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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-10-18 - Orange Coast Pilot' -•. ---=~-• • ---- . --. • J:~_q,,.·stain ·1~000 _Miles AJ1Ja9· ----..,. I ' " -·--- ,. • • ·- ~ ~t~ipp~~~s Mate Valley Bnr·glary . ' ' . ---~s~ys:_.!lj·Jls Paid At Dead~Cli~k -. . , --Uer ·S.iOQ a ·:Week ~ =·-... ·--- ' M~dert~ .. ~ ··;,;:flnnne·ent': ' . ' " :" .. ' . Man· . ~ . :' " ::"' ~ Jtiiled · '2 years·. -··: •1 1/Y ARTHUil )\.•VINSf;L ~.,. Of flle Dellt Pl .. I S"ll A ooetime ~ a·g u n a Hills man 1qWibes•toct:'j' ln·Los Angeles County Jail, tliO "7t0th .,fay <he has· been held there as a 91>-Called transient prisoner on a fugitive warrant. •Normally, pri...,.rs ca-be held more than 72 hours without arraignment and-upon· conviction-would serve no ""!"'\thin ooe .~ear In a C0111ty jall. .JaDl81i 1Ray Ru.ssell. .. ~. is .accused at&>M:erch, t972 murder rJ. a ~;Old •• man it.Dr Okfahoma, 1,000 imiles away,. a crime tb&t his lawyer cooteods be -<Olll<tuot-haye-cOmllllltal. Russell wts Srrest:OO t beld cind,clearcd on the. warrant iniUally in~Orange Coun- ty, i.lben three weeks hlter drove to BeJll Gardens In Los Angeles Cow\lY to •lsit·a brother. ~ ' · • He was ~ and quesUooed while havingva suppeftjme snack in a Taco Bell by j>asalng,pqlic:e, who disoov...O tbe outiliDjjff&~Oklihom_!, _ m.u rd er fuiitlve • warrant which had not been c&noeled 1 by, tbe"Orange c.ounty legal action that cleared him. Ruloell bu ·-eoling SIOJlP'I' at , ~l Beaucbet-St.1• near Union Station in downlo'lm Los Aoeoles for the past , two -,..,...aJlll 10 daya, without -having • •' h:ls case cleated. • ' -'CLIENT IS INNOCENT•-· Attorney Roger Agajani11n. · m! bas 1eve.rltl wttneat,s·who swear he waa.wllb lbem at· the'tong Beach Nu-Pike.:AmllM!menL Park just having fun !bat fate!UI Saturdoy night o1 the old man's mutdcr aOO. robbery t n Oklahoma.. .. James · Ray Russell is some sort of born loser, his life• bulleted by courts of law from here to Oklahoma .. ' He did his ~ime there too-at McAlester-a stretch for burglary. Russell's record Indicates be bad just arrived in Orance County after release from prison and gone to work: Things teemed to be 'oing well. Okl-.a aulhorlll,.· abruptly ended that. 'Ibey issued a fugitive Wa:rTant charg- ing R-1)_.Mtb the murder ol the a1ed Invalid and be was arreated here, then cleared after a series of court. proc:ecdings. • - One Included a Polygraph lest ad· ministered <b)' a technlclan which strong- ly Indicated Rus,,ell wa1 innocent. He aim had the testimony or his wife ·and 1ev<ra1 componiOnl. plus the Long &•ch pawn shop r.C.ipt "1ow\ng "11ere he WU that night. , a-n waa fi:eed, then wen1 to o.u llom"" to viol! a brother thm w .. ks 1•1'r """ .... au~y mr<mt<:d by police at a Taco Bell where he (S.. JAILED, P11e A2J • .. Mercury Drops Along Coa$t; F o~ Han_g~ng On nie fog l'Olled m, but !be Santa Ana condition rolled out so re:Sidents along the Orange Coe~ spent today In ,comfort and oM<:uiily. - BUl'tbe teiJ)9triture milp to .the low '108 was-beinR greeted with r 'e 11 e f fblloWing ·the ~ker tcm- poratiiiei ol mlclwoij<. - The National }ftl.ther Service sild today1s ooodlllohs would continue oVer the: weekend. That means considerable fog In the mornings with only partial clearing at the beaches in the afternoons.' Oiberwise il wlll be m9<'1ly sunny. "It's back to the usual glu<k , fog at nlgtis and In the mornings," the weather service spokesman said. "The beat wave is over." • so i1 the he•Y}"'!IUl'f lhat pounded the bel!Chea Thuraday, reachmg ,lix )" eight feet. • >· • • • our Ie '.Just Fti~ds' 'Fanne' on· Mills' Payroll-Hubby By tbe Aiiociated Press ' Eduardo Battistella says his wife was employed for a year as a $50().a-week aide by Rep. Wilbur D. Mills (0.Ark-). but there was no romance between the congressman and the fbnner striptease dancer. "We are friends , that's it. My wife and 1 think the Mills are wonderful people. I love him like a father. He and Polly (Mrs. Mills) are very fond of our three children," he said in an interview ill Buenos Aires. In Little Rock, Ark., Mill! denied that Mn:. BatUstella had ever been on his personal payroll. He said she had been paid to redecorate their apartment in July 1973 on a one-time basis. Earlier, he denied there was @.ft y roniance between himself and the 38- year<Nd Mrs. Bhttistella. He said people were .tr-ymg to · create the lmpreWoo that tbere"'was such a romance. She is known as "Fanne Fox, the Argentine Firecracker." Mrs . Battistella was one of r o u r persoos with Mills, the 8 5 ·ye a r-o Id chairman of the HOUie Ways and Means Committee, wtien polic:e stOJJ!l<d Mills' speeding, ooligbled car In Washington Oct. 7. Mills said he was taking Mrs. Battistella home from a party. Battistella said he did not want to talk about the incident. Heroin Seller Draws Jail Tenn He said he and his wife and the 1.-lillses traVeled together to Antigua in tl1e Caribbean in July 1973. Mills had no comment on the alleged Antigua trip. Battim.eila said Ulat after their Antigua vacation his wife began working for . Mrs. Milts as a public relations and secretarial assistant in the Mills home. After a time, she also helped Mills (See MILLS, Page AZ} Gun. at Valley Victim's Head Fails to Go Off By KATIIY CLANCY Of flN Diiiy f'li.t '''" How would you feel If someone put a gun to your head and pulled the trigger? "I just don't know bow I'm still here today, to tell you the truth." Robert Flynn, 51 , a Fountain. \.'alley television repainnan, today described his apparent escape rrom death \\'ednesday when he came home and surprised l\\'O burglars in his apartment. One or them, he said, put a blue steel automatic to his head and pulled the trigger twi~, but the gun didn 't go off. "Tho whole thing only lasted f i v e secmd5 but it was a lifetime," said Flynn. Flynn arrived home at 12:15 a.m. Wedneoday and had just Ojlened the A Costa · Mesa woman who admitted door about six inehes, when· he said in the courtroom she ·bad flOUeS9ed-it was jerked from his hands. and mid heroin in the Huntington Beach · FJynn said one of the men jabbed area ha5 been sentenced to one ye&f him Jn the ribs, then &'!! he apparently in the Orange County Jail, slwnped down, be felt something brush superior Court Judge f:veretl w . hllJ>air. Dickey ordered the jaif term and three ''I heard a click," he said. He later years probation for Brenda Hope saw the.gun pointed at his head. Etchison, 20, of 947 Paularino Ave., Then. he hea rd a second click, after Cos!,:a Mesa. which the two men Oed. Re further ordered Mrs. Etchison to Fountain Valley police said l o d ay attend a~ Metropoli tan State Hospital, they're investigating the Incident, but Norwalk, ptJ>gtam for drug olfende.ra so far haven't made any arrests. as part of the probation term. Flynn 's assailants, who fled without Mes. Etchim was arrested in COsta taking lll)'t.hing, were described as of M!;!sa last Aug. 1 by HlD\Ungton.Bcach Me~lcan descent one about 18 years police.. who 'Mid· they ·~..bad 1*' ,under~oJd..~ the other 25 to 30. police said. surve.tllance for hercun sales for 10me ~ entered th\-ap:i"Nmcnt w h I 1 c time. IS.. UVES, P•ge All .. • \ Ill Clta.,e: AUlng Cesar Chavez, leader of the United Fann \Vorkers Union, has been hospitalized in San J05e for acute back pains. The ailment was described as a re· curring injury. Police Hunting Gypsy Gyppe1·s PHILIPPI, \V. Va. (UPl) -A ~earch widened ror a band of roving "gyp.sy -.. -' ... H "' .. , . ras ..... I ... • Craft Hits Long Beach Fuel Tank LONG BEACH (AP)· -r Four men were killed and another critically injured today when a rented plane hit the top of a ~root gas tank and crashed into the street shortly after takeoff· The six-seat Aztec had been cleared ror an instrument takeoff from Long Beach Airpcrt at 3:55 a.m. Fog limited visibility to one-sixteenth or a mile, airpcrt official.ii said. Dick Friend, a county fire department spokesman, said the aircraft clipped the. top of the empty tank, snapped a power line and began to disintegrate. Wreckage was scattered ever a 200-yard area. Investigators said they learned that the occupants or the plane were headed for South Dakota on a hun ting trip. The men were dressed in Heavy clothing and there were several rifles in the plane. Four occuparits were pronounced dead at the scene. Police identified them as P h i I i p Morgan, 49, or Los Gatos: the pilot ; Robert John de Dobert.is, 31, Newport Beach; Peter Johnson Till9on, 40, Tor- rance : and Chauccy Ellwood \Vbip- perman, 52, Covina. Orange Weather • Fog and low clouds nig ht ahd morning hc urs becoming 1uostly sunny Saturday, according to the u·eather service.1 l:tighs at .. the beaches 68 to 72. Inland areas 74 lo 77. Lows tonight 58 to 60. INSIDE TODAY ' women" who U!e confusion and deccpllon Omnge Coast College wl/l bring tlte musical "GodspeU" to Ute stage \Vednettlay througl~ Saturda!J. S!nff \Vri~.,. Toni Titus tokes a look' '*-OCt's of· feri1t g in l1i.s 1'1terwW~sion C'ol· /u1nn on tile cot1ef" of todoy's to steal money frcm rural store owners. "We've alerted merchants in SC\'eral counties t.o be on the lookout fo r these· won1en and to report to uS immediately tr they:re seen," a state P.O I l ce spokesman said. Five women stole $200 fron1 a service statloo·stcre in the small town of Jtmlor, , sooth or here. Propf.lctor Betty · Smltll- said they looked like "gypsy women'' Wl'.o took her" by surprise. > \\' eeke11de r. · Al Your l tnkt AJ I NUMI OS L.~. ltY• 111 c11;i.r1111 AJ C\ff1ll>HI 01·1t Cttllk1 Cl Cfftlwtt11 C.f O..tll Ntllttl "1 Eclilen1I f'IM Al "1111.w;e ''"1 ,_,_ 82 lnfttfl!IUIOll Cl AIMI LllMll!'J SI Mlltllf( M ' Men.., Tr" If Mo•~• Ct-• MvlYll FMIHll I• Nttlt nll '"WI At ~ C111111y A' ,._i. • .,., ••~''"''"'"' Cl·Cl s~tvi. ""'" 11 ._,, •... Stotk M'llrktll ... , Tflot>1"1tn Ct "l'~ltrt C~I W11lllt1 M • W.111 Ntln At • .;r ' . ., 4_ J! DAJL V PILOT 5 ,, -. ,1 ... ' ~ ... .. 1 WATCHING -1'.1aureen Dean, · wi fe of former Nixon counsel ·~~ Johft Dean, leaves U.S. District ..... "'Cot.lrt wttere·her husband testi· •! ·fled at the \Vatergate cover-up "' ' tna1. · 1:._-. I• . From Page Al ·:JAILED ... ' :'ita pped for a snack. ::'. He has been eating jail food on · Beauchet Street nc3r the SP Railroad ·~an:t ·e-ver since. . , ~mey ,J,41.1!.er Agajanian-\\'ho firmly btii~'ves the client he represents free , .on kgal -principles Ls innocent-will be ·:tn l..A>5 Angelts County Superior Court ... Oct. 22'for a new extradition hearing. ·-;·."judge William P.1urray of Orange Coun- )¥ Superior Court already reject..i lbe "dXtl'adillon based on Orange C ount ~, ,.authorities investigation and legal work . ~But Los ·Angeles County 1\:on 't :i~pl ,that "'. AJ<i.janian, of the law firm of Sherfield , Charton, Flshman and Agajanlan, said ·lbursday one hopeful conces sion has ··Aleen won. Tbey are willing to accept ~the Orange Qounly potygraph--Or so-call· ,;·id lie detectm-· tes l-rindings if Russell ~t3. to .. one administered by Los Angeles C.OUnty. ,l11JJ~,j~st~Q the meantime-that his client.,..vho. is held without bail for two •f'IU'! and 19,.days, is being subjected iip..~tipna] double jeopardy. 1~ .. ~1 ,mwj justices ordered tµm ·1-.S Jrorn.IM.Angelee County cuatody. ~on grounds be could not be extradited .'.~ Oklahoma second li~' oo \he ume -alleged evidence hea rd m Orange County. 'where extradition hod been refused once r.ilrAi¥1i·•ll 111 t'\1 , "'l'rosecuto rs appealed and were then uJ)~\d, placing the appe.Uate court In -the position. of ordering Russell freed once then ordering him held without ~~1tne ~~1 of .injustice are mare :r.•.r••...-.... than other1,'' ~~ AMIMan. "And keeping a t: person in Lo& Angeles County Jail from ; :Oct. 8, 1972 to the present is at the top f~f my Outrageous lnjwitice List." 't ' .,._ .. 4 • -. \I II "-~oni Page Al . 1 1 Lf\~ · · · ! fFiYnn 'wni"'iDne by rem oving a screen j-·and climbing in an open "·indo"'• officers , said. : r F1yfln ·said' the pair only spoi<e once ; h:lurin g the incident -in Spanish. • t Flynn. "·ho livt!! aJone., explained tha t i {the attac _ · a•ned outside hls front . ~r. He_;:J8i""he was so dazed he : ::Stumbled ~,_ got up and it look about ; jhve minutes before he got to a telephone : 'lo call police. '"" l ~ "I was . sol"\ of da zzled ," he said. 1 iadding he's stiJl shaken tcxlay and hasn't : ._been back to work yet because ol bruised j t ribs.iUC!eaid during the attack. , ;· He said he "A'as more shaken "after : p realized \\'hit co uld have happened." ' ' ! ; l i " i • . ,. I r ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Thomas A. Murphine -.JiMM91"ji1 ldolMr " Charles H. ~oos Ric hard P. Nall • ... \h tMlil IM,..Ol"9 Edi'W\ ' •· TtftphoM (7141 M2-4J21 -CJ,lss:i.tiad Uwtrtlslng '42·5'71 • Frldi1, October 1.8. 1974 ' - ' ' ' . Watergate Jury Hears ' Nixon As·k Probe Halt .. WA S ll!NG TON (UPI) -The \Vatergate cover--up I.rial Jury heard a tape rec."erding today ln which former President Nixoo h13'trueted John W. Dean Ill 10 try to cut ofJ the inves1igalion of the \Vatergate burglary before ii .implicated White Hotae personnel. The previously unrelea.!ed tape was made during a converstatlon wi Afa.rch 17, 1973, fOUf da)'3 berore lhe-aate N1J.On once insisted be first learned the details of the burglary from Dean. A later portion or tbc same tape was released earlier in the \Vhlte House trlll9Cripls, but it did not include Nixon's instructions to Dean , to limll the in- • veatlgaUon. As Nixon and Dean talked tllal day about the burglary and the upcomlng Senate Watergate committee hearings, Nixon said: "I think what you've got to do, to the extent that you can, John, is cut her off at the pass ... (Watergate defendant G. Gordon Liddy and his bunch just did lbls aa part of their job." Dean also told Nixon that former Al· torney General John N. Pttitchell and then Whlte House chief ol. staff ll.R. Haldeman, both defendants in the trial, were Involved in the cover-up. Nixon agreed oo the tape that they w e r "vulnerable.'' Later in the meeting, Dean told NIJ.OO about the Whlte House Plumbers break· .. in at the Los Angeles office of Dr. Daniel Ellsberg's psychiatrist. Nixon has said in lhe past that Utls was the first he leamed of the Ellsberg bretk·in. "What in tbe world, what in the name .ol God .... (Jolm) Ehrlichman havlllg IO TU et h In I (unintelligible) in the Elltbera:! 'l11ls is the lint J ever beard of thla: ..• JeSUI Cu1st," Nixon aald 00 the tape. Ttie 13-mlnut. tape was ·played after 2 ~ hours of testimony by De&n, fonntr Whl\e llnu!e counsel and l'ijllon'• dlid. a_ccuser. ... ID During that testimony, prosecutor James Neal took Dean step by step Lhrough a aeriea ol meeting• be bad with a number of the defendants w~re problems ol raising hush money were discussed for the Watergate burglars .. , Ford Sig11,s Bill on Housing The meetings throughout late January and February, 1973, 1ed up to Dean''s teJling Haldeman that he wu afradi he could nol be prot.ct<d by the dodrlne of executi ve privilege because he met with Nixon only once in on the Watergate W ASH.INGTON (UPO -Pre6ident Ford signed a bill today that will help finance $7 .75 billion worth of housing construction. Ford said the bill will give the depressed housing industry ''a shot in the arm." _ ·The bill is expected to spur construction of 100,000 new houses case. Following that meeting Dean said be .tarted "meeting frequently with the President -some weeks every day." across the country. · Under the legiJilation, the federal governpient will be empowered to buy conventional home mortgages from savings and loan associa- tions and other lending institutions and in this way can pump more home loan funds into the ti ght money market. Dean also testified that Charles W. ~ A number of leaders in the housing industry and construction unions along with members of Congress were ii1 the Cabinet room whe nFord sJgnedthe bill. · Colson. former White House special counsel, told him he disc\lssed clemency for the original Watergate defendants wtth Nixon In January, 1973. He said so while telling about the problem.. Wl:ite House aides had with original Watergate defendants E. Howard ljUDt Jr.· and Ford lfaia the bill will "materially help the housing industry in turning the corner.'' The industry has fallen Jnto a deep slump be- cause the shortage of money has brought home construction close to a, standstill. James W. McCord Jr. ~ Dean said Hunt was distraught ~~ the death of his wife in an ~airplarie crash and wanted to pll!ad guilty if Trees Burn Fir~ -apparently started by children playing with matches -~urned briskly for a time in San Juan Capistrano Thursday destroymg or ctamaglng six eucalyptus trees th;¥-would have been part oi. Cook Park. Trees in San JJ!a"n -are protecled by law. Fire was near Mission Glen t.r•ct: .; -· Citibank and Chemical he could get "some as:Surance from lhe White House he wouldn't go to jail for the rest of his life." Then Dean told or a Jan. 5, 1973 White House ... corridor conversation with Colson, who Lower Prime Rate%% hired HWlt. Dean quoted Colson as saying. "John, I felt this matter was so serious ... This was a matter I felt I had to take up with the President himself." Brig-ht ·Declines to Make ' ' '· . ' NEW YORK (UPI ) -Two major banks today lowered the prime lending rate for top business borrowers to 11 1/" from 11 'n percent. F,irst National Cib' Bank and Chemical Bank, both of New York, made the latest> move in the recent downward spiral of the prime from its histori c high . of 12 percent. II was npected to touch off a new roand of reductions. Citibank. which reviews its pr i m e structure every Friday, uses a floating rate fonnula based on certain money market interest rates. Last week the Federal Reserve Bank of New York released statisUcs showing C i t I b a n k could reduce Its prime lo 1111 percent, The move by Clllbaok 1881 Friday f'r-Page Al MILLS ... him.self with appointments, travel ar- rangements and similar duties. Mills paid Mn. Batlistella a weekly salary of $500 from his own funds , Battistella said. He said bis wife oc- casionally traveled with the Mi!Jses as part of her job, which lasted from August 1973 until recently. Battistella said he first knew Mrs. Mills as a client or his interior decorating firm in Georgetown, a fashionable Washington district. Battlstella said he J,ook Mrs. 1ttills and her husband tO the Sliver Slipper ni ght club where the congressman met his wife Annabel, v;ho was perfonning there. Battistella found an apartment for the Mills at the Washington building where he and his wife also have an apartment. Battlstella said be -not hls wife - decorated the Mills apartment. Battistell a, 43, said he is an importer and travels to Argentina frequently . Jl e said he is separated from his wife. Meanwhile, Mills elicited laughter and v;ann .-appl 3use from LitUe Rock Jaycees in his first public appearance since the Tidal Basin ind dent when he advised : "Don't go out with foreigners who drink champagne." "I did something I shouldn't have done -I drank some champagne when I knew it went to my head right quickly. And it did," ~tills told the Jaycees in a campaign appearance in Little Rock Th ursday. "Now I've been embarrassed beyond \\'Ords about this experience, as J've said. I've a~logi,ied publicly on several occa!lions £or what happened. l apologize again tO{light for what happened. , "As r say, I was wrong in ever taking bne drink of champagne becaUAe I !~med · years ago that I coukln't drink ii. and t have learned in more recent years· that )1XI can't d r Ink anythi"i ebe and do vry much·" ~fills is see.kin& his 19th tenn In the general election nezt month. lUs op- ponent is Republican Judy Petty, a 3(). year-<>ld divorcee who has said she would not make the Tidal Balin lnddeilt a Neal asked Dean iI Colson told him to trim its prime to ll'h percent touched he actually took it up with the Preside.ct. off a .new round .r reductions among "Yes, he did," Dean said. Brown Funding_ St.atem~pt . c: i ~ the nation's major banks. Dean 's testimony wa,, identical to that Although the prevailing prime rate he gave at the Senate Watergate bear-By JOHN VALTERZA ls II'lh: percent, Michigan National Bank ings June 2S, 1973. . . °' ,.. Pa11r ,.11t1 s1~tt of ~il ~ ,announced plans to lower , . It \\'as business as usual at the mornirig the ending' rate to Ioa4 percent from SCS!ioo of the regional coe.stal com- 11 percent, effective Ocl 11. Tw M U }d mission, .Qespite the £act that i t s The downward. spiral d. the prime 0 .1. en .1.1i-e chairman is,now under investigationJor sugg~1 b4nkers see at least a slight soliciting fun~ f9l' EdmW)lt G. Brown easing tn lrtDat~n and att: optimistic Jn Three Killine~S Jr., Democratic. candidate for i;:ovemor. the Federal Reserve will conUnue to u Chairman Dooald Bright declined, an relax credit reins: invitation from Commissioner Carmen Given encouragement by the decrease FORT WORTH TeL (UPI ) -Homi· Warschaw at the Long Beach meeting in interest rates, investors pushed prices cide detectives ' holding four ~lex· to make a full statement. on the in- sharply higher in active trading on the !fl ican nationals in conoect.ion with the vestigatioo. ~ New York Stock Exchange. butcher lmife ,slayings of three women It was disclosed this week that Bright The Dow Jones indw;trial average ~s and two children released two and held hosted a luncheon Oct. 7 at which lea~ng ahead 11.97 at 643.41 shortly after the the other two as prime suspects. coastline developers were asked to · al- announcement. "We do have two men in custody tend a $100 per person cocktail party in B ~.~ aMr ~.!::.invoColving Inte1 mational that are suspects tn the murders at Brown's booor. , us~ ....,uucs rp., aso was RivenideVllla(anapartme·ntcom-Some developers uld following the stimulated by a report but the company plex)," said homicide detective Oliver meetin g they felt they might have a .. -~ At this morning 's ~klll ol the <»m- miss.ioo, Bright said t.bat be did appear before t~ st.ate-commission Wednesday · to request a "thorough and immediate investigatioo." •·Any addi~al statement would com- promise the µiveStig ation· It is not rea- sonable or appropriate to make' a :;tate- me'nt at thi.S point," Bright told fello \v commissioners. 1be commission then turned to ~ · sideration ol a Jenathy agenda of re- quests for approval 0 r develoj>inents along the Orange and Los Angeles county coasts. It was expected that the matter \vould again be raised during the oral com- munications porijon or the agenda scheduled for late this afternoon. denied today any knowledge of a Ball. preferential treatment before the com- reported takeover bid by ' an Arab con· The five persons were discovered in mJseioo, which reRUfalea coastal develop-~fexico Fires En1pi sortium. their wrecked apartment. The women ment, if they attended tt)e party or In a one-!elltence statement Wued were stripped, their -hands bound and urged othen to do so. TIJUANA. Mexico (AP) -BMh fifes from its headquarters in Armonk, N.Y., their mouth.s gagged with rags an d Bright denies any such implication swept ~ an estimate 2,000 acres the company said, "We have no know!-clothing. At least one had been raped. was made. He said that the sole pufllOSe Thursday between Tijuana and Tecate edge of any negotiations for the sale or The children were gagged and all the luncheon was to garner support f'lr about 3tl miles south of the U.S. border. IBM stock to-any Arab consortium." five were stabbed ard mutilated with Brown, who Bright considers the most As temperatures climbed above 90, a R\lmors of a t~eover b!d sent lBPtf a butcher knife, according to police environmentally-oriented of the t w o total of six !llcfl fires broke oul but sharts sharply higher earlier today on investigators. candidates for the governship. were believed l'Onlained. the London Stock Exchange. · ---:;,_.;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiii;;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;m;;;;;;~;;;;:;;;;,;;;:;;:;;:;;;;::,;;;;;;;;;;;~=-The report about a possible A r a b takeover was first carried by the Midd1e East News Agency, coosidered the semi· d.ficial organ ol. the Egyptian govern- ·ment. The report did not specify who W8.'I involved in the negotiations, nor who was involved in the alleged con- sortium. There also was a report in the Detroit Free Press that the arms flor. from the United States to Saudl Arabia could double or triple WldCr a secret plan developed by the federal gbvemment in an attempt to drive foreign oil prices down. The secret program to Saudi Arabia apparenUy was developed by Secretary or State Henry A. Kis,,inger, t h e newspaper said today in a report from it.s Washington "bureau. German, Brewers Start Crying l n Tlieir Beer BONN (UP!l -Prof, Dieter Runkel , a brewery expert, was explaining to a group U West German legislators how a propoeed law would perm l t glucose, suJj>hur dioiide, a!ICOr'bic add Md proteolyli< enzyme lo be added · to beer. "Pfui! pful! boo!" the law mater s crted. W.es! GmnanJ, wbo guzzle more beer tflan allj'OIM eloe, -end lbe propo9ed all-European la!f would pollute their na- tional drink. LAMP SALE CONTINUED From the finest collection of lamps -in South Orange County. Sel.ect from such well known names at Marbro, St~fle, Knob Creek , Norman Percy and many others. Fanla•tic I nv<1ntory of • Quality Lamps All ~eady For Immediate Delive;y ; ,I ,_ Cot\1-1 _,,,,, ~"" ~ 8tecit • ~t2-4410 --campaign issue. ~ • During hfs Jaya.>e1 address r.1111~ look- The naUon'1 1,700 breweries took: out flill-page MWJ?8per ads calllnl o n driMers to protest the law, now bejng worked out at CqJnrnon Market Mad- DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK-KARASTAN-BAKER -I i -tr ll ll r-rom lilrtr .. t..A,.eevnt,~11"' Pd often towe.rd his wire, Poll1. ·who M0-1220 was seat~ in the audience. She wis .. ,. at'"9flt,MW. ••• c0.,1 ~l""Nf not with htr hmb8nd Oct. 7. c:.n,...,., ,.. ,.,.., , • .,i.,. 11~'"'-"· '"Tbere is no_..di(f~ bel~n us. ..,"""'" _,~, •• •a-11wme11" ...,....,. tftlr After you've betn m1rried as l<>ng as ~.JI l'l!Pl'GdUttd Wltl!O\ll ti..Cltl ..... ml»ion OI ....,"l1'~ ,· we have, you get so used to one person s.c11,,. ..,,~.._... ,,.111 ,, °"'' .,"' that no one el.le can come between c.titOl'~a. o.<r1111~ .,., (.,,.., u.oo )'llu." h.tllls said ln denylnj;i: sugeslione "'°111"'': bb •11 "·'° IMlllNJ;-"'11~..,., • that he was romantically fu votved wtlh cll\l~tlo!lt !:!'"*',""' _.... v -_ -~~--:::--:::;--::,..---:;:. ;:.;:t.~~~lgrs::,. ~B:at~U~•l'.';el".'.';la. _ q1,1arter1 in BrusHls. .. Jt Would standardlze beer production in Europe and allow addition of chemical addt Uvet to beer, as In the United S<AlC8 . Gennan beer ta still breftd according lo Duke William II ol Bavaria's Law of 1$1!, wJilch allowo only_ m>ll, hop! and l"llter -no chemical l'!..*!Y•Urt<--. , • --- WIBDATS I SATVftOAYS t:OO le l:Jq -'. --------~ • ·- NEWPORT BEACH"• 1777 WtsTCLIFF DR ., kZ·2050, LAGUNA BEA"CH, - 34S N()ff!J'lf COA.!oil llWY., 0<t!U.WI ' TORRANCE • 23649 ltAWMIORNE B~VD <Open Fri .. tll 9, Sufh 12·5:30)~ 3?8".1219 f ' • ' • l s t I I l I At Your Service AS11nday, Monday, Wednesday and Frld1y Fe11ure Ol lhe Dally PUol Errors Correete d DEAR PAT: I received a mail in· vitalion to pufchase a family Coat of arms froll\ Halbert.a, Inc., ·Bath, Ohio. I woWd like to find out how honest and reliable this firm i&, or where 1 can write in Ohio to find out. D.J.U:, a_,...· Deach At. Your Service ltls rtefl.V«I 1ever1l li te -delivery or lDcorrect lalatoriograpby coi;~a about Halbert'•, Jae., but errors llave· beta eorrected pc:omptly when tbe flrm wia COltla'ded. • Steve Scbmldl, Balbert'a edatomer 1 e r v I c e managir, Claims leu than fow percent of orders received have result.ff in con- sumer ·complaiau. The Better Bminess Bureau of Akroa, Ohio, n Ports few problems wkh tbl1 firm aad Ute Federal ----'l'rade Commission bas ~DO rteerd of complal11 t1 against Halbert'•· l•k Remover DEAR PAT: Tell M.S., Costa Mesa, that "Specia1-T," a product made by Spedlllty Coaling & Chemical Co., 7314 Varna, North Hollywood, and A.mar-AU, available at art -supply stores-and some ~ service stations, will do a p>d job SQUATTER MIKE POMPILLO SURVEYS RUINS OF SHACK He1lth Officials Bu rned Home; Pompillo Sent to Jail of removing ballpoint ink stains from • vinyl .upholstery. D.M., N~wport Beach Yours was one of several I et t er• rttcived Jn respoase to M.S.11 lnqairy. Other readers report 1aeces1ful ballpoint ink stai.n removal by nslag "Jnknh," a Parker Pen product available at oflice supply stores, L O.C., dlstrlbuted b y Amway, and cuticle remover products. Wome•'• Ot'ff••fzatlotu DEAR PAT: Has anyone published a book listJ'tlg all of the w o m e n ' s vrganizations In the United States? I hBVe become involv~ in working with several groups concerned with the pro- gress of ·women's rightJ and J'd like to contact other similar organizations throughout the coWrtry for pn)gfam ideas and other Information that may prove helpful to my groups' aims. ,.. y L.C·, Costa Mesa "\Vomen'11 Organizatlo111 aDd laden: 1'113-14 Directory" Cilntaim 47t pages listing 1,000 lndlvlduall and organlia· tious. A copy can be ordered fn)m Women Today, Nattonai Pren Budding, \Vashington, D.C. %0004. Crock Pots Safe · DEAR PAT: fJow safe Is It to ('()()k meat all day long at a low ·temperature in one of the new electric crock pots now on the market? It would seem that there might be a danger of food poisoning. True? H.G., ~llsslon Viejo ~o. not unless the crD<!k pot ls deice- . tive and doesn'I reach lbe proper temperature. Dr. George York, U. c. Cooperative Extension fOod. technologist says most crock pols hold foods at temperatures between lfil>-180 degrees -!Cl deiree• above tbe temperature at "·hich food poisoning bacteria are \Hied. He adds lhat crock pots reach the 1'0 degree point quickly .and no danger or bacteria growth exists during long cookJng periods at an even higher lemperature. Orde r of lnitlatlties DEAR PAT: After looking over the numerous propositions included. on my sample ballot ror the upcoming election, it' OCCUr! to me to ask how t h es e measures are assigned. lhe nwnbers they 'are advertised Dy and \'Olcd on. It would seem that the first rew would have an advantage over the last ooes as far as proper consideration by the voter is concerned. J.K., San Clemente By law, initiatives are placed oo the ballot In the erder each meuare is placed before voters by lbe Legislature. Other• are assll{Ded (usually by draw- ing) al ·lhe dlscretlo~ of lbe seeretary ot state, the chief elections oll1cer. Russi& Suppol'ts Town • ID Uproar '~l'ee Spirited' Oldster Jailed LIVERMORE (UPI) - A Joto! people in this sunny, wind~swept N o r t h e r n California town think story-spinner and squatter Mike Pompilio is all right. ' That's why there has been such a ruckus since the 73-year-old weaver of tales was carted to jail and b I s ramshackle dwelling burned to t h e growid. Ofd Mike, as the townspeople can him, used to carry flowers to the women wor1ten at City Hill, refers to animals . as bis friends and fttquftitly cfalms to own the entire Uvermore Valley in· oouthem Alameda County. Laguna· Trustees Verify LaBUl!'A In Wage Talks Laguna Beach school tnJStees recognii- ed the . Laguna Beach Unified Faculty Asaocialion (LaBUFA) this week as lbe only oiganization to represent teachers this year in wage and other negotiations. LaBUF A, which represents 129 of 144 teachers fn the district, ls affiliated with the California Teachers Association . It negotiated a 9.68 percent wage raise for teachers this summer after more than a week of picketing and a wildcat strike by teachers. The American Federation of Teachers, an AFlrCIO affiliate, WB!I not verified to represent local teachers this year because it did not apply by the Oct, 1 deadline. By state law, all teachers' organiz.a· Uoos must be veriUed each year. At this week's meeting, trustees also approved -The amual spring trip to t be C.Olorado River by abOut 125 Thurston IDterrnediate School students, with the condition that delaUed plans be brought back for board approval closer to the time of the trip. -A revised bus schedule already in effect for Aliso Elementary S c b o o I students. LocaUon changes had been requested by Parents for safety ~asons. He was arrested. recently on a mJsde- meanor trespassing charge and went to jail before being transferred to Napa State Hospital, where he'll undergo psychiatric examinations. Frieods and acquaintances have rallied to Pompillo's defense. 1be town's Emergency Fund Center agreed to accept , dooations ol mon- ey, clothing and funi.iture on behalf of Pompl.llo~ local teen-agers schedul· ed a dance -Co raise runds. A local !-~per, the T f I~ V a 1 l::e y ijera~ t'aq Cnint PQge stories on Pom- pillo's plight all week and ' been besieged by Good·will call.s from readers. ••r think it might kill him if he's committed~" said one caler, A 111 Bon . Stockley. 'He's been living fine the way he is. He's a free man and a free spirit." P,ompillo's shack on Vasco Road was burned to Jbe ground after animal con· .trot officers cleared the dwelling of sttay pets -dogs, kittens, rabbits and dllckens. Two county sharpshooters picked off about two dozen rats that scurried from the flames. while children in a passing bus chanted, '1We Like }.fike. We Want Mike." Fire Warden John Moore said the entire area had to be burned because of health hazards. The shack, which contained a huge box collection gathered by Pompilio. was located on an a:J..acre parcel owned by an Oakland interest, the Rhodes Co. George Rhodes, who works for the landowner, said cattle that graze on the land were often chased by dogs from Mike's place. He doesn 't want Pompil io back. Pompilio claims he ooce lived at the site some 60 years ago and claJms to be a descendant of a family which originally held title to the Livermore Valley from a land grant from the King or Spain. "Nobody wants to put Mike in jail," said Harry Murphy, assistant district attorney. "He's not a vicious person and we're not trying to hang him. We just wanted to get him out of there. "Maybe he'll return to th e com- munity," said Murphy. "But that's up to the psycl!!atrists for nfr." Sunday Pilot to Explore Search for Oil in ·county For reading matter during the up-the municipality. Staff Writer Kat b y Clancy tells stories of the creators of the song and poem, scheduled for YOU Section. p ales li' m'an' Bi'd coming weekend, Daily Piloted llor-s predict these will be among "Sunday's ___. Best'' offerings: / r MOSCOW (AP) -The Soviet Union and Egypt agreed todoy lo support 1bc SEARCH FOR 1 OIL-As an energy· CE L EBRITY MAKERS-A nallonal creation of a Palesllnian state as a thirsty world looks for fuel 90urctS, magazine published in 'Capistrano Beach . -prereqllll1te for an overall peace act· one of the _places wbeni it all began makes celebrities of the Orange C.Ounty Uemcnt in the Mlddle Ea.st. ln California-North 0 range County's hone peopte· it features, not to mention • "1'1e USSR and Egypt have come the Orange County cover shot locaUons to ~ that tun •nd ultimate L J it makes famous. Tom M c Ca n p ' s political settlement which must be ..,. S.unday's Best "Honin' Around" loll• the story of"'"" • complishcd within the tramc1''0tk of the _ _ and lloncman Magazine. • Geneva confctt11ce with the aim o f Gt.AMOR GONE?-Stockbrokcrs who establishmtnt of 1 ju!t and lostlng peace hl!Js.-.ts the &ite oC research that pro-made $25,000 last year may be glad In the Middle East is possible only mJses to squeeze mote oil from old to see $10 000 in gross Income this on condlHon oL aecuring t.M.Jeaitim•le holes.-Staff Writer William Schreiber )'~Ar. SOltte fulve even dorml!d. carpenters' rights of the Arab people of Palestine, tl'lls about It ln two lllustruled st.ories, aprons or turned •to even more mtnlal Including its ~ght to creation of 11.s YOU Sect.ion. methods o( making a living. Start Writer national bOme, Tass aaJd. Alan Dtrkin '\akes a look ' at a onct- The official SQvlet news agency said WORD AND SONG-Fountain VaTIC>' ·glamorous profculon which Is havl ,. the two '°unlrlea called for seating joins the list ol cl\les which ca.n boast trouble finding "glamor stocks" to se"tf tht. ..Palestine Uber a lion Organization •t •their own aonp. But old. • ' G o i p e I Jn the mid1t of a very ooi\!used and any ruture Geneiva peace lllb as a Swamp'-· not only has a city sons. It orten stock a ._swi lull partldpanl alao has a JIO'lll wrtuen<!ptclplly-ror-Spccla. I .J f'rld.v, Octobtr 18. 1~74 s DAILV PILOT "' J Fly Ci ty Off icial Accus ed of Dishon esty A 11 e a s t I o n a ol '"dishonesty" and 'conDlct of interest" were I eve I e d this week against f eJ lo w council members and Laguna Beach Plann ing Commissioner. • William Leak by Coun· cllman Charlton Boyd. Boyd hurled the charges d u r i n g discussion of procedures to ~ followed by the council and the commission in c.on.sideratio n 9f a eontroversial housing developmerit In upper Bluebird canyon. He said the COWlCU and the commission were· engaged In a predetermined no- growth phtlosophy and had set out to delay, reduce or kW all propo1ed developme:nt. Boyd's charge of "dishonesty" cen- teled on predetermination of whe'ber or not developfnent should take place, not on graft or corruption. Coastal Commission The \li'rangling erupled f o·l l ow l n I presentation or a letter by Planning Director \\1ayne Mood y from the com· mission. In it. a council su"eSf.lOf\ that a committee approach be used to revleW" !!nd~ttemJ>! to resolve d IJ.! i p u It I c 1 between city ordinances and the en- vironmental, report. Doheny Project Foes Win One in Appeal Bid "''This kind of letter we received •.. is not the type of letter an appointed co!11mission sends to its council.': Boyd said: fl1oody said that although the letter was initialled · b,Y Leak, it had ·been approved by a majority o[ the com· mission. Opponents of state plans to expand camping areas at Doheny State Beach won another round in their appeal battle Thursday before the C~lifomia Coastal Zone CommissiOn. 'Ille panel, meeting in San Diego, agreed that the appeal by a group of Capistrano Beach residents to a regional commission decision v"as a substanUal .issue and merited the state commission's attention. But instead of deciding !he fate of the plans by the California Department of Parks and Recreation, the com- mission agreed that its sfatr should spend several week.! studying the plans ·to determine if Doheny would be the best spot lor expanded beach camping. reversed. The staff is expected to return with data either Nov. 6 or 20, aides told the commission. Opponents, led by rormer Capistrano Beach Chamber of Commerce President Vaughn Curtiss, argued that the con- version or the day-use beach downcoast of the present campsites at Doheny was a poor decision. The public, CUrtiu argued, would be better served by day-use beaches than conversion of the strands into camping areas. • l\1other of ~ Home CATONSVILLE, Md. (AP) -Karen Rohrer was back home today, 11 days after givfn& birth to quintuplets. Mrs. Rohrer, 21, was released from Unlvttsity Hospital in Baltimore Thursday. Hospital spokesmen"Sald the quints -four girls and one boy bbm six weeks: prtm&&urely Oct. 8 -have been taken off heart-lung machines and intravenOus feeding and probably will be released in tv.·o to three weeks. But William Penn fl.1ott Jr .. the state's director of parks and recreatiori. said that the plans for expansion of Doheny are spawned by the awesome arnual figure of persons seeking beach camping only to find campgrounds full. About 50,000 persons a year arc turned aY:ay, he said. hfott asserted that by expanding the Doheny campground with 175 new spaces, more Californians could share in the "beach camping experience." This marks the second time the state panel has heard evidence on an appeal of regional approval of the Doheny pro- ject. 1be initial state proposals "·on regional approval and were appealed to the state panel, where the endorsement w a s reversed. The state department then cut the nwnber of sites and made other revisions to the pill. They won approvaJ once agam by the regional commission. But opponents said lhey saw n o sub.stantial improvemenl in the plans and launched their second appeal. · Close Doesn't Count, F elloivs FLORIANAPOLJS, Bnnil (UPI) -·As Gunther Severin, · E a s t Germany's ambassador to Brazil, arrived in UUs resort city, a band struck up West Germany's national anlllem. It was only after Sevtrin listened passively and diplomatically as the mlltlary poll"" band played Ille wrong anthem that he lnfOnned his 'host, Gov. Colombo Sales of Santa Catarina state, of t b e mistake. Boyd suggested the council go ahead with the committee or study the pro. posed tract at a study session at which the commission members would be "welcome, but a finn leash be put on Mr. Leak. "His mind is already made· up," Boyd charged saying that the l)feae(ennlnation "is legally conflict of , i.ntere;t. I call it dishonesty," he said. : _ ; Councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney 'strong· ly disagreed., saying that the commission was so burdened with proposals coming before it that the body could not revamp the city's building ordinances properly. "We have to wait unUI we have the ordinances in shape. "1 don't think Mr. Leak needs a leash," she srud. Now, really angry, Boyd said he had had a "bellyful" of the attitude. "If you hold it, delay it or stall it, maybe you can kill it. lf you can't hold, delay or stall it, reduce it .•. " an attitude he said confOsed and mirked the waten so "their own zealous stand will prevail:" He said he addressed his charge of dishonesty at Mrs. SWeeney for her attitude that development should be ha~ed until city ordlna.nces are revamped. . ~ "l am ... in totally and compl~te disagreement with every~ing you safd; Mr. Boyd," Mayor Roy Holm said. He said Boyd's charges "ineeling a ft e r meeting" were getting "sick and s~le up here." ·• · Interrupting Mayor Holm, Boyd "said, "And, I will include you in this \oo.!' . · Reac~ ror ~mment toaay, -l.elk said he was unaware of what evklenee there could be of any confJict of inlttest. "As far as tJl.e leash is ~. I would not be opposed to a leash at all. I believe ift4.a ll}Ub law, as long as Boyd would coMent to 1 muale for himself/' Leak said. ' '" "! ' In the end. the council set a ittii:ly session for Dec. 11 to rtvJew the pro. pooed tract. - ~-------------------------- ~ .. BEGONIAS Reg. 69• 39~ .. RANUNCULAS '>It ':it;_• .... ~ BULBS '? .... IACH DAFFODIL BULBS C}!.98t FERN W·4CX9'· DECORATIVE BARK •PATHWAY • MEDIUM $198 •COURSE UG. ll.91 SEQUOIA PLANTER MIX SPHAGNUM $198 MOSS REG. $2.H 2 :"'ft. $1 29 $1,., BALE .... u .... s19 ts HEW HOURS 7:30 TO 5:30 . HANGING MOSS BASKETS SEEN El.SEWHERE AT. $1495 S24.t5 HOLLY FERN $J19 RlG. $2.H .. ,\ .f DAILY PILOT Jost I ,,.., "\'\ with Tom urphine if i111e-to Hit l eac hes Again "' W'RJDAV FROLICS DEPT. -Have ;tJil ·~.:Wearied of 1ranscripts from the 15l taµc-recordings played in Judge .(.Jn 'rira's courtroom? Have you just dia.'o\-tmt, -with 3 shudder. the bottom !re 011 your ne\v property tax bill? you il'1.lstratcd by lhe stock market rt? Is life glum? ou should do like a lot of other rii1\s. Get away from it all. r OU can't afford to get 8\o,'3Y from i ,ell , you say? t.lust look around at what other people doing that's free. Or at least almost • f!· if you don't count things like a ~r~e gasoline. • ,. liere we are in the middl e of October !ind. if you can believe \Vhal our good d;.stal lifeguards are telling us. people +ve been going to the beach again .• ' - ?8<>)tEBOO¥ FORGOT to tell our in- 1~ Jlcighbors that it isn't summer anymore~ Just take the reports over the past l\\o'O days in the middle of the week, when our beadi guards from Seal Beach lo . San Clemente have rcportt'd that nearly 90,000 visitors dropped down to the shoreline. All this has been attributed to Santa Ana v.ind conditions v.ilich have pushed lhe thermometer readings up into the 90s in places like downtown Los Angeles and other inland reaches.· Even aloog our coastline. the mercury \\'as said to be hovering near 00 degrees upcoast at Seal Beach. CLl~1BING ~ACll attendance figures are particularjy interesting this October because. dMPhe of the rising air tem- peratures,.;t00r ocean front conditions Dave been far from ideal. We ha.ye had. for example, that con- dition which the weather persons like to describe as "night and morning log along thi? coast." You would think this wou&d disoourt most of the inlanders. Bu~t appare · hao;n't. n there the ocean itself. \Ve been wasbed by high and lo\v st ni at dusk, for exam;,e, ""e the JoW .Ude thing where wport rbor looked )ike it had just rained \£. E.arlY ln the day . we had high e \Vhereupon some of the Newport eets got washed dcm:n with salt water. These conditions tend to frustrate the and visitor. At low tide he can·t d the ocean. At high tide it ls abruptly over his beach blanket. IIEN \VE'VE HAD high surf CQn- 'ons to boot. Big surf is particularlv ·oyed by· our 0"11 coastnl surfers \vhO get irritated when this condition oc- ., ~'hile they are stuck nn so1ne class- . m. But they manage to get out ll1cre, frmeho11.•. High sur(. however. isn"t loved by inland people who \Vould just like get in the water and cool off from terrors of smoggy freeways. So here we've had it for the last pie of days. Scorching temprrature .• land. fog along the co.1st . high lides ~ashing in and our and big surf to ~~ori1.e the uninitiated. .... liSTILL THEY HAVE come lo the :joastllne. Thousand of folks s!reanting ~fo1vn to the sands in the middle of :j>ctober. \.\'hy to they do il? ;~, You have to suspect it's just the i!l"n1pcr of the lilnc~. • Thin~s nn1st be helter just over the .bil l. :; Sitti11g lip i11 Bed • Rocky's Spouse Recovery 'Good' NEW YORK (UPI ) -Margaretta ''Happy'' RockefeHer, wife of vice president-designate Nelson A. Rocke- feller, \\'3S reported in ex c e I :.c n t condition today and sitting up in bed after undergoing surgery for removal of her canet!rous left breast. E11tertai11er Qu~stioned I n Shooting MEfl.lPH1S. Tenn. (UP') -A \t'oman was fowld shot to death in 1he home oI soul singer Al Green today after she reportedly · dumped a pan of hot grits on the entertainer while he was taking a bath , police said. Inspector Dan Jones said the woman was shot once in the head and a .38 caliber pistol was found at her side. Police said the shooting was an appar· ent suicide. A three-page note to Green \Vas found in her purse. The shooting took place at the en. terlainer's splil·level country home near A1emphis, authorities said. Jones, head of the Shelby Co u n t y Sherifrs Department detective division, said the Hi Recording Co. artist was being questioned about the incident. He said Green, who had a siring ol five straight gold records, was in Baptist Hospital with second-degree burns on his baek-and arms~ A local newspaper said deputies ilooted Green as sayinR' that the victim was 29· year-old 1.fary E. Woodson, or l\~adison, N.J. Deputies removed several pieces of evidence from Green's home. surrounded bi' an electric £ence, in North Shelby County. They were seen carrying out a toilet seat, a shotgun, a large knife and a hammer head. other sacks o( material also v•ere removed from the 'house. "It seems that (the victim) poured a bucket or bot, boiling grits onto the back and arm <:A. Mr. ·Green this morning :at his residence," Jones said. ' ' 1.1 r . Green apparutly was taking a bath at the time. "After the incident, (the victim) went downstairs and shots yt"ere heard and she \\'as found dead.'' Green. originally from Arkansas, has sold more than 20 million reconb since he joined the l\lemphis·based Hi Recording firm under produ~r Willie Mitchell. He has been named ma I e vocalist of the year by the Memphis Music, Inc., organization for the past three years. The 27-year.-old singer had five con- secutive gold records. indicating sale 0£ more than one million copies each, beginning in 1971. The hits included "I'm So Tired or Being Alone," ''Call Me.'' "Let's Stay Together." "You Ought to Be \\1ith f\fc" and "I'm Still in Love \Vitb You." Ribicoff Puslies Gasoline Sa·vi ng hfERIDEN, Conn. (UPI) -Sen. Abraham A, Ribicoff (0-Coon.), said today he Y.ill draft legislation requiring American auto makers to produ ce cars that provide no less than 20 miles per gallon of ga~Hne. Ribicoff said the car industry is known ''for its ingenious 'extras'; c e r t a i n I y Detroit can meet a 20 miles per gallon minimum." In a prepared speech at the Intcrna· lional Silver Co. plant, Riblcoff said his proposal 'would save millions o r gallons ol gasoine the first year a~ ··utimately eliminate the p r e s e n t dependence on foreign oil." Jn a bulletin issued by memorial Sloan- Ketterlng Institute, attending phr.'.51clans said Airs. Rockefeller passed ' a very comfortable night" and "e\·ery indication is that her recovery will be rapid and she 'Aili be able to return home by nm Friday.'' . THERE WAS NO immediate... w o rd from pathologists \\ilether the cancer had spread to the lymph nodes that "'ere removed Thursday, but a press briefing was scheduled for 4 p.m. at the hospital at ,~nicb Drs. Jerome A .. Urban, acting chief of breast services, and Edward J. Beattie Jr., were ex· ~ed to releaSe a full pathology report. Urban said Thursday he did not believe the cancer had spread to the lymph nodes. telling reporters: "I feel I got all cl it. I really do." Today's hospital bulletin s a f d a rehabilitation team "has already begun working with (l\1rs. Rockefeller) and she is now able to raise her left arm above her head." She also was reported to be "off intravenous fluids and on a light diet." Urban said Thursday tbat lif r s . JWckefeller. who found the malignancy in a self-examination tll'O weeks ago, had an excellent chance for a f u I I recovery. URBAN DESCRIBED the 48-year-old l\Irs. Rockefeller as "a sturdy, V.'<mderiUI \\'Olllan." He said there appeared lo be no complications and said she was ·in excellent condition. The former NeW York Governor looked tired and depi es'9Cd as he told re}X)rters earlier in the day: · · "Gentlemen, you're not going to believe what I have lo tell you. Happy has just-had--a-radieal--m.astectomy of the left breast." Rockefeller declined to speculate on ho\V the surgery woold affect bi.s Political rututt:, telling a questioner: "I think at this time, perhaps all of us should think about Happy's future, which is the one t'Uicem I have." Urban said a tifOJ)sy performed Thurs- day morning revealed a carcinoma less than tv.·o centimeters in diameter and t\vO smaller modules that were found to be cancerous. He and two other surgeons, Dr s . Edwnrd J. Beattie Jr. and Roy As.hikari, then performed the mastectomy. URBAN SAID be informed M r s • Rockefeller after the surgery was com- plete that the cancer had .not spread. He said she replied: "Ob. thank good· ness." Judge Suggests Citizens Vote On Porno Movies BOSTON (UPI) - A Superior Court Judge ruled Thursday that district at- torneys in three Massachusetts counties had failed to prove three films sexuaDy offensive. He called for a referendwn to determine public sentiment on the showing of such films. "We should find out what the average person in Massachusetts wants or will tolerate as s e x u a I entertainment," Sllperior Court Judge Vincent R. Brogna said in his decision involving "Deep Throat," "1be Devil in Atiss Jones" and "Behind I.he Green Door." "There has been no reliable survey made to determine just what 'vould or would not offend the average person in tile comm.onv.·ealth in the field of explicit sexual movies," he said in his decision. Brogna suggested very strongly that the legislature put..i&wo questions on the state election ballot. One wouJd ask voters if they are willing to have explicit sex fims sho~11 to adults in their local theaters. The other would ask if voters n·anted the showing()( such filfns limited for adult viewing only "in theaters in some areas ol tbe commonwealth." • . • Snow Covers Upper U.S . ; • •. • ~ .~1ost of Country En jo ys W a.r1ner W eatlier ,, •·t·JltlW''''' DELIVERY SERVICE Oel"""Y of the Oo;ly P;lot is gl/Orontl'ed ~ndoy· tt ~ do rict llow 'fCll' pQJOr ~ $·30 p.m co; of'd 'fOUI l"'1' ...a M WoutN to .,_. Coill -~ 11!0 D,lfl, !lir~ mil ~ " .,.,., d:I not ._ IW' coot °' 9 11.a. ~. 11 3 11111, $un'.loy' "" 11'11:! Cl «OY will t'.9' ~to )QI. Colla (In·~"''~ 1011.111 California I I .. . Short .Freedo!n Robert Peter Johnson (cen~ter) is bugged by mother as his father (left) scuffles with FBI agent at Miami International Airport Thurs- day, Johnson, who was released after four years in Cuban prison for drug smuggling, was arrested again on charges of stealing a plane. He and another man still face charges in the alleged theft in 1970. • Wlairie Officer Accused Of 'Death Squad' Plot Information Act Veto Fight Vowed WASHINGTON (APl -Key Democrats plan to pres'S Congress to override Presklent Ford's veto of 'A'hat he brands an "unconstitutional a n d wi"·orkable" bill to amend the Freedon1 of Information Act. The bill, overturning a 1973 Supreme Court &d.sloo in a sef;.recy·stamping case and closing what the measure's authors call major loopholes in the law. could a d v e r s el y af£ect intelligence ( IN SHORT .•• ) secrets and dipomatic relations, Ford sa1d as he vetoed rt Thursday. e Vet Dela11 WASH!NGTOrl (UPI) -Fearing a "pocket veto" by President Ford , Congress Thursday decided to hold unt il after the election-period recess. legisla- tion granting Vietnam-era veterans a 23 percent Increase in e d u c a t I o n a I benefits. Senate Democratic Leader M i k e l\fansfield said the legislatioo. approved earlier in the week by the Senate and House, 9;ouJd not be transmitted to Ford until Nov. 18. e Belfast .Violence BELFAST (U PI) -The thin! day or violent protest against mass Jailing PORTLAND, Maine (UPI) -Police leveled Thursday, patrolman Edward of suspected terrorists today hit bl I u lh SC p a M ki 10 c of sl ri to a Ii s a c ll 0 d c ki hi have charged a Portland patrolman with Foster allegedly planned to ronn a Northern Ireland with b(>mbings i n trying_to...organiz~~de~allh:hfs~g~u~a'iiiidil's'-,v~i~g~ila~n~le~g~roup~~to"-'>ex~ec~u~l~e~lhr"!.'Oce"-!P~or~l~land'!!!'.~iBeffll~ast~~·ij-if~al~a~l~!hootin'i"'~·..._~ln,_.,N~e~L!'an~d,__~f-~~~w~ within the department.~ kilt crunma s o . attempted murders. t he believed "merit.ed elimination." In a letter sent to FOster and his • A youth died in a shooting incident b According to departmental ch a r g es atton'tey, City Manage r, John Menario in the border.town of Newry, an Anny la , ... .,...,,..,...'-"""'_,..,,. .._, ~ said Foster was suspended with pay spokesman said. ~ £or unbecomi~g conduct, an "intent to JrfJTNESS SLAIN ponme a course of behavior Iha! wa& .. criminal and felonious in nature,", a e Bishop• 1'1eet IN COURTROOM lack of s o u n d judgment and a "personality disorder of sufficient severi· OAXTEPEC, Mexico (AP) -Bishops of tbe Episcopal Church say they support the principle of ordaining female pri6ts. A vote on the issue stipulated. however. that such ordinations must wait until church law is ctfanged .• SEOUL, South Korea (AP ) -A 34- year-old convicted murderer fatally stal>- bed a witness during a trial in a Seoul courtroom 1bunday. ty and lasyng effect (that Foster is) unfit for further duty as a Portland policeman." Um Byung Suk, serving a life term for murdering an old woman. was on trial oo charges cl threatening to kill the woman's son. . 1be son. Lee Won Ho, 50, was on the witness stand when Lim suddenly attacked him with a knife he had con- cealed in a 90Clc. The letter said F os t e r approached three members ol the department "to solicit their aKI and assistance in the fonnation of a team for the purpose of killing ttrtain members of the com- munity. ~'ho, by their past p o I i c e records .... y.·ere determined (by Fast.tr) to be of undesirable dJaracter and, therefore. merited elimination." At their annual conference, the bishops rejected a bid to hold a .special meeting next year oo ordailil.ng \\'omen but ap- proved the subject for the agenda for the next convention. The church's policy-making body, com· prising laymen ·and clergy, next mee1s at 1.finneapolls in 1978. lt would ha\·e to approve a change in church law. It narrowly n!jected a proposal last year for accepting wcmen priests. Lower Falls area. Lee had refu..ed to permit his daughter to marry Um, authorities said. The officer was committed to the psychiatrk: ward ct the Maine Medical center JuJy .31 for observation alter the "death squad'' plot became known. In The Htw Lillo Village 343.1 Via Oporto, Newport Beach Telephone 673-1442 c•-•c-. TthphoooOnlon meDtll....i.s ...... Fm Porldo'J ' OCTOBER SALE OF GREAT RED BORDEAUX WINES -. tMt tho prico1 of fioo fHoc• wliles ,_. ...... do• "" ool qoift !not. Tiit rote of .,.,.. ... ha slow.cl. to be...,., W th wholtsole prices at tlw w......, CCN1tl1• to '""me•. For this HM .hw+aHA'i.Ms _. ._..c reMffoM: °" o ...-.r. of ouht ... 11 IN w"'.t froM 1..-...X, mtd w• offer"'"'°" a ........ the lat" bnfa. It ii • 90kln opportuolty for Yoo lo ·-,_ ...... "' prices -· ..., ..... .,... ~~~ . . RED BORDEA UX P-106l wine experts agree that the red wines of Bordeaux are the world 's greatest. They combine fin es!5e and complexity, along \\'ilh'true drinking dellghL Open lhl'ln an hour or two before servi,ng. &Ille Case of 12 Chaleou llaut.SOCfondo . 1970 CCote~ de Bourgl •. $4.45 S48.00 Cha!l'Q11 Laroqut. 1910 (St. Emilion I •.•• : •••• --• SS.23 g~.48 Cllotca11L11Jersan.1t10 lSuint·Stluvcur) .•• : .... S:i.l\l SGIJ.80 i."liah·au Angliulet, 1970 (Ci ntcnac ), •••••••. , . ., •. SS.83 SG2.96 Choteau Lagrangt, 1970 CSt. Julien) .•••••••••• : •• $6.6a 171.82 Chaieau S<Unt·Brice, 1910 Cti1C'docl ••• ••••••••••· S6.98 S75.38 Chalrou Canlenac·Brown, ·mo CMargaux> •••••• S6.99 175.49 Choteau L.a POfl!le, 1'70 fPomeroJI •••••••••.•• s.7\47 S80.68 Chattou Vi«u Conlenoc, '970 ISt. Emilioral ••• , V'"49 Rlfl.89 Chaltcu Povd dt Luze, JP10 cSt. Julieni •••••••. $7.67 SAZ.l\.t C.'?wlleou L4 CroU-dt-Gci11. 1970 CPomerol) •••••• $7.85 SM.78 Chaltau Fouqwl, 19i0 ISl. i-;milionl ...•• ; •••••. $7.89 SSS.21 ChattouGrvowf,Larost, 1970 tSt._JUlitl'l) ••.••.•. 17.89 1 SIS.21 Chat«lu At~aeot·Solnl·E.tupt'i, mo tMarg.;iux> $1.99 Choteau AJolkrtl, 1970 ( Ludon) ...•. ,. -· •.•••••.. $1 .99 C'htlreau canon, 1110 est. Emll\On) ....••.•• : •• , • $7.99 .0.01ea11 IJ«ausejotlr. IJ'10 f$t. Emllionl •••••••••• $7,99 C.1wl.lta.11 CSUoc.1910 ICluae> .... , · .... -.••..••••• sT.99 Chc:llectu C11ra11 .1910 Cllaut·A1edocl ••.....•••••.. SS.SS_ Chotm11Gmnd·P1ty0Locostct.1970 f Paullltc)., •••• $8.93 Cblllmu Bir11chttMllf. Jt70 fSt. Jullet1l ..• : •••.•••. 19.49 Cha1ttt11La 1..a11•u.1910 1Ludon1 ••..•..••.•••••. St.61 Chatt.au Ltot•illf·lAl.c'oft'J, 1910 !St. Julitn) •••..• S9.fl8 Chotm• Ca11.1ctnuirl1t , 1968 l?ilacaul •••••••..••• Sll.91 Chareau Co1/t l1trf, Jt70 tSt. Emllioo) ••••• .-. ••• SI 1.98 ' to&.29 $8'.2' $8'.2' S88.21 $86.2' $92.34 $118.44 $102.49 1104.44 1101.78 5129.28 $129.!ll Oialtatt Lyt1ch·&ges, 19i0 rPauillac I ....•.•••• S12.75 t'halftlu Magdel4i~. 1970 !St. Emil.Ion) •• ; ••••• $12.89 Chai Nu Hout.Bailly, 1966 !Graves) , •.. , •.••••• $13.95 Cholea11 Polmtt, 1910 11"1argaux) •........••.•• Sl4.35 Choteau VieuzCertan , 1966 IPomeroll •. ,,,,,, •• Sl4.87 Claaltou lfoul·Bailly. 1970 !Graves I ..•......... Sl9.85 Chateau ,,·largoiu, 1910 ll\1argaux) , ••.••...... S19.97 Chateou Ducru·Beaucaillov, 1966 ISt. Julien) ..•. $19.98 Clia/eou C/u:ool Blonc, 1910 ISi.: Emilion ) ..• , •.•. S29,9S Choleau Mo11ton·Ro!h$Qlild, l910 I Pauillac) .•.• $39,85 $137.711 $139.21 $150.66 SIM.98 $160.59 $2t4.38 S21S.68 $215.78 $323.46 $430.38 RED BORDEAUX IN J\IAGN UJ\IS A magnum hold!i two b:Jttles, o.nd fs m05t Impressive 11 it graet:1 your party tables, lending In air of opulence and festivity •• Afag11vm ConofS OwlltcuConrmo.c-Brown. W10 .................... SIS.IT SS8.2-J Oaoteou Crond·Pu11·Locost1, 1no ... •\·· ......•.... Sii.iS SlOZ.33 ChG.IM1'1 Lo Lo:g1t~.1970 .......................... Sii.~ StOS.02 Claotf911Bl~htvtllt.1910 •....................... $19.SO SIM.29 Chottou La Poi11t1 , 1910 .•.••••••• , ................. 111.65 -S106.20 Chateo11 Co1-dE'1lourn1/, 1910 •••••••• , •••••••• ·~·· .SZl.41 l1 t6.0$ C1tolt01'1MargoMt,1910 ••••••••••••• , , :. , • , ........ S.2.M $229.50 ChaltGN tldlll•Brion , 1919 •......................... 145.00 $243.00 CholtQ\I Ch1vol Bl one, 1910 •...... , ............... , $62.95 $339.03 Chotto11 Pdfllt.1970 •••••• 1 ...................... 187.50 MT:Z.50 Ololto11 La/1l1·Roth1child, J'14 •............ , •••••. 581.SIS $41!. 73 ) ' - • s 24 al w ci c a s u r I 0 d c p ~ I c j a a s n s 0 c i 0 s I y f ,... • • Frld11, Octobtf 18, 1974 DAILY PILOT THE FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Ke&ll«I Both Drop De ad 2 .Indians Arrested · In Murd er Mystery Disease Claims Sisters· • •• .. PHOENIX ( UPll -1\\• In· dians w~re arrested h e r e Thursday on charges of stab- bing to death a cab dri ver in California, where authorities denied a re p o r t !hat the driver had been scalped. Police took into c u s to d Y Paul Blue Cloud Durant. 29, and Richard ;l'flunde-r ~tohawk, 25, on charges of ( __ __.st_at_e _J '/ . "Would you undo this oronge, Mqmmy?" NORTHRJDGE ( UP I i - Two sisters, 18 and 20, drop- ped dead in college physical education classes withln I O days of each other, apparently the victims of a mysterious disease whkh aged t h e i r hearts prematurely. Vicki Ann Penfold, 20, col- lapsed and died Thursday while running up and down Slairs in a warmup exercise at CaJ state Northridge. On Oct. 7_, her sister Janet, 18, fell dead -whlle -jogging at Cal Poly San Lui s Obispo. Dr; Karl K i r sch n e r , a pathologist ""ho performed the killing the taxi driver Oct. --------------------- 10 at an Ind ian camp in Box WHALE BITE IVORTH CASH Canyon, in Ventura County. The driver, George Aird . 'n. of lnglewood , was robbed and stabbed to death when he ar- rived to pick up a fare. In Ve ntura, Di s trict At- torney C. Stanley Trom said a report by a sherlff"s detec- tive that Aird bad b een scalped was "erroneous." In an affidavit filed in 11.Junicipal Court \Vednesday, Detective l3raden ~tcKinley said th a f after Aird was stabbed to death, those of the c a m p celebrated by "chanting and kicking the victim and passing his hair around." Liz Taylor's Beau Faces Ar~aignnient SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Superior Court j u r y has av.·arded $75 ,000 in com· pensatory damages to a former woman employe or Sea \Vorld for leg injuries suf- fered \\'hen she was bitten LOS ANGELES (UPI) _ 'd by Shamu, the killer whale. sai · The verdict Thursday was Elizabeth Taylor's ' I ates t \Vynbe~. a rorm'!r bi!:llhop in favor or Annette ·Godsey. boyfriend was scheduled for in his native Amsterdam. was the form er Ann E. Eckis, of arraignment today on f o u r introduced by Peter Lawford San Diego. who worked at counts of grand theft , l he to Miss Taylor in June, 1973, the aquatic park as a District Attorney's Office said as her marriage to Richard secretary. Thursday. Burton began to come ap.1rt. ~!rs. Godsey was bitten by •lenry 0 . \\'ynbi!rg, 41'. has He soon became her con-the "''hale April 19. 1971 , when been cbarR;ed with rolling back slant companion. in California she rode Shamu three times the odometers of four autos end Europe. even before ll-1iss in a shoiv tank during a film he sold when he ~·as a used Taylor . "find Burton w e r e autopsy 011 Janet, 1111id her heiirt tissue "looked like that of a little old man that had been ex.posed to an a\\iul lot of stress over the years." Kirschner, who had j u s l completed the autopsy, said Thursday he was not surprised to hear that her sister had died a similar death. They were the only children ol Ted and Gertrude Penfold of Northridge. The par e.n ts said they had .no history or hea rt d!::c~::e. Kirschn er said Janet died of "obstructiv~ ~an.lioniyo­ pathy," ~scribing it as "" very. verf mysterious rtiSt'ase ... that occurs pcrh:.ps once in a n1illio11, or Hl n1ilhon cases·" "It seems th::it this is something genetic. A ronning out or time no mailer v.·here people are or v.•hat they're doing," he said. "It ls n 't unusual for proplc in Lbe same family with the disease lo die at nearly the same tinte. no niatter wheri; they are or whal they're doing.•· The Los Angeles C o u n t y Coroner's Office scheduled an autopsy today to dctennine the cause of Vicki Ann 's death. Kirschner said he was "sure her heart \\'as just as in\·olvl'd \hy the disease) as the heart of he: sister." riledical checkups had tum- ed up oo indication of the --==-- ORIE NTAL RUGS at ASIAN ENTERPRISE .in Design Plaza • 250 Bldg .. 2nd Floor Donald F. McDermott Jr., owner TELEPHONE 644-8881 F.i.SHIOH ISL.i.HD • NEWPORT ~· disease. the girls" pa r ents athletic, often swhnmln'g a !aid. and both led norrnal. mile a day, and r~ ~­ octi ve lives. J an e t "'as pleted a loog b&eltl'ftCkl~ p. ----'-"-'-'-'--"--"-.....:....:..:.C:~ ' , WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY CAllfOitHIA 'S l.AltGfST LAW' SCHOOL ·•oFFERS A NEW PROGkAM 81 OF SPRING-ENTERING FULL -TIME LAW STUDY • . • tWilh 2 '11 • *"" l ·r•"' •••"'•I••" ep1;o,.,1 • A CHOICE Of fOUR fltOGlt"""S OF I.AW STUDY IS AYAILAll.E: • IN EITHER l'h or J YEARS of FUU-TIMf /::., itudy (!5".16 dell•OO"' ~~~n i:er "'eel/, or • JN EITHER J1/, ot 4 YEARS of fART·flUE dat. t•t"i"1· e· weel.end I;; .. ••udr (1 cl:n1e1 re• "'eel. J.4 ~oun ;,er do11J. • You <on l'(J,,, you• JURIS DOCTOR: (J.D.) d1911e e'd btto"'e el·gjb/e 10 11;1le lhe Coldotnio a"' E•o..-<111;1111:111. Wlln o• !'HONE fOl CATAtOGUl 800 South Brookhunt An•heim, C•. 92804 (7141 635-3453 APPLY NOW FOi DAY, EVENING , 01 WEEKEND ' CLASSES BEGINNING fEllUAIY 3, 1975 PIOVtSIONAU.'I' ACCllDITlO l'I' TMI COMMITill Of tAI DIAllllNIH OF TMl STAll tAI Of (#.LIFOINIA e FBI 1''abs T 1t'O car salesman in Norwalk in di \·oreed. and picture laking session for 1972. \Yhen the actress recor:C'il~d '_cp_u_bl_ic_itc_y..cp_u_rpo:_se_s_. ___ __:_ _______ .:_ ______ ~r-----=:..:...--------------------- LOS ANGELES !UPI ) The Since the cars were sold "''ilh.Burton. \Y y n he r.I( ap-1- F:BI captured two fu gitives in for more than $20, the alleged peared to be out of the pic- Long Beach. Thursday night offense is grand theft, a ture. But when the Burtons \1•anted for the k id n a P ·ex-district attorney's spokesman divorced earlier this year. the l----1Mtion-oJ-a...-¥psUantir-A1ich. __ ~----------"ay.loc:.W.)'Dber.g~o-m-a-.n e·e+--------------- bank manager and his family resume d . Many h ave las!. week. J d L "f predicted he would become Special Agent \Villiam A_ U ge l ts her shcth husband. Sullivan said Luther Leath, 24. and Timothy Thomas. 2S. News Ba ·also known as Lionel Fisher. ll Salesman Awarded Alimony were arrested w i t h o u t ln- cideni. The lwo men were On Inmates charged Oct. 15 in Detroit. alo n g with three other suspects still al large. e Budget Okayed SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The finance committee of the University of C al i f o r n i a regents, in a·move tantamount to acceptance by the [ u 11 board, has approved a record operating budget of $ 5 8 9 . 2 million for 1975-76. The budget approved Thurs- day is 14.9 percent above the current years. U.C. Vice Presi d ent C h este r O ~ ~tcCorkle said nearly I w o • thirds or th(; increase was caused by inflation and a pro- jected rise in enrollment. STOCKTON (UPI ) -San Joaquin County Superior Court Judge \Villiam \Voodward has rescinded an order that ban- ned 10 newspapers f F om Publishing the names of in-STOCKTON (APJ -A local salesman has been awarded mate witnesses who testify at . $200 a month 1 e m p 0 r a r y a murder trial. However, Woodward said alimony from his wife of 35 another method "'·ou\d be used years along with use of one of her two Cadillacs. to protect the men's identity Supe r i or Court Judge -allowing them to use fie-Norman c. Sullivan said ·litious names on the stand. Thursdav that he b e 1 i e v ed The judge said this was to Joseph Ratrial, 58. is the first protecl three inmates testi-husband to receive s u c h fying at the murder trial of alimony in San Joaquin Coun- two Deuel Vocational Institute l y. prisoners accused of killing guard Jerry Saunders. TllE AWARD is temporary Robert P. Uecker~ publishe r pending dissolution of th e of the Slocktqn record, said, marriage. • · d "the Judge 'Sbou1d b<? ~nt-Raffial 's attorneys con· Body Fou11 ·t plimertted for finding another tended he Is unemployl'd, POWA y ( AP J _ Sheriff's \\'ay of protecting t h e s e \vbile court documents showl'd and coroners's office officials "'itnesses V.'ithout violating the his wife Sadie. 57. awns a are attempting to identify the ·;1;-i';-';'-;a-;m-;en;d~m~e;n;l.;";;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;;;:;;do;;:;;w;;:;;nio;w;n;l;unu;;:;;·;;u;re;s;to;r;e;. ~-i bodv of a woman disco.,.~red sprawled in a secluded area near liigh'A•ay 67 on Thursday. Sheriff's officials said the woman Vi·as between 20 and 30 years of age. The body was nud e, except for h i g h shoes and orange-red k n e e socks. e B11• Vote Today LOS ANGELES (UPll - The Rapid T r a n s i t District board of directors votes today on a contract with bus drivers, closing the only ga p remaining in offlcial\y ending the 68-day· old bus strike. MINOLTA SR-T 102 Ust "'° """"·''"''c... NOW 5315 HUNTINGTON PHOTO SUPPLY 18519 Maia SI. H.t .-347-6411 or 842·9519 5 Point $hQpp1no Cenler The board origina\!11 \\'BS scheduled to vote on the con- tract Thursday, but balloting was delayed for fear o f violat'ing the state I a w re- quiring 24-hour official notice be given before a p u b I i c meeting. But ev~ without the final okaY by the board, which is expected to approve the pact, mL'Chanics and b u s drivers continued to be called back lo work to prepare buses for service beginning Satur· ~Y· -..-;;;: .• ::;-+:;::;~;;:~~~~~~ii-~-~::-;_;::=:::~::;~;::;;~ I .,_ 15 ..•. ~·· ~· ~-··+ • YOU ARE INVITED lo • HAMMOND HAPPENING Famous Rnmonn Gerhard will entertain you with a program on the fabulous HAMMOND CONCORDE ORGAN. She is <I musician par-Cxcellent in al l realms from classical lo jazz. :-MOHDA.Y, Oct. 21 et 7:10 P.W. lf you haven't beard her berore, she is. a must and ir you have heard her, you will enjoy hearlng her again. (omt. cw. and cl end ~ the f.,., Rel1~1. f' 2854 E. Coot! Hwy. • c ..... o dtl tot_.• 6f 4·1930 HAMMOND ORGAN ST.UDIOS of Ora ~ Coast CORONA del MAR STORE ONLY ...-..--~~L -.... -a--.--~~ ... I I • Antique Auction. • • . .. at South Coa st Plaza this Snnday October 20at10 a.m . in the Jew el Court. It's all part of Old Fashion Days Week. All antiqu es to be auctioned Sunday are on dis Ia now. C me see. ~--. • \ \ 5outh Coast ?taza. 4-----· BRISTOL_~ SAN OIE'3! FR~EWA Y, GllSTA MESA • • . A& P A I LY P ILOT E DITORIAL P AGE , • Trees and the Law As folklore hos It, George Woshington chopped do\vn a cherry tree, an act he readily con ressed when reproached by his angry father . ~ In Laguna Beach, had that cherry tree. been a designated flcrilage 1·rec. George could have been jailed for six months , finc.-d $500or both. 'fha t is the e ffect of a Ja,v 110\V unde r consideration by the city council. Under it , not even the Lrc:c O\\'llt:I' \\'OUld have thl' option of dcn)ring his tree hi storic status and restriction. 1"hc trees \vould be suggested by ;.iny Laguna resident , and formally designated hy the city board of adjustment. Once on the list, the O\rner could not cut. remove, prune ··so as to alter the-natltral ·shape" or eve n build \•lithin 15 feel of the tre~ \vithout a permit granted a t the pl easure of the board of adjustment. . In its present s tale, the la\v also ceuld be used as a club to slop devc.lopmci:it. The la\V and the philosophy behind it a re an · abridg m e nt of individu.'.lJ and property rights. It :should be forgotten. Bound ary Dilem m a Although a preliminary committee re port drafted by a par ent g roup makes it sound.easy, the proposal lo s hifl 6 .000 w.crcs of the l\•li ssio n Vi e jo fro m Capis tra no unified to the Saddleback Valley Unified School Dis trict is fraught \\·ith problems. Alread y residents of the .affect ed area are taking s ides. Trustees from each diStrict mus t be wondering if they h ave the time. stamina and resources for 3 prolonged controversy. Advocat es of the plan c ite long dis ta nces to Capistra no unified campuses a nd they believe that by 'Libr_ary Mall Plan Sets Off Laguna 'Tempest' 1Tothe Editor: Perhaps a little wider vision on the i part or some dO\\'nlo\vn merchants is needed in the latest Laguna ·•tempest in a tea pol" furor : The Library !'11all. It r eally doesn't take too' mllch imagaination to sec that the benefits of an extcntion of the beauty of !\fain Beach Park (trees. benches, the "cob· I bfeStone'" CffCCl, CtC.) (O the other side "4>f"lhe highway could and surely would entice visitors and residents <dike to the commercial side or the do\vntown basin: vnila -more business (or the merchants! PLEASE, ~Ir. Businessman. try to .see the benefits to you if. during our ; heavy tourist weekend s. local a rtists and c raftsmen can display their ! works in the lovely Librury mull. Pie· . ture, perhaps. the White l!ousc restaurant serving rerreshments on "ice cream p arlor" tables in the Library mall during the hot summer montb1s ... -. . The oss or eight parking spaces \\'Iii be moi:e tha n offset by the resullant esthetic upg radi ng of the area a nd so m e of our prob le m s will im · prove by having one less turn-off point on the busy Coast Jlig h\\'ay. I , have examined the proposed traffic flow plan fo r Larsen Lane !the alley> and the~pla n seems quite adequate to handle the necessary deliveries and private automobile traffic. After all. the Library and Chamber of Com· merce parking, as "'ell as the all ey, t were orig inall y designed to acco~­ modate vehicl es and the mall will not change that. ( MAILBOX J Utters 1r...n ,..,...._ ;or• -c .... -...iii,, .,.; .. ,, -( .... , lkir IMlo.19•1 in --Ir IHI. fll• ritM '-COftlltM• l•tllff"I I• lit~·., ..ii ........ li ... I ;. nwn".,_ AU .. lltrl m•d iK-litMtltN Md 1N11if19 ~' hi R•mel .... , ff wll-lol "' ._st II 'let-ficie.t_ .. ,""""'.t, P"9ry_,.I_. ... ....,,.__ is to fine hone some dynamic, prac- tical solutions to the problems. The members o f this group have already raised almost $3000 to help develop some constructive, viable alter natives which we propose to present to the city just as soon as pos· sible. In the first week alone well o\lcr 1,000 rellow citizens have joined us to petition the city government-to delay- any action on these projects until our group can be he ard from. STUDIES done lo dale clearly in- dicate potentially very serious negative impact on the downtown basin as well as the community as a whole if. the proposed Parle: Avenue mall and Coast Righway median strip are implemented. DR. VINCENT P. CARROLL MRS . DANIELSHRYVER MRS. THOMAS BIRD DR. Tl!0 !\1A.S R. J UDY RlCHARDJAllRAUS Citizens Committee for Parking and Circulation . ~rail Hi.d ory TltF. SINCERE people who signed To the Editor: the petition now being circulated by Now that the !\T:iin Beach Park has Doris Shie ld s a nd othcr-s \Vere become a reality, citizens of Laguna somctimCs misled into signing by Beach can look for,vard lo another --~ornc bu:-iincssmen. One resident was beautli!_rea in the: do\lo-nto\vn busin_ess told lhal this n1 all idea \\'O.S ~ln-g S ection. The Shorf tilock "between (he ··sne:ikl•fl throu_gh by the city council library and Const lliJ:h\vay which is t '\Vithout the public kno\vin~ about it." cssenlially now used to park eight Thcst~ t;1cl ics ~i re clcplorablc a nd automobiles is proposed lo be dishonest. sincl' the niall idea is five convert ed into a beautiful new years old :i nd has rccci\'C'd a great Library !\-fall. This mall are3 \viii c1eal of nt'\\'Spapcr coverage. In facl. include a sidew alk along Coast both the l\'c,~s·Posl and the llaily Jli gh\\'ay "·hich "'ill match the Pilot ha\·e 'vrittcn editorials in sup-sidewalk fronting· the park and wi ll porl of the idea and the Planning Com· allo\v safC'. uninterrupted pedestrian mission has a lready approved it. In flow tu t'orrst ,\\·cnu c. llO\\'C Ver. addition, the plan has received the en· there now appears to be some dnrsemenl of the Friends or the qu esti,,n regarding traffic flow and Lagun a Brach Library. the Ci,·ic parking. · Leagul'. \'ill age Lacun a, and the Citi zens To"'" Planning Association. f )n ~I arch 4. 1970, the General Plan l lopcfully. the merchants \Vi ii up, l 'raffir ~ngineer._h'lr._D~la Barre. prcciate ··their" niall when ii if. 11tatl~c1 "1n no case 1s lh1s hnk of Park fi nished . l'111 surce\·cryone{'\sc\\'ill ' i\\"~1~ue . n cce~s ary to t.~e over.a ll 00:'\N,\ L. DEl\IEl'Rli\OES 1ralf1c c1rculat1on pattern <rcfernng To thc Editor· For <1ui1 r sonie yea rs parking und circulation h:1\·e been consistently <1L the top of the problem priority list in .L.'lguna ~ach. Despite the dubious honor of monopolizing the number one problem slot nothing yl'l of any sis:· nirifi1nCc hus been done to :1llcvi:JtL' these proble ms m uc h less solve them. The lales t 11lans proposed by 1hc rily to create u ma ll on Park A\'cnue bctwe~n Coast lllghway ,am! !he Library plu~ the accompttnytn8 median strip on Coast lllgfn\•ay and Forest could well add .wrious new probl ems to nn already fntolcrable pa rkin g and .traffic circulation situ3tion. NO\\' TllAT m:1ny in the com· munity ha\'C h~comc ;1warc of the city's ru:ppo)!cd p/:11~~. a !:11'.ll.C number of eoncehrcd cltlit·ti!I rL·ru·cscnllng a i----braad spectrum "Ttf-t.lie-cit)'-ha"1e-. Joinf!d t o~eth e r 10 tackle thc5e omblemJ. The objcctl\•e of lhh1 group I lo Park 1\venue between Coast lligh'A-·ay and Glc nncyrcl. tlN ~IAH Cll :10, 1971.1\lr. S"'ecney, l)irl'<:tor of l'ubllc Works. submitle4 a rl'µorl to 1:11c city n1an3gcr which stall•d "it is generally concluded that ah a 11tlonmcnt o r the street is favorable and that developmcntofttie mall is likewise ac:c:eptnblc." "'Thh; re port contained input from the plannini: d<'partmenl. public works dep;irtment, fire department, and police de partm ent. The police department st.1lcd that "elosingof the street \Viii improve traffic conditions at Park /\venue and Pacific ~st lll gh"•ay F<M'eSl Aven4e by total elimination or turn mov~ments." _CALCULATIONS show lhAl the new library :fnd c~pa nsion o( spaces at the Glcnneyre parkln(l' lot ha,·e provided 37 spa<'e~ (not including library staf( parking ) and 30 !paces 'viii be lost, lncludin1t the 8 in the mull area. Th is results in u net gain of7 spaces. --J0SE-P!M-0'SUU.i\\AN, Board of Friends Of Laguna Beach Llbr1rv ' changing di stricts, the community would truly be geographically intact. Critics-and they outnumbered supporters at a recent study s ession-"''ondc r if the proposa l is worth it. They ins ist that tax rates would increase dra matically, that tradltional educational progra ms ;.it ne ighborhood schools \vould .ch a nge and tha t scores or t each e rs and administrators· might vanish lrom neighborhood schools and be replaced by strangers. · ·· tr trustees decide to conlinue study on.the J11alter, they.had better gird for a long state-or s?cgc. Help for t h e Children An intense new effort to help ease the prt>bl~ms of children from broke n homes is developing along the South Coast. The projec t brings togethe r volunteers from churches, the Capistrano Unified School Di.strict , San Clemente Fire Department and county h ealth agencies into a big-brother and big-sister project. If enough volunteers can be found for screening and training, t he project wou ld involve individual and g roup activities geared to easing a child's feeling of rejection or guilt during the breakup of his f amity. Enthus ias m about the project is keen, but s pokesm e n s till be li eve th al more voluntee rs are needed to sustain the pQot program . The first fe\v montfts of the project , they add, \viii be the critical ones. - "· ) ""' ....... ~-;;:::... ,_ San Cle mente Fire Department safety specialist Don Hodgson has assumed the key recruitment role for volwitecrs. A call to him could have a major impact on a troubled youngster. s "IT IS MORE BLESSEI> TO PAY OFF'THAN TO BE PAID OFF." Dear Gloomy Gus Reflectio1i of Anti·Americanisrn Greeks Pull Out of NATO Howcum newspaper women's pages are now called •·people" or "View" or "Today" but still are all about \vo men, written by wpmen for the most pail? J .B.L. • Morality Needs New Vocabulary (SYDNEY HARRIS) Thoughts at Large: Obviously, the language needs a new word for young couples who are living together more or les~ per- manently, but a re not married. An y suggestions! (Remember,_ Gelett Burgess invented the marvelous \\'Ord, "blurb, .. only a few decades ago, whi ch filled a genuine.need.) The only effective punishment for an evil-doer is remorse; and if he or she cannot be made tO feel remorse, -a ny pun is hment becomes seJr. defeating lhro.Mgh!..turning-the...cvil· -ooer Info a more resenUul creature than before. \V AS l-tI NGTON -The Greek gov· ernment has quietly \~dthdrawn some· or its top military officers from North Allantir Treaty (NATO) ·headquar· ters in Brussels, one more indication, of how seriou sly the Caramanlis government views anti-Am eri can sentime nt n O\V sweeping Greece. ( EVANS-NOV AK ) a re unable to i mpede the move toward what looks like a form o{ dangerous neutrality for fear Lhat the, a nti-Am e ri ca n c urrents n ow sweeping Greece would pull them Un· der. Accordingly. rational diplomacy di ctated by long·term Greek security Facing the rirsl parliamentary election on Nov. 17 since the military coup d 'etat or 1967. the new c ivilian go vernm e nt or Prime l\lini stcr W"li'-..needs has been inundated by sbort- Cara manlis is lorn ' between conflicting palilieal realities. The merest fra gment o'r public display of pro-American sentiment coul d boom erang, giving .the Gr.eek left a dangerous opening that Andreas Papandrcou would be auick to exploit. Caramanlis dealt with this hard political fact by pulling Greece out of the military organization or NATO. Now he has followed up by with- drawing some of the 400-odd Greek of- ficers from t heir regular military-bi!· lets in Brussels, Naples and other NATO comma nds. BUT T JI E domestic: poli tica l demands for anti·U.S. actions raise the gravest future problems for Greece. 1''riendship with the West, and particularly t he U.S., is ab· solutely essential for Greece in the long run, as a glance at the map proves. Greece is bordered by three Communist states to the north and by muscle-fl exing Turkey on the east. Caramanlis a nd his fore ig n minister, the astute George Mavros, along with most other leading Greek politicians of the center and -right, Cully understand that fact. B.!!!..despit strong pressure rrom the (i.s"., they m domestic politics . The foun· da "on rgr this Wa!'i built by Washing- ton's d'ilg love affair with the hated military dictators hip. A CASE in poi nt was the absolute- ly futile effort by Secretary of State 1-lenry Ki ssinger last week to enlist sub rosa Greek support against the then-pending congressional ban on U.S. military assista nce to Turkey. Conferring at hi s own request at \he Plaza 1-l'otel in Manhattan last week \lo'ith Mavros, Ki ssinger explained that the effect of a cohgrcssionaJly. imposed Turkish aid ban was· pr¢ic- lable : it would m ake the Turks dig in~ their heels against U.S. mediation ef· forts to remove Turkish troops fi-om Cyprus and return part of Turkey's Cyprus co nquest to Greek Cypriots. Thus, it was in the self-interest or Athens to keep the U.S. on good terms 'with Turkey. !\1avros was stunned. ''That," he told Kissinger, "isllot sOmething for a Greek to do.'' INDEED, fa r from di scouraging Greek sympa thizers in the U.S. Congress rrom voting against the ban on aid to Turkey, top Greek diplomats in the U.S. encouraged it. One acti ve promoter of the aid ban was the con· ut,gehcr-al-in tlie. .. innuenti al Greek consulate in San Francisco, who quietly spread the word to friendly Con~ressmen : stop Ameri can aid to Turkey, no matter \vhat l~ impact on Cy prus. · In short. the poli tical imperatives in Athens on the eve or the parliamen· tary election far outweigh the long· ra nge ne ces~ity o f g r ad ually restoring the Athens-Washington link. No Greek leader caught secretly lob- bying Congress tO vote against the 'l'urkish aid-ban could be elected sewer inspector in a provincial Greek village. The unannounced decision to with· draw top Greek military men from NATO headquarters is simply the newest si gnal. Having heard American pledges for over two mon- ths that Turkey would be glad to cive up some or its CyprtLS conquest once talks started {pledges wholly unredee med), the Greek government continues to advertise itself as anti- American. THERE IS no hope that this will change between now and the mid· November election, and little expec. talion that it could change soon thereafter. Likewise, the hostility for Turkey so vividly expressed in Co ngress over the aid-ban threatens po litical retaliation against Wfthing- ton there, loo. \Vith an outstanding IOU debt to Russia for its acquiescence in the in· vasion or Cyprus last July, Turkey may find il harder than before to deny any Soviet request for overflight privileges in a future Middle Eastern war, partic ularly with the U.S . Congress so virulently anti-Turkey. As these Cyprus chickens come home to ~st, the once-mighty U.S. is an impotent bystander. Kindly keep in mind that "media" is a plural word, and there is no such thing as "medias." Economy Shakes Insurance Firms \Vhal the world in the past has alw ays called a .. 'great" m an was measured by the number or people who feared him ; what the present and future must learn to call a great man should be me:is ured by the number of people he frees from rear. It is hard to believe, but true;thal there is no such thing as a "rainbo,v" if there is no one thereto see it; a rain- bow docs not exist in itself, but only through human eyes. Television won 't come or age until it acquires at least one comment:>.tor who is as incisive; as well-informed, and as even·handed as the late I amen· ted Elmer Davis was on radio. lliun- Llcy and Brinkley were lo Davis as P.lantovanl Is to Mozart>. ?.1osl political speeches remind'me or Churchill's comment abo ut Stanley llaldwin, wh~en Baldwin W3S Prime ~linl ste r: '"Stanley occasiona ll y stumbles over the truth, but he alway~· h:1alily picks himself up and hurries .on as iJ noth ing had happened." _ IJ 1 werc.the-hea"d of any COmplftY, 1~ \\'Ould summnrily fire the rir.;t subor· (linalc who called me "Chier." --- Despite the ~mage of a rock which insurance c:ompa·nies have us ed over the year$ lo impress upon the publi c mind the security lo be gained by being inde mnified through their policies, lhe economic troubles being experienced in the nation may be threatening even the in su ran c e bulwarks. At least , State ln s uriln ce Commission er Gleeson L. Payne ha s issued so me guarded wa rnings to the effect that. insurance can no longer be blindly accci>ted as an · absolute surety. \V~i lc Payne 's thesis is not centered on rising 'costs a nd inflation as rduch as the saggi ng stock market, the w~olc thrust of his cautions is based upon the prevail'in g direction of the eeonomlc winds. As Payne Ind icate~. insurance com· panics are he avy in\'estors i·n stocb a nd bond s a l on g with other s pecul ations. \Vh ile they are regul ated by the govcrnmCnt and some types or policies li ke t.Ome l~ nf bnnk savingi, arc "insured"' by the g<J\lcrnmcnt. lhe...prolct':lions arc not geared to the full potentials or•a disastrous depression. ALTllOUGll Jnsurunce compunics People who clamor to be "'free" have a fiduciary rclation'ihip with 1which usuully nl cans rid or their their in vestors :.s do the bank!'i, lhere obllg<i tionsl. forget Gacthe'lf war· ure sij(niOcunt differences. llanking oig~; "Everything th t r ttS-,o.,,u,,_r_.,.ws prc1c.rlbc.J.hc...JlC.(.CCJlt~s_ ~µ1 r1t wi!.lin.Jt f!.iving us ntro 01 our. lnlal ai:;.."Cls which may he lnvc.stcd in :iiclves lg ruhrou!i'." any nnc nrea. 1'hus n bunk ma)' only ( EARL WATERS ) loan so much of its capital on homes or real estate in general. Other types of loans arc also limited as to their percentages of the total. ·1t may only invest a sµec1 liced percentage of lhe who le in bonds nr 311y other fielrl of sC1Curities. rnsur:incc c·ompa nies. e ven though re<1uirfd It) n1;,1inl;,1i n il .'ltipulated pcr- ccolagc of tolul liahilitic~ in liquid reserves, n1<1y olherwlsc plunge the • enlirc remainder on Lile stock market or any other fi <.!ld . Payne hni; not charAed that lhis has been done b)I any cllm1n1ny. To lhc contrary muny arc heavi ly in vested in long term l<tnd QWJU:rshlps ~nd nther real e:;ita lc of the types alwuys considered mo~t 'nund, especially in the long range view. ~ILL. to the extent that the c:'om- pani es have invested on the !itock market he has \va mcd that further dips ---in ~lock~ could well jcopardiic the snlld lty <ir stJ mc com1Janil!.4'. lie has suggeslCd that there :ire com· panic~ which s hould be rMttcinic their ,;tockmarkc.ts portrolio!4 by l!l to 2fJ percent. ' Po:Vne i111y11 th:it th comp;1nlcs in lhe ir rcatcst dungcr ar~ nol the life in· surr rs 11~ much os the c:.1suqlty com· pnnics. 'fhe latter wrltc rlre, 11uln :i nd other tyi>CA nr l'!S~ insur<jllCC. A lnp ln~urancc exe iOVc 01-e ITc .,ssumcd lhc:..statc's jnhnf' PJ!lclng lhc. •• • ins urance indu~try. Payne has been most attentive to the protection of the ~ubli c a nd has 'vorked to :;ecure new measures to ~trcngthcn the insurance companies. HE POINTS to the fact' that the state h~s brought about the establish· mentor a guar<inty fund to 1.>rotecl the insured a ~a in st casualty company failures. This ts a pool made up of con· tributions ,from ~II casu3lty com· panics tp 11 rovidC' {l~:iinst the f:ii lu re or any one or tht•m . ·- ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Roberl N. \Vced, Publishtr Tho1na1 K eevtl, Editor Barbara Krelbich. f.ditorial Page editor The ediloria l PaJle or the Dally 'Pilol 11~ks to inrorm and !';timulafe r~aders b)' prl·~cnling on this page diverse C<lmml'nl;>ry on topics Of in· !crest by ~)'ndicatcd columnists and canoonis(!f, h)' providing :i .forum • lo~ re:tdtf) · viil'w-: and bypre.-icntlng this ncw~pa!)Cr't opinions 11nd ideas on cu rrent.. topics. Th cdllorial opini~ns ot lhe D1&ily fil<it apfie1u· only 1n th ethtorial column <1l thf' top of the p:1~c 0111nion.'I ex!)rL>s~I" by the cotumn1sllf and c;irtooni1'1\ 11nd lett er wrllt•rs arc their nv;n u11d no C!ndo;:.f!mcnt or their\ I'\\'/! by lhc Daill' Pilot should bC' infcm:d, Prirt~r~nilffiS.197 . ' I 0 "' • l1l N " ' c •• v ' •• .. ~ • G "' W• (!) " '· ' ,, " thy dl in Sp A he! "P I M H11Tlel or CM 11, 1'7 ...... In dH ... s•~lc . " Prlv•N .. ~ c •. di • 1 For the • Record • Deaths Elsewhere DETROIT (AP) -Ray· mond J. Meurer, 89, one of the original promoters of the popular Lone Ranger, Green Homet and Sergeant Preston network radio series, d i e d Tue.!day. ~ PALM SPRINGS IAP) - Johll Amos Flemln1, 72, ""ho wa1 the lawyer for the Southern California land and business holdings of the weal~ thY Clark family of t.1ont.ana·, died Thunday. He bad homes in Shennan Oaks And Palm Springs. MOUNTAIN VIEW (AP) - A-memorial service will be held Monday for . L. Harold "Pete" Altder1tn, retired vice president and assistant general manager of Pacific Gu and Etectric Co., who died Wednesday. Anderson, 75, of Palo Alto, was a ronner city engineer and city ex· ecuUve officer there. 81.N FRANCISCO (AP) - The n.year-old son of a p~ minent family fell to his death Thursday ~ lbe seventb- floor ftre ·escape of a downt own hotel, police repolted. An officer Identified the victim as Albert W • t t l\tiller, son of attorney Robert Folger Miller of Hillsborough, anil 'grandson of the I a t e Robert Watt Miller, a city civic and business leader. !MOLA, Italy ( U P I ) - M.,.._90prano -Sttpaal, 67,.one of the greatest con- temporary opera singers, died Oct. 18, it was announced to- day. She retired ln 1958 after a career that took her to IA>ndon'a Covent Garden, the Par!J Opera and leading opera houses in the Americas. Deetla Notlc!e1 • ) • • , By Phil lnterla ndi QUEENIE • ~ o--.r-~ ..._ .,, .... ..:... ...... --. ••Ab t A firm na me that makes sense." ~ L.ff. Boyd Elderly Eskimo Change s Name . Client ruiks if a.nybodj ever really faints. It happens. A medical man once told me why. The' fainter really wants to run away. So much blood then goes to the mUM:les .to enable such a flight that too little blood gets to the bram. Circumstances prevent the would-be--runaway from lighting out. And it's too late, anyway. 'Ibe blackout comes. Or 111.1ch be the theory. ODDS AGAINST successful reju- veMtion after a vasectomy reportedly now runs 10 to one ... IT'S £UST0~1· ARY for an elderly Eskimo to change his name to make a late new start . . . TWO TlllRDS of the nation's counties have no psychiatrists in J'f;Si· dence . . . CAN STILL fmd no contra- diction to the claim that alcoholics rarely have hair on their chests •.• "WRITING free verse is like playing te.nnis with the net down," said Robert Frost. BRIDAL VEIL That piece ~ netting known as the bridal veil has its history too. Started out as a sack over her bead, be it known. Thole old' boys carted off those old girls in rather an abrupt manner sometimes. Or so our Love and War man reports. ' Q. "WHAT SORT of military discharge does .a person get if kicked out Of the service for homosexuahty7" A. Less than honorable'.. C.OUple thousand men a year are separated for such cause. YOUNG FELLOW, if yoo show up at the Singa~re Airport with overlong hair, guard! there are a.uU\orUied to confiscate your passport, and not return it until you get a haircut. ' LINCOLN No Abraham Lincoln was not particularly conscious of the 'mote On bis cheek. A client asks about that. At age 50 Lincoln wrot.e of himsell as follows : "If any personal d~ption of me is Ux>ught desirable, it may be said I am in height six ' feet four inches, nearly; ~ean in fi~sb, weighing on an average, 180 pounds; dark m complenon, with coarse black hair and gray eyes. No marks or. brands •AT•' recollected." Ectward LIMl!ofl ••tts. SU Rtc11111ds. ' ~.~ •. s":vt!:"~°' ,:-'~~= SlR YOU HEAR a lot about Switzerland's numbered sM111 F11rmen ·o1 s..i11 ""'r K11rv bank ~ts _ for the sake ,pi secrecy -but in Pl4ocenll1 of N.wpart lffdt, SI ly P111l . •~ ot _..ico.. Jollnn w'"'"" o1 COii• fact only about four percent of all SWISS accounLOI are MeMI II ... grano:khlld•to1. ROlttY Sund\; I t 1::JO ,.M and Mal MOllUY II •: numbered, remember. AM bOtll II SI, JOfC:ltlm• Cllurcti. /nt.,.- e:f_; e:'l ~:::. ':1"~ If:.: Address mail to L. M. Boyd P.O. 80% 1875, New-1t'~::;-.:' ~,7:,,~pot~, .. :':n.!: port Beac/' 92660. Copyright 1974 L. M. Boyd. to tf1t ante COunl'f H11rf AllOCl1tlon.1--------------------....i 81lh.·8W"tfl'011 CVlll Meu cllrKI01'1. •UIOH HIM'let E1ttllt •111'911. _Pf "' ~.--· of C111l1 e · Patt "' lltlln .,., 11, ,,,.. ftcl ~ her tttn ... ncl •• .,. rnonc1 J. 8\ll'!ii of Coll• Mna1 precldld In dNlh i't htr ton. l'rld 5. llU!lilll w11o w.. , dlrtetw of lnfor,.,.:IONOI &«Yl«I II lltf!t!i•n CollfOI, •M Wll I nlM Ytlr r .. IOtnl of Cotti Mffl, Prlv•tt llf'Y1Ces -·· Mid Th\ll'ldly, wHl'I Donto.., Fvner•I HorM ol Or1nge, c1. 111..:1<tr1. NIW•••cx l'rldtrlc:k W. N.WIN'K•, rnlllenl o I T1kom1 P1r1t, Md. 01t1 of 1191111 CklOfier 11, 1'7'. 'ti Sou1n co11t Co1T1mun11v tf010ll1I._. ~kt• Pfl'ldlt'!IJ,. 511 1 11 1 r LIOllllf -ch Mortv1ry, t7• South C011I Hlg!nwy, LIOUN l11cll, C1. 4'4-U3' · TATI ~ Wllll._m J. T1t1, rnldlnl of S1nt1 AN. c.. 0111 of d11lh (klflt>t( 11. 19l•. ~ Pfl'ldlnt• PKlllc VI-.v..mori.1. P1rt Morl"9FY. -·-IAL TZ..IEIUHROH l'UHlllAL HOME CorOllQ d1I Mor 673-94.50 C0tto MeJO 646-2424 • -·-llLLIROMWAY Mo.TUAIY I 106roodwov. ~oMeso 042-~150 -·-McCORMICK LAOUHA HACH MOtlTUAaY 1795 lgguno Canyon R .49'4-9415 . -·-McCOIMIC MISSION MOllTI!AIY 28832 C11mino Cop!Alrono Son Juon Col)lstrono .. 9j.f776 -·-PACIPIC YllW MI MOllIAL PARK Cttnrttery Mort\#Or/ Chopol 3.SOO Pocific V141W Drive ~t koi;k, ~lon1lo 64'-2700 -·-PllK PAMILY COLONIAL JUNlllAL H9M1 7801 Bobo AYI .. Wt1tmi111!el' 89J'..352j -·- SMITHS' MOllTUARY 61'7 M01n St. I ·-+.---,,,"'111in'9i0ii G&JI ~~ Religion Suggested For Prostitutes VATICAN CITY (AP) -A cardinal says that prostitutes urgently need religion a n d suggested that \\'Omefl b e employed lo carry the gospel to them. Evangelizing prostitutes will be dUflcult a n d dangerous, Perlcle Cardinal Felid, an in- fluenUal Italian member of the Roman curia. Thursday told the General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops. Pope Paul VJ 1 presided a: the seMion. GARAGE-SIDEWALK . SALE! 5olwdaf,Och11Mrl9 1:00 ......... 5:00 , ..... CORHIR OF 161111< OUMCiE COSTA.MESA ' SI ll .,., .. COSfkMESA Ref AR¥ Elli ' I .. • Frida,, October l.8, 197• D4!>Y PILOT A 1 Board-Orders By WILLIAM SCHREIBER 01 ... o.Hy l"Mll Sllff SANTA ANA -A !"'-hour board of supervisors tummlt confereoce on Orange County cons&ructlon I o d u s t r y pr~ bletm Thursday yleldl'd a lot of talk and only one minor ' acttoo by the board. · upervisor s voted unanimously to order a countY . counael investigation of legal . ways to streamline i on 1 n g , tentative map and permit ap. p r oval processes developers must go through b e f o r e starting their projects. More than two dozen people took the 009r during th e special hearing, conducted at the request of the Council ror Employment , Economy, Environment a n d Develop- ment (CEEED). SO~tE OF TIIE m o s t discouraging remarkJ c a m e from Congressman A n d re w Hinshaw (R·Newport Be.ach), who said there was UUle local government coo.Id dD to ease the crisis situation in t h e building and h o u 1 I o g In· dustrls . Local government doe51(1'\ have the kind ot CO.'ltrol need· ed to confront thls s.e v ere state.or depression tn tbe con- s tr u c t1 on Industry," said Hinshaw, who noted Congress recently h'as approved-more than $15 billion. In aid bills tor the industry . ·He said he was told by Federal n e 1 er v e Board Chainnan Arthur Burns that five years of poor ftscal polici- es at the federal levels have resulted in the problems that DOW exist In all part3 ol the national economy. "We need better budgel con- trol at the federal level, but even with sound fiscal policy, if you could put It all under a microscoPe thire is no way to turn inflation a.round .and eod the construction industry depression in less than two years," Hinshaw said. HINSllA W SAID !he bes! local governments can !lope for ls to smooth out rough sPots in p o r m t t procedures and ti ppt:al to higher levels for help on the bigger pnr bl ems. Marlene Fox, attorney for CEEED and a dozen county. Developers, outlined a tough, six·point progrant for easing the problem. She said the following-things should be considered: -Ougoing development pro- jects should ha~ to submit only one environmental Im- pact report for the entire fob, supplementing the base report 1 each ti.mt r.e~v pcrmil:: :::n: sought. -The state should clarify its Environmental Quality Act , which she called "one of the most ambiguous a n d sul:r jective laws ever passed." She said it is possible to "torture" i~ provisions enough to yield any kind of interpretation . -The ElR must not be used by planners and com- mission as "a device to hold up the developer to blackmail or e.xkln r.omethlng out or hiln." -Remind any candidate elected on a limited grov.1th or open space platfo rm that be ls responsible f o r pro- tecting the rights of all people, not just a select Ccw. -URGE CllANGES and clarificl\tionh in the felcr:ll Clean Air Act that also leave the door ope n for an "onslaught of w o r t h I c ss disputes and challenges o f development projects." -Use all available channels from !Geai lo fed&a! and-S'-.l!e. levels to state the problems that mus.t be dealt wi th. SuperviS(lrs also ht.>11.rd a presentation f r o m represen- tatives of the Southern Ca lifornh:I Building Industry Association. Th<!Y laid out a proposal that could cut the permit prOcess delays in half. nine month.II under ide•I co&~ ditions. He said the system could be streamll11ed by maklng nll approval p r o c e a a e 1 l'On- eurrent . thus cutting the 111nc needed almost•ln half. Supervisors"bad eome quts- tlon about the legality of such a change ana ordered the BIA proposal to be s\1;1died aa part ot the county coqoscl's probe. Supervisors wefe told durini; the hearing that their ntw Environmental Miln.agemenl Agency (EMA) is. _worki_ni.! rapidly toward revisions 1 n procedures that will help to eliminate boltienecks in the de\'eiopment apt)l'1>val process. SU PERVIS 0 R Ralph Diedrich said the developers cannot be held up loneer Lh1111 necf'ssary. Bill Olson. planning division program admini~trator for the EMA said his de~artment 1s also working rapidly to"·drd County Housing Costs CllUCK KNICKERBOCK ER approval of general p I a n of Vista Developntent Com-an-.endments that could open pany spoke for the BIA and up 37,000 acres of county told supervisors current pro-land for development. cedure s fo ll owed b y ---------- developers to get z o n i n g changes. tentative m a p ap- prov a I and cnvironment;il clearances take more t h a n Do This If Prohibitive to A verage FALSE TEETH Drop At The Wrong Time: Afr1id lalie teeth .... 111 drop •t 1he .....,onr time! A drnlurt" adhe.IYc c•n lltlp. FASTEETH• Powd•r rt-·•~ SANTA ANA -Less than six pereent of all new homes built so far this year J n OranR:e County can be af· forded by a family with a median income of $16,000 per year, a county advisor says. JoM G. Rau, cha\rman of the county's Cost ol Housing Committee, said in a letter to the board of supervisors that the average new home in tbe oomty now c o s t s $55,000. -Rau's Jetter, which included a vow that the board v.i ll get a fuU committee pfogress report by e a r 1 y November, Judge Sode11 to Rule On Bixby Ranch Land SANTA ANA -0 r-a n g e . residents, the College Park County Superior Court Judge Homeowners Association, the Mari: Soden. has set Nov. 13 Rossmoor Homeowners as the date he will rule on Association and the S e n i o r the demand ·to ha 1 t con-Cltizerul League to nullify aC· struction on BU.by Ranch land tion taken May 28 by the in the Seal Beach area pend-. Seal Beach city: council . ing ·trial ol .a lawsuit fiJed Seal Beach city councilmen. bY. 48 area residents and three named-as individual eodefend- homeowner groups. ants ln the lawsuit. movOO Judge Soden is being &ked ori that occas ion Jo grant a "r in the action filed by . 4 8 grading permit for a 1 it e earmarked for construction of Patron Sues Mesa Store For.Injury 61 town home!. lt is alleged in the lawsuit that the action viG!ates the comprehensive land use plan devised by the Orange County Airport Land Use Comrrtission and should be set aside as illegal and Jnvalld. AIRPORTER INN HOTEL BANQUET ROOM 11700 ~r. '"',.. SUNDAY, OCTOell 20 AUCTIOfG 2r00 Nl t. 7:00 PM IXHl&mON flOM 1.1 iOO AM • • 1 f'lurntlonll. H<9aooo dentvru a lon1cr, ll•ITl"r, •lead~• hc.o..:t. hold.Whrbeembarr~!Formore. was aired during a special T""'St-•erurity 111.d comlnrt. 111., FA S· -' b .i '10'6 -TEETH Dentur., Adbetiv1 Po.,..dtt. summit t."Ul.Jlerene'e on uilding M°""'"' O.nt\INS tti.t fit 1NI! ~ntial 111 industry problems Thursday in '42-1751 bult.b. SM )'OUI' dtntist rec111atl1. Santa Ana. 1-"'"'========'...'...--------- "The committee fully recognizes the present building industry dilemma and the increasing demand for low to moderate income housing," Rau laid. "Based on a projected me- dian 1974 family income of ·=============:::::::;:=:;:;;;;;,;;:.;;:::;-$16,000, more than SO percent r camot afford a · home worth over $40,000," he said . "Only six percent of the OOmes built during 1974 so far could be afforded by a median income family." -.__ DR. R. J. PARTAIN Announces the Opening of His Office FOR THE PRACTICE OF CHIROPRACTIC IN THE EASTBLUFF VILLAGt CENTER , ' . Rau said there are almost no ~ single family homes available in the county for less ll!an $30,000. Professionol Bldg., Suite I 05 "" 2503 Eostbluff Dr., Newport Beoch ' ·' I ·.1 • By Appointment Phone; ,64o,6.i(o ' .' ... , MEN WOMEN The rrost beaulilul shop in this country wlll ope,n soon in the labulOUll South Coast Plau ShOpping Center. If you would llke 10 work In these elegant surrountlngs, lull Of'" 1)8f't-time, wtlh liberal employee duscounts, 0Pportunl1y for advancement, etc., phone Eme_st Sands for a~pt. -; 546-6741. Public AUCTION fRIDAY. SATIJRDAY, SUNDAY •t 8 P.M. Bargains on Fine Crystal. Sterling Siluer, Porcelains. Oriental Objects d'Art, Paintings. J ewelry, Antiques, Bronzes, Furniture, Select Indian Turquoise... ' ' S 1.000.000 INVENTORY From E:states. Courts, Out-Of-Pawn, Customs Seizures. etc. VlSrTORSI Conw and •ee ullat fun an AIJCfJON c an hr FREE ADMISSION! ... across the street from seven of th e SoUthland·s most elegant watf'rfronl restaurants! Inspection & Private Soles 2-4 P.M. & 7-8 P.M.-01lty Closed Wed~sday .t Thurtd1y AUCTIONS HELD EVOIY FRIDAY, 5111\JRDAY. SUNDAY 018 P.M. USE YOUR BANKAMERICARD. MASTI:R CHARGE • Pf.RSON.~LCHECK"OR CASI I 2542 Wut Coost Highway Newport Beach, Clllllomlo 92660 (714) 645·2".!0o WE BUY FOR CASH OR SELL ON COOIJ>llSSION WHOLE ESTATES OltSrJ\IGLE tr'EMS ·- I ' . ' • . . ,. . -. __ .. ~· .. . ·*· • , .. :mu:. • •• . Warning, The Surgeon General ·Has Oat.ermined' That Cigarene Smoking Is Dangerous t~ Your Health. -.. , ___ .,,.._ _..,,.. ' I ' .... \ . . -• , • •• • • . --, --. ' . •• ( ,_ , - ' ' ~ ··-·-• . • ; -. • ·--' ' ' I • • t ' • • • . , " ' Bacteria c·ount: 7F h e~Eyes I _lave If 1"7MAaYLUOWN ATLANTA (UPI> -The eye tosmeffc iad\&stry may 50on·befor· ttd to make its ~aried assortment of mascaras. liners and colored ·.shadows ·a leas inviting ·l)ome for germs that can Cause eye infection, . er blindness in rtre cases. · Dr. Louis A. Wilsop~ associate proreUor of ophthalmology in the Emory University School of '.Medicine, is doingkesearch fQr Uk F(deral Food and Prug Ad· mlniStration_ f F,'DA) on the proble~ cf ger:m con l a pi fnaUon Jn eye· Cl&metica \ • He 1aY'l research over theJ>ast three years .bas sh'own some brands .i eye ·cosmetics become con , tamtnated \Vitti Use and can cause eerio~ eye infection or even blind· neas. Other b'rands: however, are relatively tesistant to con· taniln8tion: • · Tbe probljm, as WilSon explaihs it, is that A woman· picks up bac- teHa from tfie surface of her eye lid when applying m-akeup with an alS:· pUcator or brush. • . These bacteria are transferred bect·into the mascara or liner con- tainer, -:bere they can live and •'utftiie any or all ol.:..1:.~ cosmeUc parts as a source ol ,nauiUon.". Witb"makeup that does not have an adequate preservative, Wi.ls~on __ say_s,_tbe_w.QJD.an __ will.Jay_er.. bat!... ~ ont.O her eye lid each time she , . reappliesthemakeup. ' Testing of f,400 random samples of used e)'e ~smetics showed 55 to mpercent ortbe sam.Ptes had~baC­ tertal contamination, he said. .The u se o r ·contaminat ed makeup, wilsOn said, can lead to cbrOnic infection or UN! lid margin, which can lae cleared up with treat- ment., or tlie mor~ severe corneal 'ulceration'. He said he is aware of six cases at uleefalions, which began with a .. .-.le& 'eaused by an applicator btuJb. lnd got worse by ''in· ·--now1at.rag bacterlt: orito the sur· · face Orttte_scratch41d cornea." "!H t haflPl'D5 lo .. the rld>t bac· leria, "' WJlsOn sakl, "you •re off -runnin_g to a violent inrection tliat can cause the louor an eyeball or even sight." Wilson· said the only rederlll reeulatiOn at present concerning eyt cosmeUcs is th~t they "can't be grossl'y contaminated whe n leaving the ractory... - ' He said the FDA is moving ·toward regulations that would require the industry to insure that the product.will remain sale during daily use for a reasonable peijod or · ' time. • -one way to. do this, be said, wOuld be to.Jabel products "UMafe for ~·1 after a certain amount of time, or package cosmetics J n siDaU -'C.bnt_ainers_ so_the__product would be used quickly and could. not beconie grossly contaminated. ,. Cancer researcher Dr. Rob ;tt'-Goo'd . ' . ". ' says patients ~rely die of cancer. lnste8d,-infection, ' . . • ' I • 'takes its toll. " . . • • However, 'Wilson said the id• dustry believes ft would be ttQn9mTcally unprofitable to we small containers. 1Wilson said testing cosmetics with women on two Georgia college campuses r evealed one brand of mascara th a t r eached ''hor· rifying'' levels or contamination .within 10 days. · .lie said the company rnanu!ac- ~uring the product took immediate action to improve the product's sa£ety and adde d a n effective ~reservative when notified. ••other brands got cori'· taminated.'' he said. "But this varied according to the preser- vati~es. Those that bad good . preservatives r esisted cbn- tamination, for the most part, with • ord\nary, daily Cemale usage." Wtlson said response from the ·cos metic i ndustry has been "'mixed," with several companies doing their Own research to try to insure safer products. "We are not talking about that many cases or documented diSease, ·~ be said, "But l;>e£ore I became interested in this, it never would have occurred to me to look at a woman's makeup in relation to ber infection. ~So .. ho.w many_cases do oCcur? Maybe many more than we now suspect." • ' l Cancer Cure~ Engineered ByJOOLSON- °'°"Dturl'l11t..., New discoveries in the Way the human, immunity system works are "a prototype ot whal is to come " Dr. Robert Good, director of the famed Sloan-Kelterin& In- stitute Jol.<Lstudents at 1C:alifornia State University, Fulle:rtao. "Molecular and cellular biology will be the basis for the medJclne or the future." The cancer. researcher was the third in a series of speakers invited by the university to speak oo. The •. Biology of Cancer. 1 He fot1nd put about the invitation arter his secretary had routinely turned IL down, and insl!ted she send'a lelte.'"'or acceptanCf. "I'm., thl'illed to come because this 00Ur1e was put together by young-pebple," he· said during a dinner before the lecture. He expressed further delight at speaking on c ampus beciuse In ~is audience cou ld be "cancer resear- cbersofthe future.'' · Dr. Good, a graduate of the Untversity of Minnesot. .. , sald that 32 years ago .. nothing wu known •boUtimmunlty." · No'!1 there is ''alm08lat!Omplete deflniuOl'I of antibody and progress has been made In undentanding lhe.cells Involved lnj mmunology." TWO SYSTEMS Most important; he said, ls the rec~nt discovery that thtre are ~\\o'O immunity systems In the body tn· stead or one. These are the f ·ccll and the B·cell systems. ' These systems can control each other, and It ls essentlol lhat ~y work 1011elhcr, Dr. Good said. •. , , I I·--"- r 'l'he key came For this discovery during -studies of related cancers: ..._ Ch'ronic lymphatic leukemia." lfodgkin's Di,sease, multiple my· alomaandothers. Certain separate populations or organisms were round to be in- volved ln-each .. disea.se, ·indicating that lwo diffetent influences were at, work. ''Each class goes through separate sieps in development," Dt. Good said. "The signal may be a very simple sig8al." He said that at Slo.an-KeUering, oOOdsald. This concept also ~as im- plications for the study-or aging, which Dr. Good said would be em4 phasized in the next 10-12 years. Also, "cellular engineering" can be used for common problems or man such as nutritional almgr- ·malities, Dr. Good noted:~- Cancer must be studied with !he "'cellular engineering'' concept because ••cancer cells are not' ,' listening to normal signals/' Dr. Good.said. He predicted lhat ••we•re only • 7here are all sorts of ways to play th e gam e ' -· onc e you know wh at you 're do ing.