOR SMOCK HM M, YOl) SAY S H ~ W A S e A l"ING A Pieces OF W Gtl?t?IN G CAKe:; ... A t..-1-r-rt..~ i...ou De~ ! =' 0-~L..l~Ve 1.'M GS:-r-r1 NG Ct...OS~~ .1 __________ .....,._ __ --~ __......_ .............. __ / REWARD P.f"INr, A. GIJl\lf\~\C~ CfX.l ~l r,tlOR IS A VER4 REW~RDING J oer1. IT'S UER4 SATISF~I NG 10 KNOW Tt-t~T YOU GIVE TH E.ff\ THE ANSW E.RS AND HELP PRO\JI DE DIRECTION EXC.USE ME! WHERE.'.S \ OOWt-J TI-\E HAU.. ANO TO ~UR LEFT I n1E GI RL'S RESTROOM~ FOR 114E.I R. L\\JE S I . YOU!<. STA~IN<tl IS KIEIEPINGI Mi:= AWA!<tf WEL L, LIKE -/F- L /K E T/Mt:. WHAT.<' MARCHES ON ...... AN!? S H e A CCI C/E:Nl"AL..L..Y SWAL.L-ow e l? "fHA""f L.1 'L. COU P t...e l/e::c oF<A-r1 NG !He IOP O F. ""!H e CAKe ? S r/OULON 1T CLOCKS flAVE FEET INSTEA D OF flANos<> • Gi1s Arriola .SHUT TJ..IOSE SU0-E YES AND-STOP AC/ING:! LIKE AN OWL' • LO!eD'I! NO WORSE. S!E Si'A PARTNER If/AN AN INSOM NIAC OWL r • By Geqr e Lemont Yf;:;AH ·' i<ee p AL..KING, K 1C'S .' 1 HAl'L.L. MAK·e YOU f/ ~ MUCH E:AS 1e ~ ~ 10 L..OCA-r~ .' I I I 1 .. ' • (\\/ f-:...-.-&; _f-_ \ I Iv -(., /\ ' \ ~ELL01 MV MOMW\'-1 IS IN THE BA'THl<OOM I BUT I'M ~1\JE AND I CAN O<E.SS MYSELF" t-oN 'CEPT RJR MY ~\R . . . DADDY'S A\ WORK. ANO HE WONDEQS W~E.RE. ALL. OUI< tv'ONEY GOES,. BUT HE'S GOIN' ON A D\ET 'C~SE WE Tl41NK HE'S TOO J=AT AROUND Tut M\OOLE . MOMMY RUINED °™E t'l/\EAILOA-~ LAST NIGHT SO WE ~AD TO GET PIZZA ANDBlLLY 8URNE:D ~IS LIP BUT IT 'S OKA'I NOW ... THE PLUM6ER \4A.O 1'0 COl\AE 'C-OUSE u EF=FY ... • ' r TU"~::SL::E::~:E:::E:CS by Tom K.R t--------------------------~ ~--------...... -----------...... ._....,,,, / \../ ( W~Y ro 11-H:.Y MA't!..£ M f; (;.10 TO BE. P ~o EARL V ? ~IAV l PAT• ENCE,· {)00 1 l Y ~ YOU 'L.L .: r l t )1 P ::,00"1 ·, 1 L NC1U C.1 ~I ! __/- 1r 1 ~"1 ·1 RIGMT 10 \'\/15~ YOUR u r E. AWAY ... ·~ R~Mf.MB£R IHL COMMANDME-Nl I ''IHOU S i--IALI NOT COMMtl ADULT HOOD Bf.FORE I HY T IME'' ! - • /()-/> o · ' I WI SH I WAS GROWN UP; IHAT1S W~AT ! .. !HAT COMMANDM~NlS 60T A FAM\LIAR RING TO IT 1 BUT I '"IU5T CAN1" PLACi: IT 0 )') 10-6 .· I. • . . • . ' • ' I . • • . . . . . . . . . . • . . . . . . . . . -: . ' I .. . I " . • . . .. : . ' • . . . . : . . • . . • • • . . • . • : . : . ' ' I • • • • . • . .. .. ' • . . • . . .. ' . I , " • . : ' .. " : ! . . : . . . . . • . • :· . • : . . . • : . . . . • . • • CAN YO U 'J'lttS·r YO\..T rt F;YE.o::;'! Thrrr atl' al lr a't ~1)( dirrl'r· encf'!> in dt;11.,•1ni: f1rta 1L~ hl'IWt>t'n lop ~nd botli)nl fl ;\Jlrls. Ho11i qu1r kl}' ran you find th<'m'! fht'<'k an~wf'rs -...·1th tho!;E' brlov.·. 'f'~'l"ll ""'I ~• '' ~"/ .,, '"'''II'\' ',,,,.,.,, " •'l••"I' '' l•~«r 1U~l~J J'IJ'' "''!I!. 1"·'1•'11'1''' ""II 0 •'"' ,,,..,; .. 11'1 'l · •Hl:•,•!Jlll ~ MIXED SIN(;tES 'Oo~. ~OOM 6K'. <IOU K'€At..LI/ . _ r,;;;J; i-l AI/€ If ([ . M.A,'Vt. Wi-IAT ·s, 1Hf l/ZICK' '? IH!:r<E:'7 NO TIZICK , AK'NOLD. ' 10-6 DICK TRACY S~DLINGABIG ROCKAND BUSTING AN OIL PAN- ~EANTTME VAN WAS USE LESS. NAME'S VERA ALLDID, CARTOONIST 'OF "INVISIBLE TRIBE." MY WIFE AND I STOPPED TO OFFER 1-lELP TO 4 GUYS Tl-!AT FLAGGED US DOWN AND T l-IEV loll.JACKED OUR R . .. '• . , ·-· --BULLETIN BO AR D --- e rtl.\ I' Ytll .! \n old·llmt• f11rn1ula rur f1nd1n~ <1 p1·r,u11\ 1d1•al "1·1i,:ht !>a~s: t':~hah'; m1·a:.url' \our • 1·h1•'!. JJ1\·trlP ll\ 1 .. ur. S.ru~n· Jht• r••,ult. \·l·ilt1· plr h)' hl'1i,:hL Ill ineht''-, 1)1\1/11• hy '27. 'l'ty II . " ' ' '3 1'un,tu.n• l•• 111,1 \!c "In"'·: lh .. 1•11U,111 ''"'''d 0 .t t"I.' h:1U ,111 hour ,t!lt r ht "'t' h.111i.:• d. ' I ' , \1\(,1\ \l\I '. I lt~1.1,111 l'l 1,,·~ I 111•1,IJ,il ··I •·'" ·""" 111 T 1 I ·" I • I : I ) I 11 , _\ I ' ,i r, '' , .I' " II ' I· l ~ I I I' .I " 11, d "111" "'' I'' ~ ' '"I I,, r P .II I I .. 111 1!11 IH111d•."t "! , "ilh 111 !lh' I 111 .11i.I 11,ol 111 _1!, r I h.111 •• 11" '"""t., t 111 Hi,-111•- 1'1 I Pl 11 JI ,, ,, ,I.,, d ,, I•• ,,,,Ill l•I' 11,,111 l/1,' 1--.-,J'., !Ii' 1ol lll, IJil , '•1111{1.:r '1. '-~" ,,, ,11 ••'llld 111. !'I.ii f,1 hi• ll!llJll·,!' •.• It 11111 ••111 I .11hl ''\'''' ·'"'"1111~,1 ... 1.' "!'L ,Jl"lll•·I !11,-Pl.ii {" Jq, np111!•,., 11"11 11~' )1!111• Ir•· I dl1 ,nd., 1111 111.1_1·1, 1.111 lt1!11 111111,' ,1 lll'l·lt 1'"1111 j'I ·•··I· Jrl/ \[ I .1!-• ., 'I Ir 1""1 -"I I J~l 1 r ! """' ' l"I' "'I' I•'" ~'II' •IJ' "''I"·'""• ,. • '"lol "" ~l•11 e 1111·r·· .in· 1~ .. 1·s ... 1.11+· 1.1p1r.1J-. "ht"I' 11.11111 .., !11·c;111 "llh 1tlt• l1·t1•·r ti i .1n 1011 1d"n!d\ th1•r11 '.' 'l'l'\\I .,,. 1 ''""'('I~<• I'" !i •'I .,,I"' 11 • 11111~11" ];111i:I• r ' ··,-.;p 11 pli 11d1•t , .u1111111, ,,•:1 "'1-.. ;-:.: ,,1!1~" p •Jl•puihnr! ..... , ..,,1111 ' I I ,"1-.J I\!; HI· I!' \1!d 1111 .... 1 1·,.l·or·, f11 •,.1I\ f,,1 ,1 "'"I"', 1,., l•ll't' .1hn11• 1 1!1•11 :! I.I hlui• \ ),.11., .. I 111 1.,'"''' !'1 l.t hr1111n f, 1 11,,h llJll•''--:-Ill tiJu1 . h /llatl-.. 'l Lt 1:1.11 I SP[llBINO[R! -=~~--t __ -= l ~{'OR f: ](] p'l1 nt~ fnr U~lni;! a!) lhP --;------ lrtli>r~ 1n th r "on1 b<>lo"' lfl form -=-=-=·=-=!=-=== l"u r•1n1 plr1 r .,.orrl s .\ H II ,.