· '8tlents rarely dje or cancer. In· stead, infection t1ke.slts toll. ~ · ''In trutm-enl, their Im· munological _.)'stems are Screwed up. Cancers aren't so stupid. We're poor at getting rid ol the lut cells, 'lbil ii where the immunity system worlts.11 's 1 good housekeeper.'' ~Y!!TtlllS 11118!i1NG Among petltnts aeen at Sloan· K-enering are those who have ·whole immun1ty systems missing, ;ind those where one component is lollout. ' - . These can ba corrected b)' "eel· JuJar englneerin&."' or ''ehar· m1colo1lcal engineering,' Dr. ' . -· , . - • seeing the tip or the lee berg" in the study or immunity. ''There are all sorts oC ways ,lo play lbe game; once you know what you 're doing. '' Also making an appearance in Orange County was Dr. Michael 8. Shimkin, professor or community medicine attd oncology at the Univers ity., of C~li£ornia , San Diego. - ANNUAL MEETING-- He spoke on The Cancer Crusade: Whence and Whit.her for the annual dinner ineeting or the -O ra nge County U,nft or the AMertcan Cancer Society. He looked back IOlhcfustcaneer - research, which revealed that can· cer· is not trarismissable. In 1910, a researcher named Peyton Raus had a chicken with a mass brought to him. This tumor was transplanted to other chickens and they developed tumors too. Dr. Shimkin said. This su_ggested that viruses were involved · Raus waS sent to Bermuda to work on blood preservatives and didn 't get back to his disputed work' on cancer and viruses £or . three decades. ''Fifty years later he won a Nobel prize for his work in viruses.'' Now, he said, more than 100 viruses have been identified Y.'hich cause a ."galaxy or tumors" in animals. The salvage of cancer pa~~~~~ llas steadily improved because of earlie r diagnosis a nd better• surgery, Dr. Shimkin noted, and chemotherapy now is an "ancillary treatment being used.ror more dir- fi cult tumors.'' But he lamented that ther,e is "'disquietude in th e scientific com· munlty over the distribution ·of research runds-cancer vs. ,basic sciences.'' Dr. Shtmkin a dvocates basic science research because "you can't approach cancer but through basic science.'' Whf:re Is the cancer crusader going? Dr. Shi mkin said that in 1876 tuberculosis caused seven"' U me~ more deaths than cancer . Now, TB .is not even in lhe first 10 causes of death. ''J think this is what will happen to c1ncer by the ti me this country celebratesJts lhird centennial.'' . ' ' . • ii ' • ' • ., • Tfie applicator, stick or brush can be as much a culprit as the cosmetic itself • • " 1ncaus1ng contamination. \, • , BEA ANDERSON, Editor '""""r.octMtrtl.ttM .. ... 'Miscalculation Adds Another DEAR ANN LANDERS : I ·am a 17-year,old high school senior who neem an answer, 1 hope you will print the advice because there is no way I can risk getting a letter with such information in the mail . My mother would surely open it and all hell would break loose. My steady and I have been going together £or 14 months. We started to have sex three m·onths ago. Please don 't tell me to stop because we tried to three times and it's im· possible. We even made promises to each other a nd look an oath on the Bible. It didn't help. What l need to know is this : When is the safest time for me lO have intercourse because I sure :ion't want to get pregnant. I hope you won~t suggest Planned Paren- thood or anything that has to do with birth control: Il is against my religion. Also, my boy £riend thinks (and [ agree) that any artificial methods would cheapen the beautiful lovr. we have £or each other. Please, Ann, try to understand and help us.-VERY ANONYMOUS DEAR V .A.: What you are already doing Is against your tellglon, Dummy. I wish you both lots or luck 1£ you continue to play VaUcan Roulette because you 're certainly gotnit lo need it. The rh ythm system is the least safe way to prevent pregnancy. (In fact, at least 15 percent of the time it doesn't work.) The system ha i; to be worked out with • professional, according to eacb woman's cycle. The problem lies In the fact that most women's cycles are somewhat irregular. If a wo·man miscalculates bJ even one day she has a new name. ll is "MotMr." My adv)ce fs lo go to-Planned Parenthood or yo.or family doctor and not take any. more foolish chances. DEAR AN N I.ANDERS: My molher had a beautiful gold bracelet. Si nce I wa s the only daughter, It was natural for her to promise it to me. Whenever st1e wore that bracelet, she mentioned . . that one day it would be mirtec. ' A £ew weeks ago Mother passed away. The gold bracelet was not with the rest of her thui:gs when lhl' ramily gathered to divjde het fe\.\' meaningful possessiont:"No one seemed to know a nythinJ;ibout it. Last week I learned qiy brother had given the bracelCC .to his 13- year-old daughter. That brat never gave two hoots ror her grand· ~other. She ~as a tlj,de a nd disrespectful child. T~,. 'Jlen t saw her wea ring .fbi levelr bracelet, my blood be9~ boil. What should I do? ---OQJ,"' Dear 0.: Tell your.'J.Niher the bracelet was prom I~ S'OU and you'd like to have it. Tot;.,cl your mother dldn 't put &he ,....lse In wrillag. She could h1wfJl11'9fenled' what is sure to be a peM; ••I of unpleasantness. . DEAR ANN: I know-..ren't a · doctor but you have IOld connec· lions. Here's the problem. When [ get tense I per spire pro£usely, especially my hands. (Ann Landers QJ It's very Cmbarrassifig when I'm in a group and have toshalte hands, es~cially in a receiving llne. I ~ gloves once and ft lt: · very Out-of-place because no other woma n had gloves on. Three doctors have given mr medication but nothin'1., works. J. would. bless you forevef' if you could suggest s ometb lng. -·WRINGING WET Otar Wet: Your problem Is not u•co mmon . It Is e all ed hyperbydrosl~. Some dn:c·s give relie.£ but the st de efftcts may cause problems. If you'vt seen three doctors I suggest you see one more, 1 der- matologist. If he is pcrsls&ent 1te may hit on the drug or cen1blli1tlon. of drugs .that Wiil l!lYe your proble m without crtaUna: new ones, • I '. •. ·lfl OAILYPILOT • ·"' ·'. .. ~ • Frlday,October18, 1174 Pledges SQid '."ln Wedqings MRS. SCHMIDT I ~" SCHM IDT-QUARRIER graduate of -Redlands High. University al Long Beach • Sharon Margaret Quar· &hool. They will live in 1•,ngde.the Baptist Bible Col-6'1 entone. --rier and Bri a n Lee Schmidt llonor attendants were '! ., .. ~than'W1 vows and rings LUCATOATA· Pifrs . Ken McNaughton and >.: Sl. jlfrid 's Episcopal Robert Preston. ~9-. .qurch, H.untington Beach. . . McNAJJGHTON : Others were :.,andy Waid, ~ 1". Conducting the nuptials l\l 1 r1 a m 1'1 cN aughton Mn. Rojer '...otter, Ken Mc· i,'1:1tr the dllUKhtcr of the Car-became the bride of Frank · Naughton Arlie Lockwood "tW1 Winston Quarriers of L . Lucatorta during J G ' M R M ~. ,Pot.in~ari.ft Valley a nd the son ceremonies conducted by a~ Mr~~~gaefnes cLu~~tort!: ,,.. M. ~ Henry Schmidt, lhe Rev . Dr. James Combs Mr. and Mrs. Lee Bowler, ! . ~·•nlone, wa s the Rev. •and t he .Rev. 'fhomas Dawn Smith, Walte r ~ ~metO.Caley. ~ucatorta 1n the First Bap-Pedrik, Juanita Parker and :-,.~:· Attendlna the bride were list C~urch of Costa Mesa. Mrs. Thomas Lucatorta. •;. e l\1 mes. Thomas Wells, Their parents are Mr. and ·:t ud Br•dshaw, James t.trs. Hugh ·McNaughton.of ::~~ley. J.erry Beardsley. Costa t.1esa and Mr. and WHITED-BERTRAM ;,.: :ollonald Coone. Michael &h-Mrs. Frank Lucatorla. Red-Ann Daree Bertram and ~;::.:C.ldt,, Frank Villhard and ding. Garry Mars hal l Whited ::t"~:tveJyn1Bucker . ·The bride, a graduate of were united in marriage in :!;:!-: Also n the wedding party Newport Har bor High St. John the Dlvine Catholic ~f-....ve re Lee Pt\.ilippi, best School, attended Paciric Church, Costa Mesa. Q:~.;.m.an, EdY.•ard Mendoza and Coast Baptist Bible College Their parents are Mr. and : .. ~omas Wetls. and Southern California Mrs. Robert J . Bertram, ~~· The bride, a graduate of College. Costa Mesa and Mr. and ;.;. ~"'Wtstrniruter fllgh &hool, Her h u s band i s a Mrs. &tanley &1 . Whited, ;~Uended Orange Coast.Col·. graduate of Lynwood High Antioch. ~ ge. lier .hus band 1s a School, California State Mi's. Larry Pryor and MRS. LUCATORTA John SpUrrief were honor attendants. Others in the wedding party were Mrs. John Bertram, Michelle Whited, Cynthia T.ahey, Thomas Toohey. Timothy Young, Richard Wolf and CharJes Hamtlln. A graduate of Corona del Mar High School , the bride attended San Diego State University and Cal Poly, San Luis Obispo. Her husband is a graduate of Antioch High School aqd at· tended SDSU. HOPE-TWl~EGAR MRS.WHITED • PUBUC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE ·-·~ l'"ICTrTKMll •UllNllSI PUBLIC NOTICE fl'ICTlnous IUSANESS. I NAMf 1T4Tl"Mt:MT Tiit .""" ... Pt!Mlll '• ..... ~ .,: CAPtS111ANO ?V, llO EISI 11tlt Slr1ol ; $UHi I , Co1!1 Miii. CA "'" er .... G. Smlllt, lfftl ~' Unt, H!.111-..ion lle1•J1. CA. Tilts •u•lntf\ Is Cl"ClltCIHI Dor '" _, lti.it D. S1111tll Tllh sl•ltll)tnl •• , 111"9 with HM• C•untr Cltrl OI Or1n91 Ctu11IJ O<'I Ottol:ltf' u. ·'"'· ... IJ PwbllS"-0 01•111t C••" 0.llJ Pilot Ot:tobtt 11. "· ""'~~"'°'' '· •. "'· 3161-14 PUBLIC NOTIOE :. : su .. ••IOI: cou•T °" ,... ....,,. ITATIM••T flCTITIOU5 IUllNlU STA.T• Oii' CAU•otlNIA t'Olt 'fllt tollowftlf MfMM fl'9 dDfllt IMl6i-•' NA.Ml! 5T4TEMl.HT 1 lltll CO:..'":.':. oaAMO• ' -,.,.: CALl•.ORHl4 $41\.'°"" ICIT l,.. fOllA•lng per~o"' .... IS o I n O #OTICI ~ NIARINO O• "w.f!Ttolil Cl!HT.f:• U1f UHLIM!TEO f!ICRl!A· busl-H ! JO• l'•Ql;Afl' Ofl WILL AMO fO•. TtOM COMPANY, HUI 8t•clt HUNtlHVlON VIEW POINT 14 LITTl•I TllTAM.lllTA•Y '°"'ltv•td. "'1ntkieton 8"dl.'Cflllotrll• l lmUt(l P1rln1ru1lpl, ,., .. 8 I.th EJ11lle of WtH<>MA L. DE All T H • I. s.mu.t-F. Wrtollt, till!. l!""tllltt BooM-t•rO, Sc.Ile UG, tt1111llrlgion llNcll,. Dk .. Md. • Dl'l¥t. LIU Fanti, t.lllllml1 n.ao CA. m.i1 NOTICE IS 14ERl!a\" GIVUI thtl r. ~ •W. f>trrofc. 1t-ti1 N'.Hdt G. LClllll Gr1rlaolo , II, '"" •• ,. · ,._...,l..J: ,,.oEA~_ ......... nieo.,11-.. 11 "~u:i= ~,...11,,.:11~ f;t:T 81¥d.. tt11111l11Q1cin e..i;11, c.111. m.1 ·:O,. ~. ot ""L:;tt;,•1-T.,,_Jlf\I ~L~illlilliiwnr11191~ ~ 1'.;1: F•o:I eiit1~rlM1, a e.ur.,...;iiil to t111 petillcllW. mmnc. i. Wflldl ~~ llJ·~ IW l)lmlld ~=~Ion~ Wllllllr1, Lo1 · ... 11t. Parents or the newt~· 11 ,,... ~ tur1Mr _.~.!"" 11111nwM1p. -w------· G. L01111 6'•r1~1o 111 ~ """"' .... , 1111 1-1r.o plla OI ._,11111 • II~ W-l"wnl who traveled to Hawaii and in. --""'" .. ., 1or No-TN•· .. ...,,..,.. ,... "'"' .,m. ""' Tll h u11ern1111 ••• 1111• •111'1 1111 'ill re 'd · San Jose s. nu, "'' •=• ... rn~ lft 1M c.111"*" c-w-Clfrtl 111 0r.,.. ,. __ ._ • County Cl••• of Or1nt1 C•uncr ~ w SJ e In . " °""""""'' Ho. t d Pill c_.t, Ott 1 "11. -"Y OdaMr u , It,.. ,. Attendants were Mr. and •• ,. c1'11( ~ ... 0r1 .. -.... "' · ' · ......... · _.1._ ._,, . 1111 City of s...!1 AN.~· y • ... • .-.._. PloblllltlCI "rlfln CN1I Glllr J'llot Mrs . Paul Robinson, Mrs. ...., 0c...-11. ttr• , ..,. .. •YI.MIC.. ~ •,.. Mi,•.~.,_.. u....,..... ·-. ~ 11. U, ~Wefttllitr I, Jll'N• William Mar-sbaleck , • =6tf.r':-MJON11• ........ c.....- Christin e Hope, Rene uwt1 "·HAL, U::~""-~t o.if,""' PVBLIC1'lOTICE Kestenbaum, Lisa Mayer, ~~':i:.~..._.., ftD4 • ~4.1i;,11.lil. 1tt•• · ,pn.:1 ,.. Sharon Stanberry J enny Al'-'Y ,.,, ......_ lflJtmJi! · • NCT1r1ov,s.1u•nt11111 Graham, Jerry P 1 ullman, C:.=rY, 1r~,,~ o.iiv =· ::-=> NO'l'IC&; .. "!" ~i=•..;;:; ~!'-::. ~u James Spencer, Gordon PUBLIC NOTICE :;; . ·•, "!£'!'.yM1':" 1. 'AMt~NT ,A V•L""T•AiLIRS Lester, Bill Silver, Norman · ,..,. ..,........1."i'!'~..W ......_. 1 t"c--o•A -tH1t11",fV ltlNl·A: Pullman and Greg Mar-,,,, .... ••••T 0 .. cM.••oaMC&. -.: · · t.;--•. · • . CAR, 1101 11. H.,,.., ''"'·· S.nt• , • l alfOl"~ltfMO · AHO ' 'MI!: t 11t I 0 ' · it.flt, c:.!lf. ttNM ltnez. ,.c~Y!:"c.!:. :.~~ . ~· IVSTl,.M.:CO..IUl.TINO SERVIC•; 11)( • All'lttlUll Tr•~•I lrtllttt. I 11 c .• The b ri d e a ttended SU•••u.C•Mfttllll . '. ~tl 'Orl"' C... MM&. C"lfor*I A c111r•m•• Cotpor111on, t101 Soul.It N I B h h I cASR MUM9aR. · r"Ml~ • ~(tiNmani t • • HRt&ler 81\0d., $tonl• A"", CM. ft10I ewpor eac sc oo s 0 ..., MS.~ KT_.11 ~ .. c:.i ~ n11 ,141,,.,, 11 condiKtH .., • c•r· before graduating· with suMMOtls cMA•llAoaJ . 'c.i1..,..ftm. t. • *"', por~h honors from UCLA where In •• 1111 ....... ,1191 ot P1tlfloMf'1 TI111 .,....,.., k COllCNKlfd ._. • '!twi1T11 .. 1 lr•li.rt. lrc.. SHIERllY O. RISINGI!•, -•RPorc""ll lndl"""'-! •. · ; ~ , f ,S.ul lllltlPfrO , St. Rose of Uma Church she was president of Alpha JAMEi w. 11s111co1ER . ~MU-Kr..ic: '· ,,. Triu 11•t1m,111 ••• 111~ w11111 the l·n s1·m1• was the setti'ng Xi Delta sorority To 1"" R9WIOl'ldtnl: TM "'11"°""' Tllll .....,.... -fllld .. .., "" ou11ty Clerk 01 Or•ll•• Co•nlY on , • .... !li.d • plllllOl'I nincwnlnl· ~ Clwtt ef °'""' ~ oq °'"~ U, lt14f •-when Judy Lyn Twilegar lJer "husband was -ri.ve. You,.,.., fll• • wrll1tn ...........,um4 ,.., t• ,.." . ,..""°".. wltlllft 'a Uya ol 111t ... ' ftNll1 -llltoll9"• Ot1n1• Co1111 Otljy Piiot and John Hope exchanged president of Alpha Phi tt1r1t ,,,,, --. 1, "'"'" en .yw., ~..,.. er.., C.oMt o.i1r '"'"'• ~ 1 .. '~i'.H-'Jlbt~ 1,1, 1w.•1.1• wedding vows and rinas Omeaa at his alma mater 11 "°" 1a11 10 r11o • wr1nen ,..,._ .acw.r ._ 11, H; Uw 1n4 V.i'f f> "' ' Wltt'Oln IOICll l11M. ~ c.'M'Wlf m.r l'1u RM;rore the Rev. Sylvester Caliror!lia State University, .,. .. i.rec1 !:.iZ :n:-~: . PUBLIC NOTict • P"~IC NQ.IICE 0 Byrne. Northr1dge, where be was !J.ra~111ne dl11h1tn "" .,,...ir. · ff;, . Burt Twilegar or Newport selected for ''Who's Who in ~ --'• di! .. cwllldy, "<lllN . SLP.1...u ,· IUPUlfO• COii•! 0 '-l'MR. d ' II -'• •"-"' ,_., com. ...i -" SUPlfttOll COU•T 01' 'nil" ITA'!"l 01" CALll'CIRtllCNl Beach an Mr.ahdMrs.An-Amer1can Co eges and°'""' reliet ...... , .,. .,....,.. by STAT•o.-uul'O•Nia'°" ...-'t;csu111rTCWOIAMN. lb J H Is.. U . ltl '' IM'-' ... -. ... ,.., ony . ope 0 Im! are mvers es. ti ..... to ..-: "" """"'...:: TMI" COUNTY 01' OllAMOli --..OTICS 'OI' MU11011• Ofl PaT1noM • r...-y lol .. •,..""'"•· Y" ...... ea o• .. -:;.~~ 01' P•TITIOM l'O:OIA.TI 01' Wll.L ANO fOlt .. "' ......... , .. .,.., " ' L T•ITAMl"fllTARY .....-. if...,, NY M 11111 • l'O•PrtOUillO••WILLAfllOl'O• E ... IH£LEHl!"£\IERSOH ti-. Lln•RS TfttoU!l•MTa.•Y OKMMCI 1 , ' o.1tC1 Oc:t. t. ltu. E 1 1 •It o I (; tt AR LI! S L · NOTICE IS MEJlll:BY 01\IEN l111I WILLIAM e. St. JQMM, Cwt allOOllHOUSEll, ,lft., 0.CUltG. JOHN '<HARLI$ SMOLLEN lle1 JUN H Dr P. It.~~ NOTICE II H£1t1!8V G'IVliM th•l ' Ofiosco e.'" IM•1t1.T D. RIS~MMl . ROGICEll NATIONAL SANK 1111, llltO Mref" • polltlo" lff Pro•tt ol Wiii •.... ~ .,... ____________ .;..:.::::..::::::.::.:-:.r.:.:::..:~---l l7G 4. ._... •1. rt 11 a Pt1lll111 tor Probltt of WIU end ...... l1w.ct ol LIUff1 Tt~Y 'ffillilll~ iiiiiiilror I• 1111/Pttl"6111,, r•t•r•nco I• wfllcl\ ,...._, M2-1Ull o lht pt~::'tn•• '''''~'' 10 -.111c11 Is ."!iii• f0'''ill'11Wrii11rittw!.,.,..;;,.---l----I f'lllHCMI Ill Pro....... Pl .. I• •d t l •t'Pltr Otrt!t wllrl lllCI 11111 1111 tlrn1 · •nCI Pll<I 01 ht•rln1 Aries ~·K ~~Aged ~: . '' ... #"' ••• ; ~ lOAN RIVERS , ~ Yofl know ' yo u 'r e ·' . . wia.c old . • ' ... when you get winded ·~hile .brushing your teeth .{.when the only way you • !<an get men to ra n at your eel is by gluing a hundred Uar bill 'to euch or your ·~hoes . . :, .. ,when you rind you need . • Supp-hose bra ~ •.. when after yoa get it all ~~ether, you realize you'd 1;,,do bettei.: if you ,took it all ~apart ;,: ··- JOAN RIVERS -.;· .. when you arc J,lrateful that wrinkles don 't hurt ... when your a ppendix scar hits your kn ee ... when the rirst Ume yo1,1 act your age your husband cal11 an ambulance Roger and Madeline Walke Hoist flag at their chapel which may turn Rhine . Channel into sea of matrimony. ... when the only pill you take each day is a vitamin pill ... v.•hen a rortune teller . reads the lines around your eyes ... \vhcn the doctor who lif- IC'd your f11cc get!li a hernia Newlyweds Adrift .. \vhc n your croy,·sfect ByGA RY GRANVILLE nl'ed orthopedic shoes °''"' 0.11, Pnt1 '"" . . \\'he n yo11 reach the ngc . The day may be near \\here you knO\Y a ll the an· wh e n we 11 ·dressed S\1·crs. but no one C'\'Cr bridegrooms wear deck hothers lo ask lh c questions shoes and bridal gow ns . wh<'n lhr hones on your come equipped y.•ith built-in X-r:ay!l<"omcoutycllo"'cd cle,•c rl y disguised lire .. when you 1·un out "' jackets. bre3th just blow ing into Or, merrymakers prone your huslinnlrs car to tying ti n <"ans on e mbar· .,.u'h<'n you begin lo ha,·e rasscd ne1vlywcds' car sex rantasics about Gnbby bumpers may ha ve to settle 1-la)·cs for strapping water noat.s ... 11·hcn ino;tcacl or ~la:t o n the r ear o f cabin Fa<"tor you USL' ~tra ight cruisers. f\rmt onc Possibly touching off a \\"ht·n 1our t•irc11lation trend lo marine-flavored ht•cOmcs sO s hot I ha1 1\ hen v•cddini;:s i! the opening or a you cross ~·our ll·~s. ;-.·oln' dockside wedding chapel in ;lrm i::ocs to l'lf.'e p Newport Bcae'h ·s Canncp- \1· hr j vou .!Iii in " Villa~c . t'o~k.in!!C'h:ii.ranfi i'un'lg1·t T1vo bo at l a nd in~s il~oin~ leudit1g frQm the Rhine .. 11'ht•n ·~n u hrC':tk a t:hannc l to the c hapel nngcrnai111nd h;11·e I~ put it enable wedding parties to into a r;1st either snil or pilot :i motor .. . 11·ht•n ·' uu ll!t't out or lau nrh 10 thf' ceremonies JhP sho\1cr ;inct you'rt• glnd Lanrllubbc r romantics lhr mi rror j!I fogged up and ruture mother-in-laws 11·hcn 1·011 r ml nct reels can romc i.l nd i:::o through 11ke· 18 und" .1<111r hody rt•els the vlllnge streets by more like 108 nnd ~·ou sudden!~· convent ionul means. 1-ca li1.(I tht1t ~·ou h:t\'(' your During the ceremony, O\\'n bu! ll·in tft•ncro1I ion 1?81> how('\'er, like the bride a nd ... \\'hen ~·0111· l'~'C:J :11·c ~n groom they'll be ~lliingout shot that you can·t £'\'Cn lnrge windows overlooking -1-eadthe nbfi,·r . and so hn\'e the tn\or,ul channel. no idc;1 th:1t 1ou '1·c J,lro\\'1ng Th1ni,:s 11·crc not ~1lways •lid ! uotes makes Plltlt:>AY ·in the 1•,•pft1~1a...,w1"1~.t'I UFFELL'S 'UPHOLSTERY 112t H.,._. llvd. l;.ost. Mr..-S41·0lSf so romantic Ul the Lafeyette The antique fixtures still Avenu e watcrrront address. in the building make it Until recently, the aged "very romantic ," Mrs. building was the poshly Walkesayswitha smile. decorated sales ofrice or a s·he likes the slogan, boat brok erage fi rm . "wedding on the Rhine," Earlier, it served as a but is reluctant to adopt it sallmaker 's loft. because the unknowing -The peaked building '>l.'as might think it means over· origi nally a sin a ll fish can-seas nuptials. ncry, according lo village "Not everyone knows folklore. there's a Rhine Channel in But no w U nitarian NewportHarbor,"shecon· minister Roger Walke and ~es. his wire. l\1adeline, are co n-Neither or the Walkes had verting it to a y,•cddinit_a bayside chapel in mind chapel. when they began the ir The rerurbishint;, is still search ror a "nice" location under "''ay but already one 8 rew "''eeks ago. couple has been married "But once 1 spotted the and 10 have asked ror rescr-·'for lease' sign in the win · valions. dow l knew we'd round PQrt or Lhc cha1>el's ap-whal we were looking for," peal. accordin g to ftlrs . says Mrs. Walke . Wnlke, is the· large wharf- d eck art·a for bayside receptions . If the 1vcather isn't all it should be ror a wedding celcbr_a tlo n. the rccepli9n can be moved in side. A crnon'S SPORTSWEAR Pllbll>lled Or•noe COf\I Diiiy • m • tr " ' tPlt Yme ·~s bltll HI for Nowemblr ()(-r II, 11, !S, •rid NCl'lftllblr 1. lt14 ""'' Ill• !!me •lld Sllltt 01 flfilrlll9 s 'ltJ• •I ,.:to·; 111 In tM t-troan ~' Ill Mrnt hM been 111 tor NoW!mOlr · · · · ·· 1------------s 1'" •I f •JO In\ 1.t'-11>o1 courlrotm of Ott1rt1111nt No. i ol ••Id court, PUBLIC NOTICE ·, DtPirt'"fnt No'." 1 ,, i•l d cturt, 11 100 c1 wrt Ctnl•t or•.w• W11t, In 11 1110 Cl11lc Ctn\•• 6r(v1 Weil, In tilt City of 5.1"9 An.t, 0.1 IGr"'--I 4lt1' 1111 Otr of s.n11 ,.,.., Ctl~lorni.. O.ttO 0t1011tr U; !'''· IUPl!'l.0. COUl.T Ofl Ttt• Dttrtl Octobl!r 16,. 1t7f; WILLIAM t.. tt JOlt11t~ STaT! 01' CALU'OIMIA FOi ___ WILLl4M t:. _!!0Mll, -JCNOI IE~~'Jo~~-, , ·-. --nil (OUNTY-0..--0RA"G~ OlunlT CJtrlf HIJ W.$k.,... Dri;:J s.IM tfJ "'-.MIMI .J JAMtEI •· WILNl!LM "I"'' • llOTtea tw MllMllllO O!" PetlTIOlll lllllOl!:L & ANDl!l.50N HI•-'-...... CltlteniY ,,... Travels •OI "RMATI Of" WIU. MO Ha ••_,.TM llOAOWAY Tl! (1141 '41.._ By SYDNEY OMA.RR LITT••• TllT4MnTARY' :UllTA ....... CALll'OllNI• A ..... •Y ..,., ~-.....,_ AR IES (March 21·April e .. -. et 1u1E s. aLUOOtil, o.ce.1~1 · P11111111t1d Ort1191 C•••t Dolly Pllof I 'fO. . .i ---.........., ..,., PllllllMr ~rll,1','H,1974 :J1$S.1t 19) : Accent s . on your MOT ICE IS \4ElllEIY OtVEM ""' 'P\lbl1ilwG Or~ CN~l Dolly Piiot Qc. philosophy, ability to learn. ALllE•T"' E. LOl'MMN .... " .... ~n _,,._,, 1s ,,,. ll:IJ-u PUBLIC NOTICE Travel and roreign :.,.p11~1c1rof'1:., ~.'::....::•----·-·----~~--------------- language may be on agen-'° "" Pfl1"-" rwfennce " whkfl PUBLIC NOTICE NOncE tNv1r111G 111°' h ---'°' fll•tllll' ~ and da. Family member makes ..... !hi ltmt _, .. of ....,,,,.1--==~=-,,====-NOTI CE ts HEREBY GIUE N l ... ,. ea bl l .... -........ Ill ,.,.. Nown'llltr NOTICE Of" AP"OINTMENT W•l•d propo1111 •I ll Ill .... <.el•eO br .r sona e reques . s. "74 ti t :JO iJ,.lft., Ill IM ~ TO l'ILL VACANCY OH '"' CIJy of Ct•I• Mfw II Ill• ofllt• T U ·1 .. o.-1""""' NGI,.,, .. Mid mwt •O.ltD Of' T•WITIQ OI .... Clly Cl•rl •t th• c11, H•lt, A RUS (Apn. 20-May _, '* CM< c...i.r on.. w.u, ..; f1'h b 0111c1t1 H\lt:.,.t thlt c;.or1t 11 F•lr ori ..... co\•• ¥•w. C.lffornl• • 20); Partner, mate wants to IM c1t(o1 s...... ""'· c111~ G. Logan ••••oe•" 1r1m !I'll ll••ro ""'11 "'"-r o• n ;oo •.m . .,.. ,..._ disc~'. fl.SC&I matters. Be Do~W-IU.'"!: >IL. >,.m_._ OI T•u•tHI tf llMI ttunll"'91on IN~lil 15, lt1•. •I •11/Ui 11'"' the, wilt )w ..,... -.,---Utilon Hill'I kMoO! Olotrld, !oh ..... loll Ol'lntO publicly "'"° re1d eloltd In "'"' realistic. ITU11oir'A'llo'l':.111.ll : ... ¥!no tll9rl IUICI '" .... •llK\hoJ Wto. Count.Ji ~ ...... ,., FU•NISHING ALL ~. $efl4tmlltr U, lt1'. 1.ABOR, MAT IE Ff I A LS, EQUIPMENT. GEMINI (l\1ay 2l·June ::.!.''L"::."1111 ,1., FurUwr. on 5-lut .. ,, Cklotllt n, ,,,., TRANSPORTATION ANO SUCH OTHER 20): Emphasis is on area of ,., 111i1 Mt-Htl """ Heltn E. 0111• IMri. JoMlltl Ollttl FACILITIES "' M"Y llE REQUIRED .,,_ ltl' """"""" .... aapoln-provllltlwo Uy kl IM Baird FQA THE IN$1:ALLAllON 0 F IR-chart related to agree.men-. P.UI:;:.,, &. ..... COltt o.lf'f' ""°'' 01 trullc•• of Ille Munl lllfllA lltM:fl RIGATION SYSTEM AT t IE w IN IC LE ls, pubU~relations, special dcttMr 11, 1 .. 34, lfl'• .... 4 UnlOI' Ht9h $tltool Dlllrltt to llU ... PljRll, •THLET1C FIELDS WEST OF ~IKNICJ"" Mr. Lo.-n•1,rtllll'lltloll. JUNIPERO DRIVE. alliances -and marria11:e. PUBLIC NOTIC"" F11•1hlr, unle1s • peUtltn t1lllnt tor A ••• ol p11n1 , •P•<lt1c1t1on1 1ncr CANCER (J 21 J I 11:. • \PICIM tlKllon, <onl1lnlltg • Mllfklerl' ollltr ~ontf1c 1 documtnU m1y ~ ob-une • U Y _.1 .... ni.rnDlr of lltn11wre1. II fll1Cf flt' IM Ulntf in tl>t ofllc• ol Ill• Otp,,rl-nl 22): Employm-enl matters . .. offlc• OI Col.NII, 5.u111rlllt•l'lltrtl ol Sc!ICIOI• "' Ltl1urt s ..... ,,,, ,, F1lr Drive, tend lO dominate -and NOYIC• lO Cl.•DITOlll b' Nowernblr II, ltll twllflln JO ders CMll Me st. C1Uftrnla. llllOll r1<1lpl l~l.fllf.."ciiYIJiia2ri llto\ I 1111 d110 al lip• P'0¥11lon1I IP• ti •·nonreh1n01blt I•• ti 16.60, If _ health factor is in picture, THI-COUNTY op O.:M~I poln1rn1nl), 111• ._,1101111~111 01 Mr1. bldclers req'"'s1 p11n1 •nd Hll'tffkiltlon' loo · NO.,.,..,. Dine w..11bl'orne1UtcUtt. bt m111e·d, 111e <11••9• will bt 17.}0 · .. ~ 0.ttd Cklablr 11, n14 llO!r s.eL LEO CJ uly 23·Aug. 22): 1E111i. of LEOttA•o G. ,...,,......... "°" Shlri•rn.n, Eet11 blO s11,J11 tie,., • .,.°" uw ..,._.., Favorable lunar aspect ~i[ IS ttEllEaY GIVEN >to IM Pr'M1dtnl form •nd Jn Ille m1nntr prtwlcllO In · · d · h cr~llorl of tlll .i:o.... ~ dttHlnl ecr.ra ol ltwslet• Ille coM••<I documen.u, •llCI i.11•11 tie- C 0 Inc I es' n 0 w w It !NI •M pe-1\1¥1"9 dM!nt ..... ".. w111.i.m J. Situ., EG.O. •tomo1n!eO b¥ • Ct•lllltd •• Ulf>ilr'• speculation, children, af-1n. 1114 ~nt or1 ,_.,... hi llM AtU~ !otcre11rr It cllec k or • 1110 0011d for not 1 •• , r ·' f h tfllfl\. wttt1 !hi _...., ~ l" Botrd OI ,,.,,..,.,, . t111n 10 P•rctnl ot 111• •mount ot airs o earl. ,... olftct OI tM d.,. o1 the 1boo. _Pwlllhl'ltd Orin .. C•••t D1i1y r;1o1. 111e bid , rn •O• P•r1010 to 1111 Clly VIRGO (Aug •. 23-~ept. ""''111ec1 '°""'·.,. 10 Jll'IH4f'lt ._,,, w11t1 0c1-• 11, ,,,. J111>1.14 o1 Colt1 """'"· IN r!KtiWr'I' _,.,., II 1111 """' I NOTICE IS FURTHER Gl\ll!"N 11\11 22>: Red tape would delay_ ~ 11 '"' o111ct"' .,.. '"°'"''' PUBLIC NOTICE th• cny co11nc11 01 '11ld c11 , "• s basic operation. Be positive WILi.ARO M. REtSt, 1"1 "'"'C:iif! :s' r.re1o1ore ••••oll111td • ..,. ..... u1n1 ••t• Slt<I. Svlll Sl'O. LM ........... "·· t ILl'-J4U'f ..... Ktle ol wiQe• In ll<Otdaf>u 11111!1'1 concerning details.· :.-: ... ""!:"\:...!° ~ ~~ SU .. l"RIOll COUllT 01' fNIE , .... It b• PillO I~ Ill• <On'llrutlloA LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22): 111111111 111 1111 Hlltt " Miii dlcldlftl, STAT• 01' C"Lll'0•111" 'Or 01 tllt •"""' tnu11eo lm prow-e-n11. wllfll" '-" ~ lfW tlll llnt..... TNl!COUMTYOflOR4HOI" Tllilt MI O •ltt •"4 K11te ••S ldopled Accent On the testing or !Ion ot IN• llOlk'I. J · Me.A·llW.0 bf 1,,. Clh CounclL br AtoolwtlOfl No • l'deas .~'ou get opportunity DtlldOctobtrt,1'71. NOTICE Of' HEAlllHC OF ~IETITIOll , •. ,on .... 1111 O•y 01 J•11u1r, ltl•. l HELEN llASHOR FO• P•o••TE 01" WILL AMO fOA .... o Is on Ill• In Ill• olllt• ol lht to try , to perform . E .. cVll'btoftllllWOlofrhl Ll"TTE•STEST,.MEllTA•Y cr1r Cler• 01 \lid cu,. Tll1l 1•id SCORPI,,, (Oct. 23·Nov. WlLL4\'lr:..nr;ttz:•...... IElltlt °' HILDAIEO MAUNE. Dt<l;n. role ... o itlll II herein reltrrttl lo U eo. •"d adoPlld In 1111 ~ notice •• tllouoll 21 ): YoU find what costs are l.:1 :=. ~.':'~~ m P<IOll CE is ttEAEBY GIV£H 11'1111 fully •llCll comp1e1e1, ''' 10.ih n.r,111. b 'Id ' . ct Tth llU) •n-nu "RTHUA J. W15SMATH n.1 filed ..... ft Ill~ llltl ••IO \(lie, 1i1 •doptoo tty in\'Olved in Ul 1n g proJe · """""" i.r: E•eatlrlx 1 Jlllllo n for Ptob•t • 01 Wiii 111d ••.•O re•ohHlon , Ii 1111d1 1 p1r1 al Facts are made available. Plilllli!Nd Or•nge coast O•llT Piiot tor l•111111c1 of L1111r 9 T1~t•rn•n11rr ttil'I notk• or re11rtnc:1 . SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22• OtfOOtr 11, 11, U. Howtll'lbtr 1. It!~ to 111, 111t1111ntr. 'tfertnc• to wlll<ll Tiii Ct II Ir• t It r ... an. h• Ille :.mol~ 11 midi lo'r lur1,..r 1•rt1cul1ri, 111<1 Ptrlorm•11ct ti tho •••I • n d Im· Dec 21 ). Lunar cycle is 111•1 1111 ~lmt tnd p •<• •• l'll••lng PN ... ,,,..,,H. (O!lfOrm ID '"" Ulltr Codi-. · 1-~----------!flt 11mt n11 bltn t•I tor Nov.trnlltr of lh1 Sl•I• ol C1lllt•nl1 Ind oll'llr such lhal you 'make new PU UC s, 1'''· ot t ;JO •.m., 1" in. courtniorn ..... of,,.. s111t o1 c..111om111 1PP11<1111e slarts in new directions 8 NOTICE · 01 Otporlmtnt No. l 01 1110 co11rt , ttier1t11, •Ith 1111 11<c111t1011 only 01 •I 100 Clwlc Ctll lt • Ori Ye WeU,•in 'luCll verll llons •t m•Y bl rtquh td' CA PRICORN (Dec. 22· SUl'l!•to:L;: Ot' '"' tlll City ot $tnt1 "n•. C•llloml.\. w"de' 1111 11Mcla1 .-a1u111 1111nuont 10 Jan. \9 ): The.tiler or other ITATli o• CALi•OlllllA Po• Dt-Octomr 1~ 1•1t. w111t11 11roceeolna1 h1t1w11oer ,,.. •••en r . Tt!E COUll1T Of1-ORAlllll WILUAM •· M JOHP<I. 1'10 •111<11 ~•¥t nol blen SWP1rH0tc;t form o entertainment "'· MllN COurlty c11r1o by'"' pra~1.1on1 ot 010 L•bor Code . should be s h ared with llOTICI o• NEAlllNO 01' "IT!TtO" PAUL,KASTIN•S. Prt11ren<• lo 1•tior 11'1111 Ill 01"'" Diil'( ' , , ,.OR "IOIATR 0, WILL 411D FDA JllN0"1KTIWALKlll' f'I lhl INMtr "'9Wldtcl Dy llW. ram1(y. Be Cntertainedby tl· Llnl!l.I TE$T4MlllTAIY Hit DUPONT OltlVI SUITE I Ho bill 111111 01 to111 hl1r1d unlll\. I us ion Without ra \ling Victim 0,!!l0•1/~l1, c1~RL .. w,.,",'-',,'"o'i·v°"<., ••~,· llYIMa, CALl l'CIRMIA " ii l1 m1ctt o" I bll!ll form lum)Wd " " " "'" .... . by Ill• Clly •I fio1I• Mltl, •nd '" to wis bful thinking. UMllEATA lllE1"1A >tL"W~~. 1!10 A'*-'f' •: Ptllll•M• ,,.... 111 •ccor111nc1 wun ,,.. ,,,....1.,...1 lftC-... LAMlllEITA It. HLAWllK. 111• Of... I AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feb. 111tc1 111r1;,, "! 0tHU., lat PreO.hr -:t Pub11u11d Or1110• co111 0.11, Pl~ Of'OPOW roqu1reme~11. r · d h . wm '"'° !tr ·-~ "' u""" r .. 1 •. D<lobtr 11, If, U, lt74 JIM.If Eich bldd1r rn wll bot 11c1"wo •nd 18 ): A r1cn as romantic .._11ry '° 111e 11111'*""· "'"'._•to ··· ~~11t1tc11•r1twlrtt111T .. w. l . ·0 'th t WPlidl It "*'° 1tt"""""' ttrttclll~ ICNO Tiit City cow11cu •f 1111 City 11r no ions ; cnJ y WI OU -11111""' '""" -rlCll OI ""''"' PUBL TICE Cati ......... ~.-. , .. , ...... ·--··· · 1 b I' . be IM ~ 11&5 belrl M for Nowtrltlli' -•• T" .. •• necessar1 y e 1ev:1ng -s. 1914 " •=• •.rn.. '" n. ,__ 1ny • •" lllcb. curious, not gulhble. One or O.O.NllMllt No. l o1 ,.kl ~. .-1CT1T10t.1s au11M1ESS !11-"·Pll'-' It 111111 CM< c"""" .,,._ w-· I ,.,. ..... trATIMENT . .CllvCl•rll who has ambi guous atUtude ,,.. ci" .. s-10 ,.,.., c•1~ .... n n. to11owteo -'''°" 11 **19 111n1-Pll"bltintc1 0r1n0t: c ... 1 -0.11~ "uo1. would like to create con· ~ Octobtt is. tt1• •: °''°°" '" u. "" ..,,, WILLIA"I -· II Jottll; NEWPO•T BEACH HAIR COMPANY troversy. c_,., c11rtt ,,,, v11 OH-rt•, s11111 l. N1w"" "AUL. l'IASTlllOI, te C.111 PISCES t Feb. 19·March JANOf'S11T " WALXl"lt ;.11·0. 11~r(ow1. m11 v....,. SL, 20) A t · b' . nu °"""' Ori•• ~lll1e a : cccn 1s on am 1l1on, '"'"'· C)lllwlli• Ll9llflll Mleull, C••lf. '1•11 I l. h' 'th tho · Tth l:J>.USI Tiii~ bu•l11111 Is <onGuclfd llr •n re a ions 1ps w1 se in MltnltTt ..,, Prtrr-.r lndlwllkott. position lo ··pull &trings." Publllllld Dr1n1t c.>ut tl111y Pttct, Joe o. Rodrl9111r ''ou <1 rc givlln addillonal 0ci1.c11r 17• 1" "'· "" ;IU2·1' tnls 't•t1m1n1 "'' 11110 .. 11h 111e C•wlllf Cltrll, ol O••nl• Ctwnlr on ·com pensation for accepting PUBLIC NOTICE Ott-• n. 1t1•. added responsibility. · 11 -hr. sole to fight' Inflation! 1""-,"'•"""''""''°"=-' ~.,~ .. ~.~ .. ~. --MAM• STATlMl!Ml 54 stores kick off T11t "'i."' .,.._ ... '''"' ~ .. , PUBUC NOTICE tonight 7·10 pm with CONTIEMl>o.A•'I' DCSIOll, 1St• .... Qrl'ft, CerbM ff! #M ftm rooonlight sale suf'\br Mv111 ... M. "'--1ue 1111t1 Drl..., """ Ctt"'t .. , 1i111r f'HH savings. Conlinues 11ewt "· P,..,,. 1na ... , °' .. '°'°"' ... Mir "'" Sat. 1 o am to 6 pm T1111. ws1,,_ 1.1 CONMIH w • t11n11d ... _. at Huntington Center. ,.....1 ... M. HtH Tllll lltltllw<\1 •• , flltll 1fl'llfl -.,. Beach '& Edinger at c-"' c1-.~ 11 or.., COllll•Y oc"Mltt 1. 1tl4, • • the San Diego-Fwy. •Jm• PuOlll.hecf Or.,... Coal! Dlily 1'11111 j--~-'----------jCklc*t II, It JS. Hll'I. I. ltl4 .)111.7\ w, a. If .JUttM " l c.twlllr t.11rl Mlt ttt<ollklo Ott\ 01 lllt llttrd ol S..--YI"°') o1 Or-c-1.,, (.tlll!ltfll<1 R, J,.l'lf Ale•~ °'""'' l\lblhtled~ ... ~OlllyPltot,~•1•"U."'' • -·-. -I ' " ' ' ·- • ... ..• I -. .. ' Frid!Y,0clober18.1974 DAILYPILOT •:J Oakland's. Magic Number Co Illes Up 3-2 OAKLAND <AP) -The L.os !'ngeles Dodgers brought out the-best 1n the Oaklund A'll ;\~tit turned out. the best "'US good t11oogh to "'in the 1974 World St•riei1 . "'~cy needed a Jillie humility," ~aid Sal Dundo, and the A's guve it to lht!m by ~'hl1>ping the Dodgers, J -2. Thursd<1 y. niMhl to "'in their third str<.1ight worl~ title, this one in f!\'C uneusy gi:1mes. _lrl four or the five gumes the win· n1ng 5l'Ot(' \ViJ S 3-2, "'ilh the A's \\!'in- ning three. And 'in each ga me or tht Series the'\ fusing ·team scort'<i tv.·o runs. The season ended ofriciaily v.·hl!n O;iklund relief slur Rollie fo'i,'!~rs col· ... Jared pinch-hitter Von Joshuu's hl~i ng grounder und hopped In joy as hc threw out the runner. · Actually , the Dodgers Y:ere ·dcud but didn't know it v.•hcn they popped ofr against the A 's btrore this bi zarre ~cries sturtl.!d. They tulled the I\ 's doubtful chum- pions, despite the fuel thut they hud v.·on t Y.'O straight baseball titles. ··t\fll.!r they bcut Pitts bur_gh in the Nationu l Lcugue playoffs , the Dodgers said ttley w<:rcn't impressed by us," said Joe lludi, who hit the win· nipg home run 'fhursday night. "\Ve il . they hu\'C all winter to think about It.'' ·lleggie JuC'k So n . the' mos t emotional of ull the d yna miC' A's, y,:ouldn't gloat o\'t:r the 'ob\'iousl.v sv.·cet ,·ictory. But you got some idea how he fl'lt "'hen he ll nnouneed : .. \V e'rc the champs ... I don't llavc to suy onything more.·· lie also thought thut the Dodgers \\'ere a ~ttcr team tha n the~ i:;hqv.:ed, hut ob,·iously not good enough to bcut Oaklund. .. I ulwuys knew that v;e were a greut bullclub, if no one else did," i>aid J ackson. ··r knew we weren't going to lose. There's no tt-<tm in baseball that can bcut us four or sc\·cn games. "As for th!! Dodgers. they made mistakes and \\'e didn't. 1·hal's v.·hy \\•cllt•;it lhl'm-:-\Ve ca.pitulized on~ op· portunities. \V e used oor,expcrien(·c. 'fhe DudJ,!ers \v ere loo anxious . They're a young und emotional learn and they'll learn from thiio \\lorld Series experience. believe me.'' \\l hut the l>OdJt.•rs leurnt.od rron1 the 1974 \Vorld SL•r1eK is lhul )·ou don't give the /\ ':; u brcuk und expect to get pv.•uy 'o\'ilh it. "\Ve nl!vc r win them tusily," said 0:.1klund second baseman Di ck Green. the de f ens Ive s t..i r or the Series. Vida Blue. s till looking for his first . \Vorld Series \'ictory. w,._gi\'cn ..in c..irl y lcad but couldn'rliold it. A Dodgers error set up Sal H:.indo's :.arrificc fly in the ri(!,t inning, then H.ay Fosse hit a mist:.ike pitl·h frum !lodgers ;.ice Don Sutton into lhl• left rlcld seals for a 2·0 Oakl:1nd le;id. It sluycd lhaJ v.·ay until the :->ixt h. \\hen the Dodgers tied the ga1nc• \\ilh * *' * * * * Ends Dodgers ' Hopes Buckner: I'd Try For Third Again OAKLAND !UPI) -Bill Buckner knew it 'o\'Oo ld ta ke two periect relays to get him a t third, so he chanced it. It didn't work that way Thursday f)ighl and "'ith it "'cnt the Los Angell!!i Dodgers' hopes for sur\'i\·al in the 1974 \Vorld Series. ' .. \Vhen I saw the ball go through 4 Billy) North. I knew it would lake· tv.·o perfect throws to get me," the Dodger 1ertrielde r said. "Bullhey did it." \Vith the Dodgers trailing 3·2. Buckner led off the eighth with <i hit to center. The ball got pas t North and Buckner kcet on g_oin_g. But Reggil! J ackson retrieved the ball. fi red lo second baseman Dic k Green, "'ho r elayed to third to nuil Buckner. ··saJ t Sa ndo) tagged · me on ·the head.'' Buckner said. ;,Uc had the bag "'ell blocked. reeled him. "No. 1 \\'OU ldn'I think so," said /\lston. in defense or his ace reliever. ··ritarsha ll is a \'eleran. Al l he could do v.·as s tand the re and '":iit. I doubt th1.1t the wuit had anything tu do' with what happened next." Neither Alston nor catcher Steve 'l'eager thought the dclay had much influence. . Alston, proud of his young team tha t won the National League pennant, ex· plained the World Series defeat in part by saying: ··They've never been , there before. There's a certuin part of this game you can't gel from talking. There are a re w thin gs you have l9 get on the playing field that nothing but experi ence will gi\·e you." lhl' ht·lp of lheir IY.O best 1·un· produl'cr:. of 197~. Jimmy \Vynn h1l 11 s:.icriril'~ fl.v und S te \'t' <•ar\'l') sin~ll•d in the :,erond run and lht· Dodgl•rs IJUI · lt'tl c \'ell "Ith the A's al 2·2. 11us (jUil'll•d lhi.! ('UJ)UCllY (·ro\\'d of 1 "19,347 fans al the Oakland t'oli.scum for a \\'hi l<· --but they did n't ~1 :1,\' th<.1t "·ay for very long. In lhl· next inning, Hudi p:1rked an inside fastlJull fron1 l\1ursh:1ll 11110 the left He ld seals . -. 'l'hl'n a Ion.a: ca n1e Fing,•rs "I \\'US told that if \II.' J.:11\ lhL· le:.td, I'd be in !he game." said Fingt•r:-i lie came in. all l'ight. l1u! \1a-.n'I his usual ~elf. 'fhis \1·as l'\'ldt·nt \\ht•n he gavt· u1> ;1 hard siil~!t· 111 llt1l'kt11·r ll'lld1ng ofr tht· eighth inrun.a: Tht-hall i.:ot through t·,·nll·r fit-Ider Bill North .ind lluckm•r uttl•n'\plt'(l In mukl" third pn the error but 1''U!'- nuiled on a beuuty ut a rl•la~· tbro\\ rro1n Jat'kson to Urel'n to Bunde. Green cxpcCll•d the i!KGrt?SSi\'1' Buckner to run. but knew ht hid hirn "before I thrt>W the bi.1 11." Dando n101de the tag "'ilh a floutishing :i'o\'ceµ or his glove ha nd. Fingers ''':dke d the d;.1n~ero11 ~ \Vynn but J!OI uul of the inning b,\' i:rl ting <_;arvey ;ind Joe Ferguson on 11.v b:.tll!'o. l"ingt·r:-; lhl'll got lhl• Oodgers l ·:!·:l in lhl' ninth and th1· ;\'s ber;1mt! tht· r1r!5t t1«1m In b;1 :,l•ball history :-.tt1 C'l' lht• !'\1·\V York \"ankt'l'S lo v.·in lhrt't" st 1~:11 ih-t \\'orld Serie.!o: 'fhe Yanks "·011 11\"l' ~lrai {!hl Jt nne point and four :H :1 notht·r . ··~leek. if I had to do ii again, I'd ~'-"""-1:7::":"~--pl ay·it the·sa me way).> Third base coach Tom Lasorda said Buckner made the right decision. "No one has to be ashamed," said \Vynn . :'They wanted a pennant in Los Angeles and "'C gave it to them. Everybody did a ~grearjob· and-I'm - f}roud-. -• UPIT1 ........ 1 REGGIE JACKSON IS DOUSED WITH BEER, SHAVING CREAM. SQOrts in Bric-f Babashoff Nominated For Sullivan Awar-d \\' 1\Sl-l INGTON-Fountain ValJ ey·s Defending champion Ben Crenshaw Shirley Babashofr is one o~ eight per·. 'shot a 67 over the first 18 holes. aloni:: sons nominated for the annual Sill· v.·ith .Mike Hill. Bob Eriakson. Bobby li,·an a\\'ard. the 'highest national Grecn1\·ood . Uob Goalby, and Bob trophy an amateur athlete can v.·in . Stanton. l3ab11shoff. a gr:ldualc or Fount~in Lee Tre\•ino. the number thrl'e \'alley lligh ;ind no\\. a student at money "'inner on lhC' 1 97~ tour, \\'US (iolden \V L•s t College. set v.·orld knotted at 68 "'ith 12other pla)'er~. reeords in t he 200 and 400 meter freestyles in a recent s"·immin.e: meet \\·ith East Gcrmany .. Others no minated include boxer llo\\·ard Oa\·is. s~·ncopation SY•immer Gail Johnson. dj\·er Christine l..ocke. S\\·lmmer J ohn Naber. basketball player Da,·id Thom~, long jumper l\lartha \V atson. 800·meter record· holder Ric hard \Votrlhuter. The \\·inne r \\'ill be a nnounced during the midd\c of l\1areh. TnpiP SPPOHd 1.0Nt~ BE ,\Cll -Alun 'f ;ipie of :\t>\\'l>Orl fil«lch fi rl'd I hc lo\\'esl round of thl' tou rn a men I to date 1'hu rsday. a si:<·unde r·pa r GG . to s h;n·t• second place \\'ilh toul'in.g pro G:1 r,\' S11ndep; in lht· S22.SOO Lnni;: Rc;1ch Qul'en l\l;ir,\· opcn ~ol f tourn;i1nenl at Hl'l'reation P:1rk (;oJf COU l'S(• herl' Rarr'.I· .Jarrkel \\'ith a fiS :1nd Rot> His(·h 1\·ilh a r\7 . shar('d !he le:id al 1:16 aftf'r the rirst l\\'O rounds. Thc'.I· "·erl' tl1lC' strokt• in front nf Tapi<' and San· de rs. :\I 138 \\'ere l)on ll:1ndcrson. Dil'k l\lcClenn and first round ro·leadcr D:i1·e Ne\\'QlliSI. Pa••·'"' 10 .flc•.t>it•ft? P.IEXTCO CIT,. -l\1 exi<'O ThursdR'.1' officially offered lo hold Ilic sf.\·enth Pnn Amcric:in (iamP,!'i in October of 1975. ' l\'lrxico's offer \\·as l':1blcd Thur- sd.iy to .Josc Deracasa of V'coe7.ucln. prcsident of lhc l';in 1\meriean s1:iort!S" oritaniz;llinn by !\I ;11io \laz<1ucz. br<id of 1 hr !\It•XiC'll ll Cl l.r nlJ1ic comm ill ec. \·at.qu·t>7. !'aid h e h:td b-c-en :.1l1tho1izcd by l\'1 exican preside11t Lui~ Eche\·l'rl'i:1. Ki119 A·lfl"Rlll'<'M LOS ANGELES -Billie Jean King o\·er"•helmed ~lelen Gourlay a nd E\·onne Goolagong defeiitf'd Lesley Hunt in straight sets in quarter fina l!:> matches Thursday ni ght in a Sl00.000 \\°Omen's tennis tourna mcnt . King stopped Gourlay, 6·1. 6·2 and fioolagong defeated ~lunl. her long· time Australian ri\·al. 1r6. 7·5. llM<>ornll Whu SYDNEY. Au stralia Second· seeded Ken Rose."•all survi\·ed t\\'O t ough m a t c hes in the $75.000 Auslr;.1linn indoor tennis tournament Thursda~· l o <1 d v:.ince In the <1u:1rter· fin<il s. ~le derented Brian Fairlil'. 7·6. 6·'1 and then be111 Bob Carmiehael. 1·!i. ·6 .. 1. Roscoe Turner dercatt•d lsmucl to1 Shafei. 6·2, 6·4 in another second· round match and top.seeded J ohn Ne\\'Combe e liminated ~like Estep. 6-l. 7·fi . Fill .. I Tri11111pl1• BARCELONA. Spain ·-.Jaime Fil- lol topped top·Sl'eded Totn Okker. 6·1. 6-3 ;,ind mo\·ed into the qua11eriina l ~ of the S\}<lnish Opt.•n tennis tour· nament Thursday. t;uille1·mo Vi l;1s also \\·as upsC'I \\'hen Franroil'l J<1uffr<'t bc;it him, 7·5. 6-1, but the sceond :ind third sceds. Bjorn Bor~ and llie NaslaS<'. ad\·an· ('l'rl. Borg c liminalC'd IJ:ins Karr. 9·7.li·4 :111d Nusla!l<' S\\'t'J)I p;1~1 Lilli Pinni;r. r .. 1. fi-2. ··tt took two ·outstanding thro"·s.·· tasorda said. ··~le was coming on his own but he had the play in front of him.'' J im Wynn followed \\'ith a walk so inste.ud of ha ,•ing t"·o men on base and nobody out. th~ Dodgers· threat died. !\lanagcr Walter Alston didn•t faull Buckner either. ··Jt's one or those plays "·here. if you make it. it's a great pla~," ht· said. ··1r you don't it's a bad play "\Ve've let out players go all season. \\'e want them lo play aggrcs· sivel~·. ''B.ill just ran into t"·o great lhrov.·s. I \\'ish he hadn't gone. It lurned'out to he a mistake. BUl I \\'Ould rather hU\'C aggressive players and try to e:1lm them dov.1~. It's hard to get players to go the other way.'' ··\Vhal pleased m e \\-'as thc aggres· sivl'ness ... Buckner trying to go to third," s aid !\larshall. "I loved that .. The A's played good baseball and 1\·on. It was good for us to see good fundamenta l baseball." Buckner also was invol\'ed in a six· minute delay in the se\·enth inning \\'hen he became the target of missile· hurling fans in the \eflfield blf'achers. ··1 got hit on the back or the head \\'ilh an a pple ," he said. ··1r they had lhro\\'ll o ne more object do""·n on lhl• field . I \\'US going in Hhc dugout L '!'here's no sense of me get ling hurt. "The fans here never t'Ome out all year and all or a sudden they're /\'s fans:· he sa id or the incident. Ironicall y. on the rirst pitch rilike riiarshcill th re\\' after the delay .. Jue Rudi hit it into the lcftricld stands for \\·hat prO\'Cd to be the v.·inning run. The hon1 er \Vas t he first run gi\'CJl up by !\larshall. \rho refusl•d lo an, s\Vl'r CIUl•stions \rhcthcr the dela.v al·· \.OS ANGELES I & t II Iii A II r Ill 11 1 lOWI 7b 1 I 0 0 (.....,..,j.s~ I 0 1 0 Bu<k°"rll l 0 1 0 """Ille! I I 0 II W'l'M cl 1 o o S.ndo '.Ito J o o G«Wy ID 0 I AJllC-:IOl'I rl 1 0 0 0 Fe•..-rl•01 0AUOl1b J111 C..ylb JO\O('OYl'mtqr>N :J OIO Ru"°'H ~ J 0 0 0 FM,qe.,p 0 0 0 0 wen.trOpf> I 0 0 0 F°'wt ' JI I 1 ....... t 1 0 0 0 OGrt't'ft 1ti J ' 0 • ~pro oooe1u111 2000 Sulklnp 0 OoO :>clomll 0 0 0 I PKIO<t-1111 ' I 1 0 lm.o<~ lb 0 0 0 Ma~•~· 0 0 0 0 Tot•I• 11 I ~ 1 IOI'"!\ 19 l • ] LO'I AftQllr\ Oiii!CiiJ-.00-J CM1c1 ... o 1 Ml ooo 10•--l E-Y••llfr, Norin OP -0•-l•nd 1. toe-t.o~ Ail9elt• •, 0•~1~"0 J. 18 P.otlo<tk, HA-Fo .. t 111, Al'd• !II. S8-Nu11n. C•fnl),tn«'•'-S-&ut•ner, !.F-e..>oo, Wynn, " • • " .. ""'~ ' • ' ' MM>fWU !l,O·tl ' ' ' ' ' "~ 6 2·l • , , ' °"'"' tw.1 01 " ' • • • • Fo-r~ , ' • • • .... F1nqtt< "' ' 1 7l. "' -..1•.:io11, "We scored t\VO runs and that's ilot enough to win a ball game or a World Series. We thought we were a much better hitting ball club but we just <'Ouldn'l play our game and exeC'ule lhe finer ooinls. ·· * fr * Composite Box Score Tht l• .... ·011"• l0"'P0'11t DO• store 01 '"" l•I• WOtl<I !.e'ries: aATllNGSUMIM•Y l.05 AllGELES OOOGER5 -~ llu<kne< II Wym ti c;.r .. , 1b P.c:letek pr·pll Fer911w11 !I·<: ""' Jllf!af!ll ,., Vt•< t C•.tlOtford <l·pf> Mt-•WT!ltn p ~-.. ""'"'"""" p 5"1:10t! p ...... bit~ "' Ouwni119 p °'"''" 0 '""'"' -· roi~s ,l«kjUOI •• CW.111•"910t! .. .,, Rud< ll·lb ,_.lb Fo,w < c.-~ Holl pr,.!b ,,.,..~.11 ,. 7t> Ho111 ...... p F!llllet\ P H""tft b """'" H"'"'' < """"(!Uoll J11> 8 111" p !ul•" • t lllllolltrlliot.,. II 2 1 0 fl 0 fl .11\ 101s·1011 .2so 161l101 7,1fll 211 1 0001 .:111 2 ·111 000 .500 16 1 1 0 0 I 1 .IH !1 1l0000 .116 ••o 01 0 1 .m 110 10 01 .36' ;,110011 .JJJ •OlOOG0 .500 000000 .000 0000100.eoo JOOOltl0 .000 000000 0 .CDI 100000 0.000 00000 00.000 100000 0 ,00 -0000000.000 1~ 11 llo • I f 10 .nt 04KLAMOA'S •b r -2lt :Ml "' rDi •v .. 111•100l .liJ 11l l0GOll .ll>'I 16J10001 .0U 1• l 4 I 0 I ' .1 .. l l•0000 .~11 111•00 1•.m •010000 .m I< I 1 0 0 1 1 .Ul ll100001 .00ll JO?OOO?.W.I 0000000 .000 I 1 I 0 I I ,j(JO 000000 .000 000000.CDI (1000000.000 00000011.000 10000011.000 011000110 000 1011110110000 •OOOOoo·.ooo 111 lfl>)l • Q • I• .111 PITCIUHG SUMMAJIY L'JS it.NGELES M-"W•-•111. 111. """•V>dtl, 0·1 -..i1on. 1·0 °"""'lnq, (I.I ll<e-• -Toi.is Solw: -· M.IM•ll. • ip 11-, ,.-w w ~·~ /U 11.1 111 0 0· t 6 I I I 10 111 1 11 •••J l~l' JlJ I J 1•Jl)) 1J oooooon I 1 0 0 0 I 4 OOli! " lli.U1~•l 11~ Oit.ICLANO , I• II 'ttbO .. ••• l'fllll ........ ,1 0 1 11 1ll1•101.~ FM'19t'•, 1-0 1 • l'l I 7 1 1 6 70 lfwnt•r.1.0 Jlll\111~1 l E)Jue,0·1 1 131 .. ID \\\ .. )) Odom. 1·0 7 1 I·] 0 0 0 I 7 000 To!M' I U ll II IO I~ J1 10'> Sol"l'S -H\1111Pf', r•-•J 1. SCOAE llY INN!lo!G!i l O• A_lr, IN I OIO '1• 111'-II OOJ#>d IAI 17l 11f 111 !1> f. •· C.ompnn"'" 1, J••~•on, Gr,.rn, '11 o•tn. (ey, Pu•~fll , r"'O""'" 1. Mr"P'"";u,, ""d<l<'t OP lo~ Ange,., I, O~-Mnd 6, lOll l o All<l"ic' l•, O~~l •nll 1& l>O -f'c•ou.,,,n, lopr' 1. J•<l ,on, N<utll, C•mu~,....,, !i (dn1p~nPn 1. Nortll, l~n~t•. Hunt~r. (;t,.•n. l'lud•, l>ullon, ·Me1•0•,mllll, lklc~ner . S f 8•l'IOO. Wf"n. H81> bf ~•noe•' (r troo,on1, .,.,.-!ill!lon re~n,tQ), by AAf>-"mo lh !C•n>Pi"'~'"I WP M<o"P"mi!h .,.~•on. HOuo~. +tolum.-!'n UPIT-'-""''• GENE TEN ACE (TOP), ROLUE FINGERS (34), RAY FOSSE CELEBf\ATE. . ·.' No Cont raet Yet A's Rally AroundDark, BY!__!Jnley Still Silent Oi\Kf.,\i'\;O IAl'l 011·nt'r Char1t·-. 0 . Finlc.v ll'l-nicll hi -. manaj?cr, ,\I, 1n D:.irk . his 0111• hi.it 1nomt·nt nt glory 1n th(' \vild t'l'l<·bralton 11f ()11kl;n11J'-. third :-;traight \Vurld Series ti!lt', hut hi: touldn't hlun1 lhl' rall .vin~ :-;up1M11·1 oft ht· J::ll V'.'>. 1\'hn d it! I ht. JOh . 'l'h~· ha11pr 01't'•1 ~1011 !'!l't'mt'<l to <"•111 fur I he crotchl'ty, \\ hill·hairi·d Finlt•\ tu JUmp 011111 th1• 1m pro \'t!'!t'fl 11 ·]1'\ is11111 rostrun1 in 1h1• l41l'kt·r r(.IOm and li•ll lhl• \vnrld thut ht> pl;inncd In r1•11ard hi -. manal!t·t· \\ilh :1 n1•1\' 1·hn 1 rael 1n ~1 1·:1tl. hv -.1·1·rn1·d altnos~ to -.hun "111.!'s ;1 ht.cit of .1 J.lll\'." hl•arrled n .. i.: l>a·l'k a~ h1• lcap1•fl lo th1· pla1forn1 :tnd gil.! .Jackson :-.;i1d of the ljllil'I. 1!1hh· .-.h11\·f'<I h1 -. l\<I.\ into lht· t•t•nlt·r i ii tiurili ng pilol of lhe 1•h;1n1pions. ··11.. r;1n11•ra r ;1nMl' II he l'\•'I' on1·e-~rah dl·scr\'t•s a Ol''" 1·unlracl . :ind I'd lik1 · ht·d h1 :-. n1:1nag('r hy lh1·arrn :1nd :-i;.11d. lo St'I' hin1 j.!l'1 lou.,!h :ind h"ndl(· lh1• ··(;oodjoh. i\l11n.·· 11obod.1·sa\\ 11. lt·:im 1\·ith rnort· :.1ulhoritv " HP -.trulted ft'on1 ont• l·ordon .. r /\t•rnss lht• 1n ;1dt;1 p lo"t:·kC'r 1·1H1m u( h:1l·k·slap1ll'rs lo o.01olhcr \\'hilt• h1" the \'ictoriou .... i\ ·· ..... Catli~h llunl1•r. I h•· I hxit'I and h:.i nd n1 11 .., str:iw s:iilol' hat" team·~ 25·gan11• \\'1n1lt•r, :1ddcd :111 t•n1 :-.t rul·k up mart•hing tunes. l)ark 11hr1l ie <·1·hn • · s:1u:;1kt.·d intn his office !ht• ha1·k \\a\. ··11t-hrouJ,!ht u.; .1 11th1·1r:i~.,·· 11un· "I hav1•n't thought :1liout ii . I ,1;111 '1 lt•r suicl "llt':-huu lll h1 •rt•hirl'<t .·· intend In lhink ahoul 11 t11nil!hl .'' l)arl. ··1 tlnn'I thin t' handtt"d n1c• rtJ!h\.'' :--<ii<I <1f the c•1nlrat·t n1 :1tl1•r add{'d .i ~111 •11 ~ 111· • n Cldn1n. Finh·~ 1·xplodl'd in 1";1:.:1· <11 llu· \1 ·1\ ai1olhl·r pit hl'r ··ire should ha,1· :--ug:g(':-..liouoft·onlraeltalk. us:l·d Ill<' mo t·. l.!l\t'tl n1.._• ~• regular Approa<·hcfl b~ onr r1 ·porti·r ;111 d st.arl . Bui h1• d t•.,t•r\ t•:.1o ht• h<n:k •H'XI ;isked \\ h1•n ht• rtJi).!hl I al k l'nnlrar·I ~ear 11ith h1 ., 111:1na i.:l'I'. Finlt·,, pu -.h1·rl lh•· And ~1~ d1111•11 1h1· li111· 1! 11 1·n1 n ·11(Jfl,.l'r:i1,;1) ph~-.1(';111.1 ;11'1dh11t·ke1I 11rai·-.p :111d r1•t••1c111lt•J1l I 1'11 n1 e\'1•r1r111~· ·•(;l:t 1111! 11! n1y 11 :1~ I 1ln11't 11·anl t•1 l/ut Finlc-~. \1h11 :1p1)(•;1r1·d lo 11:,\ 111 ht':tr:.111 1 ~i l11 que-.t111ns;1ho111 l>:1 rk.'' .-.1<:;11 •111 Lhl' ::-1w1l1i.:ht I ht1L cuultl lu· \Vh.v t hr· t•di: • nt·:-s" 1-:11·ryone :.iskt•rl 1·rarnrnt'd into I ho-.1· h1 ·1t1r po ... r '11· 111:.: norm;d prol·t·1h1r1· 1n :1 1norn1·nt nl lory 1non11•n1 -., )!1'11.11 ! 1·1 u n1 ph I 111· an 111\ tll'r t 11 rt'\\':trd :.i 111:111 :1).!l'I' 11 ho h:1s 1lonc• ~1 tT(·dil ahl1· ··u is not •• 1·er1t1l'ill. lJul tin offpr n1adc in tht• nume or rontinent al !'\Olid:llity." \. :t 7.QUC'Z :oiald, \'azquez discussPd thr question •\\·Uh Eche\'ctria J!•!lt hours artcr thr \'ie nna :innouncemcnl th:1t S~o P;.1ulo. Rr:11.il had \rlthdra\\·n it~ pl:ul to host thc games be<'nuse .or 11 rontinulng ti>id<'mi<' of meningili!l, Lakers Face Warriors in Opener 1oh. Hut F1nl1·v dnt ''ill'l <111 norn1 .1I 1hu11!"' l);1 rk u :1-. p1rk<'d up \·1rluullyon th1· IMfen L°\' :1nc:-r J)l('I.. \\'llti~Ol:-., \\1ho h:1•I n1.1 11:1g1·d lh!' 1\'~ lo 111·0 f\aJ,!s, 11111! :1hruptly ~1ft1·r !hi' 1~17;1 \\lorld Scri1•-< \i(·tor\ O\l•r lhl' ,'\1•\\' 'l'ork ri1c1~ :inrl ;innou'nced ht• h:ut ut h('r 1>l ans. ,1am11 111 l .<•nd SAN e\NTONIO. Tex. Vl'ler11n Tomn1 ~· :\arnn rirt•d ;1 ~e,·cn undt.•r p:ir'65-Thu r~dny lo 1 :ik,• lhe nrst round h•:1d In thl' 5 12~.ooo Tt•x ns oprn ~plf 1011rnnmt•nl. ,... t"r:1nk nc.u·d. klk ~1asJ10\•ni;i:t1lt' "nd Tnm ,\yro<'k nil :<hot Gll11 In u ma~11i\'e :1~,iault on par lha1 11:n\' 71 ~nlfrrs Nhoot sub~pur and unot hcr 21l'\'f;'ll1i:11·· on lhl' i .. 03fi.yard \Voodl11kc <tolr (1uh ("(llll'Sl'• -·-----·-----·--- • LOS ANGELES IAI') ·-The f't'm;1ins of the Golden Stute \Vurriors and the r eshurrled l.os Angele$ I.:.1ke_($ ovc.11 the Natlon:1 l Rultkl'lball Assocla'tlon l'<'llSOn tonight. Th~ onl~· \V urrior~ st1111dnut rrom last it<'otson \\'ho \\Ill open th<' nt.'\\' year it Rifk H:1rr~., \\'ho ~nys "I .ah,·a~·~ lcl(')k .:11 tftc bt1~hl itldc.-. this \\'ill )!i\'e 0111' ;roun~cr pl:1ycrit ~• C'hanrC" to dt•\'('1op (11stc1'. •· For (;olden St Ill<'. <'C'nlrr Nutt• Thur- mond \\':lit lradcd lo (.'hi('Ujtn nnd Cllr. 1'01·d pay, lhc rorml'I° llulls'\·t•ntl'r. \\'i~i s~ou1 In hlit 11l;1t'l'. Clyde Lee wns l11kcn awar by /\tlanta In thl' end of a confusing de:tl 1h;1t started four ~·ca rs ai:?o. N<'w ()rlc:1ns took Jim tl<1rnctt in thl' ex- p:inslon drnh a11d ".lcfr h1ull\n!l bmke hlit hand this \\'l'('k und v.·ll l be out ;iboul n 1no11lh . ~'lnnll,\'. C:11',tif' Htt.~Sl·ll 11layC'd out hi~ npUnn. IJl'c:1n1 !' a rr<'C ;1~l·nt :ind ';l~nrd 1rilh lhr l.:1krr~. Los AnRclcs. hll\\'t'\'l'I'. \1111 :.ilso llC 11·i1hnut llu sro1l'll. l'Sll('C'll·<I 10 sl:n1 nt fnf\\';1rcl. llusst•ll undt•r·\\·l'nl ktll'l'" surJ:~r~· lasl \\'l't'k ;nut \\'ill IX• out 11r action ul )(•ast sis \\'t'l'k~ --' ·-------·-----! ---- The l.aker!; arc ulso mi ... :-in~ l\Upl'r· stur Jerry \\'est" \1'ho rclirt.'tl. l.:1kers C'o:1C'h Rill ~harnlan :-11'"' f>ut Hilt•y. ;1 :'ll'\'Cll•)l'ttr \'elcrun \\.ho ha:'! s1tenl mnsl, or t ht• I as1 I \I u st•asnn.-. a!'! ii rc~c~\'l' in the hal·k1:0111·1.· \\ill ~lllrt II( ror1\ard in pl:ll'I.' nf ltl\SSt•IJ .!Im l'rirt•. "·ho pl a,\'t'<I \I hrn \Vt·st "·a ~ lnjurt•d last se:1sun. nn"· h:1s thul 11osition. · 'rhe l.ak(•r.-. h:1\'~' :1lso :1<l(lt't'I i'.t•ln111 1'4.•atv as ll h;1t·kup ror (•t•nlt•r 1-:1nio1·1· Sn1i1)1. !tile:-· said. ··t ha1·1·11·1 l'l'illl)' ph1 ,\·1.•1I Ufl lmnl nu :1 cnn'1'1l·nl h;1~1s s1 nrc I (1\ll'<i in for .fln1m\' i\11•1\lrllinn lh;• \l':tr \\l' \\on th1• 1·han1111011 .... hip 1tu·1·1• )Cilr:-. ai.:11. hul 11 fl•cl:. i.:u•M1 lo Ill,• lh1•1'1• ai.:ain :i nti I Ji\,.1• 1l ·,- 1'1H• ri•sl or 1 h1· l..1h"\•n; hnl'up 11111 h;l \t'' llapp\' ll:11r.,lon ;11111 lldl l\r11h~1·, :1 lt1·rn;1!1nj,J a\ ln1\1,11d \\ilh 1:ad 1:11odr1rh 11·an11n i.: :ii .a:uard \\llh fl rit!'. -· Fnr lh•' \\ ,1rr1ors. :-.1·1·1101l:~·t•a r pl:1~t·r l)t•rrt·k l)i<•l.:t·1· v.111 :-.1:111 lnr l.i-1• ;inti l!utt>h B.-anl ;u\rl J 'harlc•" ,l11hn~11i \\ 1 JI 1,f .1 rl 1111 hl' h11(•kt •111ll'I , -----------: -----~~-·~ Iii· h;tfl ho11L•d lo J.:11 \11 lhr N1•\v ''ork '':1nk1·1·:.. hul l-'inl1•\ •111t>l·red 1 h4 • fl1 ·:11 So !).irk. \\'hn h;r<I nn<'t• hccn Ti r1•d 111 l-'1n h·v al l\t1 n ·~.1" ('11\' anrl .11 -. .. n1an:J).!1•rl tht• S:1n Fr:u11·1,.1•11 c;1anl'i ;11111 ( '11•\'t•l;ind Ind 1;111-.. t•nu•rgt·d I n1111 lln1h11 anrl ;1-. ... 11m1·1I 11t·rha11~ l h 1• lt'lli).(h1 • ... 1Joh111 ha:-.l·hall II(• 11•1 Finl1·v t•all th1• :-hul.,., \1 1• •l1·m1>11111·1I h1nl «l·lf 1111 11c1·:1!'-uu 1 h\ 1·ha11J.!)ll~ :i n •1r1g1n11I cl~·c.1~11111 11111\11 ~'inh·:-':-. 11rdc1'"· II hJ1111M.'nc1 I t'\'t•n 111 1his \Vorld !'i1·r1cs 1n 1h1.• c;,i ~c 111' c:i·n·· ,:l'l'tlill'I' • , -- l > } • • • Bl CAll y PILOT • . . Laguna!1.s ·Sea Kings, Eagles Collid~ Th~riot,-Bazacas Key Cypress; • H~st MV _ In Struggle for Survival . hi Opener · 17-10 Newport Victory Oilers 'Mls slo1f"'Vlcjo llii:h's Diab,os, ri\td thl" ll"ftm to .beat in tbt!: South Cousl League footb1::1ll race, lukc their ve1unted. offensive ul· tack to LagU011 Ueuch lli f.lh tonight to. b~tlle "" Artists team th"\ hus been strug- gling the lt&&t lwo "'eeks. Gametimc)s7:30. 1t1ission..) Viejo, behind the passini: oJ senior Dave Sch· m1dt.. has rolled to a 3-1 TttOtd thus fur und a No. 3 rank.inJ!' in th e Cl Jo' 2-A poll. i he only loss u•as to No. I rate4 El Dorado, and thaL came in the last minute. Schmidt ha s passed for nine touchdowns and 776 yards already this season, completing 64 percent of his ·..aerials. His chief targets ai'e llis brother Eric and Wilbur Gregory. Laguna Beach won Its first lwo games, but drop- ped the last two-mainly· because or the absence or top runnin~ back John Carlsdn, who 1s sidelined for Cor the rest of the season "'ith a back Injury. Witftout Carlson the Ar· lists have been half as effec· tivc offensivel y, says Laguna coach De nnis Haryung. Laguna's bi gges t problem offens ively has been iJ?terceplions. The Ar· t.ists hive given up six in the lastlwogames. Hariung feels the key lo • the gatne is ball control. .. 'Our i>nly chance to beat them ts to hold the ball. And 'We've~ got to stop giving away cheap touchdowns, e.speci)Jty Jn the first quar· '"r" Mission Viejo coach John Muriolls a little leery of the Laguna defense. lt '"'-·ill be u battle cl sur· vivul tonight ut 8 \1.'hl!n Coronll del Afur lllgh und Estunciu Jl igh 11quure orr in a Century League football game at l\1cwport ll igh. lloth teams ft!el they still have <.i shot at the Century title. Lui u loss loniGhl would bt" d isustrous for eith('r school . Coron<.1 del r.-1 a r lukes a 1·1 circuit mark inlO the contest . The Sea Kings lost an important. game last week to . Villa P a rk and can't afford another set- bac~. EstUnclu ulso lost last GuiSness. lie pOl8 the b~ll week und Is O· l · I in Century up about 12 time$ u R<1mc play with the ll u coming and when he's on tur~c.·l lhc aguinst Villa 1'urk. The Sea Kings c11n usually mo\·c Ee1gles proved in the Villu the pigs kin. Marty un(I Pe1rk game they tun play Mike F er raro e1re the with anybody in the feugu<.\ leading ball carriers on the but another loss would put t<'nm und '""·Ill start behind them ou t of the rucc. Guisness. The Sea Kinl:s und Eagles Estanciu's maln task '"'-'ill both have st1·ong offensive be to stop Cdl\1's running teams with dr rcnses which game. tr the Eagles can uc· haven't looked that good so complish this, it will force far. This shou ld le11J!...\9_a!!._ Uie~u Ki_n_gsjnJo a_J>~ng offensi\'e shov.• "'ith plenty game and E stancl<1 c<in ofwide·open arlion. "'nit for the big mistake or Corona drl hi a r's attack inte rceplion. is led by quarterback Gary The E<.igles are more of a passing team tha n Corona Tangle Ry ROGER ('ARI.SON Hwitington Beach High's ot1111 °'11)"11 .. ~"" Oilers, still winless and Ne,,·port llu1•bor Jligh's smoldering from a 12·7 loss ,Sailors rt•main ali\·e in the to KeMedy Jasl week, seek chaSl' for the Sunscl11.t>;.1gi.1e to vent their fi..iry on In·. footbul l l'hampi onshil) vading Cypress tonight in toda~· thunks to anl\l~t•r gut· an Empire League football l~'. comt'·from·bt'!}.ind er. game. ro11. . . Kickofr is at 8 and the This lime it \\'as Los Oilers of coach Roy Brum-Al amitos lligh 's Grirfins melt are nine·poJnt ~,·h_oroundt.heSai'lors tough favorites. 1n the fourtn quarter and 1n Huntington Beach h as the ·<'nd i.t '"as a 17·10 been tr.yi ng to "'in 'K'ith a triumph fo1· coach Bil~ Piz. .running a ttack featuring zica's host Sai1 6rs on a fog· Loren Micklin and Greg shrouded Thursday night. Nitzkowski out or tile veer Steve Fole}' scored tro.rn lJsk \\'US to stop Los AJ·s of· f<'nsi\'e-\\·hlch they did ut the.> Newport 42. t..os Alamltoa dominuted the L'&rly goings. racing to a 10 ·0 advant11je o n sophomore Rirk Suns' 30.. )'.ard fi eld goal and Craig Chamberlain's 27-yard TD puss to Ron Ash. But Ne"•port stayed in the game. th an k s t o Ron L-am-ertorr. Surl·l· •. Tl"iVfio1 und Ba zac:is. Lamerton forcl"d a furn · ble \\Jth a solid 1.fc;-kl<' and Sorce reco\'ered the bill! al the Les Alamitos 4.S to set 'up Ne,\·port's first touchdo\\'11. Th<.•liQl g;.1ined 5. -'· 7 und '3 bt.•(ore Bazucas c:1mr UJI u·ith his patented qui<'k ovenel' for lS yards to the l 1. Thel'iol J!ain1..•d four ~:ar· ds. then knirt•d O\'t•r fron1 10 vards out u·i1b 1:3-1 lert in iht• hnlf. Los Al's on<':t\\·o punch or tuil back Du,·id Spr·agueand linen1a11 Jirn hl;1in ,,·as im· µressi\·e. !Jut de ft.>11si1·0. pl uys b~· John Phipps. Pt•ll' htcCo"·en. J im Ht'lfrich. Ste\·e ltich;irdson illl d Bucko Sha \1· of l\c\\·1mrl o\·ershado,,·ed th<' Griffin~. d e l 1ota r . Quarterback Larry Hall throws about 20 passes each game and has a completi on percentage or around 40 percent. He has three fine' receivers in Gary Confer, Scotty \Vil son and offense. t\\·o ~·ards out on his onl)· Neithef has been effec· carry or the night "'ith 6:08 tive, ho"·ever, due to a pas· left lo culmina~e an 82-~·ard sing game that has been march. snapping a lO·all Baro~· Faee Western • • Rich Franklin. · llalfback Ken \Villiams is the leading rusher for the Eagles with 149 ~·ards in 22 carries. Hall also likes to run and his double threat could give Coronu del M:ir some trouble. unable to take the heat off siJuation. the running game. The Bri an Theriot finully Oilers have used three !llho,vcd his stuff Thursday, quarterbacks in four games .racin g for 156 :rards In Snnset Tilt· Tqajght and have netted 167 yard.5· net-but the crusher for Los · Fountain Valley High's through the air. Al \\·;is the staggering runs Barons, stiJI seeking their Tonight quarterback Bill of 140-pound up ba.ck Toi:n first ever Sunset League Hoisl tries to keep ttie Ba zucas. football victory, try to gain Cypress defense honest. The back-snapper was 8 foothold in th4! race for the Coro na d e l !\tar's linebackers "·ill probably be the key to stopping Estancia's attack. The Eagles Jike to run short. Slanting patterns and thei r receivers should usually be picked up by the backers. The. game pits two veer Bn zueas' 31-yard scamper l eague championship )ffenses a nd the key to op· t o the two, settjng up tonight when they travel t.O t i o n a t t a t k s a re Jo~oley's touchdown. weStem High to duel the mistake s -m ad e or Art Sorce. who had tied Weslem Pioneers. . eliminated. the game at 10 Y.·ith a 43· Kickoff is al 8 and' coach Nitzkowski is the Oilers' y11 rd fi eld goal in the third Bruce Pickford's B•roi<s leading scorer with three period, a dded his second are eight-point favorites to touchdowns to his credit, PAT a nd the Sailors' last thumpthehosu. while Micklin's only tally r Fountain V.alley has yet was a 15·yard scamper ~ ~ ~ to win ln league, yel has "'-,..!Mir~ TE BrMI Gtffle\I T Boll Blu!ftl" G Mlrk Ma•well C Alltll Tuc;ktr G MArll Gl'M!Ue T TOiiy Ro•Mrom Wit ltl:vl11 Plrk Wfi: AIUI Frlnlllln Gt: c;.,., c....1,,,,,~ Rll tMrtw Ferr1ro Rll Mlkt Ftrr•ro 11i11 againstSa<f:\:eback. ~ .,..~ been out.scored by onlY one '" Bui ' l h h G~ME STATISTIO • ,,, mis a es ave am· LA ._NH point combined against 1to pered the Oilers, as they F1rst6otwls•uSfll"t u u :Edison and Loara. · · ~~ . have the Centurions. ~~=::i1i;:1 : ~ And the Barons figure to uo Cypress tries to buck the T1t11t1r5tdown1 ,, • n snap out of the doldrums ~~: odds with quarterback ~=:=::: l~ :' t~~J~t behind the crisp 1t0 Mark Jackson and backs Y•••iosi 22 2' • p g of sophotnore quar· Everett's Pioneers use a sprintout S)'Stem with the · quarterback option around the ends the chief rushing threat.• Jn the air 'it 's Brian Bideai.Ux doin g th e thro\..ing, "'hlie the defense~ is Jed by Bob Aguiler (2051 and middleguard Britt Bell (200), the broth e r o{ Nebraska's John Bell. Mike Dahn spearheads the Western secondary and the line is keyed by Da\·e Deighton 1205). Both teams, · bo"·eve r , yielded much yardage last '""·eek <ind toni ght's a ffair could be a y,·ide open game with thre e touchdowns necessary for Victory. C.e111 Otl Milt °',_ OLM flotl Hl•son OLM Dilw C..Ur OLM BruttC.r111ntt r 110 • Don Ohmenus and Tony ..... ,.,.c11,.1Mc1 .,,, ..,,. •"rback Chr1's Dove and a Put'ltl/I Ylf'IOI' dllllll(t 4.J1 .f.2' """' 2;: Lan~~1f,;11°" .. •ch ot1-~=~~::i:~·· ~ !::' we a 1 th o f r u n n i n g F•llM1l11 v11i., 0111nM 110 Tt: 01c11 11uu1r ns score ~, GN.Uri backs-<starting with ful· SE P.n JKkWI ,. "' ... OLM fll<k El ... 11 LB Sprro Kt mble MLll·M!kt Ferrtro LB Br.., GtHley ca Kint t:ueu Cll St.w MA""w!h ROV !1111 Moore 5 Rici! Ntbll , l1!111cl• OfltflM Rf G1ry Conffr 111 •T 11ob s1m1~ 1" Los ,•1.i1m1tos 10 o o . 0-,_•,•, lback Steve Thompson and ~ ~~.:~~!;~11 1m RCi .1o1111 NHuo11 1m Newport Ha•boro 1 3 Dave Kruelzer. 190 C Olnl'lll LuPffnl UO llllUSHING C Ollt llobtrOon 1t0 LG Sttve Oo•ner us Lo• 1.11,.,11" Kruetzer has scored three G Ttrry Schust•• lolCI LT Gtr111:1 lloltl no hdo d T BUI Cow111r 110 st: .1o1111 Pot1•• u.o '' '' '3 touc wn.s ~an averages TE Ml-• McO.rmo11 1.1o oe a111 Hohl ------·oo ~~ :: 1;, : }1 6.2 yards·~er carry. oa °";' Dov• l!J; RB Lorell Mlc•11" • 1m Cl\lmtll'rt••n • • " .J..D :i-Loara defeated Fountain "'11 oa.,. Kr11tutr Rll °'"" Nlu•ow1~1 llll TotllS ., 1'2 22 2.1 J:IB Vlll(.t Bl•~· FL Ty Torr11 II.,\ ..... ,..rt H•••• Valley y,•ith the help of some f'B Sieve TllomPIOll ... >M ·~ ,. "' •• "' ·1·~ "We might have some problems up front. We'll- have to play one or our bet· ter games to move the ball on them. Defensive ly they'r~ 'ery strong. Jf they can cure their offensive mistakes, they could be trouble;,•• .says Murio. ESTANCIA HIOH OB LARRY HALL Al 5M"'f W1tl ACi Drl .ioftls lM H1111t lRt1• ... ,11 o.ltflw Thttk>I 21 n1 , s,s horrendous confusion in the Do Fe.,..11a111 v111t1 o.1111t1 210 E Die• Bulll• 175 Bl~ll 5 10. 2 m.1 0£ ""' w IW! 180 200 T 11:111h 01011M tto 0or· 1 1 21 ·o '·' Barons camp at the end, but ot IM•k Bu••• 1110 c: &rid Gret.n • LG eo.,. 'Mllwn.,.d LT Scotl Sulht•!lllG WA S<.olh Wiison 08 l,.lrtJ H1U 210 MG ,.,..., wrlOfl• llO ~' 1 2 o 2.0 the sltuatioh was set up af· MG Bruce ao-" 110 160 T • AIC ... rO Cl~o Ito \ D JJ ••• OT Te<ry Schu,!er llO Trojans, Tritons Vie 1t0 £ Aooert Hlcol.5<111 1~ ~;1l •J ?J• ,. ._2 ter Loara had pounded the DE tMr11 l,,.;•~ 110 ;: t: :: ::;:II m t"•SSING Baron!' fl anks With their t: ;:"i;o:YCi=rlla :~ L•I••• l••Cll 0111•1• s~ Jim Gtetfl HB Ken Willl•m• FB Al LIOGlt 110 M Jim LU<ll 1n ... IK pfll YI IKI OpliOn seriet;. CB °""" Kruelnt 11111 lt.j CB Rl<k s.ttr 1m bwmt1trt.in B • l l'l .-And that's wh at \Vestern CB w1rren T1rtor '"° '" Ml Ai<ll E1191e Ito CB Lorell Mk•li11 llO " .. ,..., H1r""• s Gl•w OllClr•v HO s Clrt1I N11r•-•I 1m -..... s 2 o 26 . .m likes to do. Coach Jim s Kevin sere... uo LT Joflll IMC.II -l.G Clwll IU111tl1Yd1 C IMrti~ RCi P11 IMW«lt !£ In South Coast Duel li.U•fl<il Ot .. •M Lt: Mae l'ltml11t ,. "' "' •• --=:.:..::..~.:..-~~::.-~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- llT JoM Wills RE k.OH Wfttg.11rd oe Mlk• s.rr-FI 1to:vh1 Plkt 'Tl Jlon Wood '' kill:! llllollotrl!.OIO 411-..... .. tcll DlllllN D£ Jol'wl IJl'cClll OT JoM Wiiii MG "°""' JIC••mt' DT Jolwl VerGlllCI 0£ SCott Wt1tg.11rd "' Jtfl JOPlftton LI IM"rll Jtllnlon Cl llllollotrt Weocl a ._.... Moc111110 a Ml<k•r A11e11 I Dlw ~ •• ,. ,. •• .. '" ,. ,. ,. ,. ,. ,. ,. •• ,. ,. ,. •• University High'& un· defeated Trojans go a!ter their fifth straight victory tonight at San Clemente High in their first-ever South Coast League football outing. Kickoff is 7:30 and coach Jerry Redrilan'& Trojans are to.point favorites to make San Clemente's in· jury-riddled Tritons their Mla5t11 VleJ9 Oflt-· ,.ESI-~' t,. T J1lf Aliltltl 1111 flfth victim of the '74 cam ,. 11S paign. LG,,.,.r11 ...... 111 C Rltk P,•<1uln RG .1111 6t1ns AT TOOd '"'"'st' $£ Wilbur: GreqO<' 'Q8 Dilw Scllmldl Pe Glem Rlclwlrc:lso" Tl Pllil (611 uo The Trojans go with a ball ;~ control ground attack, built 1u around 196·p.ound Jim :::: Green and 195-pound Scott SI irk SOtmldl ,...._ Vltlof OIN•• DE .lltt "'""'. •• •• •• Mllfl>hy. a pair of bulls that are bigge r than an y lineman for coach Allie DE Mlrk Jt.9!.191111 OT .1111 FltmlrHJ :~ Schaf('s Tritons. 11J A passing game hasn't 110 really come into focus due ~= lo the ground success. but us Redman says quarterback :~ Richard Hernon can do Dl Mlrk ,.,...,,.,n MG V11K.t..AC.Wrltr LB Glem ,..<.lwlrdWlll La G«r c.-c.a Jiit H- Cll DoU9 AIH!""~ S IM"' AnOrtw\ s Wiibur (lrt90r' "' what's necessary in the air Westmfuster Favored To Dump Vikes Again ·rhc ~·I arina lligh Viking!i have a perfeet record in their 11 foolbnll gan1es with the Westrninster Li •ns. P.Iarini has ne\'cr "·on. And the Yiking'S are 5· point underdogs tonight when they meet the Lions at 8 at \\1estminster lligh in a .key Sunset L<'ag1ie i;?a me. The Lions are 2·0 in JeaJ!'U C p\sy. ha,·in~ dereated.Los Alamilos, 28·17 .and Newport Harb<\r , 21-7. The Vikings arc l·l .casily bealing Western, 32·16, :i nd Josing lo Loar a. 20·6. On size, \Vcstminster haR a decisiv<' ed,:t:e . The Lion" have a big offensive line led b y left tackle Denni s Sc.'.'hade ( 6·4, 220 ), centl'r Chuck Brc\\'ington !5·10. 220) and right tackle Randy Mccaslin (6·0. 22.'i I. l'itanna·a bi~gest defen- si\!t lineman Is t3ckl<' Dan Meeks 15-11.1951. top orrens i\'e threats in quartcrha<'k Tim Del\fase,· \\."ho has compll'tccl 20 of 32 passe~. a nd receiver Tony Maddocks. who has 10 recepl1ons tor 219 yards. Marina is not !ihorl on or· (ensive ta lf'nt either. Run· ninJl back Jim Rankin has rushed for :ul9 yards on 73 car rirs and 1 quorl<'rback Chri!<: ll a\\'ll has complet('d N:ior 4i pa~ses for 28 1 yarrts . ll O\\'l'\·l'r. !\larina's nffrn· siv(' lin1·m<'n \\"ill he sn1allPr th;1n \Vcst1ninslf't'0~ dt>fl·n· clE'rs und . llt'11i g:in s:iy s. "\\Te "·ill find (IUI 1t·hot kind of blockinJt tcl'lm \\'(' hnvl' this '"'-'l'l'k." On lhr IJO ~ili\·r siclt'. J\larina \\"ill ha\'(' multi· talen11'd .1in1 \\'ende11 at nenrl.v full str('ngth. \Ven · dE'll punts. rec<:lvc8 and playio lin,)harkE"r and W:t!i U!'l ed s paringly a gnin sl \Veliil<'rn because nf a mild ltg Injury. LT Freo MICllo h MG Jonn Wwlul will RT EOdle Met._, RE Joe Hiii when the situation '11.'arrnn· ls. LB Jim Snyder La Cork J W!llON LC ,,..,. Dt-ve" lilC &tad lno.,.,.~ 5 Scot! C.Osl!Ow 5 Mlkt F1u!kner •• •• '" •• ,. Defense, bowever, has alscfbeen a major factor in University's success and tonight's confrontation pits two sterling defensive units again.st ea ch other. •• '" Injuries KeepGW . In Limbo Schaff's San Clemente crew features the Arkansas slant defense, keyed by linebacker f>ondo Yleisldes. His brother, Tim, is the leam's quarterback, while sophomore tailback Randy Adams is usually the only ball carrier Vleisides hands off lo when he doesn't pass or carry the ball himselr. Overco nfidence is one of UlliYfnllJ OffffM JIE Roi N1cllols ltT Mltw tW'Ollt'ld RG Ed Pal!!M<I c ..... u "'°°'' LC. Ml-t PlfCllrll LT Tll'I Atll- LE Mlllt' CM~er FL 5Mn G<-m Q8 RICl'llrO Hernon FB Jim Grftn TB Scolt MurllllJ U11l.,,.r111, 0.k•M OE Miki Dilley OT er.., 0..~!11 DG INU Bonne• DG Uonllll Ar in OT RI<-IM•l•r DE Ran ~khoh LB Ol~ICI 5<rnoql"i CB T•rrr Prt\lon Cfl G#J Plforot S Jim G<ttn 5 An HllM .. " Cl•m•ftlt Ol/t1111 TE D111111s E"9ltrom LT Man Gtrrl<o LG Mar• F.0,.., C: Fu ... AIUO AG OIYkl 0ornll'IQUH Rt LMrv ,.,,..,_ 5£ Linet Herry oe Tim Vltllldt' TBll-..,.ms F8 TMI ArOllS SS Vinet Mer'""' SI• o.-tt Def.-DE Gtl!I .,,_, DI ICt•lfl ,..,, /rlOCl Pondo Vlfl!oi<ln 01 o.tv!d OomlftV'IH DE. Tim 81o<k lB /oVrl F~ lll Tom .V- Dfl l...fllcl 8tt"rW 08 Glim OIU 08 si.... Mlll'll~ 06 Vorce Htr"""" • the chief concerns of Golden >tt :iu1 West College football coach n1 Ray Shackleford this week. i~ The Rustlers travel to 191 Buena Park High School to •• c u1 play ypress College Satur· '" da y n ig ht (7 ; 30) in a ;: Southern California Con· ference game and take a 4·0 ;: r ecord into the battlt?. 11s Cypress is 1·3 which gives ~ the Ru stlers coach cause for 1<n cont"ern. ;~ ':Any time your team has 111 been winning a nd the other :~ team hasn't, you have the fear of overconfidence . us "But anybody who has us watched our games with i~~ Cy press over the years. ' u1 kno'o''S we have a tough lime ::J \\·ith them. 1t0 "This See m's to be a bi g -:~t game for Cypress and they 1111 really get themselves up for 1.0 it. uo "They ha\'e a good defen- ~~ sive team and we'll have to 1'0. be ready to play rootball. 1/1\ Yes, it 's harder ~o get a uo team up for practice some 1s' \\'eeks but u•hen Saturday , .. •• , rolls around, they arc usually ready. Area Grid "There are two area~ of concern this 'veek. First. a lot wil I de.pend on how well we are able to run agalnsl their defense. Results l'Rl!'SHMAN "'" 11, °"'"'" MiUioll V1fio Ii I 0 U-21 u~ llfo1tt1 • • • 1-12 Ml~ Vl•f• l•u<lldow•u: Ocll" 2, llroc1'.,._, Con"""~' <ld!ol lrunl. Ulll""I 84'.cfrl 10..(lldO-\: Ge~, ... _. ,JIElH ...... H $\ .... , Olllntl"I t\llM.11 t ' 0 •-n ..Second, it "·ill be how "'ell our defense docs against them.'' The Golden. West running game m ay-hiVe suffered a bit In last week's victory over LA Southwest. Paul Fiskness at ta11back and Brent Partridge al ful· Says Marina coach ~·fi~e lfenigan on \\'estminster"s offensive lin~: "The.v ha\'e the finest blocklna lioe in lhf' Sunset L,ea J:UP. Ml(tM Oll•RM TE 8oO T;,."1 llS """"...... • 0 • ,,_, .. ~1~k~e;,er~.fo~h s~~~ii::d \\;eslmlnster may also have drle of the finest run· nio,a b ack s in Orun,l?e Count,· ln fullbuck Dennis Boswe11. ~nn or LIQn!I couch Bill Boswell. Oennis'"'hu~ ~a.rried 53 llmell for 2.12 :vardS a nd m11ny cnn1dder h im ln bl!: On <' of thr ~trnnE!'CS I runn lnR back ~ .o.1rounct. . Th~ J .. ion s ha ve''"'" other T 0•11 Met_, G 8oe lort1Mf c )l'"' l(l!¥h G Din C.....11 T '-'''' TIJOo'fttOO ~Oki MOrot11 Otl (.lw11 ... ..., Ta Jom R•n-111 "II J1rn OtLut• l"l Jlm WtllOtU wriu O.lt.IM Df 8" f1<1111 • 0' °"' Mfttlo , MG IMrk VK' OT Mtrt k••O Cl lrMrt l"'°"'<ltr LI Jim Wlll'IOflt! 1,,a Diln L•tlt Cl 8oO Cr.ill 01 Mo!my for"'' ~.,..~-­ ,08 °"'"G $UllfZ ttS r1t1ntl1I O,,.t hG•Wll S; Kf1l1to ttS ,Jlck-. ttS •lllllSHMAH .u St ... "' 0Nr1tr\ "' ........... • 0 '1 ,., 16J WtVmillJl•r 0 0 D 0 ... 1m Ml r.M IOUclldc-wrl• PolklftQhot11. (M. 111 .....,,,1 ......... !kk;• '· ~' ' SOPNOMORl ,., k ... ~' °"'"''' Mllfl' Otl 0 0 • .R,, llJP!111 ) I 6 t 11) .., "'"''Del IOW.frlClo•nt . Mtfrllll, ii> 'MH*"4. '" •> •• ,. "' '" '" •• flRl!IHMAH kttt •w °"""''' C0'!.11 Mew o • o o-• HufrllnOIOll O.t~ll I n • I·~ l'll.llll lllflllll lotKl\IO"'ChCIO•ll t : ,...,.,.,n 1, QllMYn, n r" mm 1 1 t , Hi~,,..~,., c_,,_,. H <rm1111 •tr l~\\I W1,<t•lt~ f11ot"I . . ankle and ntay not play while Part.ridge went out of action in the first quarter. ''NormaTly it di>fsn'L take a week for an ankle injury lo he1I but..it's a day-by-day thing. Fiskness will play If , he's able to play. Partridfe 1 • is the same." J ohn J\fa cnulcy, a wide r e ceiver .wlt'1 injury problems r ecently, will rel urn to the starling tin Saturday. ' . 2NEW ROTARY·ENGINE ·MAZDAS. EACH 'WITH 'AN ENGINE WARRANTY* AS LONG ·AS ROLLS·ROYCE'S.- They're both rotary.engine Mazda RX ·3s, eoch with a 50,000·mile, J.year. engine warronty. A warranty matched only by lne cars from Roll .. Royce. 'Th•1 r>0"·1fon1ferobl11 worron•v Ii ''"on alt n11w rotory·1n9in11Mc11do11old o"d 1orvic9d i1111!1 <Ofl!in.,"1:>1 Un<!ed 5101111. It worronh rl!:.r 1~11 ba1k engo,,. blocl ond inrerno! porh ••It be hfte ol delct•i, with normol uio oMI pr•1trlbed moin· 1ana~c11. for.S0,000 or 3 ytori, whlchtr¥o• oc!u•1 li•11, or Men do will 11. i• lree TEST·DRM ON~ OF OUR MIDU,IND WE'UIUYYOUR W11C11. BEACH MAZDA 17331 -BEACH BLVD., HUNTINGTON BEACH . (714) 842-6:666 -·- ,, ( MIRACLE MAZDA ·2150 HARBOR BLVD :, COSTA· MESA (714) 645-5700 . • .. I • b l I 0 r· ( h II E t' .. A s w a 0. di re "' "' .. •• "' .. " .. ' • ·~ .. "' ' c .. c A pr lu no le lo th th a pl le la. " th ra ·ha • "'i 17· ho le ar th eli co hi m .. .. " •• Co ·I • At Mi.ssion Vie j o E l Toro,DH. Coast Area Cla sh Ton ight • Cross Country El Toro and Du na Jlills league behind 1i11sslon both, of which compilCd Viejo's Dave Schmid(. KeY. mediocre non-league foot· pussed ror 143 yard~ against bal~ recordi;, m~ct at 7:30 <Jahr und for 171. against l~n1ght at l\.1l ssion Viejo Esperanza. · 1-hgh In their South Coast The Churgers also have a· League opener. strong runner in Chuck Vun El Toro's Charge rs are Lie\Y; a 190-pound fullback only t -2·t ·but arc still v.'hohasrarried52limesfor favored by (our poi nts O\'er 292 yards. Taiib3ck Brian the 2·2 Dolphins. El Toro llcuney has gained 272 ha~ .Played tougher com·. yards on 62 t'arries. pctilio11 ~od hu5 f~red bet --But 1.he Dolphins may ter uga1nst l'Om rnon op· have the manpower to stop ponent~. · \',an Liew and Heaney in Last \vcck, the Chargers t ackles Craig Fulladosa6·i: lost to the 2·A 's No.I tea m, 205) and Joe Cameron 16· El Dorado. 2 1 -8 . 1'h e 5,230).l>anaHills'defensli' Dolphins come off u. 16-6 vie-has <illowed only one 01>· tory over Can.¥on. • ponent to score more than . ·Both El Toro and Dana 10,points. Jiills h <iv e played Brea and ·And the Dolphins m ay Esperanza. The Chargers have the best running back lied the \Vildcats , 14 ·14, and in Darryl Howe, ·v.·ho has ·the D olphins los t 28·13. rushed ror442yardsin89at· Against Esperanza, bolh te'!1pts. schools registered shutouts, Says Chargers coach Mac with El Toro winning, 28-0, 1.1oore about Howe: "He's and Dana llills v.'inning 27. about a 10 rial 100 man and o. we need to s top the sweeps Th"C C harge r s ha ve <ind powers they run with displ-ayed a m ore potent or-'him.'~ t e n sive u t tack \vhile the In addition to his defense Dolphins h ave been defen-stop ping H o we's sweeps, ~ve-orientcd . fl1oore wants to see his of· ·Leading El Toro's offense rcnsive line "stop making is quarte rback Gary Kt'y mis takes that we shouldn't who is possibly the seeond be m a king a l this time of best s ignal-caller in the year." Prep Grid Standings El ,..,. OlhlllM TE Jtll Grffft RT Mlkt C.i.'1' AG Tony Llll'od'I' C LAI 0.1-M~tll LG Milt Nl1bl11 LT P1rw::i.o C.t1UU0 SE Jot CM!e 08 Glory ICl'I' 1'8 CllllClt VMI Ll9w t B llflill HeeM'I' FL' Cll'OI Blrtlllrd "' •• '" "' •• •• "' '" ... "' m .• SPORTS Warriol'8, Mater Dei Collide DOWNEY-Male r D ei lligh begins its quest for an Angelus L eague football title tonight at ·8 when it trave ls to Pius X Hlgla h e re to face the pass-min· d ed W~rriors . The M a te r Dci MonarChs figure lo batUe iL out with St. Paul, Servil e and Bishop Amat for the Angelus crown, but Mater Dei coach Gary Carr is more ooncer· ned with tonight's foe, Pius x. Althoug h not cons idered a ravoritc ror the circuit title . Pius has the capability or upsetting a ny or the top teams. The Warriorsare3·1 in pre -seaiOn and are pa.ced by a wide-op~n passing at· tack. SUNSET ' 'WtSll'l'linsttr ..... Htwll0f1 Htrbl.>r ... ,~ Fown•t!n Vlllty ,,_ LE4GUE WLTPF,.r. 1 D D.,"Jool f O D •I M ' I 0 •1 ,, 1 1 0 • ,,. 0 I ' JO 11 0 1 1 ,, 11 110'1'4 0 1 0 JI 116 I.IT .... DlfteM RE hilll Joor'!j Rl""i.eltn MoWy MG sie ... Hoe•....wllz ·LT Jt'"91 Gt•M• LE Sit ... 1C1c1111 .. 111 Lii Cllo.l<k Y111 Lltw LB Jell Grt111 R eceiver s Jerr Kristoff and Willie McMahon will test a Mate r Dei defensive backfield which has played well all year, according to Carr. However. Long_Beach :-Wilson· v.•as able to pick up !ti 138 yards through the a ir : against it las t week. LllS Alfmito, Wr111rr1 Tll 11r1a1y'1 S.:ort N~WPOrl H••IMI• II, LOI .r.11mllo1 " TtlllOllt'I G1me1 fdi\Oll ~I LMrl II LI Pi llN "-••In V11i.y 11 We11ern , Mlrll"ll 11 W11tml1111er EMPllllE LEAGUE l'ool,.11 lttnNOr "'""' SIOcl!tDK~ ANr.lm H1,1n\J119\on 6ei<ll C"f1JfllU W L. PP PA ' 0 ., • !O Jt tl •, f 1 IS 41 1 ' tO u I 1 It 1 0 111•1 0 ' u ,, 1C1t1!11 0 l u u Tll11rlt11y·1. kore OtM!~ 11. S.OOltD.K-0 To11l1M'\ G1m1 . . C•PftU 01 H""1;"91°" Beac~ S.t11r41y '1 Gome\ Allollwfm vi. IC1t1Ho •I LI Pilmo filolllolt V\ "'",,...,' •I lWln A"GE LU$ LfAGUE Se<Ylll ?2, Bl\.ho9 .r.mtt 9 ca Jot cer11 C.P Sutlt BurgMrOI S Clllrl•U Mic-I S Milt R11l1 .o. ... Mlllt OtltflH RE VlllCe McC\lllolll Rt Clelo F1111.oow RG Nie• Y<ICCe C Miki T111111r LG W.I Coltltr Lt Jot C•me<"Oll LE .r.rnwlto Mli.gon 08 .r.1 e. ..... IOt, FB AOll 1Cosm1i. Tl 0.tryl M<l-SB John Perw::1 01 ... Mltll QllellM OE .r.rn11ll0Mllt9011 f?l JotC•'"9•0ll OT Cr1lo Full~ OE Rlclllro •1111 LB ROii Kosrn•I• LB lllck ltOWlllllO LB JoM OJI! LB 8'-vcct W•nfnqtOft OB ICtn-rCr.oll . 08 0."yl Mo-~ Qwl1 ...... 1 ... ::-Pius X also has a good uo ground gam e to go with its \: passing attack, hut it is w very young· on d efense a nd NJaier Dei will b.e out to take 1U advantage Of the situation. ms Pat Mc Keon continues to •• be u1o the Jeading rusher on the 1110 team. He nO\\' h as picked up : 363 yards in four gamC5. Hi~ llS ability to find a hole and ~:! blast through it makes him 1so errectivl·. 11s fl.later Dci s hould huve a 1• big advantage in the tren- ~ ches . The l\1onurchs orfen · 110 sivelinehasbee n.the key to 111 much or th eir s uccess so •• ''° rar. On the eithe r h a nd, 1i: ..Pius' defensi\'e line is very ~ young and inexpcrienct.od. Must Win Situation . . P ius coach Gene Zeller f~cls he C3D stQ,y in the game .ir his young de!ense can stop Mater Dei's powe r · ful ground gam e . Zeller also feels his tea m mus t run to open up the passir-g atta'ck. Confronting Edison VA•JIT"Y C""""4 14.111 l") M•tllof'M .... II I. A~I•• IMBI l !I J; l. M"'"'' lCI t:U; I c..iw- IHBI IO·t.t; '· GlllOfO IMlll IO:Ot; S. Wt!""' \MUI 1D :1J; '· H1rr1ll IM81 10:1(; 1, McO..O-CM8l 1on1; I. rleger IH8 1 10:1,; I. Hoswl~t· ICI I0:1'1; 111, ~1 .. llQ<IOO !Cl 1D:JD; 11, CWlll ICI ~SI; 11. LOPll CCI H :ll); IJ.. eot01ll (Cl 11;10; I&, '°"' !Cl 11:1'. JUMIOlt YA•SITY C'1lf'HI UIJ llU M•IM91• 1Mc• 1, Tfll.,.r (Hiii IO:•O; 1. hUff IMBI IO;t~· 1. IC11lolill.a !Miii ll:Gl; '· IOIB!ftlnn Ot81 11.0.; \. !illorl IHUI 11:10; .... ....... •• ..., .. "" !Kt!. '' Ii; j • Slt'llhtn\ lHBI 11;11; I Y1110u1on IH81 11 15! •• RO•• IHBl 11 :Ji. ., IQ. C..tr CHBI H ;~. FltOM·SOPM ~ ... (._..., ....... l VAltS ITY 1:91-l:tfl Ul f ~· I. St rn• IL ) •:•I; 1. to\tl;OllMll • IEI t :l-4; ' l. Gtlli9n1r !LI 10,01: 4. WOKlo~ lfl I0:61; S. F•HKll Ill IG:GI; '· Ho91n CEI 1Q,.J1; 1. I~ lei 10:)~; I. ObtiVotwllcn ILi 10.u . '· .r.1><"""' IEI to:Ma; IO. Tom•'lc IEI IG:il; 11, ...,,_ 1U »:M: U. Dfl'Pft IL1 IG:i•: 11. Stll"(lllC! llJ ll:IOi 14. YlllO-ILI 11:116. JU"IOlt VA•S 1TY 1..i-IHI IMI I.Hr• ., I. Glltletr'tl CEI I01j0; t. il.lnc:llllelO ILi lt;SI; ]. Fln• ILi ll:GI ! '· Ar<ll11llll IE 1 11: II; S . .r.Klllnll!jlil ;, IEI 11:1•; o. V1r111s tel ll:b; 1. Y-rnoto ILi 11:18; I. Jonlnn~ 'IEI ll::tf; 9, Man;.,.tli IEI 1\•J1• IO. ~II CLI 11:ll. PROiH·M>PM Edi-Ull 1 .. 1 LN•• I. Slktrt IEI 11:01; 1. Kellw !fl 11;11; J. s..,........ ILi ll:Jl : 4. Ort Ill U;JJ; S. Mustangs Take On Spartans Costa lt1es a Hi g h 's P..1us tangs will be looking for their, sec;ond straight vie· tory tonight at 8 when they take ort Villa Park High in u Ce ntury League £ootball ·game at Oran-ge-coast COi· lege . The Mustangs are coming off a 22·20 win over Mag - nolia while Villa P a rk knocked oCf Corona del Mar in its last outing, 21·7. The Spartans are six-point favorites in a ga me which s hould see plenty of offense. Costa Mesa's attack has been improvin g eve r y week, especially its passing game. Quarte rback Tim Rosaue r has. completed. 23 passes for 291 in his las t two games. Muc h of h is success is du e to three fin e receivers, Keith JOsephson, Dan B ye r s a nd M a rk Krikorian. The Mustangs r unning ~ame h a s a lso s tarted to Jell. Tony Martinez. led all rushers in the Magnolia gam e with 66 yards and ear· Edis on lli g h School's Chargers football team v.•ill have its back to the w~J tonight against th e Loara Saxons in Su nset League ac· tlon at L a P a lma P ark in Anaheim . side t he opponents' 10.yard stripe which have cos t as ~much as 63 Points ·to. the Mater Del ·will be a n eight -point favo rite in the g ame . ned himself a starting ber· "S th. ,,,..,,; Oii otltllll TE Mike MonnlfWJ • Kickoff is at 8 . T he Charger s, on e of the pre-seaso n favorites to cap· ture the league title. have not had a victory in tv.·o league enc; unters and a loss to night "'ould eliminate them fro m any c hance at the title. Chargers . \ 1-lerb HUI of Loara wclnts lo e liminate the (umbles a nd pass lnteroeptions his team h as given up, Nale.. Ching a.l quarter· back fo r Edison i regarded by both m e ntors a;s one or the top signal-calfers in the league this season: 1 "\Ve have to nhd some v.•ay or limiting him ," Hill s ays. ··1 don 't believe he can be s topped but he certainly has to he limited in his of· fcns \vc :ittack ." Loara's Saxons h a,·c v.·on a ~air or de:cislons in league play including a 21·20 thril· le r over F ountain Vllllcy last week. Despite t h e won -lo s t w~ Don Wh~!11"' ou111i1 5latistics, Edison \Viii enter LT s11 ... cro1r..n the game us three-point ~ ~~~~"tufl f avorites. The C h argers AG kon eemooe11 "' "' •• have a scor eless d ead1ock ;~ ~.·.;:·~Ii~~ "'Ith Fountain Vnlley and a oa N11tc111119 17·16 loss lO Newport }-Jar· 'I'• Oona .... ,,. ll O$l'I Cotlltll bor on thc.ir r ecord ln s• '" .. HI"'"' league P.lay so-t~e-odd,:-0E p,111 A.~r:,,_-o.••11 .. aren't quite as unlikely as OT A1 01S1<1n.t they seem at first glarl~e. ~};: ~~111 Both team !! are trying to os 1<1" W111w11.,d e liminate mistakes. Edison LB J111 Rob1n,011 . I I LB Crtlo H•wlr, coach 8111 \Vorkman ec s cB r..11 c111"' his squ ad has m ade far too oe s,, .. Mi1111 . k • S .kllVI Port1rflt10 many penaltv m1sta cs in· s A•t• a'"'°'' "' •• "' "' •• •• "' ••• ,. ,. '" •m •u •• .... "' •• '" ·~ Area P .olo Results \tAltflYY Sr.or• '' Olo•rt•" •· JU"•Oll VAltllYY S.:or• '' Ov.ltttrs El ioro 1 I o 1-i 0.ne Hl!I\ 2011\.....i El Toro t<orln11: 5pr,,, Ltolltfd, °"'''"°"· 01n1 Miii' 1cotln11: Hllf'lllf t, 0....-11,, k lll ... P. LT &Iron Hunttr LG JoM Cftli!lllM C .loM UGfl"°'""' RG DOii Wi Ut ri AT Erk &erg AE P•I PrlUI QB JIM Wlgmtrl Tl Pll M(ICtOll Fl 0.11 BrOWll FL P1I Et(t.\ Milt~ Dtl 011en1e De Miki Wln1Mlller OT J""" \..IGnllOUIH" MG Tom Ly le OT li.rlc Bir• OE Dlfll,,.P,l""r LI a.rrtllt Rumpl LI Boll ""'u..i.r HI 8r4"1 C11Kt HI JOI S<llmfdt S P•I """"-' • s Greg,., .. _ Women's Athletics ' • 100 P.1esa will be trying to : establish its running game 110 e arly to s et up t he passing ~!: attack. Vill a Park has an · 11i excellent defen sive line so . ;: the Mustangs might have to 1n Luke l;o lhe air eventually to "' •• "' "' '" ·~ "' '" '" ,. ,. move the ball. The S partans have a con- taining type o r defense which gave Corona del Mar all sorts or trouble. They are ve ry quick and their linebackers mov~ to the b all very well. An exc~lent secondary could also pose problem!for the Mustangs. Stopping Villa Park's stead y ground game will be the main job or Cost a Meii;a's defense. Led by speedy tailback Bruce Ben Ben, the Spartans were able lo grind out 273 yards in the .Corona del Ma..r..game. Villa Park can go up the middle as well as wide. 0(.nl• Ml\1 OlltflW Tl! k.11111 JOM(lll$0fl LT GMy 9.....,. LG l•"Y Kohl"'bcr• C Mitt; Mu111un AG Gf•O Holelen AT !lcO!i Tu""t Rll O.n '"'~ 0 8 Tim Aowwe• Fl St1 ... Tt•P91~ Tl fony ..... 111,..t FL Milltt; K•!kod an· Colli ,,,,.W 0.ltflM oe.' T011Y ""11<1!ne1 DY Mitt Httllktr OG 11!11 Ekllt..,O DG Slln MtCoy Dl 1<•1111 S.lt"'4" OE llobln &en•o•O LI llfllCI SlliflJ LB Rltk Miiie' OB Mlrl< 1Ct11M01 01 °'""' C.O.r S ROO Fo991ll Pro Sports •• ·~ "' "' '" "' "' •• '" •• '" ~ ,,, "' '~ '" ·~ '" ,,, •• '" ·~ ·~ . . Mllll't !El It :Iii; •· Glll111 1£1 11 :•1: 1. Slooom 1£1 11:.n: 1. w11, .. lllil ll:•t , t , Cl•rk IC) 11 ;11 WJliM ILi ll:M. """"TY ~11 "VOiier USI lltl ........ 1. 8'11""'''' !WI ID:IJ; 2. AW.St IFVI IG:JJ; J. B•~ IWI tO:JS ; '· Miller IWI lG:H; \. JoM\.Dfl CW) 10>)1; t. (llmMlno~ CFYI lD:iO: 1. ...... 11:1 IWI IG:•S; I. lt•\,4kf lfVI lt<W: t . O•U•ll .. I IFVI tO:tJ, t0. "-Klwlo !FYI ,,,,,; II. Slri(kl1110 IFVI 1o·s1. IJ. -!FVJ H.Ol, U. H11"1"0e 1 IWI 1\'JI; I' Gr-llO IWI IJ.OJ. JUMIOR VARSIT Y ~lllft ¥•1 .. t CUI ~•11 MUlfll 1, Oiirt CFVI 11 . 14, ;. Sorl\Jr• IFVl 11: It; J. BhCl•Oll tFY) 11·1s ••• Slrotni.111 !FYI 11 11, t, $rn411 (FYI ll;JJ; t , fenc,.•k (FYI 11.U; I llotw !Fiii 11 lll. I . Finnie (FVl 11 .411: •.!ump.on fWI II 'I; 10 . .r.rr!•lo lWl tl.U. FR05M·50PH "-111• V•leY IUI 1141 Mt•11 I. Min>n• IWI 11•0/; 1 Hllt<lli"'!I IFYI 11.TI! l . Si<MllnlO tFV) l\"l l; ._ """'lo>t• 1.,.1 11.4l; '· Co..l<ltntie tFYI II SI; •· Slr11\lft" !FYI 11 01. 1. Ordell CFVI ll ~DI: I. l>t't•lng tWI 12.U; t Cr""folk ...... , 12;11; .s.ir..t1 IFYI ll:2J, VARSITY UI Ai.rrtilM 111) 1111 NtWjN!rt H•rbat I. Wtiltr (L) 11t:1•; J. Yo11ngt>efl ILi '\O:U ; I. IClng INI 10:11 ; 4. Fuk11mDl<1 INI ll:M; S. Ertl tNI . •. Pellon lNI 10:5t; 1. Pel~r wtn ILi IO·l-4· I . W1i1trl1nO ILi 1trD•; t. Mrl ILi 11:•; IO. R ..... i-. INI 11.1); 11. Soniko"" !NI ll:U; 11. F1b+111 IN ) 11.\1, I). V•<kt•• Ill 11.H; "· Kilfltl ILi 11:41. JU"IOlt YAll51TW , L.ls A"""'llS (fll (Zfl N...,.... Mllri.r 1. Af t ll Ill 10 :11. 1. 0. F11r IHI 11:11; l . .r.t1iont! INI 11 :1•; •. 011"0 tHI 11 .lt . ~. Arri90 CNI 11:2!. •. PIU<ln IN l tl·Jf ; /, Ca11k iN\ 11:1'1; I . IC!On1 INl 11 :u , t . McOon.ilo CNl II JI, tO F•!olllf IL i 11·•1. fROSH·WPH LM AJ.lorlitol 1111 14.111 .. ,.,.,.,, H.lr- 1. C1mpbell Ill \\'.ti; J Ft r<l•S ILi 11:'1; l. Oowlr !NI 11 OG; t . Coltt Cl f 12 Ot; S. B'"'" Ill 11 :11 ; •. W•llo ch ILi 11·11 ; 1. NDrlo ii.I 17.:U; I . Oo•oes !NI ll:JS; •.Cole Cl.I "· VARSITY Mlrilli 1211 lttl W~flmi">IM 1. Wll IM) 10 l l1 ; 1. P1!ne CMI IO;J2; l. lnc1 IWI IO:l•;; 4. Stoy IWI .10:•?; }. No\n CM! 10: ; •-snai.r (Ml G:fl; 1. Plott (Ml IO:S1. I. Mall• (M) 10:1-4; •. Goll lto\I 1111M: 10. Cl-IWI 11:10: 11. !WI 11 :1 IJ . 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JI Frid!)', October 18. 1974 OAILVPtLOT BS • Sunset .Ford Football FORECAST • Bob Heusser .........,.--PREDICTS: Los Anqeles • • . . . • • • • . 2 4 San Francisco •..••••••. 9 Fint of two mertinqs betwf'f'n thele two NFC We•t ri•ols. Rams slopped 49ers down twlct Iott foll .•• ~kf· do some this ytaf'". I $-point 51»rtod for Los Angel<>. Sunday, October 20 HIEW YOllJf TS ...... 11 14LTIMOllE ...... 7 • •....i At1,. (,,., ·-~•111IU 1H1tun1n• ..,..,_ CoMt ...,. -• "'0.-'" ••~ • .,,., , .. .Ill> ..... ,,,.., IQ lilf¥ """-"" ' .1-.,~.ino,1-1ut•l•"'°'*"P1 1t • 0 4 MlAHD •.•. , . 27 CIHCIHHATT •• , .. , 11 ..., -C>nE' al -~· ol a., Oo)UI \l!llllM .. ,,,.._..,. M!gfll 01 A.I'( CIW-1>.-.-1...i M-111 Ot::1 O.: ,tAltftuo -~ °""' ""°' A.o.I<• f'ITISIUICiH ..... , 14 CLEVILAND , ..... 14 11 !ii-OOJOec.;..OYm~•" _,._.,,ui,_ •"'9. i:i.-~w..,_u_ "'CCeolb1'~p w•n PtlloOoirOI' l"""'"'_.., ... in~ MINNESOTA. •••••• 16 DfTI OIT ...... IJ ('h1 OI ".....:> ~8,.. -•"'-'It m'llhl tie liullClio, -l~ .. o11 ge1 up Oft t,..,. "'llO otgt. II'""'...,.~ in.on .......i. ir'G D•IO v ...... M!...,.IOloi Wf\!ly ~WI /-ti WOI\ ...... _, -• MIAMI .••.•• ZI U NS4S CITY ...... IJ · Mlgfll DoJ ... 11oc ... u ..,, OolDn•M !O ""ygl 1-....... -atttr R.., ....... Chlllr. N .. °'~ ·-to I.HD +;,,_,Ill l>O"! M- ~ -..Ow1..,naPCH1r. HEW ENGLAND .•..•• Z1 1Uff4LO •..... 20 No..,..,,.,.l>OI!,..._..,. M...,..."' .r.J'CU>I P-....a l"'lol llt•l lOP O!d>•---~°"""""'""'-W•-P~h wlliwnt .... ........,......1)1, • .p,,_1 ' AR4HT4 •..•.. 17 NEW OW.A.HS ..... , 10 f-"""" !-10o)t!MI 11\.llOl """""'9"' /4 D\11 rut M--I'll --R•"'""' IJ s..no. WOA _ _...,. ""'lllO Of -·-1'·13 f-· OA.LlAS •••.•• ZO PHILAOILPHIA. ...... 17 °"""'°"Qt! r•ut1e<ll"'1"' it>eo• '°""' "'"'" E-•.,. meft•-f'lltll1 _,,,_ -"' 1~ ""' -°"""' -""' 1na..,... d./( l~tOC-...-••11>,3. · ST. LOUIS •..••• Zl HOUSTOH ...... J !'la~_. 11 5..........., lo relf< 10 CMOI M NFC E.l>t _....... U-"""°' ..... """"•II> c-,. -11 11'°'1 -................ 0.11<1 •Iii I-Of 10 ' DIHYEI ...... 17 SAN DIEGO ••••.• I J &i.c:. ...... ot.I ,,,.., .. !1>11< -IO gel tw<:0. ""° -01" ......, OOllt COllnl CIOifgt<I 0011 I'll 0-AFC WMl <llllC ...... ""'"' ~ tlWOrllO Dr 11!1!1 '°"' _.. cH1c~~~~°.~l Oc!~~e::,2 .• .... ,; -.,. -l&l""'llG Olcl NFC c.tllrOI "••I•. 8olll W"111Q1tAO lo ... p ,.ot WM/I V1'Mf'IQI, -go,,,. lo<" 8'!11s .• -'"""Y lo!" -TVID -OBG.-yH,,.it .. F""""D lrown on lelnl<:01l.,1 """"'"" lc><'e,,..a r1~ o,. thgfll......, &fie•~ 100! ll !1<11 •-IOO RICOnl "'"•MOftNV. ();1 1111.~:li-l>l lOf .686• ... _ . I-OHIO STATE &-SOUTHERN CAL 2-0KLAHOMA 7-MARYlAND J-..MICHIGAN I-TEXAS .UM 4-ALABAMA 9-NOTRE DAME 5-AUBUR N 10-TEXAS TECH Saturday, Oct. 19 -Major Collea:es Al ' Fo«:e 17 N•lf'I' to Al•~"'· 21 r ... ne.see. 9 .r.rlzon. Stal• 42 Ullh 12 Ark111ses Stale 21 L1m1r II Ark1n~$ 21 T"e111 20 "ubur11 27 Geor•i• T1;ch JO Bril)llm YPUnJ JO U.T.E.P. 14 9,own 21 Dlrtmouth 20 Celltomi1 2• OrellOfl su.a l• Clncinn•tl ll Wlchil1 6 Coloredo SU.te l5 Nev•<H (Reno) 12 COrne!I 25 H1,...1rd 10 ouite 22 cmmson 11 Eost Ca rolin• 19 A ptlltho1n 6 Florid• 24· I'" orld& St1te 1 Fu,man 17 E11t Tennesi;ec 6 Gtor&i1 ll V.yiderbirt 17 H1w11; 2J Lont ·Btt(h ll Hou\loll J.4 Vil1111G"t 10 ld•ho 2A MPn11n1 :?l llllnois 21 Mlcfll11n st11e 21 low• 21 Ml11111sct1 It K•nsas State 2J IPW• s111e 21 1Ce11t St1te 21 Uta n St•t• 25 L•noi•·Ahyne 18 O.vidt.Pn 7 LS.u. 21 Ktnlll'Cky 10 LCJUisviUe 33 Dr1k1 1 M1ryl•nd 19 Wt kt ro,eu o McNeese St.tte JO Arlln11ton 1 M<1mo, Fii. ?5 west \tor1+11.1 II Ml1ml {Olllo} 24 Bowlina Green 7 Mlchip n 28 W•!.<:Onsin ]6 Mis~ossippi Slate 22 Meml)hi1 St•te 14 Mossisslppi 27 Sou th C.101in• 15 Nebrask• 21 11ans1s 12 New Me•ieo Stile-211 Norlh Te~as 12 New M11tiCO 20 Wypming IS North C1roli111 27 No. C1ro1i111 Slate 2• Natre Dime l8 Arnw 1 Ohio Stile t5 lndi1n1 6 Oruo U ll More11t1d It Oklthom& Stale 20 MiS IOIH• 17 O\o:l1hom1 l9 Co!OtldO \l P1c1tic 17 Fresno Sl1te II Penn Stilt 211 SyrKU>oe 1 Pennsy1v~n+• ]'!> L1!1ye1tll 6 PiUl-bu'tth 2' 8o5ton College 22 Prirteeton 22 COip ie 20 Purdul lS Nortnwesrern ll Alct 2l S M.U. 20 Aulae~ 2t Wollotm & Mi r;" tl S•n Diego State 21 Sin · Jost Stile 2l SPU!htrn C1I •2 Ort111on 6 Southtrn Illinois · 21 Nor1ne1n Illinois 21 SPl.ltht rn MississlP01 16 v M.1. , 11 Sl•nf'Ord 20 W1~hlngton 1 Ttml).a 31 SW Loul~ltne 6 Tfl Ml)lfl 31 M<>ly Cl'01S 7 T•••s MM 12 T.C.u . ll Te111 T1C1' 21 Arlron• 22 TolOdO H Oevton II Tull"'° 31 Thf Cll~I 6 TUl$11 'I West ,.,.,, 20 U.C.L.A. '6 Weshlnlflon SYtt 1 Vlraini1 11 V.P.I. J weuer11 Michi1111 to M1n.h1U u Vite •~ Col um bl• o Other Games -Sou th 1nd Southwest "-bilene Chns1l111 .r.n(ltlo Stele Austin Pt•r C1t1wb1 ~~tern t<enl\IC~Y Emory i Hen,., 0.orp!OWll Clt!nvill• Gr1mbli11J H1mo<1e11-Syd'Wty Jtcll$0fl St•lt Jtclt10nvllle l.l••n41to!I Lou"""' Tt<h MI 'S Hiii McMurry M!Odlt lO llM$\C'f" Mls•IW~ Coll•11• Qv1chl!1 S r Austill 5•m li01.l~ton .S.ou.tbwtt1tm. 71n11 ,lo••• Aloi Te••s Llllht ,an , ... ~ r. " " .. " " .. .. ". " " " ,. " " " " .. " " ll " " " " (•t i ,..~., HPWll'd P•rne Norlh Allbllfll Gll'd11tr-W1bb Mlrlln P,.Sb)'ltri•n Rtl'Hk>lph-M•can M•l)'\'lllt Blutfleld Ml11l1Mppl V11!~y western. Me,YJ;ind Soutl'lern U Ch1111nooll• .r.l11Mim. St1 I• NW LPUlsi1ne GUilkll'd M!lt"I)~ Mutre)' Nlc holll Montlc;sllo SW Te~'' T1111ton Se••llf• ~ ... "°'' AU\thl Wt•hinJ!on .. Lff " " " .. ' , 1' , • ' " " .. ! " " " ' " , ' ' • ' • 11-NEBRASKA 16-K.l ;NSAS 11-TWS ' 17--MISSOURI ll-ARIZONA STATE 11--VANDERBILT 1 ~AYLOR . 11-f"LORIDA 15-0KLAHOMA 'STATE 20-Arbnu s -Pinn SI. Trlnllr "'" Vi111i11l1 U11iot1 West v1. Tech W11t1f11 C1ro1in1 We1t1m Kenluclly Wi11sto11-S1lem Wollord :n New Mexico Hl'l111d1 11 26 0e1i. u 42 SI, Ptul's 0 11 COO.Cord 1l 21 lllditlll State 14 ll Tennes:we Ttc1' U 20 Ft,..tle\tllle I 11 :u Newtieny I Other G.amos -East AJleahenr Amhtrst BP,ton µ Bridlltl)Orl Centrtl COnntcUcut Connecl.cut Del1w1re Edinboro Ft1nkU11 & Marsfl•ll 0.tty•bu'I Hobert llldie111 U L1comi111 M•ttach11MLI• Mickllebwry Mill<11rswlll1 Monte le Ir Mullltnbe•& New HIM(l,hire NP<lhe11\em Norwic1' Slippery AP<.k SU\QIJl!h•nn• Tr1n1011 T"nity Willl1m, 31 Wesh'ton &. Jt11'50ll 120 21 A<>chesler 21 B1,1ekneu 14 27 Corlla nd 21 31 Wllli•m Peterson o 21 M•ine 1 22 Lthilh 10 40 Lock Htven O f2 Olctl11son 6 41 We~t•rn Connecticut O 2l Alfred 20 21 Clt•iCHO 20 Zt Ul)s•I• I 21 AhPdt bl•nd 7 31 H1mllto11 6 l3 l loomsb11r& 6 11 Wiifll< I 29 Urs!nus 10 20 YerMOlll 11 2t Sprl nafield 2J 3-1 Boston Stelf" 1 19 W•1ne~bll•I 7 20 Del1w1r1 V1Ut'I' 15 'l Jo/Int HO(lkin1 17 U CPlb)' 1 20 BPWdPin r Other Games -Midwest A11111nd 21 f1innoot 1 Btldwi11-W1ll1c1 11 Heldelbe'II 6 Cemeron 21 Centrtl Olt.l1llom1 20 Central C<>llep, 11. 21 Biie,,_ Vi•t• ll Cenlt•I Michlpn 2' Western Illinois 7 COlorido COii•&• ll Bethel, IC•nws 6 0.fillnte 20 Blufflpn 11 E. C.nl,11 0•1111om1 23 NE Ol<l1hom1 15 r..s11rn M1chl1:1" 29 Norlhlrn Michlpn 1 (••111will• U DeP1uw ll FeniJ 20 Northwood 15 r,1n-1in 25 St. Josep11's 10 H1U5d1le 28 W1yne, Mien. ll lltlnoi1 Si.le JO E•stern Ill inois 7 John C•rroll 27 Ct\e RestNe o Lek1l1nd lfi •ow• Wesltyen 1 Llln15ton 21 SE Ol<l1hom1 14 Lincoln 2t Missouri SOulht m 16 Millikin l 5 Whetlon k11 Missou ri V1Ut y 21 Centrll Methodist 1e Monmouth 21 KflOll 12 Muski11111m 2fi 01t1fbein 10 N•br1sk1 We1ler•11 lt COllCOf'di• Neb. u Norlh 0.koll ll Norlh De~Ol.I Stitt ll NOrthtm ,_ l~ Mornir.1$idtl 6 NW Mi»CJUrl 17 C.nl,11 MilM>Url If orn1....-12 MUw1ukee 21 Aoll1 11 NE Missouri 16 SE Ml1M1U ri 27 SW MiUOllri Zl Ste•llnr IS SOUlhM•te rn, K111. tl T1yl<1' 21 Andeison 12 V1 ll)lr1l10 21 Wtblllh \9 w1sfli111l1>r1 U 21 Otllo Wt1l1y111 ~l WtMminslti• 21 Ollio Northtl'" 14 Wiii/im Jewell 24 Oll•w• 15 Youn~lown ll 1111 St1te 30 Ottl1r G1m11 -F1f West Ooiw Stitt C.I Luthe•11' Chico St1t1 0.V<S Fullerton ld•llo Collfrt Ll!lfklld ••Los A11111es Monliolll Sllle Norni.m Cotorado Ptcl~ lutht1•11 ftl.,.nlde S1c,.mento S.1111 Cl••• Simon rre$~,. SOuth1rn Ortron Weber Wl \lffll W1~h•l'li'IOt1 we1tf'lll11s1er WUllmttlt 5440 CMIJOI GROVE llVD. WESTMINSTER ,CALIFORNIA lord moni·1111 • l .I .,. 'r • • • J, ~. I llfi OAILY PILOT I Ft1<1ay, Oclober 18. 1974 • Job Taken Seriously ,..,.,.~. TOO FRIVOLOUS? Raquel Welch Testinio11.y Cites Loan By You1iger SAN FRANC ISCO (U PI ) -Testimony in a deposition indicates t hllt .Attorney General Evellc Younger may have invested in a speculutivc oil \'Cnturc "''ith a "no-ribk " loan. Thirly·111nc c:.1rlon:-. or documents dtoaling ,,.,,ith a case involving GcoTck Resources Fund. Inc .. now in federal court h(·rc. wert• madc1>ub/ic. JN ONE DEPOSITION, a Securities and ExchanKc Commission attorney asked Jarob Swartz. a friend of the attorney general, why ''oungcr was "entitled to in- vest in a program without taking any risk" while other investors had a chance to lose all their money. "Don 't bla m e that on me," Sw<1rtz responded. lie said he did not beliC\'C 'ioungcr knew John Burke, a key figu re in the Geol'ek case who is accused or misusing the rirm's funds. Younger has denied that the k>tu\,-for Slti.5'00, carried no M k. lie rclc1.1sed a legal opinion which J;tates he must repay the Joan with in- tPrest in 1978. Tllf; DOC U i'I ENTS released by the cuurt also dealt v.·ith the role played by Otis Chandl er , publisher or the Los Angeles Times. in the llcoTt•k oil cxploratinn ''cnture:-. 'I'he \Vall Street Journal said a statement prepared by .Jacqueline Chambt!rs Aldrich. Gl.'oTek 's chicr ac· l'Ountant. indicated Cha n· dler "·ould ha\"l' reaped a '"\Vindf:ill " if a propost..'<I n1er~t:r of Ut·oTt·k \1"ith anothe r t1rm . Pacific Oil <ind Ua~ l)l'\ tlopmt•nt Cor· p . ,,.,ert· :11·1·ompli-.he1l accom1>li sh1'd The merger never Look place and Chandler has con· sistently denied an)' connec- tion with irregularities in· volving the Gt·oTek runds. The rcrords show. arcor- d1ng to the \Vall Sircet Jour- nal, th<.11 Chandler bac·kt•d thl' proposed 1971 mcrg1'r, By Raquel .. NEW YORK IAPJ -With l{!'<trs in her t.-yes, actress R<1quel Welch walked out of a nt,,.,·s conrerence called to. 1 ')11l~n ce her appointment 'f"S chairman of the 1975 American Cancer Crusade. She has ~en usked Ir her sex symhol mQvie image \l,'<J S too fri \"Olous ror her new role. "I J>O~·t Tllll'\K th~t it 1s .it :ill." :-hf> responded l'hur!lda ~ A le11 11101n t"11l!> later. :-.he <Jthled. ·· 1 lh1 nk thal was vc rv rucl l'. '1 E)'!;'S "'t·l .. ~h1: ll'ft the rwm. ~li ss \V e lc:h returned .about five m inult>s later. ""EY•:use me. Thank you for '~iti n g "''hile I com- posed myself," she said. CA~TER SOCI ETY of. fiC'i:.d i;i s;,i id stuge uni.I screen stars often serve in the largely honorary position or e<.1nc:er <:rusadc <:hairman. r\c:tor Peter G ra \'('S ""US co- c:h ai rm ;.in of this 1·ear's cru.~ude . - .. \\'h::it we "·ere intere!:iled in v.its that l\liss \Velch had a spcc.ial interest in the American Cance·r Society." said lr1·ing Rimer. the society's public informution director. '"\Ve a re sincerely and .deeply graterul to her for.that." "'tancer Society officials said about SIOO million was raised across the country by this year':s cancer crusade and hope to raise m ore thari $110 million in 1975. DEMUR ELY dressed in a. \t'hite suit and blue blouse, l\li ss \\'el ch said at the. beginning of the nev.'s con· fer ence that s he woul,d muke te levision ;,ind public appear;.inces for the society's education a nd • fund raisilll;! pro~rams. ""l\11' life has been very good1o me." s he said, "a nd now perhaps I can use my name to advance t he work of the American Cancer Society," i\"otini; that she had ltt•o ~oung cltildren, l\1iss \Ve lch s aid sh e ho p ed cancer "'ould be ,,.,,ipt"d out in her lifetime. not theirs. She also <:ited the e:.1ncer deaths of actors Gary Cooper, Hu m'· phrey Bogart and other en tertainme nt per sonalitie~ as reasons for her in tercsl in the crusade. "1'!'1 S:\DOENEIJ nol only by the losses v.·hi ch c<1ncer eause~. but l"m di str(•ssed to di ~H'o1·cr lhal snme people think t.hc ri)!hl :t~a1n:-;t c:tncer has all tht ino nl'Y ;.Ind rcsourr es ii nt·eds,'' she saicl ··Thrs just l:i OOI so ·" :\llss \\.clch \\"a s ;iskcd if the silicon injt:'elions em- ployed by some <.1clrcsses to enlarge their hrcasts could be <J cause of cancer. ·rrn not fa mili ar I hat. ·~i;he r('pl ied. \\ ith R-=r--i?12fi'o r:=:i=-.:-=--::...-::..:1ac( -1-- 5'T'ON 63' .__,,........,1~E 40CAR_PAR~I N]§ __ FOR SALE 'S·erious' P r o grams De fe nde d ) NEW YORK !UPI ) ~ Robert T . lloward, the president or NBC·TV, has reaffirmed thal his network "'ooJd continue to broadcast serious and r e ali s tic programming, but would reject any shows '"played for shock 11r se n salion;.ilis m.'' Howard 's comm ents were made al t ·h e newsmakers lunc heon of the Hollywood Radio and TY.Society. ll OWARD 'S STATEMENT was . .£enerated by criticism NBC- received following the Sept. 9 telecast of .. Born lnnoccn· t," w hi c h s howed the g radual m ora l disi n · tcgration of a teen-age gi rl in a j u ve nile d etentior, 'home. The show. starring Linda Blair, portraye d so m e aspects o f les bi a nis m amongst the inmates and one scene depicted · tlie remale rape of the teen- ager by peers. Despite hun- dTeds o r ·co mplaining telephone call s and mail, many TV critics. viewers. and professionals working with disturbe<t youths praised the show for 1ll\ realism " BORN INNOCENT" may have kicked up a lot of dust, .. Howard said, "but in the end. it has only confir- m ed two t hings we 've always known. 1''irst, that serious themes do have 11 rightful place in prime lime, as a service to mil· lions bf adult \'i ewcrs y.·ho want entertainment lo be ;1 renection of the real world. ·Second. it confirmed that there will always be a seg- ment of \'iC\vcrs who v.·ill be disturbed hy this kind of progr;.imming " llov.·a rd tailed ··Born In- nocent" ·· A cons tious at- tempt lo do a serious drama on an u~Jy social problem." lie said rcmale rape in a detention center is .. a fair_l.v com m o n occu rre nce 1n those places.'' What CAN Yo u Get for only a dime --- these days? ' /'. I I • lS,160 s,._ Ft. ,,,.. , L-.:1 J.1§' 115' L 60 ' I 79 PL Se-lected • 1 •.,20 s.._ ft. •ldcJ. 548 3414 OR YO UR BROK ER· A TROUSERS SUITS DRESS Bt SPORT REG . SALE SHIRTS 5 125 $9 9 V2 PRICE 5 145 $116 W r nlto i., .. ., " 1,..,.,,~d 5 165 s132 .~1~r11on o l •u•" l!'>d 1port (OOl!"!Ow pt«d!llltl--..., .• $29.99 .-5 195 s1 5 2 ~al wa nt ads Selected SPORT COATS REG. • SALE . ' 5 85 5 100 s125 · s15o '$5999 .. $6999 . s9799 SJ Q4 99 Over The Counter IWOLhilogt Lick Postal Costs Increased Rates Pronipts Thrift . By SYLVIA PORTER Air mail, as a special and more expensive category. is dying -but as it does, we must race the prospect or a jump in first class postal rates from today's 10 cents to 12, 13, or even IS cents. 1r you use the mails. this to receive anything from s pare mac hine parts to medical la b tesl results. study the new services that the Postal System is or- Cering at extra cost to you to meet its competition and in- crease its revenues .• One is express mail ser- Service, under which mes- sages are sent via Western Union and then delivered by the Postal Service, usually the following day_ will send your ''com -,....,=-------, pulsory" operating expen· n ses to new peaks. And as- ITEM: I F YOU llAVE family or friends in the U.S. Armed Forces, aave money by laking advantage or Par- cel Airlift: Mail <PAL) and Space Available Ma il suming you are a lready Money's caught in a cost squeeze - this will make it more _ Worth imperative than ever that we seek ways to curb these . costs. 11fUS, KEEP in mind the following (acts about the way in which the Postal System handles your mail and your tax dollars before you lick your nex.t stamp. Item: All special classes -whether air m a il or special delivery -o rten in· crease the time il takes for your mail t o reach its destination . Speci a ll y marked mail ls diverted out of the main strea m and requires expensive, special hardling. Item: The extra 60 cents that you pay for special delivery does not guara ntee you faster service. Special deliveries for downtown businesses ar e generally made with the regular mail. In residential a reas (urban. suburban. rural), a spe:Cla l t•arrier is di spatched only if your r egul a r postman already has left on his roun· ds. As rar back as 1970. a major study or a typical Tuesday in P.1anhallan revealed that only 35 per- cent o r special .de livery mail recei\'ed special ser · vice. Item: Bulk y a nd ir · regularly shaped envelope,i; travel more slowly thal'I s tandard ·size lette r s because the heavy. nonstan- dard-size letters cannot ·be processed by machine and must be put through by hand. This not only takes extra time bul also costs the Post al Service more omney. ITEM: YOUR lette r faces· an immediate d e lay or aOOuL a rull day ir you mail it in the after noon. Mosi. pickups arc down to one a day and generally occur in the mor ning . Eve n in business a reas collections from post boxes stop after 5 or 6 p.m. In the pre-1970 Post Office era. residential mail boxes usua lly were emptied three times a day. and pick-ups from business OOxes often made as late as 9p.m. Item: IJ you r firm is a large mailer, investigate private mail services which promise reliable, relatively inexpens ive d e livery or third class mail -such as Greyhound. Am e rican Airlines. United Parcel Ser- vice. They could save ynu time, monc .v and :1g - gravation. Ite m: Look particularly into the UPS. t}\e Postal Syst em 's major 1>rivate competitor, which now han· dies twice as many pa rcels as the Postal service, ut gtnerally cheaper rates. Its service also is faster , more reliable a nd Its damage rate is :1bout one·fifth .thal of the PS. It offers many services at extra fees tha t the Po!tal Service docs not. rrEM: BE SUR£ you in. v~igate the · Postal Scr- vlce' s n umerou~ rate rntegorie!!: ror whi~ yoor church group nr club migbl qualify and-that your organliatlon ·~ malling I~ IX'insi S<'nt via the h~asl ex· pen!iive bulk r:ile. T.>on't vice which guarantees next day delivery within a 220- city network or your money bfck. ,Letters and-or mer- chandise weighi ng up to 40 pounds are picked up by postal messenger~ itenl to the designated city and then delivered by another mes- senger the next day. This service is available, too, lQ. England. tht· Netherland<:; ;,ind Brazi l. Another is the Mailgram Louis iana Study Oii !1110 ()fl II.I Ofl "ll• °" 1,.1 on 1• J Oft U .J Oii M.0 ()It 11.• °" 11' 011 11., OP! 11.1 ()It 11 1 No Harmful Effects' I MUTUAL FUND S .I UALVES'l'ON. T ex. A group of unive rsity-!Owing 11 1 tlu of Dt.•el E 1,10 1. J_,,, FO 14.SI, u.u.~wrv F 1.00 ·1.00 bid -•S•td prl. DA•YFUS GRP JOI'"'''" u .1111.n 'lil• ... •• f 4.JO 4.19 tts an M1,1full Ory! Fd •l.(lfo 1. JOtlN MAHCO(ll: Soi>IK EQ S.Sl •.OI New Yor• -Fol· UOO!IC.. 11.0J 11.~J PG-Mn 1.00 1.•lj lf<l,19 t .'IS 1.60 1 UPI ) -A t wo year study related scientists working of an oil rich area off the in the so-called "oil patch" Uluisiana coa'st indicates in the Gulr or Mexico where offs hore drilling ant. drilling began in 1937 said79 productiop have ne ither p e r cent of th e ir in - hurmful nor benefic ial cr .• ·vestigalions demonstrated rectsonthcenvironment. no dramatic change in the funds •s <1..ottd bv E<1'' Fd J.11 J. 8nCI FO 1•.•111.1 ~l~o G 4.30 4.10 .Ille NA50 11'1(. Or\'f Lv 10.SJ 11. Gl"wl~ •4.M 1,01 (U00f.ll FD5: --Ol'yf U. 10.01 ... S!Qft.lt 6.10 6,14 Intl Inv t.W t .'4 T~1, Sp 1nun 1.09 6.6~kE'f5TONE: , M<JI Rei 10.01 IO.Ot Oclllbtr 11. ltU )tO C..n• 6.91 ' C~I Ill 11.1•0 11. B.\11...: 11.1? 11.n ... ,..,. E&E MV l.il 21 Cui! BJ 11.ll 11. tom l.S6 l .S. -•=u-m~~-M~·-· •WW• AOlft IM J ... 1.1 E,.TOtl I Cu\I Kl t . ..i 6.1 1.t• J.n •. IS /On 1111 1.00 1.61 MC)W,.110 : C...I Ill l.11 &.1 SECUlllTY ,DS: HMM• J.O J,U 8'111 Fii •.11 /.4 "41 SI U.11 !S.4 EQIUlll l.H J,r. -N ~w-·~•·-•-u-~~ Aet111 1n 11.m 11.0-1......... • .... 1. eie1 !>l •.to s.u Ult•• ,. •.n s.11 AMllrf S.J, s. !".pitt:H f •.•1 •. Viii ~ 1.n 1.4 SELECTID •os: -NW> -N~•--U--~~ 111E Sl.5 MILLION study AHi.1111 1.00 '· eo1E s, 11.u 11. Pot .... , 2.10 1. °"' Fd •·• e.• ,.lplw fd 1.12 1.11 E~et GI l . .U •.1 Kf!l(lr &.41 & Siii ~ 1~1114.ll was sponsored by the Gulf NM-IP, 1.11 J. Elfllfl 1r1 '·'' ""~' c;in '·" s.11 !i.rf>Unt:• •.n 1.10 u . "l' R h Am Birth ,_ .. ,,. Ent•u t.11'1 ..... °"""'"' S.•• s.• Stlll!Y F '·"' 10.U ruvers1 1es esearc con-""' °"""' .,,,1 •.n Fein s.tt 6.1 1..0 Edie 11.0. 11.a:i stt,.111Ht.o Gii,. , sortium Am Eqly l•I Il l F"' fl.we 6.ll 6.1 LEX GllOUP; c.omi.1 1.11 • l.M f.llf'ltllSS Fed ARI S.'1 •.. Cl> Uclr 10.'2 II.I Elll<Pf 4.0I ••• Prob bl FUNDS: ,.-IOl:LITY (if'wtll & ... 4.11 Flet Fd 111'9 ... '' a y the main con· Ulll.. • ... '·'' GllOUP: ~11"(11 10.oa 11.01 .._,°' e.u •.. \ribution or the study is thal ~T"' t*' I:' ~:" !:n ;::1 ti:~ !:!t !.n ~:r. F~ ;:: : m this particular environ-~, •.• •. c.on1r1 1.u ... UXIMIS s1tE•llM>fll •M: ..... 1·· s.s (¥ SSec s.n •.. s.AYLES; "-t 1111 "·" ment orfshore drillinfl has ""' Gftlt .u · J. °'' Inc. 1.00 -·· ~ °"' , ... 1 ... lncom ''·'' "·'' done no harm e ven though I'( ,.,,.. !Miii l.• l. DHI •.M ... Mulllat 1G.1S 10.1 ,,....,, 1.1'0 1.11 l.lfl lll'nt J.ta EHtl S.2' LORO .... : $11 0...., 11.)l 11.U environmenl . Economic Plans Told By R e a g an has been going on for ""'""" ... •· EYWSt 1.• •. .t.n11<11 s.11 s.11 s.i.. Ft1 '·" 1.00 SACRAMENTO <U PI)-more MIH!G.-1.111. Fn 11.nn. ""'111r1 2 . .0 1 . .os1GM,. J'UHOS: Go • R ld R h than 25 years '' GURC AMCIMOll Pwttn 1 ... 1.1 8tld oe11 1.1s •. ., c.o Stir •.1o1 ·s.01 v . ona cagan as . • GllOU,.: s.1em F 1.u l . LUTHE•"" •110: 1.w '·" 1.•1 told President Ford Califor-J>i:es1denl James M. Sharp Grwtt> s,"."' ,'·. Trend 1•.n 1t.1 BrOI'! Fo 1.11 1.•l .,.,.. Lu '·" nl·a 1·s proc-di·ng toward <""d. IMom ,,. P'IN,.Htl"L Bro inc 1 ... 1.v 11e11•11• '·'° j·• '""'" ._. Rt•rv IOJ:I 11. PltOGllAMS: Bro US t .'11 10.ll $mltll 8 l.«I . .io I. · · $pKtr l .Ot l. Fin [)yfl J.IM 2.IM MA.SS CO: \8 l&Gr J ... 1 ... e 1m 1na t1n g outmo ded Sharp said the s tudy, F"nd 111v s.ot s. Fin 1nd 1.e1 1.a1 F•"'m s.11 •.os.. GtnF •·"' 1 ... regulations that keep costs w1 ,.,.n 1.11 1.s Fin inc. •.1s •·• ·~ F s.1e •.O'I Sws1 1nv s.11 ,S.6J coveringtheT1'mbali·erBay .t.uo.a F •.n s.1 v.n1 ,_,, 1.61 Miln F '·" •.•Sw•11v G '·" a.t11 of g oods a nd services high .t.x1: 111F11 v11 1.&1 1. Mot.SS FNtL: Sow• '" 1.10 I.Ml Estaurined syste m ;.ind ex-HOUGHTON : ,111sT M•T 1.tl 1 .• 1 Spec1... , ... '·'' and enforcing regulations tending offshore about 20 Flll'lll A J.• •.11 1HYEs1011s: 1o11G-'·'° 1.&t SIP 1110 .... '·" lhal Promoleeffl.Cl.Cncy. Flll!d 8 6.01 6.S DIK Ftl J,0 l,41 MIO !0 Je 11.:M STITE BHO Gll"P: m I. to lh loo r l d lh St«• 4.IG '·U GUii FO 4.91> S.44 MFO t .!4 l .tO Com Fii l.01 l.:IO In a tel •• t F d 1 8 e 00 cp • ,..,.. sci l .11 J.s 1ncom t.36 6.11 MtO '·'' 10 .... 01oe1o11 J.s1 ,l.to c ra m 0 or · should not be inte rpreted to &Le Gt11 1.it 1. S!oc.k " s.7' 6.lSM4M• •v 111 1.11 Pl"OQI"• 1.16 l.u Reaga.n not ed t.h a l a meanoffs•'-re dri'\li·ng i·scn· ~ 1 .• 2 1.t ht:Multl ......... lrMtfle• •.11 e.1 SIFrc.r a.i..3.h tit.I 9.1-. 6 . .i S. Flm Bot ··-•• , Mlil Am J • .O J."-1 SI fr In< 6.t1 •.'1 statewide econom 1!' con· . . &.\"flt OI' l.11 '· FOttUM GllOUP: MD,.,,.,,, 1.00 1.00 S1a1<1 St• H.lt 111.1• rerence has been c· tied fo v1ronm~nta lly h<f rmless 1n RNcn H1 .... '· 100 F11t1 e."M ... ""'"'' Fo 1.oo 1.6s st1aoMA.N .,o5, Ocl. 23 l·n Los Ange"les w·ilhr all locations. llffcoll 1.M 1. 101 ""° •·.n ... 111s.e Fo '·'' .... """1..0 1.11 •2.11 Rtrlt,.... f,4' 2. ColWI> t ,)I •• , I 8nG ... I 1.01 """ Ftl .tt · ·" llondslti 140 l. 1S FYllO 4.lt ..• llllF Fii •.Ol l .U l11iot\I 1.00 1.00 Tepresent;Jlivesofbusiness. Tweilty·lhree scientists ae,1 Fiii! 1.oe 1.1 ,.,,..Gr 1,q '·' MIF Gto t.• t.~ Oct.WI l.14 '·'' lahor. educati·on,·consumer ar-1.10 1.1 FOUNOE•s °' a.to '·" 5TEIM 1101t ,os, working on the project said 11rn11m 1.n '·" GllOU•: hi loluC)m ~ I.ft< 1.&J Bt1-. 11..31111.• -ups and the elderly. 21 per-nt of the research CALVIN FuHos: Grw1t1 l. 4.14Mut sii" u.s11s.u •""•" •,·,.• •,·• lb'" ,...._ 8"'1 Ftl t..JI 10. ll!Com •.29 IO.l lolult Trt 1.10 1.10 OC • ·" The te legram was in .. ,d not demonstrate harm· eon Fo •.•J '· F M11111 "" 1.01111;i1 1..ou 1,01 1.e1 11s cttouP: UI Dl'I Slit f.:IJ 1.S ,-SQKll 1.42 t. 11,.T SEC ,Q\: Grwtll (.1'1 (.10 reply lo Pord's request that ru1 impact~bul ~u1'red fur-Hatwll 1.11 I.ti fOut1.q F 6."M .. Bill~ t .l l '·'° ""'°'" •. t1 J.IM II d '"'"t N'I' V... l.ll I. J'll,.NllLIM 6oftd S.. l.IM 4.tll !.rnmlt S.Ml ••.14 a governors, mayors an ther study because or insuf· cG """° '"" 1.1 GtK>UP: o;widft ,_,. a.02 Ted"'' '·'° s 111 other local officials set up CG IMF •l.IM 1.61 ONTC s.m $. Prd SI• •:11 S.11 -.. , ,. •.SI 1,11 ficientorincon"-istentdata •. c.ap "'"' '4.°' ... Gv!WISr 4.69 '·' ktcom i.a •.11 TMIP G 6.11 111 voluntary citizens action ~ CMt SM 1.s1 1.11 Fr 1Mm 1.~ 1. Stoc11. Sr s.ts s.1 ''"' ct11 •·" •·•' •• R ( 11 •• ~I '"" t .ll I. USC...$, t .10 t .tl GrW'lll 4.0l 4. frav! Eq I.JS 1.M committees to fi ght in -e por e conccn -c.t1AHM11to util!ti. i.i. 1.11 1.w IEHG L,: TL.dlr 11 .... 1 .. nation similar to the -im· tralions of trace a nd toxi·c Futtos: ""' c.. •.11 s.:12 E<lllilY 11.11 n .IM 7lllll cc 1.n J.11 ,.., "'"9f" ,ti 1.01 lb IEql, 2,n J.Ool Grwtl> I.SI I.IS 10ltl (I l.U S.U mittc..oe established on the metals present no evidence a.tnc11 '·" e." F•1 L1E.q 1.11 1.os 1ncom •11.!IO 11.1• u..11i.ci s • .o 6.11 r b. 1 · 1 h d r Bnct ,.,, 1.11 '·" Ft1 Mi 11p t .OJ •.03 ~ ~•0.10 to." Ul\HYNi s.u '·" national level. o 10 og1ca azar a nd are EClly Or .. ,, '·'' ''"'os tNtP NE,. Mi 6.41 •·" UHIOtt •11•••CE R ·d h c i·r helo \ th r 1 l f.ql' ~ 1 . ., 2.ot GMIU•: NN c.iit '•.10 .• c•ouP: eaj!an sa1 I at u 1or-\' e ume eves Fnd""' s.us.6 c..rnr.. 6.11 6. -11 6.11 .. , Bt11StY 1.-t.ll nia is · Ir cl r " .. ~ promulg;.itcd as being llar &w111 1.u '·" 1rnpac s.• s.11t ~ori •.o 10.SJ NlMt t~Y '·" ~.10 · a t'a Y al' 1n.., on or· -1nc.0111 s.11 s.to 1,.,5 1, 1.09 1.1-1 N• Pl!•~ 11.~ 1J.'1! v.. C..p• •.31 '·'° d 's first point. thul of con· mful to livint: things,''.-lhe "'oY 111 l .()) l.lO 1>111tt s.1s • • .N Ne-« wtt1 1.u 1."1 """"' ln '·" 10.11 · I f • -port 8',IO.d . ' !::' I.I) l.ll Gt-1 3.8J 4.U NltlllH I.IS I .IS UHIT EO FUN05 ~ servi ng erierJ.(y iy e n orc1ng •" 111r 4.H s.o GE s. P :io.l'l ... w.~1 1~1• · 11.SI u.s1 Mt"'" 4 11 s.01 the ••5 ·1 h Fd •. 37 •.1 Gell SK J.IS s.n ~.,. ~.!t ... 8tld Ft1 •.•S 1.01 ,,, ·mt c·pc>r-o ur speed a.Asa Gtfl FA"' >.l'l 1.10 Ne11 Id 10 ... 10 ... Cotit 11• 1.11 1.1~ li1Tiil. ' tolTOH: Ol111 Ind 11.4112.•t Wiii 11.16 11,u, <:.ont ,..._ 1.01 l ,M FllO ~ 4.U S.1t Guan! 11 ... 18... PEMHM FO: ln<Ol't'I 1.4) t.11 "As Lo yo ur second Safety E y ed •""'"'" l.H 1.n """"'"'°"G•P: ... 1m F11 6 ... ,,Oii Sc-11~· 4.4, •-•~ d )\ Sf!Tt 81 J.M S ... Fl#ld 2.tl l .19 0o Flld 4.M ·J.11 ll~fl<Jd l.W S,9' n..•commcn atlon," cagan ~ •·05 •.•J °'""'~ •.a. .... ,..,... e t.11 10 10 Uto S"¥CcF •.11 '·" Id I th l I "th t Clll!tft ftd t .1! 1.(t I-4.tl i.)I, Time F 1.IS 4:10 USAA C. i.'2 °J,t1 :-;a n e e egram. a B B J CMA MNO FOS1 ..,,, GI"-1.u .. 1.1' re s... 1 . ., "·'' us G~t'> •.~ .•.1• of eliminating OUlrho<fefl y 01" d e r's Llbt1t J.ll J..• L• l ,JS •.JS •-I.Gt S.~ U5UFf. FUllOS: Mlftflt 2,2J 1.44 .....,_ '·'' ,, . ..t Rev •.411 4.'IO Alie• F 1,lt ,J.O~ regulaUOflli .lh<tl keep l.'O.'ils "5'1\uS F .... J.M H.ril~ Al ... F 2.11 l .li Bill F110 6.IJ ... t> ol •-•o an'd scrvi·ccs h)gh Stllol Sp t.ft 4.tl Hor«• u,,, u~ 1111 1.i. 1.1'1. cam Siii. lfl ... 11 uuu.-. COLOfillAL 1,..rr QI 1 ... 1.)Q ~ S.lt \.1• •ALUt: LINE •OS· nd f . I ,. Th 0 c l ·~--I .... Gt S,.til S.'1 l• F 4,U •.ti 1111 ..... 4.11 •.1} a en orc1ng rcgu a ions c ran gc qun y ~, 1.0 .. n i11t AM 10 . ., 11.,, • ,_10 1.» 11.t1 1~ '"l! 'l.t1 that ad vance cfrlciency Builde r s Association ts ~1• 1.m 1.t;1rw: lbt s.0t s. LGtt11110P: t•vr '-•.• he f FllllCI J.t l .. '1 llltl FA!ft 1.16 ••• F'll F~rn .... ,., Y.tl 2.11 '1.ll alth and sa cty, we-af"'e sponsoring a safely m eeting °"'"' :u1 •,n 1'*"°"' '""' .. c..pw.1 1.1• 2.~ v•11c ~· •n d bolh ( h C ·eon l'llCMI I.II l.4l Ill lnwit IS.Ill ~.S ll'ltO'll L'O I.St SC.NDl!lt\: V'""'-"" .... 1ng ~,war o atJ e alifomia trnc· ,......_ :·" '·" -" G s:n ,, ,.... Fd '·" s.u 1n ... 11 sH I·" those ..:oals." · toN; Uttnse Scrvltt, 1628 ~'"i~ '·"::: '6vQ ::., ~. "' ¥~ fir f;r ~c;-:·: ,:!: Rcaxan !'iilld the nne-daw7lh St. Sant.a Ana Oct. TllVST~ ifw lflllll; 1,lf "' Ofllflll J.D1 """"111! J,Jol l )4 econ min OOnfercn'c ... 0 ACl.I ,I,. .111 .. 8M loll I.~ PIOfl fct l.M ... VMl IOl'O 4fl : v-JU I.Gt 1.0 INYl.lf ' II 1,)1, t:t) '141"1H I t,,.-t.li ch3ire• by Licut.1.nanl No h-l beer hNor wi'll -~ "·" '·" ru: ....i •.•l •11 11·-"'~ l• >• J ' o,: "" ""'"~ e J.to l.ti C-' Ut. l. ~0 Ul t.6t WaU'il or 4.n 4.1\ (k)vcrnnr John ll.arflicr, !>1.arlat7:00p.m. . •.a,,., c.11iv 1 . .10 1.s1 1,,, 4.tt i.11CW•\f!Mu t.or I"' I 11 s." t" Ctllit !if! a.w 1,11 tel ttowt; ~" '" · .. wt I <k'ul \•1.U.h ;lgr1c11ltu rc. All general a nd subron· " 1.11 .111Mve:1T CltOuP: Gtwtt\ ,,.. r.ia. w1.L1.1HotON _.,~.,· I ., f'U""'lll c-1..., 1.IO t,M !OJ Gtll 3.14 •.. lft(Ofl'I ,.,. '·'' OlllOUP1 '.""' n 1ve l"(su a o., • ...-rue· tractors arc urged to 1:1tlend °"'~ ""' •.It •.tt 1os NO J,.111 :a. ""' E•• 1.•1 ,_., (,...., 1ito 1, .• l11::C.!'I or "0\C'rnincnt :i nd and ~1 1. lo '·•le ln'or ._,.I·°' 1.n IOSPf t,» '·" Nw Htr ~.n 11t hl'\I 141 Jtl • .. , t:o... Oo I' • Qllllry ~ ,II f,H Mo.l!Ufl 6.14 ,,._. ftl • f.Sf 4 )4 MOr9ll ! :14 I Of bu~ln<'.~~. tht• \'llAhl nr mJ t ion n how safety ,c-'".,' •·!!! '·" )!«• ,,_,.,.,. Gt i ... •·~ 1ri111 ri1 1:• · I · • """' v ,,. t.'6 Mill! I.ti 1,n U(l~IP t..H 1,>1 WtlMr , .. , i. s11v 1n ~s an< 11 ;.1n •n · req111remcnts arfcct them. ~,11. i ... '.i:i v•r .,., '·'' >·n utMA111 • Wt111~ •. 01 .:n ~astc money t>y 5cndln,1? # wsl<'tters or bulletins or is•ortJiri\l c)uS6.. ~· It.I'm : If Y{'U~rc Jn 11 rust! l s lllullons. ltll\'crnmcnL Member and non member ot.Ulw.ti11J·IZ' :":~· '·14 •· 1 "!~1 1,3 t,1 =:~"": t~ •·r. ~(l()nding and tax 11oliclcs contractors s hould moke ~,~1 '·'' l.\.t = t:! }:'l =1' • it:T 1t ~' ~~ 1r,: 'f. lt: ..and how filaW ~O..\"Ctnmeol.-rescrvations no later thul'\, • m~ ~ l~ "•If ~vt t,'o..,... °'-•'~ ·~-1,14 !f."on"'.....J.::.....u....- 1na.)• t'on1hat.in1"1ul)nn. Oct.28byta llingS43"122.'i. ·~ "-•s4f~ 1w1 ni~ :_,::::::= ~·11 1;3' .~ .. ~." a.u ' lh'O C. .) 13 ~f.1 ~"1' #llPWI 1.t:1 S \l~I• f Iii U l .U 1-~~!l.;ble>~ I r I I '·' .. ; , •' J .•. "I J • t .j f l 'i ' " ' ' " " " ., ., ' ' J • . \ -···'· Oetobtt 101' OAILVPILOT CT · fDlsecting -·B:lnbows Thursday's Closing' Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ·~··Investme nt Oppor~un ities A bo und llL ROBEllT ADLER Despite the air or gtOOm and doom clrculatlng In economic quartcris these. days , opportunities sUU abound tor th e astute. Some of these Oppor. · tllnlties deserve i!Xploru lion a nd prob a blY, a bit or sticking one's toes tn the watcr~ft-1s not yet time, however. to stick in the whole foot. l_n ~~.energy area, Y.'ith or Witltout 10.vernment sup· pert, work is ex panding 1n the area of solar energy. Whether bt 1980-1990 it sup. plies JO percent or 00 per· cent. of our ·n.~eds, rou arc talking of a mult1-billion dollar industry. The problEm in making it ('flmrr-ercial 1s the solar cell, which still costs much too mucb compared to present ener gy sources. .Research indlc_i!!es-the ·ingenuity of 'American ~productivity is needed to tiring results into line. TO TUIS END M o~il Oil has take n the bit In its teeth and has 18.ld out S30 million for the pr~cct , through u small glamour company, Tyco La bo ratories. The fac· tor that will make the solar -cell .a reality Is a reduction . "in the' cost or producing its ' chemical base-silicon. Dow-Corning has made the commitment to this end with the help or a $17 million grant from the National Science Foundation. 1£ you like stocks -buy the future. The market will discount the ruture but shuns the present. Two triple A companies, Mobil ' Oil 11nd Oow·Cotning, and a super sleeper Tyco L:i.bs. rn real estate -peopl~ Money Doclor rental units. The exodus from ownership is s welling, If you like the feeling of owning pro.s>e.rlY !lO to where the growth of the next decade will be. Buy a duplex-triplex or apartment house. People will pay rent because the amount of cash ror dow n payments -not interest r ates -is the bugaboo in the single family dwelling. Appreciation and tax benefits are incidental if you don't 'have a buyer With the cash to put down. IN ADDIT ION, you can do better in the loan market with well situated income property than you can with a single family dwelling. For (he pros pe rous, agriculture is a place to look . N ot Ca lifor nia agri culture, but pure Mid· west gro wing country . Acreage is still available in \'iUil quantities at $300 to $750 an acre. Grain prices ure triple tv.•o years ago, and while there wiJI be some e bb and flow of pricing, this is our balance of · payments. We need to :Sell and t e world need! our food . . Top leve l lruined farm maTI.a gers iind tenant rar-- mers art! available. Return on· lnve1tmen-t on 33(»aere plihta and up will be in ex· cea1or18 percent even uftcr spltls with the munagcr and ten11nts.. ffiterc st ra{cs are not going back to 7 or 8 percent. Short term p11per will flue- tuat.e but will still t>e the !iafest thing around. tor the nellt 12 months you can bet" on an average of 7 :i~ • 8 per· cent on T·Bills though there Will~ luwer munth:I . 8 and olie:Jialf. 10 percent on C('r- tificates or deposit and 9 percent · 11 percent on com· mercial paper. Tll F. TRUE R E l-'l~t;c. TORS of the ebb a nd flow or innation, the comn1odities m arkets wi ll continue to produce 50 percent and up profits for those in com· puter type trend-followi ng programs. There are selecti ve op- portunities around. \Ve have covered some -next week we will cover more. In short, even a rainstorm has a ra inbow. You and I have ll choice.· We can look at the bl ack clouds or we can look at the rainbow . In either case we a re wronR. But if we recoJ:nir.e the existence or the black clouds we can separate out the colors --in thif case the opPQ.rlunilies -of the rainbo>.A• instead of being intoxicated by it. tDI". Mt1 win.,.,_ ~11••~o"<Kteo w ""'111 IN O&o lV Piiot. I folllrlt YOlllt: IU"JI -Wt.. Jlrt , ....... ,, P'kt\ ..i \flit • Pt'*' Cllw 0. i..... Ytn trKto: trtMl'ltl It WTt I .• 'l )1' .. • I uoiw. tom ea u \lo. '' W.. "" IS 1.4' 114 H \.o• ~ ~ .... ! ( ... u.. c,1~'-f,rs •• ! .!:Z-·i.. --A A-(;it-I.Ill • 1.M ,. ... • 'A "'l!b.ttL 1.n 11 '1l ""' • 'h Cini:• lfl .lO :ti n )fl• .,. "''"·•no 1.t0 1 ~ ,,~.,., '*"•• ,n ' • •v. .. .i.crritei.v 1 t u 1111 ••. ~""" 1.n • 1 11•-• AOl'l!Ot ,GM J l l + 1io 111L 1,loO 1 t i I 111-.-. ::~,/~ii ~ ; -~ L.'l t~ : , :t~~ Mclrts .JOI! Ill 10 "4~ • " CJ'N.Pw 1,N I 'l Ho o\clVlllY ,JOd •• 10 l'lt-\,9 C..•SW 1,11 ~ 'l Un "'-IMl..I I.Qt S It) lt\li+l~• c.r.OSl>y ,.0 j H~ ... AlllwlL• Ill J .. 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J II • '- AmStclpl •.\. .. 6 13 -Vo Cal G.M 1.W I 12 11 ·••• o\mS\lrol .11 I It I , \ii ColGt pf S* .• Ml ~"---• ~ o\mStor 1.1111 • 10 JS\lo Oii Pkl..,.1 .• U .,.. ,. Hew 'tor~ \U~) -Tht IOl-lllO 1111 o\ml & T l.40 t 111 •JI~ , • _ij OllS Oii 1.M 1 Ml lJ -i.. t -1"' llOC-i tlltl ,,.,. 91'''"' tr... ...... T&Tpll 111'9\loo14 OllwMl.2111 1 ,12 1·-· MARKET HIGHLIGHTS '"111 Incl 111511"' ff!O'l INHcl., ptnl<l1 o\npto\tr,. 1t0 3"11-"" Comb.II!: J,litl I IU 2 • t'I ol {Nollge Oii IN N-Vor>l Slo<~ o\TTol8l.I• ,, •H•• "' Ce!!dlw 1.10 10 ,. l + ... ~~ """""• <f•tnQIS ... !he INDEXES ::~:t~ -:.• "j "ll P'' .-v; =r1:: "i ,J r,:= ~ <lif!e<enu bet-Tiie P•t•1ou• uo,;119 • Amer0ti ·.90 • 6 1010-"' Q:irnE<lllt J ·· t •~· \lo prJce -'"' cutren•· cio~•nt prlct. NYSElffdeX 37 52 up 0 40 A.messt .10c1 • 1• l l'>+ .... cw£«i11.11 .. io 1111o .. v. Oo\lHIJ15 • "' · Arnett~ .IO I l 11•~-V. C....pi: ,1.90 .. 19 11'\li• \lo •Biker 1" .10 •4"·• 11\ uo 10.0 ASE Index 68.98 ui> 0 05 .i.MF 1111.16 , nt 101-t-¥o 1$°'' si 2 '° 1"-'-1 c.vc.om co .,.,. v. UP ro.p • o\m!.c: .IO 1 :i. o~. v. lllf 1.n .• n """ •.. 3 SCM "' .)0 10"' • 1"' up 11·' Oow·Jones Ind 65 t 44 up 9 15 "'""'P 111< .J)" 3l•J 21 -31.1o "' 1 • 1" ,,_ • "" • S...,, Pn J"' • h UP U,I ' • · ""'°'DP .60 I J1 1\'o-V. (Ompulr SC! 1• fJ ,... ··· 58ttltt lndu• U"'• J•.-UP 111 S&P500Slo k. 71 17 OS """iie• ep • •1 \to V. OlnA01"1 I" .• I ....... \It • VSl.Nte .1• IO>t • 1-,, UP 11.J C S · Up · 4 Mut9Cotp J __ 11 l \> .• Cilnl~ 1.110 I t II ··· •• • ,.1tnro011·:10 I"'• -II U9 H.6 ·.i...;~t•r J. IU--4·-,;i·-lll.O+ '\l On'lMI l~to-·"I -11-!'I,.-Vil • fit 0>at1 $< "11• + l''I Uo u .J ot.mstr Pl ... .. a_1 llt • . . Cmr«C . .o • 1 IJ\'o-I'> 'f """"°' .Ola 1 • Vi lJ9 1•.J """lfll l .IO 1 I :M"--"" Con Eel .6111 l 199 l\lo-'Ao "IQ union CotP 4 • Vt uo u .J Mftlel In .JO s 21 1,,.-v. 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Up 11.I -Yll'tl l tMtihtn It MOIT o\Cfl VI: STOCKS o\p(_ol);I •i -• 16 I~•• loo c:-mPwl 6 14 11 ... •"" , Wn -~~IOI 1, 1,,'" •. 1~ H', ',',· .• ' 1, 11•1 HEW Y0Alt (UPI I -1111 '' moll "-a Corp .. )II 1'4 • . • Q)nP pf I II •. /JO JS • Ir. r .,. .lld .. 1-v ,t.clJt; '°"' 1',4/\,l#)O t<ll,. 110<-• I•-., t"" N~w Y"'• ,\ pl Corp • 11 ~\. • . . (.on P pf •V:. .. l100 )lltoO -1'<1 1DIN.PCO .... 111'!,• \'o Up 11.l "'h'iOU'ld<lr lt,/fO;oJo Sl«l [ ....... , ..... 11.v o\pplltcl MQIO 1J 1 ~ •• \'• (DnPpt llS •. 110 SS I LD511111S --h.J>W,tl>O SI .. , C-C .... o\A:A.S•l.'61! 11 'II _,.,, (.onPpf 1n •. •JO S•""''"' 1 illdlrl• l.IOn l 1i. M.! --11,•l,5.N llMP In<: Jil.JOU 11 )'• o\rclllN ,H J • 61\ ..• t.onPpl I.II . 110 Ill '"' 1-I.Old Ho-"'' JD.I YHI'. ••.114,110 lo""T_ (Drp •M,9'111 • o\nr...ro .n I 2S 11 ...... (.onl"wt pf... 10 JI ..... I• JU.Tel ..,\ 11·1•-).16 J•.• 1'1eYfftSIQO 1"9M1,flt l·f·E 1....,., 1t11,'IUO "" '• o\n:tl( En!p .. 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V1 e:i.t I.II I ll4 . t"-'• V1e:lc pl J , • 1110 .-J -1 V•EI llf I.lei .. ~ WV.-I VIEi Pl 1.•S •. no loO -lolt VIEi pf l,16 . 11 ltt 16,. • 1•, """"'°° "' l !JO l"'-... \!St Qlrfl .Iii •• ' 10 • .... \l\tknM 1.loO' ) ,~ .... 11• .... .. . ' "" . ,..,, '• \)it. h •" ... , ... 10 ...... ... " ' J/1'1-·~ .Ill~. I Finance Briefs. • Cinerama S111it 1.1)$ 1\N1~r:1 .1-:s I AP ) 1"'' Slock ho1dl'r!'I of ('in rr11m~1 ff'll'.,ove whl'I n11ng ly a pprflv(•d ;1 1 · for-5 rf"V('r,t,. :Stfl('k s1>l i L after hc11 rin~ chalr1nun \\ti 1- lt a m 11 Furman l"~'l>Ort hl' l\\"it:c ad \ ~1nCl'd :-urns from hi!> pri v~tclyownl'tl t•o111pnn1 ('..; tn save tht' thrl':iter ~·h:i\n fr.1111 h;111kruµtt·v . 'l'h1• !>l11f'k hold1•r~ ;1 l~o \'Ol<!d du1i ng a i.1><'1:1.d nt ('C linJ! \\lednco::day to gl''" F1ir1n;in ·~ l)aririr 1'hcutcr:oi the option to hu y :-;11 1nl•3 mil Jinn pr.-split ~har~of l"1n1•r.1 n1 ;1 rom rnon i.ln<'k at $1 a shar e. ll11ghes Tool llOl 'STO'J 11\ Pl -lhtRhesTool CO. ~<J)' 11 has ron~un1 m atcd ~ dral (o buy :1nothf'1' oil f1rld f'onipany dcspilt' a JK'nd1nA :111t1 trui.t. !>Uit i)y the JuiliCt lll'pflrlmr·n~ ll:1.vn1n11•I l\I. I Int liday. chriirrnan or tht• hn.trd or lluit hcs Tool tlnl\OW)Ctd '"l''1nl",tla~ 1h111 11\<' aequiSlllori or ,.ayn;n .1 ~1c·~~nn ln1•. !!·om Aoi:i;:•.!Vp r i'ir1 t n1·11 '' ;i' 1·1• I !' n11 c·I! \ \ · 1 u Ju l'j J ' • • ' • < • • B 8 DAILY PILOT Friday, Octobtr 18, 1q74 ., 1Jnisex s~andal ,------------:_ ' ftlen , Women to Share P·ronvuns? . ' To•1•Tlmes Rebekah Harkn..., widow Of William Hale Harkness of Standard Oil family, is unable to bankroll Harkness Bal· let ·and the dance com- pany may have to dis· b a n d1 a spokesman I MISSlO IEJO IMPORTS ~shocked our and J must say . 1 1\ k' bit ...OOalizing iey3eJl: ' '9t, '.caoditions in our socie- t1 today are such that such ._ pi-oposal appean in such .a respectable publicatloo as tbe National Educatio n "-111Llon'1 journal. If yoo a u imalilne such a thing. 'In the curTellt issue, Fred Wt 1he1ms, former executive secretary of the Association for Supei'vlsion a n d Cur· r i c u l u m Development, ad· vocates adoption ot three ne"' unisex pronouct! -"ne-ner- nls" -for use in dou ble g<llder situations. rifiS PROPOOAL, as yoo might have suspected, is an out~ of the women 's liberaUc.t rn o v e me n t • Lib leaders contend that pronoun- &baring already is widespread · ntenc ~s__.asi------ "eve.rybody ·is losing his head" 'smce women as well as men . are losing their heads, they argue. that sentence Is bisex- ual. But-women are denied e q u a I prooominal represen- tatiOn. instead, they are shov- ed lnlD the masculine pronoun. Thi! on I y alternative - -Of separate but equal •jll'ClllOIDJ ("eveyrbody is losing his or her head") - is cumbersome. So, u n d e·r Wilhelms' integration plan. the prmoun would become unisex- ual ("everybody is losing ner head."). ~ THIS PROPOSAL prompted a distinct narrowing of my chauvinist pig·like eyes. I don't llke it. Not one bit. That sort ol thing can only lead lo further confusion of sexual roles. which already Is creating identity c r I 11 i a . Trial Slated BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A Ridgecrest man is to go on trial Jan. 6 on a charge of murdering bis e stranged wife's date. Jack Wayne Bumgarner, 33, ple:ided in· nocent to the Aug. 25 stabbing death of John Stanely Bugay. 44, administr ator of R.idgecrest:s Drumm o rul MedicaJ Group. Monk-ing . .4round BOLTON ABBEY , England (UPI) -The Rev. F'rederick Griffiths says he and his family share their home in the rectory on the Duke or Devonshire's Bolton Abbey t•statc \\•ith a ghost -an Augustinian n1onk \\'ho wanders through the living room in black cassock and cap. "\Ve ha~'!' seen him many limes and happily accept the fa ct that he is here," the 61-year-<>ld Church of England rector said. "Sometimes we have the smr\J of incense noating throug h the house and rccentl}' \\'e have had the ~1nell ot f e r1nenting mead." WHY LEASE AVW? •&..wlr .... , ...... ---"'"""" C. lhery 2 ,,, I y..,.. .n.. • .., ......... c.toet ttt. ...... hp«i.ot HARBOUR vw 18711B~h I• HwitinlJfon l•ach 842·44l!i °'" ' 0..,. """" """~ ' ' \.et!~·· -MERCEDES BENZ - Sales • Seroice • Leasing 21701 MARQUERITE PARKWAY 495-1700 MISSION VIEJO 131 ·17"1 s. ... Fw)o ... """" l'llwy. ·•~6'1M~ ~ ... 1 .. ~ said. • • 642-4321 Direct or•Coltect to subscribe to the Dally Pllo~ YOUR Hometown Community.Newspaper You can Charge DAILY PILOT Classlfled Ads ., 642·5678 FREE 14 pl•c• cookw•r• ••l with purch•••· I ' , ~0Eu@] 3DOOR ICE'N WATER SIDE·BY·SIDE Automatic Refrigerator Complelelj Free·O'·Frost ' Am11n11. · /"""i.44~~. 1'A , • Ml'CftOWAV~ OVIUf SEE A LIVE DEMONSTRATION " at our , EL TORO STORE . ·s1l.,Oct 19 from 10 1.m.-4 p.m. Amana's Home Economist will show you how to pr8pare delicious food in Y4th normal time. Attention L:aguna Hiiis Leisure World Residents: Sod'.• fouhta!,rl convenience and 11''"'•"'•mat1c1 *W1tch ·your _own Channel 6 on •Ice dispenser bar - •Waterdispenserbar Wed. at 11 a,m. tor our new .H>h":'!.'•••!"IY!'·v:'-eg="c::"'"''_• ~---1------'_,'C...,A.,, Q_QKlN1.•G1.'_' ----~11- .ae~rate fresh .meat .• cold control Program featuring tarTiolJS Home EC:onomist, Thelma , Presman, 'FUN, NEW RECIPES, PRIZES! GE Microwave Oven Sat. Oct. 19 flCA BOLD SPANISH STYLe CONSOLE $589 95 at OUf' Costa Mesa Store 'lrtlm 10 a.m. lo 2 p.m. · n by GE Home E~onomist NOW ONLY $399 95 NOW ONLY eSuper AccuColor .100% Solid State oAFT •"Click .. selection for. VHF and UHF FRIGIDAIRE WASHER/DRYER RCA SMART CONTEMPORARY PAIR SALE NOW $39995 THEPAIR ONLY FRIGIDAIRE · LAUNDRY CENTER .. SAVE $501 t37995 •$pace saver. .Fiimily size washer •Flowing .Heat dryer .Plugs into any seParate 15 amp. conventional house- hold circuit. .Jet Action washer· .2 cycles-4 temps eDeepcleans denims to delicates eFlowing heat electric dryer · .Fabric settings-no heat cycle FRIGIDAIRE WASHER •low-priced washer loaded with fuli size 1au~ NOW ONLY dry features. Choose • agitale/spin speeds and $ l 5995 wash/rinse temps for wash· ables. • • AccuColor blackmatrix Picture tube • XL-1 00 all solid state •Automatic Fine tuning ·<i(O)gg .LJ(9). dagonal non · REMOTE , CONTROL B/W • Instant Pie • e Bright clear picture • Remote cont rOl luxury $159 95 avls•brow 27 Years of Integrity & Dependability ! . . j Cotti Mesi • ~1rbor Area El Toro • Siddlebick v,lley • ~··•• =W~·F··=·~;·~~ 411 East Sevtntttnth Street El Toro Roa~ 1t Fwy. (Ntlf to Sn-On) ==tF.1?=:;==-= ( . ( ::>-' O.iti, 9.9, $otvrdoy 9·6 Do~., 9°9,...Htwday 9-6 . 646-16•• e31.3no '<lr :..-- Jf111 ~ • ~:~=~!~~~~:!:'.~='!:':~= 1"' M • ~ ~ W~•• •u.,,,..., '! ·~'""'le-'""'· 'NIW lOU fRU SERVtCI PHOHI NUMIER .Zlnlth 7.3437 • XL~100 . 15" dia90na1 nan ' ~ E13MHEN PORTABLE CO~OR TV eAccuMatic IV .xL ·100-solid .slate .AFT NOW 'ONLY ' ·~-----,.-.....,-.. ,----- I I, I · .-.. . . --____ ., --~--~---~-· -~. ~----·-­.. """. 1 " \ ' I • • ., • ., r ' • • ' .. ' • Arts I Dining Out Entertainment " DAILY Ptl.oT' ~l 1 1 .; • ' , • • I . • • ' • • O!ange, '{ioizs·i Puts 'Codspell'.'.on Stage . t ., 'f ·~I ~ . ;~ .. , . Orange Coast College's theatre:Q,rts department will present the smash )nusical hit. "Godspell," Wednesdai.-through Saturday Oct. 23·26, in the OCC Auditorium. . · Th~ play, under-the direction of William Purkiss, begins at 8 p.m. nightly and is fr,ee to the public. Seating will be limited to 200, and ~~rSons w!ll 'be sea.tedon a fi~st comE? basis. / ·'GOO.Spell" 1s a musical adapt10.n of th:e Gospel according to St. Matth~w. The book was written by John Michael Tebelak with music by Stephen Schwartz. '.• ., Th~OCC prod.uction incl tides an ensemble of 13. . Diane King of Costa Mesa is the musical director and Jeffrey Robirison ·of Costa Mesa b_andles chqreography·. Jeff Kappe of Newport Beach is the set designer. Members oflhe ·ensemble are • Gail .Bto\Ver, Loren M8rs~ers, Ron· Chipres, Andria Meidinger, Lilidsay'Gambini, sue Roderiguez, Robin Francis, Joel S\\;'enson, ---Jack-6t11bish;5te-v-e-'11l:omas, FeliciaHemarUiez, Patty Wiglit and Cal Hoff.1 • "-• · ,, • Ftldav. October18! 197' . ., "" O~C · .~Tb~Qter's Biggest Bargain --.. · Intermission . ,-i •; ·~ .. .. . . ··The big,{!sl bargain in local theater is the dra.ma ·program at Orange Coast College -and it's going·to be even more so this season. Ever since its origin more than 20 years ago,· OCC has presented" its student productions free of charge. Some of these ,shows, quite frankly, have been• worth the priee of adl'Jlis· sion, but mariY Of them·...,.. ."Romeo and Juliet," ''Indians.'' 0 Maralhon 33'' -have ._proven superlative slagings Which have "outclUsed their· counterpar.ts in the community theaters. 'The OCC drama department is presided over bY two young and am· bilious. iristrU~lors, John Ferzacca and Bill Purkiss, who divide the dinec· ~aJ _.duties and alternate on the staging of the summer musical. The season they ha·ve carved out for the college this time around merits par· ticular aUention. ,. l'I' OPENS NEXT week with Purkiss·' production of a show that just finished setting all kinds of records at South Coast Repertory, the rock-religion musical revue .. God· spell." Then. next month, Ferzacca will present the first-ever college production of "Lenny," the scathing autobiography of night club comic Lenny Bruce. The second half of the OCC season Will be a hea vy dose of more cerebral theater. Purkiss will mount Samuel Beckett's ''Waiting for Godot," while Ferzacca will revive "The Seagull" by Anton Chekov. On the heels of SCR's success with "Godspell," Purkiss might have some reservations about staging the show with the audience on the stage of the large auditorium and limiting the seating tp 200. But thal's the way it's planned for next Wednesday through Saturday when '·'Godspell" goes on at 8o'cJoc_k each night. "'THE PLAY DEALS with the • human levels of the story of Jesus," Purk~s s ays. "It's not really~ a religious piece, blil reli_gious people may readily identify with it." On the other hand, religious people would be advised to keep their distance from "Lenny," which rips traditional morality to shreds in its re·creation of Lenny Bruce'S l ur· bulent career and turgid ni~bt clu5 routines. Ii Coeuses on the issues that brought Bruce before the .Supreme Court on charges or obscenity. And , while some or the material that was deemed ob· scene in the Fifties may be a bit tame " Tom Titus today, the show is still recom mended for those with open minds and strong stomachs . PLAYING THE key role of Lenny will be Ron Christi e, who last was seen locally as the "butterfly in heat," Emory. in South Coast Reper· tory's producti on of '1'he Boys in the Band.'·' He also played the central role of J\1urray Burns in "A Thousand Clowns" at "the San Clemente Com· munity Theater. The OCC version will open on Nov. 20, fou r days after the Dustin Hoffman movie "Lenn}'" prefl\i eres in l.os Angeles. Film producer Marvin ' Worth ha s granted Orange'Coast•the rights to the stage production. • Looking at the rest of· the OCC season, one must only .€3Jess that the Costa.Mesa college didn't consult wltb its s ister institulioh, Golden West Col~ lege, or neighboring UC tume befor:e sche4uling ''The Sea~ull '' and "Waiting for Godot ... 0 A touring production of ''Seagull 0 played 'at UCI last week, while "Godot"' Will' be staged next week a t Golden.West. But bQth are highly regardea piays in the world th eater repert6i.re, and at OCC the price is al\vays fight. . . • Manhattan. Proje~t 'Magnificent' Theater Group Removes Humor from Chekov, Puts Savagery in 'Alice' , By TOM BARLEY Ot .. O.l!J .... lltff • Sir Henry Irving's biographers have it that th·e British immortal once told .a frantic wardrobe_ mistress to abandon her hunt ror missing materials and instead sup· ply him with an old bath robe, a broom haildle and "enotlih silver .• paper to fashion into a crown.'' · Manhattan Project enchanted UC when the Gregory group erammed- lrvine audiences with back to back an even bi gger aud ience backst~ge performan ces or Chekov 's with them in extremely intimate "Seagull:' and the Andre Gregory sf!a ting arrangements that ap· -analysii; of ''Alice in Wonderland.'' peared to · leave the ··Alice'' ca st -It's obviOus e nough that these-are with about six sguare feel of st.'age two very different plays but each to work in. tak'es on new diinensions via No one could d0ubt, afte;-that in· Gregory's "wofkshop" approach credible perfo'"rrtiance, that they .. and two decisioris that demon-could do it in less. Take away a bat·· The hahd that took the life of lhe seagull in the presence of the ·Wayward Nina (gloriously played by Angela Pietropinto) moves to self destruction when Nina makes her last and-tragic relUfn to the home of Konstantin's obsessed and often selfish mother. strated 118.wless judgement: under· tered -steP. l'dder, a large ·plasuC· "Give me those and 1'11 give yoU • 'play the Chekov humor and em· sheet !Jnd tour or five umbrelfas a King Lear thaf'll keepme'hei:e all phasize the psychiatric savagery .that:il'fe· used with stunning effect Gregory retains much of the Chekov humor .in his low key "Seagull" but he does not rermit himself the ·m odern mistake· of giving levity a great deal of scope in his inte rpretation. To be s\lre, we get a Noel Coward air or two and Bingo becomes the family game but those moments are not allowed to impede ··seagull 's'' progress. night .taking curtain calls," the ,.. that constantlt creeps into Car~ in"olle .of the play's most gripping thespian knight assured her. Irving. roll's "Alice " scenes and you'll have· them doing was the best In the business and, as · Gregory, ~po'rting what appears it With no props at all, to boot .. the reader.. Will cattier, Irving knew to be acceptable Project gear of But Jet chronqlogy rule us in it. . • t' • tu~le neck sweater, blue i'eans and M h ,-~ looking ba ck at. Ille ana attan .loarers, constantly assures his Project. Back to the Chckov and a He didn't' get his Wish on lhai oe,.· casion but nb 004! at tHe theater • doubted his abi1fly \0 put•on a propless Lear that would cram the theater:. Those same biographers . tell or the lime he put. on an 'im· promptu, one'.man show for tired lravetera taiapped with him lg, .the waiti.1)8 room or a fog-bound railwil:y stiti6n and of hoW they ' cheered blm to the echo for his el· forts.• THOSE ARE tbe -memories that came bubbling to the sulface ·1asl weekend as the equally propless and .equally gilled players or the • • audiences that they are present aj superb cast that put on a ''Seagull " C II t: K 0 V 'S c h u ck I e-s · a re an open rehearsal of the production that soars above a ny previous of-primarily designed lo heighten the in question. fering viewed l)y thiS)'lriter. tension as we move Y.'ith Konstan- 'l'o that e nd , he assured membe rs • · : tin to the abyss that awaits him and of the "Seagull'' a udience that they J .B. PRIESTLEY .W~ on the the Russian has, in that sense, a lot could forsake their Village Theater right tr a Ck:. when he said tha t in common wilh the Lewis Car roll seats and find squatting_ room on "Seatull " liad at its heart the eon· who is also supe rbly interpreted by thefianks ofthestage. -· ffict betwe·e n the writer that Gregory. - Chekov beCame ·and the writer he. Workin g wITli"'ltamm,_n, A VENTURESOME viewer or once thoughthe·was. ·Pietropinto and Pine in Seagull two tbok him up on the offer much Gerry .ua mman as the eminenUy were: John Ferraro as Sorin, John tothedelightofGr~gOryandbis successftJIBorisandLarryP.ineas Holms as Sharnra:vev, Avra crew who insist that togetherness the tortured iiladequate Konstan· Petrides.as Polina, Karen Ludwig -ot this type not-only ~~s the tin certahitf gav~ that ppproach as-·Mash!l' Tom Cost ello as audience a new dimension buL_fulL...rein.-wilh the....JaUet-mo1.tln11-· _ie.v.gcny and.David Laden.as ~1ed· · spurs the players .to greater efforts. remorselessly on to what we know vedenko. We had no.cho1ce 24 hours laler~will t;e·hi s suicide. !J'hey Will not be sorted out-as in· ' . .. . • --.....i..-------• I ' I " dividuals by this writer. Both plays y,:ere spl endid team efforts a·nd that is the way they ""ill b<.> analyzed. \Vi th these two exceptions: Nina's performance as she strui?· gles, \\'rapped in a giant pillow case, to deliver Konstantin 's miserably vague message and a dining room table passage between · "Boris and !\.1asha !Karen Ludwig) that has a botlle or vodka as the go· between • ··seagull'' ,,·as n't the only tragedy arou nd last weekend . The other tragedy was that the Project could onl y give us one J>('rform' ance. OTll E R PLAY\VRIGllTS have commented that Leu·is Carroll in· jected a lot of l·lalloween and not a little of what \\'e have learned was. extremelY sick thinking into his "Alicein Wonder'land. ·• With Gregory. it takes on a Jot of "Night Gallery" and not a little o( Alge rnon Blackwood as his prop· less players use a loot or two of Ooor space and a bent brolly orlwo to stunning effect via inspired gib- ~MSh arid gcsl1CliliiUOns. --~-- llow will we ever forget Larry • Pine ~1 s the Caterpillar, airily ------- sealed on a chimney created by the! backs of hi s colleagues, draJA•ing up' a n actor's arm that becomes a · hookah, taking a puff and emrtting a hlissfu I '"\Vo\\": " " •. <.:.. -Or !h(' scribbled ··tewis Loves Liddell GirJs" on the blackboard? Or the maddest !\lad llattei:'s Tea Party of all u·ith the unhapi)y Dor.-.. mouse being the s il enced recipient . of the biggest mouthful of brclad and butter seen since ou r nursery days? OR llUl\tPTV Dumptr "'ho se v.·oll is ;,i wobbling: step ladder, !'('fusi ng lo listen to t alc~ nr king's soldier ~ a nd k ing ":-mC'n but kno\vin g full \Veil th at C\l'r.V \\'Obble brini::~ him nearc1· to his fate ·- stunnin gly achieved \Vilb 3n egg crushed against hi s forffica"ll and:t~ the yolk oozing down bts chest before our shocked eyes~ . /\n incredible and m~gnificcnt play, this ~t o nhatta n Project "Alice .. , \Vhat is even more in·· · credible is the fa ct that this"suJ)efb cast moved tr.om the rigprs or . "5eagull" to the fright(lning"' rari· tasy of Lewis~ Carroll 4J,l jusL 24 hours. , -• -TherC fl-:isn·•r"been throtrC' liko this in our part ot the 9rJd. (or many a year. •• r " ·, AIR SHOW• USAF THUNDERBIRDS! SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19th MARCH AF BASE (Hwy 395, S.E, of Riverside) FREE! Ho Admlulon Chl'I*! OPEN HOUSE: 10 A.M. to 5 P.M. USAF THUNDERBIRDS Precision F"lyinlil Demol'IStr•tl°": 3 P.M. • USAF Aircraft Olsplay • • 15th Air Fore• Marchln; Band • Sentry Dog Demonst,.tlons ••• • Orlll Team 1nd Color Guard Performances .. OCT IQUR f!JI\!M OfT THE GJIOUND ••• The Air force Is mon: than ~ ptal'tel and blut Illy. It'• your chance to find a urwr with I fut\IN. Tha Air Force will Pl1 r0u .. n to tum any OM of hundreds of ••cftlna 1111111 JOU un bke wtth yOi.i and utt for the Nit of '°"' ltr.. Alk ~ recn.1it1r aboYt a trw aptitude teet Ind Oull'llrt-1 _tffd Air Force Jobs. llJNTINGTON BEAQI • lllJO ._.It'd. ''J.1167 COSTA MESA saw.1,.st. C.-646-146' Joyful Concert Opens Ballet Pacifica's Year . ' ... By JACKIE HYMAN OfllltO.llr P'li.I Stefl' and not particularly in· teresting exceRt for some fin~ dancing by Belinda Smith, Ma ry Sayer11 and Cynthia Tosh. number with Rand)' Bar· nett and Benjamin Sperber. The Ballet Paclrica began i'ts 1974 -75 se ason auspiciously with a delight- fully varied program Satur- day at Newport Harbor However. the second I-Ugh School. m9vement, an unusual and 'The l1:1st piece on the program was "Graduation Ball,'" music by Johann Strauss, a successrul comic number staged by Tatiana Lichine and choreographed by David J.ichine. -· Highlight or the afternoon lovely pas de, deux which performance was the ··0on becomes a pas de quatre, is _Quixote Pas de Deux-•· with stWUling~ It featured Joan a:uestart.ist David l1analefr Ross · Gair, Paul Maure. f\stitch·in·the·sideaward and Paci rica ba 1 lerina ~ Kristi Stephens· ,nd David goes to Charles Colgan, who Caroll Stasney. Panaierr. ~: was very ve ry funny ~the Both perrormers showed The third qJovement h8£i coq_uettish and ugly old , considerable stage less impact but bad fine headmistres5. presence and technical perrormanccs by· Miss / mastery. They were a joy lo Frazer and Vietor .M!>reno• TllE PIECE is moslefrec:, watch. who later di6tiftguiahe(I Uve in ill light scenes &! Another star or the day himaelf-with • superb solo when the OOjs a nil gii-lS!Fne was Louise Frazer, an agile as t h·e Dru m•m er l n u~ on opposite !tde' of t~ dancer with a talent for "GradutlionBall." room and eye each OJ.her characterization. Jn "La , ''Fulliive ·visions,'' awkWardly and leasteffec· Danse el La Muslque" s he music by Prokofiev;' wa1 i ive in a 'tridltional and came across as an excep. the second dance on the ·~uninteresting dreai;q pas de' Uonally .· sensuous woman; program and had the mos( deux. ·· ... in "Graduation Ball," she unusual and striking ,. -·'" 1' managed to be bolh funny choreography of .f.he day, Miss Frazer ct·earl)'. and graceful as an impish· created by Lila Zali. w a I k s a wa y Wit ti young girl in pigtails. . "Graduation Ball" but· THE PROGRAM'S .first piece, "La Danse et L.a Mus iqu e." musle by Chopin, was ehoreographed by Mi chel P anaieff. The first section is traditional IN ntE sCrieli of vlgnel· · olher fine performances Les which build to an eery were given by 1\forcno and and effective climax, Mary Miss Stasney and by Mo1\y S aye rs and ·carrie Lynch, Mary Say'ers and Kneubuhl were standout.'>. Be njamin Sperber. who Mi s~ Kp e ubuhl Wa s showed a fl ai r for C'Omedy . especially good in a comie :i.s a sell-conseious cadet. • • ' ' Lo!Jdon · ~ .... . .. • • • • Begins LafJ!ina Season • ( • ... • • t ·A concert bv the London.ViJ'tuo.si ~ill open the Laguna t ' 1 Beach Chamber Music Society season Monday, Oct. 28. 'fhe progrC1m . \viii featlafe works by Bach, Mozart. \Telemann, Handel, Loeillet and Beethoven. The London· Virtuosi i1 composed of seven _ European musicians. Three who work witll the London Symphony are Anthony Camden, co-pr1ncip31 oboe; JoJtn Georgiadis, concert maSter ; and Douglas Cummings . pr:fn.cip~l cell~si. Also in the group are. Bfian llawklns, pnnc1~al vto1a. ~ith th_e Londo_p ~infoniCU.!j J~mes Galway, !~~~t~ so,lo flute with the Uerlm Philijarmon1c; Jane Ryan. professor of viOla da gamba; and David Lum sden . harpsichordist, professor of musi~ at Oxford University. The concert \\'ill begin at 8:30'p.m. in the Laguni'Bcaeh ·High School auditorium. 'J;ickets, \}'hi ch will be available -at the door. cost SS for adults and.SS for students. muriel stevens takes the mystery out of moUsses, the sighs out of scuffles, the doldrums oui of dinner ... whal's her secret? ~he cooks wilh love . the muriel st evens _show ~COMMUNITY 3 . CABLEVISION Newport Beach Monday. Wednesday 8r Frid1y 7:00 to 7:30 P.M. Tuesday 8r ThurJday 10:00 to 10:30 A.M. 6:00 to 6:30 P.M. RaUmOnd Haaen Fine Art aa11eru • I I•'. ' .. --. ' ·.-:-..,_ f!nn furn ishings, labrlcs, wall coverings lo flt every budget. Compllmentarv design advice. Tn11v iln lnvr.stors ond col· Heverl y Thomp~on lnl cr· lnclors gallery, Raymond flil liu nal _ c nrpcling, Hngon lcat11rrn1 1he mo st vi nyl , tllr. in ;1 r.n mph:lu con1 plclc co !lr:c11olf of hnnic cenler. Nor.n111~ Rockwell fHJ~ts Hi:vcrly's Tnbl" _ t:vcrv· you 11 rind. An ln1prcs51vr. ih· . n .. bl" lor •a . .1 or! 1ng 1m, g111.i '· •. ~· r.ollr.i;llon ° Rofw.rl \-Vo uni or clcgnn1 dinlnR. A master nt the disa ppear· Allan Enteror11e Orien1al rugs and arlifacrs. Handmade I Nomadic I Craftsmanship ot Its verv fi nest and 111 prices eastly affordable. Oricnra l throw rugs. Second fl oor, 250 Newport Cenlcr DrlvP., Suite 207. W ... St.hlffl OtklcMSclloolNy Al'PLES or BARfUtT PEARS '•'! •' '/l· I V'• •, .. .. I UST Of TME SIASOM BELL PEPPERS pnlntinR"li plus Mnrr. flr.vcrly 's l!cdrooln HOU· Chognll, ,Slqu1iiros. Marcel lll/Ufl _Truly spnctnr.u lllr Dvl. Wh1H1'kr.r. LocCll. nnd 91 m h( I flf.CP.SSOrif: others makr. this a gallery r.u 0 t< • •• .s. rh el investors and collec· 1ors most visit. Glddlnp/ RObllllOll,lllC. Ing craft Of cuslom·mndfl meni;· clolhlng, Tony Botl c offers th e fi nes t in bolh fllhrlc and qu<J lit lJ. Cusrom· dosjgncd nnd lnllored r.lolfilng bV Tony Bolic nl· lows vou ro lrul y loolr: your very hfls1. =·· i¥ 5 s I oo .;.f '" 1 • • .... . 'II ,, ~ ..,., .... ., '"'' "'-'!" I -• I · ... :. ·-wttti~.,.. z Hzti.::; ... ii • L OR SMAU. TOMATOfS IOc,,.... u.M I LIN. Tet• ~e~--- j --...... ....... • II lnlerlor acstgnora and im· por111rs. ra1 Giddings and Cllllre Robln,on Invite you 10 ~co 8 spACllll OKCl!lng r.ollocllon of ruRll, an· tiqueR , acces1orle1 and contemporary fur nll urc from urou nd the world. Wa ere experienced In hrlnglna together lhe best In all pflrlods and cullures. O"' l1t1n rould tnlr111tct your '""'"· Coo11 '" 11.f 111 find it! Rcpro II ls a new, upand· l:ig Reproduction f&clllty con veniently IOC!lted In 1he Design l"Jaza secllon ol Newport C.Onler. Our ser· vices rnngo from photo re· production 10 a complete llno ol dralflng supplies . Walkln1 tl\roogh frank f'err1s Interiors ·is ii unique sensual.c.xporlcncc . The play ol enr1 hen 1cx1ures -stone, loa ther. suede and w&rm woods -and dollclous· colors proffer a vi sual fAat L Acc1:tsor1e1 abound -each chosen 1v1th an eye lor 1he dtsttnc· I Ive, the one·ol·a·klnd . Slop In for a cup ofColfee and an enligh tening chat with our staff. . Tllt'I Once you hnve eon her creations. you \Ylll never forge! !heir Impact. ff vou have hevcr seen her cre11· 11ont, you must etpertenca !hem at Ta f's . A ivarm wal· come will be waltlna for you . · • Erle I Annette . ._ ... A quaint home·spuh ehop wllh 1h1 \varrnlh, color 11nd personoltlV of ori&·Of·I· klfn1 luml1hlngs andactes· 1orlc~ for Iha home. Fea· lured era 1elec1 Rnt1que1, • 1runk1. chest s, mlrrorsr clocks. tablet, cHatrs end other collectables ln clud· tngcon1emparary,abs1rac1 and 1radlltonal line an. Art for lhfl be&JMlng COi• 1uctor 11 wen as the colft. mercial u1&r. lnvutment a rt. original graph let, water colon, paintings And .. sculp1ure. Corpora1e lel!.slng. Cu11o m design ptc111re framlna. r1n1ncLna available. Warren IQlport1' Dalgnen a nd Craf1 s men are ranotitnird for !heir "In· tamallonal Theme". Rnl- denllal and commen::lal ~tartors, fumlshlnp, ac· ca11or1e1, anllque1, fine 1rt1 & aJft,·for dlscrimlneu· Ing u1ste1. hcmi c... ""'""' ' 011t1n Pl111, 1 p1rl 'af' Ntwpor1 Cen11r .' •• W111 01 F•thlon t1l11d . T1ke Newpart Center Drive ind took to tfte 1e1. Nine 0111. In lhe 1ky dlrecl yoa 10 plenty Ol lree plrktn1 and a truly unl11u1 1boppln1 1•pe~let1ce. I . - '. • Dance Concert The Phylli s Lamhul Da nc e Company, s'hoWn above in rehearsal, will be featured in two modern dapce performances at UC Irvine 's Fine Arts Village Theatre at 8 p.m. Tuesday and Wednes3ay, OCt. 29· ... • 30. 1'he two programs combine fi ve modern da nce works respansible for the New York-based com - pany's critical acclaim. 'ric kets are $4 .50. Jnfor- matlon, 833-6587. • • Fr~. Oc1ooer 18, 1!17-4 DAILYPILOf ('fJ • Valet Parking Welcome On Busy Balboa Island An outing to Balboa Island, us you know, usually nets the problem or where to park. The street:; always 5cem run of eur.s, parked and moving, as people l ry to m a ke their way lo the i s la nd 's a ppealing s hops a nd · restaurants. Roger Palmateer and Roger Clar k, operators of the new Brass Beacon, have solved the dilemma with valet parking. It's ., good idea and none loo soon for lhu crowded island. The newly-opened Brass Beacon has r eplaced the old Village Inn in many exciting "''ays. Aft er the valet has freed you from worry about "'hat to do wi th the car, you wi ll enter t he building to fi nd il complet e ly changed. Fl RST NOTE the ("efurhished cock t ail loun ge, a h omey, a t - mospheric place geared to old-shoe comfort. You will be escortt.'<i to the dining room. on the left , by the lovely hostess, J oAnne. Although la rge, this r oom gives an immediate feeling of intimacy <ind \11urmth. T hese <1ualities are owing to thi ck carpeting, -::?mmodious leather booths, and .. vcrdcnt array of hunging and potted plants. . Out 'n' About Norman Stanley the Brass Uc:.tl·un buys it:, mt«1l from the area 's to1> purvcyol'. Furthl·r . the chef insists 11n l'U\11ng t he meat into :-.leaks hin1scll lie doc~ a skillful, 1,rof cssion;.i/ JOIJ. ·rhe gra1ul filct mignon. $7 95. camt' .wrappyd in h1.1con and was dl't 1niH:I)· capabfe or t•xciling lhe lastc hud-. or the mosl JOJded steak cater Hrllcenh with llollandaisc s auce accomp;.in1l'd it along\\ Ith <.i broiled lomuto · 'vou mi1y want a bukcd pol;.1to or saulccd mushroom cups. :1 la carll', with you r enl rcti. \Ve opted fo r the mushrooms, SI.25, and Y.'C'rc plc.•asa n- tly surprised by the hint or ginge r \\"ith \Yhich thev \vc re seasoned. A lry also was lliVl'n lt1 lht• bolled Jobstcr tail. SS.95 , a bi!! 10 01 .. gem Broiled just ril:ht, it .... -a~ ~cr\'ecf\\'i\h dra \\'n butter and lcmo•1 1 Jay. S-1.95 1r \OU t·a n onl v manal!e .i ~;.i l ud . ~t·re ·s set1food s a l <1d . s.t.75 : or l'he1 ·~ ~a l;.id , S.1.25. FOR t\ lii.:htt-r ml';.il ;1rtcr 10:30 v.m., th1· late night SJ>l•t1als , are a logical bet. ·rhc.•s£· int·lude a prime rib sandwich. served on sour dough with cheese, $3 .50. spet·ial cheeseburger st·rvcd "'·ith onion rings, $2.95; steak s;.ind"°ich. $2.95. The Brass Bc;.1con h;.is a select and uncomplicated \vine list. suited lo the menu \Yilh enough variety lO plea:;c everyone. Spook Show Opens for Valley Kids The accent al the Brass Beacon is on s implicity , fri e ndliness. <ind Promoting a good lime \Yith one's companions. This atlitude is reflected in the menu "''hich consists chiefly of slcuks. lobste r, and ot he r sc<ifood . Beca u se these are t he house' spee1alties in so many restaurants today, discerning dine~ want such of- fcrin~s to be first-class. And first· 1·luss is the way they come a t t he Urass Beacon. 1\ S PLEN DID priml· r11J \\;1~ the 1h1rd l'nlrcc. the s mall1·r ul l\\'O cuts Lunch providt•s a nice selection of s:llads, s and"·ichcs and hot entrees. Represent ati\•(' sl.'lcctions are seafood l.ouis,-SJ.75: Bro.1ss Ue~1con sandwich 1roast beer. h;.im and j;itk c heese, grilled on rye bre<.1dl. $2.50; club san· d\\'lrh. S2.50: dct'I> (r1ctl shrimp, $2.95 . l'hefs sal:i cl . S:1 :!5 . Brass Beacon omt•lctte, S2 2.1 offered. Thl' lit tie male 1>1·1 me rib is l& \\'EEK F.N OS 1 ht· reslauro.111l ~ervcs oz. of choi t•c bee f. S6 .95, :ind ror ll dol -brunch. cntrcl' p1·iccs rU"nging. from lar mort' there's the big rnat<' .... h'\ch •~ S2.25 to SJ 95 . Before that Saturday or 'f hcrc is only one livl· theater opening a long the Orange Cousl this wccKend, ""The (;houl F riend " ---"The Ghoul Friend" Opening tonight for a lhrec-\veekend . run is the l'rilics continues nighUy, except Monday. at South Coast Repe rtory , 1821 .Newport Blvd ., Cos ta ~lesa. with a'n 8 o'clock curtain. Heserva tioiis, 646- 1.163. 1-lallOWecn production of the ''Norman, l s That .,..,u?" Fountain Va ll ey Com -JV •munity Theater . 18280 Mt: The Irvine COJJlf?1Unity .Baldy Circle , Fountain Val· Theater gives itSj:. fiila l Jey. Curtain is 1:ao on performances of this new comedy a b·out h~m osex ­':ida.~s, 2 o'clock Sa~u r-uality tonight a nd ·Sa tur-d~ys and Sundays. Reser-day at 8;30, Sund,ay a t vatlons,.9S2-2551 · ·-7;30;-trrthTKCfOf"StP!a"YOOX "The Real Inspector Jlound" ·rom Stoppard"s satire on -mystery plays and drama Ttiealer off the ·Gothard Street parkinfi lot a\ Golden We~t College, Huh1,ington Beach. Reser-vation$, S57· -Tl!TI. . LUNCH• DI NNl;R OYSTER BAB COCKTAILS' LATE SUPPER HAPPTH0ua4t.JP.N. SUt4DA. T llllHCH t :J0.4 HOW OPEN FOR IRE.UFAST Fro• 7:00 a~ MoL Hiru Sot. · ·· ··tHTHT'AIHM!HT-HIGHl'l;Y IRAHDIE HA"llDOH DUO r .... sot. GEORGE FOSTH-S-. and MOA. OUTDOOR DIHIHG PATIO 12802 COAST HIGHWA Y U.GUHA HIGUIL IAt era:-v...,. P.tiw.yl "~lame" lragioomedy will be staged Continuing nig htly, except ror two weekends, bcgin- Monday, at Sebastian's ning next Fr.iday, at Golden West Dinner Playhouse, 140 , \Vest Coll,ege's Con1munity Avenida Pico, San Clemen-Theat er. P crrormancc te, is this musical comedy Limes are Fridays ,and "'"hich plays through No v. 9. Saturdays ;it 8 o'clol·k ;.111d llcservalions ct nd c urtain Sundays a\. 4 o'eloc k. information 492-9950.-'Nckets are <.ivailablc at the IT 'S EASY to say: ··when you 've had steak one plac!e, you've bud it everywhere". But that 's not an objec· live conclusion. a whopping 22 oz. ser\'inA Sundav s ;.1il around the bay you might Soup of the day or salad tomes \\'ant ·to indulge in eggs Benedict. before d inner. the sal:1d SCr\'l'd with <1 hue\'os runc hc ros with tortill as. nicely ·chilled fork. Wondl•1fully hot stcuk. sausage, bacon or ham and cg. bread and pl enty of butter also comes gs. Eve rything on the brunc h menu is "'ith di nner but be careful . it ·s ll'mp-ser\"Cd .,., ith fresh fruit et nd to::tSt. ting to the point of s1:ioiling your ;.1p· Entert<.ilnmcnt is (e<Jtured in the petite. ~ounge ni ~hll .". ·rue:.d:iy 1hrough "Godspell" Orang!'.! Coast College will Present this gospel-rock musical ' revue Wednesday through Saturday of next week at 8 o'clock on the :;-fa ge o r-ine-o·c c· auditorium in Costa Mesa. Admission is free. · "Waili•g for Godot" Sa m u el B eck e lt 's dooc. To be "'orthy or the name, a fi let "6 Rms Riv Vu"' mignon, tor instance. must present C the palate with flavor, texture, and 'f hc \Vest m insle r on1· character. \Vith this steak, as a ll Dusty. the pretty "'<lll rl'ss. ratt•s a S:.Llurday. Spring Ca n~·on is the fine sperial sa lute loo. lier IOp·nOlr h per-niu~ic;.11 u,ggrcgation l'Urrently ap· formancc was marked by l•qual parts 1>caring on stage. charm and e fficient'y. 1'hc Bra ~s Be acon is lor;1tcd at 127 n1unity 'fhe::iter \Vi ii o~n steaks, the w;.1y in "'hich the meat is the firsl Ol·angc County cut is essential to insure its being a Production of t his new . h ----·t:u linary-dell g l-: --·-~---· ·-· -comed"Yon NoV .-t ror a four: If the cut is wrong, a rilel might as Wl.>ekend 'run. F'ridays and well be bottom round. 'fo insure the &iturdays al 8:30. at the theater, 7272 J\·l uplc A\'C., pcrfeclion of e very s teak they serve. Additional c ntrecs on the bill of fure :"llarinc t\\·e., corner ot' P<1rk Avenue. include NC\\' \'ork cut sirloi n stt'OJ~. Bil lbou Isl:1n d. \\'t•ekd<ty lunch gets $7 .95.; steak and !obiter con1bo, SS~; ··under .,.,.-::rv · <.it -11· <i·:m:;-dinn('r'"C't'Cr y-- fried jumbo shrimp £5). 56.25: fi let of night at 5· p.m . Saturday und Sundaf Dover soil!, $5.95 : Nt•w York cut pep-brunch s tarts at JO u.m. Hescrvations per steak, S8.25; fresh calch or the at675·9'l22. Westminster. Rcscrvatinns. lpiiliilrnrnrniii iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ 893-8626. R S UNDAY CHAMPAG NE BUFFET BRUNCH CR & SS 1 0A.~~t:::M. • DINNER A fl TRADITIONAL AND S INTERNATIONAL CUISINE DANCING & ENTERTAINMENT 7 NIGHTS A WEEK Banquet Facil ities Lunch Mon.-Fri. • Dinner Sun.-Thur. 5 to 11 Fri ,·Sal.5to12 • '· 18050 BROOKH.URST IC-efT...,._Wodi.s..lllef .. S-IMopfwyJ FOUNTAIN VALLEY Reservatians 963-671l PrOUdly Presen1s A DIXIELAND JUBILEE . W•lh,-he BACK BAY JAZZ BAND Friday-& Saturday Nites ........ s , .... -c....,..... Me1ic: ... DiMln 1712 Placentia -Costa Mesa -548-9203 In Lagima Beach j,ebastian's ... ~ Dnnrr-~la!'fJousr JMr. (bristian's For dining and dtincing amongst lht relics of fine old sailing ships. CJ;:e Boardwalk ~ptciali.7.es in strictly ·fresh seafood ~rved amid historic n-me1nbranr~ or lurn-of-the- 1·enlurr Laguna Beach. 1·1ic choicest and freshest seJcc. li ons are flo\\·n in dai ly fron1 many distant ports. Li~ lobsten; fron1 the coa~t ol~l ain<". Pacific Salmon from \\'a~hington. Oysters fTom Long Island Sound and Red· Snapper from NrwOrleans. And each is ru~hcd directly to the Boardwalk's kitchen where scrumptiow entrees are prepared over glowing coals of "'estern moquite and fruit\\·ood! The Board\\·a.lk also offcn choice bet:£ ~nd tender chicken dinners charcoal broiled to a delect- able 1u·rn. Dinners start at $3.95. PRESE N.TS r , Book by lttOl'IW L.,wrtnct 'nd Rober! E. l « Music and Lyrit) by --·-"-' lcny Ucrnwn ..J NOW PLA YJNG TUES ., THR U RESERVATIONS 492-9950 L f" DIREC TED , ANO STAGED BY SUN ,. EVENINGS or et lh• Ioli Of lit• • 1 AO Avenlda Pico .. ,,_,. ~-,.,,, ,,1.,,1· ~---San Clement• ' ~--..... ------------................. ..... . ' I ROAST PRIME RIB OF BEEF Au Jus AMONG 20 SWCT DttMA&tTllES Continent•I Cuit ine Cocktails Serun1g t.101cheon a11d 011u1c, Monrloy-th-rouph Sn1ur1ltt~ Closed Sundays W e are toc.lltfd ne1tl to the M.iy Co !1• South ·coa,t Plata . l li J ' ,,i,101 Cest. ... *'-• DANCING IS BACK 'Fri., Sat., & Suri. Eve nings. Din~er ser11ed Nightly fro1n S:OO p.m. Luncheon Mon. -Fri.fr om 11:JO 11.tn. Sunday Champagne Brunchfron1 10:10 a.in. Fishes, Meats, Oyster &r, Noted Win ts, A Its and Spirits Edgar Haya Enurtains Tues., JVed. & Thur. E11tnings. Distributed throughout thr Boardwalk arc hun- dri·d~ of antiques, artifact.~ and hi~torical photographs. i\n authrntic player pianv stands in the Play hou!>C I .ounge .... ·here gutsts niay ~t·k·ct the musii; and operate the old fashioned foot pedal. Bring rour f:1111ih to t11t· Hoard\\'al k for dinner. ()pt"n daily frorn 4 :30 p.m. ~ ~~~,a!~- Re<.('r\'atiuns; 494--8588 !Ir. C!I~ri.etian·.e· JSJ E. CD<lst HighWay Nt1111HJrt flt<1rl1 ~ t Rtser11Jtions (714} 615-SJZD ~ . ' ·~~':;"'Surl't1Sand .0:--HOTEL '/fl 515 .south eoa~1 lligh\\ay, Wguna lk:.11:h MICllSll FAMILY MEX ICAN RESTAURANT OUR MEALS .ARE A TRIP TO MEXICO ' .. • 296 F:. 17th s·r1lEET . 1111.1 .r.nt~N SQ. COSTA Mt>;A ti I ION~: &l!>-7621i COCKTAILS • I. . . ' . I I ' ' • f Balboa Island J<'inc Food ;_and Spirits SAT ANO SUN. Breaktast,llunch 10-5 p,m. Dinner s-'11:30 p.m. ·-...... 675-9222 Blt~AKf"AST I.UNCH OINr\EH COCKTAIL ' DANCING c.Airporter 'Inn C/lotel PRESENTS OUTSTANDING DINING & ENTERTAINME;NT .. * MEDITERRANEAN ROOM FOR EXQUISITE CUISINE-SERVICE DINNER SERVED FROM S PM LUNCH FROM II :30 AM CHAMPAGNE SUNDAY BRUNCH FROM 10 AM • 3 PM * Captain's Table Coffee Shop I SERVING 24 HOURS * WUNGE For Dancing & Entertainment AnllNOON flOM S PM NtGHTLY JIOM 1:30 with SHONA llSHOP TllO . "THI IND IESULT' 18700 MacARTHUR-NEWPORT (Dl'l'OSITI THI AIRPOIT) 833-2770 (~ DAILY PILOT -,. ly ltMr•aHCNt CU.SSIC FRENCH . DIHHERS St4• ptt pers°" ............ _ 5TIAI 6 LotSTlil M1HU Hts ....... IAt I 7IOJ Col .... .. 646-7944 PUC• MIMl'l'L T fO lNI ..,.. .... ,OUCM" .....,.1 .. 11•••aut •~oli<wo~ {1 ·714) ~1 1416t 1 IEACM ILVD. '~\ WESTMINSTIEI t!IP ,...,_,, G-•"'-~ ... 1714) ~4·7S7S E.liQUISlrE OI HNEllS l.ctEAl(FASr • lUNCHEOH ' LOW COFFEE SHOP P~ICES ENTERTAINMENT JOLLY HOU.ct JTOIDAILY PiiZA HOME DELIVERIES . HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS \\~Gt\lf.I , Starting October 22 TUESDAYS THROUGH SUNDAYS AT THE REUBEN E. LEE NEWPORT BEACH ' - Friday. Octobef 18. 197' ' 3.iGllTSOILY OCT. 21, 29, ...i· JO, • 1130·,..,. AN EllENING TO REMEMBER WITH KElllMmAY AND HIS LIVE; All STAI l!EVllW "''"""' Skt1d1 .. li1lt'-4JU1 .. SIAIDlllG OVATIDI ••• JVSTIFIAILY"" Hollrw'Ofd lndtptn.dtnt PLUS llTIA A-ATTUC'llQll PtrM»n1I Film from Ken Murray's Priceless foot1g ot HollywOOd's 9reatest stars. Tkkrl• SJ.H 111 ~. •.oo.111te._. Ti ckets available: Mutual & Liberty Offlcts. For mail ordirs send Chtck or money order To : Ktn Murray, Grand Hotel II Ho.tel Way, Anaheim, ca . '2102 Sq1e1tiett: H•v• ilMner ...... fer• ttt.· shew •I J•s .. ·s si.-.... st tr VIiia Chfwtl ............. -- .~ GRA~HOTEL l•mlNr One Htlel Wirf a...e...c •. 114.112.1111 • MONDAYS • -in the DAILY PILOT • :. ,.( ttJ111f 1'o fJft Nader to -'·~Speft.k· • m C~unty '· . ' ... ( ' -. ocr 21 • ~ispasalon, led by experlf. on &aturda~· nlghts through CONSUMER LECTURt: -.Consuriier cr"s11der Raf Ph Qet. 14. Films are sho"'" a.t 8 p.m. In the OCC f'o1·um on Nader,,the 40-reai:-old Washington_lawyer''-1bo ·works'° 1 Campus. "•lunger:· a Nor"·egian film directed b~· ref arm the Injustices or 20th Century America, will Htpnings Carlson. I~ about 1i stur,·Jng ~·oung artist :speak at 8 p.m. Sunday. Oct. 20. during the Chapman Inform~ disc~ssion led by Dr. Paul ftizlJ!l'i ~·Ill folio\\'.. College Artist.-Lecture Series.in the.colle1~umi>-----~---·-Dt:l'.1l • .333 W. Glasswell, Orange. Single adrhlssion is $4 LEt"TURE SERIES -Plant ca e ;iffil .dccoration- reserve<\, S3 general· admission and $3-2 for students rolsponsored b'.\' Golden West C..ollege . and Roger's non·Chapman students. JnrormaUon, 633·~1. -. Gardens. "t>aJJi).1, Ferns and Terrariums." Oct. 21,~by. Aim Ve~ti..Y"Outdoor Decorating \\·ith Plants," Oct. OCT.18 28, Hank Rowell: "The Art or Bonsai," No, .. 4, Kikue BARBER SHOP -The San Clemente Chapter of the Sahlo. All lectures at lt1ui'CI\' Park Community Center. Society for the Preservation 3.nd Encouragemeni oi Huntington Qeach. 9:30 to 1i:30 a.m., and admifsion is Berber Shop Quartet Singing in America will perform.,~ rree. ,g p.m. Fr-iday, Oc.h 18, in---l.h$ ~larco Foster_Ji:.. H!gh School, San Juan CaP,istrano. The San Diego Sun Harbor Chapter also will participate. Tickets available at the door or by calling, 494-9566. . OCT.24 UNIVERSITY DAY -Information day 'for prospective studen,ts and higti school counselors, sponsored by UCl ~ Offic!e of' Relations with Schools. Orientatio.n, Campus ' Park, 9:30 a.m. Oct. 24. Jo'or inform'ation call Office of Relations with SchoolS (714) 833-5519 .. JJq:.25·2' DRAMA WORKSHOP.-'Hughie'" bl Eugene O'Neill, directed by Paul 1Barbar, senior drama major, will .be presented in the Fine Arts Village Studio Theatre, 8 p.m. f'riday and Saturday, Oct. 2S-2ti. Admission, 75 cents. OCT.JI LECTURE SERIES -''The Right tO Privacy," public arf.airs lecture series sponsored by UCI Student·Affairs Committee for · Lectures. Schedule: Alan Westin, Columbia University professor of public law and government, Science Lecture llall, Oct. 21 ; 1i1ary Saylin. American Civil Liberties Union member\ Social Science llall, N,ov. l~, and John ?i-tonahan, UCI social ecology profes!ior, Nov. 22. All_lecture,s begin' at 8 p.m. and are free admission. OCT.2G QRCllESTRA CONCERT -Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra, under the directlon of .Zubin 1i1ehta, will . perform at 8:30 p.m . Saturday in Crawford Hall on UCI campus. For .tickets call Orat;1ge County Philharmonic ·Society,646-.6411 . - . 0Cf.Z3 LECTURES AND SE•llNARS FOR WOMEN - "Discoveries Unlimited" plllla ram at Golden \Vest College for community wOmen. Wednesda_ys from . 9 a.m. to noon in campus Communit)· Center. Schedule; Graphology -know your'inner selr through hand\\·ritlng anarysi~. ~>' Phylli-' Harrison,· Oct. 23: Creali\'e Hostess -,entertaining ideas that are fun ror host«:ss and guests • 'i>Y Cai'ol Heinz, Oct. 30 .. Call 892-7711. Ext. 561, for det'ails -and free biochure. Noadrilission charge. . ocT.zs ~ ntEA.TER -Golden West College presents •·Waiting f~ Godot.'' Samuel Beclsett•s classic theater of the absurd piece at 8 p.m. Oct. 25 8nd 2tl, 5 p.m., Oct. 27. 8 p.m., Nov. 1 and 2, S p.m .. No\'. 3 in tte Community Theater on campus. lnformation892-7711,t'xt. 59J. . OCl'.25 .. F1LM SE.ROS -Golden West College fall film series presents .. Johnny Got His Gun," Oct. 2.5: "Five Easy Pieces," Nov. 8; "Billy Jack," Nov. 15. There are two shows at 4 p .m . and 8 p.in. in FOi-um II. Admission $1 .SO or' so cent's with any stl!dent car<I. NOV.$ PSYCHOLOGY FJL!\t -Affiliated Psychologjcal Consultants presents a film Q.n psychotherapy, "A Conversation with Carl Rogers" al 7:30 p.m. Nov. S In the· Tustin Community Hospital Conference Room; 14662 Ne\\•port Ave., Tustin. A group discus1ion will follow. Admission is free. NOV.:it • ocr 19 , TRAVEL SERIES -NewPort Harbor Kiw'lnis FOREIGN F·ILMS ---Orang~-Coa.St-eoi.iege Film Club __ Fou_o_da.tiQn_presen~s a~vel_@ruS advef!1u~ selje~ a~ presents highly acclaimed foreigo films and informal p.m: o~ Friday n1g~ts. 1n the Orange Coast Coll~ge . · _ aud1tonum, 2701 Fa1rv1ew Road, C~ta Mesa. Senes ------------'-'-------, tickets: $12.50 for adults·and S5 fo: stltdents and single Jtighest Quality Native r..1exican Foods Wee\ Ooys: 11-JO a .m. 10 12 P·"'· Open 7 Days YIC GARCIA Formerly of Coesor'5 Poloce , -Tue. tl-ru Sot. ..fri. and Sa1. 11:30 a.m. •o t2JO COCKTAILS 9093 E. AOf.IK:,, HUNTINGTON BEACH 962-7911 1.95 ~ 3~55 STEAK N' LOBSTER 6.45 . Olnners Include: Green Salad. Choice of Dressing, Garl ic Bread: ChOk:e of Rice Pilaf! or Potaio DINNER BY CANDLELITE a.Mt.Di..r; ..... : ......... ti S..FoodC 'I Y• ••.. J.60 ...__. ..... ~ ., .... 1.ts s....H·r.,,.... ..... ; .... z.ts r., SirWlt SW,., •..•••. 2.11 Fllf.hc• W...,.N ...... l.45 MtwY.nst.41:, •••••••••• J.45 St.ckywdSfittlli •.•.•••••• J.11 Cct'[ ,, ................. 2.tl Ste.II· .................... z.ss Spedeh...._n.s. ...... J.11 S... Shtili .............. 2.15 CHA11AUlllAHD IS..n tw.I._. ..,_ J.JS tH HUNflMCi,fQH II.ACM, 5174 W...-.t. ..... -14MIOI ....... f-All911M~-C..,. • .._,......, _ t f?.M.. IFrl • s.t. 'til t :JO P.M.J L..a. • ....._ .. Fri.-s.t. & S-. 0,.. 4:JO P.M. tM ....... GIMI, "'I ...._ .,..,. IL-5J0.7Mt ..,...... llACM & '1'-MeOl.1& 1-. • tickets, $2 .50 for,.t adults and SI for 1tudent1. The schedule: Robin Williams, ''This Is Paris," Nov. 30 ; Ralph Franklin, "Grecian lloliday," Dec. 20; Sherilyn aild ltlatthew lifentes, .. ·Hungary," Jan. 31, 8.nd Russ :Potter, "The Kingdom of the Netherlands," April 4. Information, 646-2163. J • NOV.6·9 DRAMA -''Vector: Two'' will be presented by Survival Theatre 'under direction of Ashley Catr1• UCI assistant professor of drama, in the Fine Arts village Cohcert Hall, 8, p.m . W~dnesday through Saturday, No_v. 6-9. Admission $1. For information call Fine Arts Box Office (714)833·6617. ' . NOV.14·11 •. ~AMA -·:t))~. Bir&" by ,Aristophanes, direct.ed by avid.McDonald, UCI assistant prolessor'of drama, will presentet:I in the Fine Arts Village The'atre, I p.m. ursday t6rough Saturc@y, Nov.14-16. AdmissionS2.50. For information call Fine Arts BoX Office (714) 833-6617 . ii ~ourmtt ~anhwir~ i'l1op . A BIT OF OLD EUROPE RIGHT IN COSTA MESA Relax at our Sidewalk Cafe Try Out Gourmet Defight , end • Oellctous Home Biked Carrot c'lke 0,..11 ..... 4,..._ ............. 1767 NEWPORT ILYD. Al.SO ORDEllS TO GO 646-Jl20 - . . J ~....-,: u.tl t P.M. IFrl &'s.t, 'tll I 0 P.M.I '-i:t.Dmfr: *"tin FrL-a. ,~,_. S-., l :JI A.M. ~~!!-!!.--!!· . Destination: pe~ps !he fine~t prime nb ever. . ·"Eating out"is not _ •ty A:~: .... ..,., 1~."'·:~? -nee~ '¥-U ...... &e• Dining a,t 1ttcitkiv:~rter Inn's ~arlnc F1cs\aurant ts a totally pleasurable experience. Excellent cuisine, rariging tr om o·ur superb Racko! Laitlb lo Salmon Sleak in Salsa Verd!; pRlnstaklngly prepared b'J our European· trained chefs. A wine list·of dislil'ICtion to complement your entree. And, In ari - atmosphere of cootinental elegance unmatched IOf relaxed enjoyment. Dining is The MJrino Restaurant at At Victoria Station, a restauranL without compromise. Dine on superb pi"ilne rib or splendid eteake in the authentic atina-. sphere of an Ertelish ra.tlwa;r. station, surrounded by railroad arti!a.cts. The drfnks are hearty and food, the experience one to ~e you return, Next stop: Victor.le.Station. .. • ED RYAN & ROSEMARY CARUSO . TuESOA Y THRU SA TUR DAY -t:OO P.M •• 2:00 A.M. IAitrigger Room-KQNA LANE')~99 HARBOR. COSTA MESA 545.111°2 .. • ... , -Q90 Dove Street. Newport Bei.oh 7&2~0240 l • • • l , ··..._ • • SPOµTER SALOON Victorian Bar at lliE/1kWHAt~ 400 MAIN , BALBOA PENINSULA • 673·4633 ~-- ofa Featuri.J'fg Old SoOOra ....... o1.., Mamacita aiOce 1912 LUNCH 11:30 A.M. TO 2 P.M. DINNER 5:00 P.M. TO 9:30 P.M. Cl\TERING AND FOOD TO GO lu.IVATIOHS 54 .. H07 • CL'OUD SiiiWA f 113"::! COSTA ... ~ rEMPLE GARDENS CJf'NSSG Re1t•11rane RICKSHA COCKTAIL LOUNGE ~~,;.,!\ ..... ·'.'! t'caturing Exotic 'tropical l)rinks Lwncheon I: Dinner D•ily IHI ADAMS f.t H.WJ COSTA MISA 540.1 H7 540, 1923 .............. ! 1Jffl llOOIHUIST tAt a., .... •1a.1m SW]'tA'r :-· ~ )l'U:B11f · THUR. -SUH. LA-: POSADA HOW APPEARING JERRY LAMBUTH · TRIO Tllflday ttn Sahirdcry . - ~·~ MONDAY thru THURSDAY SPECIAL$ , ~Friday andlSatUrday until 6 P.~. > dinners i"!clude.souporsa1ad, baked potato.or rice RED SNAPl'ER. • • . • . • • • • • . • • . • • • 2.25 MAHI MAHi .••••••..•. ;-:-;-. "" • · 2."5 GRILLED ~EA BASS • . . . • • • • . . . . . 2.95 TOP SIRL,OIN •••••.•••.. " ...... '3.25 NEW YORK STEAK .............. 3.75 LOBSTER TAIL '.. . • • • • • .. • • • • . • 4-9fi STEAK ANO LOBSTER • • • • • • • • • • • 5.95 LUNCHEON ""' mvrd daily until 4 p.m. . . ' J'l()t E. Coast Hwy,• COIOrod.I Ma• !714)67!"!.cRX> "6278 Pociroc:Coas1 Hwv • t\,nlirqOl'IBch ~ [2ll) 592· 1321 . ' Ice skat in~ C\'Cr~''la~: 0.. cl Jiii•"'"""'" .. ,......, ....... ._ ASK AIOUT SPECIAL GROUP RA Tf '" ICt ClPADE$ CHAltT COSTA ME~A r:C SA V[AOI:. SHOPP114\J CENTI:.~ • -• HA•lnl llYD ' AT AOAl1il ' HHIWood" You can bet the wood grain on this 1929 Model A' Ford station wagon didn't come out or a pa.int bucket or a plastic fac· tory. Car is owned and proudly shown by Glenn and Sharon J ohnson or Placentia who, along with daughters Heather, 8, and twins_ H_olly and Heidi, 4, will be among 300 participants expec- ted Saturday at 12th An- nual Model A Ford Roun- dup at Knott 's Berry Farm in Buena Park. Knott's Promises 193~s Nostalgia Whatever you want to call it-''A Trip: Down Memory. Lane," "Nostalgic Mom · ents," or perhaps, "A Sam_. pling of the Good Old Days"· -K nott~s Berry Farm's Hil arious 1934 Muslcal Revue on stage in Knott's John Wayne Theater today through Sunday promises run-rilled family entertain-1-----~=----'-, ment for Oldsters and young-~1""~Y.-sters alike: according to u · """-""' spokesman. ""'-·•i-r A three -act family variety show. Knott's J.934 1105NstUt•lla•ve. Musical Revue is the first be The Lyons Family, a ·fam il.Y of four acrobats, and the vivaciouS Duane Dan· cers. The Lyons Family (mother and father and two sons). will put on a disp1ay or hand-bala ncing acrobatic routines such as were ever· so popular during the 1930 entert~inmentera . Sh ow time s ror th e musical review are 7 and 9 o'clock tonight, s, 7, and 9 p.n\. on Saturday, and 3, s and 7 p.m. on Sunday. Knott 's Berry Farm's Saturday Night Sundown Showcase continues Satur- day at the Wagon Camp whe~ Joe and Rose Lee Maphis will be featured. •nahtlm 17141 '3t·2'M such review ever to appear R ~=:::1atthefarm. Featuring"one_ us.s1"an Favon"tes :: of the world's fastest and cleverest ventriloquists,'' DAILY PILOT -.... ~ ,_ Hewtt "JOHHHY TOUGH" -, __ ~'DAllHG DOIERMAHS" I.Du Dupont, the Hilarious At c 11 · c rt ...,._,_ 1934 Musical Revue will be 0 _ ege once "RASPUTIN & THE part of Knoll's 40-year old · EMPRESS" aux French Cuirine Chicken Dinfter restaurant Orange Coast College in· less frequently heard ·Rus· ·· ' birlh'1ay party cel~bration structors, Charles Berger sian salon music of the 19th .,... ~~M.AM that runs through Wed· "a nd Irina Gsovs kaya century. ~HU..~· & nesday. Berger;wiH present-an-aH---1'-he--pr-ogulil-..w:iJ:l~co~n:-,1~~~~~~-~~~~I While most ventriloquists Russian music program at elude with traditional fOlk ~OL"D1tUSJf'' emplcy only two voices, the noon Tuesday, Oct. 29, in and gypsy songs. review's emcee Dupont OCC's Music Studio 1. After pursuin g ,separate uses £our dif£erent voices in Admission is free and the m us i ca l e are e rs the Lunelt 11:30 tO 2 his act, and is capable of publtc Is Invited to attend. Bergers teamed together at Dinner From s~ speaking si x ·d ifferent The Bergers have perfor· OCC, singing the_ leads in ·-· ·ci;f.,ea-s1Tn. & Mnu. languages flu ently. med before the Tolstoy Purcell 's ''D"ido and 7H ~'· cWt, C•ft MHci J · · D . h . Foundation in New Yofk Aeneas." For two years ~714) 540-3641 oining upont 18 t e and at many Southern they presented 1yric1.heatre I ~;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:~;:three=~-·;:a;:ct=va;:n;:·;:et~y=sh;:o;:w=w;:il;:I rl California colleges and programs in conjunction Ii universities. Tuesday's with .an OCC Evening Col· program will feature the lege lyric theater workshop. Soloist They are currently preparing a program of tradition&l A m ericao favorites for tbe 1976 Bicen· .... ..._. ....... .. HARRYIM YOUR POCKET" ·"INN-COMPARABLE" Performs tennial. . ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii DAY AND HICOHT • SUHDA Y IRUHC:H Dining-Dancing-Entertainment ~ -'f P•al'.hMJ AmtslrOiWJ lroa. Wed. HlrU Sot. TllHday Hlgllt Gloo Lallll ltl Auso CANYON SOUTH LAGUNA l 1 IN Cent Hwy. . bt11"C1"°'95 49t-266J MIME RA11NOB. FOR l'MEN18AND \'DlJllO PBJPlE _..,......, .... ....,,..; ......... .............. ........,., ____ ......,.,_""""'"" Dorothy Wade, recenUy named concertmistress of the Sinfonia. Orchestra, will . perform as Soloist in the Vivaldi "Autumn," :it\the opening concert or the l,os Angeles Master Chorale ~:::::::::::::::;:;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;~: and Sin ro n i a 0 re hestra • Satu rday, Nov. 9, at the · la1o~Mt•,....••~ (Bay.side on the Lido Peninsula) •SUNO"AY BRUNCH on the Deck 9:00 . 2:30 •CHUCK IEAUY AIS Colorlul Artist Doing His Thing Tuesday thru Friday 5 to 1 675-5777 Dorothy Chandl er Pavipon. Ms. Wade who has ap- peured as soloist with the Los Angeles Ptlilharmonic is cu r re ntl y concert· mistress or the California Chamber Symphony and of the Santa Monica Sym· phony. Among the many awards she has received are the Coleman Chamber Music !\Ward a nd the Jacque Thibaud Concour in Paris. -------------------- ® ..... UllCKI IJ .. llHI (&to 1..,,, ..,., ...., • trlfJ~ Ml'1 The Master CPorale or 120 voices will prese nt six con· certs at the Pavilion during l'---------------------1lthis, its eleventh season at • IMTHTAIHMEMT NIGtfi:t.Y • "OASIS"-Wed. lhno S.... Ti• Awii•r -Mon. & T11e1. 0..-0fHIS PAIHTIM'IS 411\'IMAWAY EYBIYDAYI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••• -11 .... ~ ....... -•. -....... ... _ ... ___ .... _ ..... UJ II hf,.,... --·-·-......_......,I 714-4tJ.llll the 1t1usic Center . ' Real cantonese Food ••f here or tlike home STAG CHINESE CASINO 111 21st Pl., Newport'Buch ORlolo :1-9560 o,.. '"' ArM-4 hlly 12·12-frl .. •s.t. 'ti le.a. andNEWfi1m iMpired by the ncNel, 1UAPGRT .. byArthirHiiioy. U IS AY . "MIXED COMPANY" ,,., ALL STAR LAUCOH RIOT SHOWH DAILY AT: -'*" '*"" ''" ,._&U.t.f&l .. M """' ........ " MOH THlU SAT. t :OO SUM. 4 & 7:JG • ..,..MIOO'l'ITUN" ..... ...,.,.. IOIS fT MUllTr Ill • "M>On.M•HS" ~WAl"INI 1.-w•C.1C-,_•-C.1 _, 'WOnM•t1s~ "MOOMIHMI "&I" INI ....... -"·-"· -·-··1•··-__ ,.., ..... , "CAI AllT" -COlO TU1•1Y• INI -~1~:::._..:.i.=:::;::::::::t:":':''~··:·•:0::::::::::;;:.......;;;:;:;:;::;1J ' I, .· I I HELD OVER RMAL WEEK!. 'fill! .: .. ;//do . --...... ~ -·· .. . ..... . • Mtwport 47l-ll50 LA.St CHAHCl TO "' Sf:f .. , "-C~~'tl.l.111..\' THESTING - -~CIPIC TH•ATR•& DRIYa-IN SUPl:R SWAP MRSTS HA••oR aLVD.priw·lft S.....MMt&Auf9S-, Sit.a s-.-..., to '""' ORANG• Drlwe"tn 1 & 2 ,, .. ,.. .• s-....... '°'""' ... ,'""'""" '1 ....... $1Mi .. F•mllw F&HT! · Profit•! •er9•1M0alerel MON. flt. OHN '''' P.M. SAf. a KIN.· Of'fN .f141 '·M. SNOW AT "4S UHDll 12 fllJ UMTS WlDHISM'I' ClnOlft ,I ' ~ '· Al PcicH'ic'1 Hijliwcry l' l "TAKING Of PIUtAM 121" ,..,..,., ·•~lh. ·S1S.l 526 $> ........ ,,_.,.!Id '1 '"''Co-\,l-1011 .... .,,. .. ,..., c"""''"• °" ...... '093·•••• ~lAW~ -""'--llG IAD MAMA i-i &IG IUST OUT "' J ' ) I (.6 DAIL V P1LOT • lt Friday, October 18. 197~ Julie on ·TV Mik e Doiig las Co-lio sl J~li e Nixon Eisenhower makes her co· hosLlng de but y,•ith Mike Douglas on '1'tu: ~Ike Do ug las Sho\V ," ,'\1onday Oct 21 1 rough .f<"riday. ()(;!. 25. at 3:30 pm' 0~ KNUC, Ch<Jn11el 11. ' ., (\mong the variety of guc.·sts that she a nd ~lik e IJ0.t11.!las \viii i nt l'r~•ic\v ~uring t~ week are. h~1 hu.~b.ind f).iv1d F.1!.cnho\vef'· l\\'O ?lhcr ~otc.d tclc.·vi sion hosts. \Villiam B~f·rc-iey and l::d\\'ln Nc•\\'mu.n ; film st ars l:ha.rlton Jlcs~o.n .. ~~!·nes t Borgnine u.nd P1.1trirk \Vaync: rv st.irs Steve ,\lJen, .J u._vnc f\feado\\'S and the Hudson liruth<•rs; l'Omed1c.1ns l'at lil'JH')' a nd Oc.1v1d Jir~nnc.·r . singer Kelly Garrett : psvchi<: Ki.!n ny Kingston . formc.•r hc.1 seb•1 ll mciiiager 1..eo Durocher : and odllsmc.1kt.•r .J immy lthc \.ret:k J Snyclt•r . l\1rs . E1sc nho'''cr. the younger daughter of '"former Presi dent '.'\ixon. last vi6 itcd the ~ .l)(;>ugla~ sho\~ c.1 ycc.1r c.1go. She is assistant ~ managing C'tl1tor of 'l'hc S<ilurday Evcnin~ 1:,.. Pqst. FOR WEEKENDER ADVERTISING PHONE NORM STANLEY , 642-4321 IT'S S•RYIYAL "OF THE FIERCEST. AMD THE •~. ·';:. F•MMIEST. J "THE LONGEST - YARD" la e .-le-!,;::! cr..U e lol of Joli... Ir., Andelolof- llUrt flernoldo atera- tough,-J--. .1_,. -fire. The-of·· woman scorned at.rts hie trouble. However, he'a got_,,. wreth of hill own. And the laSt 45 mlnutea of the film la unlike enJthlng WoU t.vewer......, It will ---lng•nd cheeriagtikenomovie ' ........ . "THE LONGEST YARD" is for nwt, for women, for .weryone. lbce,t ..... ·~ ,..,. IRl~~·~.Oj l~PIUMIPtt•llfl AI MKIT&.-rrulCt• E OWAROS CINEMA VIEJO ..... " """'"'' ' ••' ,: l'CO !.Ill Dll llAl\'N 11,U IKlllll.'OOK. • io ·~.-~• ,,. G1111 lllOll "11 ~ ~ J'J )JIG PIJllO\'kA. \-;/ !-• l'f t f I\ I l\l 11 " ,__ __ .,,. __ .... 11\11 1\1\\\ l _Tl-IL ABDICATION 0 • In tl1e (iialleri<'s OCC Displays Graphics, .Photography ~RANGt; COAST COLLEGE LIBRA R Y -2702 Fa1rv1ew Road, Costa Mesa. "Photo-Graphics," a serits or 25 photographic prints by international artis ts a'nd photogra1Jhers. will be on display through Nov. 14. Show SJ>Olll$01'Cd by George Eastman !·louse of Rochester , N. Y., f~atures litho~ra phs, etchings, strecnprints, stencils and silksc reens. !·lours: Ti.tonday-Friday, 7:30 a.nl.·10 p.m :i nd weekends. 10 a.m.-5p.m . l.A(;UNA IJt:'°AC ll l\o1 USEU~1 Ot' ART ·-301 Cliff Drive, J,ugunu Bcat•h. Californiu National \Vatercolor Society, a juried show with 122 entires, is on exhibit through Octobcr. ll ours Daily, 11 :3Qa .m.-4:30 p.m. CllAt'.l.JS Gl\l.Ll(RfES 1300 S. Coast ll1t1ty., Laguna Beach. Recenl \v;.itercolors by Phil Paradise and recenl acrylics by Shirley \Veek.s., through. October. llours: \Vcd~esday·Sunday, 11 a.m.·S p.m. ~1AH I Nt:RS SAV INGS -!SIS \\'estclif( Drive, i~ewporl Beach. Impressionist pa intings by Violet Spiker or Costa Mes;.i, through Ot'tobcr. CELEBRITY CENTER -215 Riverside Ave., Newporl fi;each. Portr~its by Nancy Turner Rea. Cf)ntemporary oil s by l\tarl1n Green and crystalline porcelains and stoneware by Hobt!rt Gary Eakin on exhibit· through October. £.iO L~EN Wt:S'I' COLLEGE -15744 Golden \Vest SL, Huntington Be ach. Abstract paintings, dra,11ings and "IAHDY"S BRIDE"" & .. DEADLY TIIACKERS"". .... ,Oi9o •••• -UDY stMGS THE llUESM l:lM:05 l'llLD~~R PICTUAl'.S f<ld P~UACruM f'llOOUCTlllll.S P""'"' "THE TAKING OF PELHAM ONE TWO THR EE " WALTER MATTHAU· ROBERT SHAW MARTIN BALSAM· HECTOR ELIZONDO • • lfll tlAll4» '"°""'"" crm• · · llOWAflO HARBORo:.'m.2 ICUIOtl l&.VG . .IT Wll.JOll tT. OITA 111111 Ml·OS7 PREVIEW 8:30 HARRY & TOHTO WIU BE SHOWH BEfORE & AFTER I '~ prints•by Jow Goode, James Jara,·aise, David Vatierson and Pete r l'lagens. Hours: MoA~ay·Friday, 11 ct .m.·3 p.m. and \V cdnesduy, 7.9 p,m. • · • SANTA ANA COLLEGE -17th and Bristol Stree~ ~;,.u1ta Ana. "Tongue !n Groove," an e xhibit by si:.i artists'. tn~ludes ~he work by Puul Maull, Michael Davis, Greg l\f1ller, Jim Van Geem, Bruce \Villia ms and Richard Turner. I-lours : l\.1onday·Friday, 10 a.m.·3 p.m. a nd l\fonday and Tuesday, 7.9 p. m. Ti\.LISl't AN PRIN1:'S -1437 Glenneyrc St., Laguna !leach. Recenl etchings by the renowned Spanish a rtist ~larL'Os l ril~rri:-Hour:f: \'!cdnesday.~fonday, ll a .m .·S p.m . GAl.Lt:RY I Studenl 1-lcallh Services, UC Irvine. \Vatercolors by Hex Brandt of Corona dcl 1\lar. l·lours: ~londay.f'riday. 9 a .11).·4 p.m. LAGUNI\ t-·~D E R AL SAVINGS --· 260 Ocean Ave .. Laguna Beach. Oi ls and watercolors by Phil Dike through October. ' NE "'PORT CIVIC CENTER -Newport Beach City Hall G~llery, 3300 Ne~port Blvd., Ne\vport Beach. Award . winners of the City Arts Festival will be on exhibit through November. UC IKVJNE GAl.l.EKY UCI t"ine Arts Vi llage. Cartoon show from lhe pri vate collection or J erome Aluller includes political arid popular comics a nd original drawings for animation, through Oet. 27. Hours: Datly '"TMl LOM~EST YAIDM •ittl Ill l\Nl:TIETMOlDS -zoo1 S,ACE ODYSSEY- "CHAllOT OF THE GODS" "GIMME SMELTER" IPG I "I USTEtl • llLUE" Ill . • --"UST-SUMMER'"- ''HARRY & TONTO" IPGI • "HARRY IM YOUR fJOCICET" "MIXED COMPANY" • "'IAHl SHOT'' lrGt 'K A \.\'Ol'flan wffh a profane love ... for a rnan of God. EXCLUSIVE ORAHGE COUHTY SHOWIHG From the"""""' BUSpenSe novel of the year. STARTS FRIDAY , ...... OCT.18 ...,. SS lo ' ........ -.. _, -... -fASHION ISLAND ••• ' • ·-..... --..... .:;....:: ....., ...... ···""' STARS JOMYOIGHT "''""'-'-·"' ...,._ '. .,, Tt'llt-ttr »TU DIA.TM" exce t &1ond ay 1tnd Saturday ~rom nuon' to.5 p.m.- BOWERS MUSEUM -200'.c! N.,.,ti1.1tin St., Santa Ana. Precolumbian arl or 1';fexico will Sb on exhibit through Dec. I. I-lours: Tuesday-5.uturd»y, 9 u.m,·5 p.m .. ; Su,nday. l·5 p.m. a nd Wcdne~ay and Thursday, 7·9 p.m. -. ' 'CAL STATE LONG BEACH GALLERY 61H t;, 1\!! St., Long Beach. J\tariu Po\'eka: American f.'otlci' will be . on exhibit through Oct. 27. The exhibition is un indepth . look St the pottery of Maria l\lartinez, a 1'ewa indian from San Ildefonso Pueblo in New l\l exico. who is almost 00 years old. I-lours: P..londay-Friday, ti a.m.·3 p.m . and Slinda~. 1·4 p.m . TJB GALLER Y 1535 b P.1ofirovi a Ave., Newport Bel:lch. "Seril:ll Images," an exbibil of prints. paintings and drawings by W.W. Keeler. through Nov. 18. Hours: \Vednesday·Saturday, noon·5 p.m. or by appointment., 645·7017 . NEWPOR-T H·ARBOR ART' MUSE\J M 2211 W. Balboa Blvd ., Newport'.' Beach. Retropsective'of Lyn Foulkes will be featured along with wall scul)!ture by Gloira Kiseh in lhe entranc~ gallery, throhgfi"'.Oct. 20. llours : Daily, noon-4 p.m. (closed Monday) and Fridays, 6·9 p. m. -ORANGE COAST COLLEGE ART GAL LERY'-2701 fo'airview Road, Costa Mesa. Watercolors by Milford Zornes, recipient or the American Watercolor Society's Meda l of Honor and professor at Otis Art Institute. Pasadena Scho'O I of F ine Arts and Rex Brandl Summer School of Painting, will be onexhibit through Oct. 20. . ~Jours : Monday-Friday,9a.m.-2p.m. SIGN Of. T ll E CRo\.B -South Coast Sh.ipyard and Design Center, 2234 Newport Bl,•d., ~ewport Beach. Rece nt wo rks by Jonas Gerard and metal collages by Edward Goldman. SECURITY P ACIFIC BANK .._ 3435 E. Coast Hwy .• Corona del l\1ar. "Orange Coast Visions." 40 prints by l\1ark fl.1illl•r of Corona del fl.1ctr, on exhibit through October. • J1\CK .Gl.t~NN GA i.LEK\' -2831 E . Coctsl Hwy., Corona de! rifa r. Afri can art and sculpture, thr collection of llcrbert Haker, is on exhibit through Oct. Jl. Hours: Daily, 11 a.m .·5 p.m. , 'Harr-yan · lonto' · is·a hit, and one of the best 1110vies of 1974." Gene Shalt ofW d "ONE Of THE .i4"'HARRY AND am MOVIES OF THE lONTO' LIGHTS UP SEVINTIES SO FAR. THE SCREEN WITH A EACH Of THE WARMTH, WIT AND PIRFORMERS ARE \VISDOM THAT IS ~!' ~.~~...ullA,,L-mFU~ 2fi:-c:;·;,;~;·•' =CARNEY MOST ORIGINAL, TAllNt :k c;:"T FUNNY, TRUE AND COULD NEVIi TOUCHING PICTURES FUUY SHOW ON ~,!HwE..,!_!~~..., TELMSION!' -~· ... Sl'ICIAl NIYllW NIDAY -'"THE T ..... Of"'-HAM l·J..J"~:lt OCT. II .. 7heYseiirclied • . , . . the world. .. untl/ they<" found~ othec .. -NOW- -AT-THREE~ EDWARDS . ' ' • ,. I • MIXED SINGLES TUMBLEWEEDS ~El\ LIMPID UlARP A~KE:D IF I CAN GO FOR A RIPE ON HIS New HORSE! by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Ca~IOll by Tom K. Ryan by Tom Batiuc:k 1\ll5 NEUl 11'\Alll COUJN\t.l I'N\ DOlt.16 RlR1"E SCllOOl .fl\PER REAU.<,o SEEN\!l 10 Les'Logs! Today's topic: Anew look at counting on your fingers. eE CA1t.HIN(; ON ! RGMENTS NANCY TD·DAY'S CIDSSIDRD PUZZLE ACAOSS 4S Hid 1 9'111 Yt1tilrd1y'1 PIWM SoMd: 1 Agr\Cuhur1I 47 Blow thal tr1ct dsr11 !i JergOl'I 48 ••• c1n11tor1 10 M1dlt1te 49 botigh uHd 11'1 dffpty fl¥1oli 14 Aretdlln ci1'1' · 50 John ···-: of old yi1r.wrlttr l!i Mutci. 53_,lttlly · 1& Sllkwork hlftdltcl: Vat, 17 Stlf·lumlnou1 t.4 Pott office , bOdy U1m 18 Goll count S8 Ponrtyer feature : 2 61 Golden Call words 62 8ar111n 20 Arllculatts 63 Nicolaus ·····'. words Danish 22 T111trn anttomilt 23 Tht Hoo1ief 14 Quot• Poe1 · 65 T1bl1 d' • ··. 13 Simple 42 Com•·····: 24 UM! I fl!OI MHI 19 G1ound 1111ln Tt111n 28 Asund11: 66 Tint 21 HthflWMltttr 44 Sunktnttlcks Comb. form 117 G111k portico 2S Now ···_'... 48 Slngll, kM't; 27 Amerkan 11int DOWN , 2t Flaws t'IP '. 30 Charige 1 R'pld 27 Old T1stamen147--Sou1h i,Klric. ou1Hn11 2 C1n. pro11. book . 91rfl'ltltt 34 ''Whl'th11 by J Not fk:ithious 29 Ice hockev 49 Thin rMtll 1,._ •••... " 4 Sharpshooter'l p1llc1 ~1911 l 36 Church 5 Common 3 NtrlOW 50 H"ar9tl'I ..... balCOl'IV ending fjfOO\lff 51 Nowt 31011YG9n e T1k1l1om• _30 Slnbld'I cn.rlidtt J1 CitMOU1 IOUltt tMrd 52 DtlCel'ldtcf 11ement 7 Gt9tk 31 One• moni 53 Yog4 31 follow the goddQI 32 P11l\hept'ir'l'le 56 Mt•..,.. COUJH of I Stcr/t 33 frtgflllt llQvld 58 Mov6tntnt: 40 Shotmak11'1 ch1mti.r 35 Th• ptlllc• Mutlc '°'"' • 9 Mill humtiis '9 Sta ·••': 57 Appe1I 41 lnMCt 10 Oli IKOml 18 "C' ···Si CZ MNtlca1e 'j Scl'loOI PMn turtou1 eon" 4J Octtn llOy9gl 1 SUf.. ..a '"""'people 60 C1vle1 SIUICI ' HEY--- WHAT"S THE 'IDEA? PEANUTS by Dole Hale by Ende BuihmlDer T>< AT'S WHAT T><E SIGN SAYS JUDGE PARKER Ml.SS PEACH i j I --, ~ ... DOOLEY'S WORLD DR.SMOCK l ,,.-Cf",.·.,. P O to..: .. "> .-lAP'-~C-~.i A.1' L.0"1' "1 •\. 1-(A ~{I N.~A ... OJOl:IA•· H t..'"'::r 11·AL~ .. , GORDO MOON MULLINS • •a / .ANIMAL CRACKERS -' by Horold Le DoUlt MEL DID QUrTE A err OF GA.Mel.ING ON AU KIP'IOS OF sPORTS! A&OUT A WEEK "'60 HE WON $100;000 ON A PRIZE FlGKT 8UT 16 OF lASt NIGHT, H£ HAON'T 8EfN PAID! by Mell WI, THANK YOCA. J~T OWi MOll'I THIN6- CAN 1 HAVf IH A~Y FOii: THI lll'OL06'Y? by Chester Gould Ft1d!y. Oclooet 11. 1974 DAILY PILOT {7 by ROCJer Bradfield · ) by Gus Arriola .• Bur :t PLJ,tm!D '81!£!FST"EAKS" ! ·THE GIRLS • .. The 1hinE; about PQnlyho\C i!. •hey <ilw.1y' ~m to 1eair when you"1c going lo M>mcthing instead or returning rrom ii .• .---"-D-EN...;NIS THE MENACE ! I I ! ' • ; 'Tm's S(WfJIU!j' J.MJr GIAA I CAH'r FIGGES! OOT. • -. • OJ DAILY PILOT *V DAI.LY LOG ' Friday Evening ,..,.....,. Saturday Mornirlg WOllD SOtlD IASEU.1 fl I 5dl 11.. is -..,.., J.I th w.w s.ries ""· It wil ..... .. -..ti• ...... "'· .u ,,... ... Mjtd ...... .... ......... KOC'F., CliAN{';F.L 50 Orange County'~ UHNl'lC\1lslnn !lt:1!1on. KOCE-TV, }las scheduled the fnllo"'ing s·rwci~l programs today. Detailed listings of Cha nnel 5(fs pro~r:1n1s nre carried jn tbe D:1ily Pilot's TV \Veek eoich Sund av. r1tltM'f:OC.TOlli ll U II' M.I 'Oil • flM ll to i,ROw. f\UMAN llEVEl OPM(ffT ICI ~ • a:«1 WOM.AN \CLtPUSl •iOO Fllr0M""CH4NT TO ('MANCt ; IW..llf(IN '#ll f l!ftNCUL TUlllE !Cl •!A ELE.Cflll(.(OllllPANY f(I !CTWI 6-;Clt SEU.ME:Sfll:EIE l lCl ICTWI ~ fROM (H"1111r TO OtANC£f • • J IYtlJ'\I\ INV.l \J(AN(ULll,1kl !LI ft )Ill ()lJR VA.Nt5HIH0 "1111.DEIHIU.S "' ) (It AC(ION CHICANO 1(1 t,.llSI 7'11) PE0fllr'w.\ft"4 4Cl fll:OCE I e 00 A TI ME TO 0110'1\f! HUMAN OE Vl ~OPMioNt ICI ll«Jt FE!iTIVAL l"tullS t(I !PIM ,;(IQ FIRING I.Alff. tQ IPl5.I . ~ • • , • ~~~~!Enters Realm ~!.'Q-z.'!9!. ~~~~ that is more competitive 1i•wNnl'I on the bard-hitting Jocks -productions. lncluding and sound tr.:.ek albums. than any area of the coun· .,.. , -~ with a "good music" station t.onigb.t's presentation of They 1i.iian look;'foi-ward try . format changes are over-all tounc:t.,:. ib~udin~ Pucclal's "Mact..me B~«r.-to a Graad.Prize ,dr'aa~wingnn frequent as the search goes Scull ManctASier ntw iltel~ pactaee ond • Oy"lroms.u p.m. I Dec; 1;. :j!:lch "!'U l\nd !hat on for the formul a that will new news ~ 1,pproae ""'• 111 y J 8 elf on s ~1p1en~c1utcht g a pa~~of generate a greater listening • ~~ ~ •"'mbtttes "'Rsember the Atovies" tick~ (o r t-..·o t l!awai1 as audience. · . . ~~-, feature on KGIL ClO a.m .. 3 a holiday seaso b1lof good Heading t he search for .. ~1cl1 ll !ftll res~ed ~.m) ii gaining Increasing cheer. . that audience at KGBS ls its ~one from KGBS is its about creating a formit for .his ~bilit Y, In bf!>Ad· JIOpWarity. Liste•ers ari J~e station who })as new General Manager Paul brightest star, Bill Ballan-which w 111 pro,-lde · casling c1rcJJ?s and,.bAB: had vi&ed 10 IUtll. the..a.ewt ~-eUCJtgd t,_!'e nl~st monel_ .... Cussldy who is taking the ee, I or mer Los Angeles maximu0'1 of hit country 4jeneral 1h pnua:!rsh}pj 'wltb tl'tai" and the title or e r""!' ,ft,B Ustenel's roTI wi~e station t he "gentle coun-Mayor Sam Yorty, Mickie music <the kind or c&w s everal top ~t at1~n s _In film, arter J ackson plays'a va ntfy or 11opd causes, 1s try" way. Cassidy is intent and Teddy, et c., and Cas-songs lbaJ ride tbe charts) Sout_be rn ·Cal1rorn1 a, 10-sound track from some K.MPC, ~h ere p ro,ram on pulling together a format sidy isn't Interested in 'with a minimum of per· eluding_ KHJ so. the he~vy ·in e m 0 ra b 1 e m 0 v i e dtrect or Mv k Bl1noff t hat will be ''highly ln· building a~new stable or top · sonality interruption. · money ts th8the II make it •• produced' in the past 50 repori s tha t mo1:e thn_n novalive and new to this on-the-air persooalities as l Don 't forget KFAC 's years. $1511i000 hfS been ra1s~this market.•• h · ed ._ .:. .. t a much as e 1s concern IT'S nAT~Ea -a com• ·FJ:iday night airing of San. Participants wind up with pas ye r • CllRllU'SHI -.- AllEllGAI DIE· 10•1 mE' ·~Ir JAWS Tougll-1-·--·-jnn. Eweayila:•Mouldho9iew..W.1h9acr. cloooa"t llo4i..lllm- ~ ' Looks Uk• any old law ii me. INl'whea __ ..,. leal_ forlh~,f'*:·W~I ... ..u so lDCll;'1'. •lll·llAC 35 14" CUii SAW 12995 • . ' l!orta.ble. ligbt. vcn-power.d . ..U-cleaulno•-· ._......, Sudac• ID Loguaa u' ... it lo cut lhll firewood for.her Stunl9y Stit4"mef~iioiilCGL , .BOW SAWS So you. spurn out modem 9adget1. thmlbuy ou of th ... and UM the old elbow po_.. (Gel a COM ol "lowSawElbo•"· 1ee U I care.) \ POLEPIVIEI AllSAW •• 7 21" 24"" 30"" 36"" ' . • ·2.s~. 2•7 347_ 397 Eftrytim. r.,. UBI I am Nmi_..... of tbe tim. I boughl oae at reguliar lor clroud teo ~ •adl-.lhaald ...t ""---· Thl!l-U. thdall'-mOuwl.ittiel lhoe lor addlrl. . 1111port."8,qfull~··.,. ....... it walk right'""' lb. ' ~jobo. LISTEN TO DISSTON . DISSTOIJ4CISAW. g . .. ,,~ .: {\ . 97c Handy thing to han. ne•ff kncaw when you haft to put one in a cake for your uncle Herby. Handles I 0to12 inch bladHo DISSTOI CULLElliU BAii SAW Blade is hardeMcL temptorild. mad HI. H....,. duty plastic haadle. 20 or 28 inch. 10 or I point. Goaerol-., DISSTOI coumYSllE BAIDSAW ·497 . ' • I • ., llSSTOI TOWISllAI 347· ' BAii SAW Economical Cl'OU<UI so..:. hi9hly poliab.d stNL 26 iach blade. 8 point. (pointa means teeth porUu:h.> llSSTll UICBEI BUISAW -• ·6•7 • < Pnmlumquallty, hoaf;" duty ha:ndaa.w. sp.cial alloy NW at .. 1. hardened Clad tempered blade. ho1dwwd haadle. Polish.d blade. CroA cul orripatyt.. • ' . I, .. ' ' • t. ... ....... ••• I I 'w•lc•••• ··11 Cliry1ler · ec.-• .,.....,."'"""' ......... ,...., ...... -.................. w .... pw t '-W•.._...._..,, =:::·, l••.kA•erlcerlll, • lxpre11, Cert• ........... cw.. - THE ALL NEW- 1_97~ CHRYSLERS . •ncl,udn~g the a~ie; ~·coRDOBA•• PLYMOUJHS rtl6 .IO~ ~· JISPUY _AID: READY aJts~~t':~~ ~IMMEDIATE -DELIVERY u ... rr,s s~'f\r USID CAR· SAYINGS TO .· I ..._ ___ •• '62 ·PLYMOUTH COUPE . V8 erlgine, automatic transmission, heaie1 · <FFA188) . - '59 DUNE BUGGY . VOLKSWAGEN f speed transmission, canvas top. (SIE757) • - · '73 PLYMOUTH FURY Ill 2 DR. H.T. VB, automatic, radio, heater, power steering &: brakes, wsw tires, air condilioning, viny l top. (IBJNB) I WE HAYE A HUGE SELECTION OF .. INTERllA TIOllAl " TRUCKS! · 1975 Internationals HERE IOWI •SCOUTS• TRAVELALLS• •PICKUP TRUCKS• Pricn l'W Ta & le....-Are V•d 'Til 10 p.a. s-clly, Oc..._ Zotti ' • . ' J I .. Ll,~·~~·~·l~LY~Pl~L~Or~~~-'~'~"~:::.:..·~~~i.btr:::.:~l~B,'-"19~74"'"-~~ ~ I ritish Auto Makers at the i MerCy of tabor 1ht cq~l\1/'11 lhal inlroduud lhe tlon tlir' lo the U.S. 25 ~tar1 ago pra&tloall~ out of rht competitl07' oda)I , Tkt rta.1on Lt not a drop tn T)J"fll o/ tlu: sltelc, sporty MG, Tri- 11nnh. Jog1wr, and others, but often OrliJ dela11.1 btfort deliutrv, poor per· rrncnicr. a11d poor workmanahip. Ry cRA.RLES E, 001.F. Cl'lrltllt~ '''"'' Mtfltltr SV"IC. I LONDQT4 - A !cw weeks ago 10 i sr:i · .Pll(*s In one of Ford Mntor ~~-·s~ ""Mish plants decided they !!ti611\i be retlassl!led into a higher pay I gr-id•· 1 'F'M'rl ~lktd. The ~lr.!e~ <!~o;med­ th••ir spray gum, and the plant shut dO\\O. T}1(' plant \\'as out of production tor 21 ~ dav11. Ford lost 2,500 can worth : about S6 million. and 2,000 workers did i not g<'I paid. ' "Jn the U.S .. " says \Vllliam O. Bourke, ! presidf.'flt o( Ford of Europe, "we would ~"10-a .,,fudgf, show him the contract, 1 ~ judge would probably issue an in· ~ion,-and the 1,1·orkert would either 1~o'"bllck tO work . or the union ""'Ould 11ace a stiff fine." ,. I' BUT NOT IN Britain. U·S. auto makers, ln fact. ha ve been !IO incensed over 1the frustrations and underutilliatlon ol ; produc;tlon capacity in Britain -fre. j(Jucnt 5~lk,e.s, for example -that they 1all have threatened to withhold further :tJll•estment in the country. I 'A labor-relations act was passed,lltlder rl1i! la st Conservative G<lvemmenl . but ltrade--union opposition to it made It unen- forceable. Harold Wil500's Labor JGovemrnent has repealed the act. Its ,.ftmula for industrial relations is ·ttacit "IOCiJI contract." which is unen-- 'orceablt in H>e courts and is, In effect, i3 genUemeo's agreement. ' Industrialists feel that the Labour .J'lirtj's policy will open the door to ~-:_~r· stfongtr demands on the part of ~lant leftiats withW the unions. 1 / How can you have a gentlemen's i"!Pment with 70,000 guys whe.n 20 ~· them can shut you down?" asks Leyland, and lt Is I.he only major manufacturer without a link to Detroit. Its worldwide sales last year v.·ere 1.161,00Q units about 65,000 of ""'hich \\"ere sent to the U.S. In addition to Ford and Ley I and. the other t¥1·0 members of the "big four" which account for 97 percent of British auto product.ion are General Motors and Chrysler. Significantly, U.S. automakers do 11()1. ship their British-built cars to the American market. Major complaints are lack of quality control and the inability to build enough cars. workers to work overtime, and last winter's fue1·short, three-day workweeks, says Mr. Bourke. Chrysler not long ago laid oer 3,500 workers at an assembly plant in Scotland because of a cootimrlng strike at a plastic plant. Already the shortage of plastic parts bad ca.wed the layoff ol. .f,500 other assembly workers. Chrysler has had some tttrbulent times In Britain ln recent years, mueh to the dismay of the U.S. management. The company faces even more industrial strife from other labor groupS -the electricians, for example, who are - a model or lighting, sound conditioning and venlilatlon. . IT WAS AT COWLEY that Alan Thornett, a TrotSltyite shop steward, was toppled in a secret unioo ballot last June. A modao\e woo by an overwhelming margin, helped by workers' wives wbo marched on the plant and demanded the vote. British Leyland,' however, still has Jess of a grip 'on labor than does Ford ·Motor b:iinpany. Ford ~g~ates a union contract every year that applies to all of the company's plants in Britain. ' I . ' return to the U.S. market wtth the oew sedan. • A BRAND-NEW · TRIUMPR sporty tedan a1eo ti planned for the latter part ol the 19'10~, and It ' too will be shlwed to the U.S. l!\l'cb ol Britain's slujokap' In the u.s1 -market__,. trOm a failure to provide what tbe U.S. motorist want to ,t>Uy. The Allltin Amttlca was a disaster although aarruttedty it was on interim ' car till BL coold bring the Marina into production. About 800 Marin.as a week now are being sent to the U.S. "We inherited a lot of. old car designs when BriU:di left.ind w-u &el. up six years ago," reminds Barber. 1be ?.1orris Minor was introduced in 1948 ind \\'OS still nm¢ng off the assembly line 20 years later. There was no viable product program at the time or the merger. A crash program was launched, which resuJted in the ·Marina and Allegro, the later not sold in the U.S.• BL now Is trying to decide what to do about the Mlni, a 14'year-old "timeless car, which cootlnues to sell in Europe in high volume .. Still, it Is seriously dated. The Mini is upected to have several more years ot life, but in !!Orne markets it ia: beginning to lose groond to better-style<f com- petitors. INNOCEN11; 111E Italian company picked up by BL a few years ago, has designed a new body for the Mini heir.apparent to U>rd Donald Stokes as whieh is a couple feet larger than the bead of. British Leyland Motors. present model. A larger Mini would • Clll'btr•n .kl-• MlflltOf' ••~ui Art wen In 1968 there were 74 different plants compete head-on with Fiat, Renault, and Datsun. in the United Kingdom with 176.000 Wha of the future' w·n the "R ·u h employes. Now there are 59 .. pla9ts. t · 1 r:" s In 1968 there ·was a complex movement auto industry degen~te into a small· time maker of specialiied models, having of engines and car bodies between the little impact on what happens elaewhere. plants, which !llacte for a cumbenome, Probabl not outsi•· -~-~1 ~~ of build! t bil Y • say ~ ~....,. ._.,,_ y mt!WUU ng au omo es. ......_ 1-.J" t the ~· "'•·• last "It . 't too -~· t tr ~ llit: ele'.•IOO a ........ ,ey t-U" . Wl ~Y o ~1" an JWle is ·seen as a hopeful sign. Many engine, because it is compact, says British plant.I ,have outstanding tecord"r Barber. "But when you move a car body of labor-relation& am. pne have never any -distance, ~ a~ transportlnt a-bad a strike or w~kout, reports Bourke. whole Jot ol. air! which can be tre-The British auto industry actually has mend~ly expe11S1ve. a better P>Stwa pert' rd "Now we are trying to get ~1,1r new than much of BJusb in~v!ftliat 'Po"urke. · f ~1ANY QBSERVERS say the workers :Want to -!b.f on the job. get it done, Pnd go boMe with their money but that the shdp stewards, especb1lly the ~ititanl leltJsts, will not let them. The ~ steward is kingpin In the British labor pil:ture. When he blows the whistle, he w0rll.rsipu11 the aw;tch. FORD, FOR EXA!\IPLE, brought in the Cortina for several years and !hen dropped it. Henry Ford II, chairn1an, blamed "poor quality." The company nonetheless still ships in a lot of German· built Capris, and also brings in engines from West Germany and France. 'How ean you hatie a gentleman's agreeme11t tvlth 70,000 guys tvhen 20 of the1n ea11 shut you dow11?' engine and body plants together. is of little comfort when the balance FURTHER, HE ADDS: "We had to sheet is laid out on the table. reduce the enormous ·number or pp.y Britain Is one of the most industrialized grades throughout the corporatJon. We nations in the, world. Its costs, despite ll'!M r: decided to build a new ertWne.' pl outside Britain a few years ti.go. mlttai · unionists bombed the house bC -the company 's managing director in Sritain. Workers often refuse to work overthne. And even worse, turnover and absen- teeism nm high. Ford's biggest manufacturing facility In Britain is at Dagenham on ·the but~J.oodon. I : u 1..ts not a pretty place ," ~ B<N.rke. In the unWlled and Diiskilled·1abor categories, turnover tt1ils to 50 and 60 percent a year, P._evastatingly high when a manufacturer Jfies to build qualJty and continuity r'.to an operation. ABSENTEEISM HAS been especially gh in the last year, he adds "from ~, ... perce!Jt_qr higher on fl.fonday and Friday fiva or six percent in mich~:eek." Btggest car maker here is British Chrysler no longer imports the British- built Ave11ger, known in the U.S. as the Plymouth Cricket, although it still brings in vehicles from Japan. GM sells tens of thousand of Gennan·buill Opels in the U.S. each year but fails to import a single British-built Vauxhall. Yet 25 years ago Britain's sporty MG actually began the auto-import market in the United States. Britain then had some 96 percent of the total U.S. import.· pie; now it has a bare 6 percent. EVEN IF TIIE demand were there, Britain probably could not build the cal'S to meet it. Jaguar, which bu.Uds the only V-12 engine in 'the world, con- tinually loses sales to Mercedes-Benz because the Stuttgart·basl'd. manufac· turer can deliver the goods, while Jaguar can only promise a delay. The company was tied up with a strike all summer in 1972, just days after the V-12 was launched in the U.S. In the last year Ford lost about one- third of its production because of strikes, unautborized walkouts, refusal o f demanding large increases in pay and benefits. PART OF THE problem can be traced to outmodl'd. practices in some of the plants. Piecework still exists at British Leyland, especially at such places u the MG assembly plant in Abingdon. On a walk-through one day, I saw some workers cleaning up while others were &tlll on the fine. My guide said they had finished their quota of' work for the day so they coold wash up and go home early. "Besides," he added , "it's a good day for fishing." lo good weather the jobs often are speedl'd. up so the workers can get out of the plants. In bad weather, it does not make much difference. British Leyland says that piecework has been scrapped for a day's pay in all but a few of its sites. ln contrast to the antiquated facilities at Abingdon is the · Marina plant at Cowley into which British Leyland already has plowed some $100 million •Fail to Catch Essence' "We made a deal many years a,go with the trade unions to bave a naUohal joint negatlating rommittee, and each of the wtions appoints representatives to the committee," explains Bourke. In effect, Ford has a national agree- ment, · comparable to that negotiated ln the U.S. between the Unitl'd. Automobile Worters and tbe manufac-- tunn. BL, by contrast, 'has a different agreement with every union in every plant. The compahy Is constantly in negotiation with the unions. BIUTISR LEYLAND resulted from .'.l series of mergers of independent motor companies over the past 15 years, among them Austin, Morris,· Jaguar, Triumph, Rover, and Leyland, the big truckmaker. The mergers, lo the chagrin of tbe BL leadership, were more in name than filnction. Duplication and wasted eUort persist. "Our big problem was in integrating all eight companies, setting up from scratch a big company with some sense of unification," reports John Barber, had to train supervisory workers in the pr~ures . a!-innaUon, ue highly the plants. Under the old piecework compeuuve w1tli any other area of the sy~em the workers tended to pace world. Costs are much higher ln W~st themselves and nm their own jobs.". ~pnany,, althou&b production capacity Barber admits the com~ny has a long it.self ls higher. way to go. BRITAIN AUiO llA8 a high degree Tony Hogg, a respected auto writer of technical ability, which indultra1ists born in Britain but who now works · F pl Ford Bri · in the U.S., says in a recent luue prize. or exam e, 0~ lain is the largest diesel manufadufer in the oC Ward 's Auto World, referring to world, and much of the firm's total diesel British Leyland : e%pertise is located here. BriU.h aulo- "One sometimes gets the imprt.SSipn motive transmissions: are rated among that its left hand doesn't always know· the best in the world. what its right hand is doing." Don Vordennan, when edftor or Yet despite a $36 million loss in the Automobile Quarterly, wrote: "They've first half of 1974, Lord Stokes speak! got the engineers; lt's just that their with some optimism for the future. He hands seem tied. '11!ey're all IOrt of says the company has settled many wading around hip deep In oorporate causes for lntem1l strife and that the mud." British national labor outlook is inr Some · critics say the Britlih. have proved. a tendency for doing noth:.;because ~ British Leyland has several new cats of the poSsibWty that some might on the way, including a wedge-shaped, go wrong if they moved off dea center. front-wheel-drive vehicle aimed at the In the interim, their compeUton \ take worldwide market. A $150 million Rover the chant'e3 and walk off with the sales. plant is under coostruction. It will-build--Summtng up, Bourke, leaning' back a new medium·sized sedan to compete ln his chair, smiles and says: with the German-bunt Mercedes and "But despite all of the hangups in BMW. He tndicates that Rover will Britaln, isn't it a niee place to.live?" PUBLIC NOTICE PUBLIC NOTICE Student Joins IN THI IUll••101 COURT Otl' FICTITIOUS MISllfltf TH•·J!tAT• OP: CALIFORNIA NAMI STATIMIJn' UI AMO tl'Oll THI' 1lie to1i.wl"8 ~ Wt dlllng Hemingway Wife Faults His Writers Trojan Club Steven McDonald of Newport Beach, atteading the University of Southern California, has been selected a member of Trojan Knights, a men's service organization at the school. COUWTY OP: OIAMOE boniness 111 • ' ....... nn1 OEHNll .. DENNIS ~elltSONNEL otlOllt TO lltOW c.t.llSI FOii AGEHCY Oil lllVINE, -Mldltlson CHAlfOI Of' JfAM• Or., trvl111, Cltll. In rt LlNOA DIANE DEAN, Mll'IOf, ta.w Enttrort-. 1 Ctllfornl1 by l!TTY o . NADltlDGE, lllr moll'ltr. COrpor1!11P1 ro1tt ol lllCOfJOl'tllon Ftb. l"Dr Ollnge ol H1mt. I. 1t14l, 31C2 THl!woad, Stntt A111, Thi IPPl'ie.llon ol l.INDA DIANE Ctllf. F f ' ~ Alun1ni Pi!'k ~ ~ 2 Attorneys i Two Newport BP:ich attor· ~eys have recently bce1: f. IN.ied officers of the L'11i\·er· 1ty o! Southern C1Hfor11i:1 ..;,1\Y Alumni Associallon . ~ U.S. District Court Judge E. !Avery Crary "'as elrct"d sec· ~1erary and Jlerbcrt \V. \\'al ker ~as elected re~ional \'ICC pres. l~cnt for Orange county. :} •• iDra.u1atic Art Stucly Begun ' Lyssa Black. a graduntc O{ Ck?mente High School, hns ~n classes at lhe Amerl~n c.1dcrny of Dramatic Art In ·1asaOtn1· Ms Rinck. who was acU\-e I heater ~rodutcions on the • • iton campus, is oot or 48 , ~tudenll 1elecftd for the la- l°:J.UJ1UrAI class of the new West· Co~t branch of tbe 90-year-old in111ilutlon. -~ .. --. . • From Wlre Services The widow of Nobel Prize winning author Ernest Hem· lngway says bis biographers and interpreters have failed to catch the essence. of the luminaries of the f i Im in-award for an episode dealing dustry. with problem drinking b y Judges for the contest were Itlaude's husband, Walter. actresses C I o r I s Leachman, The council said it • 1 d i d f\lary Tyler ftloore and Esther more to make people aware Rolle, actor Jack Lemmon, of the dangers of improper man. film producers \Valler Mlrlscb drinking than anything else !\1ary R e m I n g w 8 y , in· [~---------~ ever put on lelevision." lerviewed on the sundeck of J * !he home in , Keiehum , Idaho PEOPLE Jerry Fosler and Biii Rice, where Hemingway commillted a io.1usic City songwriting suicide in 1961. said tho se -team. '\\'00 15 plaques at the failures were prob ab I y,in· and f\1iclmel Phllllpt a n d ninth annual American Society C,·1·table, UCLA f f t h of Composers, Authors. and pro essor o e a t e r Pub\' h (ASCAP) try Even the author'. zed rt •I I 1111· is ers coun • a s e vyn · e li ien. music awards banquet. biography, Carlos Baker 's * "Ernest Hemingway: A Life lfumorist Victor Borge will "Colonel" BW Hall of Jack Story,•· failed to catch the be released today from and Bill Musi c led an lfcmingway spirit. she said. Greenwich (CoM.) Hospital, Pub Ii s be rs with an un- "llow could he ?" she asked . where he has been undergoing pfecedented 11 prizes at the "They never went hunting or treatment three weeks for a black tie banquet hosted by drink ing or even c h a t t ed painful n e r v e compression the music-licensing organiza· together. l\1r. Baker is a very cauaed by a protruded disk. lion. In all, 181 winners receiv· great scholar, but no one can A spokesman said he would ed awards at the n at Ion a I describe a Person he has never resume his concttt schedule guard armory in Nashville. me!." Oct •• • * · .,.,, * A work by artist Frederick Long lines of fans waited The Block Student All iance Remington, sold for $170 in through the early dark hours at the University of Virginia 1893• brought a record bid in Chica go to purchase tickets failed In its attempt to prevent of $l75,000 at a Sotheby·Parke to a piano concert by world an appearance by Dr. Wiiiiam Bernet auction in new York. renovmed pianist, VlaJJmir Shockley, exponenl of a theory The painting, an oil ~ can-; llorowlti· of the genetic Inferiority or vas ·enUtled, "Tum 'em Loose •fot"01'iUfs concert, first in blacks. Bill," depicts a cowboy break· C ' kl J s r ing · a bronco. It wa.s from hicago since 1968. is scbedul· Sboc ey, ""' fan or d the collection of the Kimbell ed for Oct. 27 1» Orchestra University who won a Nobel !tall. rt was a fast sellout Prlz.e for his'work in physics, Art Foundat.lon of Fort Worth, with top scale tickets going Is scheduled to debate Dr. Tex ., and was purchased by for $25 fn the 2 , s a 2. s ea t Roy lMls, director of the a New Yrok dealer. audltortum . ; Congress of Rac1a1~ Equalitf. • * Feb. S. __,. n~wage.r ~1liaed' l\f a~ s o n 1 "UCLA has a wealt h ,0 f * nvu11 aa.ys aue s 1SpoSlJll o talent right i n HoUY'A·ood 's The Alcoholism Council or Ftloll, her fabulous 750.acre back yard." actor 11 u g 11 f.merica will p r e 1 e n r an estate at Woodside complete O'Brl1n said as he singled award to television produCG' with Georgian brick manor. f rd •· b Lt "It 's too big lor one out or a!Na s t."" righteJJl Nonnan ar at a reception stars in the university's .11eting In lhe Beverly W 11, hire person," Mrs. Roth, in her progr11m. t.QOliht. Cocktails wlll be. serv-Mb, said. ~1mn f\1eCan.noa. a 23-ytar· ed. For several year11 Mr 1. old scnlor, was named "6est Lear product1 11 All Jn the Roth, who has lived here alhce performer" rn lht'l llth annual Famlly," "Sanfotd and Son," 193&, has been tbe sole family Hugh O'Brlan acting award1 and other 1 h o w 1 • Including occupant, along with t w o c o m p e ti t i on Judged by ''Mauclt:, "'which won him the secretaries, a ho\Jsekt(lping ~ - ) I • staff and gardening crew. Asked what would become of the multimillion dollar pro-- perty, f.>trs . Roth said: "I have no idea, that's the $100 DEAN, by IETTY D. NADIUDGe. her This MlnHI 11 COflducltd llY • CCII"• mo1111r, pwtttr-. for dllnge o1 1111,,.., por1t1on. 1 11tvr111 -.., fll9d 111 COl,lrf, Ind II e&w Elltwo<1sn 101111rfng fTom nld •Plllleltlfll'I tlllT Lfl1 WttlOlfl IETTY D. NAOJllDGE lln flltd 1n PT"ldent •Pl>llc.atlon Jlfllllflllng tlllt llHOA DIANE Thlt sltttm9"1 wn Hied wltll tM OEAN'1o r11m1 bl C.lt8'flOld IO LINOA COunly CJ""" cf Orlflllll COU!llV on DIANE NADll:IOGE. Stflttmbw U, 1'74. Now, ttt.r'9lor1. !I 11 hereby ordered P:JUtl McDonald: son of Mr and •nd d!rectec1, '~' 111 IN...,,,. 1111en11tc1 PUblllMd 0re..,. coa11 01nv Piiot. * ' . In ••Id """tr dD •PPl'I' blfw• thl1 $tptembtf' 27, •nd' OCloblr " n. 11. Mrs. Lloyd McDonald 24 Rue cowt,. In Dlpfrt""'~' l °" the ""' 1t1' 3Jl7-74 question." Former Defense Minister ' 111v OC:tDblr, 191,, et 10:00 o'clock •iosbe Dayan and r 0 r m e r St. Cloud, is majo'ri.ng in •.m., o1 ••ld d11v 10 •'-c.auw wr1y PUBLIC NonCE Jt 1111 •flllllce!IOOI fDr dllnot ol r11rntl----'-";;.,;;,;~=---foreign mlnister Abba Eban business adm.instration a t shCl111d 11111 bl or•nt9d. • .,,, II 11 fllrl .... r ordtrtd thll , c.opy NDTIC• TO CJl•DITORI plan to go on a U.S. speaking USC. "' 11111 Order bt pUblllMd In ltll OrtllOI SUPIRIOI COURT OF TNI t th t 'jJ t th CDlll 01llv Pilot 1 l'WWlplPtf of ITATI! OP: CALIFORNIA 1"01 our a WI ne e m i:r-t"tl tlrt11l1tlon. prln1'911 In Mid t-"'f, ·COUNTY OP: OJIANOI thousands or dollars ror each PUBLIC NOTICE 1t '"" onui 11(.r. ~ fflr ,_ -· NI. A-1'711 • . •------------Jctul,,. -lu. Pl'I« fO Ille d•V of E1t1lt of AVIS H. VAUGHAN, 1k1 spe«h, a newspaper report 1· Mid hffrlftlll. AVIS EILEEN VAUGHAN, 0.CHMd. 'd SUPIEAIOll COURT OF THI! 0.tld 11111 14111 d1y of Slpi'ftrlblr NOTICE II Hl!.REIY GIVEN to tttt 581 • STATI! OP: CALIP:ORMIA P:OW: THI 197, ' crtdltws of t1tt Ibo_.. nelnld dilc:tdlnt Dayan was scbed.uled t 0 COUNTY OP: LOS AMOILIS Fll:ANIC DOMENICHINI trwol ... Ptl'IOftl hiving c.llhM aa•ln•I NI. ll""1 1q J""°" of Mid Slll>tffor (ovrt TM Wld dl9c.-.i 1r1 rtqUf~ to fl11 depart at the end of the month MDTICI Otl' lfllTINTIOM TO SIU. WllNll, N&WMAlf (MfllWAM & !PIM!, wUtt tltt lllUUI~ ~ In /or I f 12 . •l!AL PROfl!RTY AT llRl\IATI SAL• •ALDONADO IMcoil~ORo\TIO Ille Dffke of "" dfrll ol tlt4 '°' ... a o U r 0 lllllV· 1n "" Mllltr of 1111 Etl1t1 or m NlrtlL ~ sttwt .mltttd ~. or to PJ-9 """"-with eraities, the n e w s pa p e r c. ~J1~e0R1~~.H~~-GIVEN ltllt, ::.,:· :::.: Clllfw1ll• nm ::..ro':t"::'h.. :::-.;-.J:n..v~AJ'; Ha'aretz-9'fd ln Tel Aviv. It sublect kl conflr1n1tl0fl by till •bov• A~s "°' Al'fllM:•lll CURTIS. •1J Clvk: tlntw Or'I ... W111. said he wt11 be paid between entlHtd ~. °" Octcmr 21. 1t74 ~1111!1"'" 0n.. c:a.p 0.11-, Piiot. ""'' Ar11, C1Ufomt1 n101, Wlktl 11 ., t ;DO A.M... or tt..r11fftr within "" ~ 27, tnd Ocfrobtr '· II; 11. ""' p!tce If INllNU ol "" lllldtl'slfMd $3,500 and $4,000 for each spe-llmt 11'--d by 11w. '"' .,_,.alfl>ld, 1t1A MJl>.14 In alt rnetttrt fll'f•lnl"ll ID tM 1s1111 h. eltfnlfor ot ltll will cf lht •bovl of 111ld dtctdlnt. within ffllll" ll'IOnllll ec ntmld decedlnt, •Ill •II. " prly1hl PUBLIC NOTICE Ifft!' "" ""' !Mlbllcl11on ol 1111• rtoflc•. T•· aJd t be 11111. to 1111 111911111 •ncl tint ._ ~d09r. D..ttd llflttmbtr tJ. lf1A 1 lft;l' newspaper s °" "" ffnnl Incl conclUICW. l'llr'91ll9f' ARTHUR NEWTON MOLOINO United Jewish Appeal and the mtntfontd, 111 rloht, '"'-lfld 1nt1r1st tl'tCT!TIOUS lllStNISS Adnilnl1tr1..-of till cf C. D. L~o.-.., OICHled, 11 lht HAMI STATIMBMT tSl1to of ttte Israel B 0 n d 8 Organlzation llmt of hit dt11t1, Ill rlgllt, 11111, Thi fdiowll"9 penon 11 dfl!no -lntH •boYI l\IMlll dilc:llilflt CO 1 ;,...<..! th t ·•··· D incl lni.ttst 1r.a1 11\1 11t1tt t..1 •C1'U1red 11: At.AM CURTll mp a .... cu a Diii\..~ ayan b'I' °""''r°" of ll'flt or otillrw'I•, 1n ELECTRONIC ENTEflllJllSES. it; o. 611 Clvk Cltt., ~" "'"' and Eban are in demand as 1e1c1111on 10 11111 of 11tt dtc:••ll!I, In BOii "' 2Am M111r1111111 111td., El s.11t1 A11a, cillftrllll mo1 k be ould tncl ID ll'!tl tffltln rt11I Pl'OPll'tY ioc.tH firD, Ctlll. 9U30 Tiil OU) 147-M411 spea ers t 'I W rather Jn tr.. covntv o1 0r1ng1. s1111 DI CPllrllt c1..i Rllllln. 24'21 Mlllrllndt A~y tor M""lllttrltw see the money go to Israel c1trlo!'nl1, dfK:rlbed •• fDU01111! 11 ... 11 .. It T-, C•Hf. •u:io P11111w.pc or-11111 ,,,.., °''"' Piiot, than to th. tw·o I 0 rm e LOI I •ncl ltte Horthwfl•tet•v -tllll TM1 llvil-I• Clllllduttld "" '" $1¢tf!'lblf" n. •l!d Octobtf A. 11. 11. r (If Loi 1, BIOC11 13 DI thl f1:1-1ubdl¥ltlon lnCHVlclllll, • lfH ~7' ml · t of sectron 1 of a.1bDI 11111'1d, 11 C:lllrlft c . llWl'n •---~-~··------DIS ers. Pl!' '""P r1tardtd In 90llk ,, 11 Ttllt 1t1ttm1nt -""" with 11111· * P191 JO Of Ml11e1111-1 Miii'• In CGllnl'1 (llfil, of Or'•llCll C°""1'/ en PlJBUC NOTICE ttll Dff1CI of Ille Counly Rlt°"*-r ~"" )A, IJ7A, The Pottsv111a Club, a n or 111d c-tv. 1c-r,.,i., 11-11 PltJll • tllll h. t rl d' . ..... f the "' """"' '" tl'rvnt, lllttlot hll..id) 1'11111~ Ol'trift c ... 1 Dill'f 1'1fllt;-SUPt•tOlf COUll'f Of' TH• IS 0 c . mmg .. .,.,. or Tlm!S ril wit: ( .... Jn W#lllt _.,. llpllmbft u. tnd OCtoW ... n. II, 'ITATI OP CAl.ltl'OftlflA POI: wealthy lo Peonsy1vanla burn-01 tht Ut\lltd ...Sttl--(111. tOftflnMl1on ,,,.. -"";J' --TM• CO\lllTT OP OilAllff ()j I I I -'ed of Mlt 1111' Mt! clllt Ind "" b111nct1 A,fftll, ed. f C I S SU.,t"' .. ' irstrl.. \/POii ttfn'll Mlitf1tlwy Ill !hi lx«vf'w NOT1CI OP NIAltlll• OP rlT'ITtoll It figured " the Clbbsville 11111 ·~ w ...,. cowt. llfl '*'°"' PUBLIC N-CE POil P•HAn: °'" W1U. •D P:01t of 1111 _, blo II ti lit °"'°"loll VII llTTlflS TISTAMlllTARY Club In eeveral novel! by the::~~°"~ =ti::. ~":w.-:d l"ICTmOU1 IUSINISI o!'.':!'!t .• CHI.Ill.IS ":O'l'D NAt..6. latt'I John O'Hara. ID ~,.. condl!lont. • nostrlctlorll, MAMI SfATIMllfT HOTICI! IS HIREt'f GIVEN ~ rlt llllo 1'1111111-of.w.., lllld ~ II Tiit lollflwf11111 Pfl'1IOftt -dolfll IOA JACQUILIHE JAC09Slif'I Mt.JOed .,,...,, . of l"tCOl'f, lm. ~ pdJey .. _ .. , . ~ ---.-pttlmll "" ~,. .,..-win ltld ""'""'lt If lknl'fll fllll to M D!NNIS lo OfNNIS P!RSONNEl 111111 for !Ulllf\CI 11 L.itfta.. l hftmtnllf)' Ea S Degree' It IPll 1.,.. of tM 1ttttt1 ~fll AGINCY OP HUNTINGTON SEACH, to 1t11 """'°"" nt.,IWICI to wtikr. of C-VMIC't 1!'111 dklA'ftlrllltf lt·-flt 141111 htc.fl 11¥11,. Nt. 111, Hlll'll~ 11 1f»c11 "°' fWlfler ,.rtlal(.,._ lflf t••" to 11t tt w...,.,,.. of~. h1eh, Ct. nw 1t11t ""' ti"" 11111 Jlffc• " ltHrlno l ,,_ 1r1 !rr.itH 1or 11111 ~ uw 1:m.r,r1... llllC°""''""' 1• 11tt .,,.,. 1111 ltMfL Mt 1w NowmMr Richard Norman Martin, a 11111 ""'" tit 1n Wf1t1110 dlrtdM "' • c.111. c-., "'"' •· 1tJ•1, a. s. ,,,.., " t :» •.m .• •n "" eowtr"'" ~-M.,. ont•-io~ ma ,,,. •~ec""' •• ,"° Rt""'109 Drt""' TMkwclod, ,..,,. A,,., c.111, « °'"'"'*'' "'· , ., 111~ ,...,..,, ,,,_,.,.. , .. Y)N &1. • lll Angt'9., QIUIOIN1 I002f, lltl1 """'"''' i. elllld~ ll'y I ar-If 71111 (IYI( Cerrttr ~'°' Wllf In Jor' fl amons 28 AURUm Tltt ~'"',,.... -tl'll ~hi partllllfl,:,.,, ..... the (fl'f of hlllt Anl, ("!Mm!.. ' ad t of r•"(ornl e... ti rtfkl -11111 alt Md• prJor fO ••W lllltrJWl1111 ...., Ottlll Ot/«lf!' lt. 1f')'• gr U• el ....u a -te lllt llftlr'\' ol lfle ... t1nllrml111 M1t. Liii WM-WILLIAM •• II JOttlf,' College c-........ DttM: Ocr,.... 1.s. 111•. Prttt.lflnt (;eivfl,., Citrji: I ...,,....,,.,.. t °""" D. Ltmor91, 11*11tor Tlll1 at1llllllftf Wit lllM wlflil fht JOllPM a. MIRlt ... MAll, 111 A total ol J95 bachelors and ltJO'lll_,h., i>r... c.,.-, ci.rie 111 ·°'"'"" CIM'ft'1 °",., .......... ., ..... • fJ6 masters degrees wef.e 000 lM Al'!ftltt. (I, _,, lftllfl'llltr 24. lt~A. l"""f"lt• C1Hfll'!111 tlh4 I·-• by P-'dent Mar"orl • TATLOlt k!JllJll• • 1uMMl1t1 .. _0 • "!.~ '''* 1n4J ru_., .. W•l.'U ,._ ;J • A~n IW ••te•tw ..--slttd °":lltt Cllll 0.11)' l'lklt. Altt""1 "'' ""'"""' W f'llMltlltd Ol'1"" C~l't .l'llOI. ~1111111\ber 22,J:fld OUOlllJ. 4 11. ILj..._-P!Alllllltf °'"'"" ~C... 0911Y PIM' .-gncr. -Ottobitr-n • .,., 21. 1rr•--,.,.,..., , ,.,.--' .,.,. OctOll« 1), 11, u.-lter .. ,.,, I , . ' I ... r r s • s T fo a E s a sa c Se c ra M its aw la He a m J Jo for tri the wa SC ha c ri SI v "( ar 00 sa 1; or ru m • sa • ti a u • a as m v lls • m m wi n •f " , 1J' eekmad Calendar PUBUC NOTICE STAT.MINT QI" A•.t.NOONM•NT Gold Cup Action 0" USI 01' S PICTITIOUS IUSINESS NAMI t , .. lollowl111 __.. ...... ·~ e Int -OI !hf lk:lltlws Dull ..... .....,., E)llOEJIT PAO COMPANY, UtlS s~..,,.... ,,..._, $Ult9 F, lrvllW, , c1111orN1 n101 ,..,. P:ltlirloul 9!il*if'lft5 N-,.,t1rnd ,. ..... Wa$ fll«f ... Ori• Oi.lnly Ol'I July JO, 1'1"4. One or Newport Harbor ,..---....,----.,. KE8lX ENTERIOll1SEI, 11' ~I CLUB -Fall Regatu:i, one-of'. Sllrpetti 11vc1~ sui11 F, 1rvl!lf, Yacht Club'a three Gold Cup regattas will monopolize the regatta action this weekend with 16 classes or sailboat.s scheduled to compete on inside and outside <:ou rses. The Saturday and Sunday regatta is koo.wn as NHYC's Fall Gold Cup. Others arc held in the spring and sum- me r. Inside classes scheduled for starts are Lido-14 A ~nd B, l...a.11JPr, Sabot A, B and C. 'lbree races will be s u i I e d Saturday, the first starting at 11:30 a. m. Two racts are scheduled Sunday starting at 12:30 p.m. OUTSIDE classes scheduled for starts off the Balboa Pier are PHRF, Rhodes-33, ~tchells-22, So I in g, Star, ~hields, Luders·16, 470, FiM and 5-0-5. Two races will be sailed Saturday starting ·a t noon and one on Sunda ;- starting: at nooo. 0 -ther e vents on the Southern Califor:nia Yachti ng Associalion calendar: Los Angeles-Long Beach LOS ANGELES YA C II T CLUB -Second race Harbo1· Series Sunday. CABRILLO BEACH YACHT CLUB -Fall Pt. Fe rm in race, ~11 classes, Sl.Jnday. BOATING SEAL BEACH YACHT CLUB ...:.. Sunday Sailors Series No. 1, all classe§, Sunday: Ghostly Galleon raet>, Sabot, Tuesday. LONG BEACH YA CH T CLUB -Indian Summer Regatta. Laser and Sabot, Saturday and Sunday. Santa l\fonlca Bay CA Ll F O R N f A YACHT CLUB -Five O'clock Bell Race. Harris Series No. 4. l'Amday. WEST COAST Y A C H T CLUB-Tran s ba v Sini;:le· handed race. all keeJboats, Saturday. PALOS VERDES YACHT k,_, k lboa'-nd l C1tllornl1 97101 ' .. UIU et ~ a ~n tr-T1111 t>U$1-Wll$ cond...c:ttd by • boards. torP011tlon. PRINDLE CAT ASSOCIA· KE8£X: ENTEAPIU$i.S · Elll>lr Q'(()nnCll' \JON -Malibu Reg at ta . Actltog .sec .. ••rv·''"'.,,., ben fit H t .1.._.....: ..:,.. Thll tl1!1mtnl 111•1 Ill«! wllfl lhlo e 1 ear ~aWYn, Coun1r cie.11 01 or1nge COl,llllY on Sa1urday Sunday Stpt•mto.r 24. 1t1•. , ! • FJ6011 KJNG HARBOR YACHT P11bl1thed Ot•noe co.u 0111, Piiot, CU1B -&Upe Invitational, ~embw 21, •nd Oc1-., i~,~f~ Saturday, Sunday. MALIBU YACHT CLUB -PUBUC NOTICE FaU series, multlhuU, Sunday. STATEMENT 01' ASANOONMENT San Diq:o OF USE OF s l' v ERG ATE YACJll' lllCTITIO"! SUSINUS NAME ... Tl!e ~::;-~ ~ eb9~ CLUB "'-'-"~-Series Ben-11111 11i.e of 1t1o1 lldlUOllS ~ ,....,., -V\..-wuo:.J ' SOL.All CHEMICAL COMPANY, 11tl! nett Trophy, Sabot, Saturday; Sl<Y$Nr11 Blvd,, Sult& F, lrvtne. RoriS'Ofl Series, SOl{F, Sun· ~~lf~1i:!'7 Br.nllM!SI Name ref..-re<i day. to ~ .,,,,, flled In Ota-cou!lly on SAN DIEGO YACHT CLUB ~~~x19rNTERP1usEs •• cau1orni1 -FaJI Series Star Saturday· COfPOl'•llon. nm Skyp.ork B•Yd.. $11111 . ' ' ' F, lrvli... Cil!lornle "'1701 Ballas Series, MORF, Stmay. Thia 11'"'"""' w11 Wldl.ld&d 11r • S<>eTiiWESTERN Y • .\C•JT ~POt•~io;8Ex ENTERPRISES CLUB .