\ I. ~. ,..., I -------- " ,I I l 11 JI 11-: L ;.'j: I I '•L;. .Jl IL•ll ,fl •'I l. I. l'l.A\'JNG FOOr.-:11 ~ \\h.11 ·~ 1n1,,1n i: ;1l1•11 r ' \ fuqth.t!I. ,.r courM>. \\h1rh u l !!1 e l-.1ck)l..\l'nl it O\t•r the goJl po~r -.·· IN T~l 5 IOUJ N 1H£K'f _A 12e: '- 'fWO GINGL £ G1~L? ·ro JZ r l/ON'I liJ.AN I -ro ~......,--IMP:JlOVS Ol'l..1id£M. eve rzl/ GING/..£ GUI/! I/OU CAN "I -1MPIZOVf ON iHOSE: 0005 ! \ 8UT ,.TRACY- CRYSTAL LYING BACK HERE WITH A BULLET l-IOLE AND TME EMPTY BLACK BOX? HOW DOES IT ALL FIGURE? IN 1-!ER 1-lEAD?r:::::._~~ OH, SPARKLE , I'M SO GLAD YOU AND VERA WEREN'T 0-, 14 URT. ,,----'... IT WAS TEJ?~\Bl.E . tlriA • "WMAT°LL I DO WITH THIS CRATE , BRAIN?" By Brown and Casson by Chester Gould ANO T l-lEY 1-lAD TO 1-lAVE ANOTl-IEI< CAR TO GET AWAY. BUT Tl-IER ES ONLY ONE SET OF TRACKS. ~ ... , 'i" ·11· /111·:.(~ I r-::,...>, ':AFTER YOU DROP US OFF WITH TME DOUGH , RUN IT IN T~E CANAL:' (.. , • J a b) 1'01111an I'. Kennedy . . Di d y·uu . k.now yuur liuro!)copc i..:,oulJ 11\l'd!J 1h1.· <lifferc11L'.c between hjP'i)tilC~S or :.o rro\v: \Jl!l\Vccn SU('Ce:is or failur e? Picture ;i lo11g ruui ll wnh J oo r:> at "ca1.l1 i:nJ. In tl11:. room tl1erc arc 1noncy, ;ittractiv,c· pcrsun::. t)f tl1 ~ UP I~OsHc sex , book..;; 1J1at tell y l1U tl1e sec ret llf happ1ne,.;; ;ind 111a11y ot her v;,ilu ab!c .irti i.:lcs. Bu t, al ~u 1r1 1t·.i:-. r;JL)ni .!fr.: botto1n1ess pits, traps., hoslile pc1 1)on~ J 11J Jang0r0u .... beasts · cJ1aincd in various places .irou nd tl1~ ruo 111. Yl)U n1ust \Valk tl1roug.h tl1 i~ Tl10Jll . lJu t Yl)U n1;iy t:ik(' 11u t uf it anytl1ing you can . ~ow if yo u hac.1 :i Lli uii.:c. \\'l.Jtd J )'UU •.:!1oosc t11 -I) go through th< morn blindFofdeu ~~'"! g~ t+lf~ugh~he roo111 with }'Our eyes upen~nd \vitl1 °"'ritten in::-lrt11.:ti on) on which places and people lo 1'isi t o-r ovu!J ____ __... Acfvertisement Astrology To day PR~SENTED BY • THE AMERICAN ASTROLOGICAL ASSOC IATION "The Natlon's L'argest Astr~log 1ca l Socie ty'" 0 1913 Amer1c.an ·A5trolog1c<1I Aun • " • ' •, . " ' . t , !11 ~ l1u fl)SCu pe Ill 1hc last \110111¢1llS or li1e -war as Berlin turneJ aruurtd him. 01i the uther hand , astrul ugers aided the Allie s in fore · .::1s1ing the. 1\xi~· 1novc s: ·rhc n1ost fan1o us astrolc1gcr, l~1..1uis de \\"ul1I . 1..'n1 pluyrd by 1he Br it is h Govcrn111ent. prc- Ji..:~t>d tl1t· r:...:.i..:t event s leading to the downfall ot' \<l us~o!J n i•. 