-Three-quarter too Ein-O'Connor I t' Satu~. Sun.a~ . Aeling Secrll1ry0Treasvrer rega a. •-..uY, uay, Tllli atatemenl Wll llled wl!h '"" Arden Series, PllR.F, Sunday. County C~k ol Or•~ Cou111y on CORONAOO YACHT CLUB ~reml!H' 2'' 1"' F•i:it -Fall Series Laser Satur· Published Or1119e COAst O•llv Plloi. ' ' Sepremr>er 27, alld Cktotier •, 11. II day. 191• · UOS·1• OCEANSIDE YACHT CLUB -Indian Summer Regatta,1 ____ P_U_B_,l:_IC_N_O_TI_C_E_' __ Sabot, PITRF, Saturday. . 1~10S7 SUPERIOR COURT OF THE MISSION BAY y Ac HT STATJ OF CALIFORNIA FOR CLUB -LidG-14 Fall Invita-THE couNTv oF ORANGE Noa. A·ll.,! tional, Saturday, Sunday. NOTICE OF HEARING OF PlfTITION FOR PROBATE OF WILL ANO coot North CI L AND l'OR l.EnERS TEST.v.IEN· SANTA BARBARA YACHT i:,!,~ of JOHN 8. EOOY, ••s• known CLUB ~·angle a all ''JOHN BURICE EDDY. DKlaH<I. . -11 I r ces, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN '"'"' classes, Saturday, Sunday. e11i111em w. Eddy 111s uleil IM•e•n • t1111llD11 for P.--11 of w;u and COClkH and IM LU"'•• Tn1ement1ry So11thland Drawbridge to the pellllone<' reltterice lo wllicn 11 ~ for h.lrlher ~r1ic\ll1rs. and !Nol lht llme and place of heari"'ll lhe same nas l>een set for CklObC!r l't, 1'7•, 11 t :lO 1.m .• Jn 1111! rourtroom Df o.i>ar1~1 No. J of Yid cour!, 11 700 (lv!c C~ltt Drive Well, In the cnv ot S11n11 Ana, C1lih1rnl1. Closin!!S r\nnounced ..... 0.lfll ~ ,, 19U. WILLIAM E, 51 JOHN, COUflty Cler1l ' ROSERT F. tyLEll Pair Giveit Aivards For Service )67f Wiishire Blvd., Slllle IMO .Skip~rs or sailboats with ty by reducing the number 1..1ro. A"9tl•s. C••;tw~;• to0u tall masts are warned that O f openingr-and-ctoslngrOf ,,{f...,., 1or: P~111-r . The So uth ern California 1¥1arine Association presented its outstanding s e r v 1 c e awards · to Ted Thal and the family of the late Clarence Herman at the annual SCMA boat show kickoff dinner held aboa rd the ~ Mary. h H F rd B 'd Pub1!1hed Orar>Ot (Qejl Oaoly PHO! the Henry Ford a n d Corti· t e enry . 0 n ge. 0<:1obl'r 11, 12. 11, 197.1 39C3·7• "The bridge has served 1 ___________ _ m o d o r e Sc u Y I e r H e i m beyond its ·intended useful life PUBLIC NOTICE drawbridges across Cerritos and will utimately be replac-FICTITious ausiNEs.s Channel in Los Angeles and ed," the Coo.st Guard said,· NAM E STATEMENT Long Beach harbors will be In addition to the Co a S t .,.~ttt tot1owln~ ~rson Is OclllO bu,1~s1 closed to water traffic ·during Guard regulations, the Port JUST HAIR 1For~r1r sanv's Per11, · · d ''I f • •• A I · t d to ~Ion), 30l56 Coast Hlgflway, South certalII tunes Of the ay lUlU 0 ~ nge es tn efl S • ~ Lll!luna. C.lllornie, 9:'6n further notice vide weekend and h o I 1 d a y Edwlf'd HKkttt. mM ttfvl«• cr1 .• The presentations w e r e made by' industrY 1 e a d e r s J ames Dugan an d Vin Jorgensen. • The awards are not an annual presentation. instead, they are presented for especially significant con· tributions to the industry when the occasions warrant. · " "ods" to bet! San Juen C.11>11tr1no. Callt, The Coast Guard said the open per1 er ac-r~1s bu$!""'' Is co0011e1itc1 bV an bridges will not be opened commodate boat traffic and 1n111vl<!~~ward Hackett for boat traffic during peak £urtber reduce bridge OpenillgS Thh starement -s I/led with ltl6 tomob'I t affi .... 6·JO and closings of the Henry Counrv Cllrt of Or119: County on au I e r JC uuurs, . ~ rd B "d b I . the Sepltmber :u, 197•. a.m. to 8 a.m. and from 3:30 ° . nthge Y e~yingfrom Pllbllshld Orenge eo.11 0,;1y Ftr: p.m. to 6 p.m. Monda y draw IJl. e up i;:iosibon . s.i>ttmbl'r 21, 11nc1 0c1obe!' ... 11. 11'. through Friday except f 0 r 6 p.m. each Friday to 6.30 ,,1~ 362•·1• federal holidays. a.m. each lttond~y -except . . that the draws will be lowered PUBL.JC NOTICE ~t an. other tJ_mes e1lher [Or the n:u: .. age or trains. ·-----------~ bridge will open 'with the least ,....... STATEMENT OF AllANOONMENT OF USE OF Thal , of Newport Be a ch • ""as one of the founders of SCMA arxl per s onally bankrolled the organization in Us format ive years. He was a pioneer in fiberglass boat construction. possible de1ay on receiving the FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME ~.,.,.;bed s1'gnal The n. w The lollawlng l!Oll"$OllS ""' ... •Nnd<>nN .. ~.. . 01 . the UH DI IM fklltiout buslflft$ nanw: reTguhelatCoasM:m isteGffectuanlive ~~d· 2thel. ymp1c JX PRODUCTS, 17tl5 Slr.yp.trlr. BIYd .• ~ Suite IF, lrYIM, Calllornl• 92707 Tiie Fldlllous B\15ineu N,,,,... nlerred new regulations are n ecessary to abo .... was riled 1,, o..-coontv on t mmoda ehic I 470 P Oclab&r !, 1911. 0 aceo te V U 8f s ace KE8EX ENTERPRISES, 1 7 9 3 S traffic during an exte nd ed Slr.yp1rk BIY<I., Suite F, irvlnt. I be H · Catlfornill 92707 ane reduction on t e1m D, hi This blrslneu w11 cond...:led 11r • Hennann was a former boat shoe chairman and served on the board of directors o f SCMA for man y years prior to his· recent death. Bridge for resurfacing, pain· mg es corpora~~8ex ENTERPRISES ting and other bridge repair Eu""" o·eo..llQO' Work. Acting S«~t1rv-T~asurwr ~-cl·-• pen·ods will also Olympic 470s dominated This "'",,.,."' wa$ 111ac1 whh the llft: UM:\.! Countr Clerk of Or1n9c Count~ on provide increased public safe-King Harbor Yacht Cluh·s Ce· seprcmtier 2.4, 197•. Ft°'3s ,. Welcome Aboard By ALMON LOCKABEY ' . ............... 4-am.1 If you are one of the sailboat skippers who thinks be has right or way over all power vessels, you'd better re- check the International and lnland Rules of the Road. Time was "'hen sailboats \\'ere presumed to have the right or way over power driven vessels under all circum~ stances except when the sailboat was the overtaking vessel. 'There have been some changes made. The International Rules of the Road Rule 20 states. "(a) when a power driven vesse l and a sailing vessel are proceeding in such directions as to involve risk of coJljsion, the power-driven vessel shall keep clear of the sailing vessel -except for power vessels engaged in Jishing or when the sailboat is overtaking." BUT SECI'ION (b) of the same rule snatches some ot that tight of Way frnm the sailboaL' Such~ AS: "This rule shall not give the sailing vessel the right to hamper, in a narrow chaMel, lhe safe passage of the power vesW which can navigate only Inside such channel." The Inland Rules of lhe Road Article 20, implies the same in£ormation. At first glance, this supports the sailboater's ronten· • lion that he has the right of wny, but section (b) takes it away when he is in a harbor or channel area, THE SAILBOAT docs not have the right lo cross under the bow ot a power vessel cl~ enough to create a hazard. It docs not have the rig~~] to -tack in front Of a power boat comlng in the opposite direction so close as to cause n hazard. The sailboat may not maneuver in any manner to place himself In the way .of a power ve.ssel maintainin& a reasonabl e course and speed -if that maneuver places either Vl!:ssel in jeopardy of col· Jision. Most Infractions ol Ruic 20 toke place inside harbor areas, bot It Is well to remember that commercial vessel3· have restricted channels well outside the harbor l.imjt:s. A new provision ln the Rules or the Road makes Jt mandatory that all pleasure vts9tla -power or sail - stay clear of commercial or miJitary vtSSCla which cannot maneuver or stop q1~ and arc severly hampered in movemen lJf fiifWifers. ~ F'EOERAL Boaling Safety Act of 1971 came up with another law th at la not l!nlln!ly familiar ta pleasure boaters. It it.a tes that "no ~rson may UJC a vessel 1n a negligent manner 90 as to endanger life. limb or property of any person." This simply means that no one may cause e hazard lo him.self or another pe:f'DI by negUgtnt operai.!J>n of. a ~nl And another thing : The law has &lwart ma19ta1ned that a sailboat with lb nuxillnry en~ning -even when .. n, re ()tl ~.dtAWi~K -~U~ ft 1!9lW!t a Md" no specfaf prfvllege tDlder Rules ,of lhl Road. I cit R King Trophy race for Pllbli1hfd 0ru19e '°"'' o.11v Pl101, 'li s.i>iemtier 11. 1nd Octotoer '· 11. 11, dinghies under 20 feet sa1 ng: 191, 3il06-I• the Portsmouth Handica1> sys· PUBLIC NOTICE tern. The race was sailed over 1041' a 13-mile course off RW.ondo FICTITIOUS BUSINESS NAME STATEMENT Beach. The toUC'!ring P!f'SOM are "°i"9 !Ml· OveraU winner was Br ad "'1"1'111':~ WAY. 1112S 11roo1ttwot, Foun-"··bl and '1 'k •·~·y t--11in V•lley 9271)1 IH.<li e "J e .WUA U\;JIJ Donald R . Clarlc.. ISM Trinity !ti.-cr Del Rey Yacht Club. c1rc11, Fow\Tlln v1r1ev n101 v'-• u.~. y ht C I 0 b Dorothy A. Clark, 15811 Trinity Rh•et •Ullfi Ulll UUI ac Clrci., Fou!llll1'1 V•l1ey 927al also spoo.sored the Ligbt:zting O•ne J. Clark. HU Trinity ~lwr . . . Cir~. Fountain V11!ey 9270I Qass tnVltational race OD ~ Thls DUsine51 ls conducted bl' ii ;ener•I day, won by \Vendall Harter parlne.'6:ottiv A. Clilrk ol KHVC. Th!i stattml'l>I w1s Hied ••lfl the CECIL R. KING TROPHY Countr Clerk ol Ora~ Couolr on se,llemblr U, lt1• (Overall) -I. Brad Marble Fl1uo M.k •· ky DRYC· 2 P11hllsl'led 0!'•"51t' Co.st D~Hy "'"ot, and I e u'lT • • · Octo11er •· 11, 1a, 2$, 191• J11,G·7' Tom Lin s ky and Kurt Langrord 1470! WVC; 3. Alan PUBLIC NOTICE Field (470). WVC; 4. Mark NOTICE TO CREDITORS V.I (La I "'IYC 5 SUPl!RIOll COURT OF THE \ I son ser IV ; . STATE OF. CALIFORNIA FDR n.1anny Smith (470 ) ADYC. THE COUNT Y OF ORANGE 470 -I. Marble and Zarky: Ellare 01 vN~i:1~5t NtK')L!>l(Y, 2. Llnsky and Langrord; 3. o.c11Mct. - U NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to 111-0 AJan Field; 4. r.1anny Smi l credllor1 of the 1DO¥e ..ame.r «cecttn1 LIGHTNING - L Bath R. rn.1 au perlonS r..v1no c111ms 191ln11 1 • !he Mid Cl&Cedenl ill'1! ~~ lo 1111 F. Brewer, MBYC; 2. Paddlm ni.m. '"1th the fllCesurv YOUdler~ in Madelyn Wendall Ii a r t e r !he oflke of the derlr. DI 11111 aDOve 1 I .... tttled CO.WI. Cf' to PASftlt llwm, wll~ KHYC; 3. Nameless Terror, 111e l'IK'HSI..,, Y011Chl•t. 1o 111e u ... Myron Lvnn MBYC. dersloned 11 tfll ofl_lc:e of he!" attorrteY, .l""., TltornlS W. Hffldef'son, Jr., !l'8 El$! LllX).14 -J. Too Grand, 111h s""'· «:o111 Mew, c111forftl1 n611 B·u B~ CYC · 2 Wild wNch .'• 111e pl.iQ oi 111111nns o1 !"" I • · 1>ndent9!'Hld In Ill m111!1n P«t1lfl1119 Wild Pau Hubay KHVC ; l. 10 IN ait1te ot said dec.edent. w11tiln ~.: p Gary Frost• KHYC tour mont~' •""' Ille tlr$1 Pllbflcatt1>11 ,,,...a y, , • ot This nolice. Dl!ltd Cktobl!r ~. 1t7• LORENE G. NIKOLSfCY Adm!nlltratrl" DI tM E~1111,. DI IM abovt! 1U1ml!d clece<le111 H k EJ I d THOMAS W. HENDERSON, JR. llS -cy e{! e lW 1!1st lllh Street, Sulit 111 Ceil~ ,,.,.,., C1Uforll11 '2''1 P 014) s•-171-6 Cal!llll>'l'<'ll.I v All ... nty for Admlnl11r1lrl• ._ ..:1 Publf5het1 Oranve Co~11 Dail¥ l'.!n, : • ----. ' Cktober •. 11, 1e. 15. 191t J /O'/.)t -·· 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 D Friday, Octobtr 18, 1974 The Blcgest Marketplace,on the Orance Coast DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS • You Can Sell It, Find It, (642-5678) One Call ~rvice Fast Credit Approval T ri'lde It With a Want Ad Real Elto•e .•••••.• 1()()()..2999 Announcement1, Ptr1onol1, Merchandise .....•. 800()..8099 R.ntol' ~-••99 lost & Found ...••• 5050-5499 Boots & Manne "·""" • ..vuu-... Services & Repairs ~ Equipment ........ 'I00().9099 ' Busine.•s. Investment & Employment & Automobiles & other · 1 Flnonetol ., ....... ~5000-5049 Preporotion ...... 7000.7199 Transportation .... 9100·9999 [~lrllE~] I -.. ·~· .. I~ Cl•11Jfic•tion I 000.J 098 ERRORS: Advertise rt I should check their ad1 daily & report errors Imm• d i a t e I y. The DAILY PILOT assumes llaiblllty for the first Inc o rr I ct ln5ertlon only. - General R.E. • 1002 General R.E. 1002 WESLEY N.· . TAYLOR CO. REAL TORS sinee -t946 .__-_ .. _-___,]~!=== BRAND NEW IN THE "BLUFFS" 2 Heaul. 1-sto rv "t.indas" -Si4,950 & Si8.500. :\love right in ~ Ne\\ cust. drapc3 & cptng, lush prof. land:,eaping. 3 HR & 2 ba. Cldissification 1100 I .._.for Wt II fl! J ~'------Real Eitilt~ General 2111 San Joaquin Hills Road NEWPORT CENTER, N,B. 644-4910 .._ _____ __, General RE 1002 Clossification 1200-2999 1.::=;:;.:::...:.;:·::;_· ----.,. ________ .,...,._, ... _.,.,....,,,..,.) ~--,,-""--="'"',-,=-:!I~ Classification 31 00.3699 Ap.artmentstorRent , [T'] i Clas5ification 3700-3999 I ....... I~ I Am A Duplex!! 1.:1e •• ~ra l R.E . 1002 General R.E . 1002 I'n1 1vt"ll ll}(·a1c1[ in old ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Coron~ 1:1•J !'llnr. 'vllh 11. I Fourplex ~hannu1~ 2 br._X d~n ho1nc 3-2 lkill'ooni. 1 t.nth \·:: in front '.Bid n SUPJ..R 1 Hr·· 1 l1C<h1Xln1 2 hn!h. 1\i1• ")!l· n:-:11• uni!. NC'\1•. carpet in dilloni'<I,' n1•ar ( r 1• t' 11 il) . den an~ lre1;h paint and nc11• Prit•NI ri..~hl ror SG7,j()(). carpel 111 rl'aJ' unn . . . __ ANO PRJ.~I::D HICllT Corona del Mar Duplex at $.119.~iOO t 11111. Call us for I Ch · n.. ,, I I a shoiving. &l•l-72!1 . arn11ni;t uupc ... ..._ iouSt'. 2 l.M'droon1~ ~ dl'n. Aud 111~11•, largr bl1t'ht!lor un!L Good rf'nt.al ine<unr. S11l11n1t 1 S ' • terms. $77 ,500. t Classification 4000·4650 • • • 644-1210 I ~ -.~ DOVER"SHORES- Classificafion 5000 NEW LIST ING EXCEPTIONAL HQ;\IE A~~ S -ti"~~ REAlTORS Al l_··-~·___Jl 1-1• I~ \\'ilh family r o o n1 an1\ ;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:; L L __ •_~ __ -__ '_' _-1'14 forma l dining roorn. i\la.~1t•r ;;; GRANDMA'S ROOM ~h<"ll 1'11« hl11'!11t: hl'r 01i1,n ..,llll«lllill'~ (·\)ltljll<'!t' \\ I I h p1•1vn11· b11th. ht·r o.., n l1t•1·pli11·l' &tKl s •' IXl I'll l.t "l1<tl11g .Joor "ut i" her pa.1i.. l<i't"'-\"v\U' l.1111 1ly l'+'lll love lh1.' I lwdtOOrll , :!000 SIJ, It ho1111' on n ll\\ re ping Cftr'.1 rll't IOI 11 ilh l-011~ o ( l"Q()l'l\ for r«.·1-e.1tion.il v eh i c I a ~-forage! IT 'f\ Ii\!· !\IACULATL aOO onl,,i( S·l::.950. co:rs .: . WALLACE REALTORl . suile \\'/Study & bath _.. --"5"46U4141-·' (Open Evenings) I Clos1iftc afion _5100_:5299 3 other llt'flroon1s & haths. WESTCllff A rarr find in Du\'l'r Shore~ Immediate Escrow COZY COTTAGE ~ fbr SI !9.JOO. \\'ET p A I NT ! See this , \\'urn1 ;ind 11'0ndcrful beru:ti Lost and found l PETE BARR.UT. r111irti" t bedrm---4t0me-, ' l10111e \\ilh JPJft.lt lrO"lJ"lr~f---- 1 I -REALTY-scp. furn rn1. 2 fplcs, ei.:trd 1• Private b ca ch. Ei.:l.'lw;ivl' Classification 5300 -r lal'gC" country kitchen. sep j communit)·. Only 2 block I 642·5200 · 675~4060 utilily room. POOL 40' long. fmn1 the 11•Rtcr. Dcliihlfil:) I I ~ J<'innncinl( availublc ~ 0 7~ red brick. courlyurd. 01.lt [ Person.ii~ ~ ~'82f,nOm°.;~NJ .. i~~LY 1·5. $64.950. ' I JlllQuail ~ lii•Place ... Clas1ifi~tion 5350.5499 P Neat and roomy ·I · BH. in I I~ ~1ESA DEL MAR. Lrg . Senices and Repairs tncd. yard & patio. Nr. all sch.ls., shopping and tennis I Classification 6000.6099 cts. VACANT & ANXIOUS. Only $42,950. 10-;;, 0o~1n. ~ Pacific Real Estate Instruction I J.-642--0200 L L..--.,---~S 0~P-A-C~l~0,;:::U~S='~F~o-u-r~h-.,g-e Cla1sification 7005 bedrooms. Gia n I goo1111et kilchen. Vacant. Superb 0 l ~~ J[f f J, ~~~7' _ _..,~u"'~rn~";,.,~o~'.~"-,_"_J_"'="·~c.~11 T NEWPORT RIVIERA Classification 7000.7199 4 BR. 2,~ Ba. family rni. I I[~! Xlnt lo<."8\ion !or only Merchandi1e · S:~.7;xJ. Take advanlage of L------~· this price nov.•. 01v11er v.·ill Classific ation 8000·8099 help finance . MILLER REALTY I M~ ....... "'!__ 11· *I =~-":.:,_.::...=,"""-~­. -~-"""" _ 1'. · S22:i P<>r mo. payments may be assun1cd on this sharp Classi fi cation 9000.9099 pool hon1e. Full prit:e just C s.37.500. Best buy • bet1er I l[i] hurry. 847-6010 Ag:t. TraMp«tation Iii S.TI.000! Tu·o slory + SPIJrkl· 1 • · lng pool. NOi a condo. Love· L I ~ c1.,,ification 91 oo 1 .§]9Q499 Jy residenuar area. i1urry _ -11'0n't last! Cull 817--ffllO -'""""'·-------Autos frwSale •4 BP '.! Ba. S3l.000. O\\"C A 2nd, Santa Ana. nr. C~I. Classification 950o.9q99 833-!!974. s s I F I E D 6 1 4 2 • 5 '6 7 8 JuSt a few words in the right place .•• Trivia? Daily Pilot Classified Ads Dial the direct line 642-5678 It's o reason to read the Daily Pilot's entertainment page every Saturday Gen11ra l R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 tll Coldwell Banker . ,. • •• -.~ . ' •. ,. •' "'/l'.\t,, COUNTRY FRENCH WARMTH Big Canyon 4 bedroom home with family room and sunken conversation area. Large terraced lot, with plans for pool. Decorated in sunny earth tones. $175,900. GREAT OCEAN VIEW! Relax on your terrace and enjoy the vie\v. Custon1 decorated 4 Bedroo1n + fan1il y roon1 \vith high beam ceilings. 41-'.i years nC\11• 1\sklng Sl20.000. 7000 SQUARE FEET OF GRANDEUR on lhC! \1atcrfl·ont. l)icr & sli p for lnrgc racht. fi Jjedroo1ns. 51 : bf!ths. forn1al ct in· 111g roon1, g11u rn1et kitchen. fan1il y roon1 \\'ilh '"cl bar \~ soda bur. gan1e roon1 \vith \\'tll bar. sauna . jacuzzi. 4 security s.vstc111s. Old \Vorld crafts1nanshlJ) in 1narble & \1•ood work. Elega nt & partially furnished al • $575.000. LOT ON "BIG CANYON" GOLF COURSE Super location. End· of cul·d~·Sac touChing on golf course. Exciting plans for !JOO() sq. It. hon1e included in pr1rc of $7$,000. BIG CANYON -MONACO Very large living room \\'ilh bean1ed cell- 111g nnct l•'rench doors. ,,·alk·in bar. Exqu1· slle decor. Henuliful patios and landscaping. 3 I:Jedroo1ns . 21'!.t bath:> 137.500. 1:ce. LINDA ISLE -ONE STORY I liedroon1 . cu~o1n built hon'e on the In· ~0011. l'"an111,· roo111. bcan,cd ceiling~. Pier & sli p for hlrge boat. '82.15 .000. DIAL 644-1766 2161 San Joaquin Hill & Rd., N.B. A ~OLDWCU BANKER CO. • • OPEN HOUSE Sat & Sun 1-j 3277 Minnesota, C:\t. l\1esa Verrlc \iA, Appraisal ordl"rerl. 0 1v n e r <Anxious. Low interest & low or no do1\·n. A super s p a c i n u s sharp 3 Br 2 Bath family entertaining hon1e. I l~l:r:!~ Praperti•• · , 752-1920 " 1400 OUAtl 5t. NIWPOlT SlACH WATERFRONT WITH PIER & SLIP $97,500. 3 13R, rlen, 11 ~ BA. Jrg llv nn "'lfpl. 4 car off st prkg. ASSLm'IABLE 914 r;. loon. JACOBS REAL TV 675-6670 Prap•rtl•ii · · 752~1920 . 1400 OU.I.IL !>T. N(Wl'OlT llAQt Bachelor Pad Corona del Mar With Pool ·· Call us about this riesirabW! Corona llighlands 2 br pool hon1e 11.'lth I a r I c master suite pri\"ale beacb llt"CCSs und very s~ f i n ancing amuigcmmts: "9.SOO Call S#-7?11 ..... ~· ONLY $34,9SO . Grt>al starter hon1e in Ollt8 ~lesn. 4 big bedroon1s I nice arcn. Owner will ~II \"A. \\'on'! la11t. Call 64&17)J. SECLUDED ao;un1 entry. Patio kitchen. r anlily room. Walker & Lee ' Big lx.'Clrootns. Boat door. ~••l 111•11 Lushly lnnclsc:aped ya rd s. l ~~======:::::'.~I \\/alk to 1111 schools and ma-$27,900'. Assun1c 71..,•: loan. jor shopping. $-13.500. Vl'l.s $1.13 mo. Clean. s b a r:•J ,1·elcomc. Cali no1v 847..0010 ready. Call NO\V to ~. ~gL 847-EiOlO .Agl. • \\'anl a low-priced car? Sell !dJe l1en1s with a DaUY Read today's Clusilled Ads. Pilot ClassiCicd ad. ~ General R.E. 1002 General R.E. macnab I irvine realty ------ Fl NE R HOMES Priced From $63,500 to $550,000 .,ELE GANCE" 1])02 Cameo Shores VlE\V! 5000+ sq. ft., 4/5 bedroo1n suites, 5'1.? baths. O\\'ller ,~·i.11 con- sider exchange. $535.000. For appt. or colotL- brochure -Bob Owens 642-8235. (Ull) COUNTRY CLUB LIVING! For1ner 1n-0del 3 bedroom \\'/fo1n1al dining rm. & family roon1. :\ccess to all free,vays. $63.500. Vee Stinson 642·8235. (U!2) SPYGLASS Ol·can·NC\\1J>0rt Cen ter \'!!~\\'! 4 Bedroom. 11ct11ll·occupicd hon1r. l\lodcl-likc decorating! $lfi-l ,OOO Ice . Joyce Edlund G42·8Zt=i. 1 U13) "PEEK!" Pre,.tl r:co11s 13arshorc~: f"lri vatc t'rin11nuni~ lv-11 '.hcach! J"lrcrio11s :~ hrrlroon1 cll)llhouse! St.3 .000 .. lack Custe r fi42·8:?~5. (U l-11 CORONA DEL MAR DUPL EX .Ju st li:-.tcd~ 2 ,,,·n·hc<lroon1 unit s on -15' lot w1Vll".\\I of f"d~.1. 3 IJ\ocks fron1 ocean. 0\vner \rill trade. S-105.000. Toni Queen 64<H!200.' (Ul5) WESTCLIFF VERANDA Bca1ns ·-brick -cu,.ton1 C'Ons1n1ction. 4 be<lroon~ home on beautiful secluded tree· lined !ilreet. 'l"ile floors. 114,500. l~rbara 1\unc IH2-82:J5. 1L'l 61 SOUTH OF HIWAY . CORONA DEL MAR i':e\\ Iv rerurb1shed 3 bedroo1n front wil l \1 reii(nl 111 rcrir. 1 !·blo<:k to all ~hopping. llcducrd lo S65.500 & i.eller \\1811\s offers! Tont Turner. &\2·8235. 1 l"li\ N11wpor1 BN<.tl, c.1,lornla 8266J • '' Frid,,., Oeuibet 18, 1974 i~~;;;]~~§~g~;;::=D~~ill~~;;~~TI~~~g~;;~fil~~~~~~~~~j!~~§;~~~~~~~§j~;;;;~~I Gener• R.l 1002 -·• R.E. 1002Genorol R.E, 1002 Gonorol R. • 1002 «;oner•I R.E. 1002 Coron• dol Mor 1m ountoln •lloy 11)34 1 ~ ~·=-~;;;;;;;:;;;;~~;::;.1;~;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;1 .=~~~i - I ·:* * * * * 4 IEDROOM Do1't c;:al Me -i~~CEM°'Z~~· ALL WORK AHO. No 2 .... """~· ..... '· ....... A Dllllle1! ! PU. y •.• i·W r.~ \\ ~ • 11 Jot. Edtakk, to.ta Mesa. rm. a dtU&btiJ llJR aml,,lttl • Br plus bonus room plus No oecd b' oonoetn u this .,: neritage Co ection Ust Roy Mer.;: RHl!w ;.~,;'~~~lbbflu-S. ~.:.~ ~~.;t:,iJ:..J,~i Yow • 1110 Nowport Blvd., CM PLUS Hunllnf!!n llM<h 1040 nb '°""'and blCyde patN. l . EW sa..n29 A chumlne 1f ! rental wtth -A grtat 2 Aol')' home wt.th ,.,NOISTRUCTED OCEAN VI nom• l"""""'""'"""""""""'.,.I pr1,.,. yar.! ""1'ftn.llY pro-FRANCISCAN ' btlmll .. 211 cb<Uto. 2 R9f'I ;TALINA TO LAGUNA -enjoy S.lboo lslond 1006 dudns 225/mo. FOUNTAIN =-• and 1,)Ja eck . • . domlnlum living with secuntfr . Herc ALL MODEL HOM" I SM. and Uo l'>lln d hi A REAL ESTATE ' "\VATERF'RONT" 2 bdnn __ ,_..i.~~ ' Iii> • • 10 enjoy, ~. Compare others an t t wl f fr'l')t ol <;mu~e on a ~ \t lot in One of lh·e rnodel1! Central CALL SSZ.7$11 y ofce. Priced at $90,000 completely 2 bJtb bom(' in top con-the be!.' sou · wy loca-atr, hlr~Jy upgra~ '· rnistR: , eller may carry lsl Tru1t Oetd Price to ''Dtflate" $250 wMkly •. WIN wJtb dlUon, apaclous room• ~i.th Uon i89 500 ft.rm carpet1, drapes, wall cover-• VISION • C.11 S4•1 's1. this one! A lovely S bdrm. Bluffs condo is ~at closet & 1 1 0 rage · Can M+T211 t~1 It special . eUecta! 4 v-I Phone $pace-lll"eplace k lge patio BR., i.ncl. Jli&ll\l!r y.i/stt,ldy ORNER SPLENDOR _ .ou·u.":r-0ve THE wide open feeling o! thi11.Gbsfa.tJ.1esa bo1ne. 3 Huge bedrooms, 2 .1 baU1s, .2. bMck fireplaces, family room and "much .. much more. No 2nd ur n..ded htr• -walk to everyt~. A terrific value, call ~ r-ur full dt!tails, OW. · _ : iw.u-toWNHOUSE IN c.M. ~MS, 2 balhs, beautlfully decor· r ated, new shag carpets, many extras. you acsust: lee-this special ruchmond model. 'ille\!d iii $33,500. CALL 54-0-llSL RE F'iND . EAS'T~IDE CORNER on alley, 2 bedrooms :-and den. 1 ~ bath s, fireplace, double gar. I~ Great, for motor home, boat or trailer :ttor· ge Hurry -. o!!ered' at $37,500. CALL 540-1151 ' • . " • 1~. !• '\' -• MODELED 4 BEDROOM . : $37,000.-Talk about value, imagine 4 bed- 1 rooms .2 baths, beautiful front kitchen, com- : plete with new app liances, l1r:ge t nclosecf I ,Ntio, new carpets and Paint. Located on I safe cul-de-sac. Vacant and owner wants ·,.·action. S.6-5880 ' , OPEN HOUSE, SAT & SUN 12-4 "·2000 Miramar. Balboa Penn. 2 Story CAPE "COD MANSION with 3 story "Wmdmill" :Tower. Perfect for large family or for the 'person who wants the unusual. Includes sep- : arafe 2i bdrm. Cottage for servants, in·laws, I : or rental Income. $195,000. Financing avail· . 'abli. 54-0-1151 -.. ERITAGE .REALTORS .. · 'eneral R.E. 1002Gener•I .E. --. ' .. ' 1002 * Balboa Bay Properties * .... rN.EWPOR·T SHORES NEWPORT DUPLEX V i ·•-239 -Prosp.ct Near everything. 3 BR .. !,'EN SUN. 1-5. Sharp 2 ba. & garage, each -:SR .. & den. Move--in-unit; one unit avail. at t~<!dy. Reduced to $350 mo. Fu 11 price J;lll.500. 675'7060 $89.500. 642·7491. [' EA;;.ll~UFF Large ~~.~~:io2 BR , 'SuPer cle~n 4 BR. home cov'd. patio, $700 On., 1-llf~e ram./din. rm. $500 costs & impounds. Ne\\'ly rec.I ce. 0\vners Payts. $245 mo., P .l.T.l. ~·11 x i <> u s• $70,500. $ 2 5 . 5 O 0 -Full price'. M0-8484. 550-8800 f'[B REALTORS 4 Local Offices To Serve You k.ne!al ft?E. 'Tod2Gener•I R.E. 1002 •, CAMEO HIGHLANDS _ ..1lU..eliigant 4 bdrm. home in prestige JocaA 6 ttion. 21t2 Baths, family rm. & an exception- ~ai fonnar . dining rm. Pro~ssionally land- ,_.~ped . $125,000. " )~.\'\' <11111 }~l·~. \(_~11 REALTY OUR '/A ·25 ~,-fAR: CALL 675-3000 ANYTIME ~~~;:.;~";. •;;r;a;;l;R;';E;;.;;;;;;;;;100;;2 1 Gener1I R.E. I.STUDIO IN HOME 1002 ~rt 1 ,.1 , nr1·!11ll:'l'l~. n1u~i­ t·J311.c;. ,,., !111s 1 o \' r I ) j1';'r1~I ~1d1•. ('0~1 11 r.tr"ft l'll.11~1 .. 11d 111~ v fl I u c. Hns ;t.e /1 1o r 11 1 ,. 11\0lht'r-in·lnw 1-..1·to11•n! iil!t~ 1h<' ~tudio. ; Full P(i,ce 548,750 2il1 Newport II. fi'l-l'O~ Costo 1!1.e:sa ' 646-81111 DUPLEXES OCEANFRONT. Nev.· h$lh1£~ 3 Bil.., 3 b3. +-den upper: 1 BP.., 2 .!;.<i. to .... ·cr. Nrwly pain1cd: xlnt locut!on. $179,!'JOO. CKll; 673-3663 6tl-22:"~1 Eves '!BR., 1 bA. + I Hit. (Lgef, I bn. Nr\\·ly red<'cor. Xlnt cond. S179.500 Call: 673-3663 associated BROKERS -REAL TORS 1111~ W 6olb"c 67l 1611 K.., thk lta11dy llltect•l'f wtth yo• ttil1 '"""' • you ga ,ti-·•nn1tl ... All tflll IH .. l•M llttff Mtow a,.. dw:'"4 In 9r.am d9t•ll ~ •dfttthhl9·efM. Wfl•1! 1,_J ..... _,., 0.l!y Pll•t WANT ADI. ,..,_. &h•w1119 •!Miii ho•MI fM Nie •r te .... t -wtM te lht 'ICh l11f9nHtf•1t f11 rfLib C•I ... MdL ""-'• S... .irlloy 6 S1nd•'• ,,~A_. HOUSES FOR SALE 3 BR & FAM RM or DEN ~3098 Sumatra Place, Costa tttesa ~ $'18,500. !Sat & Sun 11).5) ~n •l\llR & FAM RM or DEN 3313' N\Wada . Cn<ta Mesa 557·7067 !.18,950 (Sat & Sun 1&-5) 1123 l\1.-ln St., Huntington Beach 536-1167 S79,500 !Daily 1·5) i8S'l~'ttkon Dr .. Jluntington Bench 6l2-BG96 $39.500 (Sat ,& Sun l prQPerly priced at $67,950 and the price will + lnri;e 2 bdrm apt with + prtYate sundeck!' Form. 1 R~L:,LTY,, <I deflate" $250 every week until sold {or GTl--4400 view deck + 3 c:ar parking d I n., e er am le garden a red hu1 ~ny further notice ). This hoine has greenbelt Harbor Investment Co. + doc~.JQ! ~ boe.t. Ex.:. kitchen has bar le 5 n. uruv. P.ark· Center, Irvine access, is just steps to the pool and a short tinaocl~.., 01' aet lo see, bit-In china closet. H~ I '"!"!'""!"""':!~'!'!'-""'•I walk to shoppinJ. This "Deflation Special" cNUE.Lo'1-~l:B_sON , YOU 'vru. LOVE; IT! New fU!.. rm.' w/opcn bea 'Aa1u'm• ~~ L~n will be open thlS Sunday1 1-5 at 409 Vista ' .U.U.TOR unusual dupl~. 1 5 BR, ;.Uol~Jo~le~ 1:~ Sp'a.rlis~ -~·el! Jii!'t s yn S erte th Bl U f.n4) ~2898 3 ~bou2 I 1·2 BR. 2 towerln& t:rft&. e xte rior ~ld~ 3 bdnns., 2 batlp, dln-u ' e u s. \ * BAY VIEW* ... ,; •• ~,., /.'!t:"F~· llghU.,..--<lompa.,. .....,,., -"1<, nnl blt·lllL,. "'""'s . .,,.,,_h_ UNIQUE HOMES Realtor1, . 47.S.6000 5 BR., 3 bath$. tam. rm. bri'diet~~hj~~. -only$86,500.Bkr.~ ~~'~t.e :~~ 2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona del Mar Just Listed w/wet bar: Lee. patio; 40 o ·.1n~r/B\dlder. m.mi HONEYMOONERS red tile root: S41'~900: Oill Irvine Terrace u. ~Vacant. $1&4.500· Open to.s PM $235 PER MO. 114 ACRE' 540-1m. • · ;G;""";;'";';R,;E;;.;;;;;;;;;;;1002::;G;;•;;no:;:r•;:l;;R;;.E;;.;;;;;;;;;1002;;;;1owner Will Carry I~~~) GREAT LOCATION .<:.<Yly~"·=·~."°~ ~· [.-------Block" to beach, 1 &: 2 BR ' • ~ .., !"".. 9Aall8 I] An ertra sharp 3 BR Home Nl~E OLDER HOME 3 hr, duplex on «I' lot. Try nUd ~a., d~!'/}fl:Mbi! St~ I ~ on a large llOd.35 lt "°mer 2'11 ba. steps to bay. Acrou 80•1 ldtclitn.. ·hi.lge beck y ar~ ~ J. !J. ~ lot with warm natural \vood from Pav., shade tre es. De.nbon A.uoC 673--73U iCo/BBQ Ii: p1cnJc area -+'~ l.llLS.U.)IJ~ t•ll a ,,_ b and brick texture&, self SSS,000. 6T:r5838 ' ' lfXC tcreened In p • t Io . .. , u s; cleaning oven and much Balboa Penintula 1007 Costa Me•• 1024 Dbl. ran.ge for Dad. Eut 2955 tta.rner''Blvd. Open Sunday 1-5 107 Linda Isle Or. Lovely 5 BR., 3 bath custom home. Large courtyard. Pier;slip. Reduced -ti) $195,000 Custom Sp•nlsh Home 5 BR. 5 ba .. art sludio. Elevator. Pool. 7000 sq. ft . Ramp & float. $450,000. 70 Lind• lsle Drive Prime 45 It. lagoon lot -$150,000 For information on All Hoqies & }.(>ts Call Bill GRUNDY, REALTOR 3~1 f\uy~1d•· Dr•v• NB 675 6161 more 1 of Beach, So. of ?itcFadt¥'n e TURTLEROCK e PENJNSULA·FIXER :Mel• Vtrdt 4 Bclr.m M.C. Only $235 per roo. President Home. 4 BR, or PL.US The o .... ·ner wants a fut sale anQ \\lllL CARRY TIIE 1st Toi. . Only $87,500 P U 6:44-72ll .. COLLEGE PARK Thi!! 2 Br, l Ba dallhouse ......, FHA ti. ............ ~Sha ·· when you auwne 8 'it% 3 &: Den. A~.l prof. dee, needs TLC J._ blk from •i.r...,....., 2t;'tti._.h6, M:?p V.A . Loan balanc~. beaut..ld~.un.~eul­ OC<!an. Xlnt rentaJ area. Fee ~·" lr.!flln~~i= $29,(Q)/Owner la anx~ de-sae. fe.e Land. C:."1> o d : lond R:2. _Take advailt&ge ·room. E~~tl{l ft built-lmi, you subm4tt¥fkr· 962~ll Tenns. $89;950.1 $U--02M now. Pr1ne1pals only. fifeplace Party P 8 tJ g I e 'BY OWNER • MIL[ER REALTY 148.800. Can 54<>-1120 • 'JOG TO IEACH L•guna BNch 1,1141 WAT~~~~ONT [ TAREL.J Top ape!!~t1o!'!~~by th• SPANISH 6 Br. den. frpl, 4 Ba, dock, .. A h 1700 •• n ·--1 di 45' lot. A real beauty. See ~ u.;:ae · ,,... · """ u ng • • • to apprec. ~.000.5,:f _ ~U~~ . 4 bedrooms & aepar&te ,. , • contemporary Ii: lute. SPARLING REAL f ATE ~ , .. _...__ Bh·-' family room. SacrWee 1 at fully designed; ,your eh· 833-3544., • -~-•· 138,SQO., lll"CO, ,b I of ltaliJD tll•. BAYfRO!'JT . ON. BIG LOT ~ 1'1.AG11, =~-"'~'::. Pier I: llOBt, 3 eff: + guest 3 ·BR W1Centra1 alt eOn· .. .,. I== b . nn .. 2~) ~th home bouts This beautiful Colle&C Park home ls just waiting to make you happy. Eveythlng from the shake roof to the 1lardwood Ooon spells pride of ownership. Ask a b o u t ~ ... ~:"!!~"""""'!~!"'!~""~~~"'"""'!'!'!'!.I listing No. urn Ca 11 General ~:E. 1002 General R.E. 1002 !)&.M9l. ~r~·OOO-Tryd owner f 1·na n c .• ditioning. Jn prime loeatlon. 842-7461 2,240 sq. ft;,of Uvh:J&' apace, .....,, own. . PriCed low af' $34,900 \\1th A is truly an Mteal family Marshall RJty, . 61~ assumable VA k>an. Call borne. $79,500· · CUSTOM oceanfront duplex. 556-2660 $149,500. Finaiictng av a i 1 . Picture Perfect ~ I W lk & l "°"''Properties rn-;no ~SELECT s""" "'"'''" ~ bedroom. 2 ....,,,011'/¥1t ;;;_;;;;;_;;;:_~_;;:;_~.-;;:;;-;;.:;_;;;:;_;;;;_~_;;:;_~-! 4 DELUXE UNITS PRIME LOCATION WALK TO BEACH & TOWN EXCELLENT l NCOME POTENTIAL $110;000 Ask for Rosie ... Roberfs NOLAN REAL ESTATE a er ee Bayshor•s 1012 TPROPERTIES ... ~. ""' paint in """ REAL .ESTATE ., .. L r•t••t • out. Beautiful carpeting, I -~;:;;:;;;;~:;;;~::;;;:;'.:;._J FINEST PRIV. CO !\f M . large panelled family room 900 Glenneyre St. I· COUNTRY ESTATE Sfeps -tOprivtkh. ;;i br, -CHECK-THE.SE and extra large patio,don't 49'1-M73 549-0316 Over% acre, Sp r awling \\'OOCI par\elled, v.'600 beam· ed ranch house. Pool. 3 other" rumt1iled houses ''ab pro p erty for renters relatives or S<!rvants. Zone 5 ba, 5 car gar. 0\.\'Tlel', ./3 BR Fixer Upper VA paa this one. SM.950: 548-7116 Ready to s e I I ! no down or ast~m• I' HANDYMAN .i.. com_e see-mk ofr-und.200M FHA $32,000. 'SPECIAL Capistrano Beech 1018 __ 'tU.4471 <=11464111 Bring :your· p&nt • save J4 BR c •$on thUI neglected 2 COUNTRY LIVING .... ' custom ape BDRM., i;s ~TH HQME. 0,·i1•1W<~; 411 .,.,. Cod'-owner m•~ corry G.I. NO DOWN Bulit on 2 '•""''·''° lak• Wooi!1 d~ 4Btt,'t·4BA 1st 10. $75,500, VACANT advantqe ~f BJG ·OCEAN 900 Glenn.yr• St., Laguna Beach for 7 more units. $129,950. hOrrie wf20'x~~-in~iin. Ce.II day or nite ' 4 Bedroom, 2 VU. Kitchen has bullt~ln Be.ani CeUht&I;-custlh:' crpt CENTURY 21 645-722:1 baths, bltns, brand new shag range I: oven, ·llv. rm. has cpl.I 4 new paint thruout. / · ts ( N E E D S ' ~r pecan bdwd floors, 4 OPEN HOUSE Move fn condttJoh. CO&C to w w carpe • fpt'1, m8JW 'Cu51m fea~. a..EANING). '2nd Level has Outstitlding viell11. QY.:her SAT. & SUN. }() tt> 5 new Seara ahopping, Marina Oak Dooring i sun deck wfttnaiice. '$97,.500., ~ J\tesa Verde pool honie. 3 HI school. ""nl¥ $38,!IOO. w/view of the ocean &: ~·b·i~':~~ Gonorol R.E. 1002 Ganoral R.E. 1002 Prap•r:_t:i•• · ' · ------------m~ . ~ l•000UALl5T.NIW'°•TltACH Henry Rea1tors, 492-UZL br, 3 bll., !am. rm., frrnl. Broker 842-7411 or Eves: village below. A real steal Co rona def Mar 1022 .din, rm ., liv'e. rm., CUsL 968-UTS Ir 963-4062. for only W:!OO FULL .:.:.;.;;.;;;o..=.;.;.;.;c.._.;.;;.;::1 design. 2001 sq. ft. AAsum. SPACEMAKER IN P~g:-ssroN REALTY BUENA VISTA BAYFRONT -Fast occupancy Charming 3 bdrm., dining rm., family rm. & stud y. Pier & slip plus sandy beach. Clos~ to N.H.Y.C. Owner. will finance' or lease _with a.ption. $198;000. · '. ~ ~""" how au?> Lawsb'n :ju.~·. nealtoa loan; 148.soo. """ Sum•tra MATURE ~•o•·E en•> ·~1 Call us Pbout Ibis extra neat Pl. Call: M&-8634 (By rn 1'I ~ "'" 3 br family room home in owner) NelatiOOrhood. 4 Br, with liv· , ·Skyline Or. Eastbluff wltb la.rg<! park i ng room. game room , N · +tew beamed Hke yard and possible boat, SUJ:aER DUPLEX CO\-ered 1?8Uo tor BBQ. 2 ew, ocean , trailer litoragc access. OPEN 'DAILY 3 bedroom ~'tlert wtlt. Ne"1 bloC~..ttf school. J\gl. eef.llingo,3 ~~ \\~ba ~ Qulc;.!t.fXCUpancy a:-:1 .,...,,., carpet Ir. drapes. 2 bdrm !i93-&i.'tl· ' • au, ·~,, • ""'""''...-.' Owoer-Ziii """"'"~. ~ b<droom ' 'o Id """'' uniL Ju.t """tly REPOSSEsS' ION. S "'"· pool mbl• '"' .... h 1 "--· onl ~· 950 Corona charmer .... 1th a painted new water heaters. goonnet kitchen, $145,500. e P ..., .... nee at Y .,.,.., · family room, tormal dining Can be' sold subject to low For information and location Owner will ae1l ol'l·land con· Eastbluff c,HS44-nll a re a and a SUPER assumable 8% VA Joan ot•"-·FHA"VAhom,., tract at II%. ~•=R.~.~1:..00~2':;;:,-.'l~R:_.'E:.=,-002: ~ fJ~~ri:,;,id 8ls. ca1Ji!~R~.~~E . oool.]'ASA;IAN 2 BR,'.'~:. ~it~......., ~·-~ NEWPORT BACK BAY Rool Eol•le ffi.6644 and vtow, ISl.S!X>. Auum- Large, Quality constructed T:AKE OVER ~e!i:ank'ir~~:· . ' ...... "' ..... ' " ' ARTIST CHALET AT BEACH POOL $35,950 Secluded entry to enormous. studio living room \'ith 20 ft. vaulted open beam ceil· lngs & sun !crracc th a·t overlooks presti gio us harbor . Studio loft & library + · \\'el ba r. Gourmet kit- chen. huge n1aster lli lh OCEAN VIEW, Abundant use or \\'OOds & gh1~ add1 to artistic atmosphere. 963-7881. OPEN TIL f • ~Ft.INTO BE NC!• THE REAL ESTJITERS REAL ESTATE SALESPERSONS NEW & VIEW. \ \I J .f<:) BE \l:I''i family· home Gn Gover('ment LNnl '494-7513or494-1001 caJ.-Oe-sac. Heavy shake 3 & 4A BDRM homes In an 875 .N. Cout Hwy roof, rustic exterior. Three N II 1 ( Just about ooi.1pleled ·home bedrooms, two balhi, fiunlly a.reu. 0 qu a Y n g · A 8lRC:. ENTERPRISES CO ~:ith 163 degree bay & ocean ~RE'°"'A~L~~~sr=A~T=E~SAL=~ES~I room and heated pool. $10.IXXI. ID $15,000. is all '•PRICE SLASHED• N d A 3 500 c-n F & 0 0 you need. For more .in-$3450. -Vacant ff New Outlook? vie\v. • ""'uare eet PP RTUNIT-Y $57,SQO. formation, eaU BKR. A Fresh Sta rt? extra larse stornge. room ' You have your own private 389 Mira Loma.. Costa Mesa 847_3584 Very Serious Seller D d? plus_ wine cell11.r,-Dcl1ghf!ul desk and phone. Same loca· Call 642-1060 for appt -"''-"'"""~~~~~-Two i;tory Colonial. 0..."ean epresse fantily hc>n1e. 1' ee lot, .:-10 tion 18 ·years. New, or ex-Principals Only ASSU?i:tE FllA 7~'l~ loan, view. Palatial, 4 BR a,.fam. We are intl'rviewing men and feet deep. $239,500 perienced I i e ens e d real MESA VERDE NORTH new cpta., tile, recenUy nn., 2%· BA.. 30' living i1'0men, experienced and in· f RGUSON HESTER e!ltate ~~le 1\-elcomet M•"t •-u O"" o ... am Ho""'· painted. 4 bbr, l'~ ba. !rpl, rm ...,;th stone ~laoe, all experienc ' f~r sales posi-Ha e tinancing !or y 0 -""' ... cu.st. drps, lg. lndscaped yd. bltnS; dsltwabr, ceramic tile Uon:s in our Corona del Mar • v · · u r Leavips: State. nx> sq ft, Prime focatio, nr. acti.ls, ottlee. Earn a~-' 1--i" a aal~. ~I -for inteM ew. 2 s'""' 4 Bi': 3 bfl: water -ft~ • .k.....'<· ~-. -'". ~~~~-~-CUiiom. ,..., '"''" ... \V.E. La.cberunyer Realtor .. .r . • ' 1 j'G-1,.. ""' ....... ., .... .,, .,,..,. ... _ -..--..,.._ deli&hlful atrnospbere of Realtors, Inc. 1860 Newport BJvd., C.J\t. S?flener, sprlnklen. 0 n Y $52,500. By Owner 846-f,582, drapes tbruout. Hup J19tio, antiques and nautica With 14-01 Dove St., Ste. 220 646-39211 or Eves· 613--t5Tl $58,950. Assume VA loan 11t TAKE OVER ~ )'atd. d.o•ble h el pkfu l, '1lrripatib1e ro-Newport Beach . 7% witb331g23 dnN pymnda t.,.~'! GOVERNMENT LQ·•N garagt.. ·$69,!IOO. !J'erml. wor er~ and indhidual 833-9781 owner. eva • '-'"· "" CARPE'.', REALT01tS broker asslStanC1?. 557-706T aft 3 pm. 3 I; 4 BR homes in all 640-8672 Or' t9M271 YOU WILL NEVER HEAR IJ.....,_;~tN:o:qu:all(ytng::~· :F~orJ~~~ffi~~~~EI A DISCOURAGING \VORD! ! How many bedrooms Golf Course Special more Lnfonnation call BKR., c.an Nigel for appt"intment do you need? INSPIRATION POINT Mesa Verde. 2500 Ft. 5 BR, 846-3377 tep in to~ .... ~~er-644-1211 Aoyume If 3 to 5 ""' th• """'"''· 3 BA. btll ,1ew. $82,S(X). NEW CUSTOM HOME ra Cotta 1ltlrl' w/tlnldlog beautifully located ho m e . Low dwn. Owntt will carry 4 BR, 2 BA. fam mi. "-'et f 0 u nta I n , up th r 0 u 1 h Open Sunday only 1-5 for . onl bl k paper or nu loan at 9%%. bar5 3 ear gar. Beaut dn. A~A• --·""' ,_ Open 'til Sold ~ your inspl'ction! Stop by 341 15 Y a oc away from Costa Mesa Realty tn. aroa, nr Lake Park. m......,..ve ... ""6 .. t "'"''gates, • _... E 20th S Ea Id C this U,Ti(ic .family home. into llviJ\i room Ir: the Gracious li\"ing & en-• 1 • 1·· sis e, · .M. Equipped ,vilh all the ameni-Since 1958 * 548-7!11 ll23 Main St. Open dally adYentlft begins.Near I y tcrta!ning .t: a greBl in· ~==·~-===;::::1 400 [ 171~ ties, only 2 years old. This/,.,,.,,,.,,,.,,,.,,;,;,.,.,,.,;,.,,.1 1·5· 53&-4022/~l767 eve. new 3 BR 2 ba !am. m i .. vestment nt Big Canyon 'ii • crisp. channlng 4/5 bedrm UNLIMITED SPACE 4 BR. 1% ba. Assumable cpts, eusto,1,11 drps &- Country Club. Luxurious 3 FOR LEASE C.M. homeisprlcedat S142,500-Fruit trees galt>re. Delux 7% VA loan. $250 mo. waJlpnpcn +many extras bedrooni. 18x3Z' liV rni, dln-F'11nH1stic 2400 sq r t E:'\-OR your best negotiable carpeting, Real honest to Frplc, encl patio, 7 6 8 2 $63,500. Ing room, dble wet bar, ecutive unit witli full bay offer. goodnes." stucco walls. 3Br, Yukon Dr. H.B. 0 w n e r· 1~'---'~· · ~ n1arble master bath. Owner view. 4 BR, 2~~ BA, acros.'I 675-8600 3 Family rooms. Beaull(Ul 84~96. · · "-tU<l ...,,ill ca ...... at 9~%. $160,000. from snndy beach. Av11i1 at ho H lov •·~ =loan w/-• -"· a·•ail . ., n= GR VIS·•·•H' me. oma -'" °"~"° ~·• ·-,_ • Or lease option SllXlO. ._,.,. per mo. UBB & REAL INCOME brokers. Immediate posses-to qual beyer. 4BR 2BA, 494-0706 monthly. ELL 1 S ~:1~ E 5 ta I e · ~3 BR, 2 Ba Houses w/ln-11 .. , •:ry sioo. $35,000. Daya 55U96t cul-de-&ac. Vie. Warner/ 29 Rue Grand Vallee come of S5(XI, Asswne lhe A• Eves 832-3737. P..Iqnolla. 64«1991 eves. VI LL.AGE LAGUNA A.~~g~i~e~r ~c~ BY OWNER ~tJat 7t~l~Jhaaod ~ ~ft DON'T judge by the ol1$Side' ASSUMEToW payme nt, BY OWNEa, S A: S Parle -Cozy 2 BR, ~J_ whlle VOGEL & BABBITT OPEN HOUSE ~r e~~ mont~ The pri'::e See the kttchen. tam m4 $169.48 per mth. for charm-Huntington. 4 br, bonus rm., cottage, bricht, brpt nook. am Leeward Ln NB ,., $<8.000 ror holh '° call &: ·""" of tHls 3br, 2\l '""' Ing,' Jae, 3 BR hcnne. C10le 2\i b&.,.rov'd. patio. many ~It> bch A shop'&• Sat & Sun t2-G . . now. 556--3i60. subilEci.iITs home: am to achl s. shopping & ocean. xtrU. $68,f!OO. 96Wt41 $.SS,000 644-6056 BEST BUYll Harbor View Homes Bcauti. 3 BR .. 2 ba. "C11.nnel J\lodcl." Profess. deoor. Of- fcrt'd Hf S72.~,00. HEART OF~ .. Coronn del !\1ar. L o v e 1 y ho1nc, close to bcarh, on 1 1~ lots. Ov.·ncr \\'Ill arrnni:;c financing. RMuccd to SU4,!r.i0 ~21 CORBIN·MARTIN Reiltor1 * 644-7662 * EXCL. Baycrest, ~ At-!OBn a;; a I I :--()pep -i .. 5 Call Agent, 5f9.8398 BY QWNER •• 48R, 1" Ba. tracti,.,3bdnnhom•.2>as. ~SEOPLECTERTIES -·1ullrilt...odn.i *ASSUMEll6,IO!fFHA7% l>f,950 ... .....,,,. $195 ( r~ ) Din. rm, hrft lll'ea. Covered TPR COM, $92,500 Owner 2 BR townmuJe-Mesa Verde, pymll. ~'ID 'Ct · patio. Large landscaped lot. Oautfled ads .u big ttems, front unit, ~tlo, pooL Hunt. Htrltour 1042 •".a.. ._ Move-in condition! On 1 y sn1all Items or any Item. $29.SIXI. OWC Mlll. 8J3.8974 M•'Wt """• $79,90). 642-2393 t.IESA VERDE BY OWNER 3 BR, 2 ~~ DI• l!N!l!ll BLUFFS CONDO 3 BR. 2 BA, VA, F'HA or ba, Townhouse, Boot Slip "2·1 441 Fullerton Time to really Jive! Bright ~~ /J.,'t,f/J ronventlonal. $44,450. Inc. 80% finan av a 11 . 1400 N. Harbot Bl+tl. end unit \\'Ith open floor C.~ -0 -Q.. !II ~f!ent T";;i2-1~ $67,IXKI. can 846--1:>44 p 0c plan. Bcllm cell.. dcllghtful 0~ \." ~ SHARP s BR, 3 88, \\'lllk lrvlnt . 1044 rime t•n Front dining area. 3 Spacious T·hat Intriguing Word Game with a Chuckle ~all Sehl• & J r. Ct>llege. ·ASSUME 1,L.,,-LOAN •·$1241000 ' ., lxl~·n1s. Squint of buy vie\\', '"''"' b (!,AT • POUAN $39,SIXI. wt LL s REALTY, . . Y:.I ,. . . Spee,tacular 00 .. utOUYneO vt, .E\V On.i;:lnal section, "'llh krw Y • 546--7739 or 64:>-8733, Brand new, 3 BR. !\I os l sur & roe r g. lr11.sehold. Vacnnt. Non c 0 ~ecrionql! 111111•1 of th• MesA VERDE By Owner. de 11 Ir ab J e, In demand delux apt. 3 BR 2 Ba sldg. nicer! $72,500 fou• 1cro"lbl1d wcrd1 be· '.t bf'. 2 ~ '"eXct!),• cand. UJU~ltY park Joeadon. glflU doors frt Ir. lide COM\l?r C. f . Colesworthy low •o torm fovr 111111)11 WO'fdl. •11,-A al~" poSllble. 979~7l3l ' $51,950. 640-0087 unit, POOL. elev. to wide l• "" BY OWNER beach. lrg aundeck 3· car REAL TORS 640-002 I N I G s E L I laatblUff 1030 ..,. lnllda, ad ...,_ 24 hr OC!:ANF ON -1% V.A. loan,.._usum.Pt}on ·at~Joan avail Owner Just rcdu~ $1~00). ~-ner J I' I I 111 3~~.2 ~ ~· plaza, :"~~~:.t.°ta~: ~ LAGUNrrA.e • says sell! "3 BR. 21;i BA. £2.4543 or 838-9367 completely Uffl'1lded, <e.U 3BR. 3BA, lll'lmac. 2-4tory Everyth1ng la new. Call ft>t ; , ount1 n • :!t 963-W or 542-5656. great invtatment...,,urb beaut. rtdecorated lhrut>ut. I GA l l E I J ct) F i V 1.._ 1034 Haclenda Re-1 E,atate home.f1Wl1ptfrtlalocun- •Of<I · ' I' 1-1 I 'j t. <?OUNTRY .. (lLUB POR Sole by Owner, "vi.,..omble -t,,.,,. NEWPORTBACKBAY .,._~NKERS~~3'31 -· --' I ATMOSPHIRE un1,..,1tyParl<,Yale ln .~pvtarao . w.e Qualll> H . pork-like MOO.I, 41lt'. 1\l ba, 'Iha& Cail tor appt; -· . _famib-home 00 ~~e: •UN=~ ~U0SJ'~LM I H 0 T 0 T I i 1 rernemb!r y;tien a slOfe ·-t':i~ front door :d: ~ trpts, Jrs pt1Uoi, f1lh pond~ LAGUNA NIGUEL Hea.vy, lhake fOQf, rustle l!X· ~~rklbiR' pool. 3 BR. 2 Bi • j j' j I r•n 1 1ped"~I and you got fWO and d ubhouH: Just at.1 p• ~ $10;000.. By--a~ ~EAL TY 4ti-4l.o terior. Thrtt bedrootM. t~'O It'll yd, iacuui, patios, ll"fat . _ _ . _ for the p"ce of OM. Now aw a>'. 3 ld e d room WA&ffi: SQUARE. 1"11."l'lhle. BLUE t.AGOON VILLA bl'lthS. f11mily room and decorat!nti', M&J\V---.-t1'1la ...-. ~ Y:I yOU:1eJuc.ky 10 ---for-1n.1. ~-l..-..l&rle 11 •Ina Afr O>ntt. R'"""' ... h'""'ly Prlme JlocatJon/ 'flew, 2SR, h~111f'CI ilOOI . $57.500. Reduioed to sn.:ioo OPEN I V 0 LR EC tlce i•·1t room Wfili mrmal d.lnl nc .... -e ..... 2•1 Ill• ... , -~~-· 389 J\llra Lome, Costa ~leaa DAU y i.., om .-:..~1 ~"20 p -· ~rta, pU5h button kltchcl\ UPCTaded. ~m 644-48tT 111 ,_, ..., _.,.._..._ Call &n-106() for 11.ppl ' ""' · .,., ""Ul;I~ j j j C 0 Com "" ltl• chv<Ui quottd r'edwood deck paUo, air con. aft 6 ~rlmds. deoottitoc...fumlabed. SerioUI ~~"'Princ!pnls Olily CONDO In N.B.! . by ~":11"' the "'1nl11g ...,,,d, d!Uonln&. All for on ly •NJ-::W 4 J}R, 2 ea,, Colltgt ~;r-~~ ~mnao"= BIG MO~lE' 4 BCdroo~ NO, HOUSE on Ltdo 'vlJ' d11v•letfl rom 1tep No, 3 below. $42,400. Call Park, Ulc root. A/C, $53,500 CAR.Pl.~. Ji EA Lf OR S htl.flt' 111e11 ('°"" fAnilly room. $79.SOO f) , The Re•I Estate F•lr 1 Story. 833-$974 .. aML-or -·- ' blk I 2BR 2BA l·l !NI !<U~'llftEO LttTE~} IN I 139 '133 5•• "51 ~·• ~" ~fn!',tt.'r h"~ n rlj o I" In It rom \\'attr~ • l~l SOUA~[S '"V or -w BY OWNER Cilut Hornet.· BeautU\il ft.n\Jly exec. ht>mt. olfiee, priv11 tt' t un bftlcony, · + 1lt11, 1100 ~ ft,. nt quiet o \V N £ R ~I u ST St LL 3 Br, 2 Ba, astu1n11~ 1~ ~ bllt rrom OC<!tn on sem~ fVld ron111 'lte clORtl. A l':nd of Js1e. ldttl f~r i1ntle () IJNSC.l',.,M81f l (1TE•~ lO j j j • ! j j Crttnbrook, 4 br,,2 ~. 2300 IO!U); $llT. mo. 551-1142 riv· Mc iht Dr. 3 ilR reol hcfluty + a BAl\OAlN or couple wino ma1nt. Fre Ct l AN%.,\'EI! ft 2 -· ,..,, .... 1•• · Al $ 5 1 • 95 0 ! Cnll Al[f_. lllMI._ ll!'TiVft\'nil. ~~2 IQ . . ''-t'il., "w'V'll•IAC. ...w .memsna )'Ola wam 10 ba·POOL. v. p&l.io. Viti')' 847"1110. BY OWNER SCRAM-LETS An1won In CI0111flcollon 80IO POQI l Cub Prln. $82.800. "'"' cw.tiled oda do h dtlW< -$125, It a• Ito r •• • , .. • "?Fl 96;-;()8'1,._ 1 ' wa1t ... .oan1NOW-....._nso-'' ' ' i ,, .. • • ,. An.i wt\ .. Whl ,,. ot\ ""' 2 8d h;:e. to Ton 8d ft., dte oce ' arc alas ""'d ftfs t $65, 11 G 3 B rm., pool Cust «I I It. ' $139 Fant ba .• W/ pat "' ltEA 1 Log Deni. Lag com lrg vu. yqu fncl .... .... LA ~Rl oc or $64, "" '\'/a BUY oce $10, rO\V En • on p To \.\'hi ' la oar old. Ro $13 L RE E ho G G This a\\" al •• It! R ' I.a 132 L RE Lo NE\ ' do. p1·1 • "" Ila .ibl C1 SPECIALIZING IN • LAGUNA NIGUEL VIE\V · PROPERTIES SEA TERRACE PRIVATE GUARDE: AREA OCEAN VU to\vnhome11. 2 or 3 BR; $49,500 -$75,()()'.) * $64,500 will buy this lovely Qpgraded gnrclcn ho u1 e \'//atrium. 2 BR, den, * , BUY this outstanding 41-R ocean vu on oontrs'.ct w./ $10,()()'.) dn. l'J:love In tomor:-1 row. ' ' CUSTOM 4-PLEX ' . En1oy The Good Life call 49J...2513 e EXECUTIVE •IOi\!E e on prestigious Monarch Bay TcJTacc. J\.1agnlficent ocean \Vhltev,1atcr vle\Y. Nei.v cond. 3 BR. 2~~ BA. fonnl db1, fam rm, A/C. 2 fpl's, 3 car ~r. ~1any }t.1ra.i, 1 yr old. · 0 w n r. ttanstcr.-ed. Re:i!lonably priced nt 2 Bedroom, 2 hnth \U\it!I. Prime rcsidenti9.1 al' ea . Spanish exterior. B J t n s, OCEAN \1E\V. •Like ~t''.I' enclosed ga r ages, 3Br.,2ba.,LagunaNiguel. S p r I nklered, landscaping. I ~B~y'"-'o~wn~•~r""49&-~3=186=. -== OnJy $115,000. Income Properiy 2000 Century 21 642-1771 1137,500. LAGUNA NIGUEL REAL lY 496-4040 GREENS EAST- OPEN Exclusive ta.iN'ay front hon1ttS overlooking plush greens l-lakP.s Par Birdies & Eng-lf!S $111.0IX'I to $143,000 Greens Ea.~t 49'.)-1$60 CORONA DEL MAR TRIPLE.'X. Each unit a 2 BR to\\•nhousc. Close lO xlnt bch & sbop•g: Priced to sell. $94,500 GOLFER'S CONDO 'J'his 2 bdon~ 2 bnth l1ldc· A\\'ftf ts beln"' snct'lf1ced Rt 120-r Tu11tin A"·c., N.n. a lo\V $37,f!O(). l,t11only11tep~ REALTORS 642-4623 to the ,NIJ.tU!U 10.11'\\'ll.f!J". See BEACJ-1 PROPERTY FOR ti! CaU todny! 497·l'l61 SALE Newport Beac h, Rtd Ca r,.t, Realto rs \VU.tt'rlront \V/boat s 11 p . 1 J\.WNAROI BAY Su.per Bnlboo Covca, 3 br, TEltRACE 2 ha. Desi buy Sll5.000. J..arielif b\11ldable lot, in 919-9;)87 Owner. ' <hole< ~ Great, view • NEWPORT HEIGHTS $32,6t'JG. · 1 • 4 St, den, trplc, 2 ~ lge LAGUNA NIGUEL !Of. 157,930. · ' REAL TY 49M040 SPARLING RE,\L E.'ll'ATE 833-3;44 Li ke Forest 1054 HARBOR vu ~fontc:;o .(br, ~E\V LAKEFRONT llO~tES den. Pr I n c I pa 1 s otily, Ftom ~.9:1(). 109h. or 20% $.S9,900, m~ke otter, Appl. dn; 3, 4, 5 BR. Oub &: la.ke 1,;ool=:;;,'',:~;;14ll::::::lc::18:.,..,,.-,-=-,,.,­ prt\1'1. A/C, W/W crpla. + NEWLY Nmod. Nwpt Hgbt .. tnany ntOrC ft{\1\U'tll. o.rta. 31lr, 2 ba.. Ne\!.' carpet lla\\1dns Rcolton 83Q...Mri A paint. $19,500! MS-324l. ;ot 11. lW'-11 ~rutl)' !\lun1 lhk. TIIE ULLirrs. E11rly A~a . -r:Mls-.moro t\trnlturct-Shop -f. Sft'=k"1ien, "':!I - 1 t:lllultlt!d Ad! 6t2-ti61!. ~:ooo 61!>-'00$) l\gcnt ' 4 ON A LOT $72,500 ,.- j *RENTALS* Vtlla;e ~. Univ. Pk. 3 BR., 2~-il ba ..... , ..... $.W Unlvet'Stty Park 3 BR., :.! 00.. ••••••.••••. $385 3 Bit, 21 ~ bu ••••• , $380/$425 Tho Tcn·a~ 3 BR,, 2 ba ......... $·100/>IZi Greentree llon1c11 2 BR, 1 bn!h ....... S315 Tw'lltrock 3269 LARG E FAMI LY Hornt> In Ell'st.blu!t. N c a T • Col'ono dcl 1iltit' RfJI). ~·· Jy 1•t.furbl811ed, 4 bclrmis .. I 2 ba .. new ea rp ttll & drapes; gru'dculnfi twnl.5'1-- ~. Now on1.)' S!t.ilO a "'°*'tit,,.. HAl'tlSOl't 4 BR., 213 baUUl ...... ,!"·150 4 Bl\., :'! baths •....•••. $·17:> COMP'ANY 3 BR., 2 bfl .•••••• $175"·/gdnr 1\Ei\LTORS College Park SINCE 19+1 4 BR., 21;1, ba. , ......... $1:;() 47J..~ 3 BR., 2 i:!rsk. ~~ ....... ~ \ :::i::::!::::!::::!::::i:=::::i:::=::::=::::=iJ Udo Isle ~ BH., 2 ba .•••• ., ..••.• $500 4 BR., :! ba. , ........... $600 CALL 552-7500 e VISION• REALTY a l'ed hiU con1pany Uni\'. Park-Ccnhil'. Irvine Bountiful Bluffs Ne!U' shop11ir1g A pool. !.ovely , 3 ~droorn, · 21,v l.10lh 1..vn· • don1inium v.· IV 11'~\V of : ~l\'PQrt B.'.1y, ~25/1\lo. p-: ly. CUlS) ' I Jeanne Newman 642-8235 ~ • Macnab-Irvine J{enlty Con11)ilny 'T'wo bl"droom. l\\O bn th large sunrlr('k, quiet stree· $341). ... .• C.D.M. CHARMER • Q\·l'r~i~l' lhl'eC li tJ t q 0 fa111ily 1~..:1111. \\el b11r, ii11u of hii;h\\ay. $·lQ. Ul' ftU'lll~ ed. s:it:i WATERFRONT Tiei!Utlful :1 b.-droo l0\\1thtJUl(l'. pri\·nte boots . '"cHANNEL°"R[tt ('!l~l':c n1~ brAutit u, ha~fro111 lotatlon. V('t 11111\'' two tx>droo1n rurul~ "' LiriLE ISLAND . .. ~· ..,;• .............. ~ .. •'' \.\I J .~:'· . HE\l '.I'' ii A Q(RG f HffR9fllSfa, l.• I ~­' • I • .. ' • DIJl Y 'ILOT Jridi:J, O<tobtt 18, 11174 F rn !6f!rtment1 furn It Ap.rtm.ntt nfurn. rtment1 Unfurn. _L_I _•_1_•1_• ____ '41 __ 56 Apartroenh Unfurn. Apt• Furn/ Un urn 3900 f Bd. s 84, 1'"'1n iwi Costa Mesa 3724 Caro1111• del M.r 3122 E11tblvft 3830 LRG 38r .. 2ba. blllnl, crptl, Newport 8Mch 3169 OAKWOOD 3 -J J;!A .Y\rm. 'CdM $650 drps, 2 1•11r g11r. Adil.I, MOO ft --. ' Cttri.t .-.. 2 BORA! w/Frph" Avail. e DELUXE e leue. 6"75-ot761 at\ 6. ON TH£ BAY. dock, opt., t Bd. 2 86'1~'1to ~ Ambassador Inn 10121 ms. 515-TM.1 or 3 dR. ·n BA ufJl for leue. Me111 Verde 3863 3 tr .. 2 ba. mndeck. upper FIGHTS ••'-7270 I-Id •PQC -··t-... ,,, ""plex, Ml din. nn .. tti>l .. Renta 1 to th1r1 SlfARE lrg hon1e, po o't , frptc, nr ihopplng, frt<'Wa)'I, airport, coUf!¥es. $125 mo ... ...... u O•r•1e1 for Rent 43.SO V's'.N 8.~.~.o .. NUEpW Cost• M•-=-3124 di';; rm & dbl ";;qt, Au10 • HO)tE ATMOSPHERE utUa. lncl. J<l;,Q mo. yrl.y .• ,., ~ 1-----------1 dcxJr -Oi)t':ncr a\·&11. PooJ .l Otiluxe l! & 3 BH. RenraJ furn. a\'all. 6l>oUOQ. IN fLATION STORAGE-garage for rent. •IALTY SINGLE STUDIO APT 1-IACJENDA OE f\tEs.\ Rtcn:11Hon arta.. ,\dult1 o l e . 3 09 :i: ri.1ac1t Ave . Newe>rt Height• 3170 S2S. month. t SPECIAL \\'EEKLY RATES 160 W. \Vllton. Clot. only, no ptl.3. S.W-lOM. . l1'hC price of cver')1hin& ts 548--ll'fS or 548·1026 iilfiBOR ~ oce&n vle11o•, 3br, 22T7 l!tu'bor 81\•d. BE:AUTt.-UL CatOUNDS e $H2 e Newport Bu~ 3869 BRAND NE\V t x e c ut l v ~ gollli u.p Now o;r. kw 0 0 d SINCLE Cat Garage nr 12th h. !;fw• NB. $650 fum/ O»ta l.1eaa ~ Adultt • No Peta: ~ An11 ....... Way, NB t o v.• n ho u 11 e. 3 BR + c-~ '• • 1 St • Bal~ m·~ ~ WE STCLlfr BLDG N[WflUI~ T Ut fl H . . . 11et1ll•t 1fflc 1 • All L 111 M1 H•Jv.,or•! fH •, h)()1 ~-•l•••l<l i nin~, 2u Ba. tu"cn pt1 f:pl you .,.... ,. ... _.. UJO. @' ur. qt, &tl-2231' -10 mlnutes to oce11n. t.art;e Managed bv PARK NEWPORT r4 fight inflation by ol:ferlna: 6'3-1876 eves Condo. Fum 3«i0Huntlntton8tech J740 1 '1 2 Br. l r -$175., \VllJ..IAl\-tWALTiRSCO Cptlil/drps. ap ittiKlCli, dbl cl ive.. 1 -,'=='='°=·~--c= OFF IC ESPA CE FOR 2 BR $19().wlth PaUo SlOO. APARTMENTS f7'1~:· 0rr;.0· J::.-lJs; R!lllt''t:u':n.ntee'~0 Ren 1 Offlc• Rtnf•I 4-tOO R.EN'J'. Costa l\fesa, Harbor PAl..M S'PRINGS 2 Br, 2 LOW WEEKLY RATES Gas k \Vater in c·, Huntington BHch 3840 h b af1t'r 6.30 642-Sl7S We. guB.tftlltee !hat )'Our rent ' FOR LEASE at Adann;. Be-au t I! u \ • .._ p,xQ. tennis. u.unu, Executive SulteJ Ora~rlf:t, carpetl, g a• On t e ay . will not be railed for l 111 0 de r n . A Jr, n1 u a'b, .i.cu&Zlil. \Veeknd. wkl)', 717 Yorktown Blvd. beat, gu atove.· atr Luxury apartment I Iv Ing 2 BR, 1 ba, cpts, patio, tuU year and yoU sUll havt janitorial, C!Mt A. Walker mbnth~v. (21.l)547~ or Bea.ch Blvd. •t Yorktov.•n condltionlna, •wlmmlnt: ON BEACH! ovcrlooklnK the water. En-gar. t'tc. Adults, 110 pets, the nexiblllty or month· • OFFICES & l..t'C Bldg. Call Gene Hill 1'U-IS'i0 536-0411 :Cjcy=· room, wuhera joy $750,<m health spa, 7 Sl!l5. 548-5300. month occupancy rl.17-0136 or 642-0"200. 2 DR, 2 IJ,\. \l/f!st Nine, STUDIOS & 1 BR'i, 11v.·lmming P.00111, 7 lighted San Clemente 3876 Plus .you get a lot more • MEDICAL DEVELOPED Office Space. ~~ Niguel ~77 or • .,~ull kUcht'n th 2 Bil Unfum. Fr. S267 tcru1bJ courts, plus miles oJ for your money at Oakwood, 150 10 1500 sq ft. llUbleue, ~IT.il • Heu11:d pool • Off The Beaten Pa eoJe!:a;;~~~WL~ge ~}~~~~~~-\~~~~~~ ~~f;,L:~~!w==: ~~~ 1!1c111~!~~ ~n • RETAIL prvl entrance or conllUOJl Condos Unfvrn. .l425 • Laul'ldry fncilltlcs Heated Pool. Saun.!l.S and !rom $224.50 monthly: al80 hood, v.•111.ldng diatnnce to lime Activities Director who Prime HWttlflilon Be a ch· reception. 4500 CampUR Dr. • Frre uUUtlcs Adults • No Petii H.e<.Tf! t\o Roo I ond 2-bt'drooni plans and everythlnr l child ok. $195. plans parties, BBQ'•. Tr1ps Fountain Valley locutions on NB. PhOoe 556-3028. FOR LeaSt•. ~littc oceun 0 free linens * Luxurious shq: carpets HU• NnTIN~TON :l·slory town houM.'s. Elt>c-492-0801; 496-0911; '192-<li95 &· more! Free s un day Brookhurst & Beach Blvd. DELUXE 2 rm. ottlce; East vleo,i.·, !'IC\\' 3br, 2~ 00, lnclds • T.V. &. maid serv. av&l.t. * 811-lns incl Oh1hwasher y 1~ !dt .. · • """..:A. "'--,-, • ., O·-, u.~ ~•. n. -• -~n. .... ... u, flwy ---cdl\I 43t? Ft .-1 •• , k ,,.. I '" •· G BBQ' n e-.. c .. e:"ls. pr.·:a,c ..,..,..,,. Nl-:\V Jg! 'l BR, 2 BA . .,,\41...,... ..., uuu -a w. ... ..,._.. ., . • o;,UOl'IOUiC, uu .1M1, Huu.,,, e Blir·B-Que •t..rg Pool ..: as I PACIFIC -0r ba!CC1t1les. carpeting, l&.blc nre111 n c lud i ng :2 Realonouilcs, Bkn. Si:>-6700 no peta. lull erpts &. drPlf, e Phone sen1c<' l & 2 Bf"RJ'lt $175-$195 d ra perlca. Subterranean Prestige area. Pool, encl Si ngl es. 1 &. 2 Deluxe Medical suites $550 4'50 i cur gar, $385 mo., Sniog • 1 nillc to~an Gat & W1:1ter Pd. 1;Br:igl! 7U OCEAN A\•e., ll.B. 11 .king ii•lth elevators. Op-g11.r. 1''11ntastic view. t.?40. b-'"""°'""'mmis. Furn. & unlurn. ~f.J, with full fl<:ititics-Plus Business Rent•I nl ~·~~~. c.1eme 11 1 e • BEAUT lutn. a ts $~&; & LA MANCHA APTS. ITI4> 536-1487 . 1ional n\.llid i.erviL'll. J U!ll 4!!6--061·~'==~~~-~ \\\th all the extras. Models ortice &. retail space ll'Oft\ MONARCH BAY ..........-v...,,. $175 "~nnl.sh s"~e bull= 778 &.'Ott Pia«, C.i\I. Ofc. open 10 am-tipnt Dfilly nol1h or F1:1!1hion Is.land 111 SPAC IOUS 2 BR close to open dally 10 to 7. Sony, 636' • 1640 sq. ft. at .45c OPEi' ltOOSE SAT & SUN ~ v ' 6~2-2"07 or cA=."''"18 \VILWA.1\1 \\'ALT!::RS CO. nd J I shops. beach. NO PETS . ropels at children. fL in nl!w prlnie center. PLAZA d pvt. enclosed gar., , ..........., Jamboree a San ooqu n p Sl90 49a-41&i 9f.o 5. 3 Br, 11o'1lsher, ryer, snwm, laundry, adlts 17301 YEAR-ROUND HAPPINESS 4'111s Road. ~'-'~m-.'°"'~~~~·~~-I o-'.____... Good exposure to , traUic. Office for Lease .lllove Ji: rft. Adult (.'(HU· Keclaon L.1.nc l blk \\fest e A Pool Id Ii · LUXURY APTS Telt"phQne (7141 644-1900 NE\V 2 BR, 2 BA. Refrig, AAWUUU For detail.8 Md preview call Prime an:a-00 Sq. Fl. mHol~~· N0•·r"""'tt~t?..!..~:,1 "o~l~lle::::ao~h~o~U::,:Slao:;;t":;;,·~.,..'°=~""8"'1 e w~~:;:;i :Cozy ~t!p1!1~g Jlbit belng: completed, l, 2, tor rental infomuition rnnj,>e, dsb1v~~2.1193nd,ry. Sor· ,Garden l!NTI~~MEl700NT. D""~ON Jacrx>C:1nmonth. ~5(1;;(1 1 ,.....~ ' .. ., ..... ADULT GARDEN APT •Spring: Garden lW!ttlng & 3 bedrooms, li~places, THE MOSl ry, no pets. -.;i,-· Aparbnea.ts v....... •Y~ 3 BR 2 bll CONOO on El 1 BR turn. $145/?.tO •• Pcol. •Summer: Patio parti~ !iOme with patios or EXCITING VIEWS San Juan ~ I c;>:~~4ci.a::;r;:.~lk lauel Go l I Co\tr se, Nr. La.ke Park. 1035 12th 3 Bedrooms, 2 Baths, $2'25. balconies. GREAT LOCA· IN NEWPORT Capistra~o 3878 .................. 3 Room office/central .loc., hw •• he' ... -. d'-p., St. 536-7447 alt 5 & wknds. nIE VENOOME TION IN THE BE.A.qi Irvine and 18th , UI So "i "' BEACH Sing! f 0 f f 184.:j Ana~lm 5-ts-8628 AREA. Call 96().~ or Luxury hayf'"Qnt npartmcn1 645-0550 $240 mo. Dr•· o ce, . ~car gel' $325. 8311-90743ev52Se. •treet park'g. iJ.25 ':'1c Jut. Co((H)r Center St.CoKt.11. Mesa ~133 ask for Ailene or living. Boat slips lit your 2 ::· 6;;!~ s(~},.p~~~ ....... it-' s... ~:Pa~ i:~s~ mo~' Te,wn~s• Un rn Eves. s.51-1659/536-0862 MEDITERRANEAN Mark;n. door. \Vrtllt to shopr., restau-Evcs/\Vkends (114) !J68.2680 1&:hal Irvine OFFICE SPACE Nolan lteal Eatate 494-M2·1 s kcURITYControlled,2MEN, 1tnall beach hotel . VILLAGE $$FREE MONEY ranls. theatre, OC('tln. A 842~170 AVAILABLE NEWPORT Beach, Cnnnecy ~ry. 2 BR., l~'ft Ba. Adults, Rooms $21.50 week. Aptll. 'l Bedroo1n $200 \Vt> \1•ill pay you $50. to frw elegant, very privalt>, Apts Furn/Unfurn 3900 !--....,,=~===~-CORONA DE.:.. !tfAR Village, 1100 sq fl, 14' ceil· Jj> child under 16. Tennis, $!fa.mo. 5J6..7056 l Bedroon\ & Den $251 move into our brand new 2-bedroom, 2-lwlh unil11 wlU1 THE EXOTJNG ings, 8xl2 sliding d 0 0 t , J I 6/tOtbs mile H H bou 3741 2 BL'<irooms $255 plush 2 & 3 BK studio apts. spacious terraCl'S., pool, I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;; I PALM MESA APTS. & tnany ilflndows, ott •paclou.11 souna, aeuu · unt ar r 2 o..,,room Townhouse ~.,.,,. I blOC'k h'01n beAch. Bltns, sub1er1-anellll 2-car parking. I 1 :f.UNUTES TO NPI'. BCH. IRWIN IRWIN ~m l:leacb. $250 mo -' ---~ .,.,..., · b lid • NEW • brick ·patio \V/ltceS.. $475, ~!HOO ' • SPACIOUS BACH. C 0 11 d 0 2400 Harbor ijlvd dishwashers. fl·p~L·s & 2 cw· ~II adult, lull ~.ecur1ty u · Bnch, I &: :l BR. from SJ57 673--0.335 or titi-96.54 Costa Mesa tn.f> f)57-&'.)20 garages. L 1 on s Est. 1ng .. N_e\1' cat·p<>t, drapes, Adults, No Pets. DI-'< DPLX 3 Bit. 2 ~1 Ba, w/1Ullken lrpl, aleove. New NE\V BREED APTS. MS-2570. b~1t-ins, df't."Or. Leases from 1561 Meal!. Dr. REAIJORS SMALL OVAL Shop avail. 'f/P, new crpts &: drp1. !~·-Kit. l-'Qulp'd. $22.5. l BR, •-le, cp", drp•, pool, 2 BEDROOr..t deluxe Condo. $jOO per nio. YOU'LL BE GLAD (5 bl.la from Newport mvd.) Loe. In the Mr.l l nt Beach 11.Mie oJ HIV)', Cd?>.!. :»7-4577 "I' YOU WAITED! S46-8860 675-6060 6·l4-6lll THE FACTORY. $90. mo. $500 Agt: llSk r or 3748 jacuzzi, encl. gar. All ut!I Comn1unlty almost new. (71-1) "67l>-8551 In troducing new bach and -0 FF I CE Sp ACE & ' "'425:::,;:llth.="N°"·c;•~· .o6T.l~:HJ606"'i'"'"==I "--""~·~ Letuna Beach paid. No pets. Adults only. Bltns, refrig., Your own Newport Bay Towe•s 1 bd ·-11 , _ _..._ Rooms 1 ~ nd 1 1 R nt 1 ••~ uutvu..,., ' Sl.9J. 39.l Hamilton, &6-Mll washer &. dryer, OW, pool rm · ap.,, \\'e v.-u.a .,, ----------1 ~tnrial Services. Ex-I ustr a e • .._.,, TOWM-IOUSJ:: 2 br, nr. So. EFFICIENCY apt trom $1TI. or 642-1960 & clubhouse. 2 Children OK. 310 Fernando St., N.B. seeing. Refined Yet 81• COLLEGE Student n e c d s per le nc e d I Professional CoMt Plaza .. $275. mo. mo .. $60. "''k. llld po o I , CASA VICTORIA APTS $2'29. n110. Ask Jor Be v or I -~~~~~tGf:::is~~ ~~ roon1 in vicinity of occ Ucensed real esta1e broken 54&iJl52 1naid, phone, J au. o d r )' • Dalf'. No fce. 963-1567. In exchange tor rent o r only, Prtme Costa Mesa Duplexes Unfurn 3600 VILI.AGE lNN, 4St-s.u6 ~~ts$u;9.~ 3 BR N"ri!e~ WALK TO BEACH OCEANFRONT -tutnl.sbed preferably yard work. Pvt location:deluxe of t Ices· -1 Bit GARDEN APT. rrplc, Pool, rec rm., elevators l, 2 &. 3 Br, crpt, drps, 3 BR. 2 b..'\, Yrly s;;.-,o • $ 185 to $215 • entrance/bath des Ire d . percentage lease. For ad· 3 I: 4BR beach houat!:, $400 1 blk to beach, util. pa.id Sec. gate. Gas&: water pd bltins, gar. 2'll 16th St. or 2 BR. 2 ba, furn $400 '\lnlr. 646-8453 64H300. =t~~~n (:~;~ Ye arty, DavidliOn Real • UIS 497-1157 525 Victori&. C~f. 642-8970 205 15tll St., lluntington 2 BR, 2 ba, "'inter. S30ll FROM $82.50. Priv mis & ~'1573' ' Sch. 847-3957 STEPS TO BEACH apts Ior senlon. Unens, Brokers, P.O. Box 1595, Apar1ment1 Furnished Newport Beach 3769 APl'S Unfurnished, 2 B r·1,=c:=""'-"""----._~ 3 BR, 2 DH, winier. $275 mald senr. Xlnt security. Newport Beacb, Ca. 92663. $195. Ulil pd, pool, lndry 2 BR apt, ne\vly painted, 2 BR 1 -1• s-114 ~-1 M SC ~ "'~ WATERFRONT .. I''-· lilond 3706 WINTER RENTALS radl. cptll, drps, dshwhr, new shag cpl, drps, lots CORciNA.mDE:.l MAR ......, ar: · ...,.......,.,.., ~ Oct. to June closed gar. No child/pet. of closets, garage. No 't1ieilllattlltl• ROOMS $20 wk up, with NEWPORT BEACH Nlf;WLY d od ii 1 2 hr, Beachfront apt. $275. flacienda Harbor Apts childre.n or pets. 425~A 12th 4 BR, unf. h1ouse. F1 •m1 · n1 n. kitchen: $30, wk up apt. Executive offices * CM * 700 Sq. Ft. $115. 1lXI Sq. Ft. $195. Pvt oUc, plenty parklnc 1750 Sq. Ft $245. Nr~ San Diego Frwy Nattress Realty 979-6571 Wan erorat • wa 0 Ulil. pd. Ist & last mo. · 839-7476 Street. 2 ha. S500 s.c or ... ,. 08 · ADULT APARTMENTS 548-9755 or 645-3967 2 Or 3 Room •uite ' Br"",',·,"','pePl~e·u~tt Bapd, + refundable clea.n'g. ~~.Pu· a Tropical Pool e CHEZ ORO APTS 2NBERWP, ObaRTCoc,,~~~~J 1433 S I A FOR 1 or 2 poople, n1en v1,•wsmo~r:~~c:l~~er 1,000 SQ. IT. otllcc or • ..... • 6801 w. Seashore Dr. ""' -. g73 1 \ti t · · ....... ~ uper or venue or women. Kitchen pr Iv . Pi ol kin ~arty leue $300 mo. Call :r.tr. Pattison Jor k e )'. 2 BR, crpts, drps, bltns, '> , , . an a COMMERCIAL N B h Outside pet OK. 548-4464. Bill Grundy Rltr. stotage. enty par g. * COSTA MESA* Almo8t nev.• ~1·1. 1300 sq. ft. 1185. MO. 644-2361 •ll,26%.Agate Ave. 536-85.18 642-3698 !piral staircase, r ea l I,~& 3 BR. Pr1v g~r .. pool, t. $250 ewport eac 675-6161 S'l25. Newport Shores Area. « 75-6.'lin-fireplace rcfrlg lge pntltl \\ll!lhcr,_ dryer. Close t o JlOOM to man, $70. monthly.1,.,_....,._-c;c;-tt'.:'.:"" l -'""'"~"~6120:::~825::.:'"-----I ' LAS BRISAS APTS gas & \\'~lcr pd. ':;;:ss-116."i ' beach, 536-0036 • CHO•CE' 275 Flov.-er St, Costa' l\te.sa. **Corona del Mar** SANTA ANA nev· M-1, fn-MDOERN 2 tit, 1 ba. Close ·15 ru .. er Ave 642-2566 DOG T "'" ~36. tO Bay. S.100.. Call before evato; bldg on beach. l&2 LGE l Bit Pool, adj. 10 RUN LAKE FRON ,~~=·""°~~~-~'7 1 Profelllllo1111.! Offices and/or dustrlal unlll, 750-3600 sq Q>M, 544.9iD0:-BR. Pvt balconies, hid pool . shopping. $160. mo. Deposit Spac. 2 br, apt. All xtras. LOCATIONS GUESf nn nil--ely derorated. rtet1:1ll . Deluxe. air cond., ft fron1 12c. 5;.6-4958 Ill* Penl"'u1a · 1Y· A u ts. tenant. Infant ok, no pets. ~t .!kach off Slater. 17391 man. 64Ul392 pd. J00.200)', Hwy frontage 4550 3707 Securi cl 1 rerundable to reap. clean From $159. ~2 blk. West 1.:::::::::::: VERSAILLES Pvt cntr &. btith. \\'ol'ldng an1ple prkg, jan. serv .. utii Storage L $35-\VK UP. 1 Bdr., 2 Ba. l8S7 ~ton r ovia. C.?>.1. A Keel!iOn, 842--0389 v· o-• M V1cation Rentals 4250 & 2nd fir. Rates Crom ,411'. EXTRA SPECIA & Bach. Color TV. maid 64£.-6314 . CONDO 3 br, 2 ba, cpts, 1sta ... esa ON THE LAKE OWner, 675-6000. 2855 E. MINI.WAREHOUSE BAYFRONT yrly, lg. 1 br, servi pool. THE At.EM., 415 CHILDREN OK &rps, patio, W/D, relrig. ADULT GARDEN HOMF:S At &uth Coast Plaza. Coast l llghway. CdM Private, locked lndlvidual w/Boal Slip, 2 40'-4 ·way ~~~wport Bl., N · B · Lgc 2 Br $170. 3 Br 11~ & 11tove, No fee. $225. mo. IRVINE AVE, AT MESA Pool -Acapulco Aqua Bar Rent My Condo I I DESK space avallable sso storage units. From $7.50 de-utll. pd .. 1ar. $450. mo. Ba ......... Dupl~ &. 4-ple~. ~ .,.~r Bev or D a I e r-.:ear New;nrt Blvd, 1'Tv.'Y & J acuui. Spectacular 8 Large, 1 BR apt wltll vi~ mo. WU! provide furniture per mo. 6b-679o. BEAUTIFUL l br. Close to .. ......., ...,.........,., & Irvine Indus.trial Complex Acre Lake w/Towerlng of mountain!! and overlook· at $5. mo. Answer Ing ALLSPACE 112 BLK to bay or, bch. Fash. Island. Contp. turn., 2 pools. crpts, drps, &12-6682 LRG 2B.R, 2ba, Sl80 mo., 1 BR S.190. 2 BR $230. Fountains -1,J Million 'Dollar ing pool. Ololce PA L l\l service available. 1 7 8 7 5 960-1970 1.Br. v.'Rlk·io clo8cta, ihag lin<'ns, dishes, etc. $315. mo. 2 B_R. 1 bn sngl sty ganten c r pt s / d rp s I & bltins. Rec Bldg v.·/gym, Billiards, Oubhol!St', Gym, Sauna, DESERT locaUon. Nr amall Beach Blvd., Huntingtot1 1,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,., 1 ""*' e&rpClft. law1d rm . 64&-1006 unit, 1ha.g cpll'I, drps, dwhr, Adults, nr beach & stores, Color T.V. Pool & J acu:ai. Totlll Secur~~. shopping l.<enter. \\'eekly or Beaeh. Ctt·-!321 . I' LINK $2511 ,,.r mo. lllG w. BEAtrrIFUL Beach Apt. 2 fncd patio, beard ttll, frpl ~7865 Security Pat.rel, Refrlg. Inc. Immediate Occupancy monlhl)' rates. For In f o lSOl WESTCLIFF OR. gar. Adults $200. 2 6 5 o · D e 545-4855 e ADULTS &12-0596 or 556-8868 STORAGE UNITS boa. Call 67$-452&. BR, l Ba, dishv.·as.her. No Elden, 537-3125. DELUX~ large 2 BR, 2 Ba, 1 ---~~=~-~~ NE\\.'PORT Fl:naoclal Center ONT 4 Br, 3 Ba, (X'.l!i. Family. $300. n10. DUPLE'X 2 b bltn k't blms. 1n1mac. $215. mo, *LA PARISIENNE * So?Ty, No Pets Rentels to share 4300 Leasing Office Space ~p~, bua.lne~~· rea;~· "nter: $400. mo, yrly, SG;ia. wwtcr. &12-Til3 or 642-6'ra2 • r, · 1 •• Shopping & Fn\y c 10 s. e 2 Br. unrurn . All electric. Bachelor, 1, 2 & 3 Br'1. CALL ON-SITE l\!Ai'JAGER o storage. rom .,,. Lrg 2 Br. 2 Ba, winter: ON the beacb, bac~elor trpl, hdv.·ood firs., n e w 1 Y Adults ~ & over 847--ii732 ' ~,il'eplaet". Heated P oo I. from $17S per mo. ROOMMATES 1n41 642•3111 ext 246. Jamboree & San Diego Free-~ 1 ••= THE decor'd. $185. mo. Adults . --Ad"il• $1 85 & "P S An \Va,ied t h "' u·t .. 1 ·--C"';;:;<-"'"~;"C~;,;:--1 ~W::_.Y~·c,:Cnf~l~979-0~~150~-~= I "'1'N· mo, )'t1Y ~wu. mo, singles, lrom $125 only, no -ts. Jmmed. Qc.. $150/MO., large 2 BR. " · 9.;..·..,...,,,. ... · anta a 0 5 are au .. 1 'lO. FREE RENT &,42--8961. or 6T~ SECOND SI'ORY 103 l\1 ,.... c d '"" .... "° 2 bedroom furnished or un-" Rentals W•nted 4'00 · ' c· cp"y. 6'16--6583 arp./ rapes. Sharp! Nr. Acrosi. from go lf course 3700 Plaza Dr. furnished apts at Oakwood. No lease req. Dix. offices M.YFRONT WINTE! Fadden. 67>1865 2 BR, Crpts, Drps, bltns., .ll~ores & beach. Agt. 61;,-6700 20432 Santa Ana Ave. 714--556-0466 Thon"e's S 1 , 0 O O, O O O. In adj. ~rter Iiot~.45 A~C, GARAGE in N.B./CJ.1 . area l IBR $190. Bachelor S OCEANFRONT small prlv. patio, washing NEAR new l. BR Upper, S.l.50. EXECUTIVE APT rec r eat ton fa c I I ltle1. full se ccs. From .,. o. for storage. Need intmed. UUl pd. 926 E. Balboa. Studio npt., s~ cpt, gar., facil. Nr shopping. $180. mo. nr Frwy. $150. n10. NO On the bay, Lge new 1 Br. -----Comp I e m en tary tennis 2172 DuPont, Room 8 o a y s. 752-1500/eves & 61:>-4533 $230. yrly. 673-3 · \Vatcr & Gas §1.· Adul t<i PETS. ·847--0070 or 545-0760 Boat slip. Open dally. 310 ~~a°~IPJ=:L ~~ lessons, Sunday b 1· u n c h , .. 833-3223 'Til noon * wkends 673-17:52 ! UNlQUE 1 BR apt, garage &: g1a1ro8e0n. only. 373' B Ogle t. &14-4359 CONOO 3 br, l~ ~. pool Fl'rnando, apt l02. ~ lotgr, ~ports !?~rramJ~ A f~ 55c PER SQ FT \Vanted rum. Apt., share Salboo Inn. Pool. Utll pd. Like small hou81!. • 2 BR unfutn CanJt>n Apts. & clubhouse lac's. Jf v a i I 61:>-7520 or 675-8551 WALK TO me ac 1 1 es ctor w 1617 WESTCLI FF-NB older lady $200. p o o I ~ 1 '100. to $250. 675-8740 642-0657 or &\5-0145 Frplc, D/\V, priv patio. S200. Nov. 15, $250. 847-5960 y EAR L r. MOOE RN FASJIION JSLANO pl\ ":"11 partie!I & BBQ '1•' CptB, ..1~ A/C, tree pkg., Laguna or C.M. 3iO \V. Bo.y B N I ' I d rl ' ~ .r Ve evt'n help you [ nd ... _ c cotGnai Ml M.er 3722 ON TilE BEACH, 1 r • r. rv ne n ust a areri . 2 BDRfl.I. Cpts., Drps., SPACIOUS 2Br. blk lrorn Priv:icy-Pt>ac:erul-Spaclous a roonimate. Sorry, no one utll, 10' clngs. Agt. 541·50C'2 .M. \Vlnter $175 +utils. a57·2&1l Garage. "'aik to Hunt. ocean & bay t1.vail Nov l, under 2l & no pets. Models NE\V Plush office Blilg .. 2 :P.!ATURE couple would like 2BR, Iba, over ittl'aie, lease, 6~8224 or 213-1166-851).1 2 BEDROOM, NEAR NE\V Center. $160. 8-12-5417. only $7..,0, 673-1900. LUXURY APT. LIVING open daily 10 lo 7. See to"C' RM suit6 . Conference 2 Br wtf\Jrn apt or 1mall adulb only, Near the ocean, OCEANFRONT apts. avail Cpts, drps, rorccd air heat Laguna Beach 3848 2 BR. nev.·ly d e c 0 r a 1 e d . 1 & 2 br., furn. suites or our larger ad in Ille apart. Rm. Xerox copier. Near houllf pre.fer beach 9 re a ro pets, 6i~ v.·1n1er/yearly, plush 1, 3 $185 mo. cau v.•kdays 10:30 Quit>.L Pvt patio. L 0 ck e cl unrun1. suites. S2!E. to Sl50. ment section. O.C. Airport. 8.13-3640. 645-2241 Costa Meu 372.4 & 4 Bt. 6Ta-14CM. to 1:30, 645-039:>. "'•amge. ~1atun.o adlls, no h BANK of Cosla Mesa Pla.ui 1 BEDRM. apartment, nice S Cl t 3776 ADULTS, no pets. Like ne\IJ. OCEANFRONT ""'Is. Cpl pl't'r. $2ffi. 5-\8-1922 2 S"'immlng pools. 24 r. OAK\VOOD GARDEN APTS oftlce tu r n i 1 h e d. Nice nelghlx>r!, $140 rent 2 O 'Z •-WEEK A UP an emen e B 2BR, 2BA arl I ,.... S\\itchbrd., ulils. pd., elev.. 16th at Irvine I . B .-Quiet . Lg e 2 r. . . • yt> Y e ast'. 'YEARLY 2 B 2 Ba, C U ho & rm serv elec recepl. area. $85. 556-3900. Ba umore. Apt. J.i. H .. • $6.50 Night & Up. SPACIOUS 2 BR close to Dishv."Dsher, disf)05al, patio, Secunty. Pr1va1e b ca ch . N Sho '· 2 blk k!l . sd hp .h . ·: , 642-8170 2RM I ~ "--· H ROO~J & bath or apt. near d R -~ he -" VIEW NO g•~•e ~ill L'AA ,.,,...,. Pool. Lounge. Game room. ev..'JX)J'I res. s its., s M en;., patiOs or ,~ .... 0 R 0 0 m mat o, lo o c, .,..,.., \V . .........,.,1 wy., •Stu lo&: l B Apts. ,,,...,ps, "0 " • ~-.. ·.. • vr.-vo•o ~1 ocean S'2fi0 548-8912 or balcys & much more 1 -"""uu..:. N.B. Short/long trm lse. ocean, have cl\t, • TV & ?>.laid Service Ava.ii. PETS $210 mo. perm . $180 PER MONTit, Lg l 317~uco!~~~-y~ ~ltaguna '"GT~ . ' share 3 br, Pu.rk Newport Utll'1 pd $105 mo. 556-8315 6i3-2413 e Phone Service-,,.~~ 4!b-47&t. BR. Cpt5/drpS,. b It In s ' l.aguna DELUX.cE_2_o_r_3_B_R_.-nr-. Op!. maid serv., opt. tennis. ~~ nllllh o u a e .• F4 ""'o . 607.,,.3 C' D M 2,400 Sq Ft/PC H ELDERLY V.'O:ll&n wou Id •Children&. Pet~ .. ..,,, Apartments Unfurn. dishwasher, relr1g. ll30 Vic-Lido Shops &. beach. Cpls, ,..,,-eves. -l ' &: ·M~/2nd F\oo~ $700. · ~: like room &. board In your 237~~ ~CM tarla. 979-5099. OPEN HOUSE Sat & Sun frplc, dsh1vhr, gnr, yrly Js.e FOR LEASE OR RENT Cherie Adams. or lrade Jor ? 557-3062 home al $200 mo, 642·3945 Balboa Island 3806 LARGE Eastside 2 Br, 10-5 Neiv, Luxury 2 & 3 673--0343 2101 E. COAST' HWY. GUY 23 deslrea roommate I ~"-"i"'~'""i-'"'-i"'--,= Ftm,~11 GfH2D~S ::;1°~n GRAND Cnnal 2 BR. Bltns, cpls. drps, bltns, pool. $165 Br. Town ho mes, wide -',~B~R~.""',-Ba-. -b-ik-to-Be-,~,h ;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;; ~~~. ~r i::m~~. ~a~~ I ~B~u~1-ine.;.;;.;•~·-R~•~n~t~•~l -~44~50-'--B""-u~si_ne.;..;•~•_R __ on __ to~l--44-"50• adult Stttion. Pool, no pets, W/D, Frplc, $300. mo. yrly. Adultli, no pets. 6i5-5800. OCEAi'l VIE\VS, Corner & Bay, Frplc, Bit ns , ~ Coast Plaui Call Rog er 11'7 E. 22nd St., C. M . No children/pets. 673-3328 BrokC'r, no rec. Solana & -SO. Coast Hwy. Dsl11vi;hr. ne"'•ly redcc. $350. -afters pm . 545-8181 642-361' 807 LARGE l Br on \I/est B1.1y Laguna. yrly. 6i:,..38JO EXCITINC llEW COWClrf! J. Balboa Peninsula 3 St. Cpts, d ..... Q. bl Ins. $15.ti. OCEAN VIEW 2 BR l ha AOUtT L.lll[SIO( UVlllC FEMi\LE room matt> Io NE'"\' d ted 1" 11 y . .,.. UNFURN Apls, 2 Br, 2 BR i sh·-""le 2 Br Apt on "'" ccoru " incl. util. No pet!i. 675-5800. upt., lush gardens, lhls IMAUKtSACamo · cu<; '·" tum. 2 bl' npt. idt>al for SUPER DELUXE Brokt>r, no fee. unit separate [rom nui in \\'estcliJr area, small pct •8accelors Penln. yrly $92.50 + halt 2 or 3 "·orkin" '""""Plt> share 3 · frpi OK. cull 6·12-2152; 64:J.-9060. n util. non smok"r -0ver 21, .. ,,..v · BR. 2 BA, patio, c, $200. 2 BR. 2 BA Quti.:T. bldg. $29:1/mo. 494-1035 or R ' Linens & cleaning servlL<e 513 A \Vest Bay ,Ave 194-560? PAR\( Ncv.·porl /\pt , 2d (lla11, • 1 BR , 2 B eves 6~1023. days &G-7580 1\'kly. Util pd. &.12-1241. Balboa. Days 88&-4832: evC Crpts .. drps, bllns. clos.edl"'""""'~"-''~"~·==C7.== only S:l29 1110. tei1nis, t>tc •2 BR & Den \VORKING \\'Oman to sbal'W! BR " pl " 1 962 0721 gar. NO pcls. 2126 Thurin, 2 BR l ba \\'HITE \VATER. 640-8777 niornin"" or eves F $ 3 BR h Co i l 1 uu ex, enc. ganlgC, ..., Bi~,...:,772 VIE\\', decks. frplc, re.frig. ..~ rom 175-$435 . ome, p s rano no pets. SliO. rno. 131 E. l\l 0 rl''f II Ly . I nn. hach. SINGLE ridults. no pel s. 3 $265/1110 '194-23.19 81\YFRONT l ~!'. 1 B11 on area. Non smoker. 493--2612. 21'61•.;t,,;~~,r." house A lin backf . v.•1ru11 kilc h., gar .. _ cpls. & """'1,-'==°"'7,C==----,,,= mRin b_uy, pvt_!bch. v.•/plcr Mesa Verde East & Adams bet. 3. ~ I &, 2 Ba. t yr ne"'" s~o:;. Lagune Niguel 3852 ""''l"'o 61'4 540 1800 =oo===~-~---I · clrps., $1Ta. 9~1J21. al. mo. Eves &l0-4161; 67;M;488 "'""" =-i: .,. J l iiiiii.O:~:·i:ii~~iii:;;; R ~f~1ATE lo sh r com· Lge Fully furn '2 Br 6Pi\1 Sl'UNNING 2 Br. 2 ba. l~t SPECIAL OFF'ERINC OCEAN FR Q NT plush, ----· ---· Jortable 3br, duplex. col). Bltns, \\'/\\', drps, ~I. 1 BR Futn/unfum, yrly, util nr garden npl. pool. SJ95_ TIIRU ocr. 31.~I : Free rent unusual, 3 & 4 Br, v.·iolcr MESA venienUy located nr Bch &: Adlts, no pcls. $190. 642-9'J20 pd. S21:i mQ. New port Adults. 710 \V. 18111 SI. mo of Nol'. 3 Bd nn c_.ondos oo~r~y~e~ax~l,,y~, ~61l~~~l~40t::.:..~~~ I Nwpt. 5'1S-7746 l:XTRA lge I ,r., 2: Br. $16.1. Beach. 673-7219 eves. • reduct'd to $32:>. Children SPACIOUS. Sep. 1 br. frpl. GARDEN SHARE 2BR apt; ma I u re 4 Sl.95. Red&.1lf'ftled, uev.· LARGE J br, J blk. to bay m! 2 B~-dLO\~~ S~50. •,11 OVl'r 12 In adull pk, undi>r enc. i;rar. blk. lo bench. Stti. APTS ff'm 25-35; $100 + uUI. Ofl'l} Ideal far 0;1rhf!lors, or ocean, utils. Incl. S195. . g cp · rps, · 0 pe · 12 sep. but equal complt>x, Yearly. 673"'5760 979-3343, 6AM·i :45.AM Of art adults. 199.l 01urch :H8-9633 mo. 6T:i-...,..,.6 eves. t\r. llarbor Ci'nlf'r. 5-I0--44S1 Tenn is &: golr men1ben;hip 1 -'==~~~~-~-2 3 Bdrm ...-~ ;i__ 5:30PM. ~ '0 ' 121-2 BR 2 "-/d ·1 N i dlx · NE\V 3 br, 2 ba. \\10.lt>rfront &. t., L•~ ... .,.., "°~~0-,.~~~--.,-b 'J ' ..... cpts rps, ava1 . ew rg v1e1v urr nnt.I B l ti fl;fALE 25 to 30 to •hare yrly. C'OMP. FURN. 1 r. npl. Corona del Mar 3122 dishwasher, bllin. 1130 Vic-3 br. 21; ba , 2 pools. central apt. Lease $485. nio. u I ies i-"'• n s' 1 blk. to hea-", ••-••ht $il35. 1\dult11, no pcti;, 131 640-5866 lanlldry lacllilies. Rec . ..,, .. ._. lf1ov•er. 646-7883 DUPLEXES, 2 br, 1 ba. $290. loria. m ;,im air cond, !pl. 23821 llillhurst 1 ----===--~-room v.•/pool table, gym only. Al 6T~2'l8 or 968-4456 NICE 1 Bl' dplx. Qull'I. Sep. 2 br, J ba. $270.. 3 br, EXTRA Lrg dej"xe 2 Br apta, ~)U(TI~:U4~17~ 1 f~.e Y \'EA~!. l~v~~112 ~~~~Ba, room, sauna, pc:·~-Adults & leave menage. by garages. l::mployed adult 2 ba. sm. All w/garage crpts, drps, bltins, No pets, . 0 ICC. $280 tn 673--0709 only, no pets. 2881 Bristol, FEM to lhr w/1ame, private m.'l!.r :::i, no pets :>IS.1021 & recent 1 Y rede<'Orated. $190. &1&1181 Ir no answer, 49'rl6Z5 -~,,-~·'-'"~0''-""'-'.:.=-~ Cosln Mc~a batll, bedroom, kitch prlvl, STU"NIN'(', 1 br ••rd•-apt. 644--6800 or 644-7326. BACllELOR $125. ulils. pd. Hav~. !01U<'~i~1g ytiu want t.o 1 BR Olpt, !ln1alt, quiet, ~ 751-4117 s lo rage' 9 7 9. $ 699 aft '"' 0 " 1 21~ B 3 br 2 bn $205 2 llr SL'll . Classified ads do 1t blk lo v.·ntcr. girls. 110 pets. 6/wkends Jl'J(ll. ri•r mi .. Slgj. Adultl'i, EXTRA arge 3 Br, 8· 1 "-, ·~ .. ,, 's'°'· ,1; 0 ,15 • 11.·ell • cllll NOW 642-5678. $185. &15-66M =~=""''""'"°"""'~"""=I 1.ln \\". lll!h St. Brand new! Frplc, i.hag· j~~~~·-:~:~~~-~~F~~l ~5~~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~~;] O.J:RJSTlAN M. Straight. On FtJi!N 1 BR Str Al crpl, full y draped, all ne1v 2 BR up!1!t1in1. Cpl!!. drps. -Bay, Own room $ 12 5. '1 • : . ,), J s 0 upplns. !\lo, lo mo. or year bltns, garage. Nenr acc. ~:JJ?lS • re "v 673--4556. or '152--0100 Mr. l\il.Chcl'lr S!2"·~·\dut~. no IPu~e rron1 $,t00.67~30 $11::i. ino. 557-03ii0 ,1 STAR. GAZER:"'~ 17 J Kelley. po •t.1§. 348-:n 1fi; .,.1~102s ---,. . '"·· r <_.•_._ I ""'°'""'"""---:,,,-== s11::i 1o S1JO. l&2 Bfttriiilt!l'IJ. 2 Bedroom $250 mo. 2 BR DPLX, ndlts only. 110 ) ~.1,• DyCL~YR.l'OJ.~r.: u•~" /;.,_,_ . . l\IALE Roommate wanled, J\1a rure ridu lt !I onl \'l . PatlO!t, ~nrage. pcl11. SZIO. + S75 re.Cund / .. r "'"•.11 Ji.. YowrOai!,A.ti,.jtyCiHd• ~ i.cn.lit.'t ~ sharCl fum. 4 br, ho u11.c fil.'r 1;"~· l:tl \V•. \\"\l!IOn · 646-9:l}3 or 6T:r-0993 Jiet!, & clg dt>p. ~.'U19. -~A,I . ., A uordl~e lo.Iii• Ste,., oc;; 11~1.... :l l'lR. To1vohoo11e, frplc, w/pool A view. 640-4741 4'.!6 A . Cd!\1 i"i::'"-;;"\::"':;'"::::0"'-~l ~ . .>> •·"n.Jl. To &welop ,...,,ooe ,tor So1urdcry, ~U6.73 froni $250. I Bit, from $195. I h 2Bft. l)(~Jl, t.!00. mo. ~ -cacm, 3 br, 2 ba, 2 gur'8., nr. '' ~"°zrd'COl'~•rig lo~•• •·1t.-17 Pool, tennis. continentru WANTEnf lD ~!"~1 ,"rahomg ,' f'CllJIY(m Dmf' " BR, 2 BA Townhouse.. ii;t.orcs & oUices. Adu\11. Jf fAutus ofyour ochoc: ... rt .. 1•gn. il m e o s ..... .., ~ '•==;;;;83.rs'33:;:;:;:· ::;;;==::;J s111)11.ck>u1,190& r.1odcrn.:.1~9.19o11 ,l=""=·~"~'=Ow~ner~·~'-""""--.,..11 ~~ M•: 10 j{.i!~' ~;~~ ~~~ =tt:~~C.'lo~~1~;:~ in 1-1.B. $150. mo. n1y I ""'Y· tno. ;,.,,. • SPACIOUS 2 Bedroorn 1.1nil, I" u .. r~ ,H.., .. :#1 ' JJe.-.... tllwtJOr A: tine bellch. &$.~2ml RESPONStsLE female O , 11.1.'\-1144 Eaatslde Costa ~li!:Sll. S140 ~~.r. ~~ ·~;;_~...wwi :;~<>rid itha[: 38 1 .r;,,, ~ .... 7 w 6 /aame, Justo few words in the right place ••• ' Dally Piiot Clo11lfled Adi Dlol 1he dl,..ct line 2BH. apt, South or l-ligh1\-tty, mo. 543-7864 II" •, 64 t.,,,~, 2 "' 2 Ba F -N.B .,.,,,.. nr U\:h, uv. 11\)Q"";» d , ... ~ lMll'Q I.,..... •' • 1.1 0o4oo,. ""-'• ' '·" ... , • .,...... KING gal """ lo 1 ~. crpts. J1;tove, re .. ~. 2' BR. AdWts, no pet~. Eut· rhf 11,1~ ,, 1 1o. ... ~ ,....._ 2 Bd, 2 Ba, Uni. N.B. $500 Y.'OR . ·-ve )' S255 or $1G5 6 mo leuc. 2lJ. ~e Colla f\;1 <'AA $1110. 'll'<S,.:Juli"r 9 T ·~,., "'w"'~ 3 Bd, 2 Ba, U'nf. Lldo $47a 3 Br home to share. CM. 632·5039 GM-<1343. ,.1 .. 71 ;~~, •1 ~"""' ~~ 67,_8600 SlfJO. Incl. utll1. 66-86§2· NYCE 2 br duplex. avall Oct 2BR. Ea1t1kkl, gar. patio. 4'· 11 :~~·If :1 ~ .. n~~ VISl•N Jl,lALE or li!:male, to •It 1. "2G Aeacln. SZ5(), mo to sml cfilld/iml .-ok, SlSG. 1• ~..... • • .._... 7•0f 30, al)a.tt house HB, $95. mo 646-9300 ._,., -·· ,.... 15n.t ~CCIOPHOl'iotl ,~..,_,..,.. lncludu utll 968-5113 . =;,-~-~-"'""""'°"" ta n.. .,r_ 1&t_. 1,I"' • ':T" · $UPER PAO l Br houMI J BR npl, kilehl-n rum. I~. :~~,t,J.,., ~~I ~:'l::,n. ._. I MATURE man dllre v.'llh ln Jt\1 jungle.-~fuJt att. mo. Adultic. "'°children or1J§2!~f£,.~ i•Goo .,.,. ,..,._ l ·*-L~A-P~A~R~t~S~ll!~N=N~E"""+~ I aame -Nf!w mobile home. SDI. yr. Jse. IH2-9fi66 . fl('ls, 54&--4133 ~·r"~ fl~ :':~ AOU•atu1 2 Br. unrurn. All eh.-ctrlC. 8·~ art.er 6 p.m. 642-5678 2 nr 3 DDR)f, I bl.k. bch., Dana Point 3126 ~,.,,_, »It u """ J•"·19 ~ F'l~i«<'f'. H,.ntcd Poo l . PART tlmo roommate , ~=-::=:-:::::--::i::;:,.-,"1. frn. or un .• oll or f' stwrt. ----------1 ~~t=-~!ri:'..u ~::.t"' 1,,'.11 ~ Adulu. $t85. /.i up. ~·~~h ,l•N·shr "3~t::' .,.,<146uplex 1•·y:rn )'(IUI' 1(111 clubl into 613....t5.\\ or 'P'..>2-0100 J»ANORAJ\11C OCEAN VIE\V ~""'-s~t·nlto nr....... a.11:J1.)p(.1; 919-~ nr D<.: • wpt. _..,, 4 :-;tt'rw. ~U lhcl':' ~·Ith NICE --.Ar 1Bdrm! sun 1° 3Brdbplt>i.:, 28' ltv rm. jt.~ :..'"'"' 861....,.~ ll.ft_5' ,\rms.« from ""'If oour1c RF:UABLEJ.falc1hanlb'o' L"""' -.. l l•l>O $70... 11..,..,.. ,.KIS ev j ~ o.lly Pllol Oa..uted dt'Ck 10 single n.onned lady. S310. mo. Adl1•. •93-TM7 pr ~'""" Sit·•• iie 21>132 Santa Ann AVt", n11t. Stopa to bi.$. $150 Inc IWld UM the money lot • .Rl!l11. SlOO. 673-677'1, 6#-0J9l-''=96-:...:2'~1=1:.....~~---,-~g_-J:r:.:..... ~~~:_ :1:~.~,1~-'; SAN CLE?iJENtt. 1 BR.~ util. (TI4) ~1. ; ltneot Clll NJ..!MI ~-2 \'EAR Old Chnnnlng 3 NU 2 Rt, 11,~ Bn twnh•f', . ~1G.ol t'O\ • .i-()1'!~1 12.n;,_,. -film;~ l'\n·n-·SlSO. . RavrMmteth!Jll"l'JU"Wl Stll ll'De..b~---ttft a...Da«y nn. -3·~-w/pallo. fple, ""!tmr. bnfmty. sm. ~ ~ . , ....... 90 ~· 1dcni1orrhaturearretlttd, flf!llt aa.ulflf!d ad• do jt Alot CluURe4 'MI. &0-6611 S41i. 11H115. mo. ~!n-6:134 or 673--tJXI -----'-------,-------•4!>~113 ~7--329-1 ~11 ·can NfW ~ .. ' ( l PRESTIGE LOCATION FOR OFFICE OR STORE RETAIL BUSINESS The Bank of Costa h1esa \\-'ill rent two prime locations ror r etai l stores lo mcrc~ants desiring tremendous t rafric with purchasing power. 1100 sq. ft . per store. Will 3lter t o suit business. Located in Bank Plaza Building. next to ~1ain Office of Bank. OFFICE SPACE 2.500 sq. ft. ~1,·a ilablc on 2nd floor of J\·l ain Office of Bank of Costf1 Mesa. Ca n djvide to suit lessee. All offi ces air cond. lclca l for professional man . /\lso, 1500 sq . ft. in 11unk Pl aza Bui ld ing, recently 1·enovated. All Se!_Ce_pricc.d to maiptain (irst rutc calibre of pr~lt tenants. /\n oppol'· lunlt)· th al won 't last long. Ca ll today £or apPOintment. CALL 17141 979-4200 •SK FOR Bor1 Smhh or John Walsh .- • • lu I 1 WO coll yo yea .... bac wil ID ... •1 Im VO Pi ... ~ No t;1 & sin c fO m Hi wit .• t' r • F"rlday, OtlObtr 18, 1974 OAILY PILOT D !;B;";';'"";;;;";;;;;;°';;Pfl;";;';;;';;;;;;.IGO;:S;;B;u:•;lneu;;;;;;;;Oppa;:;;;;';;;;;;:;;.IGO;;;S;C.~1;;-~nt;;•;r;--::;:;::~id~f:-J::-:'l 'I :::; HOUMCl~~-;;;~"'~:;;;:~-~1 Holp Wontod, M&F 710011olp Wan!ocl, MlF 7100 1H•lp Wantod, M&F 7100 Help Wanlod~F 7100 Help WanMd, t -·-- . A !l!pUSAND DOLLARS REMODEL. A.....,, 1 ar HOUSECLI ANING ·----------·----Delivery-Sunday Only uo us E KECP I NC convenk>n. CUit. &: 'new By 2 ~octd ladies. aupervbor, 3·13-:30 Pm. con&e. 25 yrs ~"a w * 54~UK3' * • OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. RE· w/llOIP exp ncc. tl:'° JNU1• • ~~~ RESJDEN. -OH-uo_i;,.._.-B~.'i'-."u~"'er~:·","'.~f~:-.. -:-r-o~l I ... QUlRES TIIE USE OF A LARGE STA· ~~e~~ '=i ~~ ! A Month Or Moro Is Vary Po11lblo · This is true with th• new Chelle ng•r TIAL odd Jo b s. F ree Bacholon. Ji13.n55, EXPERIENCED TlON WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. •TIU 49&-1122 Ml'J'." ~-·~,.!.t\I Tom A1.tt.c Leod ,1===-=-="'--.,,6060= BENTON WlLLlAMS. 330 \VEST BAY t-IOUSEKEE'PER'/ !na. . . ~DE~ GAMES . ~·~~ n1uranco PARTS COUMT:ERM AM STREET,..,COSTA MESA. TELEPHONE '"''"''•· e..uL "/"• !or I NSURANCE po l lc!H 642-4321 I<"OR APPOINTMENT. ~~'ti;J,~~n~t~o ::~f. C ARPENTRY·Maat~r Cr a.ft:sman-remodeliru:: • finish work guaranteOO. FREE ESrlMATES '911-31115 urt is clean e~\brtaJnment for alJ ages. 1, 2, or 4 can play. Yields of $100 a \\•eek aren't unusual for Video Games."-The Wall Street 3ou rnal, March, 197t. amtlyied tree. Shop around. X~lnt. pay, trin~ benefits, etc. An Equal Opportunity Employer .1.al. o\.'('r 40. 2 or mon:i Chuck. 17918 Magnolia F.V. ~ ln person JO Parts Dept. Mg'r. yi,., ref's. req'd, or....:mo OJSTOM Patin Coveni Redwood & Cone. Decks F)'ee est 646-1598 846-9495 CUSTOM carpentry cf all types, cabinets & . quality concrete. 962-1981 :"'248!. 6070 I! Help Wanttd, M&F 7100 He lp W•nted, M&F 7100 J10USEKEEPER Uvc in. ,._, • ...,ry I ' MIS•...., YIEJO· l ... P"'•Ts Newport Beach. i ><cbool I 11 .....," • "" """' CAFE"l"C.~IA Help w;,1ntcd, DENTAL ASSISI'. 01·thodon· children, Mn-smoker, sonu: WIWAMS '-$ 0 N S• 11 11101 M• pc .... , ... W-, , kit & cowitl'f', Dtl)':;, COlll: tlt· 1'hr. :ddC!. APl>l'OX . 4 days t-0$Clbh l'lCCCSii. privu,le n11 J.1atON')' Ue. no 283046, 11 833-439-1 a "'eek. o1·1hn. exp. ~·d. bsth & TV. Ref, 642-9006 Brid<. bloe1c A a lon eli Gl•l740 Ml1olio Y= OS.1700. $1 lu WE PROVIDE: YOU PROVIDE : 1. A U 'Locations 1. A sincere d•slre to operate your own full or p/t business. 58$.Qll St11rt $3. Ill . ~ ·., ilOUSEKEEPER Uve ln. l. 1 .. ~...., ,. • .., ldt, • .-......... CASHIERS tlepc'1id'g, on ex p. No day wk oH. Responsible 1 REMODELING, Pa t ios, BRICK BLOCK & STONE, smok'g, Ai::r '..'0-30. &12-2626 st cad y p e. r ~ on on 1 y , ~-•·s 0 ··m Add•'llona waJ1' & patios, qua I ' HOSTESSES --'"' "'68 '·-··· 0 ·1 IA'U\ ' n...... ' .. rkm··-"p, lio & bond-' Dental Chairsd Asst. ...........,., · --& ............ i. Cabinets, 6~ll66 Mr Ryan ... ...,... """ 557~ ' Must huvr r es I u r » n I t'X• Dtsirnbll' f:;o, Orting<' Co. H.OUSEKF:EPER Christion 2. 100°/e Secured 2. A few hours of Jnv•stm ent collecting Wffkly. 3. E xpinsion 3. A m inimum cash FENCES/GATES etc., p 3 Job Wanted, Fm a le 7050Help Wanted, M&F 7100 perien('(.', nea1 aµpe11ranre l<ication. &in1e e\'C, hrs. lady or student. Ute l\,'>C\vk. Build Repair Pa irttint/ epering 607 1 , & plea~'l.nt peNiOn:illty. A1>-_!1~~h1·u Jl S: )J~ 1 !11 cxchg. tor rn1. Ji boo.rd. 5-18-7631 evenings PRACTICAL nurse, age 48, AS~ I S TANT lll t,uia g e r ply in persuu: 1.;: t-: NO· S, Dl:'.NTAL Rrt·cpl. r .. r bus.v "'.>1~<~··1~'64~==,.-,~ct'.:c:~I CARP~R)( -_PAUrrrn:C CUSTOM PAINTING seek~ day l\'ork. Hon est' traulef'. co~i11er gtl'ls, f~ 15761 Tustin VIUage \'lay, ore. At leKst I yi· exper. ifOUSKEEPLNG, pl. t Im e. progra m lnve1tm•nt of $1995. -for complete-&!ta ils, C•ll Collect: REMODEL & REPAIR 1 ~ '"" r e I 1 ab I e , hl'l.ve a t.-:ir. eooks. evenrngs, grave ya ;[:T~n~>t~lnEl:;:~;-~:;:::c: [ ,0~ ,,,·,.. v.;,~ •" ,, 0.,1. •. l""""'' 0 .. ~ r...oo pr. i·· .. Exterlo't' Speciwlst. State 839-9408 shi!t, open full & part 1i111l" ' -...... ~ " ,, """ ""' ... .. s7.hr. &t&--3079 licensed. No. 251931. Bond· H I W d M&F 71 00 Apply Jack in the Box 3Sj i l'K'1w.li!s. Sotnc Sal.s. ll.B. 28..q Cabrillo. Apt. C, CM, * CARPENTER * ~;,.~tJngbUlty '.:;'· ~~.:: • P •nt• ' -E. "'" St.. CM. . CENTRAL SUPP LY ,...,"'° , ;i,.,._;.ii;. iiiiiiiiii=iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii1 (415) 574-1030 Busineu Oppor 5005 Lost & Found 5300 X l nt era ft smanshlirlow J;;w O>mpetitlve Prices A/PAYABLE $600 A1i'ENDANT,. exper, f oi TECHNICIAN De nta l Receptionist INSPECTOR BEAT INF LATION CALIF. ANIMAL CONTROL prices. -Robert SSS.~. 642-6005 . I(l()f'fe Free To Applicant graveyard shift. Good ll·•Y· Exr.11·rlrn1·C'd 34&-AA--14 BUILD A FUTURE . Huntington Beaeh Shelter f;•;l;t1;n!9;1;;;;;;;;;;;;60;;l;I, !~~~~~;;,'\;;;;;;~~~! Construct exp. Local fringe benefits. Apply Shi;ll D (S 11\VAS 1-1 ER \\'anted 83u Also Fee." Jobs StAtion, 1000 Irvine. N.B. h11111cfli~!f' opening tor ill· 011~'!1. Heachcon1b!"rs Cof- Nobod. y •·-to tell -u •"hat Edison St., 536-6$1 PROF painter honest work ,....., "v .. Ba. k t H Soc! ACOUSTIC CEILINGS ' " ' W Ec;TCLIFF AUOITO'R/NIGHT. dividual w/p~v•ous expei" h·i• s11011. 2S3:: \\'. cuast inflation has done to your AN™oALo ASSumisr""" LEA..,GUE Rees, I n t -ex t , " ~e ----nne1 Age-• Expe,,·,,-• NCR 4 2 0 0 in Central Supply, Involves -~ll~"~·y~, ~N~B~. ~"~'~""~~7:>~·---'"mily's buuina 'nnower, but · BY CALCOUSTICS estimate. Refs. 540-.-1...,., c cnv ..... ~ """ · II ' 11 h~re's a w':'.;; ..... ~ it. We adoption, spaying and 641-3913 {Mark III Center ) Full-time. Apply in person, 80 1. me het •0vy 1""1"1g· 1' u ORlVEP. offer ...,,.., ;; ~~cluslve pro-nautering infonn. 96()...2900 APPLIED, PAINTED J P·'-tJng ... -~ Th 1651 E. Edinger, S.A. Laguna Hills Hilton, 252ffi inic ro a ng s 1 · Part tllnc for dan~ stud io JUU ANtuAlc IMPO UNDED GUARANTEED D & '"" V.....-ow11 e 542-8836 La Paz Rtl, La<•nna Hills. 6-Jj..-0472 gram featuring the new pop ··~ FREE ESTIMATES Personality painters w I th "u EXCELLENT BENEF'ITS _;:::co::::__~--~-I top hot food<>, such as bet>f Gennan Shep, blkJtan, Male FREE GLITl'ER the personal touch. Since ACCOUNTING AUTOMOTIVE Jo,fEOlANIC & \VORKING CON DS Electronic Assembler s stew, spaghetti &. meatballs, Mixed Terrier, b g e I w ht• $5 OFF WITH nus AD 1971 CLERKS Req grad !f'Om high school Prototype wii'l'r vdlh strong mn••roni • chee·•. All na· male 4-.tt1.9110 Po I J·" ED ·1· A I P I Olf' I k ' · d · UO.nell-y ad«"erll•ed~braod•. Mix Terrier, Bl k /b r w, ._. EXTERIO R PAINTING. st1nJZ. ""&""'•' aokcounting or G .cert11cate 1+ 21 ppy ersonne •Lee )[l<·groun .. u1 rea 1ng . • temale l.ic'd, Ins'd, Rer s, Tenns. nri~ Y,Sls an recon-yr exp 1n r ~pa r .o Saddlebac:k S(·h(•matics & "'ilin~ from We set up Your Hot Food Samoyed, white, male 11tACOUmCAL * Richard 979-33l5 Aeytime e1hat10ns. Acctng ex per. automotive & diesel <.oqwp. san1e. Exper i en ced in Vending machines in in-Mix Collle, blk/wht. female Apr lied-repaired -repainted · · . ' pre!'d, but not essen. Salary Salary range s.t'l1·$1010/ Community ~uh\t>rini;: P1 to pt \\iring, dustl'W. commercial, and Boston Terr., b 1 k 1 w ht, drywall. wall tex, 642-STIS PAPERHANGING &: pron-to $450 or commensurate mo. Apply Personnel OHic:e, I hl\1'nrss1ng of electronics retail operalions. You simp-female ting. 21 yrs Harbor area, w/exper. Ncv.•port Be a c h City Hall, San Clemente. Hospital u:<sen1blies & p.l'-boar<ls. ly oollect the money. Fact, Lab, black. male Ce,pet Service 6016 refs furn, no 183281. 642-2356 otc. Good co. benefits. Cull * 492-5101 * 23561 Puseo De .Valcn t"ia r-.1 1 ltt>sl'Hr~·J~. !~10 South we guarantee that you will Howid, red, male JO Ca h t CLASS Ext/Int P ainting. ~11'!1. Neil , 833-8450. L8guna H1!111 Lyo11s. SA. lil:)-161.ll. collect. at.}~~t 1,•hef., o,ver, Mix Poodle, black, malo ~N'~hani;t,,& Y&::ijlst~ Paperhanging25 . A);97r~e,!~ A/REC. CLERK AVON EQual Oppor. Employt•r n1/f1-Electric Cart s & your invesuin:nl irs Cockapoo, grey/bge, female tardants.) Degreruiera &: Spray, ( yrs exp r ~'" 1 Years eash posting c.l(per. -Grounds Maintena nce year (assuniing you follow Mixed Beagle, blk/tan, male all color brighteners & 10 PAINTING-Int-Ext. 15 yrs Lite typing, 10 key by Chemical · 45 Or Over our direction~ or v.·e buy Ger Sh Hair Pt Pups, Liver minute bleach for white local, reft, free est, St.ate touch. Live City <l)f Irvine Need Cash For 1 0001 FREE Apply In Person back the machines. U you & tick, female carpels. Save you• money lie no TlS22, 642-0238 area. Call 540-1880 ext 9 tO Jrvioe Coast C. Club will devote u minimum cf Mixed Shep, bl k/brw, E 1 o 1 Christmas? AAMES "··~ H N IO .... _ k Ill by saving me extra trips. * 10% DISCOUNT * q ua P p o r tu n t y 1600 E . ....,..,,, wy, .B. ""'"" per wee ' we w female \\rill clean livina rm., dining Wallpa.,..,.;na & Painting Employer. All po s It ions B E I show you how to build In-Cockapoo, grey, female .,. ..--... '""'" ""A" open t 1 f al If You're ambltious & en· W't'au of m P 0 Y nl ent EX. SEC'Y TYPE dependence for you and Husky, grey/wht. male ~50 & ~ $101JS, ChaAn);' rm15• Free est, Call ~ 0 ma e or em e. thusi_aslic, you can s ! art Prof-,('"0_~?""D,·"~n I Girl o{c-varicd duties your family, while taking Mixed Ten-ier, grey male .,,. ' cou 1 • 11' • *WAiipaper H•nee"* A~UNT~<;i CLERK with earning money immediately "" ,..,. v=v * * * Inventory Control the bite cut of inflation. Mixed Sheep dog, blk/wht, F 15 yrs exp, is what counts c REBKO 646-2449 brains, .ability 10 use 10 as an AVON REPRESEN-*** Typinc Invoices Min "°"lS 32 down tenns T . bl d/whlt 1 al not method. I do work • key adding m a c h In e & TATIVE. Mo·t people. flo••e * * * Phone arders · ..,.,. · ' emer, on e, em e myself. Good ref. 531-01.0I. EXTERIOR • INTERIOR t~ter 54~96a7 "' • CHEM available. Call Toll Free Cockapoo, black, female C /C 6019 Your choice of paint. Ref; "r -.. ·· fun too. Call for details: • Sport5"'ear Manufacturer 1.SOO. 432·70'13 or write Mixed Husky, tri., female ement onc{!te Neat· Lie· Bonded. 979-3!00 AP. ARTMENT ~1anager:-25 c·540!!!!!·!!701!!!!!1 . .,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!...,.I • PURCHAS AGT. Call 642-3472, N.B. C.A.B. Enterprises. 1 7 9 3 5 Cats ' ' uruts, Costa Mesa. L it e ~ TO $25K EX PO B a k er y Salem.dy SkY Park Circle, l r vi n e, Calico, lg hair, male CEMENT Work of all kinda, *W~LLPAPERING m al n tenance, giH-qening, BABYSITTER my ho n1 e "·11nted. Full time, apply catlfo.rnla 92707 Orange & v.·hite, Lg Hair, Reasonable, tree estimateSi_ .NO WASTE "MAC'' 548--1444 etc, Reply 10712 Kalt':ila, own transp. 3 Children (2 Prefer Oil co. raw pet r o 3111 Marin<' Ave. Balboa RESPONSIBLE PERSON female Call 6Jg.;.33'25 Patios 6075 Anaheitn in v.Titing only. sch!. age), Mon 1hru ~· chem. purchasing exp er. Island Wanted to own & operate Orang"&: "''hite, Sh hair, F CUSTOM Concrete Work APPT. SECRETARY 7::.> to 5:30. H.B. Oak V1e\\' Subslantial position. Party 1-'".'.:'..:'..------- candy & confection vending Kittens. blaek/wht. female Patios, Walks, Drives, BRICK, TILE.. OR CON· Telephone, p/time. a-9pm, Sehl. area. ~. wk. Ph: willing to re!QCate, route. C.OSla Mesa & sur-Orange & "1\ile, male Low prices60c-70c ft.645-8512 CRETE PatlOI,~ qual. Our office CdM. Xln't c'4c::.7-~7~82'1~.-==---~I rounding area. p I ea s a nt White, female C?ntr•ctor " 6021 workmanship, lie & bonded, l!alary to persuasive person * BABYSITI'ER, · grand · busineltS. H:igh profit items. Grey & white tabby, male • 557-6563 w/PR or sales exper. 1nother type modem sepa· Can start part time. Age Grey & white Tabby 1'emale Platter/Ropolr fAn 833--3656. rate apt + board & small CHEMICAL E NGINE ER To $17K or experience not imporl'ant. CaliCalioo, mal!ernale HOME Improvements-Addi· 1 ;o:;;,=~------selaiy. 2 girls 3 & 5, English 0 _.,_8 c•-& ~~. lo co, e ti h. od·' b d ----------·IAREA DistribUtor wanted. ·k. d. "'"048' ·~-· ~ ~ b T bby 1 ., ons, n.rm ''" suns a e 0 1 ~o"" spe'l 1ng must r1\'e. U'tU' Upco•"•'"" party to 'advance $4795. ca.sh investment. For Black/ rw, a ~ .... e paUo covers, benches, etc. PATCH PLASTEtUNG ppor. 0 eam up 10 ~ " . ..,, details write & include your,. Brown&: black, lg hall'~ Brick planters, walks, fire All Types, Free Eitimates per mo. p.lt1me. )Ne train. BABYSJTTER, after school, into supervisor. Some expcr. Pbooe Number. Dep·-nenf Assorted Kittens & Puppies rln Good ark !al c -1• un.....C!-Call for intervw 639-fil23. my home, North Blu,!f .. 2 in process control prtf'd. ou·uu g, etc. w • r --~~~!!!..~~~~L.,.,,.,,11 .. iiiOiiiiiiii~;iii ... iiiiii P.M. -:l p.m. Mon . F r 1 . RC"locatable. BVV. 3 9 3 8 Meadowbrook LOsr 10/15, BEAGLE male, prices. Free design & est!· Plumbing 6078 ASSEM. 'BLER 644-6636 aft 6. Anaheim 776-8120 Rd. Minneapolis, MN 55426 tri-color nr Ad a m s & mate. References. State Lie BABYSITTER 600 No. Euclid •. Bu.hard !J62..64l3 Reward No. 1'00&!. Phooe meeve. & L.R. OTIS p LUMB I NG -Al NEES C M 556-UJIO F /C BKKPR TO $1200 Outstanding oppor. tor indiv. \\'/good 1vork background & exper. Top exec. of N.B. firm will rely on yo u r abilities. AAMES 100% F REE Bureou of En1playmcnt Agency f'.ostu Mesu 556-1100 2706 Harbor B!vd. Suite 201 f\nahn1 600 N Euclid 776·8120 Org 2 City Bl East 634-1222 ln-P rocet• lllin. 6 11io's ,e.xpt>r. ln ln· Pt'UCells. All eleetronic in· spection. 1\lust know color codes, blueprin ti1, schematics. Xln't co .. henents includ('S 1 wits vacation 11Jter 6 m o ' a. Ouilltn1as wk oU w/pay. , Gt'Oup ins. st::trts day ol hire. Many more. Documentor Division Addressograph Multigraph 29'21 S. Daimler, S.A. EquaJ Oppor. Empla}'er INSURANCE CLERK Agricultural t r a d e asaocia· t ion has opening for clerk in accident &. health ~ gram. Ty pin g , figUre oriented, goad trlepbone voice & banking o r i~ §U~ exper.L !l_,e~p t ui .p Spanish s~ w/Mex· lean dialect would be <Ill astiel in this posttlon. Salal'y co mmell&Ul'Bte w/erper. Xln't fringe b e n e f i t •&: v..'QI'king ronds. WESTERN . GROWERS .. ASSURANCE TRUST Call E. P. Panley For Appointment DEL TACO ' weekends, Ken 642-1770 Remodels&: Repairs. Water II\ Post~~~~e·in. ~ ~Harbor E ,, [j] GERWICK &&m,Bldg Contr. h ~l'.'era, dl1 p o a -I s , Apply.in-person f 11 1811 QUAlL ST. ·FOR SAL !iiiiiiii""iili""'iiiiiii'iili~'~·~~ 0A:,:d::.d:::re=mod~.::.St.::.:.:l::.k_B_1_.11~4321= furnaces, dahwshra ~ VOLT BARM~lD, Days. nitcs. · u i!HJLD CARE needed for FIREARMS REPAIR~ Few NEWPORT BEACH F~U!fTT-~l~'CQ1~ . .,,fiT.Hi0.11, 549-2170 M/C & BIA Complete Temporary Services ~alf'~~olfo; i:e~j!':~ Balboa Res\d('nt .. 1 child good opportunities. lmmed. 833-1314, ext 239 979-7817 Electrical 6032 Plumbine Service L I c . 3848 Campo.'! Drive IOAM-2Artf. 675-8996 openings. No exper. HSG !--=======~ !~~~~~~~~~~·[ 272694 546-4741 CLERK Tl'PIST 17-28. Hi School mat h , I___. 1: _P_o_rs_o_n_o_11 _____ SlSO_ ELECTRICIAN * Ol d RAYS PLUMBING f:ERVICE (Across from O.C. Airport) BEAUTY OPERATORS Some phone-"'Ode, PIT, s physics preielTed. Gu a r , IRVINE UNIFIED * A~_!:lneedLtATE * r 00 YOU LIKE fun . iun & Jobs-New Jobs. Service "•hrRepal.--~~alla~! .. ,,~a MajorNowMAedvalka11ablPelan Full oredp/tibome ~or N~Bly AM to 12 Noon. Mon. thru l>mpl oy. Start at SCHOOL oi5TRICT Posh Mancu !I manage in ca 11 s Anyttme--Anyplace. °' ll't:.l~•--~ decorat s P in · · F11. Irvine lndust. Pa rk $344 10/mo Excel opp for v.ith Vftlted interest. Select travel? Tired at be g tied """9829 mod I & R I 6081 We have a complete package area. f>t8-5212 days. ~1025 Jocnt•·on. 7'1 '"", Sat. •all•. •dv~'"'m~nt. Pa.id 'vae. AcceptiJ?g appli.eations tor. c downtobor'g,eve ryda y "~;,::;,.::;;;:,,·==~----Re e epa r of empl'"""e benefits. we , .. ,,. o··•ptnbl•". ~ " Free""0enl/Med. Tr"'-I. Subst1t.ute Te1,chora . lmporta in Soo;th oas t life? Establ'd. p ro p e rt y ELECTRICIAN-license no to.,.. All .,. l~·~=~===;;;o.-l.!"'"""'"E".~·------1 "•" I 1-.... K'--' ...... .__ ... _ •· Village (part of South Coast bacb 1 • ADD ·A· RM . Fr.:MOOEL & pay P wagi!S. 0111ce BEAUTY OPERATOR Ca.11 the 1>1arines Tb e n -=•u11UU ~" ·• Pla, pl ) ~ owner, e or, wa n ts 233108. Small jobs, maint & industrial skills are COl\lPANION/LlVE·IN, for Car eer C 0 r p 5' * music. Must have full Calif, za=,; FOODS ~mal~:.m~~:. ~Vt.t;.a~~ 1 ~&~re~prun.=· ~548--5~~""~-~~ 1 ~~~1r s~~~Sf needed. No followin"! nee. Comm e Id er I y Jo cly-visually im· 54g.58471968.9171. credenuAP·al.PL$31J"perTO~· _ l bl' hed Fencing 603I 'Equal Oppor. Emptayer guarn. 645-1050. paired. Driv'g. req'd. Non-Beauttful we! esta IS ClassiU~ , Daily Ptl ot 1 4!13-3474 BOOKKEEPER. e.\':per. in smoker. LVN preferred. Food Serv. Attend.. 2941 Alton A've. store 1n most d es 1r a b 1 e P.O. Bo • CM,,sai.26 NO job too small ar large Roofi"I 6082 all phases of ollice bkkpng: 586-2198 or 544--0799 6AM-3PM. ~ton thru F r 1 · Irvine 92705 Ne ~ o r t Beach area. SP READER Chain link our specialty :.o;;o;.;;;:<------IASSEMBL Y contracting exper. pref'd Irvine Indus. Complex. Call Equ 1 Oppor Employer 673--• eves. Open AM to lOPM P)Tamld Fence 548-9662 Lie REPAIRS, alf types. Reas. TRAINEES Permanent full time. Reply Conve ntional Loan for appt. 639-4214. a ' D~ ~;na':!~l:h Advice on all matters. Gardening • 6045 Free est. U c'd. Ask for ~ to _C"lass_itied ad no ~4 c/o P rocessing Clerks *Gardener s Wanted* Center. Established seven ;..~ ~·e~~~~: ~=~· BARRAGAN & AGUILAR, "T~l;~~al~l::...:-=-=~-=~609~e=1 1 18 Needed lmmed. g~~~ ~~~~~a ~~x l560, ~~f%g~~irif~n;~ ~ ~!~~ ~oU:.rnPa~uls;f:;~itig~ ~~ , yenf'!I. Flexible. 962-3121.. Call 492-9034 492-9136 Mexican Gardners with 5 For 1st & 2nd Shifts BOTIQUE Sales & Sewing, Conv ent i ona I loan pro-534-7187 534-3144 ~"'"i-1~...._, GIFT Shop, po s h location DIVORCE yrs Exp. Our ,Service in· CERAMIC TILE Works, kit., MacLeods Tempora ry exp on power machine, cessing background helpful, GEN. MAINTENANCE Promantory Point. G r oss eludes Windo w s. can bl.th, entrY, shv.T. pan .,e fp·---Biki.o+;..& sportswear, \Vrite preferrably exper'd in pro· FULL TIME $4500 Mo. Broker 552-8666 ONLY ~· 548-2049 from 4 to 8 pm. repair. Free Est. 494-2135 83,_1932 Classified-AcJ~i:r.-313, r;Q ressing loans for Frcddir 3 AM 10 ll:30 AM SEE OUR SUNDAY LISTING ~ E. 17th St. (at lrvtne) CM Suito 224 '42-1479 · Mort, T rust Deeds 5035 Completely teliable *G•rdening Services* l fi'54:;.0487~·tf,i!ce~x:l.Bmi:E'}~~~l'i'i~'i:iiii'ii"'::;';;;:;';;";';;;;\';' I ~D~,i~ly~· ~P~il~o~I JP'i.O~Bo~x-1=560=, Mac, Conta'ct ~lrs .. 8rcl~n1 Position ideal for o Ider 673-579! H & Co ,_,_ CERAl\.UC 'I1LE NEW I. Costa Mesa, Ca 9262G at 963-8321 for furthr r in-iierson but age 00 barrier. PREGNANT? omes mmerc...... remodel. Free estimates. ASSEMBLY, pump repair. BOYS formation. l LOANTS DUP TLO 80"/o Caring, confidential coun!"!l· :~~j'.,_~rlnk!n~~!.,. ___ Free _ _:,s!!:!:;\'i"'!;!:ri~ 1 .~Sr:_~i>7""::.,;'";;;=";::;:"m~e~,~5.16-;:'-'242S=~1 ':naerce h~ ic!1e ::1;U~d:_ee: o r Eq ual Oppor. Employer ~o~·~·s& ~c~:· in~fr:~~· P~~ J:~i:S -rwM ~X.= " St Oa ns ing & referral. Abortion, EXP. know bow m a i rl t , * 547..a878 * pr i 0 r training nec:essary. GI RLS COOK, Experienced jani!orial exp. prefe1TCd but Also, 12AM-8AM. u:6 Baker ""' "cdAoREptio~ ... _t36keeping, AP· c J ee nu p s, t r t m ming, Kitch, Entryways, Bathrooms Wage open. Call 557-5400 P aper Routes Open Part-Time not nee. We offer gd. pay, ..ocs'~·~"°'=ta?,'•~-~'==---1< 2nd TD Loans V"" renovating, 1~ndliCaplng, T •-•1 6092 for appt. In Laguna Beach in The Rigger ins.. pdhe. ~c., A""-ur,ity .& JANITORS , REAL EstateTra.1ning. lndiv, call after 4, 96&-3486 op_, ASST MANAGERS Many Locat·,ons. 16 FMhion Island, NB. ether nc s. P P y in NEEDED! EIGHT GOOD It> instruction. Personal attn. LAWN SERVICE SOIL t'OMPO ST• Betwn 9 & lla m or 3 & 5pm person to Mgr. 3141 Harbor QUALITY PERSONNEL 0 C Sale. Or bro•-r •••m ,., .. -•TOP * Due to our present rapid Ca ll Mr. Lambert 1 E 1 l .iB~l~v~dioiC~MO..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii Low est r1+1s range o. wks. Acade~"" 54s:Jt92. """" DEPENDABLE •MULCH * REDWOOD• expansion program v:e are G42-4321 Equa Oppor. mp oyer " For full & part ti~ •'Ol'k Settle, Mtg. Co. BURNED Otrr FA M I L y ~k~~t~t • Cl~? Call 586-6930 seeking energetic & ag. Equal Oppor. Emoloyer COOKS & DRIVERS, GENERAL at a modem facility in SJC. 642-2171 545.0611 NEEDS H ELP'.'· •··t Schools& gi:essive young people. who BOYS & GIRLS p/time. Over 18. EarnPlxtra LABORE RS Goodl\wagLeadm"· 8 ~ ,,_.t ..... Harbor area 24 yn. ........,. THE Money Seven-O>mplete 7005 wl!lh ta progress quickly. $$$. Apply Mc n 1'.:ds iza, an, '"" """'""• .e verything. Donations ap-Garden Clean-up , Tree Instr uction -If you prove to be stable, The DAILY PILOT !tas 410 E. lith St, Cosla Mrstt, lmmed. Assignments. Top 2) Maids, 4--5 hrs $34,188.46 1st T.D. on prime predated. 894-9020. Trimming & Firewood. Ben. COLLEGE student g iv 1 n g dedicated & possess the routes open ln COSTA COOK ~S~·1 ~n.f ':JJor short lerm. 31 Janitors, 4-6 hrs Comml stte downtown, SJ * Palm/Card Reader * 646-8016 eves aft. 6 P 1a n 0 lessons. Beginners ability to lead, ns well as J\otESA, COU..EG~ PARK & a 4 · E T EMPO ___ c~a~l~I ~-~;3652~·;--- Ca.p!Jb'ano. $350. net mo, A~ 'ReJuction 10831 Beach Bl, EUROPEAN GARDENER and intermediates. Ca 11 to motivate people, your EAST & WEST COSTA /\pply N.fi~~OA T~·;po~ryTH~lp JANITORS incl 9% due :1 mo. Strong Stanton. 527-3406 Landscaping-tree service Brure at 75 2_1323 or future is with us. lwJanage-r.1ESA. 642-4321 Dick Church's P/lu11e eves. Newport Sch land owner, 150'.1. dlst'Ount Social Clubl 5400 reasonable, 642--5329, 681>-1425 546--4478. ment exper. ls desirable, Equal Oppor. Employer Resta ura nt are a. AP ply· 17 183 Call 493-1153 but nol necess. Xln't salary BOYS & GIRLS 2698 Ne,vport Blvd G E NE RAL HELP Armstrong Ave, s.A. betwn Znd TRUSf DEED tor sate. ----------1 LNDSCP/GARDEN/l\1AINT DTAMOND & colored stone & co. paid benefits, profit Pick Up & Delivery. Van % Post Sod, Sprinklet'S, Cleanups, classes, startin& soon, by sharing incentive. APP 1 Y New11paper Carriers. l\1in. Costa l\'lcsa or P.U. truck rcq'd. \\Tork 4 & 5:30pm. phone : ~bid 3g, l{8'm 1<fi~nt. Authon9~~~i!f1'. SY.is&-Soil cd, 642-3.131 646--4908 graduate g" e.a:omnz.o lag i s I· betwn 2:30 & 4:30 pm daily, p"''1 to.1 Lldoc ls~:·,,Bal~: COOK. full-1lml', ma 1 u r f' includes gen c 1· a\ v.·ork .;:.-""78~· ~13~·=.,.7'-.,---J * 49Hl84* ... LANDSCAPING, Sprinklers, 538-7548, 96vv.i..,., Hamburger Han\let. 1 54 5 en nsu a. on.,, 1 · "'oman. 1'::.xper or 1\·jlJ train. assisling p u r c h a s i n g & J A ~IT 0 R. I AL company 2ND TRusr O~~ -. G&erme ~pclln~~O~~~ C 1 e 8 n-u P . Mafut. the VOICE, Plano, Theory Adams, Costa Mesa. See ~c~rorr aalt 1 lh6~ .. D1321AILY&. i\IC"sa Verde Conl'. Ho!'p, engineering. ~eeks n1en who arc cxpd • .c.c:.i.r~ xtrais. The Hale Crest Club Hawaiian Way, 646-4676 My Home Or Yours. ?otr. Hage~. No phone calls Pu.•v• or c "'" 661 Cen1cr St. Ci\! 54,~.;J~ Call 979-1100 in restaurants, part Ii: Olll l0% i£i.~% e:!.~t. h;1s limited r es v ' s. re· MOW & edge, home, apts I ~ 833-2320 please. Bring photograph. l~~Af PJ~::io~ployer COOK· TAC0.S, Pflrt·tin1c GENE fl AL O ... F J CE ,:;"~"'~'~· ~;l&-.183.';""'""'·',---,.,..--1 ntn.in'g. for Oct. 19th, 7:30 & Ind. Tree trimming A I'== The tastest draw m tne West. . . . · -567S nce<lrd 1n1mcrh11 tcly. iv/phone!l, s 0 in e bkkpng. JA NITOR. f/tiine. Mes a I~ PM. Call: Ben or R u th yanJ clean up. Jim &16-5631 1 · l(t • J , .. a Da\Jy Pilot Clas!iltled Classified Ads ••· •• .642 • Call 5-lt~9949. Type niin. ;;;, w.p.nt. catl Vl'l'dl' Canv. Hosp, 6 61 Lottlnd-Fudge at 557-7234 in CM. BULK COW MANURE ll....,114Jll • Help W•nttd, M&F 7100 He lp Wa nted, M&F 7100 COOK, l.');per'd, p 11 i m c. _r~o'!:.!'Pi>iP>cl.c:'33".'' :!:_,,~1~8'.',l~---l-"C'C;;"ii"ii'.iS:i:l.C'C"M~S4S-5585i';i~;.· =-I EARTHWORMS I.""=== · ---""'"'<om foe gu"t homr. G ROOM E R JUNIOR SALESMEH mo I I~ * 757-1570 * 1-' I _.. J·lrs 10am-6pm. &l&-6n6. f"t•n1ale. EXlJ(.'r. all breeds. S.vlcB'....:I W. ,G""'-on ... •_r_•_l_S_•_rv_lc_•_• __ MM_~ Job Wanted, Ma I ,,._ COOK/LUNCHEON Scissor finishing. 673·7772. . . i · * FTVE DAYS * GUARDS LOSf: 110ER KI'M'EN 6 o·-c·" ~ It All' ... YOUNG mAn experienced tn ALL SKILLS C:11I 6-12-7880 for intcr\'i{'ll' mo. chllds favorite, strayed n .c. w.i· ........ A. • r.o p ai nting, a partment lmrocd. Need full S: p/time or borrowl'd 1900 Bl~ Acc~ntlna 6001 calltoos rn a lI .Cmnplete ma l n t e n a n ceand con· COUNTER HELP )-guardsforOrangeCo.area. Temple Hills Dr. 1 O • l :f ,. ;.;.:i: home & apt. maintenance stru.cliOn aeekt permanent D:1ys. r-.1aturc adulls JS or Call 1213\ 4~:1:\Zj. S11m· REWA.RO 833-6677 d ays M·ONTH L Y boOkkeeplng inc. palntfng, ln;llde &: out, job. call Greg: f19..96n 01·t•r. 11--.~ & ll-2. St~r1 $2 f> pnt. !'.Ion th[u Fri. ,,...,_,,.. ..... evo. service incl. all taxes and remodelng,. redecorati11g, h M th Fri 0 "231·' •, c-~ · I .. u, """" reports. Gordon W a r rf:n' rug cleaning, 'plumbing, Job W1nted, 'male 70SO MALE OR F£MALE r. on ru . Q.»"" •. .,, I ..,.1\vl'l'nt·t" =<·ur1ty, nc. LOST: \Vht. ?ttale, neulered 675~ -·· carpentry. Call All Servlcea. ' CU ST 0 D I AN, hosp ~'x p HAIR ~tyHs.t '~'/l'l1entrlt> Dom. cat. Vic. Victoria P.A. ~a. · 546-3600/545-0.521 EXPERIENCED General 6 p1·~frrred. ln1n1ed O)lf'ning!l nccdr>d in husy 1W\V salon. & Placentia Sts. Miss'g. Ba bysitting 6008 Children's Nurse requltts for p111·t·tln1c 7·3:30 & 3· 1 lli'1:hcr pcrct·ntu~\' since 10/13 eve. RE\VARO. ----DEPENDABLE woman wtll da~ position Immediately. 11 :30 $:111 Cl<'rncn!c Grncrnl • ·193-231'2 ar1 i :30 pin • ' '" =i help your mrktng, !Ibo°'. ar W ll:lf. to "·ork In "'cl': l•'eld 1•o• ll'I l"l•Ji Ant.' 11 2' ''' ----·~;:~:,;·c:;;:~'o-~.,-.,........,--,.~ YOUNG Grondmother with other need~ Xlnt dr1ve.r .. Married or single. \Vith or without c hildren. ~ •. 1·ll "' ' .. ....,-~ · 11,\11~ .DHES.5F.:R. lt•·1·n,.('d 'io'OUND Qable tan I w ht TLC will tnke care of your $3.00/hr 49429zi ~i:~~ private u 1 Y · ~~ ~hop 111'slstant. .salary gu11r. Lost i found Age 10-15. Earn $21).$40 per week gelling new c~lo1ners for 1hc DAJLY PILOT after school and Saturdays. You n1ust be out ._r school by 3:00 pm and be nbtC' to \VOl'k a• least 3 dars per "·eek. No deliveries nr collectir~-. Trttnspo11&tior1 pro '' l d rd. <' 11 00,1( .. \St~. Equal 011por1uni~'· E1nplO)'('r KI TCHEN HELPER FOOD PREP ma.le cat anived at Corona b."by. NEWBORN~t YEAR. 'THlNGS" by Moose. Gen 'I Out of state training is provided, i( need ed , DELIVER\'~tAN. P er n1 .• J f>."6--1770. ______ ~ J-llghlands early Sept. Pl&.)'ll Ever\ing• & weekend1, $2.00 C8l'.l)entry repairs, plum· Secretary, Pt/o/4 Tim e W/pay $363-$46S per month. Room & board p/tln1c. Early moi·n drlil' I ur:J~p--;,10,her i·arr for 1'tllull .\lnture won1an wanted to I wUh ~s. 675--1942. per hour or $30 per bing etcd 642--5613 70 + t y p I n i , dlctaphone, of LA Thnl'!l !o C.'7\1. Nll 1 r 11 I l d r r n & $I C' k I \1'lll'k . oit huith . C"Ountrr LOST: Beige purse v.'/bwn. week.md. Please call nf t ' " ability to edit, and/or \\Tlfe is fre e while training. Upon return to your arrns. No M!~f'ct. :,111~t havf• i.: r11nitmnthi·r. r1011-1rn1oker. P"'J111ru11C >:andv.·1cbes & tttra~. JO/l6 at 5th & 6PM, 645-4666 • Af)A rtment Cle1nlng letters. Front office op· ~Pf'nrl. rnr. ·l;IS"'4i .i2. l 011 n trnn~poi·tnTion. refs. !lllladi;, 4!' Hr ~·k. N\) Sat Or~nge, HB. Keep n10ney Exceptional Services at t'a.ir p·e a ra n ee & personaUt:;. home, you are guaranteed $2.86 Clr Jnore l)F.LTVERY' !El\. crtrly A:.1 I S.30an1-3p1n, ?llon-Fr1. Sat. n!t.e or Sun W!>rk.. No 11plit . re•,--ntents. 96'.l-8788 DAY & NIGHT, fenced yard, Prloos. SJ6.4662 557-.8071 atl.3 . b f IS h th V l I Tin1es !tout<'. fr.ii a !\l~~n op1iuna l, 1·all uJt 6 pm . I shi ft~. Clean n1odt!111 lunch •, " !..::. ..,,... u home J.Avtna care per our or ours a mon • c er ans o ~I dk 1 •~ hO LOST, S50 Reward, ma 1 e .. ,y • .. ~ .... ~ • H•ull~ , 6051 1~A.CTla!CAt-L,. NII~ xwcll n 1 ht an:'n. Nn collcctln,i:. Al11>1t 91)8-9:'~'9 .c0t.u11c1. 1 e 11 ~ ~JI , Golden Re t r I e ver. "So.1 ,,,,,.,-,,.--;~:'7.,,,,~=:-;::---~ ... ol ,,.~ all services make $3.32·$4. 76 to start part-ha~e deprnd. t·rir 516·6127 iT o TE i.. ~IAtns. 1.·xp .. y<•ur 1:11c.ririt ~1>P~ IJnd~l'R ' , .. -·· A Info pie.,. cllll WILL M Babysitting in niy CONSTRUCTION & tmsh wonderful patient 673-2413 or .;.i&-17~0. j rflun<l Jflh in lJl,unfi. Xlnl 1, uu 11 1?11.. 1n. ,nr of th0e :::;;<:::;4°2• "''•.-M•-t hOme.•-Ncar Fairview haul Ing, lite demolition ar673-e570 time. Non veterans ages 17·34 & healthy. DJ<:NTAL 3~istiuit. At lt>asl t'CliOl'l 11<wkuu,: •'OnU. Cood 1uy \\01111 ~101', un 1ri1~r ,..,~u er 54 -~ H-pl'•I. µ--·-·' ........ ...,.... .__ ---'~ e•· r eas . ""--"""""'"'------I 1,., ,, '' c•·••t 11,., ""••P f'OUNO ! At an• s engravei'.I "" "' .. ...,mR:U .,,,,_,' 11> '::',,~----·12~"""'v-...... · PRO.F'ESSWNAL Orange Co. Veter ans to age 44 . 2 ri:.s rflairstd1• 1 xp . t-:x i-:itlar:<· • •1J>ii. honui;: & 11Uld ', · ~ "' ~ ''" · rd .. ....o.ttrnr be....i Vlc · Cabinet Ma k ing 601 4 U'W"'O;,J Interviewer No. Super panllC'd tfUll<'~ 1\-/.t hanrlt'rt v(ltat1ans,C11114!\-l-119ti put;c: c.ntt>r .. r~ti• ~fNiit. W Wl."UU r. '"ti • LOCAL Moving & Haullni Markets. 6 7 3-2 413 or rl «:_ nlistry. ~.JlJ:ll!~ll Nigul'l. H (I U ~ECLEAN£R \\'anted i\~k for A! Ca~brtra. • oods CoV~Lagun&. lkach C A RP ENTRY, cnblnets, by student. Large t r u o k , ·673-95;;;:~70;.......,-,,-,-,,-..., 4!'1.J·4GllO <Jr x.n-1a:.11 ' 1 ;-.1011. \\'cd, t"'tt 9-l SZ.15 LAB 'f.ECH LIC'O I lTlol) ~ · ~$m woodworkl~ home ~1'1$nable, Barry 531-1235 ::EMA coll <k u s A ·RM" RESERVr Dftnt,11 A~iic.tAnt Chi1ll'llllll'' hr: 01,·n ll'l,n.~p. Re 1 ~ I P/1i111•· 1n large pc<11a1rle FOUND~~l' ~G er"'7fn· rtpain, rem@Cl ng. NOJOD YARD GARAOE cleanu(>f. ~._ art~11!~ w:~s ;of'i~ • •. , -f , C-.~11 !'O'l\·n, t';"P''t' d. :1 J);n·.~·] -0~~2'1~. y1\lup. !~5-1670, ~tf'!I .. \tn.h!~ ' Shc.phetdm • ~o A too SOJ&il. Free est. Lou remoYe dirt II'ttl iv)', Interior design or ph ot o . ll-.)pn1. f:.aln ry Ofl\'n. 1.IOU SE KEEP1'.'H, \Vant \,f''.(:.\1. ~rl'ellll')•, ~X J•d. 8 n d J "d t 8 napo l·I.B. 675-6739. 83+-1299 dr1vewys, a:r8.ct1ngs. 08'7-2666 6"·8490 1un Tuet· Sat Nev.'1lllrl Cir. f.10--0300. 11u:1l1hrd ho11.11ekt-•:pcr, 9.;i, n\atul"t' r11t lKlle tllX Att<imE")' , 968-9824, ·c '°'' -FOUND 10 ...... Pu aeof •rp•nl•r • ' • Hoatlnt .. Air COftd60$J DAY WORK-. ...... c1.... 213/635 00 54 714/544 9410 0 ENT" L A";' I. 0 I. "~•·lrl.<7'-:\113 '" ''"""' "'""r. """"'~ Bicycle. N.B. 6l?)i.3'D6 attl!I' MINOR HOME ,REPAIR lng. Rel I ab I e t Tranap. • Or * eh,11u1d1• '''!X'1'· r-.ton thru H OU·~ EK I~ t:: PF.;R. 'CQm: ill:c:,\J. St>1;rett1l')'. n1in. 3 6 p.m.. . PlumblnJt , carpentry, GRAHAM BROS:-546--tml 50-2419 e 541-9374 TI1~. ~11lnl'yn1lf'n, !1-17·l'j()7 Nlnkln. len1. Live-in. Mn l yt"or~ ~~p .. Snl. ~ntn r y ..,. .f'OU:-tO:..BJ!OWn Pe.kS.,cu W»tamlc Ule ~. 'F\tmiu:e repJattmt, waU \\ltt 1 IUIOC It~ l ... A'l.&.11~1.J'..)' A5-Y..ER..--H0UR:S-.E-Ak'°: (.714) S47·77.77 DENTAL 1\ s "1 s I n n t • 111nokrr. ~tu~! dri\'f' 91i2·~4 <11K·n, Ca!l 64:h10J1.. &t2·2'J30 .dog, Vic. M'atlntr &: 'Dov>et, /\LL TYPetl :U~· ~ •turnil& -ebildrenw 6 ncedlng help for --. li.cha1n11dc. "~P nr 1rni11i11R iiSKeB. . .__Eon~1n~n. Elder-I Lf\'E·IN llou5"kei-pct &tcon1. N.U. PICOJ(' caJl-§48:8500. ••Bi.& &. Sin:dI•* check. cCa.ll Gf.l'l' for n. TtAllOna.._ po,y. 642-3944 ~ , • """1,:.;:;r.tr.Mzrrr,LtHf.Jf1trl TV ·1111ly 10 lh~ 111 l · f\OOk \'lil1'116n, n\r(' .111.Cl'ft!UMI:$~ Cl.MS SEl:.LS ... ~ ~1~ ~&COunt ~ . CJ...A&S•IFIED ....ill .elJ hi !l!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!i!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! \V11nl A'rl n"Gl.1111 · •••• &U--5678 for ~11rt'le, S'Klti l\\\'I, (:T;r.1932 "•c;W-c.' m=~'-------' ; I 11 ' -. . . 8 D'1LV PILOT "' '""" Oetob<r 18..J974 r ·::-=--:-=~~~~~:--m;;;;rr:::=T::;::::=:-'iiiiiii_ ... ·-::::· • =~ ~~:~:2~~·;~:~·~:~:~:.~11~,~~A~pp~ll~•~n~<~•~•;;;•~1~o~M~i§s~<•~•i~l•§-~~ou~1~~~~~sc~o~ll~;•~1100V1~~~~~~-~1>1~M~u~c~o~ll~•~'*~°'~"~~~~-~·~~l~•"°'~Pl~~H:~~~an~S~•C~-~ :cR=,~=i~.~ U• R""""" .....,,.,, Now '74 Wh ite Deluxe "*PUBLIC FURNITURE :'UCTION•• SCRAM.:LETS • ORGANS 4 ohnl, $eldOm used. Solis ,. PROOFREADER /PASTEUP COMBINATION .mo Bll·cti St .. Suire 1~ WESTINGHOUSE ** •TONITE J :30 PM••• $.ll.SO. Atk:ing $800 or bit. "•"""" ,...,. &''-""' wAsHER & DRYER ANSWERS Rentals fr S5 •~3l83 • &l>-032I .its. IBM SELECTRIC II TYPIST Dlal A Job 133-0IJS I a1nve<1 to 111l:u1n1cn1 ""'llh no . (DEALERS \VELCOME) RCA cot.On TV. 21", rd. No Charge To You huokul'*! ! 1 \-enr '''u1T&nty Slng)e -Agile -Toolh -n......n NI hts "til f look'J. ?>tnplc cab. \t~ Id. Elll.MhliihOO l96.°"• I .tr uiM only u n~11~ EX1 · ftepossessions, Bankruptcies & Liquida tions. Clo\'tt -CET ONE -....5 , 1u5 30 5 1•• ·"":::;"°::;·°'&t:;:.&--OSSS;;:;;:;-,,.-,;-:;-;;-I • Need lo lype 65 \Vords per n1iliute accuretely, Know newspaper puge and ad paS1cu1>. Son1c proofreading esperlence ~elpful. -------<:C'lk-nl condluon. 5......, or PaJ't Listing: Outstnn•1ng Distressed blaple l t'('me1nbler "'hPn a !Jlort at1 til : , un. ~ * 23 '' COLOR T .y . I SERY'Ci:~ ~~AT~ ON ·~I· 1 hoth or mnk" offer. Pict~" Din Tbl w/ti, fi!l»:ple }lutch, B/R set, Tables, Nin a •~lnl nnd r11 KOl *Pllino1 la Gr•nd•* \\'/Remote controJ, $90. CllJI tt·tll'. i1nt u t ml', 11y5 on~" I rall nrt 6pn1, G'C-2600 I M ·r· BI R t L/R t h\~ for the -ice of one. N°"' n ... 1..1.win . Cabla. Chlcker~ ... _,.~•It. 6 l\fo11 Thru Fri, tJAO (X'r amps. uny terr1 IC se s. BC s, .... ""'""" .,..... ...,,,. hr h.> 1<it111t ~111>1) llnrbor r nr.TQIIT DAJ\tACE SALE Dinettes, china ca bl, d in tbls, tvs, stereos, fh()ij're~~ky to GET ONE for • ~be·r ·MKaw•,1"uKIAJ~ I OQLOR TV 25" Ztnlth. pctf. I Vlriv ~hell, 2500 Sun Joo· New Jlot110int R4•frlKCl';i.l.(lt'5, ba h" (urn, malts, coUee tbls, st vs, washers, 01 "'"'"'"'· ;;~ft· Solunr.~on,i M'SI ~ • cood. '" i • l • 11 d · $189. quh1 li d/~ llil, NI' IY 11 t) r I \VILIJhcrs. Dr••t•n;, 0 I 11, h . • ""' . *JI ALL 0 \V Jo: EN • cos-us;;(! • • ..:.in-G?l-8107 ne lCh .. dryers, bar stools, a/c units, mirror top tbls, TU1.jES• wa,y • Sto1'tly & Cl.ark· \Vin-~~~~~·ii!!~~\I _....:_ · '''nlihCN, l\e\V ii•:irr;.inty. law n mowers, 3 spd bike,. Lots of Misc. + Sorriethl~ u11usutd! '-·'&!, er • Wurlitzer • Yaiunha. SEflVICE Sia. S:il<.'!ln11111 & Credit, BofA, :'l.G2:3 \\' -.. M<J> N S t I = I J[trf J Jnbt' niiin. Toµ poy & frl nv.~ \Vnrner Santa '''!ij. neat• LOTS MORE. Items subje1..1 to presa1e. BOA stock o anlique « o Id ow J;uic 11 !.. •••••••• :>;iv lolt.-IJIJCI --.'\pply in person - I ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT tiencfl1.~. Jo:)qwr. rnan pr1'f'1 I. Harbor, 97S-2921 • & Master Charge honored. Food avail. c-loth'g .. acce111. 111 !he \Veal. ~scd fmin •·•·••••••·• ~ twint~ Full or p/!. Shell, 171h & C.E. VER!'.\TRON IC R;)n;.te. Star's opparel, old llne1w. lu,yc('I " .• .-••••••• ~ ' ~ I . NB MASTERS AUCTION n1atcrinls, crochet. lacet1 & Gr wklll " ........... $S!ll ~IO i ~· 330 Weit Bay Street, Costa Mesa J ~'" .'\sk [or Paul \Vard after 2:00 p.n1. ,_. " ~Equal Oppo 1tunily Employer- r'\·in<·. · · · 2 yrli 1.>ld. 2 ovens, xhlt furs . Mllitqg & etc. 1J038 :ORGANS* Ge"erel TII I S1L\A1POO tuu1\s11111t 10 busy l-..nd. f>.IS.2512. 20751h Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa Garden.. Jc. 81 QG "-'d ~ 11 d I-"..;...--"------••• •••• or 0•·•96•11::. • .. • U<ll w • ~"11 • llJlUllOn • D .. lAGED BOAT \VANTED Olll'r •• tor :; duys. s: 0 0 d Bicycle5 8020 U'WV"UUUV .,.,... ~ 63l}l583 Kawai. l\Ullballr Lownt)I • a""' Re~"l"mM tor Winter :.S:r~+, New11or1 Beul·h, "--'-'-;;;.;"------'-'1l~--=--"""'""'""'"~IOSO~~':"'""-~"!'"'""'""'"~ao~55~ I UI ANTED , ltodaer_s. 'l'bomaa. Yamaha :rojecr'Or y,•ant new hull SUNl'OUR EQU IPPED Furniture G•r•ge S.le .....,. • \\'urtit~r Gulbransen • too. (lni nislsh 6'13-6834 d &"¥ 1 Telephone Sales ' Coi t• Mei• Are• CENTURION ----r---TOP CASH OOLI.AR PAID A:.i!n. 6'73..'l6'J:9 • '· • ' Fulls Assembl~d -SEARS 1/7 PRICE GARA.GE-SIDEWALK +'OP.· YOUR J E\\'ELR-Y, 0 ;; .. - -::-::sEO -. ev.u. PART TIME EVENINGS SALE \\'ATOIES, ART OB.JECTS p.,.wi ._.._............. C~R 10' 5 hp Johnson, 99 95 Box Spring & M1ttres1 __ CE' l.ow1ey Sputet ........ $195 -"'" ff • 5, I Sat., cx.1. 19 GOJ.D, SJ • , .... R SERVI , \\'urlitzer .SWOOt new St.fl u"'-"e o e1·, 0\1'ner Work From R~g S119~Q5 a R~ .Sale I 8:00 a.nt. to 5:00 p.ni. I 1-~INE FURN .t: ANTIQUES. llaninio.iJ A-100'. ••••. :·:)ave 6'1!-5308 Your Home GLUIAFREATNIMTEEE T11·in ...... s1111.ii S 89.88 16,CIO' R&N~O.RI AONF'G... 615-~a'.Xl 0 * WIN FREE * l~~ .. wo1G1c\~ oo~;;~ 81lfl• Top Commissions Full .•...•. S219.90 $109.88 h < r.. I PUBLIC AUCTI N ORGAN LESSONS .....-: ..... s. oo ... ._.-. or '* Sj8.T3\l * Guaranteed 0 A'i£en1ltly Qt1t_'C'n ..... $209,gj 513·1.88 BAR~~Si\~~ E J\l,\N\' JT~1S 01'' 1-~1NE FULLERTON MUSIC ' canoe '84·9006 E"ual Oppor. E..'nJ"l'"'"er $10. LAYAWAY $10. Kl_ng ··:· $369.~ Sl!H.S!I ALOR ESTATE JE\\'ELRY, ART l8l9l E.'uclld l-'Qwitaln Valky 8oat5, Maint/S.r. 9020 ., '"u,: ~ At these 2 locations only! 1' urnnurc, C1utn1n~;. a BJ EC T ~; ANTIQUES, · · -·-. with . outstanding, attractive Adults personalities who enjoy working with ,.. kids. Start at $3.50 per hour. Phone --Coron<J. dl'l i\lol' Bike Shop &urs, Roebuck and Com-Ap11ham:es, Books, 'Juys, Jo~INE l<'URN ETC PllONE 5S7-4836 FIBERGLASS TELLER 3323 E. toast llwy., Cd~•I pony. Adams at A1<1gnolia, Spcn·ung CoolJs FOR INFO & BROCHURE. 122 N. llitrbot', t'ullerton Repait-any klnd·big or GT5-766G Hunt!OI,-ton Beu.ch. 962-n&I. \'UU NAf..1.J::: IT~~. 6~5-2200. · 171·1805 small. Your place. my \\'11111ed experienced Teller, I Stokes Spokes 270 E. 17th SI., C0&la Mesa, Pl'Ot:eetis to Harbor Area FREE place 592-Mll full tin1c. 224 5th Stre<>I, H.B. S.!0-5090. Youth and Comn1Wli ty GER1.1AN gf clock. beautiful n __ . M •--E -~ Please Apply 536-6940 Al'livity Pl'oje<:!s chi111es, $500. Last Ii copies Adult Organ Cl•ssts uvets, arln9 Cl• 7- Bank of America BICYCLES Sporu;oi'Cd by tne LIFE mag, $50. 0 -ga uge Now ai..'Cepting reservations, 1111'91 l\I · s 11 B Stock.Jn::nn shot> that has MA 8 TdTRESSFEuSrn' 'tu' re COSTA MESA elec 1.rnins. Good violin set, r--or l11fo1T11ation.plc'lse cli..ll 45 CAL. fuel tonks P &: ,..._n~aC'I :iL~?J1~1'ci:c>Cn e room 1 ROTARY CLUB $75. 120 base Ito! accordian, 642-2851 In Costa !1lesa, or S. ~O. ea. Windsurfer Hull ._,_. "" mo,-. 10 speed, 3 speed, S150. Cnll n1or11ings or eves 963-6733 in t•ountaln Valley. $50. Fibergla1111 prin1er $10 Or Bill Pl't<'rson :S sp1:•cd & singl1: ~pt.>ed bikes Queen, Full & Twin &?!~1 , GAiiJ\Gf: SALE! 112:! S.li. 493--1088 • Our int1U'uclor requests that i:ol. Anti-fouling $25 ga I . E'Junl Opf>Ot'. Eiuplo.vcr to be sold at dcoll'rs cost. PRICE D TO r..fOVE NO\\.. S ky line, Tustin. 5'14-3·UT. d I tho I I . t I 7/16 tumbucklei Slll each. _ . Volki; Cycle $1.lfl.9j now $100. ALSO a fn n1ous line of beaut. """ S .. " 1 ~··~ Hc<1vy uty V11cuu111 pump on Y SC II nceJ'e Y in en~s · "'" ,,.., .. 0 p \\' lrl sr><J 9• S90 King & Qu(!{'n BR furn to ..., pil.111,.., scylc uinp -· \\"/ 1'~ HP :i ph. Elcc. ~<l In lea111ing to play the ~~~~'-7~' .. -----.=•I TELLERS i\;'11 or . bikes a ~~\~111~ Ix> sal'rificed \\'llhlll next 45 9" battc1y_powered Tl/ Cor I motor $12.i. Rad11tl overhead 01-gan should take advan· Boat5, Power ,9040 ASK FOR ELAINE Doii•ncy Savini::s .t, Loun has 1 ::u;y ~\Ole p St A days · I canipei· ~. Wood o 11 1 cc router for t.1()()(1 or so f I U.ige • this free ofter. · · Equel Opportunity Employer openings in Its Jiunl in~ton , 1,:,'1~ ... uc,,•~,,~i·I arls Cct'S &16-SGSG &: 833-962.:i desk chair $30. Bohli adduig 111etal 5250. ~lctnl rnrk with Coast Music Service .... .. n1ach11K' ~u. Golt b:.1g allll S" cnstcrs 2.'.i" wide $50. 23' UNJrLITE • Ileneh branch for full & 831-1644 . clubs $35. Old fiddle with~ Dl-'<'p,' 48'" high. Cat11''I.ELD'S "·arehouse sale, 400 Fly Bridge, cstn1 w!llnut lntr. ".'HelpW•nted,M&F7100\HelpWanted,M&F7100 p/linic Tel.lea;;. Exp.cr.tiluv no1\· for Chl'isln1as & BIC.:~ Old .~rass Dbl BCd.[ "'<.'Ouin · case $-Kl. s 1naJI Oscar at 6'12 .. 1321 l:xl. 2i9-plal!Oti &.organs, DC\V & BougbJ. new $23,T':iO P.1ust i - 1 pref~f!l'd· Xln t iv 0 r k 1 11 ~ s:i1·c. V I ct or 1 a~ t..ov; .seat, Decca l.'llitar $3tJ. Old tenor d 54-1.3 ··-ig1 ts used Sp 1n e 111 , grands, Sell asking $11.200. Ca 11 • LVN, challengini: pordtion for .. PARKING LOT concht10ns. USED R b !It Ir 1 \'k ~Ir/Airs rha1rs, u nl o s I 'bunjo cleclric bass misc ays _, n 1 · pLayer,;. Goina-out for &1&-4187. perso.n 11·/supt'r\·l:"rv nl~lli· CONCESSIONAi RE I Call Mr. Ruppe · e 11 1 ~res .1 e .new. Atarb\{' lab I cs . pie-car 1;..ri_.; f.1an"¥ 111~s · SERVICE for 12, Goldplatc bUiiincss. rtental 1.1•/option ='-"19~7~1'--=s~K~l~P~J~A~C~K~--1 ty. 1'or Pi\1 J: i\oC sh1f1 !1 f .. lmrncdiole opportuni1y. 549-3220 lll'l\·~Ar>pt'Ox ! g. price. turcs, hunpi;, houdoirchait'S --' · \\-at'(! S25. girls white an-10 buy, Kawai, Steinway, 1.1•/11·knd~ oH. C.J'CAI wa~{'S [ 6--IZ-T&!O for intervit>\\'. I Equnl Oppor. Eml?loyer IO, ;i, 3 Sprls !-~tlngra~s-& antique cuckoo c Io ck. SAT /SUN * 9 TO 4 tique bedroom set, chest. Ba Id 1v In Chicke r ing , 20' Ope11 Looded, 16 5 HP & bc11C'f11s f('>f' nghl IJ('rson. • • l\I 0 t 0 -<'l'OSS equipnient & Com{' r;cc nl 2214 Port Antique furn & decor al o l' desk, nite stnd. $00, 6 k<'y Yamaha Kintball Wur etc '].'lerc Cruiser, I/0, LI k e Accepfini;:-applic:11ions at · PBX Answering Service -B~neh Cnti!<f'rs. Carlisle or call 644-5609. lten1s. \Valnut player piano, Or g a n w J b <' n ch $1 2, FIELD'S' 4114) GJS.znO neY.', $5900, 64.."-9259 Park Superior Hr;il1hcll'<!, Days or eves. Full or pit R~CY,CLEO CYC~ES 1',RENCll Pt'Ov., &Oft \\'ht. lg rollt~ 'dt!s", h84 'tree, 962·9790 12072 Brookhu1'St SI., G.G. 1969 LARSON, 14', S5HP l.wi Supi!1·)orAvl', N.B. Expcr prcf'd. EOE 54~1962. TRAINEES 6t;O \\. ~~~Jfwy, N.B. 9' couch, like nel\'. Cm. h:~ cab1net,,nurrors. BoQk· *PLUSH MAGNIFICENT Anti que f..fcrc .• trlr . $965. nnn. LVN. conv. hospi!111. :J-11. PBX Operator, p/time. E~s &ti-. -88 N3ug. fold-a-bed, rnd. bed. case, dcat.'On s ben_!'..h~~ CARPETING * Auslrian Baby Grand Piano Boat excel cond., ?iftr nteds -f'/timc. Xln'I benefit s. Call 1n!ckcnds. \\"i ll train. Call {21 10 sp&'d Rali~h Cran<l Quet?n n1at1/box spg hnnd lable, chest of drawers, PIC· Ebo f · 'h I t cond A work 846-4633 e\-es & wkndli · 61' ~, 9. \\'ill !min d\'t~ncl:iblc jX'Oplo p · I G 1 Bl "~1t" d Ch. ·, I ,·: · IW'Cti jcwelrv & many otner 250 Yards 2 tone green. ny irus • x n · · ~ , .ro+.> rix. rccn, uc. ""'·~ n1a e uiese s Ye 1n.11:hs1z~ ,·, .m; U> aJJ''cy behu·"6l' Surv>r B_!!l! ~res Interiors treusure for the collector DIVORCED, n1ust sell. tll"!W MAi Promotional Sales to IJe('On1e plascic injC<..·tion fran1es 11,ith xtras. 3 \\'<!eks hdbt'd. Nunierous o t e 1 ..,_._....,_ .. ..._ G-l'.!;22.55"/548'."654 & !lie -niu&ician. -----M..u..s t .. 31)'.....i:u.';~!('J Trowler ':~-.. ~CHINISTS molding operator,;. 1\-Iusl be old. ~scd .f~r cycle .tour by ltems. 54s-4464 Jasmine, CdM. £vestit&-2UJ w • sacrifice, at $795. 962-1605 Sips 5 flybrtcJIE! p'Vrpty'~---! ·'-'"al!," Po>rrtll~~~rf/:r~~~~ :.&;-; Co1nn1ission. 28 H.t·s a able to stnnd cntil-c shHl, ir En>'h"h \·1s1tor~. Qn~~k sale ROSE\VOOD Biu iv/Ktools, '?•\1-tAGE SALE . *DECORATOR THOMAS Electronic "-Un. Sl9.soo: Anne G4f>.,ST.J9 ' , ilt'~t-;;11d i<hlfl. 040-5..'lQG. t:tk.a~::~~~;~~o~~c~,~: IH'l'€'Ssar.1·. Ort.•ningli on :!nd __ a_!:.__5120. each. 4~·1-1~ -Lady Ken1norc ·.vf'.hr/drycr Fruit Jars, ~seq red bnc~. PICTURES* Overture 1\-ltKlcl, asv•~e1\'. I .;i;;C-"i;C:::7'ii::.'':ii,;'-':;:::;;:·I Pl6-17J7 ror interview. shif!. S2·29 lu·. Rni~ in 60 s r:..\ND ne11· N1~.1!k1 Olyrn-2 \\'111111edalc speakers, Uher 1nsulat.1on tdes, lJCuoa 'cuvang i\tlt1'0red rra1neli, Rosa1no11ds, lnsi books & l'C\.'Ords S39C. Bcaullfu l 44" studio * i•-AL•~~;~A~~~ng"1:"rn\~~~ REAL ESTATE days. IJ\I'. 10 .~·1'r>r~I bike. I boys) tapeclcck, sc1v n1nch. New tlepth gau+:c, ~~-'fru1nj)€L Super Special $49.95, Sho1'<!s cnri)honc & scat. $ll0. 2 ~~J~°d~~ ~~~ ~H483U:. • ~.~ l:£sA ?I-I 0 T £ L E x Pe rlenecd/Professional· APPLY SllO. 6~;i-18i8 binocu~p.rs, art 5: 3 0 P ni' ~u';f· ~c ~,:~~='. ~b~~~· ·lntetioL'S, 642-2253 ladies bikes $'7 ca. 2 2 9 6T':r0\ZJ. 640-0081 Brokers Only. :\lainlain in· Ol':i nge Coast f'l:i~1 i('s 1 All'n's 10 ~Jl-bik{' 25" fran\\' 6T:,..;i0;,,;i "~~ 1 a • e' GIFT shop openiiu:: soon In SierkJI, Ci\1. 548-f>.141.i =JJ>58°'-~TROJ=''7A~N"'°''2='~0."°'b~ln-.-1~92=1 MAKE SS AT HOME dept'ndcnt st;itus-in deluxe S.JO \l\•;ot l ~th St., "Arncriean Engle; i 11 {'I r WANTED nien :o li~li, china Cllbi~~· Costa ~le!;u, Let n1c sell se"winn Machine5 8093 HP lilerc vs interceptor, fr "th t t Cosrn ;\[l.'St>. Calir. xtras SllO 494-2990 Lovcseat/soln hedl:e clLJlper, a~ !11~: your Handn1<i.de !terns on •-· !l:la•ure trlrphrn1e sollrilor~. o rcl's \1'1 compe en -E • 8030 ··•·lo ~t.. Oct. 111 . 11 a.m. lil° " I ,. I fonn>• • . . xtras. 42.900. $2,900, ?i.fust All ai-enli of 0 ,.""'' C'o. !;l'<'l'<!tnry. Pl'rccntugc lease. Came ras & qurp. ill ~ood co1ru1l 11. t Lo1.1·ei· ~t. ~-MJ t.:.A'f. l.'011s1gnmcn ·. o~ .n ·VIKING Sc w 1 ng machine. sell, GiirSTG.I ..... f'or adcli1ion;iJ info1111nl.io11·I WAITRESSES \\'ill Pl!)' to SJOO. --tloncnl\DorLSat.)il,:r.1914 Brund new &till In case !~~~~~~-~~=! Call 17141 63.;...\87o rol!ect. 11-rite J\sSO<'iatcfl South I P O L A RO ID 3-IO l~•nd * 4'.12·8785 aft 6 pn1 * •TOOI-5~HIGH QU!'L'TY• NEVr'PORT Bench T c n n Is Comp. 1\W. ,Need ca s 1i BEAUTIFUL 17Ft '69 IMP. MALE \Van TOO full or p/t. Coast Brokers, P. O. Box Exper. Neat ApJ)(!urancc can1era flash, S{'\f-tin1cr, in· J.;:J t\GSZ bC'd & niatll'css, Brand . nc11r _inccharucs hand c I u b Jo~ 11 111 i l y T e n n I s $290. &12-989-1 lnb/oulbd Buick V6 00 Lido Apply _ Kl'ntuc:ky rri<'d JJ!lj, Nev•pon Beach, Ca , 21 Or O\'er ~tr. bookie!, cold clip, c:lo~ br::ind nu. Also. 2 sofa!!. tools l~uding son1e metric Al en1 bership. Sacrifice. S ti Good I094 Isle dock, S250 0. Call Qjckcn, 2929 E. Coos! 1111")·, 9'2663 Apply Surf & Sirloin up ~nil . ,r.,. tote bag, incl. lo\~cal. end· tnblt-. AliM". at &a1:agc we prices. Also 1 714 l 8 3 3-1815 1213) por "I _~ GTa--1483 or 675-0123. C41'1 ~ 5930 \\!, Coast tllvy .. NB all 10 hke llU cornl $70 .. , I 11 2. misc ilt'ITill. m 5700 ' N v 1··-I s ho 28' FAIRUNEJl ~llnL Load-IU-.:Al~ F:.r;;"rATE . · · fliShPs <'le. 1u or ;, · Sat/Sun only. 9Ai.'\f. 10 ;>Pt.I· .-· E\ 11 .... -rg a.s.11 •• ur ards. ..,.,..aO •£1.: ... a. ·· SALESPEOPLE. \\'hy no t WAITRESSES &!2-91J 4 ei··-;. afl. 6:30 64&-570-t ~f Mesa Ot·ivc. C~l DL'IETfE SET, s w Ive I . S75 . o~ best. 5.SZ-7007 or ed. Sec to appret!. •·~~ · m.Ai~GI ~TRAINEE work in the hot!<"St aJ'Ca!o>. Dinll('r &· Gn1vcyard. 1\pply CAi\lERA & CDa1,1k ,1oo 111 6 BEDRi\f. fu r n . Out of -H a.u" uphol. chrs, p e des I a I 963-5005. ~~14f~~~-Pvt party. F';ii' . 'Ihl~ btanch m<1n· 11unlirn::ton &ach/F"ounta1n / in person. Odie's fuosta1u· Equipm!'.'nt. n a t st 0 r 11 g e. so 1 i d o 11 k . orse5 V\IVlil Ne\'~1nar. Ible. $150. lO"llS:it~or;.e;;'-OR~o~s>tleR.;1;,1809ili4<s I ~~~~~'.!:..~-~~ a r. li.IUSC I <!Xpcr. 1r/ Volley~ IA't us train ~'OU. ant. 1400 Pnrific Coast lh1'}'. J\lonJl'..'r! or .01hcr e\-CS alt Beautifully grained. pc r r . Radial W.Tll SO\V. $2 0 0 . ' '• 2.'.i' Oy,·ens. Sleeps four. I-lead, fia IK"8..od. Cffrlld raise to Call Phil i\k•Nor'n(!{' 963-4J67 NB. JO. 5-l.J"".:si9. ·---'. Ve--a• al ""~. Qtl & TB mare·no papers, 846-3166 6 G SS Sho 1 -lley, tanks. \V / 1 l I p , 115 000 I I I ... v uu ... "" "' ........, I k'-'~ •. , .., I J...A. \\'Cases, x n t .. ~ , per yr n s iort I ml'. l ~~V=;t='"~"='~R='='=I =E=''=•="--\\'A 11' rt i:: SS t; S full & Cats 8035 'a36-8987 gentle or ha, .....,.,. :i D, -I Co-"' -" 3 oll . I l\·eY.'POrt. $279.). 84!>--1151 Jason Best Agency t\l':tlJ, filly-6 mo. }'a pc rs .. CA \l,'hi rpoo ·Air .,.... <.'Ouu, nre sh O\\', )e\\"C ry Real Estate p.1n-tin1e. C;1\l r or np-~S 01, A & A1 AT CJ{· G . availllble. S200. n~i-U tioner • .lor c~mcnt & ~lhcr l.YPC. 3 are ~per w 12 2 6 · 84RTENDER Cruiser, J7.00 B1ookhurs1. F. Vly c:BO\\TH Company "'it h pnln1n1rn1, s-tt-9060 SIA~1ESE RE.GJSTEP~ Lol'eseal, 2 glass cov'd. end ----------1vindo\\·s, 63'.lOBTU. Antl'quc i lBRS i;helves eric:b. $60 ea. dbl. ender. vcr')' 1ea .... nrthy. Sulli" 2L1 00.1-67i:i nc~·ly estnblishcd olfief'. re-\\' Ao~TED. niai-ried nu.1n z-1 7 11·rf'kc;, tx>a ut1lul. 227 Ibis & nlnlch'g. coft. !bl.. R E G I S T 1':: R E I) Quarter Bronl.e lrplc screen & and· 645'-1.nl S4.COO. Excel. oond. ~-1-8172 I""""""'""'"""""~~..,, quire.s salci;pcoplc:. Fulf!st or O\'er, mu~t Ol\'n truck St. Apt. J, HB eves. blu~ Y.-001 rug. All as new. Horse, Chc1$t11ul 0 1..i<Ung 16 iron~ 962.582$ !;~:~~~~~~:=~$~~~=;~:~! ?i;fG&IT tl'llt' 21·:'.0 $];,() v.-k )Ql.''1110 1;. 1,111d '11)Jl01lltil!l'nls. & he nv:iil. on <·a.J I. 546--0104 ANCORA Long hairs, Reas. :~l6-90JO lfands. Go od disposition. 1-'0RCF:J) to \'11c111c l'lllire ~~~ .. <=r~~~r~5:~ l\1r. 21:E::~~~ ·~~~:1~h: 67>S600 Ci111 aft !'pnl b<>auties. SIS. 979-8978 BLUf"FS, biuJ:uins. Cor11cr 4!Jit:l!H7 8070 npL 1'.:\0f'rything has lo j;O In . \\'AH E J.I o u ~ J::~lAN for or '1·knds. duo beds S7J. ; CfJffec lhls .. Jewelry 0111 fol' sale. Clo;icd Sun. · • • MASSEUR It.I-.. APARTi\1E~T .SALES: Au 1omolivl'/i\larlnc pa1·111, Dogs 8040 h•mvn 1:elvel 1vlng chair & ----01'Jl'n ii.Ion. Jl:': lllh SI., Apt. //}/}_ ••• -· ... f, AJJJ .... AJ F/time for n1Cn's !!pa. J\lust )'Oun~ra-~gr_es.siv e ofc 10 11·ork in rust-grn1.1•'g. hus. 011on1an. 61-1-013-1. WANTED i, MB. .,./(/~I(/~ be lic'd. Apply Tues., Fri SJ>Pl!lfl izing 111 11.1vC'Stmcnl j i\!ust he l'Xp'rl., g<l. phone • PUPPY WORL.D • F"llIG, 14" illlng. \Vhls., DUI. TOP CASH DOCLAH. PAJD AP'T sale, pots, pluncs, 11Jstic ,, A?if. ~'OP & cxch~inc:cs ni>cds •2 tXlrl'Oll:>litl'. Cnll f Or In· B \I T · L b l ' R Y 0 U I c· V A CONv B lbOa B Cl b highly n1ot1 v ule.d R.E. let'\'h_•ii·. r,1°'7063 u errt er, a , J\-ln pl e Bdrm . set., O t J.i::\ b:LH.Y. 11·a1c1·bc.'<I 5175. Baby lu111, ENIENTSkO"'IHC.A a ay u s u J (' fo; n1 () n . Fo1 appt.. \Vcininran<'I\ BuJI <logs, ~ilJ. l\tartinsville Pct"a n till s .. 8' \\",\TCl·IJ:..:S, AJtT u~r.:c.1·s, C'OUCh sa:;. SICl"l.'O, J BL t-~ .... -c:1, S£WING GUIOE FOR THE e;l2'l1 W. f.h611il H111· .. N.8. 556--0171 \\'HO \VANTS TO \\"ORI'? lluskey, Ch1huahuas, tiny c-ouch & tnisc 646-2693 COLD, SfLVEH. st.:HVJCJ:;, ! spcakcri; $100. Color 23" TV &_ ~-,, CAL ON THE GO. · ATVR~ '~n for pcu1 R•'' E··i••t· S'ale::r.eo'--·•-, DRIVE A C,\B! Po o d ! es. Pit Bulls, 1• 1 NG S 1 z E. w 0 1 c rbrd f.INE FUHN & .,I\ .. JQUJ:.:S. I $75. <'Ir. &1G-J!'.!)j3 A ~~ · ~-"' "--I I '"' " .. '" -~,..,.·n;o C\1005" h ' Cocknpoo. 100 i\fI X F. D " 1 • .. ·' ti--1 . '!.,,,,. F d · W W Id .1m~ lllJTllC~tic wr s ng c nc· WANT A CHANGE? -r. ycur ours, \.\·orA PUPS Sl"d Servloe >fo•t heater, ,bkcasc. hdbrd., 11~111 i>-"-'NU Fan1ous SHAKLEE F ood or an a 1n oman•s o r 1·c n1an. 646-00!).I for yourself. he :your OY.-n " " d r " n l y SJfJO SIGNE."D, S a n t a Do1ningo, Supolcn1cnts·1''or a g r c a t Cell PIN'llny 642~5671,, ext. 330 SS' r Coin mission boss. r.ren or 1romen. Can Brcl'ds. Roller Canaries, un e,r w 0 r -. · · Sh do ho "-' 1 I I 11 b I ·•• ,t.iv1CA1. Enginet>r or 1 .. L. · •-"-\ 0 8'16-2-182 • a w x, matcu= set. 1 feeing o we e n g. .... ·-.X>. 1censn1'l' "'°"-"--' be slighll,v ba11diea p""'! Reptil~ & Turtles. pen I R. Ea · Q;111an, n1ale or fen1aJl·. REALCO, REALTORS ,~, ..W G S 1 8055 Squus 1, 1ng, rnngs ·<1< &16-8314 ~T u:pcri<'nrc. $600/SSOO Neat . Clean AµJ)('ar i>:ire. Eves. 531 · a rage a e •. IJ1:a;.elct. Pvt pty. $ 2 o o o. -19-.. ~ai~LO~R-TV=~,;.,~--; ~Bo-l"t ' ;j;"r'"'"~1Qlllh lu i;tart. Cnll 495-tRJO (ll' 831-2770 Vts., retired. Age z, to 70. GREAT Da_n<'. l\lust. i: e I I. ALr OUT MOVI NG &\LE: :W-5SWi. aCtion Reming ton dttr rifle 'f>n ul Oniohunch'C>. 5-lti-4i100 Supplen1e."l ~·ou1· inl'On1e. good \V/ch1ldren. AKC pcd. ' od 1 P..i~·s Dri\"e a c:ib 6 hrs or more· 11 C 83 Pin ·; Apts 208 B 4 d_11ys only. J\1 cn1 urn, Livestock 8075 & 20 gauge nuto 5hol gun! Medical Front Ofc CCU'S I In a ) 1 • anhquc d~scs. c ry ll In I -scope. 49T-1153 * day. App Y oorson, 14th St. H.B. -'-and•licr, fine n1ai.~. »»Y M h. 8078 1 -~~=--~-~=ol RCC<'nl l' :o.. per. in book-Yrllow Cnh r:o .. 18S E. 16th "'' ,..,."' ~~ Misc Wanted 8081 k"'p'·-. ,ppointnien!s .~. St c~>a .J\fesa LOVABLE Old En ft I i s h fu111. BR scls, magazines, • • • "~ ., . . Sh Ct"pd-Puppies, Chan1-book• .• 16\IO GI •011 • ... ", HEAVY d">Y Va,.uum pump .ctn'! of<' 11·ork. 644-8722. Full p-1.in1l'. :1-11 & 11-T -... ~ " .. -• .. We ·Buy Dental Gold Exct'lil'nt BcllE'fils pion.~hip bac·kl!mun<I, $195 & Lagw1a Beach 4 9 -I • 6 :l 5 8 w/1 't:J lip, 3 phase electric MOTEL MANAGERS I ![~) up. 496-558:1 11{1 4 & 11·krncls B.\RGAIN BA S E Al ENT 1nolor $12;;. Radial O\'erbead Bridges · Cnllvns · Dc.nturt"!I ,, latul"l' ooupl>'. moil l'f'St1111c Good irorking c-onditio.QS .... _ .. __ ...,.. . . I --' ANY TYPE-ANY Al\10UNT " COSTA MESA _,......_ SHELTIEl"Er-·noND 1ni.\' PRlrES muter or lliuuu or soft lUCHEST pr-•-::ES PAID I: pholll' no. to C. ~fathc1\'!t. Memori·al Hospital puppies, R 11·ks, $5 to b'OOd BEAUT. l\lahog. 0 u n can n1e11tl r1;,o. ~fetal rack with SUNSET CO. 601 :'>lil·hl'al Placr, NB 9'2fr60 642-2734 EOE hnrnf'. !'"~!'-1().1 " Phyf<' din. nn set. Kenn\Clrt' 8d~nr'•.•','~~;'·h"•·g·h•• "s~d.•,G'."a·~ 249 Fof'e!Sl Ave, Sui te 5, Nf~t-:LJ 0111• rull 11n1c 1icrson. :::::::;:~::::::::::::;::::::::::::~ Antiques 8005 1 P(lA·lF.:RANIANS. J\KC. male l'lt;e."d1 ·yer. nc11-. Th-es 1.5". '"' " .J<J " • La 8 1 ( ho u, wll!in:.: 10 lr11rn (·:1 hi<' 1 i\lisc rm Clothrs \l'lg"S reduction l_)ox 111/lh l.1P..Jlf!Y.. _gitr~ l'l. n Ve gun{l m ,' ,. k ,. t i 11 ,_. 111 ... "l'd>rr"c. • ~ lO nio's. F"11111 c 9nio's. 1 • u · ll I , ·' 1 · ' 1notor. Light n1eta! shear lfa~nrcl 11oun; 12-3 Dally • '" RN 'L\<! < D\)·~, \\'•d Tl .,, til2~62.JI soH1r ne.w. ec~p pn 10 D <'sir•' 1•11· l11i::h 1·0111·! -.·. , ~ ;,. c · .1u1:.·1 -tnhll', shd{' pl'OJC<'tor. 11c11 .. 26" clctt\'Cl'. Call Oscin:.at \\'ANTED, large bookcase, pe11.-a tin11 rn'!·1·~~111·). C a ll i\J,•d-Sut·~.· iuiil \l-T:30,\i\l t-i•i, '~ .;it. .Oct. Hi. l1.1 . AFGHAN lug n1ach. lype\\Ti1cr. l\1isc. 6<!2-'1321, Ext. 27S days. wJll tr!l.-lc or ·S<'JI Spinet Prank Bry .• 111:....!:l:! r.::::.o._ shill, f/!in1l'. Xln't l~n<'fil~. 18, l!I. 10 ,\~!·.) P1\I. 1\lurhlc 5,,0. 10 good lrol~ll'~ ~II'(' l 1 !).j Sat & Sun. 1001 Alsuno ri-11-3417 nJgbts. piano. Cull 962-5994 top lh·c~~ci·, C ap la ! n s !cmpcrc<l d<Y.::. 61,r_:til L" 11 B ·?r, 1··!1 NEE!) :1 "U11H•11 1u1ni1•d. to EOt-~. Contact i\lrs. J1•11srn. Cl · c ff G · I ~ ------"• · · ·•·•'"" ;l.J. · GAS 1\·eldin;;/cuUlni; outfit, Musical lnstrum't1 1083 dlslrlbul\' Christ111a~ pro· Cn~1a i\IC''<:t l\I " 1i1 o r i :i I 111:~~~\~;~ ~11~;s' ll 1;:;~~v~TJi!~: B6in;\~~ ~~}~ fr~t~· -PUBCTC-AUCTION Pro undersea lights,• ljOO -(luct~. Full/pit. i\lr. Levi j J{QSpi t;il, :lOl Victoria, Ci\! D!'CSSC'I'' & Ii::<' ti lll_"ll.! i\.l1r-6i 3.-623:i ari. j i\l.\NY ITEJ\IS OF 1-'INE. PSI tcj l chilnWf!r. 5.19-oon GIBSON, ES..175-.D Sunbu~t. S$--j lj:i. G·l:?-:?T~I iu1-, Brt11dcd r11vc·rs1bl~ !lug, I ~ . J·:SfATE JE\VELRY, llP.T Mi1citllaneous 8080 mi11I condition. 11umbuckcr Nc1rs1wpo:'r C;irn('\'.~: 1 :lpprox 14'x22·. !)' :l rushion 01.D Enl!h!Ji ~lt.'l'JXlog-,i. 8 o BJ I!: c T s, ANTIQUE.S, --pickups, ebony fingerboard. RN-l VN-Aides IJivun. Aiin Cht' & ollon1uu, 11·c~k.~ old. Al<C. All shots. 1o·1NE FUHN. F.TC. PHONE RUGS.. Bm m!,x~ 1 3 x 1 3. Near-nu hnrd shell Cas e . GIRLS & BOYS IJco:111!iful hospital "'herl' ('f)ff"c tbl & oth<'l' mlsl'. S17a. 6:'1&--7318 J<'OR INf'O & BROCHURE. Green l:»tl4. Oval braided Cost $800. Sell $395. 831-9770 JO yrs & older good nut'S ing c(ll'c is 1op I itc111s. S<!c at 190j £. Balbo11 AOORARLE Eskimo Pup-645-220C 9xll. Xlnt o;rnd. reas. day11, 644-1156 eves. 11 r i o. r 1 I y .. X1n't .fringe B t v.d . at .. L. ' S t . pi('!!, '1o.KCN & ..:·011l1cd. 2 STOVES ~Ilse. furn, &45-7267. 2 S.G . Speak~r Cabinetl'I, 2 DAILY 'ILOT l~nrh!s. \ :ir1ous sh 1 ft s. !P~·n111s1ila 1 ,_ book. 1 .' Collon \Vool I: WESTINCJIOOSE dbl oven, 12" spi!akcrs in ('a c h. l 111pr<'"s Con1· Center 1020 11• c ~-· I rs for p A or .,· .• ,.,,·1 1 .• 11,· Bch. ,\pply·f •UBLIC AUCTION I Free To You 8045 Silk fabri<-'S, 1\o\dc Si!lec1.1on. e l e.c tr lc range t4 0=-' :,1~~. '·kn-, 0·• •' ''· ~ 11~·1 1 : u,,' UJ i\IANY !Tl:l\IS OF F"INE · IOAM lo 4.Pl-1, \V~. Oct. Smith Jrg c:irt'ia~c type. .,. ,.,_.. "" '" ' (l(' ".l . J::STAT1': .JE"\\'f':LRY AHt lFREE Puppies lo good 16th lhl'U Sun. 0 <'1. ~th. '!f"itc5Sl5.<;8-8.it2 117~ 31&,t St. NB. r:i\. Rl'hef .. \\'('('kcn~s. Da)"S. o BJ i:: c Ts . ANTiQUt::S I hoincs. Cockct/Terrie,r· + ?! 1717 Park St. l!B. u,e 1ide VIDID 1ape nlachlne and TENOR Sax S95. Baae $10 pt'r i:h1f1._,Ba;~1('\\" Conv. F'INE FURN . ETC. PllO:XI-; Cl\ll G.fG-.111'1. gate. camera all xtris, record TV gui(9.'t $60. Piatm SUIO. llu~p. f:lt Gl.-3JOJ. FOH IN1'"0 & BROCllUHE. I ;\!ALI'.: l.-cnrr.ih Shorthaired SUPER GARAGE S A I. E, progrnnll or make your Mwit Mil, 545-16!~ CALL Mr, H yd~ ROUTE SALES 61:i--T.n:I. Point{'r. 2 \"rs old. trained. Sat. Sun. J0.4:30. Ne \v 01\"n. 642=597.f Ofc. Furn. & Equip. IOIS 492-4420 l\'!11 Tr~h!· ~ilrit)': Coinm. BEAUT. & unu 11 ua l H~hrkn. GT.:-1021 r•l1 5 rclrig, bt'flsp1-et1d!l, lan1ps, ll"xli'' Color Ph:'rigraphs r-,~N=E~W-F~A-~CTORY l~.onus. \eht<"lr 1'un1. All h11nd..:a1i,·('(I 11n1iq. i·nz'OuS\'l \\'A'.':TED· n ~ hon1l' for tTi ueh n10re. lri:> Sandcns:tle mounretl or unmow1ted $15. J"OR SALE: Several offlcet 1-.-.p. Prl. F."<lnb. lluS & I .. c II 6-J r:o~ I . , . ' Dr Cdi\1 • 11 ~ ol hiJ,lh Qll!llity ore furniture. Rt'tllleh null1•1.~ ju~! fJpc!1111; 1<'1"1'!!•11). !\h•rl. L'<lvr.r:i~c. iot sr . 1~ 1 · · ' t'I'<'.~_. -u 11 ~ 11•). old. l.ll'aut, ·~ af· --· -·~ Cn · Desks, chairs. aofas, filCl'I, Iii\ ai·i·:'l 11,,,~i. .. lh•' 1.-,H"'' ui1;· 1'1 .. 111 "lir n•. J:('lil'i' :u !"ii. STOVE. 1r00rl r1hon1· boo1h. fnt'C. fPn1 , kll en ·19!J.22S1 RUMMAGE SALE EXPEilT Ca 1" p e l hlMall~ PI e t 11 r e's & ·clc. C!tll l\fill1! Tl'n<' SJS:1 11·k \'.,1 s11 .kr. I.n~·offs ;:, yrs. P11cka1'fl C>rr. 1\li~c" ~111 & --llilsJJ SE."TTF.R--Gd. th!t1gs cheap! f'1·l. & You1~·1nlnc, N!pnir, rel11y. 642--2fH2. ~'\'111rti 121 g•, hr j1fl.:J1JO. ~Ir. ·1:urkt'r. 7-9P1'1 Sun 71J \\~._J 71h SI, Ci\I _ -1 pu1'i•hr(•d puppy Sl!I. !!Ai\1. Re!l.r Of 19.t!l "A" 11 yrs cxper. 646-5815 EXEC '"'vi chrs $l5/2l, ~esnil'll Oricn LqnHI Op1..or. t.nip!f)y<'r in/I Appliances 8010 ---_ 61:1-~:,0,1 ~Vullu{'(.~ CM. , PENCUIN sailboat $ 3 0 O. secy chl'I $8/24, Ok!. 11cct, \Vin hit b~t.rl •bd l ecp hllD n:rt-r ni r ~:i. 11"11'ru'd ci•r SALES T\\10 nle(liun1 sized poplnr G~BAGI-., Slllc. ~ rl·Sti.t. :119 Baby furniture. misc. 1tctn.~. Ole"CC, 81i7 W19 Ci\f, 615-_74ll lQY,.19y, warm wtt11 111111 !Millaver. 1\JI hcill·fil s, 1"' rrPr pn~iCinn~. Al 0 0 E L 8 0 0 1' e 11 m o r c trt'Cll, yours for reinovi11g E. 18th SL Ctil. I\ Ilse. 11c111s, &ia.:.5989 · ""' ' · ..!. ' Crooho l hn.1ul•!'1l•n (11·ei1tflt I~ -~4-1 065 EST,MA TOR \\'nshl·r SlllO, t\l~lrl 70 Kl'll· lhl'nl. Phone 5.il-631$. fllshcs, nlc-nnk!i. nlnumt new -;---Larg s fbollrd Pets aoa~ "" 11Tt..ri.i-llTW\T.-fl't.lln lll!e1t llo11•n 1u Un« plt!e•. \' !'p:i o P" ti i n ~ 111111 TRAI NEE I more i1'fH1hc~ $7.1, ~ c b 11 , F "t 8050 cl/Jlhinl{. -e siO" COLLIE PUPS AKC, Sabin/ 11» "'Gtllold In:? <:ulor1. ~1110. ~ton B "11 r h .. 1111·1u·11v••, _!?unr ,r.,, Ciel, .!IG-!167~ -urni ure S A~1-0-•I . R c1' r I g, 6.)S-8684 • \\' h 11e,5 h 0 1 s 1.1•o rm· \.Q01k 1.·a1io,r. 1alh·r ln thl11 ~~1~~~.Q:lb:::.h{+~ .. -U;~i~of~~ Is 1ll'<'cl~fl r,,1• 111 ;1~~~'11~<' r.w ro111rn('t'i:; tii·n1 . 11u~ .. I Rent Washers /Dryers BEDROO:'IJ S1'.."'T. l\'riluut, tri. Dtshwosher, clothlnR".' inh1c. _CUCTQJ\t Pool tuble, et!, Champion line S75-lllO il.~:,,M ~:n TO · ~1.1.\J l>\tytf!~ 11lM"1 36 .. 12 lliclucl"!r.. ¥ • r t" (" 1• 11 lin1111<r 11n .. il in11~ 'J~ilh.. F.'.n /.! ;: . hk~rounrl. $2. \'."k. Full mnlnc. pit' drt'~ll<'r, klnLJ: hcatll)Oui'tl, hshlri lle111Jl. 17.t2 r..1tmrnar, "'-$500. 49.t-9.llUi ll.11.r•• :IJl lillllf'llAh• .. 111nl;ln.>: 7S CEN1S for t ltt\ Plll~tn i'M"r. 1101 ii('•""~ \\ill 1riun ~ "( 11 p1J.11nrn11•nt ('all : * 6.19-l202 ,, ni~h! lltand. $7J. ST:t-209.i _ B:i!bon _ __ 642·5!13I •tr"-" rlJr n ''"' <liltl011·11 Add~ t•ntM for tach pa\"-'11 y .& niaht Or<;nhi;~:.~rnll 7l l-~.-9l f.I 1-~·ftF.E-P ICKUP-Rer1 1\10-VJ~G .• llousefu of fWTI + G 0 0 Dlf.:S gnl{lT'(', Antique RUG. 12'x14' red. xtra hea"" A~;l.~~p ll~:~P~rB ::. ~\"!';:°;~,\'.~\l'i•~i~:~·r~~,;~t ~~..'!.'tf~:':'':t~~~~": 5f::~ • ~~tr~ ;"11· _ ;ltifl·. ''' ·" Sales/Gener a l Helper Afifll':c & &·rap l\1ctul •{·c'<'!!llSOl1('s & nilsc. Xlnt doll trunk. Stert1 lo'rkla"j. ~u\pltn~. be&l of Seo.;;, Ma-8000 e~ afl. Spm 111111 ~b··" '''"'· l~\S:. l~t.,. ..1 ... d"'liverr ll'ill t•kt Uirff. • a..1;u1 X' 9 .!: ·' r.r llh;'f! nian to 11tJrk pnrl Call aeylin\{', Gr.;...&jS cond. !k'JS.-0027, .!'.IF!_ Ca_!ooya, ll~nl Bc_h. •""' .• ,~32. AKC B' ·CK· -• llft;. l>t'1 ~11 .. 1.1•t. (b11tt ll7l ~.!_Ot, ,~"',.:... Sel'Ml0w, PIAl1~:c. I I I --....... -.rv'1 ~· 1n11 ... •!-r11nb 111 .. 1n1·ll, ..._ ..... -°' "" i I" ti nir in nt-\i !!nuil 11'hO ei1::t " EJ,[CT~RAl\GE urf.;:~·cfl' ·'· 1 tit l\fU~ 111'11. lol'C$('fll &. 1~2 Bl;UEGll.L CIR .. HB. _LOCAL Tenn i Ii C I u b LABR.r\OOR P UPPIES knd SI oo for t11eh p;atterfl ~raft Depc,,Rm Ill.OM hu~!nei;!I. For appl J:')l)h{' ~lcrrhll ,~lf·cican·i:.. !Ike f!IOfe, ~\'tl' u~cd • ~tom \'f oincn s clothes. m I• c . ?i1embership, Bfft offer. 832-7783 ki :S ~"1" •~ 1ntl1 1•alltt11 l~• Sli1'6il, ~ \'otk, ~iij.''9:i1;. __ 1M'1\ SIZ">. ;jji--42-t6 1 nwl~. \-err fl'' qu:\l 96,i-1910 J.~ 6#-9-178 ('a)J art 5 8090 ~ hwfrnM--i'l1,,.m1il11~~·11• N \' 10011 fnlll Nwmt, M· · I "'I 1·r ?ianos & Org•n5 h,1ndlln1t : 11C ht rwi•t third· d1w.i1p,Pat1tr1t~111ftbl'r :-.\L ;.,.: ·~U\. nullui'l', for G.F'.:""Hcfrlg. V<'ry 1<ntXl r:\in-1COUCJJ l· LO\'t" St. Nr l!UGF. SAi.~. 11 i114" V3l1ely CARPETING. drnei;rle•. 4 cl'""dtll\o:ry11111 1 .. ~1hr,.~ • New ! 1,;o mo-1 POPul1r •1rui: 'tore. full Ci nll'. Call niiig oond. After ti p.m. 1039 ~._ Creen • Gold. $125. of hen111. 91 11 llrnbham Dr. I D I •• NAB E ·up / R, J 812 , •cftaormor+ ~ndtolllanan dei41Wln1111r1r.,:Netot1lf1'r•n. 1~1 220 r Valcriela, Coin.a ~I<"'"· G1lo-lll-Jl 311cr "'g, HB.. Sat/Sun. ~~=,~~w. ~~ 111 m P · "'Jiandt:arved Ro!!c\\'()()(l,, t.~· . 7'1u'1h1. ·IU. \hf, 011111 r1tot. <'1'1110CI AU t tan.! Tlllt£1 ~\L&~~li\N ~·Uh t:'('J'lttient"t" I C f': .. '''frlJ,(ero letr. 12 t-U. n . I ~iOVI NG! contcmporacy '4aSALE, new nppl's, tum, NE\\' gpc, Set..or Wattrles• C<'I. cond .. ~ up/t pl11"jer :•'.1~z:.~fot'k~ .. ~:11~~t. ~~!'!ti!~··~~ '·" l 1~part!i \\lne Sales. ITI<I) ~\vAcurlo, .,..ilh lop rn.>e.rer riln .. l)ch'lll , &: brkf&t !ltl blkc, clot™;•. ril•nUJ, bed. cookware. $20. piano. 961).J,J:il. l-!nn1 '-'\l•!.t_AIJDR~.z::', 8ui(Tis,.UlPatt"11 ... s1.:n hl.i-l:;ai, SIGO. ~7--0920 almost O('t\" GJ..22:i3 aft 2:00 21~1 Vbtn Nqblcxa. N.B. 5:>1·2679 PRIVATJ:<: PARTY WANTS SIZt: lll nd,ST\"J,f. NUMOY.ll. ~r.'"'·-•. ~-.,:, ',',·" .. S ONt~t'M F.KPATTERNofywt NtY luti.t-1 "1-u.·twt~~ ECRET ARY GAS DRYl::R '' ELECTRTC ! --i-plt~ scctlonalWof--0.--.. 'ree Gi\R.AG~: SALE slgn1 ~ Cnl. Salt ,w:.:itcr ltnlt, Xlnt TO BUY PIANO FOR ('tlOif~lokndror.cwfNtp•t· llalrplnC'.Nc'Pttt 8oolll .,11 eo .. ~.• ; l ror joll ii/lots of vn ril'ty ! DRYEll $.JO EAOI, Xh11 GrtX>n. Good condit;on. f:~T~~t.:~ TIJ! lt£AL 1.:ond. $100. Stc\.-e 'Alo,ort CAStl 1t l 47-9-IU * t.:rn lnd d• ~cw ~PRIN .. ::::~l:":M~~ .. ::·:: , 11 /•n1:ill a: r o 1r i n g cl«· • rond, &6&-584! -_ * 4~ ., ' o(f s . . _m-2140 492-3882. $391'1. lle11.urlful 4,1·• ttlKUo. ~!~L.':J~ ~oo!,.tJ:ri1~l~f~ ILV>L;mt J.lllllittlklall .. •1 oo • , . 642·4321, extension 250, between 12:00 and 5:00 P. M. An His F avoritt Seamed· Ta-Slim J '· ; ' ·• "'fl'ii\•'1-!~" •, '::':h1• .• i•~r· . ",·· .. ~ '<Ji,., ·ro<-'!::! ~ ........ ' ........ .~:rrl_ ,. • .. \ • ' • I. I Has routes open in San Clemente • .. 7049 • I ,. ' .. P I A l)Cncf11,c, i\tu&I have xhft rnnge $2."111. NeV(r u s l' d . l!Ofn Qiwen h1~-u-bcd •Good nppll::in('('!l, 1n111e. ltcmA. Sun potty ChRlt hcndi. *-11-9170. 61t-l.13G. lll)w, s•:W •t KNIT~ wllll O:wn~l~•Ar111u1n•1Pll ,fl.OD , ersonne. genc.y • typlni;: o,k}!111,. Ol'ltn £Ice· Nc\•t-r OAl'llll'!Clt-'tl. Gt0-6;178. ('l)Tlfl. 11:1 :i,Sl..()934 OHi)' 9-3. 3SS \V. Rily. 01 ' ,19:)..6161 llA1'1Ji.10ND ORGAN L-22 tn llll.ittlHUel)~ltt'fl! " $1 2$ 12PnttAt•ntllJ MN' ' I ' "' . ( f . : s r ,_ -- J -w I - -~ I B II - NEWPORT cron1(" nuinuf, \\'lg o o ri 1 11 OTPO 1N T1elf-cle11nlna ~;· Gn'Cn k r ... 1111 s~nh•h GIGANTIC "'\,I c. furn1tw-e. Baby :ccolcic, bt\by drtMCI', Mt.Kiue while Y.'/ malcblng rm P..ttl"rn t0ur:-111. !Stnd Tk C'ool!ll<!t•Gin Rook .. SI oo Newport Bt•ch 642-3170 J,L.;.~_i c C O n t r OI C,rp . 1 G As Rf~ F It I G . \.\ /I e<' DANISH rouch cotn-ertlllo SAT/SUN ALL r»Y QVALITV F1ott'n, J1tnlP6.. Ii _ :'TIP·)'OP" shape. D ra "! 1_ :::::~:}~~!f1;*, ·::·: =~~1~~42 ·.:· 71'° "" mfi""" rir sz~ E1 (.'",.. hr.i:I, 170: ~ --~ -~16 CllU llt', "NB ~/\llcyl plclure,_ 1-elrlg, pro( wa.-ur. ~stm~... -· -1~Qlnltiiftir'T1M1.,-tr i:'" --9"-·t Oa.b1lfJ~d Ad' •••••. fUhW!l Cln .. l1flcd .•••.•••.. ~2-~7~ iront'r SIO. 6i.'l-0'61 .t12--011.5 • fm.1·11 find It in Cl••·fled CtiU ~ •fler o Brn. ~rlED )VIII .ell It! , ___ • ________ .. _•.".".'.""-"."'.,'--·-· _ • , " ~ I . . • • I 18'--ctiris O'alrSttper Sport Runabout. 200 hp inboard. radio. compua, all xlraA. Cadillac af Bay B oat . Sacrrnce. 642-9574 · •CHRIS CRAFT* 17~ Clu.Mc Runaboot le trlr. $975. Call Mr Mueller 6eooc5 or 6f6...23t6. '712 ~UYS ~ TO ·atOOSI ;IOM 20 10 CHOOSE flOM PRICED AT ·1 QOL OVER 70 'llCTOlY INVOICE COST 4 Sl)eed, radio, tinted gla•s. dJx, bumpers, whitewalls, VEGA. #12$1. $84 :. $8~:..... =i~· Sf.·-='·~.r."~r.''i.!"~ '...'."-~ ~·71· -.. -..... _.,,,_,'"", ... ,,,,,, . a MON. THlU flt, I AM TO 1 0 PM e e SAT, & SUN. 9 AM 10 6 PM e . GROTH CHEVROLET 11211 ........... -' • • lANDCRUISERS ( 4) Soft top or Hardtop • PICJCUP TRUCKS .(15) long bed or Regular •MARKll's ( 6) Coupes or Sedans • CEl.JCA's (17) GT-ST-LT •CORONA's • (31) Wag.-Cps.-Sedans •COROUA's (36) 1200or 1600 1966.Jforbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 71 DATSUN 1600 Convcrl ibl<' 54.000 nil. n~s top, ~lust Sell S850. 61.'i---1189 'Tl DATSUN 1200, C 1 e: a n, Musl eee to appreciate. Ca11 &12·1403 l\'C me!ll!agr. '73 240-Z, \\'hitc, 16,000 mllcs, A/C. $5000 . 61>-<lln '74 Datsun Pick up, air cond, 6,000 m~ assume b6lance 84J.,!889 Flat • , • Regency red, !'itereo, & lo\v miles. 3100 \V. Q>efU!~'Y·. ,N.B. ~ '421.'MO.) dilf. SUPERB CONDITION CALL OR COME IN TO SEE US '68 OPEL Ki\OE'T'TE L, Looks good 1.Wdl' & out. New radial,lires $67:i. ~~ 548--0348 NEWPORT IMPORTS 'Il OPEL 1900 Gd. cond., lo mi .. IHG-UBG NEW '7 4 CAPRIS DOZENS TO CHOOSE FROM!! '· ONLY .• 53050 : fGAECPJ534061 . ' ' ., BEACH IMPORTS • '69 ALFA SPIDER $2995 New reo oa1nt. Extra ciean. tYXA644 • '68 AUSTIM HEALY SPRITES 1695 New paint .5. top. WXDM 408 • ~ '6 7 DATSUN 1600 RDSTR. S 1695 Red. fVVS 194 • ~ -· -'71 FIAT 850 SPIDER $1995 New lime paint Looks hke new. ff 7440SY • '72 MG MIDGET Ex1rast1arp. '!5d2FZ• • '67 SUNBEAM ALPINES 1495 Red ll'/10096 • '67 TRIUMPH SPITFIRE SI 49S Mag$, • Over 80 Sport Cars In lnYentory • BEACH IMPORTS JUS-A ROMEO • SAAB ' I Sol11, Service & LeHin9 1200 'W_. Coast Highway, Newport Beach 645·4,40~6 ) • , • v. hll,K' nl(.'1'1c •• brand ~ jatnt .)ob. Appr. group, ~1/P?.t tnpe, terrific oond. 200.61>-&l69 liRSCHf: '7'1 911T, Xtr.is ludett. alt-. Sc>pia bl'own hounWltooth lnt, ?1.lm !'lie&, Sharp cond, $8595, .,-8114 I '&:i Porsche 1600 Rdll:lt. ! SPECIAL ! &11-260 dlr. 914 ,\ppearance group, -1'"1'if stereo, Plus more, jMlnw & bl.uck $5300. 9'2-2'.!ll Brand New 197 4 SAAB 99LE Priced to Sell $4384 <•7386) IJIMACULATE: '6.1 SC. New ~. paint, shock~ Pl®· M!J.3111.1 or &\2-!088 ··oirect1y across trom the ·i"' PORSCllE :G6 A, lE'OO &l:ic>a Bay Club" '" Sales • Service M. Xlnt rond, new po.int. 6CS-6406 '72TOYOTA CokoC-°""'"'°"'~ -4 tipd. -~ """l .......... "'"WI IQll, lolCIOoy •" a:inG.ltelWl l $2699 ..., ..... ,.a... .... . Bill MAXEY TOYOTA l~ii I l•a<• l••d 14/ i~S~ MUN T IN {; lON if A CH 1966 lfarbor. C.t-1. Triumph 9167 '71. TRIUMPH TR& SATELLITE SebrlnJ:. l'actory alr, power 11tee:ring A brakes, low. k1w mUcs . CM9Hf'L) $2788 ;~s~NJ1.w1 LSON I "' L • 556-1010 841-6611 993.! • t41t uau .66 DORI![ ..,,. • ...,.... IB255 -ch 81. """ .. 8"'ch VOLVO I """ OLDSMOBILE 556-1070 I 142-4611 • """' lran1miM'''" AMI CORONST 2DR. H.T. GMC TRUCKS r ATLAS f'?iil radio, new top, new 1966 Harbor, C.lil . IH6·9303 17 VS, auloria,tic, power steer-HONDA CARS paint. (6'40!QI 1970 VOLVO Wgn. auto. Camaro 99 "'i:. bu.let "'"'" CRUJ950) UNIVERSITY OLDS Chrytltr/Plymoulh $3277 trans., A/C, 43,500 mi, '74 C C ' (777 -u ..... Blvd. 0-n u,Uy & SW>. 'UI JD PM Beige. new cond. int., ext. amaro pe ' ., Costa Me:-54().9"0 ...... 2929 Harbor Blvd., & e:~. $2,495. &10..8510 or Automatic, power steering, • Costa Mesa " Wt LfW .;~:~VO 1800 ES, Xlnt., ~~:b: !~C:.?!ar4~~eJ ,. WILSON 1 ·~;,r'Jc,~~·~~ · __ .;.54:.;.:.6:.•.;.1.;.9:...3:...4,:_= D900. 49-;....s3Sl i~a;l"',."m""••"A"'•", '-.. -.. -.,.,~2-56=,~ •. 1 s.u ld1• «•m• ...... 64H678 1---c,=7'"1"'T"'O"'Y'"O'"'TA..---1 ~tsun ' 9720 Da tsun 9720 MEW 1974 1·210 s2579 MO DOWN nwr. 100% Fin. OAC * FRfE AM RADIO Willi THIS AD * NEW 1974 610 or 710 . STATIOH WAGOHS HO DOWN PTMT. 100% Fin. oac * FRfE AM RADIO Willi THIS AD * NEW 1974 PICKUP 52885 NODOWMnMT. 100% Fin. OAC * FREE AM RADIO Willi THIS AD * HEW 1974 710 2·Dr. 52899 MODOWNnMT. 100%·Fin. OAC * FAH ANt RADIO Willi THIS AD * ' LEASE SPECIAL 260Z • 1128 + tax 610 • sas + tax 8210 -168 + fall Pickup • •74 + tax ~ Sll.ICTIOM of HIW & USID 260 r s -Al~ 1 ........ hl"'T All Cars + Tax & Llc. bei. & Hndlg. CORONA COUPE VOLVO ·<-""".;.-..-. mil""o:~"'s4395 • ~~~~IDSER ·d. Pontiac 9965 AUTOS USED .All extras, tow mi. 4 i.'peed transmission, radio. 1966 Jfarbor, C.t.1. Howard Chevrolat 644-<m.9 '73 TRANS AM heater. vinyl top, mag • Gener•I 9901 Dove and Quail Sts. 1825.J Beach BJ. Hunt. Beach "'67;;--,CUT=,-LASS.=,-;;-2-:;drc:--;:harttt=::.,.::"1 SUper Clean, 26M. \Y h I le wheels. HOOEKS) Nr. i\lacArthur. Jan1boree 556-1070 842""6ll vinyl rooJ, air, PSIPB. Xlnt w IC r a Kar !Ii. W \\1/hd $1877 and Bristol cond.551-0939. Trans. Must See! $4100 . Ne\\•porl Beach 833--0555 '67 DODGE Dart GT, vinyl "P"in-Ot~o~. ~=----.99=57 537-4971 '67 Can1aro SS-350, 4 speed, roof, V-8, auto, r~dio, a/c. "·730:::.,G~RA::'-cN=D~P=m=x"'. ~F;-u~1"'°1 y J)tolt Lew• NE\\' CAR SllO\V ~.,,,!~-es, low n1i. $1050. ~r.J~a7lnt, 2 bad hres, $600. ,72 PINTO equipt. BEAlITY. l\l wrt: be • "1.,....,.,.... ......,........ seentobeap p reciated. Free In Hunllnglon Cenler's "'"-4"A" tt 7 TOYOTA !\·lall. Beai:h Blvd & Edinger Chevrolet 9920 UNBELIEVABLE '66 Dodge $4095 Pvt Pty . .....,.. ,....., a . at the San Diego Fwy Thru 1.itonaco. New rad. 1 i 1· es• WAGON Thunderbird 9970 "onday P/B, P/S, air, xlt. mech. 4 ,~ -llo he 1 r Lie 1966 Harbor, C.M. "' '73 M 1·b C """' 67'""" ~«" .• , · '' · · --------1 Buick 9910 G I U pe ,:'-'==-' c=-'77--,---1 No. :!06270. '56 T·BffiD Aulomatk:, PQ""er steering, 72 COLT, 2 dr, auto, grn., $1877 Near perfect body. Cragtrs, brakes, air cond, vinyl roof, 30 MPG, runs llke new, port hole tori 81,£00 original '70 Buick i m mac u late (BY 1947) xlnt. oond. alt. 6 960-2'160 '4 miles. White with nice black '71 TOYOTA COROLLA WGN. Radio. heater, low 1niles. '68 VOLKSWAGEN . BUG Le Sabre Only $3395 Ford 9940 '·WI LSQN 1 --~"'~"'" considor 2 Door Hardtop l'loword Chevrolet '7'>-TORINO 1963 THUNDERBIRD. Cloan Less Than 30,000 Miles Dove and Quail St.s. tJ inside .. Runs fair. $1 5 • Nr. Ma cArthur, Jamboree 548-0161. Vinyl lop, tapes1ry interior, and Bristol 4 DOOR .61 CONVERT IBLE factory air conditioning, N• ~rt o-~ ~•0555 Llctnsc CFP319 Automa!ic slick shift, radio $1177 and h•al.r. CXEX296) au t 0 ma t i c transmission, \.""" O<.-..... ~, OdJ" V·S, auto. !rans., poy,-er stef'r· 18255 8e{lch Bl. Hunt. Beach Panially restrd. Orig pty. power s leer i n g , power '73 CHEY. lrangdio" "'. Whcl~te:•. "'.'}_ybl rarooke~:5 _56-=1~0..,70'==-=•14"2"-66o=-11 Best over $500. 675-1939. $1077 brakes, radio. healer. y,•hite ~""' 72 PINTO SQUIRE Veg• 9974 'Id' wall tires. SUP"rb coo· No. 914G!V 1 ditlon. m$01A9•w9'5 v~. """~~~"o"' "" $2677 STATION WAGON '72 VEGA cooditioning. radio, heater. .... ClDIU'AC .Yin>'l 1'00$'2gj} No. 405.lffi '·WI LSQtf I • Speed 1ran1m1.,;,ri, air • ,.,.,..r, ,.'!.~·heal.,... Lie. ~ Miirler 11¥11; conditioning, AM radio, roof No. 492GJH -... --.....__ •.&A..91 rack . .('1236) $1588 711255 Boooh 81. HW>t. "'6ch 1"6 Hw'bor, C.M. 646-930.1 _,,_,, --I~' LS o N $2977 ~56-1010 . 842·6611 '73 . VW Bug oPEN suNDAY .. l)J le.wi4 •1rovoTA -FORD 72 TOYOTA Celica . coupe. 4 t'....i AM·FM rad· l low •73 BUICK Electra Umited, Mag whee I s , atr con-"I"'• . JO, 0 diti.onln8. (lliGFTF'l $2-199 miles. like new (BY1S48l loaded! $36:'3. • '(If\ L••.:• SUNSET FORD Only $2395 84"7560 '7< FORD Mu stan g. -t41l WI,. 5440 Garden Gro\-e Blvd. HOward Chevrolet oC..:;•cod.;.ill..:;•..:;< _____ 99_15 1!!255 Beach Bl. Hunt. Beach (l39~tfflss:f FORD YOLYQ FORD FORD Westmlmter 636-1010 Dov nd Quall St ,73 Eld d 556-1070 142-6611 '71 TOY[JA COROLLA e a s. ora q c 5440 Garden Grove Blvd. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 18255 Beach Bl. Hunt Be&ch . Nc. Ma~~;;,~mooree Convertible '73 Monte arlo w"im"""' 636-4010 • • 556-1070 ' 142.6611 N rt Be ch 833-0555 Automatic, P'>Wf>T' steering, 1S72 LTD 2.dr., excel. cond:· 13 P1~to ~GCJOft ::, o:::.,:c:;,;:....., __ .:;.,c=;,:..; 4 !!peed transmission, radio, <!\\'PO 8 2 To Choose From brakes, air cond., power P"'r. & air, gd. gas m1. 4 Spd. radio & beater. Im-1'l VECA Wagon. Air con- healer n1ag y.fieels side VW '71 Squarebnck, 46,IXX} Leather interior, full power, \Vindows, Ult whe!el, Strato on reg. lu.cl. m~cuJate throughout. Low dit10nlng. !!~ wh e e l 5. mouldings. (174BSX)' mi, 4 speed, air cond, new factory air condil.ioning, lilt buckct seats, Stereo, vinyl ~ 64{>-5!135 miles (211GNO) . . . . • (tOlGWNl :,~· $1477 ,~--!~5-<028/~.'fxxi_'. 81~1 ~~a:~ge~: ::~:ong ni:~1~f;11~x.A ~101,~~~ roof. Railey wheels. et1c9., 197 VAN \VAGON, air, Only $2295 -=•A~UGNardSETGFORB!Dvd II only 20,000 miles (BY IS ), auto, clean, 4 new rad. H rd Ch I t JttU en rove · door locks. Tota y equip-Make Offer tirC'S. $2000. :-:s-9435 owa evro e \Vestmlnster s:J.>-4010 · · '68 VW BUG \\'/ORIGINAL peel. {289G IU1 !20IJNJ) ~a "Ull l ••.;:• 61!,000 Ml. Bc3"tifo\ body, $6995 • H d Ch I t '74 FORD M"'tang. (7ll9JSC) Dove ""' Qu•ll S~. 19'3 VEGA WAGON. GT. UU10 OWar eYrO e $3T9'J Nr. li1acArthur, Jamboree Rally \Y h ee I g, 2' door good interior, runs perft .. gd ; Dove and Quail St.s. SUNSET FORD and Brislol AM/Radio, DX> miles Cl.JS. TOYOTA til'E's & brake~. W 5. 968-l292 ~ JIAIEIS CADILLAC~ Nr. MacArthur, Jamboree 5440 Carden crow: Blvd. Newport Beach. 833-ffi55 TOM Interior (BLACK) \VANTED TO BUY 69 or ~-lllalMM'Mo-9·-.. _ and Bristol -\\o'e:st:minster ~ 'TI PINTO. £97'2CIMl SI699 832-0371 AFT. 6 Plot'. 19661-larbor, c.11.t. 646-9300 later VW Bug, that needs NewportBcad\833-0005 .,,,, FAWJN, ~"'-liltle v.Tk. SUNSET FORD ''i'l VEGA GT Wgn.. :ii:lnt repairs, running or not. lull ~ ·~ oond 'lak II '72 TOYOTA Station 'l\'8.gon 6'1l--0121 '68 ll\1PALA. CONVERT, Call alt 6 Mon/r i or other 54«t Garden GtoYe Blvd. . xt.ral, ,. e O er · Air oondilionlng. (713ESF) evC!'i. OPEN SUNDAY power, needs soft JI.lug, ~-ns eves art 10. M5-3879 Westminster 636-«110 67J..3882 or 675-4248 $2699 VW Bus, good nmner _ _cC::A=D:.l:.:LLA=::Co:..,S~-1 xlnt. must sacrUu ... -e $550. '64 FALCON Jo'utura, Don't give up Ute shiJ?! 1971 VEGA, stick shlrt, k> I SUNSET FORD ~~ c!li:· $IS.~~':,.; 55&-4082 very very clean. $375. ··List" it in clanlfied, Ship ml., 23-25 MPG. Will accept M40 Garden Ct"ove Blyd., • wn. Largest Selection ·74 Chevy Blazer Ch~yerme, ' 557--0200 to SOore ~u1ts! 642-5678. best otter 543--6288 Westmlnsfet' ~ '68 SQUAREBACK ln'1:>range County ~~.000000 fi~.!:...f~~~-~pPed.day1 '65 GALAXIE 4 dr, "'0 A>J __ tot, New 9800 Autos, New 9800 '61 TOYOTA Corona 4 cyl, Gd. ~ond., Gd. mileage . ..._.__ .., . ..... o.>'t ..uoL ._. 3 '~ ~ 1-~' dll'. $99;1. 548-0019 Coupe DeVllles • .,.,._., or 963-1424 eves &wknds. Art 6, 548-2652 ~ +.>J" ~"JJ.AJ' DeVilles -El Dorados · 1 -"''-"'""'=:..~=~""°71 ""'--,-,c-'----= 6464W8 '69 VW l\lus1 M!ll, Good cond, Convertibles. Also Many ·G9 IMPALA CUST'OAf 2 dr Maverick 9947 •71 TOYOTA Corolla good ne1o11 brake~. lo mi, $1100/ other select Cadillac Trade-VS auto tran:. P/S. P/B. --------- Condition $l350. M6-s9xt 8-5; bst olr. 494-3473 ins. Bucket seats 494--2400 1971 MAVERICK, 6 cyl, 2 6T:t-3608 aft 5. ..72 VW Westphalia Camper FOR COMPLETE REPAIR ctr, aulo, radio/heater, good '73 CORONA t.IARK 11 S/\r 111/pop-top. J\! a n y e.xtras. NABS (ADIUAC \\lork on Corvnir & Corvair cond, best ofr, ~ 50 6 cyl. auto, "'lair, 18.000 Xlnt l"Ond. 645-9228 · 2600 HerMw ltv4.. Buggies. Call 5364144 !'1•r:cury 99 mi. Likr new $~ 495-!">463 '73 vw Limited Edition. FM CodaMela MO~•' •74 Monte Carlo • ·72 COLONY Park \Vgn. SAVE IBOSE APPLE s1ereo, warranty. H e Ip! Automatic, .......,.... steering, Loarled, lo mile!, xlnt PEELINGS and boil in J\fust sell. 644'°"157 1970 COUPE DEVILLE, cop-brakes. air ro~: vinyl roof, cond. $3500. M:t-2039 aluminum pans and pots. '65 VW BUG pcrtone vinyl top. AM/FM etc., outstanding {339KF.C) Mustang 9952 Tt,ey will brighten U1e XLNT. CONDITION $600 I h _, l'k .. * -o ·~ * rad., air, sentinel i g ts. Only $4595 . met ... to a ··i e-new JO<t'"°U'" new s!eel-belt'd. tires, gel. '74 MUSTANG Ghia. <xtndition. Hav<' an.ything 10 '69 BUG, Clean, new tires. cond. $2,400. 968-4lM Howard Chevrolet {370KBD) $3800 sell? Use a Dally Pilot 10 mi. stereo. SID50. Pvt '?I EL DORADO Dove and Quail Sts.. SUNSET FORD CIM!l.ned Ad. Call 642-5678. pty. 968-9141 aft 5. · · Nr. J\.facArthur, Jambofte 5440 Garden Grove Blvd. Sell idle items with a :>ally •70 VW, aulo stick. orig . EXECUTIVE CAR and Brislol Westminster 636-4010 TOTAL DISCOUNT SALE ON AU PIHTOS-MUSTANCiS-COURIERS 214 TO CHOOSE FROM! ALL COLORS AHD MODELS! "" I Piiot 08.Mified ad. 642-5678 owner. perfect cond. $1350. AU. options. Only 31000 mi. Newport Beach 833-o55.5 '73 OONVERT 351 4-B, .f 9900 Autos, Used 9900 962-7294 Pvt. Pty. 673-5126 l970 NOVA spd, AM/F'M stereo. 22.CXX> 't~;~;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ l'·n~vw~~BU~S~, ~X~l,~t ~co~nd~,:'ire;;iblbiit '69 CADtu.AC Sedan de 6 cyl. 4 door, good cond mi. $400 +assume 1 o a n . ~~nse or~ I ~ eng, camper equip, Ville, 4 dr. A·l Cond. $2100 Bargain! 645-1346 67~289 .&11£: 'Vftll LOOKING FOR AN fYCfPTIONAL BUY 3.)7-4086 anytime or bst ofr. J\.lust sel I. -,.-,-,A-Ll~BU Chcvelle good 1965 FORD MUSTANG, VS, '.>440 GARDEN GROVE BLVD . WE ST MINITER --11..\IY ' " ' • '71 SUPER BEETLE, :J.1,000 842·'2IJ. ,.uonlog cond!Uon, slso °' Automatic Tra,.ml'5ion 'ON' . THE BEST ' .. ~ nii, new tlr<'!!, R/H. Gd l'Ond. ·72 CAD SEO DEV. Xln't best oU'er. 847_29:12 !_695. !i164i7751 ~-,------::c;;;-.--,------r.=I !>9a.!>UI S,... O•f'qO ~ .... oi Von,,.,,., 611>·40•0 S\550 bst. 673-7080 art 6. cond. All xtra!i. $U95. Call .63 CHEVY SS Co-•., new Ca pri 9715 Capri 9715 Capri 9715 171•11 497-3\i'll ... 1:::='------'-'----'---------'-------• -' ' ~ '65 VW CAMPER, $1250 1965 CADILLAC Con\'ertible, ~ i;~ng., gd. cond . ·~~~YALUE.AHYWHERE? .:~~1~~~=pe ;;~:~. ~'.a~~i very '72 Monte Carlo • ' 173 ELDORADO • • • • • • 57200 't'ellow·Be1ge Lealher, Fully Eou1pped, only 10.000 local miles, Ser. #4039 "73 COUPE DE VILLE •• 55800 Blue. White Lealher. Fully Eau1pped, Less Than 18,000 m11es. Ser. •5297 "73 JEEP •••••••••••• 54500 Model CJ5. V-8 wilh heacler!i. 4-wheel dr .. roll bar . .spec1111 Cale! wnee1s with Parne11111res.1aw m11eage. Lrc 1"5 16 JFB '72 REM AULT •••••••• 52395 Fastback Coupe. aulomaue. air. hke MW, less INln 25.000 miles -exeeu. economy at. LIC. 1956 GOO 1 72 COUPE DE VILLE •• 54700 Gold. Beige Lea1her, Fully Equipped. l ess Than 36.000 mtles. lie. 1563 EGR 171 RIVIERA •••••••••• 5299 5 IVOfY, Brown Leather. Fully EQU1poed. less Than •0.000 miles. lie. "3t9 DLH .... .... cwt Wfy' .................. .UAIAlll8 JM SLEMONS IMPORTS, INC. ,,., 9'111, Mnport ... 133·9300 $900 CaJI 968-1443 I 9 6 9 F L EE T \V 0 0 D Automatic. JIOWer steering, Dally Pilot Oassilied Ads Broughm. new brkes, tires. brakes, air cond, vinyl roof, every day! C)(cel. cond. St.800. 557-!ll01 extra Marp ( BY 18 9 9) Autos, New 9800 Autos, New 9800 Only $2795 197 5 CHEVROLETS PRICED AT .. 10°/0 OVER INVOICE COST I NO GIMMICKS I MONTE CARLOS e CHEVELLES I YOUR CHOICE' IMPALAS e CAPRICES · 1 I THEJ'RE MAluo l . I NOVAS e CAMAROS LOOK POI THI VIHICLIS -MA1111m 1Cl'li ovn V2 & % TON TRUCKS MIH MON. tNIU fll. 'TIL 10 PM SUNDAT 'TIL 6 '*" GROTH CHEVROLET I 11211. lectch 11\'d. 847~6087 ttontltt1ton leoch 549-3331 Howard Chevrolet Dove and Quail Sts. Nr. MacArthur, Jamboree and Birstol . ., Newport Beach &'G-00$ Chrysle r 9925 ·~CHRYSLER Prts t l ge Station Wagon, beaul cond, New tires. See lo a p pr . 6T.i--."1667 Continental BMW TRADE-IN '74 MK IV Only 1,700 l\.1iles N("(t,'! F\111 J'lOWtt, fuU fa c t o r y equipment with evt'l'Y con- e e I VII. b 1 <' extra except &WU'OOf! Priced to s e 11 ! (dlr.)' 831-2040 Corvette 9922 '71 Corvette Stingray Automtt~ I runs.. pow c r steering, brakl'I, n1r rond . row~ windows, Tilt whee], AM ·FM. Lo"' lo m 11 e _q. Rella"ls excellent ca r e (4210KJl ....• Must See Howard Chevrolet Dove end Quall Sta. A Johnson and Son SPECIAL .. CAPRI • • • SALE! F~S-3388 DOZENS of Colors and Models .•• All on Sale! • JOHNSON and SON • LINCOLH-MERCURY 2626 Hao bor llYd. of Cars. Coile Mesa 540.5630 N'r. Mo c/\rthur, Jamboree a.M l~tol ' Newpoct ... ch 833o<li55 1~~~~~~~~~~~~·-·~~~~~,,,..,.~~_,,,,,...,_--'1 SiiU-tdlif ftema ••• , •• 642--5i73 • • - I • .. • • . , Fr\d!y, October 18, 1974 DAILVPILDT DIJ \ We have beenNo. I dealer in • ONE 1974 MONTEGO • 1 Everyone knows that when the bolt of cloth .is down to tog ends you gel once-in-a-lifetime saving s. Listed htire is every new 197 4 and 197 4 staff c.or left in our-stock. If YOUR car-is1:l mong them YOUR savings will be almost unbelievable. COME ON DOWN! FOUR ~ ______,,1974 MARK IV's , ~ q ..... Onrnge County Lincoln- Mercury Sa/es fO< over eight co~utive years (actual factory figures}. There mwt be a reason. ..-~-~ ' FOUR 1974 COUGARS TWO 1974 CONTINENTALS . DRIVE THE ALL NEW 1975 MONARCH YOU'LL GET THE NUMBER ONE DEAL FROM THE NUM.BER ONE DEALER 1301 NO. TUSTIN, SANT A ANA usEocARS -541-0511 ··\\c•. ·\1•1•••t•ci•1•c• \ct111· B11si11c•ss~~ " • r, • I ···-··· 7130-10 SAT,' 8130-1100 SUN. 10-J NEW CARS -547-0511 • • - ' . " • • . • • • -' • 1 l , ' r , i .. . ' ' ' . •• " ' • I 1 ' • • • • • • ' ' ~ • . , ' . ' ' l ! . • • l • • • j l • • • 1 • I • • • • • • • • • • • • l l l l l • $ , , . , . j .. , ~ , ' , • l . . . . .. . . , , . .. , .{ .. ' , ' K ' • ,. \ ·;!; I • ' . • ' ' . ALL NEW 1975 GRANADA DESIGNED TO GIVE YOU . . PEAK EFFICIENCY IN SPACE, FUEL, & PERFORMANCE! SEE & TEST DRIVE THE NEW 75's TODAY WE HAVE THEM ALL! ·>. ~73 PINTO -1971 FORD WAGON LTD ' lmmaculote, Air, AM /FM. owr., Low miles . (486GWX) very good cond. (978DEC) _s2377 51477 '72 FORD '73 FORD '73 PONTIAC 4DOOI· GRAM TORINO GIAMDPllX i Excellent family car. 4dr., air, pwr., auto. lrans. Under 10.000 mi. Must see: loaded. · 1~1ELAJ $1377 • (501GDRJ$2877 (645HSUJ$4 79 5 '71 FORD '72 COUGAR '73 Tbird LTD llOUGHAM DOUILE SHARI'! Loaded. 2-0oor. full power. air. Full power, air conditioning. Double Snarp. (9770FCJ $ I 9 7 7 1308DZFJ$299 5 1423HPD)$5495 '72 FORD '68 OLDS '72 CHEV. F2501'.U. CUTLASS NS" CAPRICE CUSTOM ~Ton, Low miles. Auto., air, power. sharp. Air. P/S, P/8, P/W, AM/FM. '1•95272)52695 (XRU099)$ I 29 5 (622FVY)$3 I 9 5 '72 CHEV. '73 FORD '72VEGA CHEYEUE WA.GOH WAGON · HATCHIACIC Loaded 3 seat, air, pwr. & more. 4 speed. (314FPZJ$299 5 is.. •1102153895 (445HOCJ$ I 59 5 ''72 PIMTO '71 FORD '72TOYOTA IUMAIOUT TOllMO 500 MA•KllZD•. ... Double sharp! Air. lowlnites. like new. 0 (140EJP)$2 I 77 (952DFBJ$ I 777 (258GNJ)$299 5 • ,, ~ • I • -;; NEW".1974 PINTO ---' · · 4 <y l. '"9" ,c;ol.H. omiuion eq~ip .. 4 •peed . €~ 2DoorSedan '· / f ~'. Includes alt Yinyl buckd seats, diK brakes, 2000 cc ' • transmission, front &. re« bumper guards & more. . Stk. 11 1664 Ser. ff4RIOXl 9 1965. .. ' NEW 1974 MUST~~! II -·~;;;;;;~ Steel belted rodiol~. disc brakes, all yinyl bucket ,_..__ .ONLY seats, tachometer instrvmentotion, wheel covers, cut pile carpets, 2.3 liter, 4 cyl. eog., AM radio, linted .$3099 . gloss & much more. ' Stk. 12299. Ser. #R02Y224382 '72 CAPRI •. • opd.: AM /FM, fancy. • (019E~$23,5- '73 DATSUM 1200 2-Door. 4 speed. (032JOYJ$2 4 9.5 '69 FIAT 85051'1DH Fancy. (373AGO)$ I 69 5 '74 PIMTO WAGOM Save. '1571JESJ$2977 '70COU<iAR 117 Air, pwr .. AM/FM (981AGA)~2695 • .' NEW '74 COURIERS 30 To Choose From! .Take Your Pick at Less Than $100--- PROFIT .. TOUS! 1972 COURIER ' ' 1971 l~Bl.RD ~ PICKUP 4 spd., ,,;ciio,. ~·sliorP E~) (21219M) '-,,,. . $1877 s3077 ' " '70TOYOTA , '7,4·f$)RD . MAUii I 4spd.,air. 4~,.v,s.~? • • •" • . j " ~s1795-· + rf'1309Jsar9s.;,~p.. (mt.FF). ---- "' . '71 vw '71 CHEV. CAMPEI CA.MAIO Extra Clean. Auto. trans.; c:iower. 1P:1iii15329.5 , C130EA(f$ 2·99 5 • '73 BUICK '721.H.C. llYIEl:k Loaded & double sharp. SCOUT Full cab. 4x4. V-8. 1587GWSJ$4 99 5 l170FENJ$3995 '71 FORD '14 DATSUM • F250 PICKUP ~T.w/camper. 4 speed, under8.000 miles. (16619HJ$3295 l\7062Ul $2777 ·•74 FORD '72GREMLIM FIOOIAMGER $TICK SHIFI' . Auto. tra ns., pawer • JI cylinder. . (!62042)$ 3 9 9 5 11 .. ElU1$ I 6 77 All SALES PRICES EFFECTIVE 72 HRS. AFTER PUBLICATION. . ., .... .. -• " • . ---• • . ' • . @!j1 '--·····---· __ .. 1MIOIOft • IOllNS a . IAut Dl", NOWl1 I ._.t ,_ ......... , ....... ,_ .. .J 11 -f ",_I..:. •••T• 1nvte~11 ' •·• """ ,..,, 1 ..... ,... NM..ftt. · PAITI MPT, °"''' I -·11 ,_ let, --~~ -... -'· . - I • --~ ......... --( I ' .,. I I ' ' I • • • -. • • -• --• - una/South ~oast Today's Final ... N.Y. Stocks -EDITION vqC{47,,.NO. 291 ;·3· SE~TIONS, 32 .PAGES --' TEN CENTS ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1974 '~~J!OC~nt~ ~oµntian Locke~ Up for .2 Y ear·s 1. ' • r 1 .. -! .. • ~ ~BJtAllTBIJR 11 •• v.INSEi. , _ Of .. o.itr ."" PMf I A-• ..,CJltethM .. Lag u.n a HJl1s tnan laiiguijiies tilday ·1n LOI. Angeles County Jail, the 7CQ\h d~ he ,Ji8s been held there as · a so-caJled tranSient ~isooer on a fugitiVe wa?rllht. · Norma!II, • pri90net'S cannot be held more thln ,n hours without-arritgrufient aQ!b-upoo, convk.1ion-wou1d aerve' no mor:e than' one year·ln a county jail. James ~ Russell, 24, Js 'accused . , . ' .. of a f.!arch, 1972 murder 9' a 92-year-old man in , Oklah>ma, 1,000 miles away, a crime that his 'lawyer1 contends he could nOt have committed. Russell was arrested, held and cleared .on the warrant initially in Orange cOun- 'ty, then three weeks later drove to Bell Gardens i.nl Lhs Angeles Counly to visit a brother. He was stopped .and questioned while having a Sl.lppertime' snack in a Taco Bell by passing police, . who discovered --• • ., ' M\t·l'!IMt:llilni. ._,';'lfltdttn K-.W Tm •·B•rn ·· .· ... } ·-• ·• ' ' ' I ~ ·apjiarentfy'startea~ children:playing With matches -burned ·---~ ,~ r•·~ • t briskly fol-a time in San Juan Capistrano Thursday destroying or ~L·. •, , iliiina~ m ·eucafypfu,s trees -that would have · been-part of Cook .,Pa;k. Trees. i~ San Juan are prOtected by law. Fire was near l\.1ission Glen tract. ) the outstanding OkJahoma m u r d er fugitive \\'arrant which had oat oeen cancelesJ. by the Orange Cowity legal action thal cleared him. Russell has been. eating supper at 441 Beauchet St., near Union 'Station in downtown Los Angeles ror the past two years and 10 days, wilhout having hi~ case cleared. He has several witnesses who swear he was with them at the Lang Beach Nu-Pike Amusement Park just having . run that fateful Saturday night or the old man's murder and robberY in Oklahoma. James Ray Russell is 90llle sort of born loser. his life buffeted by courts of law from here to Oklahoma. He did his time there t o o - a t McAlester-a stretch for burglary. Russell's record indicates he had just arrived in Orange County after release from prison and gone to work. Things seemed to be going well. Oklahoma authorities abruplly ended tbat. They issued a fugitive warrant charg· ing Russell with the murder of the aged invalid and he was arrested here. then cleared after ·a series of court proceedings. , One included a polygraph test ad· ministered by a technician which strong- ly Indicated Russell was Innocent. He also had the testimony of bis wife and several companions, plus the Long BP.ach pa\\'ll shop receipl showing where he was that night. Russell was freed. then went to BeU Gardens to visit 3 brother three weekf later and was subsequently confronted by police at a Taco Bell where he stopped for a snack. He has been · eating jail food o n Beauchet Street near the SP Railroad yard ever since. Attorney Roger Agajanian-\,·ho firmly (See JAILED, Page A%) Airplane Crashes in Fog ' At Long Beach; 4 Dead Layoff Bid . Protested By Firemen Man Wanted W 01nen Weren't Projectionists The fupic was ''It Only Hurts When I Laugh," a study by slides of sexism in the comic strips. . But when the vromen of the Nationa l Organization ror Women, a feminist group in Laguna Beach, couldn 't get tbe slide projector to work Wednesday night. they had philosophical crisis. "I DON'T KNOW HOW to '\\'Orie lhis projector because l had a deprived background and never go~ to US<! machines," or~ woman pointed out. Laguna Beach Fir~en, irked at city "How can we take over the world if we can't run machines?" aootber J-tioo)I to ~ tlll. jhree ~" .. ~. .;M'l:':i,, . --. . when Lag1na lhillo lo a ----f"'i~'Omf.J.iiO'!'"' a a""' -'-~ ~-·~ _,,111ir-·-· sar.ty radio •-~"'-•-• .,lop, are ~ : ,_.._ ,~IOil',aJiloii .to the udlencO'and no ooe, uocblln1 the .._..... onhnan'ln:tbe group;knew hoW'lol111lil. · threateping legal action agaimt the city. The firemen 's association is drafting FINALLY, ·THE CRISIS was solved when a woman called the person wbo a new petition seeking public support had loaned her tbe machine. ror retention of the present 30-man fora!. Soon the lender arrived and within a few minutes, he had it going. An earlier. petition effort has been abandoned on advice of the Teamsters' Union attorney representing the local firemen's associatiOn. 'Ibe city attOmey previously ruled the attempted initiative petition was without Iegai -stani:ting. Jerry Johnson , an association director, said the group would seek a new in· itiative ~liti?f! irrespective of the city attorney s opllUon. He said the teamsters' attorney ad- vising the local group on the matter had reaimmended that some changes be made in approach, and that was being done now. He said he had no definite information on what further legal action against the city would be. He said the attorney was working on several courses of action. "We're trying to handle it ourselves as an association, but they (thl! Team· sters) are helping us," Johnson said. He said the loss of additional personnel by the departffieflt cou1d pose a hazard to the rel!18ining members, and tbat it would leave the d epartment in- adequalely staffed. The new radio4 e q u i p me n t will eliminate the department's need for a separate 24-hour dispatcher, a· job re- quiring three men. The three loY;est seniority force members are subject to lay off. San Fra1iciscans _Get Flea Collars -For Themselves SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Local pet supply dealers are reporting a booming bysiness in .n~ collar.a."':" for humans. 0 We're selling. therh by the ton," said Firmin .Swnniers, general manager of the Pet Dealers Supply Co. 1i pet shop clerk said he sold eight flea collars to a young couple the otfler day. "You must have a lot or dogs or cats," lhe clerk noted. "Oh no, we don't have any pets at. all," the couple said. '"l'hese collars are for us -for our arms and legs. In this w a r m weather. lll06e San Francisco fleas are really biting." . "There's .. no telling what humans will 00 In this day and time,'' Jti}Qse ol 1 Pets manager JUn Umberfield sikl . "We 9ell n lol of different pet supplies to people who don't hlve any pd.s. Why, a tew years ago we had a rea l run by hun1ans on catnip, the f&llne nerve sedDU\'e. PE!ople were isriloldng the stun and drtnking il." llealth Department allicials maanwhlle are 'Wihl\ng that the chemical DDVP In many collars glv~ orr vapors ~ IOtneWmet"CluN rasbes and bcada~ ' . Adjustment Boa1·d Okays Pedestrim1 Mall Design Preliminary design or a sinall but controversial pedestrian mall in the cen- tral Laguna Beach buffiness district was approved by the Board of Adjuslment Thursday. A· petition opposing the ma)) signed by 1,660 persons was presented by merchants who cited parking and traffic problems they believe will result from closing the stub of Park Avenue between the city library and Coast Hi g h way where the mall will be located. "The existence or non-existence of the mall is not the concem of the board ," said Michael 'Easley, board ~retary at the beginning of the meeting. ' The Board of Adjustment, acting as the Review Board had been asked by the planning commission to approve the mall's design before Lhe project comes up for final approval by the city council. The design approved Thursday, drawn up by the city staff, showed a mean- dering path among s.ix trees and three benches in an area ISO ftet long and 4fl reet wide. Cost of the project, not including labor by city employes, \\'as estimated at $12.000. Board members said they liked the infonnality of the design but requested that final details such as whether or not cobblestones are to be used, be brought back for board approval. The only vote against the design was by Peter Weisbrod. board chainnan. "This is not made for heavy use and I think this is a heavy use area," Weisbrod said. During the meeting, which was at- tended by about SO people, nine of then1 (Ste l\IALL, Page A%) ' Lagzina Pupils Attend Schoo l With No Name By JACKlE ll\'l\1AN 01 Ille D11lly Pllol Slllf 'J'hlrty-three Laguna Beach high school age students attend a public school with no name. It used to be -referred to as the continuation school but Jerry Fair. its director. b e 1 i eves that name is misleading. "We're in lhe process of selecting a name to change our image from a continuation to an alternalive school," be .. 1d. Fair said the school used to be only for students who weren 't allowed to cootinuc with regular high s c h o o 1 because of troa,li;1 or other. problems lMlt that now students !Kmlcllmcs prefer 'to all.end the ·nameless school. "I believe our educational system is igeared lo tet1ch us n1any .students as theapl,y as possible by Shooting fbr ·the norrn. People on both ends or the spec- trum l<>se otit. . "SOn1e get a pcibr sc.ll·image betap!le, o( hljlurc5 ind 1*.'<lmB mental dropou ts. We1re 1r11n, to teacli them," F'olr snld. &~laln..it thp.:th" o It er n a 11 v • ' . I school has a few classes in subjects like hi story and govern1ncnt but stresses tutorials geared to the-individual 's needs and abilities. "We give them things they can handle even if it means going back to third grade 1nath," Fair said. He said he assigns college I eve I material for students who arc above average. F'air said that as a result students arc absent from school less olten. He citt'd the case of a studenl "'ho had been truant more than 100 d::iys one yefr ol regular school yet had no truancies during his first l h r1re months at the alternative schoolll. Fair said If a student just \\'ants to satisfy state law by staying in school until age 18. he ls permitted to lake only three classes, too rew to .qunllfy him for a degree in four years (re~ulllr high school stodcnt!I take five or slx cour~s). "'Of course \\'e try to stimulate these Students want to to want to take more courses.'' fair &Mid. "I'd S1'Y maybe ' 'IS.. ~CllOOL,. Pa~ ~I , .. Craft Hits . Lo11g Beach Fuel Trutl{ LONG BEACH (AP) -Four men were killed and another critic81ly injured today when a rented plane hit the top or a 125-foot gas tank and crashed into the street shortly aner takeoff. · The six'"9eat A1tec had been cleared for an instnnnent takeoff from Long Beach Airport at 3.55 am. Fog limited visibility to one-sixteenth of a mile, airport officials said. Dick Friend, a county fire departmenl spokesman, said the aircraft clipped the top or the empty tank, snapped a power line and began to disµttegrate . Wreckage was scattered over a ~yard area. Investigators said they learned that· the occupants of the plane were headed ror South Dakota on a hunting trip. The meo were dressed in heavy clothing and there were several rifles ln the plane. Four. occupants were pronounced dead at the scene. Police identified them as Phi Ii p l\1organ, 49, of Los Gatos. the pilot: Robert John de Dobertis, 38, Newport Beach; Peter Johnson Tillson, W. Tor- rance; and Chaucey E 11 w o·o d Whip- perman, 52, Covina. . James Edward Reynolds, 48, ot Cer- ritos, owne r of the Area Drain Co .• was taken to Long Beach Cooimunity Hospital with miltiple fractures. Stereo Eqrupn1ent " Taken by Burglars Stereo equipment valued at $450 was stolen Thursday by burglars who entered a Capistrano Beach home \1ia the unlock- ed front door, Orange County "Sheriff's offiei!rs said. Deputies said the intruders took ad- vantage of lbe absence on vacation in Mexico of mailman Lee Whittaker, 50. of 2~ Calle a.1onterey to enter the home and carry off the s t e r e o ap- pliances. Orange Coast We•ther . • Fog and low clouds night and morning hours becoming mostly sunny Saturday, according to the weather se rvice. Highs at the beaches 68 to 72. Inland areas 74 to 77. Lo\\'S tonight 58 to 60. INSIDE .TOOi\ Y Orange Coost College will br111g the m itsicat "God.spell" to tlae stage \Vednesday through Saturday. Stoff \Vrit.er To Tir us tokes a look nt OCC's of· /erina in l1is l"ntennission col· h1mn on the cover of todau'• \Vtekander. At 'I'-S~ AJ .,..,,., oi. L..M. lltfd Al t'1ltit•ll!• .u Clntllltil Dl·lt Ctl!lit• CJ C~nWOffl ' Cl Dftlh Ntl!fH A7 &.dlletl1I Pl~t •I Ff11•nce ••-1 1491_.. IJ lftfennllllllll Cl A!lll 1..1nct.ri al M1ltll0• A• -- ; • MMt\' ,... a7 Mt Witt CJ .. M11l11•I l'urtth II N1lit•tl ... WI .l.4 a. Ortlltt C-ly Ar p_,.. ''"' •••I••••"" t.t-es ~ s,1v11 P'"ff i6 '"'" ll·J 5'9df Mlrt:'11 l•P T•~tallil Ct •tllttltr) Ct4 WHtlltr M WtrN N1w' A4 ' ~ DAILY PILOT l,ISC I ' Agri~,u lture -"' Land Plan Clai-ified ~!embers ol the San Juan caplstrano city council now claim they only wanted to study the controvrrslal notion of des- .. ignatlng ta1x:I In the city for permanent '. ap-i('IJJiural use. 1. The Cotn:ll voted unanimously last v.'eek to take a stand on the preservation Or ' agricu.lture and lo d1rect that to sc:k!ct areas for penna.nent laf'!!\Jng. Tbe area selected was 2tlO acres south ~ o( Del Obispo Road three miles from t Coast lllghv•ay. Most of it ls now used for fanning, some Is undeveloped, and ~ portions arc used by mobile home parks. ~lembers ol the city planning com- mission approved lhe selectlon and :. adopted a general plan land use mnp v.·hlch shows those areaJ as pennanent .. ·• agrioWture. Now councilmen. who admllted receiv- .in_g a number ol phone call!! on the rssue, appear to be changing their minds. t; · ' Cowlcilma'n Jim \Veathers said h e ' ' ·didn't think a firm commitment had been m~. Councilman Yvon Heckscher ;.-said he was In favor or agriculture, _,, but only tr the city could "Coot the .: bill." He added that he doesn't view ,: preservation or agriculture the same · way he does preservation of ridge lines ·or open -specc. Cooncilman John Sv.·eeney said it was ·· · Un!Jlir lQ · ~ in on one particular att:a ' ,ol town, lbat all areas with top gradf: '"' 90iJ sho\lld be studied , and Mayor Roy • ,Byrnes said no decision should be made -uuUl economic studies are done. ' nie onJy person silent · on the issue _ \\'as c.ouocilrnan Doug Nash who had ",urged tbe original stand. From Page Al .MALL ... spoke against the project and eight spoke -· tor ft:' ~1ost ol the mall's opponents said .'~the1 ~ ~Uned about eight-parking spaM to 't>e eliminated by the mall, " a~ ... Ji'afflc problems result ing from , cl~g 'tp~ street, and •bout a Coast Hlgh)vlly'M-ent project wbleh will '-." e1lmihate a left turn onto Forest Avenue, -· Whett rrinj businessmen are located. · lklW "triembera sald the Co a s t " i!laJiwoy !l"')ecl bu _, -•I>" proved by the dty counc!.l and ls not connected with the proposed mall. · stonley Scboll, public workl director, laid,lhe1·projtct, whlch will replace the FOl'drt •Avenue left tum with left turns _ onto Ocean and Lagun8 avenues, I s S ICh<duled to begin In December. ~ SJ>e:A)ten In favor of the mall said ~Ill beautify the downtown '• · d. more aistomers for ~ ~ merchant!. -4 •. '• ,, :· II. !j Ou fall Project ' . H Budgft Approved ~ f ~~ design-phase budget for the ~.:;.Southeast Regional Rec I am at lo n • Authority's ocean outfall project was : • un~ approved by the San Juan : : Capistrano city council Wednesday. : ! San Juan'1 lhare wUI be $'70,437 which ' ; amounts to 13.29 percent of the total. • The rest wi.U be divided among the : ; Dana Point nd Capistrano Be a ch : . Sanitary District a n d Moulton-Niguel · · \\'ater Districts wilh most being paid : l by tbft.:8an'11r Margarita Water District . ' ol Mi-Viejo. · l ™ oOcarf 'outfall, proposed for the · \ Daua'"Polnt-area, will not be completed ·: ; l1fiUT 1976. rt is expected to sen•e the J smh COu"!f area until the year 2000. . t "l I I , ~IJl;ANGE COAST LI . ' DAILY PILOT ' ' .. i · ~~bert N. Weed • • ,• ' . ' ,; . ' i: 1{ •, Jack R. Curley k t Ptt'1d9fl\ tnd 0.M!" .. ""'""'' ' ' 11 Thomas Keevll liOl!OI' Thomas A. MurphJne MeN~lll ldltol" Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall ... ~"1111 ,,,,.,,..."tl!lllt•' . , . Lilguna Bt•c" Office 11 .. Gr._y,.SI. MAUI.._ 11.Cld,.t': ~.O. lle1 .... '16SI Othtr Ofllcn rMI• Mew: UOWtt!~ MPM4 ~ .. 1<111 »»~ . ......,..__ H1111tll.,.i .. 1qe11:t"'1••11.~ s... Ot1M11i.: JM Hfftll ll Gllllllflt "'"' Ttltpftont (71C) M2-u21 ct1sslfltd Advertising '42·5611 I • Lagu«a «each All Dtpartmtnts: "Ttftphone 4M·"" ~' ----.-. ------. --r - . ' ' - Frlda1, Octobtr 18, 1974 GETTING A SECOND CHANCE AT SCHOOL IN LAGUNA Instructor Holly Golfot Workt With Guy.81chm1n, 16 'WE'RE IN THE PROCESS OF CHANGING OUR IMAGE' Director Jerry Feir Prefers 'Altern1tlve' School From Pajje Al LAGUNA SCHOOL.· .. lt plftmt ol our atudtn\a fall Into this category." A motivated student can take ns many as nlne or 10 courses and mAy take a course at the regular high school with pennlssion ol the teacher. Students can also get credit for work- study, Falr sald. He c~ecks with the employer and grades according to how well the student Is doing his job. Fair said he is concerned because some people think of alternative school , students as having drug problems. "I believe drug use is less here than at regular schools because the kids like school and have suc~s." Fair said. The four teachers who instruct the 33 students are technically t e a c h i n g assistants and must hive all lesson plans approved by Fair, who also assigns the grade.. ICboOl'I ~ boa.rd, red: I "I sit at thls hard wood desk. quietly like al maes. the voice drones onward In front of the clw, trying to tt:veal secrets of knowledge to me but it slowly becomes the roar of the sea/my mind flys (sic) out the window to the grcr. blue sky out there i find a seagull sitting on a S<Jft cloud .•• "hand in your papers" i hear the ocean cry, the sky turns brov.ii, the clouds tum to air. and I fall down into this hard wood chair." German Brewers Start Crying In Their Beer ,. 11 114 Percent Two Major Banks ' Drop Prime· Rate· NEW YORK (UPI) -Two major• banks today lowered the prime leruilng rate for top business borrowers to ft~'" from 11 '11: perWlt. First Natioiial City Bank and Chemical Bank, botb of New York, made the latest move in the recent downward spiral of the prime from Its historic hieh nf 12 percent IL _wa~ e-tpe(':ted to touch off a new round of reductions, Citiban k, which revlew~~ts p r i m e structure every Friday, a floating rate formula based on certain money market intere!l rates. Last -week the Federal Reserve Bank of-Ne" York released statistics showlng C i ti b a n k could reduce its 'prime to 111/4' percent, The move by CiUbank last Friday to trim Its prime to 11 \.2 percent touched o!f a new round of reductions among the nation's major banks . . official organ o1· the Egyptian govern- ment. Ttie report did not specify who w&s· involved in the negotiations, nor who· was 'Involved in the alleged con· sortium. . • There also was a report In the Detroit Fret Presa that the •arms flov. from the United Stales' to Saudi Arabia could doiihle or triple Wider a secret plan deveJnped by the ftderaL_gnvl".mm in an attempt to drive foreign oil prk:es down. The 1eaet program to Saudi Arabia apparently was developed by Secretary of State Henry A. Kluinger, the new1paper said today in a report from Its Washington bureau. _ •. • From Page Al JAILED .•• CITY ATTORNEY·. George L090n Although the prevailing prime rate is 11 ~ percent, Michigan National Bank of Detroit has announced plans to lower believes lhe cllent he represents free the ending rate to IOo/-t. percent from on legal principles is innocent-will be George Logan Permanent City Attorney · Oc in Los Angeles COunty Superior Court 11 percent, effective l. 21. Oct. 22 for a new extradition heiring. The downward spiral of the prime suggests bankers see at least a s11ght Judge William Murray of Orange Coun- easing in inflation and are optimistic ty Sllperlor Court already rejec.1td the the Federal Reserve will continue to ertradltlon based on Orange C o u n t 'J 1be t.a(una Beach CityFCouncil has relax credit reins. authorities inve.stigatlon and lef.al work. appolrited· George G~ Logan,. interim city Given encouragement by the decrease • :!. Los Angeles County '!"OD-t acc-.pt attorney, is the city's permanent legal in interest rates, investors pushed prices Agajanlan, cl the law finn of Sheffield, counsel. sharply higher in active trading on the Charton, Fishman and Agajanlan, said' Logan will receive a $1 ,575 mmthly New York Stock Exchange. Thursday one hopeful conoesSion ha S retainer for attending all city ~ The Dow Jones industrial average was been won. 'Ibey 'are willing to accept and planning commission !JI e et l n gs. ahead ll.97 at li63.41 shortly after the the Orange County polygraph-or !JO-Call· perfonning routine legal services and ~~~~t.e t invo!Ving International ed lie deted~r _ ~llndlngs If Russell ~I~ h°Iflce ~ fOW' ~ a week Busl.ness Machines Corp., also w a s submits to one admlnl!teted by Los di . "'" .,._ . ..n.. • Angeles County. · In ad lion, u1e at.vi .. el' w111 receive stimulated by a report but the company He inslst&-in the meantime-that his $50 an boUr fOr extra ser:VICtt lncluding denied today any knowledge or a client who is held without ball f0r two trials, preCrial r e s e a r c h and for reported takeoV"er bid by an Arab coo-years and 10 days, ii .. belnttb)ected ~g the city at hearings anc; softlu>n. -. --,---------+-io"'lliitOll"'-iOUIUtlllnal-~';jtoplfd~.i·M;'.y.==-~1i.esijl1lll1oit1Wv'<-j<;!ei>' ~--;-;~~~:::::--Jn a one-sentence st.a"tement · issued Appeals court ju!tl.ces ordered him Logan of th~ of Rimel, Harvey from its headquarters in Armonk, N,Y., freed from Lai Angeles County custody, & Logan hu serving as interim the company said, "We trave no know!-unds be could 1'°' be adlted dty attorney since July 1. CoUOW,tng the edge of any negotiations Cor the sale of on gro ,. ; em reaignaUon, 'of.former City Attoqiey Tully· IBM stock to any Arab Coosortiuni." to Oklahoi:nJt .aecOod thne. on the same Seytn0uit.who ,11eeift,ned ~pltately Rumors. or a takeover b1'd sent IBM alteged evidence heard in Orange County, ,,_ • 1 J t tlo " where extradition had been refuaed once cl .... • an • .accwnu a on,... ra ns sha res sharply higher earlier today on already. .-~ ... .-~ with the4.ql.l'\4.jeb. .• .. ·:.'· the London Stock ·Exchange. Prosecutors appealed and were then Following Seymour's reslgnaUon, tht The report about 11 possible A r a b coundl-~ declared Itself to be In t h e takeover was first carried by the Middle .upheld, plactna the appellate oourt ' in mirket for a full ·tilhe dtf ,ttomey East News Agency, considered the semi· the position Ol ordering "Ruuell freed rat~"than·a ~cpntract legl!,1 £9Jlll¥.I. Col. Will Tubbs Succumbs at 8.0; • I ._,.lfl"I ' .. "" .. :.• ~ • Services Today Funera1 serviee1 wtre tO·be·betd~t.oday ror Col. Will Leoter Tubbs ol Laguna Beach, who died Tuesday. He was 80. Co. Tubbs, a M-year resident ()£ Orange County, was a former chi er of the GroUnd Safety Department or the United States Air Foree. A resident of ~ CJ.ff Drive, h& was al90 one of the founders or Orange once, then orderlna him held without FolioWmg the cOOnciJ•s ·'action Wed· ~~:me forms ol '·'ustice are lllOI< neodoy -in~ Logan, Mayor Roy "" h"" Holm said tbe oooncll bad coosldered outrageous . , t an o th e11, '' alterDaUvt:s but because ol. the outstan- decl..., Agajanlan. "And tee.pin( a din& .. job done by Logan dmiog the _ persn in Loo. Aqelu County Jail flotn intBtm period, decided lo atay with ~!· ,!!.':.;~~ ta-1ust1! ~ ,:,1 .. llle· top him. • ;-:., ....,_~""" .... .-. -..,., ~ l.Gpn'9·c:a.tl'a¢-calll for bl.m to aervo ' !\fexic~ f },r~~1.Ew,pt , TIJUANA, MexiCQ (AP) ...a.. Brush fires sv.--ept across an estimate 2,000 acre!I Thursday between TUuana Rod Tecate abollt 30 mllea south of the U.S. bord.er, As temperatures "'climbed above 90, a total o!. sl1 aich fires broke out but were believed C>ntalned. ' al tbe pleaaove of, lbe COllllcll. PrevtouJ !i> IJ'lj when Seymour became city at. · 'tomq, !'ilan w•1 .. ~,counoe1 to th• pl~ a:irhrniasiorl aoa legal partner Jack Rimel advised the city coundl. . . . . J,aguna Realtors Will Celebrate County Imurance Agency in Santa Ana. J/E ALSO LIKES He w .. a member of both Santa Ana . The Loguna Beach Boord of Realtors Elks Lodge No. 794 and the Masonic FRUIT AND NT TTS will hold a dinner-dance tonight to cele-. Lodge. u brate its 50th anniversary· Services were at 10 a.rn. at \Vlnbigler 1be party, featuring a 14-piece dance Chapel, 729 N. Grand Ave., Santa Ana. SAN DIEGO (AP) -Naturalist Euell band, will begin at 7 p.m. in the Monto Donations may be made to the American Gibbons exchanged looks with a gibbon Carlo room · ot tile Newport er IM in Cancer. Society in lieu of flowers. -named Euell after the &Jll! was named Newport Beach. Survivors Include a daughter, Dorothy in hb honor at the San Diego 1.oo. The event is open to all real tors. Budd of TUstin; a grandson, Gary Budd The gibbon. tike'Glbbons, likes to eat Tickets, which , cost $12, are available of Tustln; and a granddaughter, Lynda fruit and nuts. He was given hi.a name from the Leguna Beaeb Board o ! All are under the direction of Laguna Beach High School prtndpal Don Haught. Fair said two of the teachers arc credentialed but due to the t ea c h e r surplus oould not get regular teaching jobs. They are paid by the hour. McGraw of Huntington Beach. Thursday. Realtors:, 494-&'.>ll. BONN (UPI) -Prof. Dieter Runkel , 1.:c::~~-;;~~----------~------:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::~ a brewery expert, was explaining to a group of West German legislators how a proposed Jaw would p er m i t gluoose, sulphur dioxide, ascorbic acid and proteolytic enzyme to be added to beer . "The pay's crummy but I wouldn"t give it up." said HoUy GolfO!, who teaches arts and crafl.ll and English composition at the alternative school. Ms. Golfos, who llas taught regular summer school. said she wouldn't go ba,ck to conventional teaching. "The kids here are a lot more creative. I never have them all do the same thing at once:• she said. Fair belieV1'S a lot more students voou ld like to attend the nameless school if space were available. The school has only four classrooms in a building on St. Ann"s Drive -across frGrU the high - school fobtball field . Overcro'A·ding exists even though the building is new this yep-. The previous one burned down mys\eriously a year ago and the alternative school students spent the rest of the year in the Girls' Club bui.ld1ng in Bluebird Park. Fair said the school began double sessioos il\1onday, increasing its capacity to '10 students. He said enrollment has increased from nine at lhe beginning of last year to 24 at the start of this year and S3 now. The school Is open to students in grades nine through 12 who may request to be trans ferred or may be assigned there because of problems In regular school • Students attend cla9ACS for three hours A day. the minimum time pennltted by state law, but because nmt classes are tutorials t"hey spend many addiUonal hours studying, Falr said. Fair hlms<l! bas been al the ochool three years and Is 1 credtntlaltd teacher with a B.A. in bk>k>gy, He also coaehes vanity basketball at tile hlgli oc:Mof. The altemetl\'e tc.bool w11 two YW'!:o old when he arrived but bad only a doten Studtnts. be said. "We'ri still not where we want to be a year-from now,'' Fair said. Perhape the 1 It I t 11 d e of m1st 1ltema1lve tchool atudenll t o w a r d regular classe1 was best summed up In a poem-essay by 17-year~ld Noreen Ortiz, a senior. _ The · pl!Ct, Po&ted on ·the nameless ''Pfui! pfui! boo!" the I aw mak ers cried. West Germans, 'l''llo guzzle more beer than anyone else, contend the proposed all-European law would pollute their na- tional drink. The nation's 1.700 breweries took out full-page newspape r ads cal\Jng on drinkers to protest the law, now being worked out at Common h1arket head- quarters in Brussels. · lt would standardize beer productJon in Europe and allow addition of chemical additives to beer. as in the United States. Gennan beer ls stUI brewed acc:ording to Duke WU!iam II of Bavaria's Law of 1516, which allows only malt. hops and \Yater -no chemical prcservaUvcs. T,vo Men Held In Three Killings FORT WORTH, Tex. (UPI) -Homi· cide detectives holding foot>' ~Jex. lean nationals in connection with the butche r kn.Ile slaylng1 ol three women and two children released two and held the other two as prime suspect!. "We do haV"e two men In custody that are suspeCt.s ln the murdera al Rlve~lde Vllla (Jn a p a r t m e n t com· plex)," said homicide detective Ollver Ball. -. The five per&an1 were dlacovered In their wreck@d apartmerrt. The women were slrlpped1 lhtlr hands bound and their mouths' gagged wlth rags a n d clothing. At least one had been.raped. The children were gagacd ..---Md-. alf five were slabbed and -mutilated with 1 butcher knUe, according to polJce lnvett!pton. .. . . ·- ·- IAMP SALE CONTINUED From the finest collection of lamps in South 0(ange County. Select from such well known names at Marbro, Stiffle, Knob Creek, Norman Percy and many others. . ~ . . .. 1 • ' Fantaatic Inventory of : Quality Lampe All Ready For Immediate Delivery •. • ' ' OREXEL-ttERlT.AGE-HENREOON-WOOOMARK-f{ARASTAN:..BAKER Wiii( S & SA TURD A TS 9:00 le WO ' • ( , . ' NEWPORt.BEACH • lm W~TCLIFF DR., 642·:IOSO LAGUNA BEACH • 34$ N<>RTll L'OA!»1' HWY., •IM.f.UI , TORRANCE• 23849 HAwntORNK BLVD. (Qpfn"Fri. Ill 9, Sun. lJ·S!30) -37a.1219 ' I ' \ .- I f r I ·I • • > -Gas Saver AeroBoost· d evices have been installed along side and top edges of truck van lo reduce air resistan- ce. Pasadena· co mpany. Ae roVironment Inc .• sa.ys devices s~1ve fu el by up to 23'/.. Holiday Inn Chain Big Bank Bows to Pressure DETRO IT fUl>J) On~ d ay afte r it launched a Policy t hat \YOUld r1,1rt:e customers to kee p n1ore thun SSO Jn thel" sa \'lng~ ue- counls, tho sta te 's sixth largest bunk bowt'd to J)fl'S· sure a nd dropped the icleo. "It m ade us look like ogres," said hunk prt•sidcnt George A. Pierson ... and "'c really aren't." Tire Detroit t haiJt'-=r uf·tht.:. NAAC P called it a victory for poor people. Tll E NAACP 111\V cal!OO 48 hours earlier for all Ptlichi g an N a t lon11 l custo mers l o \v ithdraw thl.'it money and cancel any pending loans as a protest. The bunk. which li sts total assets of SI billion and sa\•ings accoun ts totaling 5200 million, wanted to dro1> small depositors because it s:.iid it was losing monl.'y on them. The bank put the new plan into acti on Tuesday, but before it actually closed any s avin gs a cc ount s con - taining less than Sri!. !he poli cy was dropped. A ri val bank e ven laun· ched an e1dvertising can1 - paign in an attempt to lu re <1way jilt e d 1\1 i c hlgan National customers. Seeking Custo_mers "J THINK \\l llAT wc'\'e seen is that the poor people ByMILTONMOSKOWITZ establishme nt. 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Joo"'"' ·'° • 10 ll.._ + 111 ~ IV. l 1 "\'o •. · Sdl!l1r 1!1 .tl 11 &t 71°'-1'" AMf<:\l<l.11 • 61 l"' ••• C..ll!.t GI 1 1)0 S,..+ \lo Fl,~J. ., 00• .... , •SYt .lov Ml91 ... ll 641 JJ .. , 1, -.-11 1.ll • t I/Vt + .... !.clll..mll .ll JZ ttl\OJ t6• A Me-Oi<O<P 5 '3 2''11 , •.-. C>t$C;pl I. It • . I 111'> <IC. Cp ·" 1 • "' ..... Mg 1.1'd l 6 IY,-... NA C..I .to I JS 11""-'<t SCM (p.'iO J Ill 10' o-', ot.mMot .2(1d • •Ill 1"'--"' 0 1$Gt>l l.IJ . . 10 16 :: ,,_,., .JO s " )'4. It --« 1(--KA Mt J.JJO I un tit .. '' SCDAIM .M) s 11 I -'• Aml\IG• 1.14 6 JO JI"+ '. Ca<•Col 1. I) 1$ •n Ut.-" ~8 .80 s l '"" . . IC•1'e• Alu I l 1' " -Vo Nl.mPft •.JO • 11 t•• I• !lc.OI Ud -~ ' u ''IJ . '• ..,,..s,r,,p .tllS tJJ •~•• '4 Ca<•Boll.40 I 14t ..... ¥1 f'oonSMo:LJO I JO ll'lt-"' 11:A1n lll•'-) '' ,z HOoAl<.lOd 4 JS l • '~ !lc.OllFfU<! t YI 10 . '1 AmSmll l'h 3 1;,s II\"• •. ColcMBk .lt . ' , ...... I\ For Mr:k .Ill ' ?l lO'M • l'o KAl t6pl•'4 . 6 .. No(nAit1 "" 11 1 . !le.on~ ....... ) I , ....... Am 'Sl:nd .80 • 1S2 t -'-4 (.o!Koln .0. . . JS 1'.<o-V. FtM pl 1.IO 1 :IOYI-V. IC.llwtCI .SO • • 5.,.. ·-NQellUI \AJ t Ill •\.o 1> !lcot\Pap ~ & lt l 11"" I h h I · money but they arl' nol l-J.--~!!n~l!"•~~01!l"J>.•LJ>lU"1Jll!S!LlliL-t!f.1.S-A-Dl-F-F-ER-EN!f-necess lITilv-t"h":frTlOOrl unren e r oom mea ns storyin the big citi'l!:s where power." · AmSle•ll .11 9 S1 '"' • V. Co!Qllt .61 16 )SS l• -1<o FIDtln l,Q:ld IJ 13\li + vt 11:(1 ~ ll9 . . J ll t "' NoUICA l,'7 ' JI 1"'4-"" !.cottyi I .lll...L Jl ~ ••• .Am!lto.W~l~ .c..IU.•ll , .. S •i -..Ml...ll.-A_U ~l ...... -1--1 ·Ht!Gtp" 1:1IO-;----t 20'1.o -W !ocO•l IM'1l 1 • 1' IOI,-'• AmT 'T l ,•O 9 U'iO 4SV. • °" Collltii F-4 1 J~• ~ 1 6 316 ""'-'° IC•CPLI J JG I » 19"-, \1 NoinP!i 1.» 6 llJ lt\lo -1• Scovol pl f..., I~ Z'I >,,, AmTAT l)I• .. t1 •9""+ .... (.ol l'wnn.JO I 141 11'9+ ~ Follt!Ot'O .Wl lS Jt lS\'11 +1"' IC(Plpt .j..., •40 •!V,-\, NoHIG>110 6 YI •l\1.•11• Scvckli'•O \' l 4''1 ·I revenu e gone forever. lloliday Inn has to vie with When the bank :innounced Holiday Inns, a company big-name hotels, many of its decision, it said on e in that d idn't e ven exist 25 the m r ecently built. So every rour sa vings accoun ts years ago, is c urrently Holiday Inn is. d,rawing a totaled less than $50, but the bumping its head against bead on this target. total small deposits acroun· Allo!Al ...... a"° • ""Colon51 1.10 s 16 1• +I Fr-M .C IO 1'1 u • .,, KCS01n SOii 9 ) 11'-':t• .... Nl;ISll>wl.M I n ,, -"• !lc.lldpl ,Mlt;. I! , ••• ''• A TT~6 l .U .. IS •t'h t 'It Coll lnd!K I J Jil "16:\t+ ... ~ r:i t 1g :::: ' tt JC.on GE· 1.~ I ?1 IJIJ. • . . l\loSPpl I.to .. t10 llV1 t I SbdCln I .XI 4 ~ UI.., lo A.m IT wt •• ~9S 1'4 •.. C.Olloll. 1.611 . . t It + 1 F ind f t0 ·~-It ~nPl\ 1.H 1 .tO IS',_ .. , Nrt/lgll .l!d l '' t \lo t 'lo SorilConlr .:IO 4 I U -'• AmW~tr .... 3 J I . . . Co11ln pl •V• . . I '1\4 • ~ ~ ~ 0----IC.lly IN:IUJI • S Jh + \> ~ I.Ml 6 t1 2•'.<o-llt Sora W Ait SI I !-1 J~ • \'lo A'MtP.-1'-". 190 lt"'-'" ColGffl.•11 St JI ... "'...,• lnrlV • I IC.l!ypfl.16 .. I ll '\, ~~ppt,~1.~~-.· >>>' B,,.-··.· 1!',V,t!°•·'."'>> •, • '•••"' AW1!•pl 1V• .. 1100 11 t I Col Gs pl J\olt • • Ito l4\\ • 'h GA(_ °"1> l 16 •>lo ic.,"'&B• .1' .. 1:111 2""-'" .,..,iA11, .... • -!~v l ... Amt1!;t .1(li:I ) t l"--1'11 COISCll l ... 7 22 IS ••. ~·· -• <>-•~-ck .'II S I II ""'""ln l.JG J tt• 70 • ~ S.•" 1 . .0.11 Ii i SO't.-"-Amttl!'ll .tCI • 1 11Y,+,...C..IWMl.U 11 2 13 •llt•\4 -1 ...... -IC.l'(Mrll .606 • 9Y,1 ~-1no ws •• IS l.O\lo•I S.•u•in li" .• 111 2\'t +\6 Money Tree In ads running in ri'he ted for only about one-tenth Wall Street Jou~nal, the of 1 percenl or J\1i chigan Holiday Inn chain is ap-National's total savings ac· pealing directly to the counts. AtnetO<I .90 t 3 IOV. . . . Col PlChl .. 5 . . J2 2V. GAF !!I .Sl • U ~+ • -or;.."'84>1 11'! .• I 10'4 -a.n 1.60 I Joi ~ • -S.l rlGD .•6 !l 39'1 tt:i.. + ~ AMF 1nt.14t 11S HY,+"' (.oml)El.Ml 7 117 ltlli ..... Gem 1 . .0 . 10 10 ... ltftAfCo.104 .. Jllt •\IO -tnpl J •• nu ,tll>sEDCO .101111-1 21\'o .. >:lio I.Inf« .8D 1 I 11 .. -\4 Condi• t.20 10 It JUt+ '141 Gmoltllpl1 ... •• l llh t Mi ltfl~f In.SO • 9 ~ .. \'o -lpl •.20 ,. 1:12 •""+ h 511,.,.keC .IO 4 .. 4\IJ +"" ::;_;;.~~:~1~W:! 2~:1:Z =:t:·i uf ~\lo:~= '::is ,J ~ .. -~::=.·=1! -~ 1;~.!.~ =~-~ ., l: ~.:1t ~::= ~ '! ~~· v. ,,,....,.. CP J 11 ··1 .. -\4 CwElci 1.2• •. I •1 + "' ::::;:~ ·: '1 lt~ 2! ... : lllt ~nmll i.eo s I 29 ••. -Pict .«IO • • U\I> ~II .IO J 9 I -... ...,..,.pc;orp J • 2'9-"" Co"1 ct or J . • 1J 1t v. + "' C..locll :. s • l•V. ~ I'll it.l'ICOl1 I.WI • no l1¥ll4 '"• -sii 2.40.& • :Ill l1 ... v. 5"el10<1 1 • .io , n1 •z .: 1h Amll•r 2,10 • l? l 1t. •.. l::clpl l.U . • 11 U\, Gm Svc ' II ' t• ll:y U\11 I.II ' 9 16Vt . t:. Nrtn Co 1.40 • ,. 2l'lt. "" SPellf 1.0'ld 2 3 ,..,. ..... Z:::Ui::"i ~ l~l· .. ~ ~d1::: l~ 1;'11_:~ GM-'tn ' l ;~-i-1 ~~.:eG :I~ ~ tt--·~~ =:.t:z .~ ~ ,;:: ~ =:-:w~: ~ l~ :-~ presidents or corporations, It said some "customers Mlle! In .JO ) U 1\11 j. \lo Comw OH Si 1 1ll llt . . . ~ </".! • ~ r--\lo l(id<lf W .60 1 M fVI Hl.aorCp .14 J 21 ...... • o:. WW"' •.«l . 1:100 ~'Ill, 11(, telling them, in effect: used the small savings ac· "Loo k, your salesmen l;lre counts to take ::idva ntage out on the ro_ad spending of free checking -v.•hi ch yoyr money like water in cost the bank 10 ·cents a lhos_e ritzy. hole~. T~y're check plus $1.51 for storing having a JOY nde on t.he informa tion in its com· company 's money. Doo'tlet poler . l.n&COl'l ,JOCI 4 U9 '"'''lo c ... onp11.12 .. u11 ..... ""' . __... • •• ltlOOfpl l.JO .. l Jj ... NV F C.0 51 1,. ltl'I•..,. SltrT•Pt .'7 6"' .. "' AncllHC I.QI I ... u • , ... c.omm Set t • ill l•l'll• I"' Gemini Inc I • . t t1Y> .•• ll:JmtoCI 1.l.ol • 1 t) , .... '"" --0 0--Si9o!Co ll): 2 n , ... them get away witla it.Have the~ chec~ toto a Holiday 1nn." ,,_ this hars h la w or hotel- ~eeping. Now the world's la r g'est innkee pe r, t he Memphis-based company has Spread its tentacles so widely that it h&s m01'91han 260,000 room s available That's really the pitch the , ~ .. world's larcest innkeeper is every night . nLLING AQUARTER,9' using. a mlllion roomsls no ea,y In on e r e ce nt ad task in ti m es o f high spotlighting San Francisco, gasoli ne prices and gal· Holiday Inn told corporate loping inflation on other 'chh!!s that their people are fronts, causing families to ·spending Uo 8nd up a night c urtai l vacations, a nd fo r a first·classsingleroom businesses to reduce travel in a name hotel, plus $4.50 a exp e n s e s. L as t yea r night for parking, when }[o1iday Inns earned $46 "they could be sta)'lng at one million a rter taxes. In the -or five Holiday Inns which first six months of this year have cheaper rates and no profits ca me to onl y $12 mil· charge for garage pa_rklng. lion, down a w hopping ~ I N ADDITION. s aid percent. l:loliday Inn "We can offer Holiday Inns Is. not !he your compiny e ven more onl y one suffw ng but. irresistible croup or cor· bein~ the..bigge~l'cheese ln porate rates." the 1ndus1.ry, it s lhe most Picture what's going to visib_le. Howard _Johnson's b a ppe n if c orporate earnings ~re runn1ng46 per-presidents buy this mes· cent behind last year and s age . J oe Wi lson, a ce Ra mada Inns Is orr 32 per· s alesman ro r t he X~Z cent. . Wid get Company, has a trip Stuck with all t hose em· 10 San Francisco a nd he's ply rooms, Holiday Inns has pl anning on staying at the decided to take out ~he' Fairmont or the St. Francis br~s s k_nu c~les . ll will, or the Mark Hopkins or the beheve 1t or not, compete new llyatt Regency. But his for business, just li ke any b oss says. ''No, J oe. red-~looded frel! enterprise : Enough or these joy. rides. patn ot. You stay at the Holiday In m a ny s m a ll ,p nd Inn." WhCn J oe checks in mediu m-size cities across he's going to be jn a lovely the countr·y t h e local rrameo!mlnd. Holi day Inn is the class _ .C9.!~~1m,u.•~'"~ Edison's Earnings Take Spurt __ ',,',',"_,,", J2 n ·1 ~l•Sd U .. 2'1t ..• ~.'·1:;1 ~ .~"':: llir>gsDS .tO . 1' l\l• .... Otklncl ·'° J IJ 1'-• ~. 519CoP!iJO l llY>-">l I t -14 Col! "41•• In .. 10 Ht r~•,. ·, --, • IC"'Kll C .to ) II Ill'> ... DttJlrPr .M I l ,._ • '"" s.-CP 1 t ( Jt'l'o • .. MMll C.0 •I t 110 JO "' C-MI 1.:JO • I It .. ....,,..,, ·-' ... " II: l M Attl I 1~ • \.o Otdd ,,_.., l •• '"'' i.., SomPf-c 11111 s 10 J • It "-""<= j(t .s 1 11\11 .... ConnMI I.to • 2t IJ"'-.. Gnl.T i;!I ,., .. 1IOD »'4. "' ICAioM N n ., •• t• • ·~ Ott;Ptpl l.MI .. IS ,,._ ..... s;...,.eo .. • )S IJ.. .. Apt.o Oil ... " 1• IG ...... ConrKC .60 • II IJ • Ill ~ .... ) II 1111-h ico.ft,9 .. s IS si.-.. Oi:tPli;!I 1.1' .. " 11 -1'4 s..._p.i " Ill lJJ 10 :-.. "-'OCorp ,. I 1''o-1ilo ConEO .•Scl t JOI 1'-• .. Gn ~1.10' lJ II .. •"' ll:Ofl'ltpi2:0.. 1 JJ ,1 ()gdonCi).IO • "4 1•1:.• "'51,...C itO • 611 u _ '4 AP L Corp. )j ....... C#KEdMt .. J •l -'t'I GM .... } .. 8~ ...... 11:o11Perl t0 °S lJ •l "" ... or...E41 ... I '" •JO••·~ S1!j.,, 11 ]I ~led """St. 1 l'loo-W CoME(t ti ).. • lS"'-1" ~ = J ,,' ,,·~.-"' "1•1tco 1:92 10 •1 .WO,,.-•\ Ot!E p1 •.Kl ·• 1'100 •i • "" 611 "s 1l ---\'o 4-RA Sv I ... 11 SI !&9, '141 C-l"O l.H I 20J 11'11 , • , ._, f • · • = .DJI ,., H\"•,. ._ Oii E Ill t.4.4 •• lllO .UV.-11'> y() 1"111 I 1J •o;. • I\ l.tqlfH ,n S U ''-• , a·\'I .. It •Jl')-1 Gn=EI« ,'-!! I~ 10.<,I ~ .. :: 11-t ,I!;! ) \ I,,..• \fo ~ 1,.~ •, », • .... 1111 • !lo• 51!11 eo.1i,. ll JI "" ... ""tftlTO.t'i 9 II lfYt+ YI .l'I I US llllrof \'t -• ""'-1.A t n lt ...... " Oli&MG -.. ....lft(;o .14 H :ii.t U"+ "" ~">•~"'-"·,· J nlo •"' Lit f .. .... •• 1::1 1~ n 1"f;_Z::!~ ic..,...111 .• 4 -' I._+"' CUnlon tt I• II Ullllo + Ylo "'""""° 1' t 1 t •. ....... n n 1\\-"" Pw2 1 11 11n ••• Gmlnw2<l •J I"'•"" --1..L em.r1o•n .w • 1• ,.,._.,.5m1.,,..,;11 ,1 1n 11oJo ,,,. "'~ PS 1.l6 I II lll.'1-\; Qin P pl •v. . . llO 3''-.. Glfll!IR pl' I 2 26 _ ~ l.MG4\ I.st t t lillt •• 0..161l .I. • I I .• 5'nl..._.1"' z 11 f3 •1,., ,,,_ ,,,_8etl.'41' 11 1'1<.+ ~ ConPpl'l.16 . 110 ''+I GenMld .u "s ll ~4"' U l'fl!.tllinlll l 11 11\'w ••• am.Go .IJ , l \ • ...,_..., 5mill'OIT .IS •• 1011>-.. N-UGl.10t •S lt'f• •.. Cof1Pwr pl'6 .. J SJ'4 .•• c..nMIH l:IOIJ 2,1 Jtlt-.... UMl!ry.r2 t l 10 .... t V. Or "ckl l.JO I if l ,.t \lo s.r..tllt>'.ID t \ 11 ..• Nltft-RHD•. 12 I"'• It Conti Air I.JI t U J -1ot ~ UScl t 1l!I JS>!>-.... 1-!rMt;, __ ·.·.~ >, ,' •,I• 0th El J,20 S IS Jli*-'4 Sort 815 .6(1 • itt ·-11. Ar1TMlle ep • •t •1t . ,, en CM\ 1.llll • 111 n:i.-v. .-...u.. ... •• , ,,... .... ..... ...... -Clo.rib!IM 1.JO ' il ,_,_ 11o ~u. 1nu 1 1 1 -..., NmtoS 1.tO s to II .... Cnti~ .ICJ 1 14 '". " ............ . . ... ... u .. s~ 11 • $0 ··~. It O\ll!ttCo ·"' • ,. ...... ""' Sony(I) .010 10 IW. S'IO-.... """'Ill 1.10 •• t 1• -\It c.ont1Cpt.li0 11 IN 21Y,+I =r . .t il .j ·~::::~ Lt•rS pl i ..... 1 "'• ... 0..Sllpll ,10 • I lt • '4 SOD l.lo 'Ol!d 1 , 31\<o Nmurpf '"" • ' ltC '4ih .. lh O>llCp 1)12.... .. M JO~.'"' G PllOU I.. s JSt \l'4 lNiWJ ,t(lq 6 l u~ ..... 0..•T•" .111 • 11 11 11. • \.:. sos en~. :II ' l s Nm:t. 0t .92 1 110 1i C Cl)()f8 , .... · · • ~ o \lo 5 ,,., S JS l'h ~~,!" ·! •, I,>, t 'llt-It °""'"Cf ·• 11 102 J2h t It S CtrEI 1'• I 11 11 ..... NmslR IMI S 11 lt\lo , • . CIUll(p 2.20 • ttl JO l '"-......,__ .., t"-~~ °"""nll! I.Ml I 61 12" • 'to SC..Ei;!I j..., J 14\'o + t NoQwptn 1 s l tl -II. CllltlP 1.-I 14 It. 11t 1 .l6 9 Sl JJ'llt · · · U hl PIC "to ' s 1°""-l'f °'""II pl'~.. 1 •I + 1 5oJ Ind 11' 'i 1 Il l.'>+ It Ar\'lnlncl .SJ 10 Ut tltio-VI ClllllA 1.IOll 1 10 ,.... . • . G T E t't:: 1 1~. 1n~-"' Un v.i 1;,.., 1 ?S IS-16. 1·16 Odordl ... Ml ' l ,,,,_ I'll ~ l I ...... ,,.. ASA l ld1 .. 111 7l\IO+'ltCMltln~1t •. Sl·l•1 t-:n GTl'lte11i11o lOIJ"" l..thml.1•0 .. :U t l;,+"" ~"-Sdowopl1to l ll 'i'o +lio ROSEMEAD <AP) -= t: ; ;: 1'~: ~ =vi'~; ~li J~:t:: GJIFlpt I.JO :: !» IJ'll< ••. t:!::'tn '.g l ~ 1~~= ~ ~:~\:ii ., l~ ll~: ~ =::i1:~ 't :~ 1l:-·;.t Southern Calirornia Edison~,.:. I'~: .... :-=. g::t?l+:t l "i ,,: t:~;2~ =':c.:·:~ ! 1M '~tt:~ t::f~~~ 1! .~:~ ~~'.:~·;51ll 1 ~~~ ~~:": ! ~!~ t1•11 ••· u,. reports a sharp increpse ~:rl1~ ~'.: .~ 3i U": 1-~'; t •i: ~~..,.-;,.; c;., ,.;: f.i 1 : ~ ~:: ,::, t::!l1~~'w!:' "! 1r. 1t:= :,: ~:~1i:U 1: ;t lft::: 1 ... ~~ r·~ t ll ~:~ : . : in sales and earnings for the At1A1dn 2y, 11 111 •~+ 11r1o Cooli:U.. .tee ' • 11r1o • •• c..~ 1· • · nm " • \{,; LFE cor"" s s '"" . Pt Tl T '·'° • t9 ""' • "" SNETPI 1:.. , ,, fl~--;..; llolkl'l pl'>llo .. 110 •lV.+ !,t (.oaplnl.Ool • 91 Jl'ill+ V. o.n-Pi:l l I 16 t lt-llio i.lllbyM<NI • 11 t •Yo Ptll T l)l • .. 110 11V.t ,,_ 5oPl<llJ.l• I 17 1lllo• ,~ three months ended Sept. 11o111c "' 1.llll •. 11111 P1' .. 1 '-' uo . . 11• 614-"" °"'' i.»:1 11 ss 126"" .. 1~ uc.rtyCp ..«1 • n •-.. "' P.c: r1n .to ' J '"'• "' !i& ~1 1•11 1 u 1 • .,. • 1'11 .,,.. A.llAdl pot J •• 11 Joni'>+ I .... '-11,. .611 J 1• 1 --8f..i-::r,,;1f" : .: 1~i'.;:~ :;t_ ~ ~ ·1~ :. ,> ,'.•, •••• P41!N Wlbb . . 11 Jl'o ••. !iOA•llpf .to .• t S'l'I + ·~ .;N. Atl.H Cap 10 11 l'lt+ ~ '-TM IV... I II + \lo · Gitlr" Fl Si Jl ,._ "-.__.,. ..,,, ·• P•11Wl11 l.:lll .. S 9\lo • 'IO Soft*I pl' J 1 tl + ~ The .ompany "arned • .,0 ~-i:o~_ ... M ,•, ~ ,•,111+ -. ~.·~~.~ •, l! ..!!:!.···· ... ' 1 + U9!it Mt 11'> 1 ,. 11V.-.... Ptlm 811.1S l IJ l l'o t •• SoUnGl. IMI ·; ~ 11~•"' .::; ....., ,... ._, ,. _ .....,. ""' ,.. ·~"' Gicld lewli S 10 J'lt • \It l.Joll"'t pf I .• rt0 11 . • . P.mlo.I llK 4 11' J\(O • \'I S.:...llld «lll t I lS .. I<-Yo million, or $1 .33 a share, on ""'°"'' enos 1 U9 J'-. 11. ~ 1.60 • 10 11 + v. Gltt H•H .si ' 1 1~ .. ""' unf E1i 1 16 11• ~s'" • '"' P•" Arn 1.1r •. un 1 , 10 SOWM Fr .lfi 3 11 slti.-14 . . A-.co Corp • !01 )\It-""' O:W-• (p .• Jt '"" ••• GOll!rlle I.SO 8 •J 111'o • .... llro:l\ltt IMI • no Jl'lt-"' P..-<1111 • JI 2• • \(I ~-"lfllf ,.. .. ' revenu es of $407 m1lhon. A._ CCI wu .• 1 n -1'+1·1' c.riG 1.121 11 191 ll._+ '"' GW1lll ,_. s 19 1 L•n:N11 p1 l .. 20 •J -1v. P~r<rf .Ml • • •~~ "' ;..PS .Ii 1 JO 1~;:; Th. ed • h $4• ·1 A-.c pl J."311 .. Joi tl'lt-\lo 0".-!Eq .tC • 4 1\io + ... GitlVI .Jln 1• II I~ · UnH Fd 1 1' I 11\io Pt rgoU "4 1 1 t'lt . !iptr\on 20.o • • Siio • \It IS compar wit mi · ,,....,Pr .10 11 u xi1,1, ... "' <:Du\!" 1.•~ 1-1• 1,.-v. (;IDbtl ,,.., ' 1n 1oi.o. • "" LiD"l!I' cOrP ·s tu '"•-• 1 P•>il'ln 1.111 1 11 11YJ-•• Spe.,.,...:.i 1 s 3 •-14 I. 88 l h ..... Shi( Kl S 11 I C.0..IH 1}0 Q I j\lo Glalltl"o .IO • t ll '• · l.Jttanin W7I 196 tY, ..• P•)CG IM I U 17 ... -'It Sperryl-lof J t 111111 •'Ioli ion, or ce n s a s are, on ,,_1"" ·.JO J » ~..-~ · ;~ c.o. a.c1· .Js s u 1o-.-· i.; Ga1<1Wt1 Fc1 ' 110 •111 • .,. unn cw"' 1 s •Jtl . . • P1y1 ... ~ .JO 1 1 111t .•• 5P A;.d .1, ·; ut. n 11o ::-~ revenues. or $285 million :i !:'6.i'&~ :j ': ?~"":'!: &~ l n,u.;, ! Bl :~; 1:z =,:.cr~1~ : ~ ~ ... ; =. ~110 } ;1 t;.,.: ~ ~::C-~i:: .' 1ll 1J~· .'.~ Spr,,,_ ... _•,,• ,1 110 1~-"" yearearher. __. ._ Crt<1n Fi .•1 1 u '"'• w Go:1n1unJ .n • 1 1 -"" 1.0Toa•F• ·l6 11 s• •I.lo-.,. "-<!"'' 1.1t u 1to ••:ot • ~ ~o 1.1o Ml ,:J :~:,:;':: J a.k K . Horton .• hal·r· ~wii_,-"., .l "u' •,•~ ~ ~~.,.<'·.~ ', "• '!?!' .... • .. Goo11<1r11 1.111 S ll 11\'o • '"l.Dllltll l.;.:.., 1 ts u ., "' P,.nnD ... 1• • u ,,. .. s.ouim .M 1, Mlf l!Mo• 14 ,,__.,.. ., ..--,.. ..,..,,., .,. ..,. ~I.JS •• ?l lS .... + :to ~ GI l ' S1't P1 Co pl4 .. , I ·~-11 .. SC-1 1..0 I 4 l1 -V. man Sa .,d Thursday that llMI..-in .10 r 111 111t .. '" c.niu.eH .10 1 J u :i. + .., g;"' .. ~ .. '_..·" ,•, •~,, ',1i,:. ·•· lDIW s 1.;., 1 • 11 '"'-·VO PtMPC. t.to • 52 111o1o. ·~ si 8"rd 1.13 u 11s 11~-..., · ' Blll«Oll .31 11 lJJ )I +I ~ Co<-I l l 1•11o + V. " lDne Siii •'> I J,Q.,,.,.,. 'Ill P Pl pl 1.60 110 IO t 1\'o StSP .. nt .:II 11 16 J&loo • 'It third quarter earning's Were 8'1dDH .tO l I 6111 + \lo CtwnZll.60 S 19 2) .... -\lo -.!W .Xlrl•O IOI> J!lo-\lo ~!G ii.'>' •t ""-··· PPL pf 8 10 .• rlO II •l''I SldOi!CMJ • 111 Ji •l 8'11C«il .60 ) ll ,_ + "' en (p .so } ~ ,._ .. 'It ~':?. .oo ) I& 6111 ..... lJlr>QI LI 1.4" • IOI 1 1~. "" P•P&l II'. . . l60 7J +IV, 5'<10lnd l.JO I lOll 9l)lt, ••• ., helped by above-average Mt~1.,. • 11t 1fu-11t cuu1o1n . .u , 11 ·~· 16 1 ·"11 1 1' 3 1..1L11111"•·· , ~·•·" P Plpf•.so .. 1110 •s •' !i!Oil0hl.l61l 156 so....-"' Pr •• lpl.,.,,·on m ak1"ng ...c.. I.Joi •• lJ'lt •.• c....n1n1 ... 6 JI Ill'>•"" ·GIAIP.OCI. t '"' l.O<l!!Oro ... 19 t .av. ...... P&n .... 1 1.11 I SI 11'1o t "'Sl<IOll lJI J>.o •• 110 S! , ~ ll'IC u 1,.,. _.,.. cu..no.o .JO • , 5,, .•• GIUrDo1.:ro .. 1 11v. .. ~. L#.i CorP 1 • 1~ ..... ....., .. i;.r 1..,. 1 JOl'o-~. Stdl'llot" 1.92 10 Il"•• ,, more·lha n-usual amounts ~ Pn .. » 2"6-.,.. C....r•nc .tt!t .. •1 10"4 "' GIN 1''·11111 12 1 12'•-1• Lll.¥1:1 '°" • !4t 2•"'''"' PnotJ p1 1.'° .• ' 11"+ "" 5'1d PrSll . .a •1 , ..... ptC2 .. tt 11'11.+ l'o g::11n .XIII ' 11 1·~-v. (;INNelol.ICJ• ., •O -\IJ UP.C•l< 0 1S . I.SI •V.-'-'11 ""'"'f;1ort I~ s 111 11i-.-•1 !old"""'·"' • ''"'' .... of low-cos t hydroelectric 8rtloN"Y"2.JO s • :u11o. :ai. 1111w1.1 .. '" ... &:~~"u~ ~ ;~ :1(<,:,~ t:;e:,,t.M, ,• ',' ,",.~·" ~.!'·,_·~ ,• ,',,•,,on _.,.~ ~~·.·.E . 1 , -·~ .1 bl 1 h a.."•.. • '° 10 ....... C1111w1-1 1.60 s • n • .... .,. .._.... _ _ .. '"'_.... ... , 10 u energy ava1 a e or l e a..rnM J s ,, » 4 1\'4 cvc1op5 t.•o J tt 1•1--,., c;cw11t s.11c ·· JJ :,,~:-~ LTV Corp 1 l4 ,,,,_·ii; Pe..,.1eo 1.00 11 ,,. ""'' •1 s. .... .., .w • 1 ''~-,, • I I · 8«1IOllMld 1 21-+ v. C)'IW'lll t.O S 1:11 Jt"-••l'I GNIGl•l.ot• S "lTVCp S pt 2 '6"loi PtAlnEl .Un :tOlo 10•~•..., SIM"rtil 1 9 Ii "' company s own p an s 111 e.o o. .20 il 116 11 .,. v. .:....o o-Grvtod '·°"" • u~ 111.\ ... lubrLOICp 1 ii 111 ,.,,, :: : 1>t1 ... , 1.•o , i 11...,, "' 51,.,.1, 1.Mlll ~11 1111 -.. California . a.met 1.tOc1 2 • .......... o.'""" cp , JM1 •111-"" t:ri1ww:1 ""'·· 11 ~.,.: ~ t.ut-.s ~ • '" 1"' ••. Pt1erP11.20 u 6 10 .... -"' s.M11!1c. .Wtd 1~ ''"-.,., . J~e Said Othet factors COn· it:.·.~ : t~ ,;...: ~ 8:~~1·.;t ~ n ,t;:. ii.r,; Go"~,,·'.~ "i :t 111''" '• t::::"s1l· 1 : !~ 1:": :· ~~:.5~ :~ '! ,1 rot.·~ ~~r 1:= ~ S~ ~~·1:: , , • o\ pl I •. l llY. + >,(, 0.11 Ill .tCQ S 1'1 1•1'1 + v; Guard I • lOCI ~ l 2 9'~-.. l V 0 Corf! 1J \~J I"' •. Pt>!fl( 2.Ud . 9 11 .... + \\ 51,,.1o-g .IO I& Jll 21'4, "" lnbut1ng t.o improved ear -1111n 11111" .«1 l 1t ...... .,.. 0tr11no1 !Ill .. JI 11\lo t •• ~rt:t?,,"'-~ : .,11 l'• •·· L'fl!KV .ti<! J 1t1 13,..._ ·~ Pll""' in .1;, i. 111 11", 1~. SI""'°'' .n 6 5• evt-.,., . · I d d I llanchL .611 11116 31.., .. \lo Dtl•Ge"'••U 111 W\'I• \\ ""'~ "' 6'• •· Lrt<el)I 2'-':t 1111111 -I'll Pr>o1o o 120 1 111 19 ,,.. "•••••-, '' <>•-• ntn"s inc u c a genera "-r.··••-"',, .. ,, .. o.-o ,_,,, ,, ,,, ... Gu11M<1 .11a J • l~-'" , ·· ,_, · -"' "" t> •• .. -·• " •~ .,, Gu!I Ofll,60 • ,60 llV. i., l'f'llCll~v .«I 1 1 ,.,.. h -l'o P!lll1El l.M .i 119 11'1t ... SIN<Wn1'12 ~ lJ 11 _..., rate increase C f f ective jn· 8elf "9S .12 I 1J IS ,. Ill Otyc 1111' •V. • • 1~ '4 • 1 ' ---#. ,.__ PflOI E!pl ''Y'." J 1JlO """ + "" SIOllly\I 1 '10 S SS 1'""-\It Octobe r 1973. increased t::::sa1: ':1 ~~~ ~:=:~::·~ J; ;!:=~ &W~;t~-~ 19f 1r .. : ~~id60 1! ! ::t.:: .v~ ~~~~l:; ·,gg !l'"":1:Z =u'.~·3 '1f: :~~~ 'I b · 1 ·' r I l llf(IOllO ·'° ti 1\t n .. 1 DtyPU 1 ... 6 116 U'--Vt 8!.'.~u \:~ . ; ,.; :~, ~ ~ ---.JO 4 • l""' Pf!EI pl 1.110 . 1110 .1 ..... I ... Slone WO Jd 10 '6 JI .. Ill ava1 a 1 1 Y 0 OW·COS 8lltd'IA .60g I Sl .,,,,_.__ ae.-.wlr ,401• .1t 11'1 .•• Gulta.wi .to 4 It 20,:• '>"'«min .JS l •• • • '"" PftolElpl'l~ ••. 1100 •l ~1l'o St<ip&5""p 1 t 1 Hilo •..,_ n"lural gas a nd sin" nge nt a.klr ·~ u •1i """ ... twr1 1.60 1 u1 eo'll>. 2~ Guna.w ,2 .-... ' , -Y 1.1~ s • 1•1t • -. ""11 El "' r •. 11 so w • 1 s. ...... 6td 1 • is u ... .,.. • flllCQPltSi S t'IO 1t~\+ 'IJ Dl!!Pa.Ll-10 S IS 1"-+ ''I G I '",'·· •>'' ." __ Fd.4Scl ·• 61 11't• l'f PllElpft . .0 .. "1lUt 11 t "' S11a Fl.il •S S t t•f>~ 'At I. nternul CO".·t controls. Moen 1.:ro s 11 1111> • :ot °"' -1.10 J 11 11~ + "' 1 wi p1 1 ' 1 .. ' "' MMJicOo .D 1 .. • ""El pf :LIO .. "° .w , l S.l.dow 1 D , • 1J1t .. ..., " ~-30;!• I ~ .. Drrt....ir .'°' .... ,.. ...... c;,,llon lnd•I • 1 1 •'•"'-'•.ISllJS 11 .... vt P111t$Uli1.JO s ll• .SluW i;!l l01(1 S ii'"'•"' a.tl l-twl.N l .. 'UV.-1'1 o.-119(!tl .t011 l f"il •.. H«kWl-.;ai H-;-1,,,_,0 Mlfla<yCo1 S 11 ll •"' PllU!pMO ,IO U IOl4 10 -2 ~"I! S!1ae 11 1•~-!lo l'lllmlJ Cll I t 1' 11 t \lo Dl'lll:tnt Cp 1 U •h -.... Kiii F B .t• I l4 9,~ • '• -H .... 10 S 16 .... • ... l'llliicllln .JO 611 JI J"',. \t ~ .11111 11 ll'll • to .Only in America? f*"cll• 1.m J 9 tl.\lo-'t o.nntin .to • 10 u~ + "" Htolll'tt .b 4 • 11,, , v. ,,.,.,..,11'111 tO . 1 l -Yo Pl'l!l lno pf 1 . . t '"' s,uc°"'c .10 . 11 i·~ ... l'lfrdl• !Il l .• J l l"-+ 11> O.W111pt 1 •. t 12 ••• KellibtnT.JOlJ 111 1611,0 .,1, ,,.,,,_ .M ' 2 ti ..• Pl'lllPt1 1.60 '•n •I ,,. s..i Oil 1e \ "•21'.•2"' 8'11Cp 1,'H s 70I u ... 0....¥5 .11 8 IS l l'o• llt Mafl Hl'l l.ll 1 )1 n v,.1 .... ""llVH . .a. s l ..... s..no.1i;.r 1 .... IS ...... ,.,, ~CllPt IY> ,. 1100 13\lo-VI O!rrtlpty .It lS HM 11 .. + h l'l"'"mlP• I l t 1 lb • \o -PCO .'6 II l'k 2l • It PIU.wlnt ·-J 10 l!lo -<·• 51,.wob.,., 1 Jt IJl'o + 'It 8-ICpl'•.JO ...... _4 l"'Dtwtflft .HU '' 1 -111 H-Cp.ol0 5 I 1 '0'Mor.o11111r!M . ll t o.V.flk<IHG l.ll S •1iµ,,•,~rna .li0 t l l)...,-\lt a.ri SI l.lli:I 2 II ,...,_Vt Dr5aloln ·'° J ,. !~+ ... HMO ..... on . 11 1~.'.:: :-: -°'' 1.• I llH " .. '• Pl ... 11 ....... 1 s 10 l'--.... Sur'l•ri;!l l ''> • l1Y,-·~ =~~; :: ~ ::: ~~~.1:.~11: ::-=," ~~~.:.~ •. :, ,,',1 ''0-··· =~:·:~" 3t ·~ :~ ~'t"&1·:: ~ 'f: ~~=~: ~;"' .. ::~ ~,.;"--:-."' t s IOI ·~-\lo DlllEpl l ...... uo ...... , H.~Crt 1.11' ) :;.~ .. '•--·'°.Ill.•'"'•"' pt1..,.,s . .o .. 120 10 .. , 'lo s..it<Gn JO~ n •l>· l~ 8rrlrl ~ 1 S S96 11'4-\lo r.tf' pl 1.0S •• 1100 Ml • 1"' MalMod 1.llll S llt 11.oi.-"-Pl!FOl'9 ,ala I 1 IJ\lo ••• ~-J lO tl"', ~ Europe Stock Markets Also Plunge 819JIN:1 .MlllU .... 111-"°DrrtE pl Sl'J l•S-Mo Klro.•.O.ll 19 • ,•,,,,,.,;onl .•12t1111''>•1Mi qPl"FtWr1 .. 1.olOJJ .•. S..CWY"'llO l J U ,~ llWClla.O .*I lS •11 11\'t • '"' Dtxlt (.p .3' . j S 11 + y, Klm~lg I 00 4 t 21 4..-Vt ,,..._ 1.60 IS JIO ll"" • 111< Pll1ilon .Mlol 10 s:ro Jl\lo + to !.ul•flM .S., s JO + , • ..., Mr .M ... • • •1'1-~ Olar Fin .14 7 11 I Y,-It .._.,.,.,, ·12 1 6 IO .. ' \t ~ Ml I tl 19 • '"' Plu• Hui t 16 IS'lt ~ 68 , )0 •',. "" lli!ML t.!Oo ' l 12"' • "" Di.mcllnll l S •S J•l!t , 't'lo Kl'fhC. 1 2ll S tt U'•-\a ~ .JOCI t Sl ''-"• \lo Pttn llt WCll 1 IS I .. + "' ~on II ~ o> 11·., BloUHA . .0 I m lCI + \o'o "'-~I.ti> S U >>"" ~ It Htf'KO IQ • 31 10 .. -·~ _.;otl Jl'fl II llS 9 .• Pl•Jbo• .II I t J .... -Vo -I• I ""' e ..... e.o .to J JO 1•~· .. o;g;;,,., __ '~.VI HlttSM• ... s 11 ... '""llMl\llF 1.H I u 11111 ''' Ptet•t .110 4 ,. 11 • \I, mi ...... o.:;;:,. ) )'" ~ BR USSELS !UPI ) - Diropean stock m ark~ls, in an unhappy show of Tran- satlantic tog etherness, have follo'ol.'cd the New York Stock Exchtingc down Into one or the longest. lowest slumps in history. A gaJloWs joke making t he rounds of tho pat- ticutar1y hard -hit J..ondon exchange ask~. "Whal's the dtrf erence betyteen the Tltanie ond t he s tock market?" Answer -';the Titanic had a band.,. m E SLID& IN' t:urope see.ms to have halted for th<" moment. But the recenl f'.C\'lval in New York1 based on such loca1 factors as tal· ~U.S. lntcre11l rates, h•s yet tn be matched b)' an up• Ml1ngln Europe. "We don't 1ee wh en and how It will and , 11 an Amlle.r-· Stock prices in Europe have been on the slide for one to five years, depending on the naUon. Exp er t !> in va riou s ca~lals· give depressingly s i milar r e asons -ln · nation, credit squeezes, b11d payments balances. lho oil crl&is -all aggru.valed by a , loss of confidence in the on- llre.economic sy5tem. ,Most lmport inl, tbey saY. the s lump is so tnte r· national lhat each nation exports and lmports gloom at.the same Ume. 111E MOST DRAMATIC drop •h ......... Jn.London. where the Financial Times Index has gone from a hl1h of 542.6 points on M•y 19, 197'l. to a low last montb or 182.1 -an almoat ln- credll>le plunge or nearly :il>~r<enL dam broker said. And In The. pictur e In ,o ther London • ...a ~to'ck de1ler.. ma~ket s, \f less s pec· l'OUld only shrug sadly a nd tacular, Is nn: le5s bleik. 'say. "I w1sh I knew." 'Thf Paris Boorsc, up l() \• 8Gtrble S••s . • " I~. "' Dl<ISllDI I.JO •• 10 " -'4 -tn l,]'Qcl . • Ullo ~ .... ,,.,.,,, M 1.111 s J,Q IS PNBM 1.ltl:I ' JS • • "" _, T-•• 1 · (S j" th' Sotlna C liO •SIS 17-•1"-Ok:•A8 S2 S J 10 KlwtiEl l.tll 1 11 ti -9'1t WGOCI .M S • 1J1't .•• Pal .. oiel .U lt 111 1'11+ \t Tlllllc~ Ml ! 11 ....,, Po1n ear 1cr is year, BDIMC.n ""° J 1 .. n Did..,·'° • t• i1t-"\.i. :::=1~b 1 ~ ,t to"'• .,. """'oCP .J2 1• 1J 11>.1o. '"" ~-!I , 1H 1111 _ \\ T"''ot' N•I .,. 1;·~ • : is barely 50 now. The Am· eono 1"""' •• 1• • •.. ~ .-1 11 u~ .. ""' ,',~-·, MnOn11e .so 1 ~ 1•'"'-"' Pope 1 .60Q 9 i ,,._._...,, r.o1i.v 1n "° ' s.. . G ll d .. ,1 0oo1rMo1v.• l lS,._lt .,.w,s 10 '"'-"" HCA Miln ln • 2S .. MtMtv .Ml!I • U1SV.•V.flo11c 11W.1!' l)li""+W f"'lef pl l 1 ,.,_,,. sterdam enera n ex II t l!lorCltft I.JO I Sl , ...... "" I.ti EQc.i IS ... , Slvt . 11'1 Htc~ Int .11 • ,, ~·. . .• .WC:Ol l.lld II U1'.. "' f'llrlOE '·' • II "". !\ T""""'£ ... n IQ ... -... AA all ti me high of 143 9 in 80r\l w 1.n • '' 1• • 11o Dli11o1011 A , JJ ,._., .,.. t:f~':~".:~ '~ l~ 1~"° ~ :1~ w 1 .. 1. t.OI , n 11111 • "' 1•01:1.ic 1 . .a • 1s ui-. + ,, r..-.a1 °"fl 11• 1s·" • • eom-1n!S 10 tlt• ... Dil!ln9fl pf J •• 1 11-\!o t" HIH,,Hl.IJlOIOl l6\< l"'l llMlw l.lJll 1S 10"-·-F'oCE!P l,1'6 bllOY,-1.T~(.IO 110 ) '• A1,rn of l!J73 As of last week Bos• Ee1 1 ... • •2 '•lh + "" outtn 1.1011 11 i u 11o .. "' • • wt'-IE .Jer s " ,,...._ " "°'e1"' sl'lo .. 1?00 •• . . r..:.~or... • 1a •·. -.., , • • • ScalE(ll l .1111 •• JIQ 1l +I Di....,W .016 )20 1J~+ It Hr"""Cur1 ~ ti 1"'• '• Mlv06 1.oll 1 1)1 li'lll• \'I Po!El11!•'1t. 110 •11'-'·· '"'""icon 10 J 1 .. -'-'ll 1twasdown to83.7. 8aums .... ' II""' ..• on.tan ·'', jl) Pt-..... Htl .... lnl.N ll l l ,~ .. '" lf.liypt"f 1.1(1 1 "~·~ l't PatElp!o(M . ISG JI •• Tti l ...... , 10 10 "''" -' Br.wirl1 .10d S 211 •'f-It DitlilS.• .IO tt i Jl.\t t "' '*~Pr .Ml • .lt ~~·• ,.. ~O< .'1 6 J 1'11) ··' PotE!pl I H ! 19"" , felKO< 11 J • 1 J '• 0rl!1'5t ,~l l 1611\olo •l:i'I Ol..nifOlll ( II I"'• It Helma.P .11 11 16S 31'•~1\.o Mill'JW .SO I 6 '"' V. PPGi"d l.10 \ •8 U'--.. fll!O'dynot .J• I ~I 1~4-• .. Even Wei1 t Germ any. llr!J M,r:S2 1)10ol _, .... 1,.. Di"'""'·* I JS Jiit•"" :::~w'fe:=~;;.1J 1l~.,;,; wr"f/'·3011 1) '1·-·1 Prtmlnd .SI • I ,.,. \o T•""'1n ol• I ·~'"'''·• I I . !ll"•t Mf flf2 •• tJJO •116 QrPlopr ,J0 14JlJ ,,._"' Hr•\h!I•·•' 11 10,1 ,.,~ .... A l .1 '"•\~1>roc &G1 ,to1111~11V.1 H•l~ll'f>l'On"lll 111 ,,,_'"" seem n 11 y immune lo many !lrltPte .«ltl J u8 •'h•· ..., 0ort1tMri .to 11 •u 111't-l'i11 """''"' to 1 .,1 >•v. • 11 1>roo1191 .t<1 • s sh itit~ °''" 01 l'-"-\, e 8totti.GI .II • •S If~\. W. 0..LulJ ,IQ ., • 1111 ... tt!IU!°" .Jl I ll 19'''1 '~ "'<Cad "6' 1 '"'' \~ Ptolt•lnt l9 I II 10 ... -1 .. (It.her economic problems, e..unGi. 1.n • it ""' . . . OGrnli, .5' 11 "1 1,.,, •.. """'o"'" 1 • s1 21· 1 • .. """"'' 1.m . . n u• . . p s "' inc: 6 11 s1~ . h as been hit by Sloc k ~1-~; 1~ 1~~-;t: g;:~~w!Y -~ t ''"':::·='~~it~~'; J~ "!"':..~ =~.,'r'.!!~1: ~;:Z:i"' ~lf1:J-~ ! J: a~·_'· market tever. The Frank· ~•' .ao ' '"' ,,,. • 111 DDrT" &i-• t1 s~+ .... Hifltolor ·"° • u ,,,~ · ·· M<OonD ·'° ' 11 10 -11. PiEOci! l.eo •• 1 12¥.. v. ~ .n t 21.S 1\11 + W. a .IO $ 1't )" t "' HU11111 HI! 1 6 JI 11~ ' '-Mc Gr Ed l"' I 6S !Stlo t ,,.. PiEVPI i.Oi • , t•O •1111-1 furter Allaemelne Ze itung Ondl'I w .eo , " ,,._ YI 1JO • s JOI.\ .. MMw tnou~ • 11 1·~ • \• ~ I'll .J,Q ) 1• 6-"' P!.EQpl 1 40 •• ,1611 •1 -1 nde • ., ST MQ l.IOcl 2 1i JYl-11. 1,IOll lM' .. fll it\i ~tl C .11 1 t• u i.,, .. MCG<1!V 0 S J I +1" PSEGPll.OI .. 110 10 •.• l x h1tan all·llmo highofa.c:"llt.ET IS tl .. JtV.•lltOP "1n«1 ••• l" ... ttrsl•,..•.liO • "'ti.-... Mc1N ... '9\S 1310 1t¥.·1 fl\rSlndJMI JI Jll-.•'• --N 17 1969 SI 8uclCI Co ~ , 11 81t •.. 0... 1,IO • ' "..,_" '40ff flol(l" 11 11 ,.,., "' Mel( ..... "° s ' ll .... -v. Pi NM• I.lo! b 13' Ill\ .. ·~ 1.U1-o• on ov. , . nee lk.t:ICll ll'lll J; • , ,.,,._ "' "'-'" 1.40 11 111 ., .... , 1\, Hol 1 .... , .n • 116 •'• • \, Melffn .11 1 •1 n·~ .. . PS.l\IM• 1 10 • ~ ,, then, it has Sk\dd<!d tO D (OW flu! 1'~ 1,JO 1 ~ 1•1.'t • h e t .IO . • 1 tlYI + t H<Olly S\q J ' II l'I' •-I MCU!olln Sii ' Ml IS''t-1\t Publo<lff SI 1 11 ll• l!llOllN l,t(l!'tl '1 ,l >t+ .. pf t •. 