111: g:.i incd the f;1i1!1 t )f tl1c 1\111eric:.1n 111ilitary, when he predicted !'earl Harbur a year before it happened. ~1u rc Qll avoiding di saster. ~:.i 1nc rh:e·se .stories _frp.111 a r~cen t <J rti clc in tht.:' Mia1n1 Her:.1ld newspaper. 111e :.i rt1cle tell s the stury (Jf tvlary Kelly , :i Mian1i co1nputcr progran1n1 eT, \Vh{> J1c eded the aLl\•icc of lier l1oroscope ~-wru ch \V:.l fllCd lie r of i1 \Yr 01l_g___!11edi'l."J_I diagnosis. Sl1e :1voided an unneccssJry operation tl1Jt would !1ave le'ft her-a. <'rippl e. Your hurl1s...:d pc ..:J n bring you \VCalth . Fan1ous • Of co urse, all of us would pick the ... c..:l·nJ i...'l1.1J(l. 111 .: case such as this . lsn't it ridiculuu'.l. thl'11 . tt1a t' v;~ \\"Otdd 1----~c-h·ooscto--go-throu-girlif , h-c-snmc--si1r1 ;:iti·on-h!in11Tid~· --'"-- folded! Even when thi.:rc is J n1e :.i11~ lo go 1!1rough li fe \vitl1a111ap :;ind o ur eyes \Vidc upc11! 'f l1c 1ncans pr(>vided bu >iness tyc oon. J. P. Morgan. used astrology to acquire ---ni's-fo<tunc.-M<>i:gall-di oL mak ·1 fio:inci.1Lm.y.=----- without chee king his natal horoscope foreca st. is Astrology. The map is our as trolog.i.:al l1o ros...:li pc. l-lo\v docs it \VOrk ? Nature·s LOtin1o:i i111pr1 11 ts ca ..:t1 of us at the ri111c of birtl1 -'vhen th e un1bilical i.:ord is cut. We tl1en becon1e ourselves. l:Jntil till' cord is cu t, \Ve dr c JJart of our n1otl1er . \Vl iy or ltO\V \VC prt';-,entl ); do 111..11 know. 'fl1 c 111ovcn1cnt uf the la rge sola r bodies 1hcn 1i111cs potentials fo r cvt!11ts 1n u\lr lives. :'\)t.rulogy docs not cause events but 1~_tin1111g of cvr11ts. But. it'~ no t fortune telling. It's a pre-dicti on of put·.'ntials '''l11ch Ire.! will can override. An)'one fa miliar with Jackie Onassis' h·orascope will b e an1a .;::ed with the u 11canny wa)! that it has predicted her lo ve life. F'or examf'le, Jachie's Cancer lies 011 i he cusp of her eigh th house. This 1ndirates that sh e will marry a man con nected with water Il er fi rst hus band , the late i'rcsidc n/ Kenned y, was a P. 'l'. bo(Jt Captain iri iVarld ll'ar JI and also enjoyed s<Jiling. 1\nd. o f cours~'. hl'r curren t husband, 1\ristotlc 011assis, &; a sup er·w calJhy slup ping rnagnate. H er Saaittarian ris ing sign shows that she prc ff'r.