11 .. t i '1Dln'lll~t!IJ J7Jll" '~Mr:Nelt .IO ~ l•~·loo "f'llot&IOIJll..• 11 J ,-·,, oC 161 .89 1astweek. 9\.llovilw .10 s ,. .,,,_.,. 1,... ,, ,. ,. -~ _, .. 11 . .:r s •'1 11" 1~ ~Qt Ill "1 .... •• Pu11·01c 19 , 11., llut\lo«ll . .0 t 4Q S -~ °"'.,tuo\ .tu 6 I• S -16 ~'!Ill I IA ti "MMl!ll 110 1 J.t ''t Pullrt!IPI .. t •1120\o;-•, llunll llf I'" • 12 .. I'> °"' """j-40 r ns· \J"'-. HO•l1on CP l II I\,. ,, ,w.,opl8 1.8:) ' u·~ ... Pu( ...... I" I JSI •l .... J ... '"A SLUMP BREEDS a a..11n<1 '·'° ~ 11i• ••• °"""" ,10 . 1110 ,1 •1,.., Hii'0111A11 •11 10 _ ..... -..,..1111 10 u •• ""••oC• • • '" 1..., ,, 8\l"INOll'Q) ,. lol1'+" OlrM,.r J.IO .. llOO .. • u, +.Dwitic...U.l ,. I\, ME I CMp 11 1.. P\lhl..., 71 I t 1 slump, s1ld Frunkfurt ""'"' p1 -'S .,. • ,•,•-.... ~P"" ,.,. •. i )91\• ti.. -1 1"11 ll> • • '" ·~ Mtr 'll'u ... sll> ,.,, ,, P1.1roi.o1• •1 • " 1 ..... ,. ~·· w11rr1 d 11 1r 001 ""'"""' ·" ., 4 o...ar• ... ,, 111 '° . , .. -11~ • • 11 1" Mft\M(1) •• ' ' , • • •• --o o-mllller e e en n. 6urT9fl'i .so n ,,, ,,.__ • 1'-~ 111 • it>t 1oci ..... "' ~ M ~1 1 1' '" • \~ Ml'ft su .111 10 " • 1)..110.0.t ., 1 101 •• ,._ ·~ "Al l th Id k -<< er•'~ . .. IL "°'"'l\OSd. S1 t'• w.t• l lOn , .. )9•~· •\ Quoo.!i()r .. ,, 11! 119'1t• •• e wo r s l oe fUJCI 1 6\sl'I+ \'4 ,v;·· 10 ;,...• ~ ~Fmc1 u '" u ··· ·, ~"' 1(1 • • ,.,. '• ~ > ma like~ are oolng Into a e» ·'' • .. ''"' .. " ... 1,11 "& '°' 1s .!.. " -p1 '"' J~ JO"-• 1\o Mt«11l..r s.. • 1n • • , . it .. 2!-~ 1t -u. · 1 l II! , tnCI 6 I) la."'' .r J .. 1•W 10 •. tt!M.Fl)l 1'> II ?S--lo ........ l'wt .lbU 2'" )(! .. , "° Atl1'an .«!IS ., Jt•t •l'> s u m p a m o s l s t m • ,.,, W1J 5 1• 11..1i • -Quql.811 l.r:s •• 1u oo t>">-111 ~lP , ~ t 21' 'H>' • \.I _,.,. .,.., • •i ,•,~, 1! ~111 1t , 111 1~. 1-o ulls·-·•ly .• II ,~ s ,. 1ft-... ~Ill •• • • ,,._ ... HOuNI(;\ IQ ' 1o+ 11' •• ~ ,,..,.,.M 1,10 ,, ) .. .. ll•t1Co In 91 ' 11 IO~ •~" , PUtl 1.U 6 t 14 .. • "" _... I -l'flrwt•dJ 10 6 tSI )'"-'' MG M 11'11 ) II ISh-Yo ll•PIG Am 1 • J I 111.-'' • Ct>lltflfl ,1$1 • ., 11-6 . ,.. Etoll ,. 1.IM • • \6V.. .. .......... Cp-I • lO Ut.. • " """""' .J,O ' n '~. .... Jl•ytmo l'l • • 11\'t . ·~ Par.,, broker Fr•neo1'se c.Mi11 .•111 .. •• ,~."~.••to 1Q111 ... Hllbo.lnl 1'° 1 '' 11'·-~ ~"·'° .s •,:io •h -11"' A•\'11,,..,,.., u ,.,, '• RU .t01l lt:I )1'9 ,. . ~ i.j~ " '"' I"! Hull A I .0. l IQ 11"""'.... l./M t. 4 101.\+ 9'lt ·i:-.S t )11 ll.,., , , P,,1awor callcd the slldep!li "'·-,. .... 511•11 "'11'-""' f:-Ckft ·*I,.," ,·'i "'UO"''H '°' 1 ,.. ~ ,,. '• J •l"' ••• ft A C0t11 1 s 1w 11 -'• ch~J'"ogical'I 5ayl n I(, "il "::.1~ ~ , 10 : 1 t "--~ 1$,..u;, 11.~ tt 1~ ;t=7 t! ==~ ~-5 :i ~~ ~~ :·~ ~$1u~ :.! } ,f 1i .... '1-o :.ft.Ji~.: 11~ ~:: :·: t.ook rool n the United 11:;'~ ,~ ,;~ f~; ~ ' t:j!• ! 'f ,J-.: 1~ r111110t1 G '° $ 11 1 1 ... • 1~ il"'. · .-i;.,.t';\ 30 , 1.r '"~, .. ., Slatesa.ndwearcalwayso 11 1<11 i. •v.''-llM 14 """ ..... =~:~;:·,1,·;:1r~:~~~·m:;~1~:,,,:~"-" ..... 0ld . '~' '" Uttle behlnd t he Am\!ri· ~~·-::: tt n ... , ~{~:::· .• 19 tt 1: .. 7 ~ Mii.Ult.1'6 J7 1•·••.'• =rt:!~,; J'~ :t~: 'I I ., (:ll(ln S , 1\0 S 1 ..,. EOW18t 1.)1 J t I~+ 1!t 100 .,.,.,.,"'° • "'-,...,., 1' Mll .. tlf a t 11 I • .l/o lteJC.1111111 .ti! I f"-t•' , .. can.... •11tfr1 .IQ • J ~"'. '" {O ~ 0 u Ill ., • •ll<olll p 1... • 1~ ,, .. j .. WMM I " 11 ,,. Mt· .. "rl li!'l "' I " IJ • ... 1-IA••<o 1 4 II 11 •' ' °"'"""' I"" I I !\.. ll~lll•t ~·I 1 o~ I • .. Fina nce Briefs l \ni~1· l \41o ~l BOl."\1-;. ld ~h ri •.\l'I U.oi."it" l .i srarlc l'or r 11rt•-.1dcn1 .lohn Ii l-"c11 ~a\' :i !'Iron~ 1)Crformancc h~ 11 .. 11:tj,l(•r' di\ l ~iun :-; urr~el problems ifl lh1· b111ld 1n\! con~truc li11n indu ... try and 1hc r~111}("!r,11ion sh11~v('d u Si million gain In carni n~s for lhc thi rd qu arter lhL'i year. 1 Th<' firm. a('tivc hol h in paflt_r. r l·l~l cd hus in('S'ltS. a nd huildrnn: 1natt:rlt1I". rcpo r1 C"d lhird quurter ear-- n1n it~ of 52~ ~·million, nr~ c'.ltnL! l"K':r -.h!!rr 'l'h:11 rnmpar1'd "·1th ettml n~s ol s:.?1 fl Ol1 IH11n l•I" 70 (I'"'" IK•r li h :1n • 1,1-.t \ 1·,1r • " 88 DAILY PILOT '· Unisex s~andal .. . ~fen, Women, to Share Pro11ou1is? By DICK WEST Furthermore, Ille proposal Is d<murely dropping .one's 'l"'I WASlDNGTON ( U P I I -based on a faulty__pttmise. when one accidentally enters There b a move w.der way \\'hen f e m a I es occupy lhe ~'l"Oflg locker room. in certain circles to advance masculine prooouns in double Wilhelms'· unisex pronouns, th.e "unisex" trend In th I 1 gender ,aJ.tuatklM, there isn't on the other hand, bring about country lo a point w b e re actualJy a O>mingling of the a definite fusion of t be males and females will ·be sexes. The feminine presence genders, with all thnt impUes. sharing the same pronolN. merely is implied. Those are the kinds ol pro- s e x u aJly segregated pro-nouns that invariably are nouns are, of course, a.s much ONE IS AWARE there are followed by pregnant pauses. a part j)/ Anterican culture females In the i pronoun bul If God had intended males as liepaiatc bicycles -one one doesn't see them. lt's all and fem a I e s to have ~ foi: girls and one for very discreet and a b o v e prenominaJ togethemetS, h e • r...,•r1111n l\ebekab HarlmeS!, widow .of William Hale Harkness of Standard Oil family, is unable to bankroll Harkness Bal- let and the dance com- pany may have to dis- b a n d, a spokesman said. " " MISSIO IEJO IMPORTS -MERCEDES BENZ - Sales'• Service • Leasing 21701 MARGU!RITI! PARKWAY 495-1700 MISSION VIEJO 131·17t0 s. Ditto fwy ..... .,.,,~· .... ,..... ............ , 642-4321 Direct or Coiled to subscribe to the Dally Pllo' YOUR Hometown Community.Newspaper . .-------. You can Charge DAILY l'ILOI' Classlfled AU 642·5671 boya. board. Even prudish. T h e would have made .JI! a 11 • ,~gr~a~mma;::::llc~al_eq~w:v•:len:'.'.'._t_o~f:._n:"':':er~.------------~~~~---------.:__~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==;:::============== WE 1 HAVE "he-him-his"I- • -pt'GilOOll.l -fuc males and "she- bef'..hers" p r o n o u n s for females. '!be thought or both sezes using the same pronoun ~oold have s ho cked our grandpatj!DtS and I must say I find 1£ a bit SCAOdalizing my .. lf. Yet, t"ODditions in our aocle- ty today are such that such a propoeal appears In such a respectable publlcatk>n as the NatM>nal Education Association's journal. If you can imagine such a thing. In the current issue, Fred Wt lhelrM, fonner executivt ~ ol Ille Association for Supefv1sion an d Cur- r l c'U Ju m Development, ad· vocates a(sop.jon of three new unisex ~ -"ne-ner-nii" -for use 1n double geodet li!uations. TIUS PROP~AL, u you might have suspected, is an outgrowth ol the won\ en's Jlberatkn movement. Ub leaden oootend that pronoun- OIW!qllll'OOdY Is wtdespreaa in such sentences as "everybody is lo&lng • his head'' Since women as well M men are losing their heads, they argue, that sentence is bisex· ual. But WOlJlen are denied e quaJpr:onominal represen- tation. Instead, they are shov- ed inlo !hi maS<U!ine pronoun. 'Ibe o D I y alternative - qmtmction of separate but ,eiqual pmlOllllS {"eveyrbody i3 losing his or her head") - is cumbersome. So, u n d e r Wilhelms' integration plan, the pronoun would become unisex-.. ual ("everybody is losln& ner head."), THIS PROPOSAL prompted a distinct narrowing ol. my chauvinist pig-like eyes. I don't like it. Not one bit. That sort ol tlµng can ooly lead to further mn!uslon ol sexual roles, which already ls creaUng identity c r l s I a • Trial Slated BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A Ridgecrest man is to go on trial Jan. 6 on a charge of murdering his estranged wife's date. Jack Wayne Bumgarner, 33, pleaded in· nocent to the Aug . 2$ stabbin4 death of John Stanely Bugay, 44. admi ni st rator of Ridgecrest's Drummond ~fedical Group. Monk-ing ,-{round BOLTON ABBEY, England (UPI) -The Re v. Frederick Griffiths says he and his family share their home in the reclory on !he Duke of Deronshlre's Bolton Abbey estate with a ghost -an Augustinian nKlnk who wanders through the liv1ng room in black cassock and cap. "\\re have seen him many times and happily accept the fact that he is here.'' the 61-year-<>ld Church of England rector said. "Sometimes v;e have the ~mell of incense floating through lhe house and recently we ha ve had the snlfll of fermenting mead." -~~~ WHY LEASE AVW? CG.locttllo U..&ptrtsat . HARBOUR vw 1871 1 B~oc.h I• ...,....nqton l•och 342-44lS 0,-I 0..,. M09 ..J.-1 t t \at a '-•·• ' -.-;. • avls·b·row INFLATION i=IGHllNG Sf'L~I . • ~0uu@1 3DOOR ICE'N WATER SIQE·BY·SIDE Autcimetlc Relrtgeretor Completely Frff'-O'·Frost Sod"a fountain convenience and lt's 811 automiticl . •ice dispenser bar •Water dispenser bar •Hi-humKUI)' Veg9181)1• compartml!ln1 .seperate ftastt meat cold oontrol . -,. • , Ml(jROWAV~ O~H "" $EE A LIVE . DEMONSTRATION . ' ' · at our EL TORO STORE -Sal,,Oc:L 19 from 10 a.m.4 p.m. Am.ana's Home Economist _will show you how to pr'8pare delicious fa.ad in v .. th normal time. · · . . . . Attention Laguna Hills Leisure World Residents: .'."Watch ·your own Channel 6 on Wed. at 11 a.m. for our new "CARE ·FREECOOKING" Program featuting famo1.1s f:lome EConomist, Thelma Presman.,FUN, NEW RECl.I;'ES, f'RIZESI, SEE A COOKl~G DEMONSTRATION -. RCA BOLD SPANISH , ' GE 'Microwave Oven Sat. Oct. 19 at our- Costa Mesa Store ' . llt>!1l.10.a.-m-:to 2 p.m.. ; · ·by GE.Home E~onomist NO.W. ONLY $399 95 ' . . STYLe CONSOLE ' NOW ONLY .S~per AccuCol.or . 0100% Solid State oAFT e"Click" selectiorl for. VHF and UHF FRIGl'D.AIRE W~SHER/DRYER . . RCA SMART CONTEMP9RARY • PAIR SALE NOW $39995 THEPAIR ONLY FRIGIDAIRE LAUNDRY CENTER SAVE $501 , $379 95 eSpace saver .Family size washer eFlowing .Heat dryer •Plugs into any se·parate 15 amp. conventional housa. hold circuit .Jet Action washer · .2 cycles-4 temps .oeepcleans denims to delicates .F10wing heat electric dryer • eF abric settings-no heat cycle FRIGIDAIRE WASHER .tow-priced W1$her loaded with fuli size laun· NOW ONLY dry features. Choose ' agitate( spin speeds and $ l s 9 9 5 wash/rinse temps for wash· ables. • . • AccuColor blackmatrix Picture tube • XL-100 all solid state •Automatic Fine tuning RCIJ REMOTE CONTROL .B/W • Instant Pie • Bright clear picture • Remote contrOI luxUry .. $159 95 • • ~davls•brow 27 Years of Integrity & Dependability I.~-! • ; Cost1 MeSil • H1rbor Are1 El Toro • Siddltblck Valley ! ~~ ... =*5~"!'~:·~~~.,~~ -411 (1st Senntttnth Strnt (f Toro Roff, It fwy. (Next ti Sft.-0.t) ==jl=\':;;==,..,. (. I~ Doil't '·'· Sotvrdo't f.6, Doil., '''• ~O't 9·6 646·1684 137·3UO '<Ir ~-- • -, .. ··A "°°"--. CalorTV .. e: XL-100 . 15" dia90na1 ftCll . ' PORTABLE COLOR TV .Accu"1atic IV oXL '1 ()().solid s late oAF't · \ NOW"O~Y '*339 95 " . ' •• ,. -. ' w,, .... b-..at ill/If" ................ w..,.._ ~.'f'ou_.'9 ....... 1 -6ieittood. O.VISllOOWN - • , • .. ' I I r I • , ·, I a Pr Ill iii Im t I . I ] . ' Saddlehaek Today's Fln.i N.;'Y. -stocks' __ _ VOt:. 47 NO. 291, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDA)', OCTOBER 18, 197'4 TEN CENTS . . 'Innocent'. Countian Locked Up for 2 Y ea~·s . . II)' ARl'lllJll R. VINSEL OfMle.,....,,..., ..... A onetime La & u n a Hilla man langu!Bhes today in Loi Angeles County Jail, the 740th day he bu been held there as a ao-calted trimient , prisoner oo a fugitive warrant. Normally, pn....,.. oa-· be held more than 72 hours withoUt arraignment , and-upon con~ aerve no mere tbav one year io;o. OOWlty jail. • Jaml!S ;Ray RusseJlr. JI; I aceu.ed -· Jufy 'Hear~ Nixon ·Talk In Cover~up .. . WASHINGTON "(UPI)· -The Watergate cover-up trial Jury heard a t~pe recording-_tOday-in Which fqrmer President Nb<oo ~ Jobn W. OW. Ill to try to cut oq:_tho· investigatico ol the WalergitetiQillai'y lief...,. it bnplioatnd !'lblte ltouse j>Oraonn<I. The previoosjy unreleased tape waa made during a con:versation on March 17, 1973, four days before the date Nixon once ~sled be first 1eamed the· details ol the burglary from Dearr. A later ~port1~, ot .. the same tape was reJeased earlier in the White House traMcrlpts, but 1t·dld not indude Nixon's instructiom to Dean . to limit the in- vestigation. , Aa Nlxoo and Deon talked that day about the liurglary and the upcoming Senate W aterple committee bearinp. Nixon said: "l think ·1fbat you've got to do, to tbt e:rteo~tbat , ~ John, is CUI !)Or• 11 ~ "-gate defend8nt G. !Jddy and bis -~,~I jml clld~tldi ... ~ of .~ ' o...-....... 1fllliiiii.•J:f• tomoY G<aera1 · :Jcila~ N. 1111 ad ~ (See TAPE, Pip AJ) San. Franciscans Get Flea Collars -For Th:emselves SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -LocAl pet supply dealers are reporting a booming business in Oea co11an -for human1. "We're ,~llrlg them ~Y the· ton," aald Firmin Summers, general manager of the Pet Dealers Supply ·c:o. A-pet sllop clerk said he aold elJ!ht flea collars to a young couple the 'otlier day. "You must have a lot of dot!:• or cats," the clerk .. noted . "Ob no, we don't have any pets at all," tbe couple said. "These collars are for us -for our arms and legs... In this w a r m weather, those San Francisco Deas are really blUng." , "There's no telling what humans will ck; in Ulis day and time,'! ·Howie of Pets manager JinilJiD.6eifiilcf 11ld. of a Marc~l .1m murder ol a192-year-old man in_ UKlaboma, t,;OOO miles away, a crime that hb lawyer contends he cOOld not have committed. ' . Ruslell was arrested, lield •nd cleared on the warrant inifially in Orange Coon-· 'ty, • theD ~three weeks later drove to - Bed G.,.ih in Loo Angelea County to •isit·a brother. ~ .He was atQpped and que!tloned while ha.l'tDg a supperfune snack in a Taco Be!J-'b)'. pusing police, who discovered ·~ ' • . .. the outstanding Oklahoma m u rd er fugitive warrant which had not oeen canceled by the Orange County legal action that cleared him. Russell has been eating supper at 441 Beauchet St., near Union Station in downtown Los Angeles for the past two years and 10 days, without having his case cleared. He has several witnesses who swear he was with them at the Long Beach Nu-Pike Amusement Park just having ~ r o.11( .. ilot l"Mteri h' Ri<M,,i.K.atllllw T~e•clarn _ · . . . :rjre-' a ' Uy started by-children playing with matches -burned _ briskly; foi; a me in San Juan.. Capistrano Tlrursday destroyiD;g or ... d.amigitlg six euc.alyptus trees that would have been part of Cook Pari. TreeS ih~SanrJuan are prcitected by law. Fire was near Mission dlen tract. • Streets Share Candidates ' ~::~I~~,~~~~:~:rto~:~~~tion "We sell a lot of diffefent pet supplies to people who don't lu.ve 1any pets. WllY, a few yem ago -had a l'ffl nm by lluDwJI "° . catnip, the feline nerve .aedaUve. Poople were ll!llOldng the 1luff and driDtlag It." Missioli •\;iejo ... can't complain about papers but Horton did not sign Fiore's • their chances to get representation an because he didn't learn Fiore was run· the new • municipal advisory council ning unt il later. Healtb Deportmmt.alliclals meanwhile are waminl that tJie. chemical DDVP in many co!lara ~:er:· yopori which IOmetlmel CIUlel . and ~ches. • • (MAC). · ~· , . The burst of politics on Amalia Place .Pepita l>rive and Amalia Place both "hasn't exactly set the neighborhood have -two chances in 32 to get a COUlk-:il on fire," Fiore said. member. · . "But the neighbors do seem to find On .Pepita, Willla·m Fenton lives at comfort in the fact that they can vote 2&e82 and Inal A~n lives at 26652. for f\ve candidates so they don't have ~ . ~,. P!Aa.' only. one .house to choose between us," he added. aeparUai cimdntites ~.l'.:. Horton and Horton said the neighbor between the RicbanlJ'iore. 'lbey live at 231S1 and two got a visit from another candidate 23111, ~~ly. . the other day. "Two of my neighbors 'nM! two ~klenls of Am~l1a Lane, are running," the man said wearily bo91. attorney s are good friends but "one on each side.'' . aay they ·have no lntenti<>ns to run as fun that fateful Saturday night or the old man's murder and robbery in Oklahoma. James Ray Russell is some~ born loser~ his life buffeted b courts of law from here to Ok1ahom - He did his time U)ere too -at M.cA1ester-a stretch fOt" burglary. Russell's record irxlicates be bad just arrived in Orange County after release from prison and gone to work. Things seemfti to be going well. Oklahoma authorities abruptly ended that. Tbey issued a fugitive warrant charg- ing Russell with the murder of the aged Invalid and he was arrested here, then cleared after a series of court proceedings. One included a polygraph test ad- ministered by a technician which strong- ly indicated Russell was innocent. He also had the testi mony of his wife and several companions. plus the Long Beach pawn shop receipt showing where he was that night. Russell was freed, then went to Bell Gardens to visit a brother three weeks later and was subsequently confronted by ~lice at a Taco Bell 'fhere he stopped for a snaclc lie has been eating jail food on Beauchet Street near the SP Railroad yard ever since. Attorney Ro11:er Agajar:Uan-who flMnly ISee JAILED, Page All -:t Air Crash l(ills 4 • Craft Clips Gas Tank in Fog LONG BEACH (AP) -Four men were killed and another critically injured today when a rented plane hit the top of a 123-foot gas tank and crashed into the street shortly after takeoff· The six-seat Aztec had been cleared for an instrument takeoff from Long Beach Airport at 3:55 a.m. Fog tlmited visibility to one-sixteenth of a mil e, airport officials said. Dick Ft:ieod, a county fire department spok~an, said the aircraft clipped the top of the empty tank, snapped a power line and began to dislntegr~te. Wreckage Robert John de Dobert.is, 38, Newport was scattered over a 200-yard area. Beach; Peter Johnson Tillson, 40, Tor· Investigators said Ibey learned that ranee: and ChauCey E 11 wood Whip.- the. occupants or the plane were beaded pennan, 52, Covina. for South Dakota on a hunting trip. James Edw~rd Rey:nolds.-48, of. Cer· The men were dreMed in heavy clothing ritos, owner of the Area Drain Co., and there were several rifles in the was taken to Ulng Beach Community plane. .J Hospital with miltiple fractures. Four occupants were pronounced dead The ,._storage tank was three quarters at the scene. full , a county fire departm•t spokesman Police identified them as P h 11 l p said, but the plane didf not penetrate Morgan, 49, of Los Gatos, the pilot ; " the tank and there was no explosion. 2 Big Banks Trim Pri.me ~ng.Jlat~~ Man Wanted Women Weren't Projectionists The tDplc wa f'Jt Only H&&ft. When I Laugh," a study by slides oC eeriarQ in the comic at.rips. • '.But when the -warnm of·ttie' National Organizat\on for Women, a feminist group in Lagwia Beach, couldn't get the slide projector to work \Vednesday NEW YORK (UPI) -Two major banb today lowered the prime lending rate for top business borrowers to 11 '14 rrom 11~ percent. First Na tional City Bank .and Chemical Bank, both of New York, made the latest move in the recent downward spiral of the prime from its historic high of 12 percent. It was expected to touch off a new round of reductions. Citibank. which reviews its p r i m e structure every Friday, uses a floating rate fonnula based on certain money market interest rates. Last week the Federal Reserve Bank of New York released statistics showing C i t j b a n k could reduce its prime to 111/t percent, The move by Citibank: last Friday to trim its prime to II 'iii percent touched off a new round of reductions among the nation's major banks. · Although the prevailing prime rate is 11 ~ percent, Michigan National Bank of Detroit has announced plans to lower the ending rate to 10% percent from II percent,·effective Oct. 21 . · The downward spiral of the prime suggests bankers see at least a slight ea sing in inflation and are optimistic the Federal Reserve will continue to relax credit reins. Given encouragement by the decrease in interest rates, in vestors pushed prices sharply higher in active trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones industrial average was ahead 11.97 at 663.41 shortly after the announcement. The m a r k e t involving International Blisiness Machines Corp., also was stimulated by a report but the company denied today any knowledge of a reported takeover bid by an Arab con- sortium. In a one-sentence statement issued from ils headquarters in Annonk, N.Y .. the company said, "We have no kno'A'l· (See BANKS. Page A% I . nigbt, they had philosophical crisis. ~c. '1 DON'T KNOW HOW to work this projeetot because I had a deprived background and never got to use machines," ooe woman pointed out. "How can we take over the world if we can't run machines?" another demanded. For a few moments, the women huddled and muttered over the machine with no results. They issued a plea to the audience and no one, including the one man in the group, knew hoVt" to run it. FINALLY, THE CRISIS was solved when a woman called. the person who had loaned her the machine. .. Soon the lender amved and within a few minutes, he had it going. • Stories Conflict ' Husband Says Dancer On Payroll of Mills By the Associated Press Eduardo Battistella says his wife was employed for a year as a $500-a·week aide by Rep. Wilbur 0. ~fills (!).Ark-). but there was no romance between the congressman and the rormer striptease dancer. "We are friends, that's it. 1.fy wife and I think the ~fills are wonderful people. I k>ve him like a father . He and Polly (Mrs. ~fills) are very fond of our three children." he said in an interview in Buenos Aires. In LitUe Rock, Ark., ·Mills denied that Mrs. Battistella had ever been on his personal payroll . He said she had been paid to redecorate their apartment in July 1973 on a ooe-time basis. part of her job, which lasted from August 1973 until recentl y. -Bi ttistella said he first knew 1.lrs. Mills as a cli~t or his interior decorating firm in Georgeto,.,.n, a l a s h I o n a b I e Washington dist rict. Battistella said be. took ~1rs. ~lill.5 and her husband to the Silver Slipper night dub where the congressman met his wife Annabel, who was perfonning there. Battistella found an apartment for the ~·!ills at the Washin gton building "'here he and hi s wife also have an apo.rtment. Batlistena said he -not his wife - del'Orated the Mills apartment. Battistella, 43, said be is an importer and travels to Argentina frequently. He said he is separated from his wife. -~--· Fog and IOw-C!oudo n!rbt and morning hours ~ mooUy sunny 'Salul<laY. ~ to the weather servtce. ""Higbl at the beaches ea to. 71. ·Inland ~ 7t to 71. LoWI tonlghr II lo ID. . an "Amlliii PJaci slate" or· any other kind. Fonr' . .'.l'elevision Sets Stolen From Hotel _l?ord Eyeing Cigarette Earlier, he denied there was a n y romance between himself and the JS. year-old Mrs. Battistella. He said people were trying to create the impression that there was such a romance. She i~ known es "Fanne Fox, the Argentine l~irecracker." ~1ean\\'hile, Mills elicited laughter and \\'arm applause from.Little Rocle Jaycees in his first public appearance since the Tidal Basin incident when he advised : ··Doo'l go out with fortigners who drink champ.1g_ne." "!did something I shouldn't have done -I drank some champagne when T knew it went lo my head right quickl y. And it did.'' ~lilhr told the Jaye\.'Cs in a campaign appearance in Little Rock Thursday. r INSIDE TODAY Orona• coa.i Colleo< toll! bring tl1c muriaU "GodrpcU1' to th< 1~e Wftl"'oda!I lhr0t<gh Satllrdall-Slaff Wril<r Tom Titm tu.kcl a look 4t OCC'1 Of• {crbt.0 tn hJI hit.trrnUlion col· Mm?l on th• COWT Of . l0do111 • Wee~er. .. At Ytw ........ AJ _,. TiW U ...... DI ..... CM ~ County SherlU'll orlicen ano ln~atint the theft ol tour c o I o r televialoa ids valUed at nearly SI~ from the RU!oo IM, ISI05 La Paz Road, La&uila ·mu.. DePut;ts said the oets were talcen from four v~ rooms at lbe hotel by Intruders who must have had a -key to the loc""1 rooms. Clouted by Coins ~~ .. , ...... ,_ .. ~---oti: • =' = :; LOS ANGELES (UPI) -L 111 an CMllO n ,.... .,., Rotener ftltd suit in federAI court ThUJ'9" -=:--... -f, =:=.. g.c.: day agalnst~HarTah' .. C.Uino ol Reno, := '"!'" ~ C' ....... ~ Ne\r., demanding ~,000 damages for __.... •1 ,........._ c.a injuries she said she sullered when ·an t111tm1i.'::S ~\ ~ <1t employe emptying a slot mAChine slung t':111111 M ...,.. ""'" M i. big of Silver d.Q.llej'l">~et hJS shoulder,. L-----'-----=-.,.-hllllna.Mr .., the ead, ' - Tar, Nicotine Levels • WASIUNGTON (UPI! '-President Ford e.xpresaed interest today in/ the PoSsibUity of ttgulating by law the tar and nicotine content of ci_garcttes· • He asked the National cancer Advisory Board to provide for him by Dec. • 1 "scientific advice on this important mat. ter of publlc concern." Ford dlsclosccl the board proposed that the aoverni:nent regulate tar and nicotine lcveta. presumably by banning from the market cigarettes deem«! to ·Produce an excessive amounl. Recent reports show that cigarette pe.r..capita consumption has ri!len about to the point where It was when the llnk between cigarette smoklng'and lung cancer was O~t a.!Lcierted by the sur"gcon g ral 10..Y!art agu, _ • • ) Ford's request came ln a letter to 0.. Jonathan E, Rhoad~ a h i g h I y regarded. cancer expert who beads the board. Not1ng ·U>e-· bOafd·" recommenttation, Fonf 'asked that It "review the existing scientific evidence on an urgent basis aod provide JJle with an assessment of the extent to which there e :z I I t g a scientifi c bJWs for responsible ttgula- lion of clgardtes.'' 1 .PNd. did noL commll hlmscll to acling on the proposal. "tt lt criUcally important !hilt our. jildgmenl! be '°"ndly based so that we mity proceed with Lh(i g r e a t e s t amounL-or wisdom ," wrote Ford, a heavy ..and. habllWILplpumok .... .t ~1rs. Battistella was one of four perSons with ~\1ills, the 6 5 • y e a r • o I d chairman of the House Ways and ~1eans CommiUee, when police stopped Mills' speeding. unlighted car in Washington Oct. 7. Mills said he was laking Mrs . BaUistella home from a party. Batustella s.aid he did not want lo taik about the 1ocident. .He 88ld ·tie and his wife and the li.fillses traveled together to Antigua in the Caribbean in July 1973. Mills had no l'Oli'lment on the allegetl Antigua trip. BaUistella sald that alter their Antlgusi vacation hit wife began working for t.lrs. ~tills os a public relations and ~retarial assistant in the ~1111! homC. Aller a time. sbe also hclt>ed ;\!!Us him.self wtth tppoinl'tntnta. travel er· ran~('mcnls and. slmllar dutl~. A1ills paid Mn. Battistella a "'eck1y salary of SMIO from his .own funds , Battiste.Ila said. He said his wife oc-- casional.!l travel<lit w,lt,h the. Mlllsea ·•a • I IS.., MILLS, Page A!) Roll s of Linoleum · Taken in Viejo Area Rolls of brand n~~ floqr covering valued by the ownen1 at more than Sl.100 wtre stolen Thunday from one or a number or newly bolll homts in the Mission ·vtejo area, Orange C.OUnty Sheriff's officen said. Deputies said the lou was reported. by officials of ADJ F'toors Int., Santa An~ who. are lnstalll1111: floor covering thrOughout the nc \\'ly·built ~!11drtd Four tract at lt1ontoooao · Drive: and 050 Park~ay• ' • ' >Jt. .2 DAILY PILOT SB Gun Held •• At-J!~ad, Misfires 8y KATllY CLANCY 01 I~• IMH! l'li.t Sflll flow 1,1·ould you reel if someone pot a gun to you r head and pulled the I rigger? "I just don't know how I'm still here !oday, to tell you the truth." Robert Flynn, 51, a Fountain \'alley 1e1evision repairman. today described his apparent escaµe froln deat h Wednesday 'i''be_n h_c cmne_)lqme__ <!_n<I S(,IJ'.J)rlsed tv:o burglars in his apartment. ·One of then1, he said. put a blue ~'\eel automatic to his head and pulled the trigger l'Aice, but the· gun didn't go off. . "The \\-'hole thing <lnly lasted I 1 v_ e .;('('()O(fs but it was a llfetime,'' said Fl)'.W,1, . H F~n arrived home at 12: 15 a.m. IV""J'esday .imc\ had just opened the !I.bar ~OOu~ six )nches. when he said It was. Je'rked ~ his hands. ·'Flynn sald '-orie of the men jabbed \iiµ..,'" the rij>s, then as he apparently ifUin~ Onw.a, jle felt something brush ljs. hair. ' · · · ~•r h~ard ' a click," he said. He later saw lbe gun po_ipted at his head. lfhen, _he hep;rd a second click, after ~'hich_the two men fled . '•Fou,itatn Valley police said today !hey're Investigating the incident, but io .fer haven't made any arresls. Flvnn's a~ilants, who fled without lakiiig anything. "'·ere described as of \lexicon descent, one about 18 years :ild and the other 25 to 30, police said. '·They entered the apartment w h i I e f"lynn was gone by rerrioving a screen and dimbing in an open "-'indow, officers '8.kl. · Pljnn said the pair only spoke once :Jurmg the •incident -in Spanish. Jeanne E. Brown, ' Wife of Marine General, Dies Funeral services were scheduled today ri:i.r Jeanne E: Brown, wife of a former high-ranking ·El Toro Marine Corps Air Station generaJ and a onetime show !IU!lness • a~iate of Bob Hope, Bing ~ti!<! Frlink Sinatra. ',fJ'be pfe)-Wbrld -War II vocalist and dldi61 show hostess died Monday at the age of 52 irf'1the U.S. Naval Medical )tnter at 1'ottimouth, Va,, ·following ln illness. She ·was the wife of Maj. Gen. l£slle !:. Brown, commander of the Marine Gents Air s1a1i0ii at Cherry J>o\DI. N.C., and mother of Costa Mes_a Police Officer --t "Rob" Brown. r l~J, Gen., Bro~ as ass.is commander of the Third · arine Air Wing based at El Toro CAS, where the family lived in base .Gffice rs' housing. . ~'1Prior to World War 11, Airs. Brown, o used t~ performing name of Jean rrell. appeared with Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra and then Bing Crosby, on the }lid Kr.aft Music Hall radio program. • .She ~ad Qec own NBC Radio show ~c~ (niln Hollywood for a number F year.s and was launched on her en- Wtainmenl career as a protege of star :Jane \\1yman. : ,Dm'ing World War JI she made five :VSO tours to entertain troops in the Pa· ;~ffic, Europe and North Africa . A • Reag:fu ltcceives Bid RENO (AP )_. Nevada's Independent American Patty Thursday i n v i t e d ..:&lifomia JleiJablican Gov. Ron a Id lttagan to seelt'l.he party's presidential oomination in 1~6. Party Chairman Dan Hansen said he "''ou!d be pleased to see: a ticket beaded by Reagan and Alabam a ~. George Wallace. .. ' ORANGE COAST -is DA ILY PILOT ""' --. "f~ 0"'"111' (N \I 0.H'f Piiot, wllfl •"'di IS ~tlll'ltl! tflt Hfllt\,PfH$, It po.blll!Wd ll'f ti .. 0-.,.,te (OI\! Putlll\1111)9 Comp,,,,y, Slpert!• ~lllOl\li •rt Pllbh\J'I..,_ Mortaay tlW"OU;fl Frio.y. tor ((Ktl ,.,,,.,., Nt•POrt 81..:fl, Huflll""'ln 811C~/~URll Vallt'f. i...otl,.. h.C:fl, !tvi~IS.ddll~··"" 541'1 0-"lafSln J ... ., c.11"•1'-. .t. s•"91• rtQiollal ltdllioll Is ,...bl ii.Md~'"•"'•"" S....0.Yt.. Tiie lll'lnc:lpal putllii.lllt1q lllilll bat -300 WKt &If Sllftt. Clli.t ""'?.a, c..rno<llla'thll. Robert N. Weed PrHiCll"! ""' Pullll--. .:· Jack R. Curley Vl<t li'l'nodelll •"" c..-111"9~ Thomas Keevll Editor Thomas A. Mu rphine Ml.,.91"t fdllor Charles~-L1>os Richard P. Nall AUi 'l..nt IM ... tl'°' E~loo Sin Cle:mtnte All Departments: t•llhon• 492'"'4420 • . Clld1'1'!Qfll, ""· 0•~"91' CO.'' lll\ltlll~ Coom1M""1 NO l'lt~ \!Of~, l!Mtrtt-. ..,.':~ ""'"° or ,,,.,.rtl_..,.h hl"'lft miv .,_ ~~•d Wltllowt •PKlfl .,,..,._ ot <GPwr!Qlllt-tl S.COl>d (l,.J ~11.0. (Miid at CMlt ¥eM. "°'~"'""· Sul>Kr!ptlett OY ,.,,IW U.CIO l'l'IOfllN,, b1 111.11! ,..,CIO IMt'llfllrl Ml/ii_.,, m1;.,.11011J Jl,00....,,lflly • ·shot 10 Ar111' E ard Sigus.._BilJJJn H <m~ing WASIDNGTON (UPI) -President Ford lfenect a bill today that will help finance fl.75 billion worlh ol housing construction. Ford said the bill will give the depressed housing Industry •·a shot ln ,tho " arm. The bill ls expected 'tO spur con'.,trucllon 01100,000 new' house~ across the country. r Under the legislation. the federal governm~nt will be empower~d to buy conventional home mortgages from savings and loan associa· lions and other lending institutions and in this way can pump µiore home loan funds into the tight money market. A number of leaders in the housing indus~ry and co~struction unions along with members of Congress were in the Cabinet room whe nFord signed the bill. • Ford said the bill will Hmaterially help the housing industry in turning the corner.'' The industry has faUen into a deep slump be. cause the shortage of money bas brought home construction close to a standstill. --~ • Bright Declines to Make Bro\vn Funding Siate~ent By JOHN VALTERZA Of "'-O.llly Pllol Sttff It was business as usual at the moml'lg .sessioo of the regional coastal com· missiOn, despite the fact that i t s chairman is now under investigation for soliciting funds for Edmwxl G. Brown Jr .. Democratic candidate for governor. Chairman Donald Bright declined an invitation from Commissioner Carmen Warschaw at the Long Beach meeting to mak~' a full statement on the in-- . vestigat.ion. tt was disclosed this week that Bright hosted a luncheon Oct. 7 at which leading coastline developers were asked to a.t· lend a $100 per person cocktail party in Brown's honor. Some developers said following the meeting they felt t~y might have a Models Hired At Saddl.eback For Art Classes It may seem like preUy easy money, earning $4.50 an hour just to pose nude while a group of college art students v.-'Ork at their sketch pads. Such is the life for two professional models hired in recent action of the saddleback Community College board of l""1<es. The I•~ women will pose, draped am mdrap:id, in Ufe Drawing classes, according to art instructor Tom Morgan. The live models, he said, hejp ~~n~ learn form . Contrary to popular Opinion, professiooal models come in all shapes and sizes, from tbose weighing "300 pounds lo those who look like they haven't eaten in a month," Morgan said. Morgan said it is the first time the college has ~ nude models in its classes. No funds were budgeted to pay the models, but a business official said the money wwld come from miscellaneous accounts used to pay student help. c:o!lege trustees unanimously endorsed hiring of the professional models. Police Hunth1g Gypsy Gyppers PHILIPPI, W. Va. (UPI) - A search widened for a band of roving "gypsy women " who use confusion and deception to steal money from tural store owners. ''\Ye've alerted merchants in several counties · to be on the lookout for these women and to report to us immediately If they're seen," a state po I i ce spokesman said. Five women stole $200 from a service station-store In the small town of Junior, south of here. Proprietor Betty Smith said tbey looked like ','gypsy women" who took her by surprise. Authorities said similar thefts have been reported in eastern Ke n t u c k y , southeastern Ohio and West Virginia. Girls' Program Pu1nned at 'Y' A new program ror· girls in grades !our, live and six begins this week at the Saddleback Valley YMCA. Called "Y Mid-Kids," the program will include activities in sports, com- mW1ily work, personal growth, family development and educational classes. Y Mid·Kids groups will meet twice a month in born , according to a Y spokesman. Family, ·en led activiti es • will include father-dau ter suppers and mother-daughter servl projects. · An organbatlonal meeting is set for 7:30 p.m. Wedneoday at lhe Y, 23131 Orange Ave .. El Toro. Mort lnfonnaUon is av~lable by calling the y at 830-9622. HE ALSO LIKES FRUIT A.ND NUTS SAN DIEGO (AP) -Natural~! Eucll Gibbons exchanged looks with a gibbon named Euell after the ape was named in hi.s bonor at tilt San Diego 1.oo, The gibbon; like Gibbonl, llm lo tat fruit aod nuts. He was etven his name 'Thur3C1iy: • .. , preferential treatment before the com- missil>n, which regulates coastal develo~ ment, if they attended the party or urged others to do so. _.,. Bright denies any such implication was made. He said that the sole purpose the luncheoo was to · gamer supp$1rt fllr Brown, v>'ho Bright considers the most environmentally-oriented of the two candidates for the governship. At this morning 's session of the com- mission, Bright said that he did appear before the state commission Wednesday to request a "thorough and immediate investigation." "Any additional statement would com- promise the inwstigatioo· It is not rea- sonable or appropriate to make a :;tate- ment at this point," Bright told fello\v commissioners. 'l1le commission then tymed to con-- si.deration of a lengthy agenda of re- quests for approval o f developments along the Orange and Los Angeles county coasts. • It was 'expected that the matter would again be raised during the oral com. municat.ions portion of the agenda scheduled f« late this afternoon. German Brewers Start Crying l n Their Beer "11onn 'IUPtr .::. J"rQf."Dilter·itun11e1. a Mewery expert, wis' explalnlng to a group of West German legislators liow a proposed f law Woidd p e·rlfn l~t gluoose, suJ~ur _dioxide, a9e0rbic' acid Md proteo!Ylfc enzyme lo be added . lo beer. "'P!Ui! pftti! boo!" the 1 aw make rl . cried. West Germans, who guzzle more beer than anyone else, contend the proposed all·European law would pollute their na· tional drink. I The nation's 1, 700 breweries took out full..page newspaper ads calling o n drinkers__ to protest the Jaw, now being worked out at Common Market head· quarters in Brussels. · It would standard.iie beer prOduction in Europe and allow addition of· chemical additives to beer, as in the United States. German beer is still brewed according to Duke William II of Bavaria's Law of 1516, which allows only malt, hops and water -no chemical preservatives. From Page Al MILLS .•• "Now I've been embarrassed beyond words about this experienct.!, as I've said. I've apologized publicly on severaJ occasions for what happened. I apologize again tonight for what happened. "As I say, l was wrong in ever taking one drink of champagne because I learned years ago that I couldn't drink it, and I have learned In more recent years that you can't d r i n k anythlng else and do vry much·'1 Mills ls seeking his 19th term in the general election next mont~. His op- JQtent is Republican Judy Petty, a 30. year-old divorcee who has said she would not .make the Tidal Basin incident a campaign issue. During his Jaycees address Mills look· ed often toward his wife, Polly, who was seated in the audience. She was not with her husband Oct. 7. "There is no difference between us. After you've been married as long as we have, you get so used to one person that no one else can come ·between you," Ptlills said in denying suggestions that he was romantically Involved with Mrs. BatUstella. Saddlehack Area Asks Volunteers -The Saddlebaclc A r •a Coordinating Cowldl (SACC) ts seeking volunleers for committees to review Issues of land use, transportallon, circulation, .rtllltilll. tducalion, and menlal. healut in the Saddleback Valley; SACC's committees meet regularly and aim to provid~ citlien review and evaluo· lion to Orange County officials on mat· tcra (l( local coocern. lnteresttd citiiens are asked to .call Louiae G&tttrdam, 830-8318 or write to Pr<sidenl• Saddleback Atta Coordinating Cowldl, ~.O. Bo.t 357, El,~. Fro111 Pa9e.AI TAPE ... then Wblte ff-chld or &tall 11.R. Haldeman, both dtleodants tn the trial, were involved in the e»ver~p. Nilon agfted on the tape lhat they w • r "vulner•bie." Huntington Ma~J~iled " In ShQotout ' . Lalor In the me«tng,• lleaD lold Niimi, about the While Houae Plumbers ,break· In II the Los Auieles office o! Dr. Daniel Ell&berg'a peycbiatrist. Nixon has said In the past that this was the first he learned ol the Elloberg break-in. Jl<>l[and Dale C{'J.iford of Huntington "What in the world, what in the naipe :Beach waa sentenced to 11\'e ..... ,. o! God was (John) Ehrlichman baY.ilg ,,_ some th l n g (unintelligible) in the to Jl/e in .9t9te pri90n today on anncd Ellsberg! This is the first I ever heard ~bery charges filed_ after he was ln- of this ... Jesus Christ," Nixon said volved ifl, santa Aita Heights shootout ~nT~ :~nute tape was played after with Newport Beach police. 2 ~ hours of testimony by Dean, former Orar\ge County Superior Court Judge White House counsel and Nixon's chief Everett W. Dickey ordered the prison a~ser. term for Cra)Vfo_rd, ~ .. ,of _725 Main • During th·a r testimony, pro~ .st., after repeatedly warning the defen· James Neal took Dean step by ' step dant that be must first serve a five-year through a, series o1 -meetings , he bad with a number of the defendants wbere tenn recently imposed ·in an El Pa;io, problems of raising bush .money~were ·· Tex_. federal court. ·, discussed for the Watergate burglars. Crawford was coovicted· in Et Paso The meetings throughout .Jate January , -1 u· ·1 I I and February, 1~3 led uP ~to OOn's' On Charges"' smugg ng mit:n uana no telling Haldeman Olat he was afiadi this country from Mexico. 1be federal he could not be prptected J)y the ¥ine prison teriri tikes priority o•.er h I s of executive privilege 9ec.a~ tie ,ptet California convictlon. · with Nixon on1y once: in on the Wa!etJate· Judge Dickey explained that· the .. ttve case. . ••·• • • , years served!.-bl federal prisol1.,WUl"'be Following that meeting Dean_ :mid he -'Credited to ~California prim. term . started "meeting frequently wJth the But Crawford rilay be slµ.pped t o President _ some weeks eveey day." California lo pul in further prison time Dean also testified that QlarJes W. on the Orange County conviction when Colson, fonner White House -.. Special lie.has served the federal term. ~ counsel, told him he discussed elelDehcy' Crawford was arrested Sept, 12; 1973 for the original Watergate deferld~ when Newport Beach police grabbed him with Nixoo' in January, 1~3. ije ~said outside~ home at 2322 Orchid Drive, so while telling a~t l;he problems White. : after their bullets bad wounded two House aides had with original Watergate hostages held by tl1e ,defendant. defendants E. Howard HWlt Jr, and Crawlord and ·the city of Newport James w. McCord Jr. Beach are defendants in civil lctlon Dean said Hunt was distraught over in which the two ~~es are d,emanding the" death of his wife in an airplane a total of more tbmi $5Ml,OOO in damages crasli. and wanted to plead guilty if for Crawford's criminal action and alleg· he cOutd get "some 8M11MUlCe from ed neglect by. ~e~ .police. · the Whtte House he wouldn't go to b 'll., ...... 1 ........... 'CLIENT IS. INNOCENT' AttOrnty Roger Ai•i.•nl1n I FroM·P•ge Al ',/ ,_, " . JAILED;·.:.··,. ' ' .. . . ' . believes the, client lle represents Jree on legal .principles ii inPOCento;-w_ill be in Loa Angeles County: .SUJI':~ .t~ Oct. JI f<lr a new ext.nuijt1on n~ .. Judge.Willi.am·Murr~y of Or~ge COun· ty SUperior. Q)urt .already rt:jeLie<l. the extradition baaed _;on ,Orange C q u n t-~1 authorltiet. illvesttgatioq. ilnd ,legal work. But Loa : Angeles.. Councy won't atCP.Jlt that. . . · " " · · Agajanian,-of the law firin of Sheffield, Charton, Fishman. and A~janian. said Thursday one hopeful ~ori has been won. 'Ibey 'are· willing to ·atcept the Orange Oounty polygraph-or ~all· ed lie detector. test.:....fmdings if Russell jail f.r the rest Of hiS life." . Then Dean told of a Jan. 5, 1973 White House corridor conversation with Colson, who hired Hunt. From Page Al submits to .,..., administer-ed by Los Angeles .c.unty. . Dean quoted Colsm as-saying, '"John, I felt this matter was so· serious ... This was a matter I felt I bad to take up with the President himself." Neal asked Dean if Co1sm !old bim he actually took it up with the President. "YeS, he did," Dean said. . Dean's testimony was identical to that he gave at the Senate Watergate bear· ings June 25, 1973. Two Men Held In Five Killi~gsi FORT ·wonm, Te<,. (UP!f -·HOi\\i- cid~ ~tectives '·holdiifg · folm .. Me,.;· icab nitionals in connection with the butcher knife· slayings of three women 1mll two '"'"ren released lwo alid ""Id ''f.be ~~~ aS prune~~ : ff,! I "We do 'have two men in ~tod'y that are suspects in the murders at Rivenide Villa (an apart me n-t com· plex)," said homicide detective Oliver Ball. · The fi11e persons were discovered In their "WJ'eCked apartment. The women were stripped, their :hand! bound and their mouths gagged with rags a n d clothing. At least one had been raped. Mexico Fires Erupt TIJUANA, Meklco (AP) -Brush !ires swept across an estimate 2.000 , acres Thursday between Tijuana and Tecate about 30 miles south of the U.S. border. As temperatures climbed above 90, a tOtal of six such :fires broke out but were believed contained. ' B .._NKS ne lnsl"5-1n lbe m-t his ... "\. .. • ~ • • client who is be)d·, without bail for two 1 years and 10 days, is-being--sub)ected edge of any negotiations fOr the ~e or to unconstitutional double jeopardy. IBM stock to any Arab consortium." Appeals court justices ordered him Rlpnors 1pf .a~-ta~ver 't:ild sent mM freed ffom Los An,el~s CaUnly custody, shares sharp)y' highet> earlier today on on grounds l\e could not be ei:tradited the London Stock Exchange. to Oklahoma . aecond time on the same The report about a possible .. A r ab alleged evideo.~.beard in Orange, CoUDty, J.akeover was first carried by the Mi .. ddl-• -wwhere extradltioif, had -been refused once East News Agency, coosidered. the semi· al~. · official organ ol fhe Egypt.ran govern-Prosecutors appealed and were then ment. 1be report did no~ specify who upheld, pl_acina the appellate court in wa,,_ jnvo1~ed in .. the oegoUatlons, nor the posltiOn Of ordering1 Russell freed who was involved in the alleged .coo-once, then ordering him ·be1d without sortium. bail. ·There also wa:s a report in the Detroit "Some. fonns . of injustice are more Free PreM that the arms Oo\17 • .from outrageou.s , tb.aq, t>t.ber1, '' the United States to SaOOi A'.r'abia "Could declares Agajanian •. 1:And, k e e p Ln g a d' ti! or ·tri 10' uncl2t• a ~ liln p;,,..1n ~&geles Collnl!' Jail from ·d~el~ ..,e._·"re.terar i""~'"' ·Oct. 1;.1mto•U..1P-i>I is .. at 111' 1op ·ffi •u au.DfilEir'diM ~oO'prices of my Oulrag"'!"' /oiustice List." ~. ~ The secrtt.pnlgrl!Jll lo :Saudl-.Arabia apparenily .,... developed by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger, -'the new'!P"per sa!d laday_ 11\.J!.!:'poi:).!llm Its Washingfiii bureaui t.-:. .. '~ ·, • •• • Shopping .Center Set For El Toro Area A $2.8 million shopping center., in· eluding an Alpha--Beta-Mark"et and a Car.l's Jr., ~staur..int, will open next month at the comef of Mu i r I an d's Boulevard and El Toro Road in El Toro, ~ 53,~are-foot development will include 25,000 square feet of speciaJty shops and officeiJ accotcfing to a spokesman for tbe developer, the -Rinker Co. .. *" Boston Scliool' s . ......... ' . Enrollment Up BOSTON (UPI) -Atlmdance a t racially troubled Hyde Park High School increased today to 708 students, including 310 whites and 392 blacks, eompared "I 628 'lbursday. Police continued to patrol the corridors and stiiaeots eitermg-tlte bUildiifg were spot checked for weapons for the second day. One stodeol was suspended Thursday when police found · an 18-incb club up his sleeve. · Officials said two-mate students were suspended after a brief aculfle Inside ihe building tQlay bul there were no , report• of arrests·or injuries. LAMP . SALE CONTl.NUED From the .finest collection of lamps· in South Orange •. County. Select from such well kno_wn names at Marbro, Stiffle, Knob Creek, Norman Percy and many othE!rs.· Fanlasllc l~vent.OfY of , Quality lamps Aft Ready For Immediate Delivery . ' J : w ' ' ' DREXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-WOODMARK'-KARASTAN-BAKER WEEICDAYS & SATVIDAYS t:GO lo S:.J9 ' ' NEWPORT BEACH • • 1127 WESTCUFP 0.Rc, 612-2000 LAGUNA.BEACH • , J'<s NORTll '-'OAST Hl\!Y.. 4'4·8S.ll • • . " . •' TORRANCE; 23619 HAWTHOltNE BLVD. <OperiFri. til 9, Sun. 12~:30>. ,3'1'&l219 " --•. =-----• • I ' Ian Jai the on $17 gen T the col ci II of fer am or be! gen re Mo am the tha for str pu s s SU b " Fi the fle ~. " .ca do ' ,, de Pe " ar in .. • • - . . , Irvine • • -r -·· • ' - Today's Final 'N;T. Stocks VO~. 67, NO. 291: 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, OCTOBER I 8, I 974 TEN CENTS 'Innocen·t' Countian Locked Up for 2 Ye3rs By ARmtlR II. VINSEL Of Mle o.ltr P'lwt Sten • A onetime L'B g u n a Hills man languishes today in l.os Angeles County Jail, the 140llJ ~•Y he bu been hekl there as ,a so-called transiept prisoner on a fugitive warrant. Normalil<, pri>boers cannot be held more than 72 bOUrs without arraignment and-uPoD conVlctlon-would serve no more than one year in a county jail.1 James Ray Ruuell, . 24, is accilsed City _Plan . . . .. -.. -. -. --.. -· CQmple~e~ For Irvine After nearly two years of eff9rt and $171,200 in con.sultant.s' fees, Irvine's general plan JS an its way to the Rrinters. The cify council this week . approved the last changes needed before the fu11· color document which will guj(ie the city's future growth is printed. But the council passed up the prospect or more moderate income bousiug of- fered In an Irvine Company-sugiested amendment to lbe plan. ~- The company asked that construction · of the I,2fi0-acre Culver Village begin before 1980 instead of after as t h e general plan now indicates. The village, designed for up to 20,329 residents, would be built b e t w e e n Ji.toulton Parkway and the San Diego Freeway, west of Culver Drive. The council approved nine lasf.·minute ameodments to the phm, but shot down the Irvine i;otnpmoy ~. cantending that moving up 1be coostructjpo acbedule for the village would put to6 much strain OQ the clty!a ability to finance public lniprovemeots sud!· 11 - The first draft of the city capital improvement program i n d J c ates a (See IBVINE P~, l'qe %) San Franciscans Get Flea Collars -' of a March, 1972 murder of a 92·year~ld the outstanding Oklahoma m u rd er · man in Oklahoma, 1,000 miles away, fugitive warrant which had not ceen a crime that his lawyer con'tends he c3nceled by the Orange County legal could not have committed. action that cleated him. Russell Waa artesfed, held and cleared R11'sell has been eating supper at onTthe W{l:Q'ant i(lltially in Orange C.oun-, ,441 Beauchet SI., near Union Station ty.. then three weeks later drove to in downtown Los Angeles for the past Bell Gardens in .Los Angeles County two years and 10 days, without having t:o'·vidt ll brother. his case cleared. He was stopped and questioned while He has !eVeral witnesses who swear having a suppertbhe snack Jn a Taco he was wl~ ~ at the .Long Beach Bell by passing police, who discovered NU-Pike Amusement Park just having -For Themselves T~e• Burn . . i ,;• < SAN FRAN~I.sro (UPI/ -Local pet · --nte..,.. apparently started by childl'l!n playing with matches~ burned supply d~alers are reporting a boommg briskly for a time in San Juan Capistrano Thursday destroying or ~m~ m O~ collars -for h~s. . daJllaging six eucalyptus trees that would have been part of Cook W~ re selling them by the too, said Park Trees in San Juan are protected by'law Fire was near Mission Flnrun Summers, general manager . Of • · • the Pet Dealers Supply Co. · _G_I_en_tract __ · ___ ~~----------------- A pet ahop cle'rk.said he so1d eight flea collars to a young couple the other 'day. "You must have a lot of dogs or cats," the clerk noted. "Ob qo, we don't have any pets at all," tbe equple 1aid. "These collars are for us -. for our arms and legs. In this w a r m weather, those San Francisco Oeas are r"'lly biling." ~'There's no telling what humans will do in this day and ' time," House of Pets manager Jim Umberfield said. "We sell a lot o,f different pet supplies to people who clon't hLve any pets. Why, a few years ago we had a real run by t1umans on catnip, the feline nerve sedative: People were smoking the stulf and drinking ll" . , Heallh Department ofllcials meanwhile are waining that the cbemlcal DDVP in many collars gifts off vaPors which sometimes Clll'!leS rubes and headaches. ' • 'Weatlter Fog and )J>w ~loucll night and morning .IJcllq beoomintl mostly SUIUIY Satw<lay, •ccording to 1be weather service.. ltJ&bl_ at the beaches 68 to 12. Inland .,... 74 to Tl. l.ow• lolligbt 51 to llO. INSWE TODAY Ora\ige Coo<I Colle(le will bring tlte musical "GodspelL"' to th< •tag• W edneidoy thn>1lgh Sah,rdo.11. Sta/1 Writer Tom Tttu; take.t a look ot OCC'a of~ /trlHQ in hi# hittrmtulon oo~ Lumh on th• couer of toda11's \Vttkender\ ' #MM., ,,... ., _...... CM ,...,._, ,..,.._ M llhtlMlal ...... M --" ,_.. ., .. ........... CKt l'l't.tl ,.,. M --... lfMt ....... ..., ,.~'-u -CM W..tW ' AA wtrW..... "' ~. , i I Watergate Jury Hears NiXon, Dean Probe Halt WASHINGTON (UPI) -·rhe Watergate · cover-up trial jury heard a tape recording today in which fonner President Nixon instructed John W. Dean III to try to cut off the Investigation ol the Watergate burglary be.fore Jt Implicated White House personnel. 'l'fJe previously unreleased tape' was made ~ a conversation on March 17.Jm, four days before the date Nixon once .illsisted. he fi?St learned the details of 1be burglary !rom Dean. A later portion of the same tape wa1 released earlier in the White House tramcripts, but it did not include Nl1on's lnst,ructions to Dean to limit the in- ve:stlption. ~ l!llon and Deao lalked lhat day about the burglary and the upcoming Senate Watergate committee hearings. Nilon said: "I think what you've got. f<i do. to the extent tbal you can, ~ohn; ls cul bir of! ot th& pess •.. (Watergate -G. Gordcin Lkley and his bunch just did. this as part of lbeir job." Dean also told Nixon that fonner At- ,.. totnny General John N. Mitchell and 'Growing Up Jewi s'1' Talk Slated in Lagtma Rabbi RObert J . Bergman of Irvine's Israel Academy will speak Monday ln Laguna Boldt on "Growlng Up Jewish In a Modem World" Monday In Laguna · Beach. The speech, opon10ttd by .the Laguna CirC!e Jlldalcr, will begin. al 7:!0 p.m. In lhe commu:nUy room at the Laguna Federal Savings and Loah AssoclaUon, :ltlO ~an Ave. ,.. meeting Is p\Jbll• and free., A coffee and social hour wUI ollow. ~~ - • then White House chief of staff H.R. Haldeman, both defendants in the trial, were involved in the ei>ver-up. Nixon agreed on tJie tape that they w e r "vulnerable." Later in the meeting, Dean told Nixon about the White House Plumbers break- in at the Los Angeles office of Dr. Daniel EUsberg's psychiatrist. Nixon has 'said in the past that this was the first he learned of the Ell3berg break·in. "What in the world, what in the name of God was (John) Ebrlichman having something (unintelligible) in the Ellsberg? This is the first I ever heard of this ... Jesus Ouist," Nixon said Oil the tape. The 28-mlnute tape~ ~as played after 21i2 hours of testimony by Dean, former White House CO\Dl.sel and Nixon's chief accuser. During that testimony, prosecutor James Neal tOQk Dean step by step through a series of meetings be had with a number or the defendants where problems of raising hush money were discussed for the Watergate burglars. The meetings throughout late January and ·February, 1973. led up to Dean's telling Haldeman that he was afradi be oould not be protected by the doctrine of execuliv~ privilege bec;luse he met with Nixon only once in on the Watergate case. Following that meeting Dean said_, be started ''meeting frequently wtth the President -some weeks every day."' Oe,.1.n also te!tified that Charles W. COISO!I, former Whlto House special counstl, told him he discuwd clemency for the original Watergate de(tndants with Nixon In January, urn. He said to while t9111ng about 1be problem.o White }louse aides had wllh orlgiMI Watergate defendants E. Howord Hunt Jr. and James ~ 111c:Cdrd ~r. ~ (Set TAPE, P 1• Alt .1 fun that fateful Saturday night of the , old man's murder and robbery i n Oklahoma. James Ray Russell is some sort of born loser, his life buffeted by ei>urts of law from here to Oklahoma. He did hJs time there ·too-at McAlester-a stretch for burglary. Russell's record indicates he had just arrived In Orange C.ounty after release from pri.son and gooe to work. Things seemed to be going well. Oklahoma authorities abruplly ended that. They issued a fugitive warrant charg· ing Russell wilh the murder of the aged invalid and he was arrested here, then cleared after a series or court proceedings. One inch><!~ a ,polygraph test ad· ministered by a technician which strong- ly indicated Russell was innocent. He al!O had the testimony of hJs wife and several companions, plas the Long B~ach. pawn shop receipt showing where he was that night. Russell y,·as freed. then went to Bell Gardens to visit ll brother three weeks later and was subsequently confron,t.ed by police at a Taco Bell where he stopped for a snack. He has been eating jail food on Beauchet StreeL near the SP Railroad yard ever since. Attorney RoRer Agajanian-y,·ho flrn1ly (See JAILED, Page A! I .. Air Crash. l{ills _ 4 Craft Clips Gas Tank in Fog LONG BEACH (AP) -Four men were killed and another critically injured ·today when a rented plane hit the top of a 125-foot gas tank and crashed Into the street-shortly after tikeoff· 1be six.ceat Aztec had been cleared for an lnstnnnent takeoff from Long Beach Airport at 3:55 a.m. Fog limited visibility to one-sixteenth of a mJle, airport officials said. Dick Friend, a county fire department spokesman, said the aircraft clipped the top of the empty tank, snapped a power 2 Big Banks Trim Prime ~en~ing'Jlate N~ YORK ci:Jp}) -Two major barlks today· lowered the prime lending rate for top business borrowers to 11V• from 11 IAI percent. F'U'!lt National City Bank and Chemical Bank, both of New York, made the latest move in the recent downward spiral or the 'prime from its historic high or 12 percent. IL was expected · to touch off a new round of reductions. Citibank~ which reviews Its p r I m -e structure every Frid!iY. Jl5eS a floating rate fonnula based on certain money markef interest rates. Last week the Ft'deral Reserve Bank of New York released statistics showing C I t i b a n k could reduce its prime to 11'14 percent, The move by Citibank last Friday to trim its prime to ~llti percent touched off a new round or reductions among the nation's major banks. Although the prevailing prime rate is ll'h percent, Michigan National Bank of Detroit has announced plans to lower the ending rate to l~ percent from 11 percent, effective Oct. ZI . The downward spiral"" oI the prime suggests bankers see at least a slight easing in inflation and are optimistic the Federal Reserve will continue to relax cre(iit teins. Given encouragement by the decrease in interest rates, investors pushed prices sharply higher in active trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones industrial average was ahead 11.97 at 663.41 shortly after the announcement. The ma r k e t involving International Business MachJnes Cq_rp., also w a s stimulated 6y a report but the. company denied today any knowledge of a reported takeover bid by an Arab con· sortlum. In a one-sentence staten1enl issued from its headquarters in Armonk. N.Y., the company said, ".We have no know!· edge of any negotiations for the sale of IBM stock to any Arab consortium." Rwnors of a takeover bid sent IBP.f shares sharply higher earlier today on the London Stock Exchange. 'The rel)Ort about a possible A r a b (See BANKS. Page A!) Students Doruit,e Red Cross Kits lrvine students from El Camino Real Elementary School today gave t h e American Red Cross more lhan 2tlO comfort kits destined for victims of last month's· Honduras Oood . The p:ickages, Mid s c h o o I ad- ministrative assistant Ro o l\toreland, contain sonp, tooth paste, tooth bt"Ushcs. small loys and other Items to b c distributed to the nood victims . The kindergarten throbgh sixth grade students have gathered the Items for the packagt?s over !he past two weeks, said Mo1 eland. many using their allowan· eM for th·e· purcM~i. line and began to disintegrate. Wreckage was scattered over a 200-yard area. Investigators said they learned that the occupants of the plane were headed for South Dakota on a hunting trip. The men were dressed In heavy clothing and there were several rifles in the plane. Four occupants were pronounced dead at the scene. Police identified them as P h i I i p Morgan, 49, of U:>s Gatos. the pilot; Robert John de Dobertis, 38, Newport Beach;· Peter Johnson Tillson, 40, Tor- rance: and Chaucey E l'l'w o o d \Vhip- pennan, 52, Covina. James Edward Reyn:ilds, 48 of Ctr· rilos. owner or the Area iJ:ain Co., was taken to Long Beach-. Community Hospital with miltiple fractures. The storage tank was three quarters full , a county fire department spokesn1an said, but the plane did not penetrate the tank and there was no !xplosion. Man Wanted -Women Weren't Pro jectioriists T1:Je topic was "lt Only Hurts When I Laugh," a study by slides of acxllm In 1be comic "4'P"· . , -.. ,_ , ~ • But when the women ·or the Nat\ona1 Orgimlt;ation for Women. a {emmill.;;. group 'in Laguna'Beach, couldn't get the slide projector to y,·ork Wedne5daf · night, they bad philosophical crisis. "I OON'T KNOW HOW to work this projector because I had a deprived background and never got to use machines," one woman pointed out. "How can we take over ibe world if we can't run machines?" another demanded. For a few moments, the women huddled and muttered over the machine with no results. They issued a plea to the audience and no one, including the one man in the group, knew how to run it. FINALLY, THE CRISIS was solved when a y,'Oman called the person who had loaned her the machine. Soon the lender arrived and within a few minutes, he had it going . Stories Conflict Husband Says Dancer On Payroll of Mills By the Associated Press Eduardo Battistella says his wife was employed for a year as a $500-a-"·eek aide by Rep. Wilbur D. Mills (D-Ark·). but there was no romance between the congressman and the fonner striptease dancer. "We are friends, that's it. My wife and I think the Mills are wonderful people. I love him like a father . He and. Polly (Mrs. A1ills l are very fond of our three child,ren, ., he said in an interview in BuenoS Aires. ~ In Little Rock, Ark., Mills denied that Mrs. Battistella had ever been on his pel'90nal payroll. He said she had been paid to redecorate their 11partment in July 1973 on a one-time ,basis. • Earlier, he denied there was a n y romance between himsclr and the 38- year-0ld Mrs. Battistc\la. ·lie said people were trying to create the impression !hot !here y,·as such a romance. She is known as "Fanne Fox, the Argenti,c· Firecracker." !\.frs. Battistella ·was one of r o penl008 with ~fills, the. 6 5 • y e a r -o 1 d chainnan of the House Ways and Means Committee, when police stopped t.1ills' speeding, unlighted ear ln \Yashington Oct. 7. Mills said he was taking Mrs. Dottfstella home from a party, Battistella said he did not want to talk aboot the incident. tie said he and his wife and the t.tillses traveled together to Anti gua in the Caribbean in July 1973. ~Ulls had no comment on the alleged Antigua trip. Battistello said that. after their Antigua vacation his wife begon workll'I~ for Mrs. !\fills as a P,Ublle rrlations and secretarial ass:lstant In the !\.tills home. After a time. she alllO helped Mills hlffllMl.U ·with appointments, travel ar· rnngements and similar duties. MUI!! l)ald Mrs. Battistella a \\'eekly '.'la\ary of $500 from his own fund!!I. Baltlstella said. He said his Wfil oc- caslo:nnlly. traveled whh thi Mllrsea as part of her job, whi ch lasted from August 1973 until recently. Battis!ella said he first knew 1\lrs. Mills as a c\il_!nt of his interior decorating firm in Georgetown, a fashionable \\'ashington district. BaUistella said he took Mrs. Mills and her husband to the Silver Slipper night club where the congressman met his y,<Jfe Annabel , who was perfonning there. Batlistella found an apartment for 1'1<> f\.1ills at the Washington building where he and his y,·ife also have an apartment. Battistella said he -not his \\ife - decorated the p.;uus apartment. Battistella. 43. said he is an importer and travels to Argentina frequently. He said he is separated from his wifi•. l\1eanwhile. l\1ills elicited laughler and warm applauS(' from l,i!lle Rock Jaycees 1n his first public appearance since the Tidal Basin incident when he advised: "Don't go out y,•ith roreigners who drink champagne." "I did something 1 shouldn't have done -I drank some champagne \vben I k:ne\ll It went to my hcnd right ql,tickly. And it did." 1\1.ills told the Jaycees in a campaign appearance in Little Rock Thursday. (See MILLS, Page A!) J rYitH' Busi ncss111a11 Draws Tcrtu in Jqil Au Irvine bu~Jincssmnn has be c n Sl'ntcnccd to in dnys In jail 11nd a year's prohntion for railing to file a p:1yroll n~port and not paying the ~tale disability lnsuran~ money wlthhc-ld from employNI ' p.'1)' checks. Joseph L. CrC'vlin,A, form~rly o ( American Corporate StrvlCC!o. Ille' .. and Women's Employes Btncl1ts ASSQC\ation, Inc .. pleadtd no contest \Veclnesday to .~~ De artment of Hum_nn Rc~ur !kvt opment comtiliiliit. T • ) ' ' ' • • A % DAILY PILOT ·= l • - • Pin~h Biker -,, . .. ~ Dad Fill,s In for Injured So n Thirlfta.yeRN>Jd Jolin illaberry of Cotta Meoa hid ~<rted bard ID sip up apona>n for his ride ln tbe Orange county Blke-a-tbon Saturday ln aid of lhe. Ameri can Canctr Socle1y. . . He hnd garnered M pledges ranging from a dime to 1 dollar 1 mile and wu determined to complete at least one circuit ot the 25-mlle OOW'll and raile I a tow.I d. Jl77.50. BUT TllUR.SOA V night John· was knocked out of the eveu\ when he broke his leg in a collision with a car at 17th Strt>et and Tustin Avenue, Costa Mesa. But the money promised by his backers y,·on 't go begging. J ohn's father, Wendall Maberry, a 35-year~ld Cost.a ?.fesa fireman, will take his place. "I think that's really neat," said John, his leg ln a casl at his home Pt 442 ~tagoolia St., Costa f.iesa . • \YENDELL ~tABERRY \11as due to y,·ork Saturday but a colleague w!ll stan<l in for him for three hours so he can complete the ~mile course, start· ing at-8 a:m. at Carl's Jr. ~taur:L-it on 17th Street. .. ll was the cure John needed," said hls mother, Pttrs. Sharon Ptlaberry. ~ . ' :·Brigl1t Decfu1es to Make ::~Brown Funding Statement { By JORN VAL TERZA Ot tM 01Uy P'llft 11111 It was business as usual at the momirig 1• sessioo of· the regifnaJ coastal com· mission , despite the fact that i t s ::·Ctiatmia n is now under investigation for -tiOliciting funds for Edmuna G. Brown .::rr .• Demot!ratlc candidate for ~over1or. Chairman Donald Bright declined an ... 1nv11atton frbm Commissioner Carmen Warschaw at the Long Beach rMetpg to · make ~ full statement on the in- vestigation. It Fas i;lisclosed this week that Bright ·' ~ a luocheon Oct. 7 at which leading coastline developers were asked to at· ·tend a $100 per person cocktail party In 'Brown's honor. -·· Some developers said following~ meeting they felt they might have a ·preferential treatment before the com- thissk>11. which regulates coastal develop- ment, if they attended' . the party or Urged others to do so. Bright denies any such implication 1 'was made. He said that the sole purpose 1\he JWlCheon , was to gamer support ff)r ""Bniwn: who 'BriJ1;ht considers tile most ,environmentaUy-0riented of the two. ;candidates for the governship. At this morning's session Of the com- ·mission. 1Br1tht said that be did appear befote' the state commission Wednesday 1 to requUt. a ''thorough and immediate . inv'tstlgilti~ '' ••Any · add tticlnaJ statement would com- 'promise the inYestigation· It is not re.a- ' !!IOriable or appropriate to make a .. tate- lllent at this point," Bright \old fellow commbsionen. .... fro111 Page Al .. ' MILLS ... :~ftlji;en embarra"'ed beyond :r ''O a ut · his experience, as I've ,·: said. I've apologized publicly on several ; : occasion! for wbat happened . I apologize ~:again f9.l}igb1 for what happened . : · ··~ ... 1 8llY. I was wrong in ever : ~taking Otlf drink of champagne because : :1 lea rned years ago that I couldn't : :drink ii. al'Wi. I have learned in more : .recffil years that you can't drink : anything lite and do vry much·" • ifdills..i.1. seeking his 19th 1erm in the j general election next month. His oi:r : :,ponent is Republican Judy Pell}'. a JG- ~ year-Old divorcee. v.·ho has said she v.-ould i .not make the Tidal Basin incident a ! :campaign issue. ~ ! During his Jaycees address Mills look-'. :ed often tov.·li'd his v.·ife, Polly. who • "•'•as seated tiL '":l he audience. She \Vas : not \\•ilh ht1' llusband Oct. 7. • : "There is no difference between us. I ';Afte1'1 jlfr.\'~n married as long as ' :'we haw;' yob "'get so used to one person :that ''ni' one ~se can come between "you." Pt1ills said in denying suggestions ' :that' Jie was roma11tically involved with .. Mrr. natt1stclla. . :_ , .... . • • . , • . ' . ' .. ' . . . • . - ORANGE COAST 1s DAILY PILOT ....... Robert N. Weed PrKuMllt •nd l'voll1'1ef' • , , • .iack R. Curley vt• Pr~l11e11t '"°Ge_ .. Mlllolgt'P' t Thomas Keevll Editor Thomas A. Murpt\ine . -~ """'•lfl.O , ..... ~rlac. H. LOOS Richard P. Nall '-'r•1tflt..,IWMtift1Edliln • • t. -~. Offices CMtl IMl.t. »OW.11 .. .,strttt Nw•-' hM.1'1' JJJJ ,,. •• _, &ou!e\/Vd W•~"" 6e<K h 11&1>(,_v,..!>I. , Mljll!INJ!or>_&tl•<fl 1'111 Bffcfl 8Dvlhat6' .. ,, Ot .... Me JOI Notti'\ El C..'!'~ ilk .. TlllphOM t7t4) 642..C321 C11sl tltd Advtrtlslng M2·5'7t ' . s.ic~1 All Oep.ar1menls : Telephone ~92""420 • -CoclT'""!. ""• ,.Or.111.. CM" ll\IOll.i"t "°""°'"'· HO flt~ !.!Olin. itt.Alr .. 19'1t, ..,.!0!'111 -11•• or '""'"'-"'' .,.,..111 """'' 1:11.. .. ~ wilf\evt 1.-1 .. """"'""" Cit Cllf'rl'ICJ'll _ .... w\ri ~· t OMI.; peld •I CAoll• Mt ... c,,1lt0n'll• s.wwr1p11111 "" cm• t.J,00 -ll'llf; by ,.,,1, .. 00 ll'IOllll'll,; ll'lllfl¥Y 1111t111t11-1J.OO m11111111, • .,:. 1, \ The commission then turned to coo- sideration of a lengthy agenda of re- quests for ~pproval o f developments along the Orange and Los Angeles county coasts. It '14'1lS expected that lbe matter would again be raised during the oral com- munications portion of the a g e n d a scheduled for late !his afternoon. From Page Al IRVINE PLAN • • shortage of nearly $25 million for capital improvements over the next five years. The city is under ·prtssure from the state altomey general's office, as well as from environmentalist groups, to pro- vide lower cost housing for people who work in Irvine. In Irvine Company presentations on ~he _p:roposed Irvine lndustr.ial-C.omplex- East. the company has promised more than sufficient housing for families eam- ing·between $10,000 and $15,000 a year. But Irvine Company Planner D o n Cameron told the counc il Tuesday that much of thal housing was to be built in CUiver Village. Unless the construction schedule for the village is moved up, he said, tbe_need would not be met. But Public Works Direct.or Bren l Muclmw, asked whether the capital im- provements pl.an could finance another village, answered a flat, "No." "Even realizing that the Irvine Com· pany would have to foot the bill for the capital improvements. we'd sUll like to go ahead w:itb the project," Cameron said. · Citing a heavy workload of projects already planned, the council refused to speed the development of Culver Village. The balance of amendments to lhe plan were described as "housekeeping" changes by city Planning D i r e c to r William Liv ingstone. They r e f I e c t changes made by the council since the fi rst general plan draft and "other minor co rrections of errors and in- consistencies." Fro111 Page Al JAILED ... believes the client he represents free on legal principles js innocent-will be in Los Angeles County Superior Court Oct. 22 for a new extradition hearing. Judge William Murray of Orange Coun-- ty Superior Court already rejected the extradition based on Orange C o u n t ;1 authorities invC5tigation and leKal work. But Los Angeles County won't ac~pt that. Agajanian, of the law firm of Sheffield , Cllarton. Fishman and Agajanlan, &aid Thursday one hopeful concession has been won. They are willing to accept the Orange County polygraph---Or so-eall- ed lie detector test-findin gs if Russell submits to one administered by Los Angel@S County. He insists-in the meantime-that his client who is held wilhout bail for two years and 10 days, is being subjected to unconstitutional double jeopardy. Appeals court. justices ordered him freed from Los Angeles County custody, on grounds . he could not be extradited lo Oklahoma second time on the sa.me alleged evidence heard in Orange County . where el'tradition had been refused once already. Prosecutors appealed and were then upheld, placing the appellate court in the position of ordering Russell freed once, then ordering him held wltbOut bail. ''Some forms of injustice are tr.ore outrageous than ot hers ,'' deciares A~aJanian •. "And k eep Ing a person in Los Angele1 County Jilli from Oct. 8, 1972 to the present Is at the top or my Outrageous lrtjustict l.Jst ... llE ALSO LIKES FRUIT AND NUTS SAN DIEGO (AP) -Naturall!t Euttl Gibbons exchanged looks with a gibbon named Eutll After tbe apt was named In bll bonor at the San Diego Zoo. The gibboo. like Glbbonl, likes to eat fruit and nuts. HI!: was given h1.t name Thursdar. ~' . Gun Ileld At Head, Misfires By KATHY CLANCY Ot "'-0.11! ,, .. , , .... How would you eel if someone put a gun to your head and pulled the trl~er? • I just don't know how I'm still here today, to tell you the truth." Robert Flynn, 51, a Fountain Valley television repatrman)today described llls apparent escape from death Wednesday when he came home and surprised. tv.'O burglars in hi! aps.rtment One of them, be said, put a blue steel automatic to his bead and pulled the trigger twice, but the gun didn't go o£f. "The whole thing only lasted r i v e second! but it was a llfeUme," said ~1ynn. Flynn a,rrived home at 12: 15 a.m. Wedneeday and bad just opened the door about six inches, when lie said It wao jerked from hiJ hands. Fiynn said one of the men jabbed him in the ribs, then a! be apparently sl umped down, he felt something bru sh his hair. "l heard a click," be said. He laler saw the gun pointed at his head. Then, be heard a second click, after which the two men fled. Fountain Valley Police said today they're investigJting the incident , but so far haven't made any arrests. Flynn's assailants, y.•ho fled \liithout taking anything. were described as of Mexican descent. one about 18 years old and the other 25 to 30, police said. They entered the apartment w l1 i I e F1ynn was gone by removing a screen and climbing in an open window, officers said. Flynn said the pair only spoke once during the Incident -In Spani.<h. - Thorough~red IJ.ace_:s? Fair B·oara Stuilies Los A lii1niio"iPllin BJ ALAN DIRltlN OI ... De"¥ "9t llttt or.nae County Flit. Board dlr<Clnrw llave opened the ltartlng gate to negotla- UollJ"to promote 14 days of thoroughbred racing at Loi Alamitos. · But ngures the board studied Thurs• day night indicated that the fa1r may have to ~t up a pur~ of $604.000 in betting tbat the racing will be profitable. There were other indications that the going might get rough "' the profit and I<>& picture If it rains during tbe racing days. The directors indicated Thursday night that A!hley EconomJc Services of· New- port Beach would , be liven ~ job of studying '14itelher the plan i.s f~cially feaalble. The racing commfttee WN instructed the !inn understands all that the board erpects from the study and then award to meet with the flnri's offlcen to insW'e the contract. The study may not exceed five days. Alhle#'1 bid on the job bad envisioned it taking two or three dars and costing $500. .. ~ Of concern to the directo r s was whether the consultant realized that the board wanted the study to consider the effects of the weather on the profit and loss picture. < . The race dates 'Ina-considered would be in November. "'nlere are obviou! reasons why these days are avaUable in November," director Richard Houston, a Huntington Beach buslnessman. aatd. "It sometimes rains in November. U it rains on 10 cf tbe. 14 days we are going to lose money·'" Director Burr Williams also noted that the pune, the money going to the winner and hones that place in the events, would have to be guaranteed. r.i1ng II Clll'l'..tly authorized at Loi . Alamitos. To win authoriution for lhorou,ghbred raci ng at Los AlanUtot, the fair board would need the approval of the lllate Division of Falra and El'poelttoos and the Callfomla Horse· Racing Board. 'I1le owner• ol tht thoroughbred tracks are l!l'peoted to fight the appllcaUoo, contending that the market w o u 1 d bea>me aaturated tf there ff e r e ad· ditiooal racing. days and their buslnes,, endangered . To meet legal requirements, the poard . would 11.o have to., .biae a fair at Loi Alamitos becauae the board caMOt lpOnlOr radn( wlthoai a fair b·e i n g' presented. 1'11;ls ralri would be in addition to the relUl• Orange pounty Fair. The study by \\ahley E~mlc Serv!C<s woold. be to •determine-!Whither Orange County has the market ?ot thoroughbred racing. .... Racee· add 4 ,.. MORE .. MORE .. MOii!: ~. ":".' ....... . U Aahley llnd.s th<I · plan. llnancially leuihle, directors lndlon.d 1bat the nel<t step would be to hire a consultant to Jobby wUh the state agencies to gain approv1lt c1·1be raci11g dates. , ·shoi~· in . Arm" Ford Sig1is Bill on H o.lfSing iiHINGTON (UPI) -President Ford signed a bill today that will b finance ,7.75 tilllioll worth of hbusm 'construction. Ford said bill will give the d~pressed housing i~111try "a shot ip \be arm." " • -, t The bill is expected to spur construction of 100,000 new houses across the country. \ · Under the legislation, the federal government will be empowered to buy conve~tto,nal home mortgages fro m sa vings and loari a9Eiocli· tions and other lending institutions and it( this way. can pump more home loan funds into the tight money market. · · A number of leaders in the housing Jndustry and construction unions alon~ wit h memDers of Congress were 1n the Cabinet tooi:n whe nFord &1gned the bill. - Ford saia the bill will .. materially help the housine industry I.ii turning the C9rner.11 The industry bas fallen into a deep slump be- cause the shortage of money has brought home coo.struction close to a standstill. · · · ... . Later Wllllams Interjected into a . 1', d Jeanne R--Brown, 1 Wife of Marine t~~ .... :gi::~:1fuoon;om~~: r or Eyeing Cigarette on the 183-acre fairgrounds that the - .......!.'hone-r.aclng-ia ... &-JeaA-two--0r-tbree, __ ._~---· ~~-·--------------'----years.away." -- _ General,--Dies Funeral services were scheduled today for Jeanne E. Brown, wife ol a former high-ranking El Toro Marine Corps Air Station general and a onetime show business associate of Bob Hope, Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra. The pre.World War ti vocalist and radio shott hostess died Monday at the age of 52 in the U.S. Naval Medical Center at Portsmoutb, Va.,· following an Uln!ss. She waa the wife of MaJ. Geo. Leslie E. Brown, oommander of the Marine Corpo Air Sllllion at Cbony°l'oln~.N:C., and mother of Costa Meu. Poli~ Officer Robert "Rob" Brown. D.tring 1970 and 1971, Gen. Brown was assistant commander of the Thint Marine ,.,.-Air Wing baaed at El ,Toro MCAS, where the family lived in base olficers' housing. Prior to Worjd ·war II, Mrs. Bro\fll, who wed the performing name of Jeah Darrell, appeared with Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra and then Bing Crosby, on the old Kraft Music Hall radio program. She had her own NBC Radio sOOw broadcast from Hollywood for a number of. years and was launched on her err tertairunent career as a protege o{ star Jane Wyman. During World War II she made five USO toors to entertain troops in lbe Per cific, Europe and North Africa. Model,s Hired At Saddleback For Art Classes It may seem like pretty euy money, earning $4.50 an hour just to pose nude while a group of college art students \\'Ork at lbelr S.ketch pads. Such is lhe life for two professional model!! hired in recent action of the saddleba<:k Community Olllege board of trustees. The l.,,'O women will pose, draped and undraped, in We Drawing classes, according to art instructor Tom Morgan. The live models, he said, help students learn fonn . Contrary to popular opinion, professiooal models come in all shapes and sizes, rrom those weighing "SOO pounds ID thooc who look like they haven't eaten in a month," ~!organ said. r.1organ said it l.t the first time the college has used nude models in its classes. . No funds were budgeted to pay the models, bui tf business official aaid the money would come from m19Ce1\aneou,, acwunts U8e!I to pay atudent help . College trustees unanimously-endorsed hiring of the profes,,ional models. Boston Scliool' s Enrollment Up BOSTON (UPI) -Atlaldan<e 1 t roclllly troubled H)11e Pill< lflllh llchool lncrcaised ttJday ID 70! studenta, 1ncludlng 310 whites and 392 btac.lts1 rompa.red to 621 Tbunday. Police continued to pottol the corrldor1 and stucleota entering the building W.re spot c~ed ror weapcna for lM aecood day. • an. stude11t wu ouspencled 'I'hunday when police lOWld an f&.lnch club up his sleeve • i • Ra~u.':~ "11mat ... based .. 1.. Tar, Nicotine Levels fonnation provided by operators of the Los Alamitos track, place lhe amount otmon.y. the fair migh! expect-ID.make--wASIDNGTClN-(UPl)-=-Presi'~aen=t ~o~n ~1h~e~p=roposa==tr. -~ from 14 days of racmg at between F d -~ Int~ toda 1 the .. $114,000 to $242,000. or expr~ ... ~·· Y n "It is Cr!Ucally Important that our These estimates, however, also show passjbillty _of regulating by law the .tar judgmenlll be soundly based ao that that the purse that would hav~ to be and nicotine content of cigarettes· we may proceed with the g r e a t e s t put up for the eventt would total $604,<m He asked the Natlc:>nal Cancer ~dvilory amount of wisdom," wrote Ford, a heavy and would be part of· total ezpenses Board ID provide for hiDL bY. Dec. t and habitual pipe smoker. for the racing of Sl.4 million. • "sdenUfic advice on this impcrl4nt inat-Presently, thoroughbred radng 1 n · Southern Califomia is authorized at San-tee of public concern." ta Anita, Hollywood Partt, Del Mu and Fon! diacloo<d the boani propooed that Pomooa. Only q\llrter horae and bal1lOSI the •ovemment rem••ite tar il1d ruc!oltne ·· r.v•~. p,.;Jum.'ll1f£r~·w·the From, Page Al TAPE ••• I ~ '< ' ,,. Dean sak! Hunt was distraught over the dea th of bta wile In an · ~ crash and wanted ID plead guilty il he could get "some llSIUl'aDCe from 1he White House he wouldn 't go to jail for the rest of his life." Then Dean told of e Jan. 5, 1973 White Houae corridor conversation with Colson, who hired Hunt. Dean quoted Colson as saying, "John, I felt this matter was so serious ... This was a matter I felt I had to take up with the President hllmelf." Neal asked Dean U Colson told him he actually took it up with the President. "Yes, he ttld," Dean said. Dean's testimony was identical to that he gave at the Senate Watergate bear- ings: June 25, 1973. market clgaretta deemed ID produce an e1~ve lmOUJ?L, .,iJ '-"~ Recent ~ ....... ~°"'· dllntte pel'<aplta consumption has risen about to the point where it was when the link. between clii rette. "1!'li<Jnl and lµng cancer waa first asserted by the IUJ'lflOD general 10 years ago. • Ford's req~st ~e ·In a letter to Dr. Jonathan E. Rhoad•, a h t g b I y regarded canctr expert who heads the board. Noting the board's recommendation, ForJ. asked that It "review the p:istlng scientific evidence on an urgent basis and provide me wllh an U¥SSMent of ~ e~ent to whJcb there ex le t s a scienllilc basis for responsible TtgU}a· tion of cigarettes." Ford did not commit himseU to acting . .. .. B.i\1'1KS •.• ialt~fr:ii~ .~t qlll'l!'f. by the Mlddle East NeJfs· Agt.nc:y, ccmtdertd the semi- official ·organ ol the Egyptian govern- ment. Tbe report did not specify who 1 was involVf:d in the negotl.O.tions, nor who was· involved in the alleged con- sortium. Th~e also was a report in the Detroit Free Press that the annJ flov: from the Uruted States to Saudi Arabia could double. or:. triple under a secret plan developed l>Y lhe federal government in an attempt to drive foreign oil prices down. The aecret program to Saudi Arabia a'pparently was ~veloped bv Secretary of State Henry A. KiJslnger, the newspaper Said today ln a rep:irt from t" Was~ bureau. LAMP SALE CONTINUED . ' From the finest collection of lamps in Sovth .Orange . County. Select from such well known names at Marbro, Stillie, Knob Creek, Norman Percy and many others. · Fantastic I nvenll"Y or Quality lamPS All Rhdy For linmediate Oeliveoy . .. OREXEl-+iERITAG.e:-HENREOON-viOODMAR"k.-M8ASTAN-BAKER , NEWPORT BEACH • '· - 1m WESTCIJl"f" DR., 11~- WHllDA'fS Ir SAtuU.t.TS 9!00 i. S:JD . . ( I "LAG(INA BEACH . :WO NllKTU<.'OASTllWY .• 4"4...,1 ° ' ' TORRANCE•- ..... HAW1110RNE BLV)>. (Open Fri, ti(9, Sun. 124:30) 378·1219 . .r -·1 • / --• I 1 -• -.. t "1"<\ ' ACI "' -i ._..,~ILY PLOT EDIT~RIAL fAGE_ , Planning-and '" ' ,, J .\u !1•.-t . Though lar ge·scale cooperative land planning bas resulted in improved proposals ror the 4,200·ac re North El Toro Genera l Plan, irlt~rests of the s mall property owners have been tl(icing a beating. •In .. j,, .. Coonty planoe.rs urged property ownel'S in the Ji:cturesqu~ area to work together on their plans so that the proPQsed result would be harmooious, and as ecologi cally sound as possible. That has been done -,wjth the three largest owners hiring a piestigious Irvine pla nning firm . While the proposals project at least 16,000 new residents, lhey call for large sectio_ns of natural open space and par Ks . • • ' •• !""'l• ' , The problem is·that ,.while cooperative i>lanning is becoming the law of the land, no provision has been made to a ssure that whatever 'profits r esult will benefit those involved. 1 •• 11 rtli'LI ·>CC 'Tl '!I• J;, 1Vl:·l·· T' 1, !1'1'" 'l'.1 What th'ft means for the small landowners is that they can see, all profitable d~nsities wiped off their hard-earned 20or 30 acres -with no recompens~. _ This situation needs to be re-examiried. While ' cooperat,ive planning is a step in the right direction, equitable profit-sharing is a necessary complement. Boundary Dilemma ' Although a preliminary committee report draft ed , b):'. a pare nt grQup makes it soun.d easy, the proposal ~.:·to s hift 6 ,000 acres of .the Mission Viejo from ,Cftpistrano'unified to the Saddleba ck Valley Unified School District is fraught with pl'oble ms .• u ·. •• I M . ' •r •' Already r esidents of the .affected area are taking sides. Trustees from ea ch district must be wOndering if they ha ve the time, stamina and r esources for a prolonged controversy. \•'. Advocates of the pl an cite l.ong dis tances to Capistrano unified campiises and they belie ve that by •• Bicentennial Slogans I Reflect Afuerican Fait ---~WASHIN.Gl'.QN_-We have been hearing about America from its people. We' asked, you may remem- ber, ror a Bicentennial slogan. The response was s pontaneous ; tens or • thousands of citizens rrom all walks of life have sent us slogans, phrases and po e tr y ~l"ptessin g ho'v they feel a bo u t -'~· ,country. Man y h a v e '¥_.r · t en , accompanyin g l ett e r s o r testimonial . T o Tead them is to understai\d tha t the Watergate horrors, economic ' uncertainties and othi:r arfli ctions-1 have not shaken the American faith. I aqd poetry expressing how they reel about their country. I Many have written accompanying I letters of testimonial. To read them is • to understand that the Watergate hor· 1 rors,-economic uncertainties a nd other arrnctions have not shaken the American faith. SOME with a lifetime behind them have written about the turmoil they 1 have seen. Youths looking ahead have 1 written about the challenge of events. We have heard rrom aliens about the dreams which brought them to this -land. Even a few convicts have responded, with a special poignancy, ' about the meaning off reedom. f Some have applauded President I Ford's attempt to return to the White ~a humanity and openness more l becoming a rree republic. Others I have \aken issue with the President ~ over his ·decision to pardon Richard · f Nixon· and thus s ufrocate the legal process to. its crib. They reject the Idea that the country would be better served by amnesifl than by truth. 1 WERECEIVEDonesloganfrom an authentic American pioneer, 98·year- 'ld. Jesse L. Hall, who was born in the l centennial year or 1876. He has spent r hi.i long lire pu shing westwards. lie • liVed through the blizzard of 1881 in a t homemade mu slin tent on the t Nebraska prairie. ·in Wyoming, he • was elected to the state legislature. I Now he abides in Reno, Nev. f He summed up his view o( Am eri ca l in fl. simple, three·word slogan : "The • RE!public Stands." · ·I From cell C·8 in the ~orida :state I pe~itentiary , ·Raiford, Fla ., Willit Young wrote : "Need I say, my Ure 1 1 has been a miserable road to travel. After years of walking it alone. I 11 discovered one must believe in something." i He put his sentiments into these 1 words : "A Cbuntry not made by ff and , but by the Grace of God and the )Yill of M¥·" ERE WERE othe r poetic ~ nses ... We may stumbl~ but \I r fill: Down through tbe years. ·we :,still stand tall," wrote Raymond Richardson from Chicago. · Ai Boalsburg, Pa., teacher, Ruth H. ,caner, felt "an extreme need for the hlldren'' to know their country's herttaie." ~he suggested this slogan: · ,'~theChildrenWlllKnow." , 111 Totedo, Ohio, the ·second und h:lrd grade' students <'t Lincolnshire llchool composed a slogon together : , .. , work for Democ racy because-It works for me_,'' I MANY OTHER children scril in lllog•na. For inst ance. a 12-year-old "Forest Height>, Md.,· girl. Mary £llzabeth He n r y , proposed : !'A1"9erica, a lfom~stcadcd Heirt." And' 14·Yearo0ld Penny Chandler or Fr •, e;anr. sent In this one : "Two .. " ' ' (JACK ANDERSON) Hundred Steps -and t.-lore to Come.'' Teenagers. too, responded by the hundreds. From Annapolis, Md., 18· year-old J.ames P. Gough told of his rrustralion over "recent acts by men in high places." Yet he could still of- rer two .heartfelt slogans: "America, a Theme that is Timele~s" and ·'Am erica, Something Warm that TOuChcdmy ifearl. ;, A 19·YEAR·OLD, Johnny Carter ol Long Beach, Calif,, suggeJted this sign be pos ted across-America: "Conquero rs and Corruptors Beware. This Nation is the Property of the People." • And a Wflmington, N.C., ftlh school student, Stewart Mosh~, sub· milted this slogan: "There's No Way like the Ameri can Way." From John Lauria or Jacksonville, Fla., we receiVed a simple. sincere motto: "America, Where People Are Haepy.", He added meaningrully: "l should know. I came here in 1903. '' HERE ARE a few other ofrerings sele cted at random rrom our mailbag: · Florence A. Tracy Revelle, Ard· more, Ok la. -''Pride in our past; Fa ith in our future; Forward ·America.'' -' Lionel Wernick, New York City - •' Ar0erica : The Promise Kept and now Renewed.'' George Kelly , Philadelphia, Pa. - "Here Lives a Free People, 1771).. 1976." JosCph P . McG oldrick. J ackson lleights, N.Y. -"In America, there arc no impossible dreams." John Klun ck, Sheboygan, Wis. - ''IC we can't get to Heaven we'll settle for America.·· Jim Felton, Little Rock, Ark. - "America is coming o( Age." Willia m Eric Rohrs, Tacoma, Wash. -"No w, Let's Put It All Together." · Adeline Feinberg. Belmont, Mass. -"ApJtreciatc our Dirrerences." Louis Gi nsberg, P;itcrson, 1'{..J . - "Take no liberties with liberty.'' J.K '. Sm ith. Salt Lake City. Utah - "Freedom : 1776.1976 Forever." F:velvn Conley, Pittsburgh, Pa. - "US1\: ·Undaunted Stands America." r.1c:1n\\'hile, our search ror' a Biccn· tcnnial slogan continues. Please send for your suggestions to Slogans. c/o Jack An derson. 1401 16th Street, N. w.; \Vashin gton, O.C. 2003fl. • •• 'If only you 'd been dran dodgers!' • ' P~ofit· changi ng dis tricts, the co mmunity \vould truly be1 geogr,p hlcally intact. . . 0-itics-a nd they outnumbered supporters at a recenl study session-\vonder i£ the proposal is \vorth it. Th ey Insist t hat lax ra tes would in crease dramati cally. that traditi onal educational programs at nei ghborhood school s would ch ange and t hat scores of teachers and administrators might vanish from neighborhood schools a nd be replaced by strangers. Jf tru_stees dec ide to continue study on the matter . they had better gird for a long state of s iege. Pro1nising Cl1oice In na ming Leo E. Pearf1rvine's director of publi c s afety, the c ity council has picked a \\'ell-qualified man fo r a tough job. Until next Se ptember, Peart will h a ve the respo n- sibility of ofganizing the city1s police fo r ce. After that. be will run it. Peart see m s to h a ve the attributes needed to police a c ity \vhich \'ie,vs itself a s ··some thing differ e nt.'' At age 32, Peart has a strong academic ·a nd la"" enforceme nt background. l·li s acad e mic achievements include a master's degree in criminal j u s t ice admin is tration . J.J.i ~ 11 years of po lice experience includes '''Ork for the Long Bl!:a ch and Palo Alto departments <.1nd 18 months a s· chief of the Los Ba nos force . In Los llanos llll.P c<.1rt achiev'e d a n excellent re putation while in char ge of police. am bul a nce service. anima l control a nd r elations \V ith t he fi re depa rtment-the same duties expected of the l r,·ine public safety director. • . • : ' . ~ .......... ~.J. Beyond tha t . though, he has a r eputat io n for b e ing ope n in h is ope rations a nd flexible in his a:pproach to law enforcement problems. SB ~IT IS MOR~ BLESSEt> TO PAY OFF THAN TO BE PAID OFF." -. Dear R e flectio11 of Anti·Aniericataism -=-eeks Pull Out of-~ Gus t · ' WASf-ll NGTON -The Greek· gov · ~ quietly spread the word·to friendly ' • ernment has quietly \vithdrav.1n some· ~ · Congressmen: stop Americ_an aid to owcum-ne.w.spap~omen:~ -ofits-top-mHitnry-offTC'M'S-from-Nort h--iVt\N-S.N{)-V-AK-· --'I'uTkey;-no:natterwbatthemipactmr-- pages. are now called .Peopl~ Atl antic Treaty c NATO) headquar-Cyprus. or "View" or "Today" ~t still ter's in Brussels, one more indi calion. . . . · · are all about \Von1en, \\Titten by or how seriously the Cara manl is arc una ble to impede the move In short, the pohticflij,mpera~vesm Yiomen forthe mostpart'! government vi ews anti-Ameri can toward what looks like~a form of Athens on.the eve o ~ pathr ajen-. J .B.L. senti me n t now tary election ra~ outweigh e one· . _ G · dangerous neutrali tyfor rear that the ra nge necessity of gradually Gloom, G~ !omm•11ts ~r• sullmitte4 Dy rt*•• ,jlftcl llo ltOI M(t \,.f<il, t tflKI tM ~ifW$ Ill' lht --P"'· S."'41 yowr ptl'oeevt 1• Glow!ly Glos, o,any Pilot. Morality Needs New - Vocabulary (SYDNEY HARRIS) Thoughts at Large: Obviously. the language needs a new word ror young couples.who are living together more or less: pe r· mapently, but are not married. Any suggestions ? (Remembe r. Gele tt Burgess invented the marve lous \I/Ord, "b)urb," On ly a rev.• decades ago, which filled a genuine need.) The only effective punishment fo r an evil-doer is r emorse; and if he or she cannot be made to reel re morse, a ny punis hment becomes sclr- defeating through turning the evil - doer into a more resentful creature than before. Kindly keep in mind that "media" is ·a plural word, apd'there is no such thing as "medias." What the world in the past has always called a "great" man was measured by the number of people who feared him ; what the present and future must learn to call a great man should be measured by the number of people he (rees from fear. It is hard to believe, but true. that there is no suc h thing as a "ra'inbow". if there is no one there to see it : a rain· bow does not ex ist in itself. but onl y through hum an eyes. T~levision \\'On't come of age urttil it acquires al least onu commentator who is as in cisive, as well-inrormed, and as elren·handcd as the late lamen· ted Elmer Davis was on radio. (Hun- tley and Brinkley were to Davis as Mantovani is lo ~1ozart). Most political speeches remind me of Churchil l's comment about Sta'nley Baldwin. when Baldwin was Prime ~tl n ister : "Stanl ey occasio·nally ·stumbles over the truth. but he always hasti ly picks hi mself up and hu rries on 3S If nothing had happened." If [\\'e re the head or any company, ( \\101.1\d sUmm~rily nro the fi r!ilsubor· din nte who culled me "Chief." PooplC' 'vho cla mor 10 be '"free" (v,.hic h usun lly means r id or thcir- obllgations). Cor set Goethe's war· ning: "Ever)'thing th3t rreei our gpi rlt without sivlng us control or our· scl~cs lg ruiaous." • s\veep~ng ree~e . an ti-Am e r ic a n c·urrent s now restoring tbe Athens·Wasbingtonlillk. .Fa~ing the r,irst s\veeping Greece would pull them un-No Greek leader c_aught sec~Uy lob. pa rl_ 1 am e n t a r y der. Accordingly. r ational diplomacy bying Congress to \'ote agamst the e!ect1on on ?-!'~v. 17 dictated by long·ter m Creek security ffurkish aid· ban could be elected since the mili tary needs has been . inundated by short-sewer inspector in a provincial Greek coup d'etat .or. 1 ~7. term domestic politics. The Coun-village. the n e w civ1!1a n dation for th is was built by Washing- gove rnm e nt. or ton's lon g love affa fi-~with the hated Prime Minist er militarydictat.orshi': Caramanlis is torn :· between conrlicting ~itical realities. A.CASE in poi nt was the absolute- The merest rr-agment or public ly futile effo rt by ·secretary of State display of pro.Am erican sentiment I-lenry Kissinge r last week to enlist could boomerang, giving the Greek sub rosa Greek support against the left a dangerous opening that Andreas then·pending congressional ban on Papandreou would be quick to exploit. U.S. military assistance to Turkey. Caramanlis dealt with thi s hard Cpnferring at h_is own request at the political ract by pulling Greece out of Plaza Hotel in Ma nhattan last week the military organization of NA1'0 . \vith fl.favros, Ki ssinger explained Now he has followed · up by with-that the effect or a corigressionally· drawing some or the 400-odd Greek of· imposed Turkish aid ban was predic- ficers from their regular military bi!-table: it v.·ould make the Turks dig in lets in Brussels, Na ples and other their heels again st U.S.'mediation er. NATO commands. forts to remove Turkish·t roops from Cyprus :.i nd return ·parf:'OC Turkey's Cyprus conquest to Gr~l!k Cypriots. Thus, it was in the selt-1.nterest of Athens to keep the U.S. 06.good terms BUT TllE' do mestic political demands for a nti·U.S. actions rajse the gravest future problems for Greece. Friend ship with the \Vest, and particul ar-ly the U.S., is ab- solutely essential for Greece in the long run, as a glance at the maP proves. Greece is bordered by three Communist states to the north and by mu scle·rlexing Turkey on the east. Ca r a m an lis a nd his foreign minister, the astute 'Geo rge Mavros. along with most other leading Greek politicians of the center._ and right.· full y understand that ract. But dcs1Jite strong pressure rrom the U.S., they with Turkey . ,· l\1avros was stunned. "That," he told Kissinger, "is not soPiethlng ror a Greek to do.'' INDEED, f<.i r Crom discouragin g Greek s ympathi zers in th ~ U.S. Congress from voting against the ban on aid to '(urkey, top Greek diplomats in the U.S. encoura ged it. One active pro moter of the· aid ban was the co n· JJUl-general in the influe ntial Greek consulale in San f'rancisco, who The unannounced decision to with· draw top Greek military men from· NATO headquarters is simply the: ne west s ig n a l. Ha ving heard American pledges for over two moo.. tbs that Turkey would be glad to give up some or its Cyprus conquest once talks s tarted (pledges wholly unredeemed l, the Greek government continues to advertise itself as anti.· American. • THERE IS no hope that this will change between now and the mid· Nouoiber election. and little expec· tatlbil ·that it could change soon thereafter. Likewise, the hostility for Turkey so vividly expressed in Congress over the aid-ban threatens political retaliation against Washing:· . ton there, too. With an outstanding JOU debt to . Ru ssia for its acquiescence in the in·· vasion of Cyprus last July, Turkey may find it harde r thah oeiore i.o tieuf any Soviet request for overrlight privileges in a fu ture Middle Eastern war , pa rtic ul a rly with the U.S. Congress so virulently anti·Turkey. As th ese Cyprus rhickens come home to roost, the once.mi ghty U.S. is an impotent bystander. Economy Shakes Insurance· Fir~~;; ( insurance industry, Payne hJS tk~;.;: Despite the im;1 gc of a rock \\'hit h insurance compa nies have used over the years lo impress upon the µubll c. mind the security to be gained b.v being inde mnifi ed lh rout:h their policies. the economi c troubles being experienced in the nalion m:.i )' he l hreat e ni n ~ ('\en th e i n s u r;in <·(> buhvarks. ' At leas t. St :1t1' In s u r ~1 nl·e Co mmi ss io n t•r Gl eeson L. P;.1~·n,· ha s issued som1' guarded \~'a rni n gs to the e ff ect t hat insu ra nce can no longer be blindly 4:1.cf'cptl.'d a s an absolute surety . \Vhilc Payne's th esis is not ccntcl'Cd on rising c-Osts and infl atio n as mu ch as th e sa gg in g stock market, tho \\'hole_ th'rust of his cautions is based upon the prevailing direction of the econom ic \Y 1nds. As llaync indi cates, in surance co m· panies nr'e hca''Y ln\'estors In stocks a nd bo nd s a loni:, \Vilh o th er s pe culations. \\'hilc they a r c r~gul &tcd by th e · J!Qvcrn1ncnt and some types or poliC'i<.•s like some types or ho nk savings :ire "insured" by the go,·crnm'cnt, the protC'c!ions arC' not ~ea red lo lhc full potc n~ials of :i disastrous dt•p1·c:;sion. ALTlfOlJGlf insuranC'r'! C'nmp:i nh.:s ha vt' a fiduciary relationship ~v\th their Investors as do th(' banks, th<.'r(' arc sis:nifi cant d1 fferc.ncc.1;. l'\11nk ing ltlw~ 11rescribe: the pcrconta~t·s of totaf assets "·hl ch 1n ay bt!invc:.tcd in nny ·one area. Thus n 'b:ink in ;:iy only -. .I ) most attentive to the protection ofthe: EARL WATERS public and has worked to securt new: measur~s to strengthen the insuNnce ·. ------------' compa ni es. ~ loa n-so much of its capilal on home..c; or real estate in general. Other types of loans arc also lim itt·d as to their percentages of the total. It may only ill \'1'5l :.l SJ)CC:l1lCC'<I pcrcclll:Jg"C Of the 1\holc in U1Jnd :-; /Jr :1ny other f'ftl d of ..;1·<·uriti1 ·s. l nsur~l uc·l· con11l:11111·:-1, c\·cn though rpqui rcd 1n rn:u nt;Hn .i st1 1>ulatcd per· ("('lll<igl' of lot :d hnhi liti<:s in liquid rt•srrvt•s, n1 a,\' u!ht·r11·i:.c plunge the entire rC'm:.ii11rlcr nn lhr stock market or l:l ny ot her fi eld Payne h~1s nol c h ar~cd that this htts been don(' by :1ny rc:unp:)ny. To the c·ontrary n1 any arc heavil y invested in long term la nd o\\1nerships uncJ. other real estatc or thC' l.YJ>4!S always considered n1 ost sound. c>s;pccially in l~c long ra nge v\c11-. STILi,, t(J th~ ex tent that the com· 1>a ni 1•s have in\'cst('d on the stock market he has \\'Hrnc.-<I thRl further dips in stoC"k . ., could v.·cll Jcopardi ze the: solidity of ..... omc co01panics. l~c has :suggested that thcrL' arc co m· panics \\·hlc h should hC' rcducinit -their s tockm11rkct!I'. portJolios I)~· 15 to 20 perce nt. Payne ~ays th:i t th e companies In the izrc111cst dani:icr arc not the life in· ..;u'1'rs as much a ~ the casu:l lt\· con1 . pnnies. 1'he la llcr write: fire. aUtu ~nd oth er ty1>es l)f loss insurance. /\top insurance cxec\ll ive before he llS1'.1Um ed1thc, slate's JOb Of pOht ing tha ) • HE POINTS to thC raet that the' stale has brought abQul lhe establish· • ment or a guara nty rµnd to prolect lhe insured agains t casualty company fail ures. This is a pool made up or con· t.ributi nns from all casualty Com · panics lo provide :-igainsl the railure of any one of them. · • ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, Publisher Thomas KeevU, Editor Ba rbara Kreibich, Editorial Page Editnr The cditorl11 I pa ge of the Daily 'Pilot seeks to inrorm and stimulate tt1tders by presenting oo this page di verse co mm entary on topics of in· tcrcst by sfnd ic ated columnists and t'artoonlsts, by pro\·idina a forum for rl'aclt r1'· views :ind hy prcM>ntlng this "'"'spaper's opinions nnd Ideas <ln cutrl'nt to pics. The editorial Of1ir11ons or the Daily Pilot appear nnly in \hr edit ori al colum n at Che top of (Jie pa11c. Opin1ons ei1presHd by the t'olumnists and Citrtoonist.s und lettf'r \v riters arc tht.ir 0'4'11 and no cndori.ement or their vicWl'! by the· Oull y Pilot should be inferred. • Friday, October 18, t974 I ' ' • • --· • • Pin~h Biker •. ...... ~ ,. • Dad Fills In for Injured Son Thirtftt.yeaM!d John Maberry of Colla lileoa had •<rted hard to •llD up 1ponmr1 for h11 ride ln tbe Orange County Bike-a·tbon Saturday In 11id of lhe American Cancer Society. ' lit htld garnered 55 pledges ranging from 1 dime lo • dollar a mile and wu determined to complete at least one oircult of I.be 25-milt c:our111 and rai.18 I a tot.al of $171.50. BUT THunSDA v night John was knocked out oI ~ evenl when he broke his leg in a collision with a car at 17th Street and Tuslln Avenue, C:O.,ta Mesa. But the money promised by hls backers Y.'On't go begging. J ohn's father, Wendall Maberry, a 35-year-old Costa ~fesa .fireman, will take ~is place. "I think that 'a really neat," said John, his leg in a cast .at his home at 443 ri.fagnotia SI., Costa tt1esa. WENDELL l\tABERRY \Vas due lo \\-'Ork Saturday but a colleague w111 stand in for him for three hours so he can complete the 25-mll course, slart-ing at 8 a:fu. at Carrs Jr. restaurant on f7th Street · · · "~t was the cure John needed," said his mother, Airs. Sb:tron Afaberry. :~Bright Declines to Make ::'.Brown Funding Statement By JOHN VALTERZA Of It.. 0111~ P'lt.I 5t1tf ltiwes business as wual at the mom111g '· session or-the reg~nal coastal com- mission, despite the fact that i t s : .... C~an is now under investlgatfon for o.1 ti0Ucitlng fWKls for EdmWld G. Brown J!Jr .• Democr3tlc candidate for i;::over1or. Chairman Donald Bright declined an ""liivitatioo frbm Conunlssioner Carmen Warschaw at the Long Beach meeting to ' make a full statement on the in- vestigation .. • 1~ was 4isClQSed this week that Bright : )I0""1 a luocbeoo Oct. 1 at which leading coastline developers were asked to at· -fend a $100 per person cockt.all party in 'Brown's honor. Some developers said following the meeting they felt they might have a The commi:uion then turned tO COl't- sideratlon of a Ilingthy agenda of re- quests for approval o f developments along the Orange and Los Angeles county coasts. It was expected that the matter would again be raised during the oral com- munications portion of the a g e n d a scheduled for late this afternoon. From Page Al IRVINE PLAN • • shortage of nearly $2S million for capital improvements over the next five years. l----'.JIO!IEete ... n'11iaL-aI treatme.nLbeloz:LthLCO 1 tnisslon, Which regulates coastal develop- ment , if they attended' . the party or : Urged others to do so. The city is under pressure from the state sttorne eneral's office, as well as from environmentalist groups, to pro: vide lower Cost housing for people who work in Irvine:· Gun Held At Head~ Misfires By KATHY CLANCV Of tflt Dtlly l"Utt U." How would you feel ii someone put a gun to your head and pulled the I rigger? . "f just don't know how I'm still here lodly, to tell you the truth.'' Robert Flynn, 51, a Fountain Valley television rtpalrman, today described his apparent escape from death Wednesday when he came home and surpr~ two burglars in his apartment. One of tlitm, he said, put a blue steel automatic to his bead and pulled lhe trigger twice, but the gwi didn't go orf. "The whole thinj: only Juted live seconds but it was a lifetime," said t1ynn. . Flynn arrived home at 12: l~ a.m. Wedneaday and had just opened the door about six inches, when he said Jt was jerked from his hands. F1ynn said one of the men jabbed him in the ribs, then M be apparently slumped down, be felt something brush hls hair. "l heard a click," he said. He later saw the gun pointed at his head. Then, he heard a second click, after which the two men Oed. Fowitain Valley Police said to d a y they 're investigating the incident, but so far haven't made any arrests. Flynn's a~ilants, v.'ho Red without laking anything, were described as of Mexican descent. one about 18 years old and the other 25 to 30, police said. They entered the apartment w h i I e F1ynn was gone by removing a screen and climbing in an open window, officers said. Flynn 'sald the pair only spoke once during the Incident -In Sprutish. Thoroughbred ~a.£e_~? Fair Board Studies Los Afu1niiiis(,Plan B1 ALAN DIRION Of ... Deli¥ Pit.I Sttff Orone• County Fllr Board directors have opened the ltartlng gate to negotla- t!OllJ to promote II days of thoiwghbred racing at Los Alamitos. But figures the board studied ThUrs· day nlgbt indicated that the fair may havo to p.it up a ~ of $60(,000 in betting that the ractn• will be Pt<fltable. There were other indications tbat the going might get rough on the profit and loss picture If it rains during the racing days. '!be directors indicated ThW'9day night thet Ashley Economic Services of New- port Beach ..uJd be given the job of studying whether tbe plan ls financially feaalble. The racing committee.. waJ instructed the firm understands au that the board e%peds from the study and Lben award to meet with the flm1'a officers to insure the contract. The -study may not eit:Ceed five days. Aahley'1 bid on the ~ bad envisioned it taking two or three d8Y,S and costing $500. Of concern to the directors was whether the consultant realized. that the board wanted the study to consider the effecta of the weather on the profit and loss picture. , The race diites 11inii: considered would be in November. "There are· obvious reasons why t~ days are availabI~ in November." director Richard Houston, a Huntington Beach businessman, said, "It sometlmes rains In November. U it rains on 10 of the.14 days we are going lo lose money·"· Director Burr Williams al!o noted tllat the purse, the money going to the winner and hones lb.at place in the events, would have to be guaranteed. Later Williams int.erjected Into a dl&cusslon on how the money raised from the racing might fund improvmenta racinc II CIJm!lll1 1uthor1ud •t Los Alamitos. To win authortution for l.horoQghbred racing at Los Alamltoa, the fair board would· need the approval of the state Dlvllion of Falr1 and E:11:po1ltlooa and- th.e California Hor!K! Racing Board. 1be ownen of. lhl thoroughbred tracks are. ex~ to fl&ht the appllcaUon, contendlng tbat the market w o u 1 d become 11turated If there "'ere ad· ditlonal racing days and their business endangered. ~ To meet legal requirements, the board . . ' woWd alao hue to • .ta1e a fair 11t Loi Alaml,.. beca\llO tho board cannot tlponaor-raciD&' wttbclltlt a f'1r b·e Ing' presented. 11tll fair. would be in a~dltlon to the regul•,Orange CoW'lty Fair. The'lludy by Ashley E~lc Services wouid be to--detennine ;wMther Orange County hu the market l.O.tiY;!roughbred racing. . .... ~ . Races add 4 • ,MORE .: MORE .• MORE •."'::' •..... · U Aahley finds l~'ttlan. llnlncially lwtbt., dlre<t«s Inell lbat the ne>t step .wouJd be lo hire a consultant to lobby wUh the state agencies lo gain approval of1be ratjrlg dates. ·shot -~ :. in .Arm!' ,. Ford Si,g11,$ Bill on H o':'-Sing iililNGTON (UPI) ~Pr .. ident Ford aigiiea a bill today that will h finance .7.75 tilllll>n worth of hi>uliill consll'llct!on. Ford said · bill will give the depressed housing :f111try "a shot in the arm." "' • • The bill is expected to spur construction of 100,000 new houses across Ute country. \ · · : . Under the leglalat!on, the federal government will be emi><>wered ~ buy conventional ·home mortgages lrom · savirigs and Joaµ aS1SOCI&· t1ons and other lending institutions and irl this way, can pump more home loan funds into the ti~t money market. · A number of leaders 1n the housing jndustry and construction unions alon' with memDers of Congress Were 1n the Cabinet tooin wbe nFord signed the bill. ~. Ford said the bill will "materially help the housin& industry-ti) turning the CQrner." The industry has fallen into a deep slump be- cause the shortage of money has brought home construction close to a stand!til.l.. · · • l?ord Eyeing Cigar~tte on the JM-acre fairgrounds that the eanne E. Brown,_~~,..":~ i• at feast two .. ·-• ~i!i:u~~M~~-~~1 ... -t~-.-based~-00~~~,7..,.,(l~r-,~rt/ ..... ~i-c-o~t,.irn~e-........ ~~ ........ ~~~~~ Wife of Marine formation provided by operators of the Bright denies any such implication l'was ma~e. He saJd that the sole purpose 1----"he=->uncheon= was · to' gamer-support w •Brow~ who 'Bright considers the most .envlronmen~lly-0riented of the t w o. 1 tandldates for the governship. In Irvine Company presentations on G I th~·propOst<I lrvtne-1ndustrlat-Colppler--enel'a ' Los Alamitos track, place the ·amount Dies·!---~01-mMeY..Jbe..lair m!gbt. ,expecUo...make--wASHINGTON . "(UPtr +.:..: President from 14 days of racing at between F rd \'nl'Aeaecf int ... tod t the $114,000 to $242,000. 0 en,...... ere .. ~ ay n on lhe proposal. "It is critically important that our judgrnenll he soundly based so that we may proceed wifh the g r e a t e s t amount of wisdom," wrote Ford, a heavy and habitual pipe smoker. • At this tnO.flllng'a session of the com- · mls~on:Bnght said that he did appear befol't' £tie state commission Wednesday ' to ' req'uest a "thorough and immediate inv'estlgilf~ ·• .. Any · additiOna1 statement would com- "promise lbe investigation· It is not re.a· ·~rrabt! or appropriate to make a ..tate- ment at this pOint," Bright told fellow commlasioners. · ·-••• frQ.11& Page AJ . .. . .. MILLS .•. ·~ ~'~i~~: :=~~ a~y~ ~: said. I've apologized publicly on several \: occasions for what happened. I apologize ~:again J9Jli8ill for what happened. : • ·~ivl eay. I ·was Y.Tong in ever : ;taking q drink of champagne because : : I learned years ago that I couldn't : .drink ii. ancl I have learned in more : .recwit years that you can't drink : .anything ilae and do vry much·" • iM,ill~.i.1. seeking his 19th term in the j general election next month. His op- : :JIOfM!fll is Republican Judy Petty, a 30- ! year-old divorcee y.·ho has said she wou1d 1 ..not make the Tidal Basin incident a ~ :e&mpaign issue. : ! lluring his Jaycees address i\lills look· : ;ed often toy.·lrii his \vife. Polly. who • :v.·as seated ~ be audience. She was ·not '"'ith titt frusband Oct. 7. : : "There is no difference betv.·een us. I ~AfteY\ ~P:leen married as Jong as '~we haw:""Yotl)et so used to one person :that"nf" oot-' i1sc can come between )'Ou," Miiis said in denying suggestions ' "1.hat' li was romantically involved with ~Mt'!':-'!!latttstella. ' , . . ., . . ' ORANGE COAST . " < -J11JltlQltill .. . .. n.. O•W>Qe c-t O.lty PllOI, w1111 wlllCll 11 combl,.d 11-,.. ..... Pf"ni, •~ pUOllWG by IM Or-Cowtl Pllblhlll'"I """-'· StPl•ll• • Hlll"'5 ••• 1>U6TI'"". Moncl.ly ll'lrOuQll frldoly, ' • "°'" c:m.11 Mtlo', Newport llt.Cll, Huntk'911111 •••• S..Cll''°""''"" ¥•• .. ,. u,,..... llita(ll, ' lrvh1tlS.dQ11!1«,\ 11111 SM 0.,..llMl'Sln -II Caloiflllnl!~ ., -,,t.l~lt l'"f9IOl'tl tcllll-ll ~" S<11.-\r1 111d SW-~ TIM O<tl'IC!lloll pt,lbl11J\!"11 DI.,,\ ll I t XIO Wtll Bty Slrfft, ""°i. MeW,~"!'J'- • ... , ~ Robert N. Weed ,.,.Kl'nl 11'111 P\ltlll1"'"F .. , • • • 111ac k R. Curley ~ ~ v~t ""rj'l!Mnl 11'111 ~...,II,,,-.~ • ' r Thomas Keevil •._. IEdilor " " " . r I ' ' " ' ' . ' ' Thomas A. Murl>hlne • -• MIMtlnt 1!.d!Gr Nt.artM H. Loos Ri(hard P. Nall i...""'\.-ir..,~..,.1 ... 1M111tf11'19£Cllton • • • ,. Off ices CMtt IMW: UCI Wttl a.y STl'fff N1JWpot1 llt.-cll• JJlJ Nf•~ ~ 1oit•u11•ik..Cll 11166""""'"',.st,.. MWlll"9IOll llel<ll' 1111S llMotll Bovle\IMd S,11 Cit,.. Mt lH t<to•lll (J C..••oi<"G Rt .. Ttlephont (71•1 M2.,.321 01sslfied Advtrtlslng 64Z·S611 . . , Sil~ ctf\MRte All Departments : Tlllpl'lont 4t2-44to •• ~ °'°"It!'>'· '"'-.O<Mltl" '"'' ~111'11114 C-y. kll 1141""\ t.1orin. llhl\lrlllell\, ..,.IOl"ll l ,...,,.., O• tOlltfll-nl\ lltrtlfl "'°'' llf...rt~tO •llM"'-'PKltl Ptt"flli .... ot .-rlOflt~ - sJt....te tt•t Cllttll4)f llfilO, ti c..tll -~1 C..llt9'111 5ultKflpllOll "' (MflV loJ.UIJ , • fl'lefltNr , ti., ••llH '°'IOO l!'IOftlN•: Miii...,., I I •tllllll~ tl.1111-\11 ' ' I ~ • East. the company has promised more than sufficient housing for families eam· ing between $10,000 and $15,000 a year. But Irvine Comp.any Planner D o n Cameron told the coW>Cil Tuesday that much of that housing was to be built in CUJver Village. Unless the construction schedule for the village is moved up, be said .. the need would not be met. But Public \Vorks Director Br en t Muclmw, asked. whether the capital im· provements plan could finance another village, answered a nat, "No." · "Even realizing that the Irvine Com· papy Would have lo foot the bill for the capital improvements, we'd still like to go ahead with the pro}ect," Cameron said. · Citing a heavy workload of projects already planned, the council refused to speed the development of Culver Village. The balance of amendments to the plan were described as "housekeeping" changes by city Planning 0 i r e c to r 'Villiam Livingstone. They re f I e c t changes made by lhe council since the first general plan draft and "other minor corrections of errors and in· consistencies." Fron• Page Al JAILED ... believes lhe client he represents free on legal principles is iMOCent-will be ' in Los Angeles County Superior Court Oct. 22 for a new extradition hearing. Judge William Murray of Orange Coun· ly Superior Court already rejet1ed the extradition based on Orange C o u n t ~' authorilies investigation and legal work. But Los Angeles C.ounty won't <'lC~pt tbat. Agajanian. of the law firm of Sbeffield, Cl13rton. Fishman and Agajanlan , said Thursday one hopeful concession has been won. They are willing to accept the Orange County polygraph--or S<Kall- ed lie detector test-findings if RU!Sell submits to one administered by Los Angeles County. He imists-in the meantime-that his client who is held without bail fOr two years and 10 days, is being subjected to unconstituUonal doubl e jeopardy. Appeals court justices ordered him freed from Los'Jt.ngeles County custody. on grounds he could not be extradited to Oklahoma second time on the same alleged evidence heard in Orange County, where e:11:tradltion had been refused once already, J>ro,,ecutors appealed and we.re then upheld , placing tbe appellate court In the position of ordering Russell freed once, then ordering h1m held without bail. h "Some forms pf Injustice nre rr.ore outrageous than others,'' declares Agajanian. "And keep In 1 a per90!l in Los Angeles County JaU from Oct. 8, tm to the present Is al the (op ot my Outrageou.s Injustice: Ust." IIE ALSO LIKES FRUIT AND NUTS SAN DIEGO (AP) -Natur1ll!l Euell Gibbons-e:11:changtd looks with a glbWn named Euell after the, ape wa1 named In biJ honor et the San Diego Zoo . The gibbon, like Gibbons, Uk" lo ••l fruit and null. He was g1ven hJa name Thursda.1._. • Funeral services were scheduled today for Jearuie E. Brown, wife of a fonner high--ranking El Toro Marine Corps Air Station general and a onetime show business associate or Bob Hope, Bing Crosby and Frank Sinatra. The pre-World War II vocalist and radio sOOw hcmeM dled Monday at the age of 52 in the U.S. Naval Medical Center at Fortsmouth, Va., -following an llln"tss. She Was the wife of MaJ. Gea. Leslie E. Brown, commander of the Marine C..,,. Air SlatiGn at Cherry Poin~' N,C .• and mother. of Costa Mesa Police Officer Robert "Rob" Brown. During 1970 and 1m, Gen. Brown was assistant commander of the Third Marine -Air ·Ww.g baaed at El Toro MCAS, Where the family lived ui base officers' housing. Prior to World War If, Mrs. Brown, who used the performing name of Jeaii Darrell, appeared with Bob Hope, Frank Sinatra and then Bing Crosby, on the old Kraft Music Hall radio program. She had her own NBC Radio sh>w broadcast from Hollywood for a number of years and was launched on her en- tertairunent career as a protege of star Jane Wyman. During World War II she made five USO tours to entertain troops in the Pa. cific, Europe and North Africa. Models Hired At Saddleback For Art CUisses These e9limates, however, also show possibility of regulating ~ law. the tar that the purse that would bave to be and nicotine content of clprettes· put up for the events would total $804,000 He asked the National Cancer Advilory and would be part d. total expenses Board to provide ior hlm bi Dec. l for the racing of $1.C million. "scientlfie advice on thla impOi't&nt inat- Presenlly, thoroughbred racing I n ·• " -Southern Callfomia is aulbori!ed at San-ter of public concern. ta Anita, Hollywood Park, Doi Mor and Ford dllclooed the board propooed that Pomoaa. Only quarter boroe and hameaa the -,.vermnlint -~•Hte tal' iiid n1Cotlne te;.ils, ~.~f ij' ~iro\l\'ltie From P .. e Al TAPE .•. " ' I ·•I Dean sakl "Hunt was dlatraught over the death of his wile .;in an · lil'!>lane crash and wanted to plead guilty if he could get "some assurance from the White House be wouldn't go to jail for the rest of bis. life." 'Then Dean told of -a Jan. 5, 1973 White House corridor conversation with C.olson, who hired Hunt. Dean quoted Colson as saying, "John, I felt this matter was so Serious ... This was a matter I felt I bad to take up witb the President himself." . Neal asked Dean II Coboo told him he actually took it up with the President. "Yes, he dld," Dean said. Oean'1 testimony W&I ideoUcal to that he gave at the Senate Watergate bear· ings June 25, 1973. market cigarettes deemed to produce . an _,exceaaJve amo~t.. , 1; , ~ R<cent ~-~.ib>wA thll. ,dprttte per-<aplta consumption baa risen about to the point where it was when the link between cijiret~. "1'¥)ng and !llllg 'cancer waa first a89el'ted by the IUl'pOn general 10 yean aao. • Ford's req~st came Jn a letter to Dr. Jooathan E. Rhoads, a h t g h I y regarded cancer erpert who beada the board. NOting the board's recommendation, ForJ asked that 11 "review the Pisttng scientific evidence on an urgent basis and provide .. me with an JlMfSllment of th extent to which there e s: la t s a scientific basis for reaponstble -regula- tion ol cigarettes." · Ford did not commit himself to acting .. hia.P .. e Al BANKS· ... tilt~!'<'!:!:! .(Int qor;l!d, by the Mlddle East Ne.-s· Agemy, cm.sldered the seml· official «sen of tlie EgyptiaD govern- ment. TJJe report Clid not·· apeclfy who r was involved in the negotllltions, nor who was involved in the alleged con· sortlwn .. • There also was a repart in ll\e Detroit Free Press that the anna nov: from the United States to Saudi Anlbla could . double or trtple under a secret plan developed PY the federal government in an attempt to drlve roreign oil prices down. The oecret program to Saudi Arabia a'pparently wu peveloped bv Secretary of Stata Henry A. Klaalnger , .the newspaper Said today ln a report from Jts Wasblngtori' bureau. ... . . .. LAMP SALE CONTINUED " It may seem like pn!tty easy money, '!. earning $4.50 an hour just to pose nude while a group of college art students Y.-ork at their sketch pads. From the finest collection of lamps in South Orange . County. Select from such well known names at Marbro, Stiffle, Knob Creek, Norman Percy arid many others . . \ .. Such is tM life for two professional models hired in recent action of the saddleback Community O>llege board of trustees. The two women will pose, draped and undraped, in Ufe. Drawing classes; according lo art instructor Tom Morgan. The live models, he &aid, help students learn form. Contrary lo popular opinion, professional models come in all shapes and sizes, from those weighing "300 pounds to those who look like they haven 't eaten in a month," 1t1organ said. -~ Pt1organ said it is the fiist tlme the college has used nude model!l in its classes. No funds v.-ere budgeted to pay the models, but a business official said the mooey would come from miscellaneous ae<011nta uoed to pay student help. College trustees unanimously endorsed hiring of the prof~ional -modt!ls. Boston Sc1tool's EnroU1nent Up • B05TON . (UPI) -Attendane. I t racially troubled Hyde Put High Scliool increased toda) to 708 students. lncluding 310 whites and 192 blacks, compared Jo 628 Thunday .• PoHce contlnutd lo patrol the comdon and ltudmu Mitring the building we"' spot c~ed for w,.potll for the 1ecood day. Ono stud<l!t WU suJpCllded Tlwnday when pollce fowid on 1a.lnch ·club up his sleeve. · Fantastic lnventOIY of Quality LamPS All Rdady For lmrnedia!e Delivery .. ........ ,. -• " -~ - • IJtlEXEL-HERITAGE-HENREOON-YfOODMARK-KARAStAM-BAKER ' .. .. WUKDAYS & SATWllAYS t:OO i. loJD. • ( I • • NEWPDRT BEACH • t'l%7 WESTCUt'F OR., "'2>2050 LAGUNA BEACH • • ·345 NOR1ll<-'>As; llWV., '"'""'l ' . ' • .- TORRANCE• 23llt HAW'J1t0t\NE BLVD. (Open Fri. tll 9, Sun. 12·1:30) ,,.127. .. ,• . I l . - fr1d1y, Otlobfr 18, 1974 OAIL y f!ILOli A .. 2 Indians Arrested THE F.AMILY CRCUS By Bil Keane Both DroJJ Dead · ' . M~stery Diseas_e Claims Si8-te :r.s · ·:; In Murder PHOENIX JU PI) -TwO In· dians were atrested h e r e Thursday on charges of stab- bing to death a cab driver in California, where authorities denied a re po r t that ·the driver bad b e e n scalped. Police took into c u s t o d y Paul Blue Cloud Durant, 29, an dRicha--rd Thu·nder Mohawk, 25, on charges of { State J ~------- ·~·· ........... •. ,,_i.,._ "Would. you undo this orange, Mommy?'' NORTHRIDGE ( UP I ) - Tv.·o sisters, 18 and 20, drop- ped dead in college physical education classes within t 0 <Ui;ys of each other, apparently the victims of a mysterious disease· whlch aged th eir hearts prematurely. Vicki Ann Penfold, 20, ro\. lapsed and died Thursday while running up and down stairs in a warmup exercise at Cal State Northridge. On Oct. 7, her sister Janet. IS, fell dead ~'bile iogging at cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Dr. Karl Kirschner , a palhologist \1'ho performed the killing the taxi driver Oct. -------------------- 10 at an India.fl camp in Box WHALE BITE lf'ORTH CASH Canyon, in Ventura CoWlty. The driver, George Aird, 27, of Inglewood, was robbed and stabbed to death when he ar· rived lo pick up a rare. ln Ventura, Distric t Af... tomey C. Slanley Trom said a report by a sherl£f's detec- tive that Aird baa been scalped was "erron eous." Jn an affidavit filed in Municipal Court \Vednesday. Detective Braden ~1cKinlcy said that after Aird was stabbed Io death. those of the camp celebrated by "chanting and kicking the victim and passing bis hair around." Liz Tay_lor's Beau Faces A rraign11ien t SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Superior Court j u r y has awarded $ 7 5 , 0 O 0 in com- pensatory d amages to a former woman employe o f ..sea World for leg injurks suf· fered when she was bitten by Shamu, the killer whale. LOS ANGELES (UPI) -said. The verdict Thursday was Elizabeth Taylor's I a t e s t Wyn berg, a former bellhop in favor of Annette Godsey, boyfriend was scheduled for in his native Amsterdam. was the former Ann E. ·'Eckis , of arraignment today on f o u r introduced by Peter Lawford San Diego, v.•ho worked at counts of g"raru:r theft, the to t.liss Taylor in June, 1973, the aquatic park as a District A~tomey's Office said as her marriage to Richard secretary. Thursday. Burton began to come a~rt . 11.Irs. Godsey was bilten by lienry 0. Wynberg, 40, has 11e soon became her con-the whale April 19. 1971, when been charged '11th rolling back slant companion, in California she rode Sllamu three times the odometers of four autos and Europe. even before ~1'.iss in a show tank during a film he sold when he was a used Taylor and Burton w er e and picture taking session for autopsy On Janet, said her .. It seems that this i s heart tiss ue "looked like that something genelir. A rulllling of a Httle old man that had out of time no matter ""here been exposed to an awful lot people are or \\'hat they're of stress over the yea rs." doing,'' he said ... It Isn't Kirschner, who had just wwsual !or people in the same completed the autopsy, said family with the disease to Thursday he was not surprised die at nearly the same time, to hear that her sister bad no matter v.•here they are or died a slmllar death. what they're doing." They were the only children The L«; Angeles c 0 u n t y of Ted and Gertrude Penfold 1 Coroner's Office scheduled an of .Northridge. The P ~ re n t s autopsy tod3y to determine said t~y had no histo ry of the cause or Vicki A n n · s heart disease. death · Kirschner said Janet di~ Kir~er S3id he v.•as "sure of "obslructl\'e car,Jion1yo-he-r heart \\·as just as in\"olved pathy," describlng il ll"i '"a \by the disease) as the heart very. very mysterious dist'ase of her sister ... ... that occurs perhnps once: in a million, or 10 ntillion P.1edical checkups bad tum- cascs·" ed up no indication of the ORIENTAL RUGS at ASIAN ENTERPRISE in Design Plaza• 250 Bldg., 2nd Floor, Donald F. McDermott Jr .. owner TELEPHONE 644-8881 FASHION ISLAHD. • HE\11'.PORT I disease, !he girls' parent s athletic, often '"'hnmiog '" a said , nnd both led 1lOfTllal, mile a day, and re<.£ritif·C6fn. ac tive llves. J a net \1'8S pleted a long badflaeklftfi'lp. WESTUN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW .... OF ORANGE COUNTY C AL/fO/tH/A'S LA ltGfST LAW SCHOOL ' loFFERS A NEW PROGRAM., OF SPRING-ENTERING ' FULL-TIME LAW STUDY • IWlrh 2 '/1· .... l ·yew 11••11 ... ap1;..,~1 • A CHO/Cf Of fOU/t ,AOG/tA.MS Of LAW' .STUOY IS Al' A/LAI LE: e IN trrHE/t 2'/i or J YfA/tS of fUtt.flMf lo ... 1r"'4'1 (f5.f6 d ou•OOl'l ho~•~ pf!• wef!I), o• e IN EITH ER Jl!J or 4 YEARS of ,AlfT·TIMf dcy, •••~ing. o• "'ff!l t lld /1;>., JI.id~ (3 clO>lll ('Ill Wf!IJ., J.-f hfWO ti•• clouJ. . e 'r'ow con ,.0,,, yowt JURIS DOC70R (J.0.) d19r!1 t;nd bicome f!/,91bl1 to 10J.1 lh1 Cold0tnio 40< f•om.nol•On. Wint 01 PHONI fOI CAfAlOGUl 800 South Brookhunt Anaheim, Ci. 92804 (714) 635-3453 APPLY NOW FOlt DAY , EVENING, Olt WEEKEND CLASSES BEGINNING FElltUAltY 3, 1975 PIOVISIONAU.T ACCHOIT'EO IT THI COMMlml Of IAI ll.f.MINllS' Of THI STATE IAI Of C.t.llfOINIA ' --car salesman in Norwalk in divorced. publicity purposes . , 1972. \Vhen the actress recur.ciled\_'._:::::_:.:::::_::2 _:.::::_ ___ .:...::=-_..:....:..:. ______________ _:::_:_:__ __________________ _ LOS ANGELES (UPI) The Since the cars were sold with Burton, \Vy n her)( ap- e FBI Nalu T1co • FBI capturOO two fugitives in for more than $20, the alleged peared to be out of the pic- Long ~....Ilnlrsday__nighL offense-is-grand~ theft, . a ture. But \1'hen the Burtons ,,·anted for the kid n a p ·e x-district attorney's spokesman divorced earlier Ibis year, the tortion of a Ypsilanti, l\1ich., Taylor-Wynberg ro mance bank manager and hls famlly re s u m e d . 1\1 an Y. ha v e. 1t---;;,;;;,r=wm=. =~::....:.C.:...--'--1-:---r--:--~rr•::??;;t-::----ip»riolea11aea he Would become Special Agent William A • 1,1· S her si:iGth husband. . - Sullivan said Luther Leath, 24, and Timothy Thomas, 25. also known as Lionel Fisher. \1'ere arrested 'v I t b o u t in· cident. The two men were charged Oct. 15 in Detroit. al ong with th r ee other suspects still at large. Salesman On Inmates . Awarded STOCKTON (UPI) -San Joaquin County. Superior Court Judge \Villiam Woodward has Al1"mo· DY e Budget Okayed rescinded an order Iha! ban- SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -ned tO newspapers f ro.m STOCKTON (AP) -A local The finance committee of the publishing the names of in· .salesman has been awarded U I .1 r C 1 1 r 1 mate witnesses who testify at ..,"" a mooth t e m p 0 r a r y n vers1 y o a o r n a a murder trial. ~ regents, in a move tantamou 1 nt However, "Woodward s 8 1 d alimony from his wile of 35 to acceptance by the f u 1 another method v.·ould be used years aloog with use of ooe board, has approved a record . ., to -~-l the men's identity of her two C8dillacs. Un bud t of $589 2 .,..,...... Superior Court Judge o~~a g ge · -allowing them to use fio-· Norman c. Sullivan s a J d rnilhon for l975-76. _ titious names on the stand. Thursday that he be 11 e v.ed ~ budget approved Thurs--The judge said this was to Joseph Raffial, 58. is the first day is 14.9 percent above. the protect three inmates test!-husband to receive s uch current. years. U.C. V 1 c e lying at the murder trial of alimony in San Joaquin Coun· Pre s 1 d e n_t Ch ester 0 · two Deuel vocational Institute r.-t~rkle said ~early I w o • prisoners accused of killing ty · thirds of .tht: !ncrcase was guard Jerry Saunders. THE AWARD is temporary ~aused ~y ·~nation and a pro-Robert P. Uecker, publisher pending dissolution of the Jected r1~ in enrollment. of the Stockton record, said, marriage. "the judge should be ~m-Raffial's a t tor n e y s con· e Body Fo1111d plimenled for finding ·another tended he is unemployed , POWA y (A.P) _ Sheriff's way cf protecting thes e while court documents showed and coroners's offi~ officials witnesses without violating the his wife Sadie. 57, owns a are attempting to identify the -·;f;ir;sl;a;m<;;nd~m;,;;;en;l;.";;;;;;;;;;do;wnl<>;;;w~n;fu;mi;;tu;re;;st;o~re~. ~-I body of a \1'oman discovered sprawled in a secluded area near llighway 67 on Thursday. Sheriff's officials said !he "''oman was between 20 and 30 years of age. The body was nude, except for h i g h shoes and orange-red k n e e MINOLTA SR-T 102 socks. --.,~,t~ e Bu# \/ole Toda11 LOS ANGELES !UPI) - The Rapid T r a n s i I Dlstrict board or directors votes today on 1 contraat with bus drivers, closing the only gap remaining iii officia lly ending Uie 68-tlayr old bus strlke. List $450 The board orfginanv was scheduled lo vote on the con- tract Thursday, but balloting was delayed for rear o f violating the stale I a w re- quiring 24-hour official notice be given 6efore a public meeting. But even without the final okay by the board, which is expected to approve Ute pact, mechanics and b u s drivers contini.ied to be called back to work to prepare buses for service beginn ing Satur-· day. ,MINOl.lA SR-T 102 WJfti F-1:4 L.ew\ I Cew NOW s315 HUNTINGTON PHOTO SUPPLY 11519 M• St. H.1.-847-6411 or 1"1·9589 5 Point Shopping Center YOU ARE INVITED to a ' HAMMOND HAPPENING _. Famous Ramona Gerhard will entertain )'OU wilh a pro~ram. on the fabulous HAMMOND CONCORDE ORGAN. She is a musiclen par-excelfenl Tn&ll realms from classical to jaxz. MONDAY, Oct. 21 ot7,JD l.M. Jf you haven't heard her berore, she ls a must and ir you have htard her, you will ~njoy hearing her agaln. COIN one Olod ol Cl'd _.,.,fit f1A RwfreWNirfh . 2154 L c-1 Hwy.• c-. def Mar• 644-1930 ' . . -. HAMMOND QRGAH STUDIOS of OrallCJe Coast --. ' CQ_f3.0NA ·de\ M~R $.l0131: ONLY_ ' \\ ' . Antique Auction . • • . . '.at South Coast Plaza this Sunday October 20 at 10 a.m. in th e Jew el Court. It's all part of Old Fashion Days Week . All antiques to be auctioned Sunday arc on disp lay now . Come see. . · I 5outh Coast ?taza . BRISTDC-AT SAN DIEGO 1'11Etll'AI\ COSTA llDA • • t -) • I J\$ • • •" )JAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Planning an~-Profit \ ' . Though large-scale cooperative land planning has resulted in Improved proposals for the 4,200-ncre North El Toro General Plan, interests of the sn1all property owners.have been tt.1king <1 beating. County planners urged property ownel's in the picturesque urea to 'vork together on their plans so that the propose<! result would be harmooious, and as ecologically sound as possible. That has been dooe -\Vith the three largest. owners hiring tt prestigious t rvinc planning firm . While the proposals project ~t least 16,000 nc'v residents. they call for large sections of natural open space and parks. .. The problem is that ,,·hile cooperative pla nning is becoming the law or the !<.ind , no 1>rovision has been made to assure that '''h•1tcver pro fits resull \VilJ benefit those involved . What that means for the sn1 all landowners is that they can see all proritablc densities wiped off their hard-ea med 20 or 30 acr es -\Vil h no r.ccompense. This situa tion needs to be re·examin~ed. While coopere1tive pla nning is a stcj> in the right direction, equitabl e p rofit·sha1ing is a necessary complement Boundary Dilemma ' u · . ' '"' ~\\thou gh a prcliniinary committee report drafted by a parent group makes it sound easy, the proposal to s hift 6.0UO acres of the M ission Viej o f r om Capistrano unified to the Saddleback Vulley Unified School District is fraught \Vith problems. Already rcsidcnl-s of the aff ected urea are t uking sides. Trustees fro m each dist rict must be \v"ondcring i[ they have the time, stamina-and resources for a prolonged controversy. Advocat es of the J>lan c ile lon g d ist a n ces t o Capistrano unified ca mpuses a nd they believe that by Bicentennial Slogans ~Reflect American Faith WASHINGTON -We have been hearing atiout America from its people. We asked, you may remem· ber, for a Bicent ennial slogan. The response was spon[aneous: tens of thousands of citizens from all wa lks of life have sent us slogans, phrases and po etr y e xpress ing ho'v , they f eel aboul :.Jh,cit.eountry. ft1 a n y h a ,·e i l t c 11 accompa n y in g lett ers or t estimon ia l. To r ead th e·m i s t o unders ta nd th;.it the \V a t e rgat e hor rors. economic uncertainties and olhl'r afflictionS' have not shaken the Ameri can fa ith. and poetry expressing how they feel about their country. f.t any have written accom panying letters or testi monial. To read them is to understand that the Watergate hor- rors, economic uncertainties a nd other afflictions have not shaken the American fa ith. SOME v.'ilh a li fetime behind them have written about the turmoil they have seen. Youths looking ahead have written about the challenge or events. We have heard fr om aliens about the dreams whi ch brought them to this tand. Even a rcw convicts have responded, with a special poi gnancy, -1 about the meaning of freedom. r So me have applauded President Ford's attempt lo return lo the White House a humanity and openness more becoming a free republic. Others have taken issue \\'ith th e President over his decision to pardon Richard Nixon and thus suffocate the legal process to its crib . They reject the idea that the co untry \\lould be better served by amnesie than by truth. WE RECEIVED one slogan from an authentic Am erican pioneer, 98-year · ,Jd Jesse L. Hall , \\'ho \\'as bo rn in the centennial year of 18i6. lie has spent his long life pushi ng \\'eslwards. lie Uved through the blizzard of 1887 in a home m a de mus lin tent on the Nebraska prairie. In Wyoming, he was elected to the state leg islature. Now he abides in Reno, Nev. lie summed up his vi ew of America in a simple, three·\\·ord slogan : "The Republic Stands.·· From cell C·S in the Florida sta\(.• pe nitenti a ry. Rairord. fo~la .. \VilliC' Young wrot(': "Need 1 say, my lifl' has been a miserablC' road to travC'I Afte r yt>a rs or "'alking it alone. I discovered one must bclie,•c in iOmethin g." lie put his sentimen ts into these words : ''A Country nql made by lfnnd but by the Grace or God and the \Viii of •AIM." TllERE \'V E RE other po<'tic responses. "\Ve may stumble but never faU; Down through the years, we still stand tall ." wrote Ra ymond Richardson rrom Chicago. A Boalsburg, Pa .. teacher, lluth II. ~rt.er, felt "an extreme need ror the childre n to know their countr~··s heritage." She suggested this slos•in : · ··~lhe Children \Viii Know." II) Toledo, Ohio. the second <1nd third grade students at l.inctlln!ihire School composed a slogun together: "I work for D'Cmocracy because It v.-orks for me.·• MA NY OT.H E R !!hlldrcn sent Jn 1log1ns. For instance. a l2·ycar-old Forest lielghts, J\ld , Air! .. '11 a ry fll.!•be!l\ .. HeP fY, !lfOpO ed ; 'A merica, a llomc11tcatlcd Heart." • ~~':rr-old Penny Chan"dlcr of •"'resn?1.Calll., serit in this one: '"Two •• • • (JACK ANDERSON) Hund red Steps -a nd !\.lore to Come.·· Teenagers, loo, responded by the hundreds. From Annapolis, l\!d., 18· year ·old James P. Gough told of his frustralion over "recent acts by men in high places." Yet he cguld still of- fer two heartfelt slogans: "America, a Theme that is Timeless'' and "America . Something Warm that TouChed· my if ea rl.;. A 19-VEAR·OLD, Johnny Carter or Long Beach. Calif., suggested this sign be posted across America: "Conquerors a nd Corruptors Bew are. This Na tion is the Property of the People." / . And a \Vilmington, N.C .. l'tih school student , Stewart Moshe, sub· milted this slogan : "There's No Way like lhe Atr\erican Way." From John Lauria of Jacksonville, F1a., we received a sim ple, Sincere motto: "America, Where People Are llappy." He added meaningfully: "I should know. I came here in 1903.'' HERE ARE a few other orferings select ed at ra ndom from our mailbag: ~ Florence /\. Tracy Revelle, Ard- more, Okla. -•·Pride in our past ; F a ith in our future; F orward 'America.,.· Lionel Wernick, New York City -· "Affieriea: ThC Promise Kept and now Renewed." George Ke lly. Philadelphia, Pa. - "Here Lives a fo~rec People, 1771).. 19i6."' Joseph P. J\lcGoldrick. Jackson lleights, N.Y. -··in America. there arc no impossible dreams." John Klunck. Sheboy"an, Wis. - '·Jf \\'c can't get to l·lea\'cn we'll settle for Ameri ca ." Jim Felton. Little Rock. Ark . - ··Am eri ca is coming of Age ." William Erie Rohrs. Tacoma. \Vash . -.. Now,· Lel's Put It All Together.,. Adeline Feinberg. Belmont. l\1ass. -·'Appreciate our Differences." Louis Gin sberg. Paterson, N.J. - "Ta kc no libcrli es with liberty.,. J .K :-;1nith . Salt Lake City, Utah - "'Frt:l·do 1n : 17i 6, 1976 fo~orcver." f.\ f'l.1 n Conley. Plttsburgh, Pa. - ··L'S,\ L:ndauntcd Stands America ... ~1l•a n\\'hilc. our search for a Bicen- ll'un1al s\OJ?an continucs. Please send fnr your s11~gcsl1onc; lo Slogans, C/O .IJck 1\ndc1·so11 . t•IOI lGlh Street. N.\\' .. \\"ashington, O.C. 20()..'Jfi. 'If only you 'd been draft dodgers!' changing d istrict s, the community \vould truJy be gco!:ruphicaJly intact. Crit ics-and they outnumbered supporters at a recent study scssion-\vonder if the proposal is worth it. 1'h ey ins i s t tha t ta x r<1tes wo uld increase dramatically·, that traditional educational 1>rograms :1t ne ig hborhood s c hools would c h a nge a11d t h al stores of t eachers· and administrutors m ight vanish from neigh borhood s chools a nd be replaced by strangers. If t'rustees decide to continue study on the m a tter, they h ad be tte r gird (o r a long state or siege. Promising Choice ln naming Leo E. PeartJrvinc's director of pu bli c saf"ety , the city council has picked a we11-qua1iJied man for a tough job. Until next Septe mber. Peart \Viii have the rcspon· sibility of organizing the city's 1police force. After th.at, he will run it. . Peart seems to have the at tri butes needed to pol ice a ci t y \\•h ich vie \\rs itself as ··somethin g differ e nt." At age 32, Peart has a strong acade mic · and la \v e nforcement background. l·lis academic achievements include a maste r's degree in criminal jus ti ce a d m i nistra tio n . l~i s 11 years of po li ce experience i ncludes v.1ork for the Long Beach <:.ind l'alo Alto departments and IS·months as chief of the Los Ba nos force . In Los ll a no s, P eart ach ie v'ed an excelle nl reputation \vh ile in cha r ge o f police. a m bulapcc SC l'\'ice. a nimal control and r elations \\'it h t he fire departme nt-the same duties expected or the lr\'ine publi c safety d irector. . : .' . :· ' ' ~----;::..~ Beyond that, though, he has a r e putation for being o pe n in his op e ra tion s a nd flexiblein his approach to law enforcement problems. SB ''IT IS MOR~ BLESSEt> TO PAY OFF lHAN~TO BE PAID OFF.•· Dear Gloomy Gus 11owcum newspa per women's pages are now called ''Peo ple" or "View" or ·..:Today" but still are all about '"omen, "'litten by "'omen for the most part? J.B.L. Glaomr GUJ commt nts •rt suD,,.,.llN "' ,..-.. -lkl 1>111 ,...;en••il"I' rl'flKt ttw •'-WI llf tlHI ... ~. !.eflll yo~r llft '""lo Gl_,.r cnis. 0..il"I' PilOI. , Morality Needs New Vocabulary (SYDNEY HARRIS) Thoughts at Large: Obviously. the language needs a new word for young couples.who are living together more or less per· manently, but are not married. Any suggestions? <Re·member , Gelett Burgess invente d the marvelous word, "blurb.'' only a £e\\' dc1..'<ldes ago. wh ich fi ll ed a genuine need.) The only effective punishment for an evil-doer is r emorse; and if he or she cannot be made to feel remorse. a ny punishment becomes self· defeating through turning the evil · doer into a more resenUul creature than before. Kindly keep in mind that ••media" is a plural word, and there is no such thing as "medias." Whal the world in the past has always called a "great" mftll was measured_by the number of people '"'ho feared him ; what the present and ruture must learn to call a great man shou ld be measured by the number of people he frees from rear. It is hard to believe, but true, that there i!i no suc h thing as a "rainbow" irUicre is no one there to see it : a r ui n· bow dOc.s not exist in itself. but only through human eyes. Tcle'"ision won't come of age ur1t ll It acquires at least one commentator who is as incisive, as "'Cll·informed. and as e\re.n·handed as the late la men· led Elmer Davis was on radio. Cfl un· tlcy and Brinkley were to Davis ~s ).tuntovani is to J\l oz::art). ~tost poli tic.al speeches rcmind_me of Churchill's comment about Stanley Raldwln. whe n Bald win was Prime J\llnister: ''Stanley occas ionall y ·stumbles 011cr the truth. but he always hasti ly picks himselr up and hurries nn ~s if nothing had happened." If-I "·e re the head or any oompany, 1 , \\'Ould summarily fire the rlNil l)Ubo r· dinatc v.·ho called me "Chief." l1cople \\•ho c.lamor 'lo be "free" (\\·hich usuall)• means ·rid of their obli galion!i), forget Goethe's w.ar- nin!l'.: "Everything th.it !rec& our s,,irit without giving us control or our· sc)ve~ Is rui nous." Reflectio1a of Anti-Americanism Greeks Pull Out of NATO WAS~IINGTON -The Greek" gov- ernment has qui etly \\'ithdrav.•n some' of its top military officers from North Atlantic Treaty !NATO) headquar· leis in Brussels. one more indication, of how seriously the Carnmanlis gover nment \•icu•s a nti-Ameri can sent i ment now s\veeping Greece. Facing the fi rst parliam entary election on Nov. 17 since the military coup d'etat of 1967, the n ew c ivili a n g ove rnm e n t or Prim e Mi ni s t er Caramanlis is lorn between conflicting pe>liticaJ realities. The m erest fra gment of public display o( pro-Am erican sentiment could boomer ang, giving the Greek left a dangerous opening that Andreas Papandreou would be quick to exploit. Caramanlis dealt with this hard political fact by pulling Greece out of the military organization of NATO. Now he has followed ·up by with· drawing some of the 400-odd Greek of· fieers from their regular military bil· lets in Brussels. Naples and other NATO comma nds. BUT Tl:IE do mestic po litical demands for a nti·U.S. actions r aise the gravest ruture problems ror Greece.· Friendship with the West, and particul a rly the U.S., is ab· solutely essentia l Cor Greece in the long run, as a glance at the map proves. Greece js bordered by three Communist states to the north and by musc!e.nexin g Turkey on the east. Caram a nlis a nd his foreign minister, the astute George Mavros, along with most other leading Greek politicia ns or the center and right. fully understa nd that fact. But despite strong pressure from the U.S., they ( EVANS-NOVAK ) arc: unable to im pede the move toward what loo ks like a form of dangerous neutrality for fear that the anti-Am e ri ca n c urre nts now sweeping Greece would pull them un· der . Accordingly, rational diplomacy dictated by long·term Greek security needs has been.inundated by short· term domestic politics. The foun· dation for this waS built by Washing· ton's long love affait:with the hated military dictatorshi;: A CASE in point Was the absolute· ly futile effort by ·secretary or State Henry Ki ssinger fa st week to enlist sub rosa Greek support against~the thcn·pending congressional ban on U.S. military assistance to Turkey. Conferring at his own request at the Plaza Hotel in ·Manhattan last week \vith l\1a vros, Kissinger ex plained that the effect of a congressionally· imposed Turkish aid ban was predic- table: it would make the Turks di,g In their heels against U.S. ·mediation· ef· forts to remove Tufkis~~.t_roops from Cyprus and return part. of Turkey's Cyprus conquest to Gr.eek Cypriots. Thus, it was in the Seit-interest of Athens to keep the U.S. O~good terms with Turkey. . 1'11avros was stunned .... "That," he told Kissinger, "is not soiriethfng for a Greek to do.'' INDEED, far from discouraging Greek sympathizers in thi! U.S. Congress from voting against the ban on aid to Tur key. top Greek diplomats in the U.S. encouraged it. One active promoter or the aid ban was the con· sul.genera1 in the influential Greek consul ate in San Franciscb, who quietly spread the wont.to friendly Congressmen: stop American aid to Turkey, no matter what the impact on Cyprus. In short, the political imperatives in Athens on the eve of the parliamen-- tary election far outweigh the loeg- range necessity of gradually restoring the Alhens-Wasbinetonliak. No Greek leader caught secretly ~ bying Congress tO vote against the tfurkish aid-ban could be elected sewer inspector ,in a provinclal Greek village. The unannounced decision to with- draw tbp Greek military men from· NATO headquarters is simply the newest signal. Hiving heard American pledges for over two moo-. ths that Turkey would be glad to give up some Of its Cyprus oonquesl once talks s tarted (p ledges wholly unredeemed), the Greek government continues to advertise itse~ as anti.· American. . THERE IS no hope that this will change between now and the mid-No~r election, and little expec· tatrow-that it could change soon thereafter. Likewise, the hostility for Turkey 90 vividly expressed in Congress over the aid-ban threatens political retaliation against Washing-. ton there, too. · With an outstanding IOU debt lo . Russia for its acquiescence in the in-· vasion of Cyprus last July, ,Turkey may find it harder than before to deny any Soviet request ror overfli&hl privileges in a future Middle Eastern war, particularly with. the U.S. Congress so virulently anti-Turkey. As these Cyprus chickens come home to roost, the once-mighty U.S. is an impotent bystander. Economy Shakes Insurance Fir~~ • • >i.: ' Despite the image of a rock which [ insurance' industry, Payne h,5 .. ~~ the"")·ears to im press upon the public EARL WATERS public and has worked to Secure-neW.' insurance compani es have used over · J most attentive to the prot«tion~ · mind th e securi ty lo be gained by measures to strengthen UM:: Insurance:. being indem nified through their 4 oompanies. , ·, policies, the economic troubles being experi enced in the nation may be threate ni ni: even t he in !i u ra n cc bulwa rks. Al least. St~•t c I n s ur a n ce Com mi s s 1onL·r Gleeson L. Parn<' h a s i~s ucd some· guardcd \\'arnings to the e rfcrt that insurancC' can no • longer he blindly-uccepl ed as an ;.ibsolutc surety. \Vhilc Pa}•nc's thesis ls not !!entered on ris ing costs a nd lnn ation as much as tho ,;agging stock market, lho "'hole thrust or his cautions is based UPon the prevailing direction of the economic winds. As Payne indlcntc~. insurance !!Om· panies ar'c.hcavy in\.·estors in st.ocks a nd b o nd s a l ong w ilh ot her s pecul ations'. \V,hile they a re regulated by lhc .,Rovernment and ~ome types or policies like some types of ban~ savings are ''insured" by the government, the protection~ are not ~cared to the full flOlentials of a disastrous depression. ALTllOUGll Ins urance companies have-a fiduciary relationship <A•ith their lnvestors as do the banks .• there are signiricant dlflcrences. B:inklng Jaws prescribe the percentages ot total asse ts which may be Invested in any ono. arca..Thus ~ank..may.,.only loan-so muc h of its capital on homes HE POINTS to thC ruct that the' or real est;;ile in general. Other types of loans arc also limited as to their stale has broug ht al?qut the establish· • perl!entages or the total. It may only !"lentodf a gua_ranty ()Ind to protect the invest a specificcd percentage of the 1n~ure ag~1!1st ca1ualty oompany v:holc in bond s or an\• other field or . fa!lur~s. This 1s a pool made upo! con· srcuritics. · tr1b_ut1ons fro!TI ... a.11. ~asualty ~Om· parues to provide against the failure lnsurri ncc compa nies. even though rc<1uircd lo maintain a sti pulated per- centage nr tolal liabilities in liquid rcser\'CS, muy other\vise plunge tbe \!ntire remainder on the stock market or .an}' other field. Payne h n~ not charged that this has been done by any company. To the contrary many 'are heavily invested In long term land ownerships and other real estate of the types always considered most sound. especially In the long range view. STILi., to the extent that the com· pnnies have Invested on Lhe stoc k market he h3s warned that further dips iq stock,; cou Id well j(lopnrdi ze the sptldlty or som e compunics. lie has suggested tha t t~erc are. com· panics which sho uld be reducing their stockmar kets portfolios by 15 to 20 pe:rcerit. ' J'4)"nC say~ that lbc companies in the ~realest danger are not the Ufa ln· suN!rs as m uch as the casualty com· panies. The lau.tr write·nre, auto ~nd other types or loss1nl';urancc. A top lni.urancc executive before he us~u1ncd the state:~ob or pollcin& th~ ofanyoneoflhem. '· ORANGE CoAST DAILY PILOT Rob<rtN. WHd,Publis"" Thomcu Kt tvll, EdiJor Barbara KrtibKh, Edltorlol Pa11< Edilor The editori•I p11e °' the Dilly 'Plkit &eeks: to inform end sllmulate rt•den by prt&enUng on lhta page diverse. comm entary on topics ot In· tertsl by 1yndjcated columni1111 and ea rtoontsts, by pro1,1ldlng a forum ror read ers' views nnd by vftsen\lng th is nct;&paper's oplnlons 'nd Ide•• on current toplc1. The edlto:1tl opini°"' or the OtllY Pilot appear only in t,he edltor11 I column at UM top ol t.he pa1e. OplniOns expre&Hd by the columnl1t1 and c:artoonists and letter wr1ler1 i re their own and · noendon.ement of their viewl by the Daily PlkM sl'H>uld bt lnremd. Friday, October IS. 1974 /, I l .i I . I I~ J th m w Be to ro VO w· E te s d y c B c 0 h w a co t a 70 fo " w h • • •• \ " Huniingion· Beaeh --Fountain ·Valle._.__~ • • VOL. 67, NO. 291, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1974 Today's Fina~ N.Y. Stocks TEN CENTS ~Innocent' Cou~tian Locked Up (or 2 Years lly ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of 1119 0..Hf Pllt~ St~ff A ooe~ime La g u )i a Hills man lp.nguishes today in Los Angeles County Jail, the 740th day he hes been held there as a so-canect transient prisoner on a fugitive warrant. Nonnally, prisoners cannot be held more than 72 hours without arraignment and-upon conviction-would serve no more than one year in a CO\llltY jail.· James Ray Russell, 24, _is accused ol a March, um: murder of a 92-year-old man in Oklahoma, 1,000 miles away, • a crime that his lawyer contends be could not have committed. Russell was ainsted. held and cleared on the warrant initially in Orange Coun- ty, then three weeks later drove to Bell' Gardens in 1.-0S Angeles County to visit a brother. · He. was stopped and qtlesttoned while having a suppertime snlJ,ck in a Taco Bell by passing police, llbo discoVered • a e Newpori ltla11 Dies Plane Hits Gas LONG BEACH (AP) -Four men were.killed and another critically injured today when a rented plane lu'l the top ol a 1.25-loot gas tank and crashed into the street shortly after takeoff· The six-seat Aztec had been cleared £or an instrument takeoff from Long Beach Airport at 3:55 am. _ _.. ' Beach Man Sentenced In Shootout / Rolland Dale Crawford of Huritington Beach was sentenced to five years to life in' state prison today on anned robbery charges filed after he was in- volved in Santa Ana Heights shootout with Newport Beach police. Orange county Superior -Court Judge Everett .w. Dickey ordered the prison term for Crawford, 26, of 725 Main st., after re~atedly warning the defen- dant that he must first serve a five-yea r term recently imposed in an El Paso, Tex. federal court. -Crawford was convicted in El P,aso on charges of smuggling marijuana into this country from Mexico. The fed eral prison term takes priority over h i s Calirornia conviction. Judge Dickey explained that the five years served in federal prison will be credited to the Ca1ifomia prison tenn. But Crawford may be shipped t o California to put in further prison time on the Orange County conviction when he has served the federal term. Crawford was arrested Sept. 12, 1973 when N,ewport BeaCh police grabbed him outside a home at 2322 Orchid Drive, after their bullets had wounded two hostages held by the defendant. .M er_cury Drops Along Coast; Fog Hanging On • The fog rolled in, but the Santa Ana condition ro]led out so residents alon g the Orange coast spent today in -comfort and obscurity. But the temperature 'i!rop to the low 70s was being greeted with r e 11 e ( following t h e pressu~ker tern· peratures or midweek. Ttie National Weather Service said today's conditions would coD:tinue ovet.... the .weekend. That means considerabJe fog in the mornings wltb only partial clearing at the beaches in the afternoons. Otherwise it will be mostly sunny. "lt's back to the usual gluck, fog at nights and in the mornings," the- wcather service !pO~sman said. '!The heal wavB is over." So is the heavy surf th6't pound® the beaches Thursday, reaching slJ (0 <lght feot. Today the forecast was for the surf to drop. The weather -report called for a high o{ 72 degrees along the coast today and over. the weekend with the high ' _teaching. 77~ degrees inland. 'l'he lows both inland and at lhe beaches will be in lhe 60:!. • Fog limil;ed visibility to one-sixteenth of a mile, airport officials said. Dick Friend, a county fire department spokesman, said the aircraft clipped the top of the empty tank, snapped a power line and began to disintegrate. Wreckage was scattered ov~ a 200-yard area. lovesli&•lo!I aald Ibey lea""'!! tbll tbe occupants al the plane were !ie'ded ror south Dakota on a bunting~. ; The men were dres8ed tn 'heavy clothing amt 'there were several i'lfles iil the plane. Four occupants were pronounced dead at the scene. · Police identified them as P hi 1 I p Morgan, 49, of Los Gatos, -the pilot; Robert John de Dqbertis, 38, Newport Beach; Peter John9on Tillson, 40, Tor~ ranee; and Chaucey Ellwood Whip- perman, 5.2, Covina. James .Edward Reynolds, 48, of Cer~ ritos, owner of the Area Drain Co., was taken tG Long Beach Community Ho:!lpital with miltiple fractures. The storage tank was three quarters full , a county fire department spokesman said, but the pl<ine did not penetrate the tank and there was no explosion. Plans Dropped To Expand --Bright Probe By FREDERICK SCllOEMEHL , ot IM D•llr Pllol s1aff Jlanking officials of the stale coastal commission and the attorney general's~ office .said today there are no plans at the present time to expand the p'robe of political activities of Dr. Don al d Bright, chairman of the regional coastal 'commission for Orange and Los Angeles counties. (Related story, A3) ~vin Lane, cbainnan of the state commission, said-thaflie does not agree wit& published reports that the st ate commission wants the probe widened. 0 1 am not aware of any basis for that statement," Lane said. The reports said lhe investigation of Bright's fund raising activities on behalf of gubernatorial candidate Edrnilnd q. Brown Jr. would Include a probe of alleged improprieties on the, part of other regional commissioners • Bright appeared before the state com~ mission earlier this week and requested the investJgation after it was disclosed that he had held a luncheon to gar.>er support for Brown. Ellen Stem Harris, vice chairman of (See BRIGHT, Paie AZ) . ~ FRI.VE. CVT_SBlJ~ STO.CK ADVANCES NEW YORK (UPI) -Iqvestors, e.1)- touraged by a cut in the prime rate, today pushed prices higher .in moderate tradinir on the New York St0<k Ex· chalige, The Dow Jones industrial average~ '11hlch gai¥d ~-!~points .!hursday, was ahead 3.44 mo ... points ·to 654.88. It bad be<n up around 12 points. Tho blu...hip lnd!Calor 16st 31.21 points early In the week due to Profit taking after it!I recent rally. Advan<es led declines, 937 to 4 1 o , among· the l.719 ;~,... traded. ' the outsf9nding Oklahoma m u rd er fugitive· warrant which had not oeen canceled by the Orange County legal action that ~]eared him. ·Russell tias been eating zupper at 441 Beaucbet St., near Union StatiOn in downtown Los Angeles for Ute p3st ·two years and 10 days, without having 4 his case cleared. • He bas several witnesses who swear he was with them at the Long Beach Nu.Pike Amusement Park just having fun tliat fa teful Salurday ni.ght of the old man's murder and robbery in Oklahoma. James Raf Russell is some sort of born loser, his life" buffeted by courts of law from here to Oklahoma. He did his time there too -a t McAlester-a stretch for burglary, , Russell's record Indicates he had just arrived in Orange C.Ounty after release from prison and gone. to work. Things seemed to be going well. Swinging at Park Ok.1ahon1a auUtorities abrupt.ly ended that. Titey issued a fugitive warrant charg· ing . Russell with the 1nurder of the aged invalid and he was arrested here. then cleared after a series of court proceedings. One included a polygraph test ad- ministered by a technician which strong- ly indicated Russell was innocent. He also had the testimony of his wife and several companions, plus the Long Beach .. • • Dilly Piiot $1111 P~olt ' Jim Kwolek, 7, (swinging on rope} and friends en~ joy new· Jog climbing· equipment recently installed at Huntington Be3.ch's , Edison Community Park. Jim, a student at Kettler School. thinks park is a swinging place. Geo1·ge Logan Appointed City Attorney of Lagu11a The Laguna Beach City C.Ouncil has appointed George a: Logan, interim city attorney, as ,the city's permanent legal counsel. LOgan resides In Huntington Beach. Logan will receive a $1,575 monthly retainer for attending all city COW!Cil and planning commission m e e t i n g s , perfor'ming routine legal services and holding office hours four hours a week at city hall. In addition, the attorney will receive $50 an hour for extra services including trials, pretrial r e s e a r c h and for ' representing the city ~t hearings and- Iegislative 'sessions. Logan or the firm or Rimel. Harvey & Logan has been serving as interim city attorney since July I following the resign8tion 0£ fonner City Attorney Tull)' Seymour who r e ~ i C n e d P.Teeipitately citing "an accumulation of rrustrations" ·with the Laguna job. · Following Seymour's resignation, the CQU?lcil .declared itself to be in t.h e market for a fu11-time city attorney rather than a contract legal counsel. Following the council's action Wed· nesda.y appointing Lqgan, ~fayor Roy Holm said the council had considered alternaUves but because of the outstan- ding job done by Logan during the interim period, decided to stay with him. o.rrr ttnoi s11rt 1"11919 CITY ATTORNEY George Logan Logan's contract calls.for him to setVe at the pi.ea.sure or the ·council. Previous • " to 1971 when Seymour became city •!· ""'"'rd ProteQt Sta-..1 tomey, Logan w91 legal coun.,1~·11ic :.r,'-, · 9 •• .S~' plannin-cotnmiSsion and legal partner T 0 K y 0 ( u p I ) _ s 0 m e 21 o o o Jack rumel 1dViseG the city c0t1ncll. ' d t . d b ·~ . -emonstra orS orgaru~ y a· ...,.,,m- Clouted by Coins LOS ANGELES (UPI) -L 111 an Rosener filed suit In federal court Thurs· day against Harrah's Ca~no or, Rtl)6, Nev., demanding $500,000 dllDUlg.. !qr lnjurles she said she suffered when an employe tmpt.Yfng, a slot machine alung °' bag of silver ·doO~ over his shl>ulder, . hilting her on the ncad. piunist~inaled group marched past the U.S. Emhessy Thursday night in the first of an eX'pttted St.-rie9 ot protests tigatnst President · f'Ol'd'I vi.sit to Japan next. month. PoUce said tbat.c were no ' ind~tl chlrh\g tb.c. prot·CIJ&... m a r c h organized "by tho CoA:lmunist~innted Jap;in counc;~ aga1iist· Atomic am! ll~drogcn bomli!. . - J F anne' s 11 usband Says Wife 'On -~1 ills' Payroll' By the Associated Press Eduardo Battistella says bis wife was employed fo r a year as a $500-a-week aide by Rep. Wilbur D. Mills {[}Ark·). but there was no romance between the congressman and the former striptease dancer. ·•\\'e are friends. that's it. ?i.·ly wife and l think the Mills are. "'Onderful people. I Jove him like a father. He and Polly (rttrs. ?i.1ills) are very fond of our thr~ children.'' he said in an interview in Buenos Aires. In Little Rock4 Ark., rt1ills denied that ?i.lrs. Batliste\la had ever been on his personal payroll . He said she had been paid to redecorate their apartment in July 1973 on a one-time basis. Earlier, he denied lhere u·as any romance between himself and the ~ year-old Mrs. Battistella. He said people \\'Cre trying to creare the impression thal there was such a romance. She is kno\vn as "Fanne Fox, the Argentine Firecracker." f.lrs . Battistella \\'as one of r our persons with ~!ills, the 6 5 ·ye a r • o J d chairman of the House Ways and Means Com1nittec, when police stopped Mills' speedfug, unlighted car in \.\'ashington Oct. 7. Mills said he was raking Mrs. Battistella home from a party. Battistella said he did not want to t.alk about the incident. He said he and his Wife and the ~1illses traveled together to Antigua In the Caribbean in July 1973. Mills hnd 00 comment on the allege:d Antigua trip. ~ Battistella sa!d that after their An!igUa vacation his \\'ifC be~un \\'Orking for J\h·s. !\fills as a po bllc relations and secretarial assistant in lhc l\Ulls homf'. After n thnc, she also helped Mllls himself \vith appointments. travel ur· rn°'emcnls and similar duties. >.tills paid Atrs. Battistc.Jlo n "':eekl y snlnrf of $$(XI froa-kis own funds. Butli s1cll:i said. lie s:Jid his wife oc- cuslonaDy tr:n1l'lt'<I wit1' the ~fiTises as (Sec ~ULLS, Page Al) pawn shop receipt sho\\'ing where he \\'as that night. Russell \vas rreed, then went to &II Gardens to visit a brother three weeks later and \.\'as subsequently confronted by police at a Taco Bell where he stopped for a snack . He has been eating jail food o n Beauchet Street near the SP Railroad ya rd ever since. Attorney Hoger Agajaniau-~·ho firn1!y (See JAILED, Page -I eat Pistol Held To His Head Has Misfire 8}' KA mv CLANCY Of the Ollly Piiot Stiff How would you feel if someone put a gun to your head and pulled the trigger? "I just don't know how I'm still here today, to tell you the truth." Robert Flynn, 51, a Fountain \'a1Jey television repairman, today described his apparent escape from death Wednesday when ht came home and surprised two burglars in his apartment. One of them, he said. put a blue steel automatic to his bead and pulled the trigger twice, but tbe 1un didn '.t go off. "The whole thing only lasted f i v e seconds but it was a lifetime," said Flynn. Flynn arrived home at 12'.15 a.m. Wednesday and had just opened the door abou t six inches," when he said it was jerked from his hands. Flynn said one of the men. jabbed him in the' ribs, then as he apparentl.v slumped down, he felt something brush his hair. - "I heard a click," he said. He later saw the gun pointed at his head. Then. he heard a second click, after which the two men nect. Fountain Valley police said to da y they're investigating the incident,. but so far haven't made any arrests. Flynn's assailants, '>''ho fled \vithout taking anyth ing. were described as of f\otex ica n descent. one about 18 y~ttrs old and the other 25 to 30, police said. They entered the apartment w h i I e F'lynn v.·as gone by removing a screen and climbing in an open v.indou', officers said. Flynn said the pair only spoi;:e once during the incident -in Spanish. flov Badlv Bnrhed • • GLEN ECHO. Mel (UPf) -·The !>- year-old soo of \\latergate cover· u p defeildant Kenneth \V. Parkinson "''as seriously burned Thursday when he and some young fri ends were trying to set a turtle on fire, police reported. orficials al Children's liospital in Washington today said Philip Parkinsori was in fair condition suffering from burns oo the neck and a cut on his head. Or:g:cJ 7 :oast Weather Fog and low cloudr4 night <1nJ morning hours becoming 111ostly sunny Saturday, according lo the v.l?ather service. Highs at lhe '1:eaches 68 to 72. Inland areas 74 to 77. UJ\\'S tonight 58 to 60. INSIDll TODAY Orange Coost College 1ci/l bri110 the. n111sical ··Go(l.spell" to the ,stage \Vect1icsd-0v throu gh Saturdi1y. Staff \Vriter Tonl Titlls takes a look nt OCC 's of· fer111g Ill Ills i'ntern1ission col· hnn11 on Ille coctr of tod<ij(Y \Veekender. --,, •• Vovr Senk:• A1 ""-"*' rm a1 llo1l"'t Dl Movlff CS·6 l...M. 80Yd A1 M•l••• J'unf• a• C.illemll Al N11iONI Nitw, 114 Cl1 .. 111te1 Ol•U · ., Clt..itt (·1\l!Slf A? C.01111<5 CJ P-i. 11 ·1 Crouwonl CJ llt~t111r1111, (j•C.I 0.1!b NlllCti 1.1 SflYll l"orter II' 1idl1orl1I P191 Al 5111'11 IJ.S ftln1n<• 111·1 Site:-.,Mlt111h .... HotflCOH It Tfltvljitfl c.- ltlt..-'"lUitn Cl Tlltl .. n ' CM ~~~~fl %! :.~ Ntwi r.-, f • A2 DAILY PILOr "" rrldiy, Oitobet' 18. 1974 :• .. J • . '$604,000 Bet? ~Fair Board Eyes Racing 'Gamble' 1 1.., BY.t!ALAN DlRKJN ~ • ,. 01 ,'ftit Diiiy fllltl Sl•ff Orange County ~·air Board directors have opened the starting gate to negotia· lions to promote 14 days of thoroughbred .. 1'.!~ng at-bos Alo1nitos. J ~r ffgu~s' Ole board sllldied Thurs· day ni~ht indicated that the fair may have to put up a pttrse of $604.000 in ·betting that lhe ractnJt v.·fll be profi table. There v.·ere other ind ications that the going might get rough on the_ profit -and loss picture if it rains dunng the '·racing days. -The djrectors Indicated Thursday night tflal As,hlex Economic Services of New· port 'Beacli 1\"0uld be given the job or .: Sludying 'A'helher the plan is financially ''reA.slble. Preliminary estimates, based on in- formation provided by operators of the Los Alamltoe' track, place the amount of money lhe fnir might expect to make from· 14 days of racing at between $114,000 lo $242.000 . These estimates. however. alao show that the purse that would have to be put up for the events v.-ould total $604,000 and y.·oo!d be part cl total eXJ'CftSeS for the racing of $1.4 million. Presently, thorooghbrOO. racing i n Southern Califot~ Is aulhorized at San· ta Anita, Hoilf\'i'ood Park, Del ~far and Pomona. Only quarter horse and harne!I! racing is currently authorized at Los A1amitos. .- Two Banks • J . . ---r •• Dro-0. Prime I a. ' Lend Rate NEW YORK (UPI) -Two major banks joday lowered the. prime lending rate for top buslneu bor!'QWers to 111/" from JI \i percent. Firat National City B~k and Chemical Bank,· both of New. York, made the • • latest move in the recent downward spiral' of the prime from 9 lta historic ntgh +of 12 percent. It was expected to touch off a new round or riductioos. Citibank, which revteWa Its p ·r I m e structure every Friday, uses a DOatlng rate tormula based on certa.ID ...JDOlley market interest rates. Last week the Federal _ ~rve Bank Or• New ·York . released statistics showing Ci t i.b a n k could reduce its prime:. to 11 ~ percent. Tbe move l>y Citibank , last Friday to trim its prime to 11 lh. percent touched off a new round J of reduCtiom arMn1 the nation'! maj'or banks.' ., ' ~ racin~ committee was Instructed the fjrn1 understands 'an that the board upetta Jroq>, .the study and then ~ward to meet YJlth. the firm 's officers to insure '1he contract . The stud y may not exc.'t"ed five days. Ashley's bid on the job had Energy Boss P1Lshes Oil THIS IS EXTERIOR VIEW OF NEWIJ' COMP~ETED WINTERSBURG Hl~H ADD.ITION " In Huntington Beach, a Single Campus to Mtet a Variety of SjMcial NHts · Although the pl'evailing pi'ime rate is I I ~ ~~e.nt, Pfi~l\jgan J"latiqnal ~ank of Detroit .llas. all{)quneed 11lan~, to (owcr the ending rate to 10% percent from 11 percent; effective Oct. 21 . , envisioned it taking two or three days and costing $500. 'Of concern to tho directors was v.·hether the consultant reallied that the board wanted !he study to cOmider the ' effects or the weather on the profi t and roes picture. Refineries \VASHINGTON (UP I) -Energy chief JC!hn Sawhill said today that com-• munitles must allo w construction of oil refineries ir the nation is to become self-sufficient in energy. Rx: Education Planning ,-4 C!llifornJa banlfa also annoooced reduc- tions in the prime.rate .today, following the lead of the Eaat Coast banks. Crocker Bank sa id it will 10\Yer the prime frorii 11~ to ii ~ percent'OO llfon-day. · ~ The race· dates being co nsidered v.·ould be in November. ''There are obvious reasons why these days are availa ble :, in ?iov~ml;>er," director Richard Hou~n. He also said there is need to tap the nation 's offshore oil, and that a great deal of technology is b e i n g developed to .i:naie such drilling safer and cleaner. , Wintersburg Provides 'Prescription'. for Pup,ils Manufacturers Bank" in Los fmgeles · also anntitmced a reiductt.on from U \.2 to 11 '4perceot, ,eftect.iv.e AiDodaY~ a RunUng~ Beach businessman, said. ; "It sometimes rains in November. If 'it ra·ios,on 10 Or the 14 days we art going lo lose money·" Director Burr Williams also noted that ,, J.tle pur5e, the money going to the winner and, hor,JeJ that place In the events, .11t·ou\d ha\'e to be guaranteed. Later Williams interjected into · a ·,.discussion on how the money raised · from the racing might fund lmprovment s on the Ifi3.acre fairgrounds that the _ "horse racing is at least two or three ~ Years away." Boy Accidentally : , Shot in Stomach , Westminster police were cootlnuing to- ,' . .day to ,probe the appll'ftlt accidental . ,. Sbooting,"ot a 14-yeBl'<lld boy by his 1 •Jlklymalel 11~1 Robert Patrick O'Donnell of 5254 Y1;le St., Westminster. was reported 1 n · satisractory condition at Westminster . · Community Hospital where he: underwent .. 1ew:gney •ftU the Tuesday W>oting. Oflicer1 reported that young O'Donnell v.·as struck in the stomach by a .22 caliber bullet v.·ound as be and his .;: friend ap2!'~1y played with the weapon ~~Diego Free\vay and :"'\VeSfrili nSf"cr 'Ave nue. ~'-Police '°"'re· called to the scene and i •found the youth bleeding, o r f I c e r s ( ireporied. P9lice said the' believe the l ~hooti2f' wa an accident. ; ' Sawhill said the country c on s u m e s about 17 million barrels of oil a day but only has the refining capacity for 14.2 million barrels. "There's a definite gap between what we consunie and what we refine," the director of the Federal E n e r g y Administration said In a television ln- "ttrvlew with Sen. -Charles H. Percy (R-nl.). Commenting on Percy's statement that the public opposes co!Ulruction o f refineries, Sawhill said, "Frankly, I think what we need to· do is really get people to understand the new r e f l n e r y technology that we have today. "We can build refineries that are not unalghUy because they can be sur- rounded by shrubbery, that don'! make any noise, that rea.Uy don't let oU any unattractive odon.. And I thlnk U people understand thta more the)' would be more willing to accept refineries. "We really need to close the gap 1 If we 're really to become elll!rgy 1eU0111f- ficlent and not dept?n<i on other countries for our refined product." AA for offshore drilling, Sawhlll said: "The companies are really moving very rapidly to develop n e w technologies which minimize the risk of oil spills. Now, we'll never completely eliminate it. "There always will be some very, very small chance of a spill, but I think we can control il to the extent that we can prote<;t our beaches, and B d G tt d at the same time, move ahead with e rQOm U e an offshore drBling program ." .,... On Thursday a Ford Foundation report ) I $8' 500 F• said a true government-inspired effort ~ n ; I.re to consen·e energy would allow the na-l 1 -· tion to postpone for anolher 10 years • ~A.shar1-J.D an electrical cord appartntly any big new commitments to. offshore ! ignited bedroom furnishings of a Hun-drilling, oil imports, nuclear ·power or ~ ~ngton Beach duplex late Thursday. Fire coal and shale development. $ officials ~mate the ensuing damage The report of the foundation's energy ; it $8.500. 4 , policy project, the product of two years • , Neigh~ ,eported the fire at 506 of study . was released along with sorne 1 '6th St .. Fir~ Capt. Roger Hosmer -;aid additional observalions by project head ~ todax, 'Ille,.occupant s of the duplex unit , S. David Freeman. 1 Richarttlt!llC)', 29. and Peter Hallsmen. Freeman told a news conference that ·: 31. we.rf.."lXlt .i hoem at the time. President Ford's present energy poli cies 1 • Hosmer;.sakl an eleciric cord leading are ·'grossly inadequate." 11e said the £ to a clock radio in thl' bcdrootn shorted alternative to "true conservation" can : out and ignited a table and carpeting. be ~escribed "only in one word -ra- • The fire "gulfed " the bedroom. Hosmer tion1ng.'' • said, and !ltnoke and hea t damage were "Our report indicates that every day . ' ' • . extensive tltfoughout the remaining por· we delay on true oonservation ls one lion of the tfn1t. more day o{ rationing we face," he .. .~NGECOAST •• . ' DAILY PILOT flor 0r...., CM•I Dally ... lol. •Hl'I wl'lkJt 1$ ~ombirwo tr-. Neff'l·Pl"~s. "putW<tl'leO bf tM Or~gt C..o.l Publl'\fll119 '-""· ~rite ""'-et• 11uan.....:1. _..,,., 1~"' "" .. '· "'' to'\11 W i.t. ""•""'°rt &111<1\. H11llllft9!on Be..-n•Jo""I'"" V1Hey. U QUl'I 8el<ll . ltV l1"' ~dtlftt!iltl • .., !...-'I 0•-nlt~n J .... n C.W•l!•i'f\O. • 11nqle rtc;i_ .. .O••-•i pUb!"l'l"C!I Ul'lllYI ... d ~-IYI. T ... Pl'll'Kipal l>Ul>••~tl'OQ pl~nl ,, 11 JOO-~· s., 51rtel. '°"~ -w. u•~o•n•~ t:l•t• r Rebert N. Weed )' Pr,.ldsnl •nd ~!Ill"" Jack R. Curley "'"' Prftidsnl •rid"' ....... Mo!"IQllf' ' Thomas Keevil , ... said. The repart contends that energy con- sumption growth rate can be cul bf' more than 50 percent without hurting the national economy. "'Energy growth and econom ic growth can be uncoupled," Freeman said. f'roin Pnge Al BRIGHT ... the state rommission and Carl Boronkay, deputy attorney general who counsels the state panel, both said they had no knowledge that the investigation was being expanded • \Yintersburg High School, the HWl· tington Beach Union High S c ho o 1 District 's expanded guidance center and continuation school, is designed to pro- vide special students with their own "educational prescription." Scott Flanagan', a s s i 1 t a n t superin- tendent for student personnel services, said the enlarged facility serves students ranging from the "very very bright" to those with severe physical, emotional and mental handicaps. "Every district, we feel, should have From Page AI MILLS .•. parl of her job, which lasted from AIJ8Ull 1913 U11W recently. BalllateUa 18id he first knew i,irs. P.filli as a cl.Jent of his interior decorating flnn lo Georgetown, a faablonable Washington district. P.1ttllte!IA .. d hO took Mril, MiUs alid her hiisblnd to 'the Silver' SllpPer nl'gbt dub where the congres.wait met his wife Annabel, who was p!rfol'ining, there. Ba!Ustella found an aparlm<nl for the Mills at the Washington building where he and his wife also have an apartment. Battistella said be -not his wife - decorated the Mills apartment. Battistella, 43, said he is an importer and travels to Argentina frequently . He said be is separated from his wife. Meanwhile, Mills elicited laughter and warm applause from Little Roe.Ii Jaycees in his first public appearance since the Tidal Bas.in incident when he advised: "Dorft go out with foreigners who drink champagne." "l did something I shouldn't have done -I drank some champagne when I knew it went to my head right quickly. And it did ," Mills told the Jaycees in a campaign appearance in Little Rock Thursday . "Now I've been emba rrassed beyond \\·ords about this experience, as I've said. I've apologized publicly on several occasions for what happened. I apologize again toriight for what happened . "As I say; I was wrong in ever taking one drink of champagne because 1 learned yearS ago that I couldn 't drink ii, and I have learned in more recent years that you can't d r I n k anything· else aod do very much." ~lills is seeking his 19th term In the general election next month. His op- pment is Republican Judy Petty, a 30- year-old divorcee who has said she would not make the Tidal Basin Incident a campaign issue . During his Jaycees addres1 ~tills look· ed often tOYlard his wife, Polly, v.·ho was seated in the audience. She was not with her hu!band Oct. ·1. "There is no difference between us~ After you 've been married as long as we have, you get so used to ane person that no one else can come between you." liUlls said in denying suggestions that he was romantically involved with Mrs. Battiste Ila.· From Page Al· ' JAii.ED .•.. Charles-H. Loos RicMrd P. Nall A'lo!l'l "I .Wn19'nQ Ellllor' None of the officials ruled out .lhc possibility that separate lnve9ligaUoN might be undertaken if other allegaUons 4 of.wrongdoing were made. It has been reported that Orange Coun-believes the client be reptt!Jierlts free ty Supervisor Ralph Diedrich also held on legal prtnclples ls-tnnocent=wilJ be ' . , T@rrv Covllle Weil Ct...., C.Un\y Ecll.- Hunt inaton 6t1ch Offlc• Ht11et1cl'I1ot.1i.v«d Mlh .... ""-d .. SI: P.O. 90• "'-._.. Tt!ltlont (714) M:Z-4321 Clas~t Advertising M:Z·S671 FrlN'I 11 Or ..... Ce""t• ~1i.t 540-1220 a luncheon in Brown's behalf iD early in Los Angeles Couaty Superior COUrt Septembtr that was allended by at least Oct. 22 for a new enradJUoo hearing. tY.'O guests who have represented Judge William Murray or Orange Coun-- dcvelopment projects before the.reatonal tr-Superior Court already rtjecled the coa.rtal commission. extradition based on Orange Co u n l ~· Diedrich, altendini;: a coast a I com-authorities investigatioo and le~al work. mission meeting today In Long Stach, But lo& Angeles County won·l act"lpt was not inunedlately available for com-that. mtnt. J{ls office said he would have Agaj11nian. of the la w flnn o( Sheffield. a stattmcnt on the mauer later. Charton, Fishman and Agajanlan, a.aid Earlier this w~k. Otedrlch said.he Thursday one hopeful concesston has was not involved in the IWlCheon hosted betn won. They are willing to acctpt ~s ~!~t. ,~ bi:e ~ ~ =din~!:~~ ~ 1~·:i~:!ar~::~r =~li for a cockl.ail party In Brown 's beluiU. submits to one admlniat.ei'td by 1As Diedrich nld he would not have at-AnRelCJI County. !ended the hmcheon had be .been Invited He lnsiitt-ln the ~t his by Bright. Guelltl al lhe Brlgli affair • cllenl who I• held without ball lor t•~ lnCldde-mW C001a1ttne dev•lop!!rs'"lll<!~rtn · anct IO' days, rs belna oubjectod U..lr •"1'!-latl,.., to unconsUiuUonal double jeopardy. -I , D.ity ...... st.ff ....... FILLING PRESCRIPTIONS School District'• Fl•n•n an assessment center where a youngster can get tbe type of help he needs," Flanagan said. Plans for the $718,IXKI Wintersburg ex- pansion 11.arted nearly two years-ago, Flanagan said. "nlt new facility, loCated on the cam- pus of the district's Wlnteraburg ~con­ tinuaUon school at 17162 Golaen West St., will be formally dedle8ted Oct. 29. Flanagan explained the new center includes space for two state-funded classes for the educationally a n d multihandicapped never offered in the diSVict before. fn addition, it will house the five classes for the trainable mentally retard- ed. a class for pregnant students in the district, a federally-funded assess- ment and guidance unit, speech therapy and youtb services counselors. The existin·g Wlntersburg school will serve as the d.istrict'1 c o n t i n u a t i o n school. ~vlding what Flanagan calls an individualized lnstructlona1 program. Students In that program, be said, aie aUowed io work at thelr own pace and receive more individual atteption than they . wiuld in the distr!ct'S oiYer· i:rowded blgb llCllool~ ' Those stud.lilts tne1ud~· the· er·,. ceptiooally bright, who may become disenchanted on a large camp u s , Flaqagan said, students who are , truant or have had othe< bruthei with • lhe law, and those who for many rea!IOns need a specifically deslped program. Flanagan added the enlarged campus also serves as a central location for evening and adult sch.oo1 coordinaUon, home· teaching services, planning for the Mentally Gifted Minor pro gr am , group te'sting and the student insurance program. Many of these programs were scat- tered throughout the campus in the past, Flanagan noted. Valley Jaycee Crate Derby Set Area youngsters will race Saturday in the third annual Orange Crate Derby, a project of the Fountain Valley Jaycees. The derby will be held on \Yard Street near Talbert in Fountai n Valley. ' The Jaycees erpect m«e than 50 1 entries in two divisioos, orange crate and soapbox., All entries should report to the registration booth before 9 a.m. Saturday. ' The downward spiral of the prime suggests banken see at"teast a ·sl ight easing Jn inflation. lld are opttmJstic the Federal Reserve will continue to re1u cn!dlt reins.-...... r' ·-~· Given encouragement l?Y the decrease tn interest rat,e;, invll6tora ·pusheil p'.rices sharply higher in active trading on the New Yori Stock E1ctian1e. '· The Dow Jones industrfal average was ahead 11.97 at 66.1.41 shortly after the announcement. Bul it later eased, closing at 654.88. The m a r k e l involving International Business Machines Corp., also wa s stimulated by a report but the CO}llpany denied today any knowledge of a reported takeover bid by ~ Arab con- oortiWlJ. ' ' Knifin Victim . ,g '. '. Identified 88'""' 1 L! {::a.h. D,rir,~r . •· •• ,. ., ' " • I Orange C<linlY .Sltirlff's ·lif!l&rs have identi'fiecl,• Yell9W. Cab ·c1n;., .w)>o was stabbed to death Sunday in an Anaheim area orange grove as •Douglas William Rehlpohl, 32, or 4092 'Green SI., Loo Alamilol. OepUlies explained thal Rehlpohl'• pareW were on a camping trip in a remote area rJ. Mooo County and coufd-00! be oonlacted until Thunday about their 900'1 death. Investigators are sUll aeeklng leads to the identity of the fare who was driven by Rehlpohl ·to tha I-Ion or Winslon and SUnkl!I Roads and who then stabbed the cab driver more than 20 limes In the cliest and back. Rehlpoh! dragged himself to a home in a nearby orange gro\'e ·and ·died about 25 fett from the front door. Of- ficers said his billfold had betD ·emptied. LAMP SALE CONTINUED " From the finest collection of lamps in South Orange County. Select from such well known names at Marbro, Stiffle, Knob Creek, Norman Percy and many others, ' Fantastic Inventory of Cl\Jalily Lampa All Ready For Immediate Deliver,. • CREXEL-H ERIT AGE-HENREDON-WOOOMARK-«ARAST AN-BAKER WEBOAlS & SATUUAYS t:oot. l:JO , NEWPORT BEACH •, J127 W&STCLlf't' OK ., 642·2050 LAGUNA BEACH • " ' SU N()fltll COAST tlwv ••. •i4·6Ml • I .TORRANCE• 2364t H~Wl'HORNl!'BLYD. <Open tri. til 9. Sun . tz;S:)QJ · 11•1m ; • " • • . . , , . -• , fr!dJy, Oclober 18, 1974 H O~ILY,Pl!f~J .. 3 ! At .Your ·service New Tape Cites Hush Eff oriS A Sunday, Monday. Wedntsday a,pd Friday Feature Of 1H Dall)' Pilot ' ' Cot a prObltm? Then write Pot f)unn. Pot will cut red tape, get the an!Uler'.t and • · actWnyourteedto so1pe •fnequities in · governmtm and ~ i business. Mail your questions to Pat Dunn I At Yo111r Se.rvice, Orange Coast n Daily F'got._ P. 0 . Bo:r 1560, Costa Mesa, CA 92626. Include ]JOur telephone number. Errers (fiwrerte• DEAR PAT: I received a mail Jo-- \'itatlon to · purchase a family Coal of • arm' from Ha1berts, tne., Bath, Ohio. I would like to find out how honest and reliable · this firm Is, or wbere .1 Can write in Ohio to find out. D.J.U., HuaUogton Beach • At Your ServlCe1 tits iecelved 1everal • ,. . ' < ' ' late deUvert or lnco~ ~*8rfograpby complab:tls about Balbert's, Uc., but erron have beta corrected promptly "* the firm wa1 contacted. Steve SclunJdt, Halbert'• cmtomer 1 er v t c e maaaitr, elllml le• than four percent of trders received bfve resulted in coo- Rmer complllatt. 'I'll . Better · Bminess Bureau of ilroa, Ohio, reports few problemt with Uals_~ 1~· the Federal Tnde Commlssloit b11 no record of ·comp11tnq: against Halbert's·: lnlcR--.. DEAR PAT: Tell M.S., Costa Mesa. that "SpeciaJ-T," a product made by Specially Coating & Cbelrilcal Co .• 7314 Varna, North Hollywood, and 'Amar·All, available at art supply stores and some serv:lce statloos, will do a good job o( removing ballpoint ink stains from vinyl upbolsrery. D.M., Newport Beach Yonn wu one of sevenl I et le rs received la respoase lo M.S.'1 inquiry. Odttr readers report 1ucces1fal ballpoint lqt tta1a remov1l by using "lnknb:," a' Parttr Pen product available at office supply. ....... t.O.C., dlstribated b y Amw.ay, aDd Cuticle rtmovef prod.acts. Trees Burn Fire -apparently started by children playing with matches-burned briskly for a time in San Juan Capistrano Thursday destroyinr or damaging six eucalyptus trees that would have been part of Cook Park. Trees in San Juan are prot~ted by law. Fire was near Mission . Glen tract. . J?ord Eying Cigarette Tar, Nicotjne Lev~Js,_ DEAR P.\T: JJos anyone published a boot llstlitg .alf of the w o r11 ep. • s WASHINGTON (UPI) -President organlzaUons. in the Uhtted StatM? I ,fOot ,expressed' int~st, today In ~he have become involved in working with ''Po!hlbllity~ior. ~gulattng "by" law the tar several groups •amcetn#d wittf' the pro-and nitotlne content of C!i:~rettE's· gress 0£ women's rigtit!i and I'd like He asked the National Cancer Advisory Ford's request came in a letter to Dr. Jonalhlln E:. Rhi>ads, a b i g h I y r egarded cancer expert who heads the board. ' to contact other Similar organizations Board to provide for him by Dec. 1 -throughout· the country for program "scientific advice on this important mat· ideas and other information that may ter of public concern." Noting the board's recommendation, ForJ 8sked that it "review the existing scientific evidence on an urgent basis and provide me with an assessment of the extent to which there e x i s t s a scienUfic basis for responsible reiuJa- tion of cigarettes." ,prove helpfu1 to my groups' aims. F'ord disclosed the board proposed that · LC·, Costa Mesa the government regulate tar and nicotine uwomen's 0rgadbatlOJ!S. ind Leaders levels, presumably by b3nning from the 1973·7-i Directory" conlafu 479 pages market c!garettes deemed to produce listing 9,000 lndlvtduals and organlia· . an excessive amount. . dons. A ci>'py caii be orderetJfrnm --Rece~t-reports-BJM>w-tbat. cigarette Ford did not commit himselt to acting on the pro~!. Wome1 Today, National Preis Building, per-capita .coRSUmpt1~i:i has risen about Washington"'; o.c. ZOO(M. t~ the pomt :Where 1t wa~ when the . "Tt is critically Important that our judgments be soundly based so that we may proceed with the g r e a t e s t amount of wisdo"m," wrote Ford, a heavy and habitual pipe smoker. Crork Pots Safe DEA~: lJow safe is it to cyok meai8l1da.Y\16ng at a low temperatilre in one of the neV?' electric crock pots now on the market? It would seem · that there might be a danger of food poisoning. True? H.G., l\-lisslon Viejo No. not anles1 the eroek"-pot is defcc .. live and doesn't reach the proper tempentue. Dr. George York, u. c. Cooperative Extension food technologist · says molt crock pots hold .../oods at temperatures between 160-l80 degrees -21 defreet. •bove the temperature at which food-poi!IOling· bacteria art tilled. Be adcll tbat crock . pots reach tbe ttt degret point qulcijy and no danger· of bacteria growth uists diJ:rfng 1on, cooking pertods at an even higher tell!_peratare. Or•er of laltlathies DEAR PA'i': After looking over the numerous propositions included on my sample ba1lot !or the upcoming election, it occurs to me . "9. ask how these measures are. assigned. the numbers they are adveft19e6 by and voted on. It i hnk between cigarette smokmg and lung cancer was first asserted by the surgeon general JO years ago. ' Man Wanted Women W eren-'t Pro}ectionists -The t,opic was "It Only Hurts When 1.:Laugb,".a study by slides or sexism in the comic strips. But when the women of the National Organization for Women, a feminist group in Laguna Beach, c<'lbldn't get the slide projector to work Wednesday night, they had philosophical crisis. . "I DON'T KNOW BOW to work this projector because I \lad a deprived background and never got to use machines," one worqan pointed out. "How can we take over the. world if we. cap't run machines?" another demanded. For a few moments, the women hJJildled and muttered over the machine with no results. They issued a plea f,o the audience and no one, includ.ing the one man in the group, knew bow to run it. FINALLY, THE CRISIS was solved when a woman called the person who had loaned her the machine. Soon the lender arrived and within a few minutes, he had it going. ' . would seem that. the first few wo'uld have .. aclvaol•g• over tile last ..... S d ·pn t E I ~~::1. ~::.·consideration by the UJl ay 0 to xp ore J.K., SM Clemente-• Bf Jaw, laltlatlves are placed on Ult s h f Oil • c :.:. :,.: .= .;-;:. r:;.r.:.r~~ earc or · m ounty Olllen ore olllped (anally by draw-· _ bl) 11 Ille dlllcrelloa of Ille IOCretary ol -·Ille elllel·t1.-·omcer. . ~ Close Doesn't Count, F el!oivs FLORIANAPOLIS, Brazil (UPI) -As -Gunther Severin, E a· s t Gennany'a ambassador to Brazil, arrived in lhta resort city, a .band struck up West Germany's national anthem. "' It was only after Severin listened passively and dlpfo)Tlatically as Ih• mWtary palice band played IOO wrong anthem that he informed • his hoot, Gov. Colombo Sales of Santa Catarina state, of th e m1stake. • ' • For reading matter' during 'the ' lft>- ~mlng weekend ... Daily Pilot e d I ~·oy a predict the.se will be among "Swlda.)111 Best'' offerings: • · · SEARCH FOR OIL-As an energy·· • thirsty world looks for fuel sources, · one of the places where it all began In caii£Omia-North O r a n g e county's ( Sunday's Be!!it J ' JtlU~s Ill<. slle of reoearch that pn> mJses to S(Nec7.e more oil from old hol.,. Stall W\iler Wl!Uam SChreih<r telb about It In two Illustrated storl"· -YOU Section. , WORD AND SONG-Fountain Valley joins the list or cities which can boaSt their ~t ~ngs. Bot old • • G o s p e I Swamp.::,...nm only baa a city song, it JbOl':a' a poem written ~peclally for ihe municipality, Slaff Writer Kath 1 Clancy tells stories of the creators. of the song and poem, scheduled for YOU Section. c E L EBRJTY MAKERS-A national magazine published in Capistrano Beach makes celebrities of the Orange County horse people It features, not to mention the Orange county cover shot locations it makes famous. Tom 1\1 c Ca nn' s "Horsin' Around" tells the story of Horse and Horseman Magazine. . GLAMOR GONE?-Slockbrokers who made $25,000 ·.ia.~t year ma,Y' be glad to see $10 000 In gross income this ye4r. some have even donned carpenters' aprons or turned to · even more menial rilethoM of making a livi"g, Staff Writer AJan Dirkin takes a look at a once. glamorous profession which ls havtng trouble finding •1glamor stocb" to sell in the midst of a very confused and ollcn · dcpr<Med stock market, Sunday Special. -~- Bright Has No Views On -Probe • 'John, Cut He1· Off at Pass'-Nixon --------------------,.. ' • ' " .. ., ~·· K.i.' . ., BEGONIAS Re«J. 69• 39~, RANUNCULAS __ BULBS SIQUOIA DAFFODIL BULBS DECORATIVE '"'~BARK •PATHWAY :~~~ $J 98 llG. U.tl PLANTER MIX 2 :"'~. $] 29 ,tt. SPHAGNUM $] 98 MOSS REG . $2.91 BALE.,.,. nus s1~• HEW HOURS 7:30 TO 5:30 .. ' HANGING MOSS BASKETS SE&I ELSEWHERE $2~~5 s 1495 HOLLY FERN $]19 aEG: $2.,. ' I • • .. A 4 DMLY PILDI F'rld.lY, Ottobrf 18, 1974 l'i111e to Hit -fleac;~es Agai11 ftlDA 'I' FROLICS DEPT. -Have yofl \fearied or transcripts from the taiC"it itape recordings played in Judge J9 Sirica's courtroom? Have you jusl dia'IOvtfl'd. with a shudder, the bottom figdre on your new property tax bill ? AN:you frustrated by the stock market reswt? Js life glum? You should do like a lot of other fo~. Get away from it all . fgu can't afford to get away from it Ml, you say? .JUst look around at what other people are doing that's /rec. Or at least almost free, i£ you don't count things like a little gasoline. {lere we are in the miQdle ol October and i! you can believe what our good coutal lileguards are telling us, people haYe been going to the. beach again. Si'r.itEBODV FORGOT to tell our in- JaDlf;,pet,pbnQ that it isn't summer anymore. Just take the reports over the past lYiO da ys in the mkldlc of the week, wben our beach guards from Seal Beach lo San .C1emente have reported that nearly 90,000 visitors dropped down to fhe shoreline. All th.is has been attributed to Santa Ana wind conditions which have pushed the thermometer readings up into the 90s in places like downtown Los Angeles and other inJand reacheS. Even along our coastline. the mercury was said to be hovering near 90 degrees upcoast.at Seal Beach. CWIBlNG BEACH attendance figures are part.icul~~ interesting this October because. de~ of the rising air tern· peratures, oar ocean front conditions have ~from ideal. \Ve h3: ~ !or eumple. that con- dition 'the weather per800! like to de as "night and morning fog aloog coast." You would think this v;ould discourage m9!t al the lnlanders. But it appa rently Msn·t. 1ft there is the ocean iUelf. We ha~beai Washed by hlgh and low tid • ' ~ night \\--dusk, tor example, v.·e haa"1be lollf!.ime thing v.ilere Newport f: looked like it had just drained i . Early In the day ""e had high t' v.·hereupon some of the NcY.1XJrt ~ got washed down \Vil.h salt '\'8ter. esc conditions tend to frustrate the visitor. At low tide he can't fijd the ocean. At high tide it is abruptly afover his beach blanket. ,X'BEN WE'VE HAD high surf con-ditions to boot. Big surf is particularly etdoyed by our own coastal surfers who do..get irritated when thls condition oc· bi le they are stuck nn some class.. But they manage to get out Utere, w. g surf. however. isn't loved by ~ inJand people Yi'ho v.·oold just like to. get in lbe water and cool off from llil-lerrors or smoggy freeways. 'So here 11·e've had it for the last cQYple or days. Scorching temperature inland. fog along the coast, high tides washing in and out and big surf to tdrrorize the uninitiated. . STILL THEY HAVE rome to the t.'00.!tlinl". Thousand of folks stre'<iming down to the sands in the middle of October. \Vhy to they do It ? · You have to suspect it's just the ten1per of the lin1es. IJ'hings must be better just over tile hill Sitti1ag llp ita Bed Rocky's Spouse . Recovery 'Good' NEW YORK tVPll -Margarella "Happy" "Rockefeller, wife of v i c ~ president-designate Nelson A. llock~· feller, was reported in ex ce I :en t oondilioo today and sjtUng up in bed after undergoing surgery for removal of her cancerous lelt breast. E11tertainer Questioned In Shooting ME?o.IPIDS, Tenn. (UP').!... A woman was found shot to death in the home of soul singer Al Green today after she reportedly dumped a pan of hot grits on lhe entertainer while he was taking a bath. police said. Inspector Dan Jones said the woman y.·as shot once in the head and a .38 caliber pistol was found at her side. Police .said the shooting was an appar- ent suicide. A three-page note to Green v.•as found in her purse. The shooting took place at the en· tcrtainer's split-level country home near Atemphis, authorities said. Jooes, bead of the Shelby co u n t y Sheriff's Department detective division, said the Hi Recording Co. artist was being ques1ioned about the incident. He said Green, who had a string of five straight gold records, was in Baptist Hospital with secoDd-degrf'i btans on hi.! back and arms. A local newspaper said dept.lties quoted Green as Sayin$l: that the victim was 29- year-old Mary E. Woodson, ol Madison; N.J. Deputies removed several pieces or evidence from Green's home, surrounded , by an electric fence. in North Shelby County. They were seen carrying oot a toilet seat, a shotgun, a large knife and a hammer head. Other sacks of material also Y.-ete removed from the house. "ft seems that flhe victim) poured a bucket of hot, boiling grits onto the back and arm of Mr. Green this morning at his residence." Jones said. '•Mr. Green appareoUy was taking a bath at the ti.me. "After the incident. (the Victlm) went downstairs and shot! w..,, bean! and she' was found dead." Green. originally from Ark8lm.!, has sold more than 20 million records since he joined the Memphis-based Hi Recording firm under producer Wlllie Mitchell. He has been named ma I e vocalist. of the year by the Memphis Music, Inc., organization f(r tbe past three years. The 27-year~ld singer had five COO· se;cutive gold records. indicating sale of more tban ooe million copies each. beginning in 1971. The hits included "I'm So Tired of Being Alone," "Call Me."·"Let's Stay Together." "You Ought to Be With Me" and "I'm Still in Love With You." Ribicoff Puslies Gasoline Sa·ving MERIDEN, Conn. (UPll -Sen . Abraham A. Ribicoff (!>Coon.), said today he 9.ill draft legislation requiring American auto makers to produce cars that provide no less than 20 miles per gallon of gasoline. Ribicof{ said the car indust ry is known "for its ingenious 'extras'; ce rt a In 1 y Detroit can meet a 20 miles per gallon minimum ." Jn a prepared speech at the Interna- tional Silver Co. plant, Ribicorf said his proposal wouJd save "llillions of gallons of gasoine the nnt year and .. utimately eliminate the p r es e n t dependence on foreign oil." In a bulletin issued by memorial Sloan· Kettering Institute, attending phr.sicians said ~lrs. Rockefeller passed • a very comfortable night" and "every indication is that her recovery \\ill be rapid and she Y.ill be able to return home by neit Friday." TIIERE WAS NO immediate word r rom pathologists whether the can«r had spread to the lymph nodes that v•ere removed ThUNday. but a preM briefing was scheduled for 4 p.m. at lbe hospital at which Drs. Jerome A. Urban, acting chief or breast services, and Edward J . Beattie Jr., v.·ere ex· peded to releese a full palhology ...,,.n. Urban said Thunday be did not believe the cancer bad spread to the lymph nodes, telling reporters : "! feel I got all of it, l reallY do." , Today's hospital bulletin s a I d a rehabilitation team "has already begun \\-"Orking with (Mrs~ Rockefeller) and she is now able to raise her left arm above her head." She also was reported to be "ofr intravenous fluids and on a light diet." Urban said Thursday that Mrs . Rockefeller, who found the malignancy in a · self-examination tv.'O v.·eeks ago. had an excellent chance for a f u 11 recovery. URBAN DESCRIBED the 48-year-old Mrs. Rockefeller as "a sturdy, wooderful woman." He said there appeared to be no complications and said she was m· excellent condition. · The former New York Governor looked tired and depressed as ·he told reporters earlier in the day: "Gentlemen, you're not going t o believe what I have to tell yoo. Happy has just had a radical mastectomy of the left breast ... Rockel'eller declined to speculate on how the surgery "'OU1d affect his political future, telling a questioner: "I think at this time, perhaps all ol us should think about Happy's future, which Is the one cuicern l have." Urban said a biopsy performed ThW"s- day morning revealed a ,carcinoma less than tv.·o centimeters in diameter and two smaller modules that were fOWld to be cancerous. - He and h\.·o other surgeons, pr s . Edward J. Beattie Jr, and Roy Amikari, !hen performed the mastectomy. URBAN SAID he .informed M r s . Rockefeller after the surgery was oom- plete that the cancer had not spread. He said she replied: ''Oil, th1m1: good- ness." Judge Suggests Citizens Vote On Po1·no Movies BOSTON (UPI) - A Superior Court Judge ruled ThW"Sday that district at- torneys in three Massachusetts counties had failed to prove three fihns sexually offensive. He called for a referendum to determine public sentiment on the · showing of such films. "We should find out what the average person in ~1assachusetts wants or will tolerate as s e x u a I eotertaimnent.," Superior Court Judge Vincent R. Brogna said in his decision involving "Deep Throat," "The Devil in Miss Jones" and "Behind the Green Door." "There ha s been no reliable survey made to determine just what \\-'OUld or would not offend the average person in the commonwealth in the field of explicit sexual movies," he said in his decision. Brogna suggested very strongly that the legislature put two questions on the state election ballot. One would ask voteryi if they are willing W have explicit sex fims shown to adults in their local theaters. The other would ask if voters "'anted the showing ci. such films limited for adult Viewing onl y "in theaters in some areas of the commonwealth.'' Snow ~.Covers Upper U.S. Jllost. of Cou1itry En joys W c1r1ner W eatlier California UPI wtAIMll fOIOC.U.1 • ' • Short Freedom Robert Peter Johnson (center) is hugged by mother as his father (left) scuffles with FBI agent at Miami International Airport Thurs- day. Johnson, who was released after four years in Cuban prison !or drug .smuggtlng, was arrested again on charges of stealing a plane. He and another man still face charges in the alleged· theft in 1970. Maine Officer Accused Of 'Death Squad' Pwt PORTLAND, Maine (UPlJ -Police have charged a PoilJand patrolman with trying to organize a "death s q u ad ' ' 9.ithin the department to kill criminals he believed "merited elimination." According to department.al c h a r g e, s IP&lif'U I lllb11'WJiliil:9a•"'l ·....: Jr1ITNESS SLAIN · IN COURTROOM SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - A 34· year-old convicted murderer fatally staJ>. bed a witness during a trial in a Seoul courtroom 'Ibursday. Lim Byung Suk, serving a life tehn for murdering an okl woman, was on trial on charges ol. threatening to kill the woman's son. ~ son, Lee W@Q Ho, 50, was on the witness st.and when Lim suddenly attacked him with a knife he had con- cealed in a sock. Lee bad ... fused tv>e"!lil hi.! daught ... to marry Lim. aulllorilies said. leveled Thursday, patrolman Edward Foster allegedly planned to form a Vigilante group to execute three Portland offenders. In a letter sent to Foster and his attorney, City Manager, Jolm Menario said Fqster \,Vas suspended with pay . for unbecoming conduct, an "Intent to pursue a course of bchaviqr that was criminal and felonious in nature," a lack of s o u n d judgment and a "personality disol'tler of sufficient severi- ty and lasting effect (that Foster is) unfit for further duty as a Portland policeman." The letter said F os t e r approached three members of the department "to solicit thelr aid and assistance in the fonnation or a team for the purpo6e of killing certain members of the com. munity, who, by their part po Ii c e records .... were detemtined (by Foster) to be of undesirable characttr and, therefore. merited elimination." The officer was committed to the psychiatric ward of the Maine Medical center July 31 for observation· after the "death squad" plot became known. In The Mew Udo Vi1a9e Information Act Veto · Fight Vowed WASHINGTO N (API -Key Democrats plan to press Congress to override President Ford's veto of wh<lt he ' brands an "unoonstitutlona1 and unworkable" bill to amend the Freedom of Information ,Act. The bill. overturning a 1973 Supreme C9.,w:t __ decision. in a .see!"fcy-starnpiog case and dosing what the measure's authors call major loopholes in the Jaw. could a.d ve r se I y arrect inte!ligcncc ( IN SHORT .•. ) secrets and dipomatic relations, Ford said as he vetoed it Thursday. e l'et Defa11 WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Fearing a "pocket veto" by President Ford . Congress Thursday decided to hold until after the eledlon-period recess legisl a- tion granting Vietnam-era veterans a 23 percent increase in e d u c a t I o n a I benefits. Senate Democratic Leader 1tt J k e 1ttansfield sakt lhe legislation. approved earlier in the week by the Senate and House, would not be tranwitted to Ford Wltil Nov. 18. e BelfMt l'lo~e BELFAST CUP!) -Tbe thin! day of violent protest against mass jailing ot suspected terrorists today hil Northern Ireland with bombings i n Belfast, a fatal shoot~ In Newry and attempted murders. , A youth died in a shooting incidCflt in the border -town of Newry, an Army spokesman sait;f. e Blahops ltleet OAXTEPEC, Mexico (AP) -Bishops ol the Episcopal Church say they support the principle of ordaining fe'ma!e pri~ts. A vote on the issue stipulated, hoWtve.r. that such ordinations must wait until church law is changed. At their aMual conferepce. the bishops rejected a bid to hold a special meeting next year on -Ordaining women but a~ proved the sul>ject for the agenda ror the next qonyenUon. • The ell~'• policy·m~ boc!y, c:om- prising laymen and clerh, next meets at Minneapolis in 1976. It would have to approve a change ln cht1rch law. It lWTOWly rejected a proposal last year for accepting wcrnen priests. Lower Falls· area. 343.1 Via Oporto, Newport Beach Telephone 673-1442 ·ci-,o Ac.-. Tefepho .. Ordon Frtt Dtll .. ritt ' . OCTOBER SALE OF GR~AT RED BORDEAUX WINES -.-... prices ol .-fnocll wlots ·ON •°'""'9tloW11 "'9ool~lrw. Tllo r9hol ......_._ lloWd. to .. _.., w ... Whole•• prlc.1 ...... "'-'•• ............. ~. ,... ................... , .... _. ~ ,...tloM on a ez::hr. of owtst'•••1 IHI w• froe:t lor*-x. M wt offw ..,. CM1 a -.-111o 1a1" 1Mn11. II is• 'JO-appotl..ity ,_po la slodr ·.,_..-Sat prices wWcii _,.....,..,. ba r1p1.ttd. RED BORDEAUX 1tf05t wine experts agree that the red wineis or Bordeaux are the world 's grea test. They combine fine1111e and romplexity, along with'true drinking delight. Open lbem . un hour or two before serving. 1 Bottle Cose tlf 12 Chaltou llaut-Socimuta.1970 tCotes de Bourgl .• i4.4!i $411.0G Chateau La~.1970 !St. Emllion> ••. : ••..... SS.2l $56.48 Chatecu1 L!tnCll·SOges.19711 f Psuillac) •••••••••• $12.75 ChaJ:eou !>1agd1daiiw, 1970 <St. Emillon I •• : ••••• $12.89 Chatmu flout·BailfN. l~ !Graves I •.••••••••.• Sl3.95 ChWeau Palmer, 1970 (Margaux I •.•..••.•••.•. Sl4.3S Cha/mu Vieurcntan.111166 <Pomeroll •.•••••..• $14.87 ChcleovHaut·BaU/y. 1970 IGravesl •.•..•..•..• $19.85 Chateou Margaur. 1970 1~1argaux I •..••.....•• $19.97 Choteau Ducru·Beaucaillou, J9661St. Julien) •••• $19.98 Chaleou CherMll Blanc, 1970 <St. Emilionl ••.••.•• S29.95 Chale<W Mouto1t·Rolh.tchild. l970 f Paulltacl ••.• $39.85 $137.70 $139.21 $150.68 Sl~.98· Sll!0.59 S214.38 $215.llJ $215.78 $323.46 S430.38 Clialeo u l.lvtoraan1 1970 1Saln4.·Sauveur> ••••... _ $."i.6'.1 S00.80 -. Cbazeau A1111/11det, 1970 ICantcnac) ........ ~··-SS.8.'l 562.96 Chateau L.o11ra11ge.1!J70 (St. JulicnJ ~ •••••••••• ; •• $6.65 $71.8:2 Chtlleou Salnt·Brlce, 1970 IMedocl ••• : •• , , , •••• SG.9ft S7S.38 Chaltau CanttllOC·Brown. ·1910 lto.largaux) •••••• $6.99 S7S.49 Chalmv La P.oinlt, 19i0 IPomerol) •.•••••••••• $7.47 $80.68 ChateGu Vif11r Ccuitenoc. 1910 <St. •~mllion ) • , • , S7 .49 580.89 Chateou Pooft! de Lun . 1970 !St. Jullcn) •••••••• $7.67 $82.&c ChoteGu La Croiz.<U.Cay . mo IPomeroll ••••• , S7.85 $84.78: Olateou FOtiq11d, 1970 <St. Emilion> ...•••••••• , $7 Jl9 SM.21 Choltau Gruaud-l.orose, mo (Sl. Jullen J ..•••••• S7.!!I S85.21 Qioleou !tfalexOC.Scinl·Enq>tTV. IJiO 1&1:irrau11 $7 .99 Chotto11 Mollm'tf, mo lLudon 1 •••••••••• _ •••••.• $7.99 Omlt011Ca"°",1170 tSt. Emilion I ....••... 1 ••• , $7.99 .chaJco11 &011njowr, 1970 ISL EmiUon) -••..••••• $7 .99 ChcleouC1•aoc. 1'10 ICiS&ac) ...... · .. • ..... -· ••••. $7.99 OiottnuCllran, 1970 IHaut·l\tedocl •......•.....• S8.M C11<r1ea11 Grolld·Aly·LacoSle. lt70 f Pauillac) ..•.•. $8.93 ChoJtoM BeychefJf!lr . 1910 ~Sl. Julien ). ... -....•.. S9.4U CMltt1u I.a Logunr. 1910 lbudonl .•.........••.•. $9.67 Cho/tall Ltc:wi/lr-l.a1.Ca1N. 1910 ISL Julien ) .• , ••• SS.SR CJ:laltov Confmvle. 1966 I Macau I ..•.....•.. , SII.97 Ch1111a11 CaJtrl1rrr, J97fJ ISL. Emlllon) •..... , ••• SI I !JR • ' ' • • 588.29 $86 ... ...... $86.2' ...... """' $96.44 $1C)2.49 $104.44 1107.11 $129.28 Sl29.:IJ . RED BORDEAUX IN MAGNUMS A magnum bolds two battles, tnd Is ino«l tmprust\le as it 1 grace11 your party \ables, lending an air or opulence and lostl..Jty. i\fagnum Caar ol' Chottau C011:tt7IGC·Bcmam. mo ..........•.. -· ..... Sl~97 186.2-1 Chol row GJ'Ond·Puy·LbcoSI,. mo .... 1 ••••••••••••• $18.95 SHl2.33 Cha.lroai La r..agw11e. 19i0 .......................... Sl9.4S SIOS.02 OlolfC1U 8fycltf:vc/k. 1916 ................. ·-·: ••• 119.50 ,$105.29 Cho/fUU La Pahltt, 1910 •• : .....................•••• $19.M S106.20 a.aJCGll Co...d£11owntcl, 1'10 .•••.••.•. , .••. , •..•. , SZl.49 -SI 16.0S awrteou Morgaia:, 1970 .•• , • , ••.•.•..••.•.••••••••. $42.50 1229.50 aiateow Haut·BtlMI. Jfi O,, .••••.••••••.•••••••••.• '45.00 $243.00 Chr&lcou Chft!Bl BJanc, 1910 •••••................... SQ:.95 ~39.93 o.a.tfCUIPrrrw.Jt70 •••••• ; .............. -•••••• $87.110 '412.MI G'hl)tl(UI La/llr·Rothlchild, 1110 •.......... , •• , ..... $89.95 $485.73 I i ' I • Friday , Oclober 18, 1914 OAILV PILOT ' . •• THE FAMILY CIRCUS Both Drop Dead -By Bil Keane ·1 2 lndia11s Arrested h1 Murder Mystery Dis_ease Claims Sisters ::N ' PHOENIX (UPI) -Two ln· dians were arrested b e r e ThursdaY, on charges of sta~ bing to death a cab driver i n California, where authorities denied a r e p o r t thet the driver had b e e n scalped. Police look into c u 11 t o d y Paul Blue Cloud Durant, 29, an d Richard Thunder Alohawk," 25, on charges -Of ( ' State J .......... ~ .. --t-1.-.- 'ORTllRIDGE ( U P I l - Two ststeri. 18 and 20, dNll>- pcd dead in college physical education classes within 1 O days of each other, apparently the victims of a mysterious disease which aged t h e i r hearts prematurely. Vicki Ann Penfold. 20. col· lapsed and died'T h u rs day· while running up and down stairs in a warmup exercise at Ca! State Northridge. On Oct. 7, her sister Janet, 18, ft'll dead \\'hile jogging al cat· Poly San Luis-Oblspo. Dr. Karl K i rsc hne r , a pathologist ""'ho performed !he "Would you undo this orange, Mommy?" killing · the taxi driver Oct. -------------------- 10 at an Indian camp in Box WHALE BITE WORTH CASH Canyon, in Ventura County. The driver, George Aird, 27. of Inglewood, was robbed and stabbed to death when he ar- rived to pick up a fare. In Ventura, i>tstrJct At· tom'ey C. Stanley Trom said a report by a sheriff's detec- tive that Aird had b e e n scalped \Vas "erroneous." Jn an affidavit filed in 1'-1unicipal Co ur t \Vednesday. Octf'Ctive Braden fl.1cKinley said th at after Aird was slabbed t o death, those of the c a m p celebrated by "chanting and kicking the victim and passing b..is hai r around." Liz Taylor's Beau Faces Arrraignnien t SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Superior Court j u r y has awarded $75 ,000 in com· pensatory d a ma ges to a former woman employe o ( Sea \Vorld for leg injuries suf· fered when she was bitten ·by Shamu. the killer whale. LOS ANGELES (UPI! - Elizabeth Taylor's I a t e a t boyfriend was scheduled for arraignment today on C o u r counts of grand theft, t h e District A~torney's Office said Thursday. said. The verdict Thursday was \Vynberg, a former bellhop in favor of Annette Godsey. in his native Amsterdam, \\'as the former Ann E. Eckis, of introduced by Peter Lawford San Diego. y,·ho \\'orked at to Miss Taylor in June, 1973. the aquatic park as a as her marriage to Richard 1 B he rt secre ary. urtoo. gan to come ap..1 . Mrs. Godsey was bitten by He soon became her con-the whale April 19, 1971 , when slant companion, in California she rode Sbamu three times and Europe, even before ~1iss in a show t8nk during a film Taylor and Burton we r e and picture taking session for autopsy on Janel. said her heart tissue "looked like that of a little old man that bad been exposed to an awful lot of stress over the years." Kirschner, who had j u s t completed the autopsy, said Thursday he wllS not 8Urprised to hear that her sister had died a similar death. They' v.•ere the only children of Ted and Gertrude Penfold of Norlhridge. The p a r e n t s said they had no hb.1ory of heart disease. K ~hner said Ja~t died or '1obstructive carJion·yo- palhy." describing it as "n very. very mysterious rtiseasl'! ... that occurs perhtlps once in a million, or 11) nlillion cases·'' "It seems that this i s something genetic. A running out of time no matter where people are or what they 're doing," be sa.id. "It is n ' t unusual for people In the same family y,·ith the disease to die at nearly the same tlmt, no matter where they are or what they're. doing.'' The Los Angeles C o u n t y Coroner's O(flce schedulec:t an autopsy today to cleleml.ine the cause of Vicki A n n · s death. . Kirschner said he y,·as '"sure her heart y,·as just as in\'ol\'ed \by the disease) as the heart of her sis1er." ~fedical checkups had tum· ed up no nxtication of the ORIENTAL RUGS at ASIAN ENTERPRISE in Design Plaza • 250 Bldg., 2nd Floor OQnatd F McDermott Jr .. owner TELEPHONE 644.a88 I FASHIOH ISLAHD • H~W'PORT . ~ dic;:e a!K', the girls' parents said. nnd both led normal, active lives . J an et \•:as athletic. orten s~11nmin(} mile a day, and recently co pleted a long bac~packina: tri . WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY CA LllOi NI A'S lA-'GlST LAW SC HOOj ~ . ., . OFFERS A ·NEW ·PROGRAM ' OF SPRING-ENTERING . FULL · TIME LAW STUDY (Wllh 1 '/1· O#t4 :S·ytM t1r.-V,il1" .,iti...11 • A CHOICf 00I fOUlt f-'OGltNifS Of LAW STVOY IS Ar AILAtlf: ~ • IH flTHl-' l'/, or J YtMS of llJU,T/Mf low it.,Jy (fS.f6 clonroom ~OVl'l ti~"'"'). OI e IH t/Tl'lt• )'/, 01 .f YlA•S ol fMT-TIMf doy, e•e~in9, o< "'"el1~d 1~ .. ,,.,.,., (J d o,.e1 re• "'""'· J . .f /lour1 flt' cl!l'!I), .. e Yo can ecM your JURI~ DOCTOR (J.D.J d•9rt11 el!d b.;ome efj9,bl1 lo lole l~t Colifon1io 8111 l oomtroot.oro. Wllfl 01 ,HON( JOI CAfAlOGUf 800 South Brookhurst An11heim1 C•. 92804 (71 4) 635-3453 APPLY NOW FOR DAY, EVENING, OR WEEKEND CLASSES BEGINNING fEIRUARY 3, 1975 PIOVISIONAU.T ACCllDITIO 11' TMI COMMITTlt Of tAI llAMINflS Of TMf SlAfl IAI Of CAUPOINIA e FBI N•lu Taro LOS ANGELES (UPI) The FBI captured two fugitives in Long Beach, Thursday night \\'anted for lhek Id nap-ex- tortion of a Ypsilanti , Mich .. bank manager and his family last week. Henry 0. Wynberg. 4£1. has been charged with rolling back the odometers of four autos he sold when he was a used car salesman in Norwalk in 1972. divorced. \Vhen the actress recor.ciledil-'p'.:u'.'.'.bl:ici:'.·1'.'.'.Y_IP'.:ur'..'po::ses:·:.__ __ --'...:::=:::::::::::::::::::::===========~:.__ __________________ _ Special Agen t William A . Sullivan said Luther Leath. 24, and Timothy Thomas. 25, Since the cars y,•ere sold for more than '20, the alleged offense is grand theft, a district attorney's spokesman with Burton . Wyn her)( ap- peared to be out of the pie· ture. But when the Burtons divorced ea rlier this year. the Taylor·Wynberg romance resumed . Many have predicted he would become her si"'h husband. -a1.s0 known as Lionel Fisher, \Vt:re arrested w i t h o u t in· cident. The ty,·o men were charged Oct. Hi in DetToit, a lon g w i th three other suspects still at large. Judge Lifts News Bqn On lnrnates STOCKTON ,(UPI) -San Joaquin County Superior Court Salesman Awarded t ' ' . e Budget Okayed SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The finance committee of the University Of C al I f o r n i 'a regents, in a move tantamount to acceptance by the r u I' I board. has approved a record operating budget of ' S 8 9 . 2 million for 1975-76. The budget approved Thurs-- day is 14..9 percent above the current years. U.C. Vice PTesident ChesteT 0 . l\-tcCorkle said nearly t w o • thirds of !ht-incresse was cau!ed by innalion and a pro- jected rise in enrollment. Judge William Woodward has A_ Jimony rescinded an order that ban- ned 10 newspapers fr o m STOCKTON {AP) _ A k>cal publishing the names of in-saJesman has been awarded mate witnesses who testify at $200 a mootb t e m po r a r y a murder trial. alimooy from his wile of 35 However. Woodward said years along with we o( ooe another method would be used of her two Cadillacs. to protect the men's identity Superior Court Judge -allowing theni to use fie-Norman C. $ullivan s a ~ d tltious names on the sta11d. "'J'hursday that he b e I i e v ed The judge said this was lo Joseph Raffia!, 58, is the first protect three inmates testi· husband lo receive such fying at the murder trial of al.imony in San Joaquin Coon· two Deuel VOca'tional Institute t y. prlsoners accused of killing guard Jerry Saunders. THE AWARD is temporary Robert P. Uecker, publisher pending· dissolution of l he of the Stockton record, said, marriage. "lhe judge should be ~m· Raffial's attorneys con-• Body Fou11d plimentecf for finding another tended he is unemployed, v.·ay of protecting t h es e while court documents showed POWAY (AP) -Sheriff's witnesses without violating the his wile Sadie, 57, owns a and coroners's office officials first amendment." downtown furniture store. are attempting to identify thel~~~~;;_;~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~il bodv of a woman discove red sprawled in a secluded area near Highy,·ay 67 on Thursday. Sheriff's officials said the woman was between 20 and 30 years of age. The body was nude, except for h i g h shoes ·and orange-red k n e e MINOLTA SR-T 102 . socks. •-.. ~ti_, e Bus l'ote Toclay LOS ANGELES IUPI) - The Rapid Tr a n si t District board of directors votes today on a e-0ntract with bus drivers,. closing the only gap remaining in officially ending the 68-day• old bus strike. MINOLTA SR-T 102 List S450 The board orlglnallv was scheduled to vote on the con· tract Thursday, but balloting was delayed for rear o f violating the state I 8 w re- quiring 24-hour official notice be given before a p u b I i c meeting. But even without the final okay by the board , which is expected to approve the pact, mechanics and b u s drivers continued to be called back to work to prepare buses for service beglnnlng SatUr- day. 'w'"' fl.4 u.. & c ... NOW s315 HUNTINGTON PHOTO SUPPLY 11519 M• St. H.1.-847·'41 I or 142·9589 5 Poinf ShOpping Center J YOU ARE INVITED to a HAMMOND HAPPENING .Famous Ramona Cerhard wiU entertain you with a program on the fabulous HAMMOND CONCORDE-ORGAN. She is a musician par-e:xcellenl in all realms from classical to jazz.. MONDAY, Od. ZI ol 7:JO P.M • • IF y0u havi n't heard her berore, she is. a must and if you have heard her, you will eojoY bcarint her again. Come one Olld cl ond .;oy Jt. f1A Relr.~ .. 2154 IE. C-tt..y. • c-. cit! IQr • 644·Hl0 HAMMOND ORGAN STUDIOS of Ora119e Coast CORONA del MAR STORE ONLY • I .. .. ' Antique Auction. • • . .. at South Coast Plaza this Sunday October 20a~10 a.m. in the Jewel Court. It's all part of Old Fashion Days Week . All antiques to be auctioned Sunday are on display now. Come see. • . . ' , 5outh· Coast '1aza. . . BRISTOi. AT SAN DIEGO FllEEWAY, COSTA llfSA • ' M . I . ·BMLY PILOT EDl'rORIAL PAGE " ' Wasting Council Titne Huiitirigtbn 'Bea ch muyor Al toe'n made a futile atte mpt last week to e;tablish a policy against city • council resolutions regarding state and nationiil issues. unless those issues ha \'C a direct, substantial effect on the local city. He lost that effort \vhen other m e mbers of the «>uncil, li?d by Harriett Wieder. overruled him and opened up debate on a baUot provosition concerning .the Stanislau s-River in north e rn Ca liforni3.· · Ironically, that debate proved how right the m ayor . was. Jt lasted nearly an hour and nothing was accomplished. Mrs. Wieder finished the wasted effort bY, movipg that the council abstain from taking a · ~~cause the issue was too confusing. ·. • ~ .·QJotion .won , 3-1, but t\\'O council members abstained from even voting on that. Too often members of the council spend city time on slate and national issues \vhich may have a strong emotional impact, but are not of substantial interest to city bus iness. And often. the city doesn't possess sufficient information to muke an intelligent decision. anyway. We think Coen is righ~. ·-unnecessary Confusion ' > Fount ain Valley cit y offi cials a nd the local Jaycees could easily have avoided an embarrassing confrontation las t week over the Red Ball fire safety program. _. -• . ·. . .. It \Ya sn't urltt13.rter the J aycees announced the program through a press release approved by City l\1ana'ger James "Neal that fire and police · reservations about the project became known. They s aid firemen \vouldn't waste tjme looking for stickers that may not b~ on windows, and a b~Ja~ a:r v.andal could use the stickers to help plan a cri'rffif:· ·-· The city cou ld have avoided the \Yhole incident iJ Neal had first discussed Ute program carefully with fire and police Qfficials and if everyone involved"' hadn't felt reluctant to turn down.a Jayceeidea .. The Jaycees say they may. drop the program now. They'd be wise to do so. Explanation Needed The recent controversy over n'lllk corrtraCts in lhe . lluntington Beach Union High School District too~·an unexpected turn last week \Vhen food service dealer Jay l\.1astroianni asked the OOard to drop his request ror a share of the district's business until the squabble is settled. lie a pparently \Vas rcrerring to a letter sent to th e school board by George Logan, a trustee \vho re~igned a month ago after months or feuding \\•ith fellow tru s tees over, a mong other things, !