~ fo rei1Jn countries and p eople. lier husband. Aristo tle, is Grecll and Jackie is k nou>n for har jet-se tting irnage. F inally, the p lane ts J upller and Vo?nws sy n1bolizC ni one-y. 1'he (act that these ti;JO p !ane ls fall in (her seven th h.ousc, the House of Partners, indicates that she 11.Ji I haue a very wealthy husband. - Bacon. Tyc ho Bac he and Albert Einstein all beli eved i.n as 1rol og)~. .... ..... , P'ron1 a11 arti cle i11 tl1e Mian1i Flcrald can1e th.is sl o r~1 : "Stuckbrukers 0 11 !Vall Street are as likely to call alf astrologer i11 this decade as fJollywood ji/111-stars would call a psy chiatrist i11 the last. David Will/am s. a 75 year· old retired JiiwHcial expert-who /i1,es i11 C/ear1vfte,r, has · 111ade S /50.00U fro 111 the stock 111arkcr i11 iJ y ears bv 11si11g lJst rr1/u~'tJ ' as a11 i11vesltl1e111 gi1ic1<!." Y t.Jtlr l1~roscope ca11 si1ow _)'OU the way to success a11d ' .happmcss 111 i6Ve and mamag.-. ·Horoscope s of Grace Kelly and Jack ie Kennedy predicted their current suc · · cessfu l marriages. Gra ce Kelly to Prince Rainier and Jackie Kennedy to Ari stotle Onassis. ·As with these fa. mo us pe opl e. yo ur .horo sc ope can help you find ond keep a last mg and meaningful love relationship . A nat:il horosc9pc analysts i.::011ta1ns the hi:~t p::-.:· Lh1..1~ logical a11a.i}'Sis of yourself tl1at you ca11 get tu.l J~-. ln addition, a nat;i.l hor psco pc ana lysis 1 nclud ~s J1 slU:-.:,1un~ on tl1c fo ll owing: fin an cial Ol1tl ook ; tJ,\CS at1d 1nheri- tJ.nces ;jl carly hon1 e cnvir on n1e11t; relat1unships with r:1- n1.il}', relat ives und pari.:nts; lovclif1.: and n1~1 r nage ; cluiO - rcn; career :i nd occupat1 011; !1upcs; \vishrs and gu:il:., :.iiid subco11scio us a ttitudes. You r ho""cope can he lp yotl be in th e right place at the right 11111e. Yl1Ur ho roscope ca11 l1clp you ::i voi d di sa!)- Ler:-., while guidii1g )'OU tll your benefiCial oppurt unitie!). l:'ow and thrnugh.Jhe ages . a_good-natal lwrnscope------- analysis ha s meant the differen ce-between success and fail ure . Will you miss yo~>r success opportunities? Will you stumble info pitfalls you could have avoided'! Today . ri ght thi s moment, you can have your natal ~·1 ;_iny peo ple tlti nk 1!1at J~tryltJg) 11n l·y Jppea!" t\i .. ,vay ou t" unsc1enti!l..: people . .\otlling .:t1ul<l be !":irtl1cr fron1 lhl..'. trut h. 111 f:n:t. ~tudil..''i ,/10\\' th:it .!~lf {Jl,igy appc~ls n1 u~l tu 1ntcl11gc11t anU 10~1.:3! p1.'11plc . f-.ulHlll'.' Sl.'.icntists G:.i!il co, CJrl Jung1 Joii.1nnc" l\('p !~r. {{1J0g·~·~ Did yu" J..nu ·~ th.it astro logy helped th e Allies win II urld War 11" The Allies employed ast ro logers. Th e Axis po \vers st;.ir tc d out en1 ployin g astr<Jloge rs. But. this \V:JS ct:.ise<l c~1rly \vl1cn !he famous as trologer . K:.i rl Er n)t h:_r<i fft , pr.;<l 11.'.tt!d the cx:.tt..'l time an d place l.lf an :111 en1 p t 1.11' ll i llt!r ·~ life 111 \1)J<1 . lli1ler thought 1!1c :lstrl ilogcr:-. \Vt Jt' i.:unsp1ring :igJ111~t '11111. so they \Vert! 1n1µri:-.uncd . lhtlcr turned bJ..::i._ 11.l :1:.tru!t)gy -\\HI l--at1:. Il e rc;.iJ horoscope cast and analyzed . You can get it for only the cost to make your duplicate copy. You get the expen sive ca~ting a nd analyzin g prui.:ess FREE. TI1e :.i rticlc be low \viii 1ell \'l lU h llW . The n1ean s are :ivailaQle . bu t the c/1oice is yuurs. HOW TO GIT YOUR NATAL HORUSCD.Pf fDR ONLY THf COST Of MAKI NG . COPIES ; Si..·nll birt h. by John I'. l'urd i\1C ~·o ur c~ai..:t Ll11lt' .111u i'l.11.-1.. l!I I 'll .._·;1::-t .ind .111;dy1.i:: )"lJU 1 liJtJJ hurus..:upc !ur 1\"'~l.':i r.._·IJ !Jllf!"•tl~1..·"· l 1 ,: !ll:!Y ll:.i\·c :.i duplic a1l' lup~ 1.JI )-~iur 11 .,i1.1 s·..:op..: 101 unl y 53.00 · \\'lih.:h 1nl.'.lUJl·" tlt~ 1--~-,~.;:v. •'!l!)l LU-11t..1kl!.. your \;upy plu:. SO~ pus t...1~1:.· ·· · :.inJ h:.inJling. 'i'l>U i;c t 1hi..: l':\fJl'll\l\l' l.'.:.Jst 1n~ .111J :1 nalyL11l b-p1ul.'.C:'I' 1 ({I · I . bi.:t:;JU:il' ll1 !hi..! fJ.1.-l th:1! \\l' !l \U ~I p1lhhli..'1' ~ uur hu1 ll~LO})I! fur re::..:.n l h .1 ny htl\\ Y1)ur 11:1tal hur0\1.."!lj)I.' \Ydl 1..·1111 ... 1..,t 111 tl\lli...' !J J gl·~ .l!IL! ~J \1.'.I ~.Q(j{) \\{1 rd". );tlUI 11;1t;Jl huro~.:upi.! \'-'lli -.:•Jll!.1111 > uur p~~.;h 1l· lusic~d a n :.tl)!)1~ plu:--,1 dt:i1:u:i~1L1n iii till.' 1'ullu\\'lllb. )Ull! Ju\i...·!i1t·: fi11:i11c1.1J Ul1![1)tik . 111arr1J g1..·. J:.u11d>· .111d i..:h!ldr:.:n rl'.:l.1111 i11 · ,Ji ip..,: cart:l' i .111J .t>1..~ u pJ t 11111): hupc~, \1,'J)hl' ... Jllcl tv:1I:.; .11 1U "\llb1..vn:-~·10u" .1tttt11J..:..,. \ l1Vf il\..;O pi..: u! till ~ l)}JC \\Ullld ..:u~t up l\\ $3 00 1f Joni..' by au .1 s11ul i...1gi..:1. I ,,;IJ i..::.i~I your hortJ ~i..:upc \\1 1th the i1cl11 uf our JOU · (i5 l .L~.~l .:~llnptttl't 1i1i1hi c-J1 contai11!) uvcr 24 1~dh1..H1 b11' •'I 111ft>rr nation. You1 J1oro~;.:opr \vdl 1101 l1c Ilic worthle ss type t'ounJ 111 p~perbJck>. Your nalal hv1u)l'.up(.' \\.'Ill bC' t.:as t tron1 -, ' ~•i' l..'.\J1.-l !J lllC .:!Id 11iall..'. l)I h11 tll !Ul . 'l'J ;111d \'Vll J.Ji.JJ\C. 11 11 HL 'S AB SOL UTELY '."U CA .ICll . I n·:.:d ill!~ 1n!\1rn1:.itio11 !u1 1n y J.~trllli.>g· J...:J.I rc)1..'a 1i...:Ji. I :.i1JJ IL)i.>k111g fl)r ..:t!rtai11 pl.ini::t i.:o nti~u rat1011~. Jr yuu are chosc.:n ,1·, .1 rc::i.::.irl-h subjCCt. I v.·ill 111a il to yol1 a 1 1..·~1.·~111...·!1 <.[lll'S li u1\n ;.iirc. If yo u fill out.and ll'lurn t!it '.'I qu cs 1ionnaiI't', )'UU will be \'llt1 llcJ ll) cxtr:.i bonu ses. 'l"hl'il.' 1" 111.> need lo \Vl)rry ab1.1ut fi11J- 111 g \)ll ! ::b1..1U t .in ll!lJ "\)!dJl)ll' t.:Ullllll]:!, 1li:-.d!-il1:1 1h1u y1.1ur ~hJ1 ~. N. 1nc 11tioneJ. as trolog_y dl'al\ 111 JJUtc11 t1.ds. Y1 1u r f1e1: \Viii c:.in 1..)vcrr1<lc po tc1111 J l'i 1f y1it1 kn1.1\v :thou1 1111.:111. In a!l)' i,;:;i~c . ihe J)C1l1i.:y lll 11u:.i lil11:J .1~L1u h1g~1:-. 1:-. pu!)tllVL' .1~1 1o!t1g)'. I! lhi...'11.: ,.., ~·1rt 11..·1h1ng 111:r.111vi...· 111 )1>U1 , hart , ~ t>u. Jrc t1 \ld \Vh:1t y1111 i..:,111 ll\1 t(• 111ai...~ it \lt1~1t1\.l'. l 1, gel yuu r hl1Ju!>i.;,Jp1: thrtt tht~ 'lJll!1...1al 11ppu1t un11J . s1n1 pi}' fill 11u t tl1c rcseari.:h 1..1.nr,p utt."r lurn1 •ll l<l n111il tq tl1c aJclr·!~s give n un the lu1m: Inc lude the S3.00 copy co>t phis 50t ~os 1 age and handli ng for cadt h()Josco1>c t>r i:t1arge your c.·redil l'JrcJ. r• ' .-J'hl..'.r1..· is a lun1t ut' t\VU J)C f fan1il)'. It" you d1J11't k111l\V Y'Jut c.xa l.:t 1in1e of birtlJ, fill in I.:' 00 PM . Joh n F. Furd, president , The Amencan Astrological Association . Telephone me at(216)478-2!11. Thank you~ If )'llll have :.iny <.1u~st 1on:-., call n1e, ·--- -- ------~ ~ ,-- -... ---•..,.,•1~ -,--,' COMPU'!'E R·OATA ENTRY FOflM ·PLEASE PA tr.' , I ~ubmit my birth data for ~tescarch. 'Q l'~'e YOUR'HO~~Ft;O:LO~ ,, ·I ;i n1 nu w eligible tO promptly recciv.: ADDRESS ' ~ · 111y 3.0ou word natal horoscope for only ; I J SJ l'O~I to makl• 1ny duplicate copy plui. I Silt po\l3gc 1tnd handling. One ur two n:i ntes tr u111 my household n1:1y be sub--I 1nittcU. (limit of 2-no exceptions) I NAME 1 > ' CITY NAME2 0 Mr. OMs. STATE • Zll» I I I I I I I ,, OA-l'E OF BIRTH I I TI ME OF BI RTH• ......0Al'.E-OF 81Rl'.H-TIME OF-llRTl41-'•,..,... <(11 I I ' I I BAM PM C1tv of vour birth State and Country of yOur birth t I City of your birlh .' Statt and Country ol-Yqur ~rth OA"I O PM 'IF YOI) OOlil'T KNOW EXACT TIME OF BIRTH , WRITE '"'t 2 P.M.'-,. Cl~p ""d mail this form to: ('ash. check or money ordet enclosed. ~One-S J plus Sot postage A h1ndlin~. a ·rwo-St.. plus SI poltage &. handling, C11:argi: n 10 my· o Amtrican Express The American Astrologi ca1 Assoc. 0 ~l :i.£te r c.~htu~e 0 Bank Amencard Research Oiv., Dept. I'> 7-, •• . , I .1:J ' I ,, , I Ac~i. Nv. 4865 Wei.t Tusc. I I Good Thru Canton, Ohio 44708 ( I IMP,ORTAHT: TlffS"O'FFER CARRIES A FULL 1'/f. 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