\1astroianni 's food catering contracts in the district . Jn his letter, Logan accused trustees of bending rules to accommodate P..1astroianni, and he said it's time people found out why. But a ng ry, trustees s8y they aren't bending rules. they don't care \vho gets the business. and so far they don't-understand Logan's point. . . .. ~. . . -· • ) l"\AoU ... ~·- Jaycees 'vantcd •to canv~· neighbor-hoods, putting red stickers on WindQWS where children. elderly or handicapped sleep. ·They thought city officials agreed with them that the program would be.Ip r escue personnel give assistance where most needed in an emergency. . ~ We don't know if his claims are justified or not, · ,, but if Logan ·makes accusations, he is obliged to explain them !ully . H " IT IS MORE S,LESSEI> TO VAY Off THAN TO SE PAID OFF.' _ "Jlicent~nnial Slogans 1Reflect American Faith WASH INGTON -We have been 'ltearing about America from jts people. We asked, you may rcmem· her, for a Bicentennial slogan. The response was spontdncous; tens of ,thousands of citizens from all walks of life have sent us slogans, phrases an d po e tr y ,.expressing ho\\' they feel about their country. litan y h a\·e r writl cn accomp a n yi n g lett e r s or , testim on ,ia~. To 1 r ead th e m 1s t o understan·d tha t •}he \Vatergate horrors. cconomiC 'uncertainties a nd other affli ctions I have not shuken the Ameri can faith. 1 and poetry expressing how they feel about their country. Many have wri tten accompanying letters of testimonial. To read them is to understand that the Watergate hor· rors, economic un certainties and other afflictions have not shaken the American faith. S01'1E with a lifetime behind them have written about the turmoil they have seen. Youths lookjng ahead hav(' written about the .thallenge of events. \Ye have heard from aliens about the dreams which brought them to this land. Even a few convicts have responded, with a special poignancy. , about the m eaning of freedom. ' Some bave applauded President Ford's attempt lo return to the \Vhite House a huma nity and openness more becom in~ a free republie. Others have taken issue u•ith the President ~ over his decision to p<irdon Ri chard Nixon and th us suffocat(' the legal ~process to its crib. They reject the idea that the country would be better served by amnes ia than by truth. WE RECEIVED one slogan from an authentic American pioneer, 98-year- ,Jd Jesse L. lla ll. whov1as born in the centennial y1:ar of 1876. }le has spent his long lift'" pus hin ~ u·cstward". lie li\'ed through the hli zzard or 1881 in a ho me m ade mus lin tent on the ~Nebraska prairie. Jn~\Vyomin J!, he \\'as elected to Thr state legislature. Now he a hides in Reno, Nt•v. f"!(' summed up his \'i<'w or Amcric:l in a simple, lhrc'l'·\\'Ord slogan: ··The Rt"public Stand~.·· Prom <'l'll C·R 111 lht• l-1orida stale 'pcnitcntir.ry. llaifnrd. Fla .. \Vi\li r Young \\•rotc · ··N1•cd I "i ay. my l1h: ·h as been a miserable rn~id lo tr:ivcl. After years of \v:J lkin.c it ;done, I discove re d '1 fll" mus t beli e ve in .. ~mething.·· He put his scnlimcnts into lhesc ,,words: "A Country not made by I-land ,but by the Grace nf (iod and the \Viii of Uao." TRE·R.E \YERf; other poetic ~ponses. ··w e may stumble but never fall ; Down through the years. "-"e !till stand tall."' wrote Raymond Richardson from Chicago. A Boa lsburg, Pa .. tcnchcr."Ru1 h 11. Carter, (ell ··an extreme nct!d for thr children to know their rountry 's heritage." She su~l!C!ilcd thi11 ~logan : ·'So Ole Children Will Knov; ... In Toledo. Oh io. the second and third gradl' stud('nts at l~l ncolnshlre School compo11~d A ~logan logcU1cr : -1 work ror De mocru('y because it •-ork!ll fQr me ... MA.NY OT11£R children sent in 1\c)gans. For ln5ta nce. a 12.yc.;1r-old Foresl lleights, ft.td., ~lrl, tttary F.Jit.abeth lfc nry , proposed : ~.,_m_eriea. a liomesttadcd Heitrt."' ~nd 14·year·old Penny Chandler ·or 'Prtsno· C1Ur., sent in this one; "Tu·o -. . . . .. JACK ANDERSON Hundred Steps -and A1oreto Come." Teenagers, too, responded by the hundreds. From Annapolis , Md., 18· year-old J a mes P . Gough told or hi.o; frustration over "recent acts by men in high places." Yet he could still of· fer tu·o heartfelt slogans: ··America. a Theme that is Timeless" a nd .. America. Something Warm that TouChcd' mv fiearl ... A 19· YEAR·OLD, Johnny Carter of Long Beach, Calif., suggested this sign be posted across Ame rica: .. Conq ue rors and Corruptors Beware. This Nation is the Property of the People." And a \Vilmington. N.C .. high school student, Stewart Moshe, sub· milted this slogana,_"Therc·s No Way like the American way.'· From John LauMa of Jacksonville, F1a., we received a simple, sincere motto: "Am erica, Where People Arc Happy." He added meaningfully: •·1 should know. I came here in 1903." llERE ARE a fcv.• other offerings s e le cted at random from our mailbag: F1orence A. Tracy Hcvclle. Ard· more. Okla. -··Pride in our past : }o'aith i n our future : Forwa rd ·,\mcrica." Lionel Wernick . Neu· York Cily "America: The Promise Kept and now Rene"•ed. ·· George Kell y. Philadelphia. Pa . "l·lere Lives a Free People. 1776· 197q.'· Joseph P. ~tcGoldrirk , Jackson llcights, N.Y. -··1n America, there arc no impossible dreams.'' . John Klunck, Sheboygan. Wi s. - "If we can't get to Heaven we'll settle for America." • Jim Felton. Little Rock, Ark. - "Am erica is coming of Age.'' \Villiam Eric Rohrs, Tacoma. \\lash. -"Now , Let's Put It All Together.·· Adelin(' Feinberg. Belmont, l\1 ass. -"Appreciate our Differences." Louis Ginsberg. Paterson,. N .I. "'T:lkc no liberti es with liberty.·• .. .I.I\. Smith. Salt Lake City. Utah "Freedom : 1776. 1976 }o~orevcr." F:\,clyn Conl ey, Pitlsburgh, Pa . "l1S1\: Unda unted Stands Amerira ·· i\lean"A•hilc, our search fci r a Biccn· tennial sloga n continues. Please send for vour su ~gc!i.ti'ons to Sloga ns. r 10 .lark Ande rso n, 1401 J6th Strc<'t . N \V., WashinAton. D C.200.16. 'If only you 'd been draft dodgers!' • Dear Gloomy Gus c H(lweum newspaper women's ·P~iges are1·now called ''People" or "View '" or ''TOOay" but still are·all about women, written by women rorthe most part? J.B.L. Morality Needs New Vocabulary (SYDNEY HARRIS ) Thoughts at Large : Obviously. the language needs a nC\\' "'Otd for yo ung couples u·ho arc living logeth C'r more or less per· 1nanently. hut are not m;1rried. Any :.uggcstions? t Rememlier, Gelett Burgess in\'Cnte d the mar\'elous \\Orel . ··blurb."' only a few decades :1go. \\'hich filled a genuine need.) 1'hc on ly effective punishment for ;:in e\'il·doer is remorse: and if he or she cannot be made to feel remorse, any punis hm ent becomes self· defeatin g through turning the evil· doer into a more resenlful Creature than before. Kindly keep in mind that "media'' is a plural \\'Otd. and thert is no such . thing as "med ias.·• 1 \\'hat the \\•orld in the past has always called a "great" man \\'~1s n1c::isurcd by the number of people \\·ho reared him : what the present t1nd fu ture must learn lo call a great man ~hould be measured by the number of p1•ople hl' fret!S ftom fear. 11 is hard to believe, but Lruc, th<it I here i~ no such thing as a ··rainbow·· if thcrC' is no one there 10 see it: a r:1in· t>0\v docs nol esist in it selr. buL onl y lhrough human eyes. --Television won't come or age until it :tequires al le;;ist one tommcnlator v;ho is as incisive, as well -inCormed, and as even-handed as the late lamen· led Elm er Davis was on r~dio. <llun· tley and Brinkley were to Davis as Alantovani is to Mozart.). i\tost Polltica1 s pet<'hcS remind me of Churl'hill ':i; comment about Stanley Bald\\•ln, \vhen Baldwin \Vas Prime l\linister: ··Stanley occasionally stumbles over the truth, but he aJy,·ays h a~tily fM <'kS himscl( up and hu rries on as if nothing had hoppencd.1 ' --- If J y,•ere the hc&dotan}' company. t \\·ould 5ummarily fire the fi rst subor· dinntc who en lied me "Chief." --·- Pei>plc wtlo clomor to be "free·• <whic h usuollY. means rid or lht:ir tJhliRulions), rorget Cioethe's war~ ning: "Every,hing that freff our s pirit wilbeiul l(ivln.( us-C6ntrol of our- ~lvc!!l l:S ruinous.•• Reflectio11 of Anti·;lnaericanism Greeks Pull Out of NATO \V 1\SlllNGTON -The Greek gov· ernmenl has qui etly u•ithdrawn some· or its top militury officers from North Atlantic Treaty I NATO) headquar- ters in Brussels. one more indication. of how seriously the Ca ramanlis government views anti·America n sen t i m e nt now sweeping Greece . Faeing the first parliam e n ta r y election on Nov. 17 s ince the military coup d'etat of 1967, the new civili an gov~rnm e nt of Pr ime lt1inis t e r Caramanlis is torn between connicting political realities. The m e rest rragment or public display of pro-American sentiment could boomerang, giving the Greek lert a da ngerous opening that Andreas Papaodreou wou ld be quick to exploit. Caramanlis dealt with this hard politica! fact by pulling Greece out or the military organization of NATO. Now he has followed up by with· drawing some or the 400-odd Greek of· ficers from their regular military bil· lcL'i in Brussels. Naples and other NATO commands. BUT T ll •~ domestic po litica l demands for anli·U.S. act.ions raise the gravest future problems for Greece. Friendship "'ith .the West. and particularly the tr.S .. is ab· solutcly essential for Greece in the long run , as a g lance at the map proves. Greece is bordered· by three Communist slates lo the north and by muscJc.flcxing Turkey on the east. Ca ramanlis and hi s foreig n minister. the a stute George l\·lavros, along \Vith most other leading Greek politicians of the center and right, full y .unde rs tand that fa ct But despite strong pressure from the U.S .• they ( EVANS-NOVAK ) .arc unable to impede the move toward what looks like a form or dangerous neutra lily for fear that the anti ·Ame ric a n c urrents n ow sweeping Greece would pull them un· der. Accordingly, rational diplomacy dictated by long-term Greek security needs has been inundated by short· term domesti c politics . The ioun· dation for this was built by \Vashing· ton's Jong love affair u;ilh the hated milita ry di rtators hip. 1\ CASE in po'lnt \\'as the absolute· ly futile effort by Secretary of Stule l!enry Kissinger last week to enlist s ub rosa Greek s upport against the then·pending congressional ban on U.S. military assistance to Turkey. Co nferr ing al his own request at the l'laza 1-fotel in A1a nhattan last week with Mavros. Kissinger explained that the effect of. a congressionally· imposed Turkish aid ban was predic· table : it would m ake the Turks dig in their heels against U.S. mediation ef· forts to remove Turkish troops from Cyprus and return part of Turkey's Cyprus conquest to Greek Cypriots. T hus . it was in the self-interest or Athens to keep the U.S. on ~ood terms \vi th Turkey. l\ta,•ros was stunnetl. 0 'Thal." he told Kissinger, ··is not something for a Greck todo.'' i. INDEED, f-..ir from discouraging Greek sympathizers in the U.S. Congress from voting against"the ban on a id to Turkey, top Greek diplomaL'i in the U.S. encouraged it. One active promoter of the aid ban was the con· sul·genercil in the innuential Greek consulate in ·S.an Francisco, who quietly spread the word to friendly Congressmen: stop American aid to Turkey, no matter what the Impact on Cyprus. In short, the political imperatives in Athens on the eve or the parliamen· tary election far outweigh the loa1· range necessity or gradually restoring the Athens·\Vashington link.· No Greek leader caught secretly lob· byin g Congress tO vote against lhe rrurkisb aid·ban could be elected sewer inspector in a provincial Greek village. The unannouTlced decision lo with· draw top Greek military tnen from NATO headquarters is simply the newest signal . l!aving heard American pledges for over two mon· ths that Turkey would be glad to give up sonic or its Cyprus conquest once talks s tarted (ple dges wholly unredeemed), the Greek government continues to advertise itself as anti· American. THERE IS no hope that this will change between now and the mid· November election, and little expec- tation that it could change soon thereatler. Likewise, the hostility tor Turkey so vivil;lly expressed in Congress over the aid·ban threat~ns political retaliation against WaSh1ni· ton there, too. \Vitb an outstanding IOU debt to Russia for its acquiescence in the in· \'asion of Cyprus lasL July, Turkey may find it harder than before to deny any Soviet r equest for overflight privileges in a future Middle Eastern \\'ar, particularly with the µ.s. Congress so virulently anti· Turkey. As these c§Prus chickens come home to roost , the once-mighty U.S. ls an impatent bystander. Economy S!uJkes Insurance Firms Despite the image ur a rock which insurance co m1~anies hav~ used over the years lo in1prcss upQn the public n1incl the sec urity to be ga ined by being indcmnifil'd through the ir IX>licics. thl' cconorni c troubles being cxpcricncl'd 111 !ht' nation m:iv bt• thrc:itc nini.: l'\\•u · l h c in s u1·;:i 111·1· buh\·arks Al l1·ast. St..1 11· I n s u r .1 11 1· l' Co n1n1i s~i ont·r GICl'Son I.. l'a) nt• h:i s iss u~·d Soll'l' j!1111rdcd \\'arning.<i to the r ffcl'l th al ins urant(' can no longer h1! blindly :l t l'tlµtcd <is ~1n ubsoh1lc surr ly. \Vhile P:iync's th£'sis is not Cf'nlcrcd nn ri sing <·osls aud lullatlon as much as the s agging stock market, the 'vhole thrust or hl!ii caufions is' based upon the prevailing dircclfon or the cronomlc \Vln<ts • As Payne indi,·:itt•s, inSurnncc com · p:1nic!'I nre hcnvy investors in sl oe.ks and bo nds <t lo n g wit h ot her speru l ations. \\'hil(' the y arc 1·eguli1lcd by the gnv<"rnmcnl and son1e types or pofi cics li ke some type:r of bank S:l \'lngs urc "iru3urL•<r' by the po\·rrnn1rnt. lhc prot('C!lons arc not ~cared lo the rull potenti a ls or· u di!'1<&$1 rous dc.pr(':<slon. /\l~Tll Oll G fl insurarlCC co1np11 niC!i ha ve a ftduci11ry rclalionshi p u•lth their investors a~ dn the bunk~. lhere urc significant-dirrercncei!. Banking laws presctribe thC' ,~rccnlt1 ~es of -total n~~~" which m11Y Ile-hlvc~led 'ln uny one a1·c••· Thi&:; 11 bank 1nuy only ( EARL WATERS ) loan so much of il s capitul on homes nr rcul estate in general. Other types of loan." <ire also lin1it.cd ll!i to their percentages or the total. It may onl y invest a spcc1t1cc<.1 perce?nl agc of the \\'holl' in bonds or ;.iny othcr"ficld <lf st·rurilit•s . Insurance con1 p:1nic•:.. {'\'Cn though r"11ui red to n1 a intuin a slipuluted per· l.'l'lltagc of totnl liabilities in li quid reserves, m~1 y otherwise plunge the entire rc n1aindcr on the stock ma1·kct nr any other (ield . l'uync has riot chargccJ that this h a~ been done by ;1 ny c:omp:1ny. To the contrury many arc heavily invested in long term land ownerships a nd other real estate o r the types al,vuys eonsidered 1n osl sound, especially in the long rtingc view. STILL, to the cxlen\ lhut the com- p.uni /Ii have in\•Csted on the stock market he has \\'11rnefl lh:i t further dips in storks could well jL-'Opurdir.e the Mlidlty nf Jt;nme companies. lie h.'l/li suggested lhnt there 11 rc cotn· panics which 5hou1d be r~cducln.cc their i-tock murkcts portfolios by 15 lo 20 percent. Payne Jii:1yJ1i that th cnmpanic!i ht the i.:re:Jtcst danucr arc not the Ute ln- l'iUrcr.J Oil' n111ch us the c:.isua lt,y com· 11nnic!i. The l:.ittcr w11to fire. auto 11 nd uther types or lo11s in:iurunc /\. tn1i:-in11urunce executive herore he a«um~d lh c .tatc's Jobolpoliclng tho • insurance industry, Payne has been most attenti ve to the protection or the public and has worked to secure new measures to strengthen the insurance companies. · llE POINTS to the £act that lhe stat<' has brought about the establis h· mcnt of a guarauty fund to protect the insured ;.i gains l casualty company failu res. This is a pool made up of con• lributions from <.1 11 casualty com· panics to provide against the failure or any one or them . ORANGE p)AST DAILY PILOT Raberl N. Wted,,,,.l>UI,,.,. Thomai Keevil. EdUor Barbero KMbitlt.- EdUorial POOi Edit« · The editorial page ot the Dally Pilot seeks to inrorm and stimulate readers by presenting on lhlt PICe di,·e~e commentary on lopics o( In- terest b)' syndicated cotwnnlita ind cartoonistt. b)' provldin& a forum for reader$· \llew!l .and h)' prc~lln1 thl! ne"ll'!Papler 'a opi nions and ldt11 on current topics. The edltor1al oSllnlons or the Dall)' Pilot •P9'1r only In the cdllorlal column at the lop of the page. Opinions ex:pre:Ued by the columnists and cartoonists t nd lttttr writer11 are thei r own i nd nocndonement or their views b)' the. Dtil,)'_.eilol 1hould be larNrod. Fri uy, October 18. 1974 ' -t: • , I I I ' , ---• - • -l -• Toda)''S F inal N.Y. St ocks vo i:. 67, NO. 291,. 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE <;OUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, OCTOB ER 18, 1974 N TEN CENTS Newp(lrt~ Residents Battle Oil Flo.., --• I ~ ................ ' ' HOW WOULD YOU LIKE THIS IN YOUR 'NEIGHBORHOOO? WOif ...................... Comiil•ln Ailavt H•urd, Smoll Newport Planne1·s Delete -. 'General Plan Parking Lot The welcome mat £or out-of· town beachgoers was given a. slight yank Thursday night when the Newport Beach PlaMing Commlsskln sniped 'at a p~ posed 2,QOO.ear parking lot on West Coast Highway. The sniping came when t h e com- missioners voted unanimously to reoom- mend to City Council that the city's general plan be amended to d e 1 e t e specific reference to ,the proposed park- h'lg lot. But it wasn"t the otrt-or-towners the planners were after as much as it was the prospect of unreasonably high beach density. "In reality, when we fill our to~ with beachgoers and 'then plan for over- flow, we're aaturating our beaches," said Commissioner Don Beckley. "I call that dangemus and hazardous planrilng," Beckley added·. , With Beckley's support, it was Com- missioner William Agee who Jed the ooe-sided fight to recommend deletion of specllic i'eference _to the proposed parpng lot on the highway's north boun- dary. · Agee attacked the state for expecting the clly lo pay !or and provide beach facilities willlout "being willing to share the cost." '1t's what you could call a ckluble standard," said Agee, who also cited homeowner' objections to the parking proposal on surplus state land. The residenls' objecllOOI to the parking ' plan were exp~ by Suianne Rudd, president of the West Newport. Beach lmprovem.ent Assoc\atlon. "We've struggled for many years to upgrade the area am!. do oot look forward to it becoming a. giant parking lot," said.Mrs. Rudd. She was jolned in the argwn~nt by another West Newport Beach resident, · Margot Skilling, who called on "the Newport Beach Planning Commission to represent Newport Beach and n o t ruverside or San Bernardino." Mrs. Skilling chided' the parking plan (See PAllKING, Page AZ) '~~~~~~~~~~ PRI.HE CUT SPURS .. . S TOCK ADVANCES ?fEW YORK (UPI) -Investors, ~n­ couraged by a cut in the prbne rale, today pushed prices higher in moderate trading on the New York Stock Ex- change. The Dow Jones industrial average, which 'gained 9.lS points Thursday, 'was ahead 3.44 more points to 654.88, It bad been up around 11 points. The blue<hlp indicator Jost 31.21 points early in the week due to profit taking after its recent rally. Advances led declines, 937 lo 4 t 0 , among the 1,719 issues traded . •. By GARV GRANVILLE Of the O.Hy l'lltt Stiff Nev.-port Beach's war with unwanted ol.I that ,eeeps to the ~ace Crom wells abandoned in the J92Qs continued today. Battle lines in the ~gbtly a n d · odorous fracas are now drawn on the southeast comer of 44tb Street a n d Balboa Boulevard. ·There, only a block from w h e r e another minl·gurgler 4estroyed a $40,IXlO home late lasl year, city and oit workers labor in the bottom of a U)·fOOt hole to cap an aged well . As the workers toil, residenls ol lbe area ljne the OPJQile side of the semi- barrlcaded boulevard, openly 1ismayed at the havoc in thei.r midst. The residents say they don't like '\be .noise made by the .pump that clean oil and water rrom the massive bole in the sidewalk opposite them . Nor are they pleased with the gaseous odors that drilt through the najghborhood since the pit v.·as dug lo reach the v.'eil 's head. All say they are dismayed with the WlSightliness or oil lined m a k e · s h i f t sumps burrowed in ti·o city-owned va· , cant lots now guarded by chain link "'rent·a-[ence." And some residents admit t h e y ' r e bothered by the spectre of a Newport Beach Fire Department pumper along with a band of firefighters standing at the alert ne arby. Plane Crash l(ills ··They \\'ouldn•t be here if lhere tSn't some danger_," Amy School ey or 131 43rd St. said Thursday as she nodded tow anls the firefi ghters. . Noise, odors, unsilditlille5S and possible danger aside, v.•bal has most re>idents admiued dismayed is a lflter t h e y received from the city Thursday . In a niitshell, what the letter from Public \Vorks Director Joe O e v I I n apologetically said \\'as that the 44th ISet OIL, Page A!) Fotlr Newport Beach Man on Fatal Long Beach Fligh.t By DOUGLAS FRl'l7.SCllE Of ... DalfY ~lllt lllff A Newport Beach resident was ooe o[ four men killed in Long Beach early today when an annual hunting trip was tr!'lgicaUy endtd in -a-plane crash minutes after takeoff. Robert. DeRobertis, 38, of Newport Beach, and three friends and business associates, Peter Tillson, 38, P h 111 i p Morgan, 45, and Chauncey Whippennan, 49, were killed in the 3:55 a.m. crash. University's Hitch Tells Resi g.l]i:ition .. SAN FRANClllCO (AP) -Cl>arles S. Hitch ~ his re.signatkm today u ,.-.t ol tbe Unlvenily o I Califomla, effecUve on ms 65tb birthday next Jlllle 30. Hitch made the surprise announcement before the UC.Board of Regents' regular montbJy meetin'g. He said that after serving as president ot the nine-campus university system for 7lii years, it . was time · to Bteij down. "Everyone who holds this position ac- cumulates barnacles that weigh h i n,, down," Hitch said. "I feel it is time for the University to s e e k new leadership." "I believe that I leave the university in better health than 1 found it," Hitch said. Hitch was inaugurated. at UCLA May 23, 196& as the University of California's 13th president. He succeeded Clark Kerr . who had been fired a year earlier after continued student troubles at t b e Berkeley campus. In his inaugural address. the former ' assistant seaetary or def~ in the Kennedy Administration proposed that univ.ersities and young people join for "what could be an unparalleled attack on the social lits ol our time." Hitch Wu noted for his battles for a strong university budget in the face of threatened cuts, controversial faculty reforms, efforts to u p gr ad e un- dergraduate education and support of campus ROTC. "It bas taken a hundred yellr!I to build the most distinguished p u b I i c wlivertity in the country, but it can be -yecl by indifferenee and neglect," Hitch said in one or his budget !igbts. 'lbe BoonvlUe, Mo., native created a stir when in 1970 he issued instructions some teachers said were unprecedented in lhe school's 102-year history. He said faculty supervisers should check the assignments of professors, k>ok over their examinations and study their lecture ootes. A fifth passenger. James E. Reynolds, 46, of Cerritos survived the crash, but was taken to Long Beach Hospital suf. fering internal and head injuries. DeRobertis, owner of Orcon, a plum- bing and kitchen contfactin-g firtn in Santa Ana, is survived by his wife. Bonnie and two children, employes at the firm said. The crash occurred when the twi n- engine Piper Aztec took off in dense fog from the Long Beach airport Shortly • aft er takeoff, !he craft clipped a 125 foot high natural gas storage t a n k , veered into a power line and crashed. The men were Oying to Las Vegas en route to Soulh Dakota for an annual hunting trip. They were d~ssed in heavy clothing and rifles and hunting gear was among the contents of the plane. Although the plane's tanks were three quarters full, there was no fire· or ex- plosion. ·shot ID Arm.~ -Ford Signs Bill on Housing WASllINGTON (UPI) -President Ford signed a bill today that will help finance .7.75 billion _JVorth of housing construction. Ford said lbe Pill will ~· the deeressed liouslng industrr "a shot in the arm... . •' ' - The bill is e~ to spur construction of 100,000 new hou~ across the country\ , · Und.er the legislation, the federal government will be empowered to buy conventional hOnie mortgages from savings and lo'an assocla· tioDB and other lending institutions and in this way can pump more home loan funds into the tight money market. A num ber of leaders in the housing industry and construction unions along with members of Congress were in the Cabinet room whe nFord.s1gned the bill. Ford said the bill will "materially help the housing industry in turning the corner." The industry has fallen into a deep slump.Jbe- cause fhe shortage of money ]Jfs brought home construction cfose to a standstill. / • 'Not 'Expanding' • Coast Unit Officials Contenwd WithProbe By FREDER ICK SCHOEMEHL Of 1119 Daill~ Pllol Sl.tff Ranking officials or the state coastal commission and the attorney general's office said today tbere are no plans at the present time to expand the probe of poliUcal aclivJties of Dr. Do n a I d Bright, chairman of the regional coastal commission for .Orange and Los Angeles counties. (Related story, A3) Melvin Lane, chainnan or the state commission, said that he does not agree with published reports that the s t at e commission wants the probe widened. "I am not aware of any basis for that statement," Lane said. 'lbe reports said the investigalion of Bright's flllld~raising activities on .behalf of gubernatorial candidate Edmund G. Brown Jr. would include a pro~ of alleged improprieties on the, part of other regional commissioners. Bright appeared before the state com- mi ssion earlier this week and requested the investi11:ation after it \\'BS disclosed that he had held a luncheon to gar~er support for Brovm. Ellen Stem Harris, vice chairman of the state commission and earl Boronkay, deputy attorney general who counsels the state panel, both said they had no knowledge that the investigation was being expanded. None of the officials ruled out the possibility that ~parate investigations might be underta ken if other allegations of wrongdo ing were made. Ah airport controller said · the plane was cleared for an instnunent takeoff when visibility was cut to onHixteentb of a mile by dense fog wblob blanketed much of Southern California early today. ~1ike Beckner, a business associate ot DeRobertis-at--the--Senta Ana finn, described his former employer in an emotion-choked voice as "a. very brilliant person. Lots ol integrity, loyalty. "That's not a line, that's the way he was. He earned a lot of respect from his etflployes." - Beach Mitn Sentenced In Shootout Rolland Dale Crawford of Htmtington Beach was sentenced to nve yean to life in state prison today on armed robbery charges filed after he wa1 in- volved in Santa Ana Heights shootout with Newport Beach police. Orange County Superior Court Judge Everett W. Dickey ordered the prilO{t tenn for Crawford, 26, of 725 Main St., after repeatedly warning the defen- dant that he must first serve a five-year . term recently imposed In an El Paso, Tex. federal court. Crawford was convided in El Pa90 On charges or smuggling marijuana lnto this country from Mexico. The federal prison tenn takes priority over h i s California conviction. • ~ · Judge Dickey explained that the five years served in federal prison will be credited to the California prison term. But Crawford may be shipped t o California to put in further pri9on time on the Orange County conviction when he has served the federal tenn. Crawford was arrested. Sept. 12. 1973 \\'hen Newport Beach police grabbed him outside a home at 2322 Orchid Dtlve after their bullets had wounded tw~ hostages held by the defendant. For d Pro tes t Staged TOKYO (UP11-Some %,000 demonstrators organized by a Com- mun ist-dominated group marched past the U.S. Embassy nnu·~da7 night in the first or an expected stftts or protests against President Ford's visit to Japan next month. Police said there were no incidents during the protest n1 8''1' ch organized by the CommwUst-dominaled Japan Cooncil against Atomic and Hydrogen Bombs. Or ange • 'Innocent'· Man Jailed 2 Years 1. It has been reported lh:\t Orange Coun- ty Supervisor Ralph Diedrich also held a luncheon in Brown's behalf in early September that was altendl'd by at least two guests who have r e pre s ented development projects before the regional coastal commission. Diedrich, attending a c o a s t a I com· mis~ion meeti ng today in Long Beach, \\'as not immediately available for com- ment. His oUice sald he would have a statement on the matter later. Weath er Fog and low clouds night and 1norning hours becoming mostly sunny Saturday. according to the v.·eather service. flighs at the beaches 68 to 72. Inland areas 74 to 77. Lo"·s tonight 58 to 60. By ARTHUR R, VINSEL'_ Of n. D~U, 1'1111 It• A-onetime L a g u n a Hi1l1 man languilhea today In Loa Anael .. Counly Jail, the 74-0th day he hu been held there as a so-called transient prisoner on a fugitive warrant. Normally, prisoners cannot be .he.Id more than 72 bours without arralgflmtnt and-upon convlcUon-would serve no more than one year tn a county Jail . Jatnct Ray Russell, 24, Is accused of a March, 1972 murder of a 92·year-old man In CMdahoma, 1,000 mtles away, a crime that hls lawyer contenda he could not have comrriltt.ed. 1\ussell was arrested, held and cleared on the warraot'lbltially in Orange Coun-. ty, then . three Weeks later drove to Dell Gardens In Loi Angeles County ~ to vistt a. brottier, _ ' lie wns stopped and qlltotloned. while l"lavlng a suppe.rtlme snack In a Taco Bell by passing police, who dlsc:over<d the outstanding Oklahoma m u rd er' fugitive warrant which had not oeen canoeled by the Orange County legal act.ion that cleared him. 1\US&eU has been eating supper at 441 Beauchet St., near Unlon StaUon in downtown Loa Angeles f0< the put two yean and 10 days, without haV\ni his CQe cleared. • fie has le.Y,eral witnesses who swear he IW with th<m at the Long · Beach Nu·Pike Amusement Park just having !un thot fate!UI Satunlay night o! the old roan's munlcr and robbery Ip Olilahoma. James Ray Russell Is aome -Sort of born loser, his Ille buffeted by courts ot law from here"WOklahoma. lie did his Ume there too -at J:Aleste~ strctcb.Jor burglary. -ltussell's record 'fndlcates he had Just ' arrived in Orange County after release > from prison and gone to work. Thlllgll seemed to be going well. Oklahoma authorities abruptly ended thal 1bey Issued a fugitive warrant charg· ing Russell with the murder of the aged invalid and he was arrested here, Frtnd:-Haising. Car Wa sh Se t A ear -wash to raise funds for the spc«.b and debate team at Coronll deJ- Mar High SChool wlll be held lrom 10 a.m. to I p.m. Sunday at the United Cnlilomla Bank parking lot en Eas Coast Highway In Cnrona del Mar. ' Funda--ral.00 win be uoecl lo aen"-., mam members to speech tournaments. 7 .i ~then cleared after a serit's of court proceedings. One Included a polygraph test ad- ministered by a technician which strong- ly indicated Russell was innocent. He aJ90 had the testimony of his wife and several companions, plus the Long Bf.ach pawn shQp receipt showing where he W81 that nlghL Russell 9r'JS freed , then went to Bell G8111ihs to wvtsit a brother thtte weeks later and was subsequenUy confronted by pollce at a Taco Bell where he stopped for a snack. He bas been eating jail food o n Beauchet Street near the SP Rallroad yard ever since. Attorney Roger Agnjanlan-who firmly b(!lleves the cllcnt -he represents free. oo legal prtnclples Is lnnoctnl-\Vlll be lb IAI, Angeles Count,y Superior '&urt oat. 22 for a new ext radition hearing. {Ste JAILED, Page Al l ~ •• ' ' Earlier this week, Diedrich said he \Vas not involved in the luncheon hosted bf Bright, but that he had alloiw·OO his name to be used on an invttotion for a cocktail party in Brown's behall. Piedrich said he \\"OUld not have al· _ tended the luncheon had be been invilt!d by Bright. Guests at the Bright afflir · include major coastline df:yelopers arid their representatives. Leaper Identified SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -A woman who jumped to her death 'l"'nursday rrom the (iold1•n Gate Bridge has been iden· tilled es Nnncy Donna ~ilicKenzie; 38, ~ a gr~untc student 11t the Uhive~ity •or ~n . Fr;;inci!WO. She scorn~ plea1' by lwo persons who saw her hc:oo rnr the railing. E\SI DE -TODAY Ora11g e Coo.st College wiU bring tlie musicol "God.spell" to !lie slape \Vednesday tl1rougl' Sattirday. Srajf \Vrirer Tom Titus takc.s a look at OCC's of· ferl 11g iH ht$ hitermissio n col· hnnn oit tile COl'tr of today's \Vcl~·endtr. ill y-Sen>ic1 ilJ atatl111 DJ L.M. l tJ'll A1 C.i11trf'11 Al (lt,tlMH Dt-11 (llnll<' C1 Ctft.--Ct 0..111 Helie•' •1 1-lt•l•I ,... Ill Flt1411t(t 11·1 HorOICGH I ! llltrmlsll111 (1 1ln11 t.•ncll~ a1 IM>lll•• • •• DAILY PILOT N Friday, Ottobtr -18, 1974 . . - 4... : c/•~ ..... ~··..,.___... ..... ~~-+- • I J. " lo:; I I l • . , l '. .: . The Shape of Roads to Come SANTA ANA COUNTRY CLUB ~ ... llerewith. the Corona del 1'1ar Freeway as jt will appear by the end or built. plus the division of Bristol Street into two frontage roads, realign- ., . 1977 if all sc hedules are met. The shaded areas show the freeway as it n1ent of MacArthur Boulevard and th~ building of new roads near San will 5tretch 1.6 ·miles from the San Diego Freeway at left to its termina· Diego Creek. Th e dotted sections shOtf the freeway as it was orig~nally lion just before Campus Drive, below Orange County Airport. 'fhe ·planned and how it might be extended if this is later found to be war-- shade d areas also include interchanges and access ramps that will be ranted and funds become available. Ending the freeway at Campus_ -~~~~~~~~~~~~=-~~~~~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ :.,.' ' _,. ...... .,. . 0'. • . Fliom Pnge Al ;:.t~'.AitKING ... " f~"overlookin'g the danger or people _J.-fossing the highway to gel to t h e :beach.'' ".', f lacing himself in the devil's advoca te , role, city diteclor of community deve.lop- ,ment Dick Hogan presented the other side ol the argument. Hogan said proponents or the plan . ,.MgUe ·that the additiona l beach parking H:Will help alleviate beach congestion of l.be-Balboa-Fenimula· ~. Ho"".ever, the commission wouldn't buy .. fba~ argument or a s t a f f recom· mendat~p that the general plan not .. t>e. arocnd,ed "on this issue" and voted ,w 7.0 to r.ecommend that It should. ... 4• ,, t·M·ercury Drops ::Along, Coast; .;:'Fol! Hanging On [,• ~ 'ii Q n., • i'"1ti.e>'foj'~ttd in, but the.Santa Ana .:·~ditlon ""to11ett out so residents along ~Orange~t spent today .in comfort ·;and obscuiilY· :i , But the temperature drop to the low 'qo,_1 was qg Kl'.tfted with r e 1 i e f ~~wing J.-h: D Pr~u;c-cooker tern· per8tures ·oY'nlldweek. 'I'be _National Weather Service said ' -.tmliii1ions wquld continue over at· meane CQJUlldefable ~ rnings with only partial J. arlng·at the beaches in the afternoons. ptberwise it will be mostly sunny. II f "It's ba~ .to the usual g\uck, fog ,t nights ift!!d in the mornings," the •,Weather serVlce spokesman said ... The ~ ~e:! ~=v~h~ ~ee;~ surf that poWlded : the beftehes , Thursday, reacblng si x to :: f ight feet..,.. t : 1 1'odiJY .the' forecast was for the surf ~to drop. : : The wea ther report called for a high ) Of 72 degr'9eS· along the coast today t and over the weekend with the high ,. teaching -77' degrees inland . The lows j ~th inla~~, and at the beaches will : \'C in the p . : '. - Citibank and Chemical Lower Prime Rate %% NE\V YORK (UPI) -Two major in interest rates, investors pushed prices banks today . lowered the prime lending sharplr higher in active trading on the rate for top business borrowers to 11 \!• New York Stock Exchange. The Dow Jones Industrial average was from II~ percent. ahead 11.97 at 663.41 shortly after the First National City Bank and Chemical announcement. But It later ea.s.ed;closii'lg Bank, both of New York, made the at 654.88 . latest move in the recent downward The market involving International~ spiral of the prime from its historic Busine5.' Machines Coi-p., also w a s stimul ated by a report but the company high of 12 percent. Jt was expected denied today any knowledge of a to touch of{ a new round or reductions. reported takeover bid by an Arab con- Citibank, which reviews its p r i m e sortium. structure every Fi'iday, uses a. floating In a one-sentence statement issued rate formula based on certain money from itS headquarters in Armonk, N.Y., market interest rates. Last week the the company said, "We have no kn::iwl· Federal Reserve Bank of New York edge of any negotiations for the sale of released statistics showing C i ti b a n k IBM stock to any Arab consortium." could reduC1! its prime to lt J,4 percent, Rumors of a takeover bid sent IBM The move by Citibank last Friday shares sharply higher earlier today on to trim its prime to llY: per~nt ~bed the London Stock Exchange. off a new_ round ot r:e(luctiQns amOng · The n\port about a posstble Ar a b the natlon's major baaJl:s. . -tal(eovef Wu first carried '.by the Middle Although the prevalllng (Jri)ne r~te East Ne"' Agency, consldefed the ~- Is 11"1i ·perCent; M!Chtg:m Natlonal Blink i ·OtrtCiAf·afg!n, of [the Etfptiift' gbviht- of Detro.it bas announCed plans to lower ment. The report did not speelfy wh> the ending rate to 10:Y. percent l'.rom . , _ · 11 percent, effective Oct. 21. , ~~ .. ~,yolve,d m the ~§OtiaU0p.1! ,.nor Callfomla banks a!JO,~uncecl reduc-.who was-!Qvolved In the alf.,e.l. .. con- tions in the prime rate today, following sortium .. the lead of the Eas~ ~ast ~nks. There also was a report in the Detroit' Crocker Bank said it wtll lower t.~e. Free Press .i. .. t th arms a from : prtJne lrom 11'1 to ll'h percent_on. Mon.. . ,. ~..., e . uln':" . · day. · the United S~es to SaUdf Atabla 'CoU!<i Afanufacturers Bank in t.os .1Angeles double or triple under a secret pl9:11 also aMounctd a reduction from 111,z to developed by the federal govel'hment 11 lf4~cent, effective Monday. ]n an attempt lo drive foreign oil prices The downwaJ,'d spiral of the prime down. suggests bankers see at least a slight The secret progra m to Saudi Arabia easing in inflation and are optimistic apparently was developed bv Secretary the Federal Reserve will continue to of State Henry A. Kisslnger, th e relax credit reins. newspaper said today in a report from Given encouragement by the d~rease tts Washington bureau. • From Pnge A' OIL SEEP _.\GE ... Street-Balboa Boulevard battle will con- tinue for anot!W!r 60 days. "\Ve ire civil engineers, not petroleum engineer!," he said. .IIE ALSO LfKES· J/RUIT AND NUTS SAN DIEGO (AP) -'Naturalist Euell Gibbons exchanged looks With a gibbon named Euell after the ape was 'named -in his honor at the San Diego ZOO. The gibbon, like Gibbons, likes to eat fruit and nuts. He was giYen hls name Thursday. From Page Al JAILED ... Judge William MWTay of Orange Coun- ty Superior" Court alre9dy rejet.1.ed the extradition based on Orange Co u n t"~· authorities Investigation and legal work. But Los Angeles County won't ae<."!:pt that. Agajanian. of the Jaw firm of ShelOeld, Charton, Fishman and Agajanian, said Thursday one hopeful concession bas been won. They are willing to accept the Orange County polygraph-or SO<all- ed lie detector test-findings if Russell submits to one administered by Los Angeles cOOnty. He imists-in the meantime-that bis client who ls he]d wttp(,qt ·bP,11 ~ t-..o • . years and 10 days, is being suDiected to unconstitutional double jeopardy. Appeals court juatlces onlered , him freed from Loi Angeles County custody, . on groonda he could not be extradited ~'\O "Oklahoma second time on the same alleged evidence heard in Orange Q>unty, :;vhere extradition bad been refuled once already. Prosecutors appealed and were then upheld, placing the appellate court In the position Of ordering Russell freed l once, then ordering him held without bail. Clouted by Coins LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Lilian Rosener filed suit in federaJ · court Thurs- day against Harrah's Casino of Reno, Nev., demanding $500,000 damages for injuries she said she suffered when an employe emptying a slo't machine slung a bag of silver dollars over his shoulder, hitting her on the head. · . -·-..... • • • ••.''I:• • ' ~ -· ;'=". .. •• -.. " . .. 1lt "-;:· .. • • •.. ...,., . ' , J I • , - . ' Drive an-.jlnpro•ing the surface -•ts was the .compt:Omise worked otlt by stait;engtneers•and local officials in . .\he bat!le' to gerthe project under way.'!J'he sHaded areu ·will be coil!truclM ln several phases, with some lli:eadY undei'. way )nd others due to start;' and all timed to ft11ish by·tsll! 1977. c. ~-·. " . . . -.. -· . " . . . .. . _Fu~r~l:ff:~tes Suntfuj :·:: .. ... -. .. . . -· ~ -·-· -·~, ... For ~E~w~id Ba:tes,: 61 '.. :::-.~ -. . . ~ • · Ootbolic l....ral .servtoot are lcheduled SUnclay and Iiiciiday !or rettfed iie,.p.,rt Be&cil pellet Capt. Edward Bat .. , wbo died Wedoelday at !I or a heart attack. . Vlsitattoo IW Capt. Bales ·will ·be Saturday and Sunday at Baltz·Bergmn Funeral Home, Corona del Mar. Rosary for the veteran policeman will be Sunday at 7:30 p.m. in St. Joachim's Catholic Church, COst.a Meta, followed by Mass Mooday at 9 a.m. at the same church. A native of Chicago, Capt. Bates mov· ed to Newport Beach and joined the police d~ent as a patrolman in 1948, working up through the ranks. He was eventually in charge of the department'• potrol division and then became administraUve of fleer as well. De9cribed aa a taciturn man who kept pretty much to hlmteU except l!f his p!ofesslooat-•. 11orlr, Capt. ·Jla.t,. mired' tn 1984 due to a heart CO"ndition: His wife later died·and police depart· ment friends said Capt. Bates then be- ~Jy ,evep 1~ gregarious, sr.cldng . bop "' Jl\11~ to .Nf')fe!'J"".1. lje~t· me. . _, . SUfVivors include· fc1uf daughters, Sht\lla Fairman and Joannie Warrine'r, '~th of Costa Mesa, plus Kathy .. Plactiitta. ol Newport' Beach' and Sally 11all of ~fexico and five grandchildren. . ,_ . .... ... ...~ Suit Threatens A&P-Attorne7 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -An attorney for the giant A&P rood store chain has told a 'federal l'OUrt judge that the chain may oot survive If a verdict producing a $32.7 mlllloo award against the chain for lllegaUy fix.ing beef prices is not set aside. Attorney Dennis Mclnemey told Chief U.S. District Court JllC!ge Oliver J . Carter Thursday that the July 25 award to seven livestock growers ·could result. in eventual damages of $4 billion an· nually, tripled to $12 billion under anti· trust law for the period between 11184 and January, 1968, ii the case become a class action . ' Mclr!erney urged carter either to set aside his verdict . granting the ~ward or permit a new ti1al. i i7\'Iexico ires Erupt ~ ' ~ . ~ : TIJUAN A, i)l'exico tAPl -Brush fires i i"·ept across:-.: an est imate 2.000 acre~ •. Thursday between Tijuana and Tccale : flbout JO miles south of the U.S. border. ( 1\s' tiffifiCr~ures climbed flbove 90. a :· ~otal of . ¥f such fires broke out but ~ r ·ere belie d contained. No one is blaming Devlin or the city for the uninvited intrusion -0f \\'a tered· do1,1.n black gold on city streets. "But a lot of work can be done in 60 days, so I don't see why it should take that long to ,get this mess cleant'd up," said Vivian Huff of 131 43rd St. to sum up the feeling of most residents of the beleagured area. However, Devlin continued, the state Division of Gas and Oil is helping in the planning of battle strategy . · "Their personnel have real experti~e in the field. So, I think we. have the necessary brainpower available to us," he commented. LAMP SALE CONTINUED .. • . . ; . l • • l . • • l ' • • ' • 1 ' . • • , • : \ ' ' • .. ' I • ' " • • • • • • : ' • • • " ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT • Jac k R. Curley \l•tt P•e~'°'nt IO'HI (;ene<_ll M!"IQtr -'J:hOmas Keevil Editor T hoi-n as A. Murph fne ~IWIQIPIQ ~Ol\or . • 'Charl esH . Loos Richard P.Nall lo.llltl-"l li\tt119l1'19 fcRIOl'I Newport Beacti Office -»ll ~•WPOrl Boulf\IHd ,_11,lftt A*"9tt : P,0 . 811• 111J,tl161 ;1 .. '9-~~~ ....... ~~~~~~--' -· - ,. ,. ' But Devlin has a lengthy list of work handicaps at hand to help e.1plain the estimated 60-day project . The use of spot skilled labor imported from the oil '!ields as well as spe.eail equipment brought to the site makes it impossible to say what the sub- terranean battle at 44th Street a n d Balboa Boulevard is costing, Devlin ad· mils. And he also said late Thursday that he "can·t help but be concerned" about the house that sits only five feet from the well head and an open storm drain that is \0 feet from it. Is there a danger of the oil and water that continually seeps into the work hole overf'lowi.ng into the drain and, in ~WTJ . into the bay ? "You bet there Is." Devlin said . "That's why the city wants the \vork carefully controlled ." The public works director candidly admJts city staff is not trained "to deal with the phenomenon." Among the hand.leaps he cit.es are the high water level in the area, leaking o!I and gas, cramped work quarters and delays in obtaining oil equipment. What is expected to ta"ke the most time, though, is cleaning the aged well. an operation that must be performed If the well Is to be properly capped and needed data obtained. It seems th:it when the now long· defunct Orange COunty Refining C o . ahandon.ed the '"'"II they ..closed it off by coistlng rock3 , bils of concrctt and other debrii1 down its throat. That must ht flShed out before the ,.,,en csn be studied And properly reca pped. accordln1t to Devlin. · In his letter to the residents, he pointed out to t!Msn that the city h a• ap. proprlated $35,00J'.I to :«AU ifs w a r, agalMt the underground Intruder. • ,, Those who believe the oil gurgling from beneath Newport Beach is an tn· dlcation of Wlt.apped riches are mistaken, according tO Devlin . Whal appean to be oil is mostly waler with oil suspended at the top, he sa id. So, it there's a silver lining to the oil pl.ague' that atfilcts West Newport Beach, neither the residents or city officials have been able to find it. German Bre"µJers Start Crying lu Their Beer BONN (UPI) -Pm. "Dieter Runkel, a bre,..·ery expert, was explaining to a group of West German legislators how a proposed law wou1d ·Pe r m i t glu~, sulphur dioxide, aacorbic acld. and proteolytic enzyme to be . added 10·~ii ¢u11 bool " the I a wm a k ers cried. _ wen Gemwis. who gunle more beer than anyone else, contend the proposed a\1-Europtan laW would pollute their na.- tlonet drink. • The na1lon's l700 brewcrtcs took <lUt lull-page '®wspaper ads ~U!rig o n drln4ers to prote,i I.he lawl now being wOrkeii out at Common fl' arket head· quarters in Brussels. -· It would standardize beer pi'oductl<ln · ln Europe 11nd :illow addltlon or cheml~ additivas to beer, as in the United State •. GemtJ!n beer Is atlll b~Wtd acconllng ·to Duke wuua-m ll of Bavaria'• Law ci 1516, which allows · only mal!;, bops arid water -no chemical PJ'MCf'Y!J!Vet. From the finest collection of lamps in Sduth Orange County. Select from such well known name~ 9t Marbro;: Stiffle, Knob Creek, Norman Percy and many.others. - . ... ' . fitntaslle lnventOty or Quality Lamps All Ready For Immediate Delivery .. .. .... ' . OREXEL-HERITAGE-+iENRE OON-WOODMARj(~ARASTAN-llAKER ' . ' .. -. "' WlaDA YS 6 SATURDAYS 9:00 le S:JO .. • •' NEWroATllEAC:H";:·- 1121 WESTCLIF, DR., •.. fa;- LAGUNA BEACl{.o -• · •U N01t711~OA81'111\'Y .. 'Ol·ij!I • TORRANCE • ' • 23949 HAWMIOftNE. BLVD. (Clptn Frl.1119. Sun. 1ts:30l . .... 37t.lflt • ., ,. I I I ' ' . ' Friday, October 18, 1974 DAILY PILOT 2 Indians Arrested_ In Murder THE }'.AMILY CIRCUS By Bil Keane Botla Drop De ad • PHOENIX (.UP!l -Two 1 .. dians were arrested ' h e re Thursday on charges of stab- bing to death a cab driver in Cal i fornia, where authorities denied a re port that the driver had h e e n scalped. Police took into c u s t o d y Paul Blue Cloud Durant, 29, .and Rich•rd T b undf r Atohawlt, 25, on charges of ( S tate ) ................. ....,.,.-.,_.,. "Would you undo this. oronge, Mommy?" killing the taxi driver Oct. -------------------- 10 at an Indian camp in Box Canyon'. in Ventura County. The driver, George Aird, 27. of Inglewood, was robbed and stabbed to death when be ar- rived to pick up a late. ln Ventura , District At- torney C. Stanley Trom said a report by a sherilrs detec- tive that Aird had been scalped was "erroneous." In an affidavi t filed in Municipal Co ur t \Vedncsday, Detective Braden McKinley said t bat after , Aird was stabbed t o death, those of the c am p celebrated by ''chanting and kicking the viCtim and passing his hair around ." e FBI l\'abs T11m LOS ANGELES (UPI) The FBI captured two fugitives in Long Beach. Tfiursday night v.•anted for the kidnap -ex- tortion of a Ypsilanti, ).1icb., b~ manager and his family last week. Special Agent William A . Sullivan said Luther Leath, 24, and Timothy Thomas, 25, also known as Lionel Fisher, "'ere arrested w i t ho u t in· cidcnL The two men \Vere charged Oct. 15 in Detroit. along w i th three other suspects still at large. e Budget Oka"ed SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - The finance committee of the University of California regents, in a mo ve tantamount to acceptance by the f u 11 board, has approved a record operating budget or $ 5 8 9 • 2 million for 1975-76. Tbe budget approved Thurs- day is 14.9 percent above the current years. U.C. Vice President Chester 0. McCorkle said nearly t w o • thirds of !hf: increase was caused by innation and a pr~ jected rise in enrollment. Liz Taylor's Beau Faces A rraignnien t LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Elizabeth Taylor's I a l e s t boyfriend was scheduled for arraignment today on f o u r counts of grand theft, the District Attorney's Office said Thursday. Henry 0. Wyn.berg, 40, has been charged with rolling back the odometers of four autos he sokl when be was a u9ed. car sales man in Norwalk in 1972. Since the cars v.~re sold I<>< more !ban $20, the alleged offense is grand theft, a district attorney's spokesman Judge Lifts News Ban 01i Inmates STOCKTON (UPI) -San Salesman Awarded Joaquin County Superior Court Judge William Woodward has AJimony rescinded an order that ban- ned IO newspapers from STOCKTON (AP ) _ ;.. local publishing the names of in· salesman has been awarded mate witnes5es who testify at $200 a month temporary a murder trial. alimony from hls wife of 3S However, Woodward said years along with use of, one another metbod-wbuld be u!led of her two Cadillacs. to protect the men's identity s u p e r i 0 r Court Judge -aJlowing the.m to use fie-Norman C. Sullivan s a Id titious nail'1es On the stand. TOOrsday that be b e I i e v ed The judg'e said this was to Joseph Ralfial, 53, is the first protect three inmates testi-husband to receive s u c h lying at the murder trial of alimony in San Joaquin Coun- two Deuel Vocational Institute ty . prJ90ners acCused of killing guard Jerry Saunders. . THE AWAR D is temporary Robert P. Uecker, publisher pending dissolution or l h e or the Stockton record, said, marriage. "the judge should be com· Raffla\'s attorneys con-• Bodg Fou11d plimented for finding another tended he i s unemployed, POWAY (AP ) _ Sherifrs way of protecting these while court documents ·showed and coronen's office' officials "'itnesses without violating the-his wife Sadie, 57, owns a first amendment." downtov;n furniture store. are attempting to Identify the -;;;~;~=~~~~~~~~~~~~~;;:~I bodv of a woman discovered • sprawled in a secluded area near High"·ay 67 on Thursday. Sherifrs officials said the v.'Oman .was between 20 and 30 years of age. nie body was nude. except for h i g h shoes and orang~red k n e e MINOLTA SR-T 102 socks. ~-'''"l~ e B11• Vo te Toda" LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The fiapid T r a n s i t District board of directors votes today on a contract \vilh bus drivers, closing the only gap remaining in o(ficially ending the 68-daiY· old bus strike. MINOLTA SR-T 102 Wlfll Pl.4 ""*I Caw List $450 NOW s315 The board originally ''as scheduled to vote on the con· tract Thursday, but balloting was delayed for . fear o f violating the state 1 a w re- quirin g 24-hour official notice be given before a p u b I i c meeting. Bui even without the final okay by the board, which is expected to approve the pact, mechanics and b u s drivers continued to be called back to \\'Ork to prepare buses for service beginning Satur- day. HUNTINGTON PHOTO SUPPLY 11519 Mo1o St. 11.1.-447-6411 or 142-9SH, 5 Point Shopp ing Center YOU ARE INVITED to a HAMMOND HAPPENING Famous Ramona Gerhard will entertain you with a program on the fabulous HAMMOND CONCOl\DE ORGAN . She is a mll!lcian par-excellent in all realm~ from classicnl lo jazz. MOHDAT, Oct. 21 .. 7:JO P.M. . .... Jf you haven'L heard her Mfore, she is a must and tf you htve heard her, you will Cf\loY hearing her again. 1 c:.,... Ofll ond cj and ~ INt fiA R.lr.,,._,.,,. 2154 E. ~Hwy.• Corooo clel M• • '44-1930 HAMMOND ORGAN STUDIOS of OrClllCJe Coast CORONA del MAR STORE dNL Y L_,,.~,....-,,--= -· . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . I I I • 'I ' • • • ' ' I• • Mystery Disease Claims Sisters NOR'fl!RlllGE ( UP I l - Two sisters, 18 aod 20, drop- ped dead t.n college physical educatkln classes within I 0 days of eadl other, apparently the victims of a mysterious disease· which aged t be i r hearts prematurely. Vicki Ann Penfold, 20, ~I· lapsed and died Thursday while running up and down stairs in a wannup exercise at Cal State Northridge. On Oct 7, her sister Janet, · IS, fell dead \\'hlle-·jogging at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. Dr. Karl K irsc hne r , a PJthologist \\'ho performed the WHALE BITE WORTH CASH autopsy on Janet, said ber heart tissue "looked li ke that of ' little old man that had been exposed to an awful lot of streu over the1years." "It seen\S tho.t this i s dlseasc. the girls' pare n ts something genetic. A runnislg snid. and both It'd normal , out of time no mailer where,1 _:a::c::H::":__:.liv::"::·_:J:.:•::•::.e:.l:__•::·a::•_:'.'.::'.:•~:.::~=:;:o::::.;::~ Klrachner, whO had j u s t completed the autopsy, said Thursday he was not surprised to bear that her sister had di ed a similar death. They were the only chlldreri ol Ted and Gert rude Penfold of Northrld ge. The p a r e n t s said they had na history of heart disease. Kirschner said Janrl died of ·•obstructi\'e carJio n1vo- palhy." describing it a'I · .. a \'cry. very mysterious '1isease ... th at occurs perhaps once in a million, or 11.J million cases·" people are or v.·hat they 're doing." be said. "lt is n · t unusual for people in the same family ~·ith the disease to die al nearly the sa lllf time , no matter where they are or \\'hat they're doing." The Los Angeles Co u n t y CorOner's Office scheduled an autopsy today {o determine the cause of Vicki Ann · s death. Kirsehner said he was "sure her heart \\'as just as in\'olvcd (by lhe disease) as the heart ot her sister ... r.Iedi cal checkups had tu m· ed up no indicat ion of the ~~=cc~~~~-'-~ ORIENTAL RUGS at ASIAN ENTERPRISE in Design Plaza • 250 Bldg ., 2nd Floor Donald F. McDermott Jr .. owner TELEPHONE 644-8881 FASHIOH ISLAHD -HEWPOIT CEHTER WESTERN STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY C Al l ,O~N/A 'S lA~Gt S T LAW SCHOOL •oFFERS A NEW PROGRA M OF SPRING -ENTERING FULL -TIME LAW STUDY ___ ,_w_'"-'-''-" _ _._,_"_'_"_•_·"-'-"_;•"-"-"'-"-"--• A CHO/Cf OF fOUR fAOG~Aio45 Of LAW STUDY IS AYA/LAllf; • '"' t /THEA 2'/J or J YtA~S of 1uu.rtut Ii;.-illldr {15-16 da111oom h01111 ~' .,,.1;, 0# • IN lfTHlA J'f1 or .. YtAAS ol f Atfr.TIMl doy, e~1·i~9. or wetlend lew >ludr (J c/01111 r~r .. 111, J ... loo~ll ""' clou), • You c.:in 1o•n yll<I• JURIS OOCT.OP JJ.0.) d19r!~ ~nd btcomt 1/igrblt to lo~t tht Col1forn1 0 8or E1ommal1011 . Wtlfl Ot ,ttONl FOi CATAlOGUl 800 So uth lrookhurst An•h•im, C.. 92804 (71 4) 635-3453 APPLY NOW FOi DAY, EVENING, 01 WEEKEND CLASSES BEGINNING fEllUAIY 3, 1975 ,.OVIS10NAl1T ACCll01110 11' l'MI COMMlml OJ I At U AMINltS Of TMf STATf I AI Of (ALlfOINlA Antique Auction . • • ~· ... at South Coast Plaza this Sunday October 20at10 a.m. in the Jewel Court. It's ail part of.Did Fashion ' Days Week. All antiques to be auctioned Sund ay are on display now. Come seec · 5outh Coast 'Plaza . BRISTOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, cOsTA MESA . ., t I I • ' '"" II.JI .. " • Di\ILY PILOT EDITORIAL P i\GE · Newport Beach's new $205.000 council chamber is scheduled to be completed late next year. That's not a minute too soon. The existing chamber, which was built in 1947 when the city was one·lhird its present.size. is POOrly lighted. badly vcnlil ated and sadly ou td ated. But its major inadequccy· is its s ize. audience seats for 70 persons plus st.inding room for an additional 30 or 40. As a result. it is not unco1nmon for some \Vho want to hear ai:id to be lieurd by locul government not lo get the chance. --·Tne new council Ch3mber-\vill'have seating for 120 persons and better faciliLies ror conducting the business of government. No doubt there '''i ll be some \vho \Y.ill say $205,000 is too much to spend for new city council quarters. But they should k ee1> in mind that a very important part of the return on that investment will be improved acc:essibility to local government. Bike Safety Watch This year's citizens' Bicycle Ways Committee in Newport Beach appears to have gotten off to a flying start in its e fforts to reduce· inju1ies to bicyclists. A r ecent planning meeting bet,veen committee members, led by chair\voman l\'l ary Blake, a nd student leaders from high schools and j unior high schools in the city, ended with new. concrete ideas. be.the ca reful walch kepl on where accidents lwppen and 'vhy they occur. 1'his \viii be done through th~ use of arcident report forms at the schools. I f~ dullger pattern de,·elops. action \viii be taken to corrc('t it . The committee's fine prepuratory 'vork Will be s uccessful. though, only if student bicyclists l'OOperate by reJ)()rting every accidt>nt, includ ing minor ones. The comn1ittee's \YOl'k \\'ill <.1 lso be aided by residents who a re interested in promoting bike safety and recreationul riding attending the meetings. Land Sale Block The sale to Newport Beach of what was once intended io be freeway land bas run into a legal block that might prevent the city from buying it for park use. • Those attempting to block the sale by the Department of Transportation say the price is too low and, consequently, a n illegal use of gas t ax funds. However, two appraisals that \Viii be challenged in court next week say the price is right. The hon'est diffe rence of opinion as to the Jand·s true current market value is probablY j ust that, an honest differe nce of opinion. But the continued mystique sur rounding ga s titx funds is still difficult to understand. ---in this case, the s tate purchased one parcel in 1965 for S425,000 and is now v.1illing to sell it to the city for public use for $440,000. Those who filed the suit to block the sale say the land's true current market va lue is $750,000. -- --...._ l ""' ...... '"' .......... Bicycle safety assemblies are scheduled at.each school and will include the sale of Jo w·cost safety equipment, mainte nance cJinics. bike licensing anci talks by traffic officers a nd doctors on the dangers of bike accidents. Perbaos an even more import'ant innovation will · Even if they should be right, would the sale to the city for public use truly be a "'misuse" of public funds? N ''IT IS MORE BLESSE~ TO fAY OFF THAN TO BE PAID .OFF.* Bicentennial Slogans Reflect American Faith Dear Gloomy Gus WASHINGTON - We have been hearing about America from its people. We asked, you may remem- ber, for a Bicentenni al slogan. The rtsPonse was spontaneous: tens of thousands of citizens from all walks of life have sent os slogans,.phrases and po e tr y expressing ho\1' they fe e l ahout theircountrv. -M a 11~ .h .-1· " wri t t en ~com·pa n yini.: Jett e rs of &es timonial . To read th em is to unders tand that the Water ga te horrors, econom ic • uncertainties and other afflictions have not shaken the American faith. and poetry expressing how they feel • about their country. l\1any have written...;t('Companying letters of testimonial. To read them is to understand that the Watergate hor· rors, economi1: uncertainties and other afflictions have not shaken the American faith. SOME with a lifetime behind them have written about the turmoil they have seen. YQuths looking ahead have written about the challenge of events. We have heard Crom aliens about the dreams which brought them to· this land. Even a {ew convicts ha ve responded, with a spet:ial poignancy, about the meaning of freedom . Some have a pplauded President ·F"ord's attempt to return to the \Vhite llouse a humanity and openness mor~ becoming a £rec republi c. Others have taken issue \\'ith the President 1 over his decision to pardon Ric ha rd Nixon and thus suffocate the legal t process to its crib. They reject the i idea that the country would be better 1erved by amnesia than by truth. ~ WE RECEIVED one slogan from an authen'tic American pioneer, 98-year· Jld Jesse L. Hall. who "''as born in the centennial year of 1876. He has spent his long life pu shing westwards. He lived through the blizzard or 1887 in a' hom emade mu slin lent on the Ne braska prairie. Jn Wyoming, he \\•as elected to !he state legislature. Now he abides in Reno. Nev. fie sumn1cd up his view of America in a simple, three-word Slogan: ''The Re publi c Stands " From cel l C-fl in the Florida state t penitentiary , Raiford. Fla., \Vi lli e t Young "'rot('. "N<'cd I say. my life ~ has beC'n a miscrnhlr• road to travel. After years of walking it 11kinc. I •, di scovered onc-mui:.l believe in 'iomcthing. · · He put his srnlin1cnts into these words: ··A country uot mode by Hand but by the Gr.1ce of God and the \Viii of \\1an." ( TIJERE \V E RE other poetic responses. "We may stunlble but never rail ; Down through the years, · we still stand tall ," wrote Raymond Richardson from Chica.co A Boalsburg. Pa .. teacher, Ru th H. Carter, Celt "an extreme need for the children to know thei r country's heritage." She i;ugf!Cstcd this slogan: •·so the Children Will !\now." In Toledo, Ohio, the second and lhitd grade students at Lincolnshire School con1posed :.-~logan together: "I work for Dtimoeracy because it v..-orks for me." M1\NY OTHER children .sent In Slogans. For Instance. a 12:-ycar·pld Forest Jteights. rild ., glrl , ~t ary Eliiabeth Henry. J)rl)posed :. '"Amerlc:a, a ll om~~te::idcd He:af'\.'' And 14·)'tar-old Penny Chandler pf' ~F'teJDO., Calif-~ sent in thls one: ''Two (JACK ANDERS~N) Jlundred Steps -and J\otore toCome. '' Teenagers. too, responded by the hundreds. From Annapolis, ?\1d., 18· year.old James P. Gough told o{ his frustration over .. recent acts by men in high places.'' Yet he could still of- fer two heartfelt s logans: "America. a Theme that is Timeless" and "Am erica, Something Warm that TouClied. m.v Heart." A 19: YEAli-OL.6, J ohnny Carter of Long Be<!ch, Ca lif., ·suggested this s ign be pos ted across America: "Conquerors and Corruptors Beware. This Nation is the Property or the People." And a Wilmington, N.C., h igh school student, Stewart Moshe, sub- mitted this slogan: ''There's No Wiy like the American Way." From John Lauria of Jacksonville, Fla., we received a simple, sincere motto: "AmericJ, Where People Are llappy." He added meaningfully: "I should know. I came herein 1903." HERE ARE a few other offerings selec t ed at r a ndo m from our mailbag: Florence .;\. Tracy Revelle, Ard· more, Okla . -"Pride in our past; Faith in our ruture; Forward ·America . .,- Lionel Wernick, New York (,'ity - "America: The Promise Kept and now Rcpcwcd. · · George Kelly, Plf!.ladelphia, Pa. - .. Here Lives a Free People, 1776- 1976." Joseph P. 1\1 cG_oldrick. Jackson licight s, N'.Y. -"In Ameri ca, there are no impossible dreams.'' John Klunc'k, Sheboygan, Wis. --·1r we can't gel to I-leaven we'll settle · for Am erica.·• Jin1 Felton, Little Rock, Ark. - "America is coming of Age." \Villia m Eric Rohrs, 1'acoma, \Vash. -· "No.w, Let's Put It All Together.·· Adeline Feinberg. Bel mont, Mass. -''Apprecia te our Differences.'' Louis Ginsberg, Paterson, N.J . - "Take no liberties with liberty." J.K. ~mith , Salt Lake City. Utah - " Frccdun1 : 1776, 1976 Forever." ~:\'e lyn Conley, Pittsburgh, Pa. - •·!JS,\: t.:ndaunted Stand s America.·• ;\lean\\1hile, our search for' a Bicen· te11nia\ slogan continues. Please send rt>r your suggestions to Slogans, c/o .J:·1ck Andc1·son. 1-101 16th Street. N.W., \Vashington. O.C.20036. ff 28 people are cited in one su m· me r · for turning le rt into Amling·s Nursery on Coast Highway,"'iSn't ti.J~re a poorly. marked turnoff problem that should be corrected'! It's a definite trap . !\:lark me .. sore loser <byS20) number2.8.'' L.D. (;loomy Gvs (0111~1111 ••• svblnilled bf~' -Ila not .,.ceHirily rt11K1 tllt ¥leM ol trle .....,$piptt, SellCI you~ !Ml PffWI lo GIOO!ll'f Gin, o...;1y Pilot. Morality ' Needs New Vocabulary ( SYDNEY HARRIS) Thoughts at Large: 'obviously, the language needs a new word for young couples who are living together more or less per- manently, but a rc not married. Any s uggestions? <Remember, Gelctt Burge~s invented the marvelous "'ord. "blurb," only a rew decades ago, which £ii led a genuine need.> The only effective punishment t'or an evil·doer is remorse; and if he or she cannot be made to feel remorse, any punis hm e nt becomes self- defeating through turning the evil· doer into a more resentful creature than before. Kindly keep in mind that "media" is a plural v.·ord, an<J there·is·no such thing as ''m edias.'' What the world in the past has always called a "great" man was measured by the number of people who feared him : what the present and future must learn to call a great man should be measured by the number of people he frees from fear. It is hard to believe, but true, that there is .no s uch thing as a "rainbQw " if there is no one there to see it; a rain· bow does not exist in itself, bul on ly through human eyes. 1'eievisi9n won 't come of age, until It ' acquires at least one commentator ·---------! who i§ as incisided as well·inrormed1 'H a na as evcn-1ian e -as the 18te laincn- 'If only you 'd been draft dodger$!' " ,, tcd Elmer Davis was on radio. (Hun- tley and Brinkley were to Davis as l\1.antovanl is to ?\1ozart). ti-lost pOlilical speeches remind me or Churchill's com ment about Stanley '' Bnldwin, when Bald\\•in was Prime ,-l\finister: "Stanley occasionally ·stumbles overl hc truth, but he always hastily picks· himself up and hurries on as ir nothing had happened.'' • • tr t were the head of any compa ny, I u·ould summarily fire the fJ N1t suhor· (1in11te who called me "Chief." People who clamor to be "rree'' !which usually means rid of thei r Ohli.gations), forget Goethe's war· nlng: "Everything that. freeli our spirit without giving us control of'O\Jr· selves is ruinous... · Reflectio11 of A11ti·An1ericanism Greeks Pull Out of NATO -- WAS l~INGTON -The Greek gov· ernment has quietly 'vithdrawn some of its top mi li tary ofrirers from North. 1\tlantie Treaty <N ATO/ headquar- ters in Brussels, one more indication. of hou' seriously the Caramanlis government views anti·American se ntim ent now .( EVANS-NOV AK ) quietly spread the weird to friendly ·eongressmen: stop American a.id to Turkey, no matter what the impact on Cyprus. sweeping Greece. Facing the firs t. p arliam en t ary election on No\•. 17 since the military coup d 'etat of 1967, the nev.' r ivilian ·g overn.me n! of Prime Mini s t er Caramanlis is torn between conflicting political realities. The merest fragment or pubUc display of pro-American sent iment could boomerang, giving the Greek left a dangerous opening that Andreas Papandreou would be qujck to exploit. Caramanlis dealt with this hard political fact by pulling Greece out of the military organization of NATO. Now he has followed up by with- drawing some .or the 400-odd Greek of- ficers from their r egular military bi!· lets in Brussels. Naples and other NATO commands. BUT THE domesiic political demands for anti-U.S. actions raise the gravest future problems ror Greece. Friend ship with :the West, and particularly the u~ .. is a b· solutely essentia l for Greece in the long run, as a glance at the map proves. Greece is bordered bv three Communist states to the north and by muscle-fleiting Turkey on the east. Ca ramanli s a nd his fore ign minister , the astute George .Mavros, a long with most other leading Greek Politicians of the center and right. fully understand that fact. But despite strong pressure from the U.S .. they ' a re unabl'e to impede the move toward what looks like a form of dangerous neutrality for tear that the a nti -Ameri ca n currents now Sweeping G rccce would pull them un· der . Accordingly, rational diplomacy dictated by long-term Greek security needs ha s been inundated by sbort- term domestic politics. The foun· dation for this was built by Washing- ton's long lo ve af{air' with the haled military dictatorship. A CASE in point was the absolute- ly futile effort by Secretary o( State lienry Kissinger last week to enlist s ub rosa Greek support against the. then-pending congressional ban on U.S. military assistancetoTurkey. Conferring at his own request at the Plaza Hotel in ?\1anhattan last week 'vith ?\1avros, Kiss1ngel-·explained that the effect or a oongressionaJly. imposed Turkish aid ban was predic· table : it would make the Turks dig in their heels against U.S. mediation ef- forts to remove T"1'kish troops from Cyprus and return part of Turkey's C}'prus conquest to Greek Cypriots. Thus. it was in the self'!interest o( Athens to keep the U.S. on good terms with Turkey. Mavros was stunned. "That," he told Kissinger, "is not something for a Greek to do .·· .. INDEED, far fr'om discouraging Greek sympathizers in the U.S. Congress from voting against the ban on aid to Turkey, top Greek diplomats in the U.S.'encouraged iL One active promoter of the aid ban was the con· sul-·general in the influential Greek consulate in San Francisco, who Jn short, the political irOpfrauves In Athens on the eve of the parUamen· tary election far outweigh the long• range necessity or gradually restoring the Athens-Washington link. No Gre·ek leader c:;~ught sec~y lob- bying Congress to vote against the •Turkish aid·ban could be elected sewer inspector in a provincial Greek '{illage. ' The unannounced deci5ion to with- draw top Greek military men from NATO headquarters is simply lbe newest signal. Having hea.rd American pledges for over two mon- ths that Turkey would be glad to iive up some of its Cyprus conquest once talks started:. (pledges wholly unredeemed), th'e Greek p.vemment CQntlnge_s_ to~a_dverlise its~s anti· American. ~ THERE IS no hope that this wUI change between Dow and the mid· November election, and little ex~ tation that it could-change-soon thereafter. Likewise, the hosUUty for Turkey s o vividly expressed in Congress over the aid-ban threatens political retalJJtion against Washing- ton there, too. . With an outstanding IOU debt to Russia for its acq utescijnce in the in· vasion o( Cyprus last July, Turkey may find it harder than beloreto deny any Soviet r equest for overflight privileges in a ruture Middle Eastern war, particularly with the U.S. Congress so virulently anti-Turkey. As these Cyprus chicke~ come home to roost, the once·mighty U.S. is an impotent bystander. Economy Shakt:s lnsuranc~ Firms Despite the inTage of a rock which insurance compani es have used over the year s to impress upon the Public mind the security to be gained by being indemnified t hrough th eir policies, the economic trouble,s being experienced in the nation may 1be lhreatening even the in suranec bulwarks. Al leas t, Stat(: ln s urant:'t- Co mmi ssio n er G l~eson L. Payn<· h as issued som e guarded \l'arnings to the effect th<il ~ ( EARL WATERS ) loan so much of its capital on hom es or real estate i n gencral~.Other tYpes of Joa ns are also limited as to their percentages of the total. Jt may only invest <I SJ>CCJriced pcrtenlage Of the • \\'hole i• bo nds or any other field or securities. lnsuruncc companies. even though required to malnluin a stipulated per· centage nf tota l li abilities in liquid reserve$, m.:iy otherwise plunge the insurance ca tr no entire remainder On the stoCk' market I o.ng.e r _bc...-b ti n,dJ y_.a cc epted "'"-•n-__l!OLr a•nU.>Co,,,twh,;cLr !li&UL _____ _ absolute surC:ty. While PaynC·s tht!!>is is not centered Payne hus not charged that thi~ has on ri5ing costs and innation as much been done by a ny company. To ,the as the sagging stock market, the · contrary m any are heavily in.vcsl<!d whol e thrust or his cnution5 is based in long term land ownerships and upon the prevailing dir<!ction nf the othc~ real estate or lhe types .al"'.'lfS economic winds. conSidcred most sound, cspec1a1Jy in A5 Payne indicate~. insurance com· the long range vie"'·· panics arc heavy invcstor.s in stocks a nd bonds along wjth other s peculations. \IJh ilc they are regulatt>d by the government a nd some types or pol.icies lik e some-types of bank savings dl:c •·insured" by tho government.. the pro!.ecti9ft~ ar~ not geared to the full 1>0tcnt1a l5 of a disast1-ous depression. STll.L, l.o the extenl that the com· 1panics have invcs cd on the stock market he has warned that further dll>!I in ~l.ock~ cou1d well jeopardize the solidity o{ sonic companies. HO has !iUgifestcd Lhat there ere com· nanies ,~,.hich should be rcducinJ? their s tockmarkcts pc>rtColios by 15 to--- 20 ~rccnl. ALtllOlJG ll insu-rancc companies Pityne say~ lhnt the cnmpanie~ In have a fiduciary relO,Uonshjp With the ~rc:ilcsL danger are not the !Ire in· their investors as do the hanks, there -t{Urcrs as much as the casualty com· aro $igniricanl diffc:rcnct.::s. Oaflking P3nlcs. The lultir write fire. auto and laws prescribe the percentages or .. uthertypcsol lossln~urance. total assets whJch may be invested in A top 1nsurattl~:e ctecuttvc before he - any one arc¥. 1'hus a bank may only assumed the stu~e'sjobofpolicil'IG the • insurance industry, Payne has !>Mn most attentive to the protection of the public and has worked to secur,e new measures to strengthen the insU.rance companies. -~ _ HE POINTS to the-facl that the statehas··nrought about t~c establish- ment of a guaranty rund to protect the insured against casualty company railutes-:-This is a pool made up of con- tributions from a ll casualty com· panics to provide <igainst the failure of any one or them. ORANGE COAST ' EJ!1!ijij!l1JI Robert N. We<d, ,,.._ Thoma3 Keeinl, Editor Bo.rbaro. Krtibich, . Edilorial Pa11t Edilor 1'ht? c!ditorial page: ot the DallJ Pilot seeks lo inform and stimulate readers by r)l'esenling on this pafe diverSe commentary on topics ot in· ler~t by syndicated columnists and cartoonists. by providing a. rorum for readers' view!i and by presenting this ncw11pal)er'11 opln~ find id''' on current topics. The editorial opi nions or the~ Dally Pik>l appear cnly in the editorial cOlumn at tht top or the page. Opinions exprc~ by the columnists and cartoonlst5 and letter wrltert tire their own..-nd nn endol'!lement of their vie~·s by the Dally ~lot should bC'l infemid. ' · l='rlday, Oclobcri8~ W74 - ' " • l • . . -• • • • -• • --'7 ~ande -Coas e EDITION Today's Final , N.Y. Stoeks VO(-6i, !)10 , 291 , 3 SE<:;TIQNS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, OCTOBER 18, 1974 • c TEN CENTS • ~Innocen.,..,,__,t' __ C9~~t~an iocked Up for 2 Y ~ar ·s . • II)' ARmVll,R. YJNSJ:L Of ttle~P'li.tSt.tf A Onetime L a g u n a llllls man lan;uwies today in Los Angeles County Jail, lh<;,740lh day be has been held there as a so-called transiePt prisoner on-~fugitive warrant. Normally, prisoners cannot be held m<n tjlan '72 hours 'f\ll)out arraignment. ~ROD-convlcU~'fou1d' 1~e no lJllFe 'than· ODe year 1n a county Jail 'James Ray J\Ul&ell, ,24, is accused. ... . , . Estanria Cosrt ' . of a March, 1972 murder of a 92-year-old man in Oklahoma, 1,000 miles away, a critne· lhat •his lawyer contends be cOuld nqUiave committed. Rusself was arrested, held and cleared on the warrani•inilially in Orange Coun· ty, the!!_ jhree weeks later drove to Bell Gardens •in Los Angeles CoWlty to visit a brother. He was .stopPed and questioned while having-a suppertime. snack 1D a. Taco Bell by passing police, who discovered . . ' ' Th~ EslaJlcia High coeds fonn the royal reception committee fo r the· Costa Mesa school's 10th homecoming tonighf. Seated (from left) are freshman pr_incess Ada Barrena, sophomore princess Kim Pearce and· juniQr princess .Kathy Edwards. Homecoming 9ueen will be chosen from seniors {standing, from left) q_ay Spies Diana Bunnett ~nd Caren Bearbower. Eagle football team wces-on1Corona de! A1ar High ·at Davidson Field. 1'JtUhl'Mf ...Girb Costa Mesa ffigh observes its annual homecoming 'tonight and these ci>eds 11$-members of the 1974 homecoming court. Standing. (from left) are freshman princess Sara Sullivan, sophomore princess Kathy K .. and ·junior prlrtcess Lorenc Yarwood. Quee n wJU be one of three seniors, (6el ted, from left/ Myrna KiesCer, Heidi 1'-lelsenhelmer, Suo . Lacltey. Homecoming loo ball will pit Mustang• again<t-Vllla Park- !onlghl al LeBard Stadium at OCC. . -' • the outstanding Okl8homa m u rd er fugitive warrant which had not ceen canceled by the Orange County legal action that cleared him. R~ell has been eating supper at 441 Beauchet St., near Union Station in downtown Los Angel~ for the past two years and 10 days, without having his case cleared. · He has several w~s who swear he was with th'em at the Long Beach Nu-Pjke An;tusement Park just having fun that faterul Saturday night of the old man's murde'r and 'robbery in Ok.Jahoma. James Ray Russell is some sort of born loser, hls life buffeted by courts of law from here to Oklahoma. He did his time there t o o -a t McAlester-a stretch for burglary. Russell's record indicates he had just arrived In Orange Countf after release from prison and gone to work. Things seemed to be going well. Oklahoma authorities abruptly ended that. They issued a fugitive warrant charg- ing Russell with the murder or the aged invalid and he was arrested here, then cleared after a series of court proceedliigs. One included a polygraph test ad- ministered by a technician which strong- ly indicated Russell was innocent. He also had the testimony of his wife and several companions, plus the Long BP.ach pawn shop rece ipt showing · where he was that night. Russell was freed, then •ent to Bell Gardens to visit a brother three weeks later and v.·as-subsequently confronted by police al a Taco Bell where he stopped for a snack. He has been eating jail food o n Beauchet Street near the SP Railroad yard ever since. Attorney Roger Agajanian-\i;ho nrimy (See JAILED, Page A?I ,, .. u Comfilunity Center Eyed Fair Board Offers 33 Acres for New Building By,ALAN DIRKIN Of nit DllllJ Pl191 $tiff Robert Krone. . of the grounds committee were given considered as a possibility for obtaining The parcel Costa Mesa has expreMed the go-ahead to continue talks with Costa a long-tenn loan, but Thurliiiay night The city of Costa Mesa will be offered a lease on 33 acres of Orange County Pair. property for the building of a commwiity center. lnterest in Is bordered by Fair Drive~ Mesa officials on what might be built fair board directors noted that they and Fairview Road. The plan to build on the fairgrounds and how MY new had received conflicting advice on a community center on Uie fairgrounds. facilities mtght""be-tunded. -wtiettie&-their...agency...had...tbeJegalstaJlo- which has a total or 163 acres, emerged Plans suggested by Costa Mesa Include ding to enter such agreements. The lease would-:..probably cost about $100,000 a year, fair board· directors indiCated Thursday night. 'at a recent meeting-between city and an auditorium or convenlion center , The g~s oof!111Uttee•will cont~ue fair board officials at which Costa Mesa -sports center, equestrian center, and talks with the city on the Sl>CC~•C3 pushed a plan to see the fairgrounds agricultural and science center that .of. what Is pro.posed and how the funding turned into a major cultural-recreation might be built and used by the school might be obtained. "A community complex would benefit tQe residents of . ~ Mesa_ and they ought to fund it,'' observed director center. 'districts. A push to see the fair~dsrme Director Krone and olher meiRberS -A joilif pj>Wen agreement ha:s been -(Ste CENTER, Page-. .\!) -' ' . . Crash Kills F 011.r-One Pin~h ·Biker . ' ' - Dad Fills In for l1ij1tr~d Son From .t'oasf ' By DOUGLAS~ Of tt. Dell'I' PliH 5Mff A Newpcrt Beach resident was one of four men killed in Long Beach early today when an annual hunting trip was Btrr THURSDAY night .f9hn was knocked out of tt)e event when he broke tragically endtd in a plane crash minutes his leg in a cOllislon wiUt a car at 17th Street and Tustin Avenue, Costa Mesa. after takeoff. But the money promised by his backers won't go begging. John's father, Robert DeRobertis, 38, of Newport Wendall MaberrY, a 35-year-old~ Costa Mesa fireman, will take his place. Beach, and three friends and business "I think that's really neat /1 said John, his leg in a cast at his home at associates, Peter Tillson .. 38, phi 111 p 442 Magnolia St., Costa Mesa. Morgan, 45, and Chauncey Whipperman, ·u 49, were killed in the 3:55 a.m. crash. ~NDEL~ l\fABERRY was due to ·v.'Ork Saturday but ~ colleague w1 A-fiRli passenger JamesK"lteynoti!S --stand m for him for three-hours so he can complete the 25-mtle course, slart- 4s of Cerritos ~ived the ·crash bui ing at 8 a.m. at Carl's Jr. restaurant~n 17th Street. w~s taken to Long Beach Hospitai suf· "Jt was the cure John needed,'.-said his mother, Pi.frs. Sharon Afaberr)'. fering intemalJ1rxt ~d.:injuries. t....~-~-~·"'-"·"···:.:·:......--------------------DeRobertis, owner of Orcon, a plum- bing and kitchen contracting finn in Santa Ana, is ·survived by his wife, Bonnie and two children, employes at the firm said. Arnaed Robbery The crash occurred when the , twin- engine Piper Aztec took of£ in dense fog from the Long Beach airport. Shortly after takeoff, the craft clipped a 125 foot high natural gas storage t a n k , veered Into a power line and crashed. Shootout Figure Handed The men were flying..J..o Las Vegas en route to South Dakota for an annual hunting trip. They were dressed in heavy clothing and rifles and hunting gear was among 5-year Priso11 Sentence the contents of the plane. · Although the plane's tanks were three quarters full , there was no fire or ex- plosion. An airport controller said the plane was cleared for an instrument takeoff when visibility was cut to one-sixteenth or a mile by dense fog which blanketed much of Southern.California early today. Mike BeclCner;-iDUsifiess assoct:ate of DeRobertis at the Santa Ana rmn, described his former employer in an emotion-clloked voiee as ''a very brilliant person. Lots or integrity, loyalty. "That's not a line, that 's the way be was. He earned a Jot of respect from his employes." Rolland Dale Crawford or Huntington Beach was sentenei!d to five years to life in state prison today on armed robbery charges filed afler he was in- volved in Santa Ana Heights shootout with Newport Beach police. Orange County Superior Court Judge Everett W. Dickey ordered the prison tenn tor-crawroro; -26. or -725-Mfiln- st., after repeatedly warning the defen- dant that be must first serve a five-year term recently lmposea in an El Paso, Tex. federal court. Crawford wa.s convicted in El J?aso on charges of smuggling marijuana into this country from Mexico. The federal prison term takes priority over hi s California conviction. Judge Dickey explained that the five years served in federal prison will be credited to the California prison term. But Crawford may be shipped t o California to put in further prison time on me -orange eounty conviction when he has served the federal term . Crawford was arrested Sept. 12. 1973 when Newport Beach police grabbed him outside a home at 2322 Orchid Drive, after their bullets had wounded two hostage s held by the defendant. .Fair· Opens Racing_ Stu_dy Board ,lf ay Have to Co1ne Vp With $60·1,,000 Purse ' Ornnge County ~Fair Board dlreclors expects from the study and then 3ward have opened the starting gate to negotia-to meet with the firm's officers to insure tions to promOte 14 di>:• of~ tbecontract.·'lbe ,wdy may· not~ racing at Uis Alamitos. ' · ftve dlij't:. Amley't l)kl on the •. job "had · But IJiures tht •l>oard sllldled "~oned 1t lil~I uro or thiee"di)'f day nlKhl ~ th!lt the rafr may and costing $500. I·• ; have to put uj a purse of .'$604.000 ln Of conoerh• to the d I r t c l o r-.1 ·Wis betting that fhe racin~ 'lfifl be proftlable. wl'lelher lhe consultaot re;illzeil'that the There were other 1ndicatiGQJ that ttle 00.rd wan,led the ltudy te consider the going might ge~ rough on lhe profit ' eHocts of the wealher on the. profit and loss pi~ure 1£ It rains d<lrlng U.,. all!! loss plciut.. ~ racing: dayt. . . 'The n1ce dntes being L'Onsidered would the directon lndlcatoo Thl'¥.Y nllht' b6 In November. "Tl\ert ,are . ob•i••JS that Ashley Ec:ohomlo Sorv1cto' of-• . rcalOils .Y<Jly t~ dtiYs are' av:illablti port Beach would be given he JOb nr-fn'Nove'rtfber." director 'Rtttum! hOtiMM, studying whctJicr the plan ls~ina9cla1ly a Huntfngton Beach businessman. ukt. feasible. , · • "tt somellm es rains In November. U The ·teeing committee was Instructed It rains on 10 ol'lhe 14 days we are going the firm uiiderstaMs All that the board to Iott money·:· I '· • Director Burr Wi lliams also noted !hat the purse, the money going to the \\'inner and hor!eS that place In the events, would have lo be tuaranteed. l;.ater Williams interjected inlo a discussion on how the money raised from the racing' might rund improvments on the Jli3-aere rairgrounds that the ''horse racing Is at least two or thret year!fi av.·ay." \ Pr~hminnry cslimtltes. based on in· rormatlon provided by ope'rators of tilt> Lns, Alamifo~ tratk. place the amount or n101Wy the fair mighl expect to make from 14 days or r&cing at be~'een 11 H,000 io· 1242.000. These estin1ates. hov.·ever. also show thal the purse that would have to be put up for the. c.vcnls v.·ould total $604.000 !See RACING, Pogt: Ail ~ • Universiiv's . ol . --. - llitch Tell~· Resignatio_n SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Charles S. futch aM'>Wlced his resignation today as president of the University of California, effective on his 65th·blrthday next June 30. · . Hitch made the surprise announcement before the UC Board of Regents' regular monthly meeting. He said that after serving as president of the nine-campus university system for ""71i years, it was time to step _down.. __ "Everyone who holds this position ac- cumulates barnacles that weigh h i m down," Hitch said. "J !eel it is time for the University to s e e k new leadership." ··1 believe 1hat I leave the university in better health than I founcf it," Hitch said. Hitch was inaugurated at UCLA ~1ay 23. 1968 as the University of CaJifomia 's 13th president. He succeeded Clark Kerr 'vho had been fired a year earlier after continued student troubles at t b e Berkeley campus. In his inaugural address, the fonner assistant secretary of defense in the Kennedy Admin istration proposed. that universitie$ and young people join £or "what could be an unparalleled attac.k on the social ills of our tin;ie." , Hitch was noted for his baUl.es: for a strong university budget in lbe faee of threatened cuts, controversial faculty reforms. efforts to u p g r a d e un- dergraduate education and support of campus ROTC. ··11 has take11 a hundred years to build the most distinguished p u b I i c university in the country. but it can f>e destroy t>y 1rxnrrerenre --aliCI nej!lect," Hitch said in one of his budjt:et fi ghts. Orange Coast Weather F'og_ and low clouds night and mornini~rs ·liecoming mo-s!IY ··sunny Saturday, accordi ng to the ,i;eather service. Highs at !he beaches li8 to 72. Inland areas 7~ to 77. Lows tonight 58 to 60. INSDtE TODAY Ora11ge COQst College 1oi/l bring the mtuical '"Godspell'' ro file sUtge "'ed11esday t/1rnuyl~ Snturcfay. SI-Off \Vnu1· Ta1n Titus tokes a look at oee's Df· feriug in l1is l1ttcrmfssf&n col· lrtrrin 011 file cover of today's \Veeke11dl'r. •t Y-5fftlk • Al I t'll"• DJ L.M. l tfd Al Ctilltirl'lll l.J Cl111rne. Dl•U Cl!llltl Cl Cl"ffl~ C7 OHltl Htllcn 1.r IE-ltw111 '°'" Al f'l11111<• •••• , H1rn<•H ,, tft1trmlolo11 Cl Allll L1nt1tn II ~111111• •• ,• . • -· ,-J Tr.. 11 Mt¥!4f Cl·• Ml/NII FMlllll IN M•llttll1 J'Nwl •• Or~~" Ct11111Y Al ,_i. 11.1 Rnl•<ll'rl~I• CJ.CS s11vi1 ,.,..., M 5Hrt• IM 51Kll Mitt.Iii 16-1 , .. ,.,._... a T~tlltr• Cl-I 'lf•-'llf'r .... w'1r~ N•-. _Al ' .... . ... ·':G1·eeu 1ag Gov ernoiJs Wit e I '~" • ·• '1, Veteran ·entertainer, dancer, acrobat and stuntman Benny Fox, 80, remlaisces on show business with .. ,. N'i!in'ey Reagan and Ursula Blaenkner. Fox and Mrs. "'"' ··BHierfkn"'eT are Foster Grandparents at Fairview : .. ~':sp:~.Hos~ltal in Costa Mesa, Where 66 senior citi- ' • • DtUy ,_lltt Sti ff "'"' zens were honored Thursday for work with retarded and physically handicapped chilOren. Benny and Ursufa danced a polka for ,Mrs. ~agan during cere- money to show they are two who aren't too old to tango. Citibank and Chemical • 'Jae.st Frie nds' 'Fanne' on ~Mills' _7 By the A1socl1ted Pre11 year-old Mrs. Botllstella. He said people Eduardo BatUstella says his wife ~·as were trying to create the Impression that there ~·aa such a romance. She . employed £or a year as a $500-a-week is known as "Fann.C Fox, the ArgenUnC aide by Rep. Wilbur D. Mills ([).Ark'), Firecracker." . but there was no rooum~ between the Mrs. Battistella was one of f o u r " congressman and ~ fortner atriptt.a.M pel'IOM with Mllls , the 6 5 -Ye a r -o 1 d ~· dancer chahman of tbe House Ways and Means 'W · f 'ends lhat' 't M 'f • , Comrnlttee, when pollce stopped Milli' ' e are n , s 1 • Y '!1 e 1 rpeedlng, unUghted car in Wpahington and I th.ink the ti-fills are wor.derful .Oct.· 7. Mills said he was taking 1t1rs. people. I love him like a rather. He Battlstella hbme rrom a party. and Polly (Mrs. Mills) are very fond . Battlstella· ·wd he did not want to of our three ctuldren," he said in an ~ talk about the lricident. .. interview in Buenos Aires. He said be and his wlft and the In °Little ROck, Ark., Milla _denied that Mlllses traveled together to Anti~ in Mrs. · Battistella had ever been on bis the Csribbean ln July 1?']3. MJJ[s ·had per9011al payroll. He said she had been no commen.t.. on the :alltsect Anligua patd to redecorate their apartment in trip. • ' ·•' ~ July. 1173 on a -basis. • Battistella,wtd tbat;llter ~lr Antigua Earll.er, he denied there was any vacatlon ~~ beg~ .. W~ for romance between himself and the 38" Mn. ~IM.,&s ~a: .pubttcf.:l:elaticm-:and -· iecrffalt"Qasistilllf h!'.lbO;ll!iUrliOme. •· o~l"Mii "ati"°M SUCCUMBS AT. 61 ,ForrMr Poll~• .. Capt. &.tei . " Ed\\·ard-Ba·tes ; . • After a Ume ... :~--:oatso t·belped Mills From P,age A l . himsell with appolnllncnts., trav~ .,. F im:ei·al D!tes rqements and·limitaltdtitlis.. . . ·'-.... J.M . ., , JAILED' · M!Jls paid Mn. Ba!Uslell& a ,,..kly • . . -• • • li".~.1~ ~~ 1H.m ..i~ iJ:n..;if~ ~ Slated .$unday · ~Heyes ·the client ho rep,....nts ·!ree _ ~ally ' traieled \!jt~· !bO MlllJes as • ' --> · • • · -• " ,pn legal prlocipl" ls lnnocent-:-w!TI ho ~ of ho<:,. job, !lilCJt laatod fJ'om Calliollc-funeral .aendcea are IChlfduled ,In toi Ang!1_es ·Count~ .s~ CoJJrt AugllJ\ 1173 llllUl. recenUy p ·-•,;;: _ ' Sunday aJ¥i Monday, fQI' ~Ureq· ~e'll"'rt Oct. 22 for a _new extradition hearing. --• ,Battiste~ ·lliid ~I~~ Mn. Beach polie< Capt. Edward Bales, who . ···Judge WUham Murray of Orang• anm. M~ as a cl~ ol,ii)rJllimor ~ting died We&tesday ~.6191 a~ aJW.4· ty S~~nor Court already reJectee;l. the fimr in ~. a f a'JJllQ n 1·b I e visllatkl\. f . ea t Bate. :tll be Lower Pri1ne .Rate %:% , TONIGHT • .J. FOOTBALL. -Costa Mesa vs. VU!a Park at OCC stadium , 8 p.m. Estancia ,... .. ¥$. Corooa del t.1ar, Davidson Field, . -18,p.m. _,;: MIJl'OJ!Q'.G!.E SPEEDWAY RACING -Fairgrounds.. 8 p.m. '\,11 NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH DRAMA -. ~1'.'.Sff~of Gamma ~s oo Man 41m.r, the~ foi1oon . Marigolds ," Room 120, \.ff)cl •• ta ~nd 19, 8 p.m. Adults $2, students .. 11.11• ,..,,,,_: •. 'fr.,_'.OCO :l.Ee'I'URES -"Geology of ~oiCulifoalia." George Masoo I e c t u r e r , Science Lecture I, 7:30 p.m. "Travel <..lt.:Hbliday. l!botography," Ralph S. Gar· ~;ri911 Jecturec1 Science Lecture 2, 7:30 t.....P·111~ Q;•h.ltl [ii",h. FRIDAY NIGHT FILMS -Fellini's ~Yf'\(l>n,~~"OCOC: Forum. 7:30 p.m. Adm· 11.sf.. ·1· "'l na .. o o "THE RElt.i> INSPECTOR HOUND" ri~ South Cemt Repertory Theater, 8 ,,,..m .. lhrougll Sun. - , '· SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 • r· I?tU VA\1Cll'.!ATIPN CL!N\C -Costa -''.~pa Womtn'N1Club, 9 a.m. -{ p.m. <:. ]at'ARY CARAGE SALE -Orange ·ana 16th Sti'Mti,--a a.m. • -"SEWING FOR WARMTH" -Rozan. .,. -ne· Rolbl'OOK lecturer, OGC Ho m e f?•m• ''!! Room 31 9a.m. _ \1 · ·-·-From Page Al !)l~;.~G ... ' ., --·--, . ...,. " : aind would be part ol total expenses i for t-.Z-acint-.of $1.4 million. ! :~1'$ently~rougbbred racing in " ttr.ern Qlilto1nia is authorized at San- ) Mtita;-'41(1._,wood Park, Del Mar and t Pomona. Only quarter horse and harness S• tacin~ is currently authorized at Los • Alamitos. ~ .. '~ ; lPcacqfi.,' Arr ested ~ l SAN rii'AN&sco (UPI) -A young l f\an "dreysed like a peacock" was ar-~ ~led t\l~ across the .street from ~ ba~as accused of robbing. ~ he-rart'9lt at.i Ricardo O. Ricafort, a ~ yea r-old nat1ve of the Philippines, ~ c;rmrt'Mttrin ~·o hours of the robbery :S 6f..-~Nerth Beach branch of the Bank t M Ameri~ FBI olfice reported. ~ ~ .. ..,... ~"' ORANGE COAST CM . • • . • I • • ' J • a ' • • • l l ? ' • • • • . -i)A:LY PILOT Jlfck R. Curley \l•<t P,.~M 1"11 Gsn ... 11#11~ Thomas Keevil -!:d!10< Triomas A. Murptllne Mlll•Ql"'t fllHor \ ' -('hclr'le_. . .Loos Richa rd P. Nall ~,1,.11111 MllMl91"9 EOltart ---.OM1a MtSI Office DO W.U Ill'!' Slffff w"'tlitilt AOfrtt•: ~.O. l!lcl• IMO,rMlt ••• .. NEW YORK (UPI) -Two major rela1. credit reins. banks today lowered the prime lending Given encouragement by the. decrease rate for top ~ borrowers to 111/t in interest rates, investors pushed prices from lJ ~ pe~t. sharpcy higher in active trading· on the First National City Bant and Chemical New York sioct Exchange. Baµk, both of New York, made the The Dow Jones industrial average was latest move ·in· the recent downward ahead 11.97 at 663.41 shortly after the spiral-of 1be prime rrom ua n1stot1c --announcement:-But-tt"later-eased, closing- high of 12 ~rcent. It was expected at 654.88. to touch oH a··new round of reductions. The m ar k·e t involving Intematlonal CWbank, which reviews Its pr Im e Business Machines Corp., also was structure every Friday, uses a floatlng s~lmul1ted by a report but the company rate fonnula based on certain money . denied today any knowledge of a market interest rates. La.st week the reported takeover bid by an Arab con· Fedefal Reserve Bank of New York sortlum. . released statistics showlng C I t I b a n k In a one-sentence st.atement issued could reduce its prime to 11¥4 percent, from Jts headquarters in Armonk, N.Y., The move by · Cttibaok last Friday the company said, "We ba,ve no knowJ. to trim its prime to ll'h. percent touched ecke of any nieiJotiations for the sale of off a new round of reductions. among IBM ·stock' to any Arab consortium.'' ttte----nauon•s-major banks. Rumors of a takeover bid sent IBM Although the prevailing prime· rate shares sharply higher earlier today on ls 111> percen~ Michigan Na\looll Bank the J.ondon.Stock Exchange. . . of Detroit has announced plant to io¥t"er The. re?J!l ._about a pnsible. Ar ab the"'eodilll rate to um ~ fqtm ., ta!$,eo"'.er'~a.$,flt!t,carried'bY ,the ... Ml!'<ll~ II pen:en~ ellective Oct. 21. E.!irt'N'e\11 Agi!ltj, conildei'M thii !lenn- califomla banks also announced redue-officiil organ ol. ~ Egyptian govern- tions in the pril}le r~\e today fol!Owing ment. The report did not speclfy who \lie lead of Ibo Easl t.last barilll ' b,M ~e!IJ1!>, the ·"019'!al!»'J• nor Crocker Bank said u Will 1oiv.r the !!IO;"I'!' .i11•Qlved lo tlie · ii)JOged• con- prime from 11;1i. to 111h: percent on Mon· ·sort1um. . ----: • day. Manufacturers Bank in tos Angeles also annowiced a ...iuction '11>1J1 ll )I, 141 . --~From P"fe .Al II l/.t~t. effective Monday:' • · · ·:-: · ...... · ·• ··~ The downward sp~al of the prime CENTER suggests bankers see at least a slight • • • easing in inflation and are optimistic the Federal Reserve will continue to Mercury Drops Alon g Coa st;. Fo g Han gin g On The fog rolled in, but the Santa Ana condition rolled out to residents aloag the Orange Coast spent today in comfort and obscurity. But the temperature drop to lhe low 70s was being greeted with r e 1 i &• f following t h e pressure-cooker tem- peratures of midweek. The National Weather Service said today's conditions would continue over the weekend. That means considerable fog in tbe mornings with only partial clearing at the beaches In the afternoons. Otherwise it will he mostly sunny. "IL's back to the usual gluck , fog at nights and in the mornings," the reather service spokesman said. "The neat wave is over." So is the heavy surr that pounded the beaches Thursday, reachina: six to eight feel. Today the forecast was for the surf to drop. The weather report called for a high of 72 degrees along the coast today and over the weekend wit h the high reaching 77 degrees inland. The lows both inland and al the beaches will be in the 60s. • the center of equestrian activities ln' Orlfllf! County was made at Thursday ·~· """'"~ ~ 9~--~· . ' · im -Coopet: said that a new group· caUed' the Qnu>ge Coo!rify . E;questrian Association had been fo~ am o n g those 1eastne barns and &tall• 00 the fai rgrounds. The purpose 0(. this group, be said, was to make the fairgrounds the focus of equestrUm activiUes In the C0W1ty and to bring this about by pushing for a~ proressional show manager on the grounds and the staging of a Class A equestrian event. "We feel lhat there should ho the same situation here as there is in Santa Barbara, Del Mar and Pomona," he said. 4 Fair board members said they would welcome.advice from the new organi7.a· tlon. The ·fair board Thursday night also approved an operating budget of $™,000 and approved renewal of the contract with International Speedway InC. for , the continuance of motorcycle races at the fairgrounds oo Friday ev~gs. The new cootract would last three years and provide tbe fair with an estimated 146,000 a year. A new $100,000 concess:i.09 stand ls going to be built in the porking lot OJ the fairgrounds. Tel·Phil Enterprises, which runs · tbe swap meets and has the concession rights to the 'swap meets and motorcycle. races, wants to put In the new building· ~ board instructed a committee to go over the cootract and then tllake 8 te lephone poll of the board for final approval so construction can s t a r t within a week if everything is acceptable. ID Ford Signs Bill on Housin g WASHINGTON (UPI) -Presldenl Ford signed a bill today that will help finance $7.75 billion worth of housing construction. Ford said the bill will give the depressed housing industry "a shot in tbe arm." • The bill is expected to spur construction ot 100,000 new houses across the co'Uptry. _ Under the legislation, the federal goveriurient will be empowered to buy oonvenUonal home mortgages from savings and loan assocla· uons and other lending lnslltullons and ln thltcway can pump more home Joan funds Jnto tbe Ught money market. . A number oI lead~ers ·1n the housing ·induStry ana construction un ions along with members of Congress were in the Ca binet room whe nFord slgned the bill. Forl! saia the bill will "materially help lhe housing indU>try In turning the corner." The lndu!llry has fall en into a deep shim!! be-· cau&e the shortage of money has brought home constr)lction close to a standstill • " - I extra:~t!on based on. ~ge C-o-u_n-~ ') Wublngton district. -_ ~ -:. -~-. ?" p .' " -.utbo"Ue.-lnvestlgattoo and-le~-work, Battiatelli ltaiil he 'toik-.Jlri~·iillls -Sa~ and .S\lllCIJY 81 Baltz,~ ~ U:ll Angeles CounJy woo t aCC';pt and" her hulblfu:i· to' tbe :SJlver Slipper Funeral Home,,.corma.del ~ar. ! ~. ibat. . . night dub wl!On(ljie ~.,.. -met -.Y ·lor Uie· veteran l'!li<mlQ wtl1 Agaiaman. of Ibo law firm of Sheffield, his ·r ••••be!-bO .;......._,.. be •• ~ •• •• 7:30 "'"• '" Sl.-Joochlm's Charton; ~bm4n and :t\gl_]aruan, S<lld Wl e ~ • }'I ._'l'JIS ~£Y~ ~......, · r '.l:" .. , •• Thursday one h:lpeful coacession· bas ~-1 -• . Catholic Church, . Costa M~, followed been won They are w1lling to accept BattlsteUa found an apartment for the by Mais Monday at t.·aiD at·'tbe ho Or · Coun 1 b-or Miils at the Waahlngton bllildioi whore · · t ange ty Po ygrap 90-CBU-he and bis wife also have an apartment · aanw:.ctwreb-'· · -, •• · ·· · · ed lie detector test-flndlng.s lf Russell Battistella aald be _ not hll wife _: A natfve ot'-Chicago, Capt. Bates rmv· submits-to ... -.!stored-by-Los-aecora einlieM111s-.-partment. - ' ed _\oJ!eWpol't~ch and" joloed :the Angeles County. •. . Battlstella 43 said be ts an lmparter police department.·• a ... tiatn11man in cll~:t 1:1bostr,"1ge::e wi~=:~~~t 1:! a~ travels' io ~Arg~tina lrequenUy. He 1°1:~::~~:t:U~ ~!:S-ot.·tl>e ·~· 0 da be! b' ed said he is se"'rated from his wife. d · ~ , ·• ' 1 dl·:.t • • . ~'---years auu. t ys, ls ng su )ect Meanwhile, "Milla elicited laughter and epartmt!Jll ~"'~~ v1jlflR ~~ u~1 to unconstituUonal double jeopardy. . wann applause from Utllt Rock Jafcees became ~d~rilstraU.~~<if eer as wel>: Appeals oourt justices ordered hun jQ,his "first public appearance since the Deecrttiecl as a tadtum'Jnan·who ke pt --freed-from·tos-·Angeles·eowrty ·custody; ·_·•Tidal Basin Incident when be advised : pretty much to hlmstlf~eicept. for his on grounds he could not be extradited "Don't go out with foreigners woo drink professiQnal work; Capt. Bates retlred lo Oklahoma second time on the same champagne" in 1964 due .to, a.heart .condition. alleged eviden~e heard in Orang~ County, "I did ~tbilll 1 shouldn't have done His ~ lati~ ~ ~ paUc'e de~ where e1tradltion had been refused once _ I drank some champagne when I mem fl'.ieDdl :AA ~et-J!a!d ~ l?e- already. knew it went to my bead rilht qulCkly. came--even _lete:.-m~ •• f&~ Prosecutor~ appealed· and were th~ And It did," Mills told the Jaycees i· prettx ~~4 !0. ~r.~~r!.lJ;lctl~ . -upheld, _p_Jacmg the a.ppellate court m in a campaign appearance in Little Rock home~,·:.~·, .. •· .. '"'~,; ii!' ~· the position of on:J~ Russell _freed Thursday. • . Suo1! . te · la once, then ordering him . ~Id ~thout • "l':{ow I've M emba;taff ~ Fairman and e-arririef, ";!IL ' • t -' o. • : . ~Q<ds abqql "~ ~•JICl'l!l'QO: a I've of Olrlt..Jli:,u .. ~ l\lll!!I. ~~COlllll, Some forms o tn1u!flce ire rr.ore said. I've apalogiied publicly on several ol fftwf,lort";;twli3t~ fltltr Rd-" ol. outrage o ~ s. t ~an o t be.r s , '' occasioos for what happened. I apoJoaize Mexico and five &t~ldferl:J, . declares Aga1~an·. And k e e P .1 n g a again tonight for what happened. · ~' ., .. · =, .J persc;in 1n_r..os Anjeles, c.oun~y l.{ail from , ~ 'l}.j I 1aay, · wu. .. wrong" la·(f#er ' Lig. l>l!~ """11· I ...fl ~iii ~~,. act. 8, 1,,, to the present Is •<'the top taking one drink of cba"ipasno beco.,. • ' · Ullftft . W or my Outrageous lnjusUCe List.'' I learned yeJrs· a10;ttl8t I coul4n't • \ ~~--~-=-;':t"? . --:~ 1 ..... : :!t u;.~ :ii:r~~ ~/\'~~= In Bic'y".eie-Tt C:tt Boston S.c. hool' s anytblng else and do VO()' much. . ~. • ~· • ' ~-1 .Mill1 ls seeking his 19th term In the l ~ • • , general election next month. His OJ>' ~ ~ Beach man who · admitted Enrollment Up poaent ls a.publican Judy Petty 8 so. being ID posae11lon of a bicycle lhat year~d divorcee who ha1 said she' would WU · stolen May 3 from a Costa Me111. not ·make the Tidal J!4sin lnctdtnt a home has been aentenCed to one year BOSTON (UPI) -Attendance at ra~ally troubled Hyd• Park High School inaeased today lo 708 stOOe!i'ts, including 310 whites and 392 blacks, compared lo 62111llursday. Police continued to patrol the corridors and students entering the building were spot checked for weapons for the second day. One student was suspended 111ursday when poll.ce found an 18-inch club up his sleeve, campaign issue. . in ~ Cowrty Jail. Durtna his Jaycees addreas,MUls look· Superior Court Judge \James K. ·TUmer ed often toward his wife, Polly, who ... ontered-Uie 1'11 teTmra:nd two years was seated in tbe 8udlence. She was probation for Cluistopber laed Mauney, not with her husba nd Oct. 7. 27, of 8811 Paldlc: Coast' H11hway, after "There is oo diff.eren<I! between us. the defendant pleaded guilty to chm:ge1 After you've been married as Jq as of drlvina: a Vehicle· Without the·conient ~·e have, you get 90 used to one person of ~ owner.. , • that no one else can _come between Costa ,Me$8 Police ~~ l'( au n e y you," Mills said in denying suggestions after identifying the bley'Cie as being -that he was romantlcany involved v4th one stolen · from a home .at 191 Mor· 1.-trs. Battl1t1lla . .:· .._... distown St. M~ 3:· • · • • , • n ·LAMP SALE CONTl'NUED . . ..... -~- • • ! •. ~ .• ~ •. -• From the finest collection of lamps in . South ·Orange · C~unty. Select from such we.II known names .. ~t _M ifr!>ro," ::" .. St1ffle. Knob Creek, Norman Percy and: many oth'ers. .. :'. . . -· .. . . ' ".~ -.. .. " . ... .. , . " ' . ,. ,,.. ·1 • l' • .:".. . . Fantasllc lnv9ntory of Quality Lamps All Ready Fbr llnmedlate1leli"8(Y . r.. •... ,,.., ~ . ,.. .. ... ... . .... .:~·~·,, • WHllDAYS & SATUIDAYS 9:00 to 5:39 . , •• ' ' ., " 3 I. I _ t .... J, •.. ' . NEWPOAT11EACH • """ 1127 WESTCtt1•r DH ., " '42"9!0 . t~GUNAilfA~H r . '"" ,34S Nf)~T~I ~'O~~ Jl~J-:.:..~~~} '\ TORRANCE•~ ' -~'164t HAWTllORNE llLVD ... (Open ,~ii 9, Sun. lt.:lrJO) . 1 .. • ... .il'f~1Ja79 .. • •• .I ---~-- I • ' • ' • -, • • I J I AG · "·,,f1fAILY. PILOT, EDITORIAL PAGE - -s ' ' Police Aid ConsuJDer • ' " ' ' •I)! 't1 1t ' I "' • '"" '" ••• ·~ -· I A new legal protection Is available through the Costa Mesa ~olice Departl1)env Detective Bureau, one which deserves lhe attention and awareness of ~very citizen. , This one shoald be especially interesting to the dlronic cillzen·complainers who grijle that the police their taxes support never do a nything but write traf· fie tickets. · Costa Mesa has created and Financed a full-time Consume• Fraud Detail headed by Detective Gerry 'nlo111pson. in addition to the efforts in ·1rvlne by Detective John, Stoneba<"k. \vho is ass'igned to that area,. --------.---Consumer truud-is one or the most prevalenl -forms of \Vhite collar crime. costing hundreds of thousands of citizens millions of dollars every year. >Pftnd it is qne of the more difficult forms to prosecute. bec3use con artists 'classically prey Qn ·people under the guise of just beihg good business operators. . If they ·sailed ships, their identifying banner would r!ol be the bl ack-and-w hile skull and crossed bones of lh,l',Jolly Roger, bul lhe slogan: "Lei The Buyer Beware.'' . • They don't sail ships, but they can turn up in virtually any commerciaJ enterprise. ••consumer fraud is big business," expiains Detective Stoneback, who handles it in the rapidly-grO\\'ing Irvine area. ;'But often. people don't kno\v the~'ve been had. And just as important, a Jot of ~ peoplelhmk they've been had when they haven't." He points out that often it is a matter of ci..vil la\v '\v~ic~ can be settled by a court suit, as opposed to c~m!nal offenses. But recent legislation permits be or aid in explaining consumer protection la\\·s . The~· \\·ill a lso purs ue proseyutiort. in cases u·here thal is indieated. / A simple bag of jelly beans could become a S2.SOO exam1>lc. according to Detecti \·c Stoneback. He said that. $2,500 is the maximum fine allo\ved under California Civil Code for consumer rraud '·io1alioris. \\•hich could extend to even selling 1a bag of~ jelly beans advertised as \\'eigbing two ounfe.s \\'hen exarnjnation sho\\'S it on~y \\'eighs l .5oun,•es. ''Tha_l ••.. ''he emphasized, ''is consumer fraud.·· Candidates Needed The s l eepy atmosph ere surrounding a three.candidate race for a single vacancy on tht! board of difectors of the Costa l\1esa Sanitary· District is so slrong that even the competitor~ \V a nt more competition. • One aspirant, Elsie Kroesche, appealed for greater citizen interest in the workings of the s pecial district which has a direct influence on every household and pocketbook within its boundaries. She deemed the special district an "invisible· form of government," yet one that levies taxes and administers waste treatm ent and trash collection throughout the community. , Her fellow candidates, Dale Secord and 1-lenry Panian, agree that the board race deserves more in· terest. • .. ... · relatively ne\v consumer fraud di!tails in local police departments to go after the shams and shysters operating Y.'ithin the legitimate business community. Co~~mers Who feel they have been defrauded by local businesses should contact detec;tives_Tho_rnpson ~Stoneback. They do not offer legal advice, but can Applications for potential candidates seeking appointment-not election-to the vacancy on the board still are available at the Costa i\'lesa City I-tall offices or the sanitatiOn district. For someone inferested in public service th~ joh is worth considering. ""'~'-~ .. J: ~IT IS MORE BLESSED TO PAY Off THAN TO BE PAID Off." Bicentennial Slogans rneflect American Faith WASHINGTdN -We have been hearing about America from its people. We asked, you may remem· ber, ror a Bicentennial slogan. The response was spontaneouS ; tens of thousands of citizens from ·aJl walks • of life have sent us slogans, phrases and oetr (J~CK ANDERSON) Hundred StePs-and More to C.Ome. '' Dear Gloomy Gus How· can I go a'bout getting a police badge like citizen 'Pinkley? It ought to be good tor a variety of courtesies. W.A.O. ; I expressing ow. they fee l about their country. Teenagers, too, responded by the . huridreds. From Annapolis, Md., 18· year-ofilJames P. Gough t.01.aor hiS --· rrust ti• " ct b G1-ro..,comll'ltflt1MttuO!llitttdDJ~ ra on over recent a s y men Md • '* -•H•'"' •efltct-. Wtws tt .,. in high places.'' Yet he could still of-M••"""'· s-i wwr ,.._,.. .. 1a GI--. o... Man y h t v c written .- accompanying letters or fer two heartfelt slogans : .. America . ~"'~· -'"-~-··-·---------~ a Them'e that is Timeless'' and • , testJmqpiaJ. To r ead them· is to understand that the Wltergate horrors, economi c 1 uncertb.inties and other afflictions I f b'ave no:l shaken the American faith. ~tr poetry expressing how they feel abo1,tt their country. I Many have written accompanying letters of testimonial. To read them is to understand that the Watergate hor· rors, econom ic uncertainties 'and other afnictions have not shaken the t American faith. l SOME with a lifetime behind them have wMtten about the turmoil they I have seen. Youths looking ahe1rd·have written about the challenge of events. l We have heard from aliens about the dreams which brought them to this land. Even a few corivicts have responded, with a special poignancy. about the meaning of freedom . Some have applauded President ·ford's attempt to return to the White ' House a humanity and openness more t becoming a free republic. Others I have taken issue with the President '· over his decision to pardon Richard ·•America, Something Warm ihat TouCheci my Heart.;; A tl·YEAR·OLD, Johnny Carter of l.A>ng Beach, Calif., suggested this sign be posted across America : "C.Onquerors and Corruptors Beware. This Nation is the Property or the ·people." And a Wilmin&ton, N.C .• high school student, Stewart Moshe, sub- mitted this slogan: ''There's No Way like the American Way." From John Lauria ot Jacksonville, Fla .. we received a simple, sincere motto-: "~merica, Where People 'Are Happy.'' He added meaningfully : "[ should know. l came here in 1903. •• HERE-KBE a rew other offerings select ed at random from our mailbag:~ Florence A. Trac¥ Revelle, Ard· more, Okla. -••Pride in our past; Faith in our ·future ; Forward Americil..1"· Lionel Wernick, ·New York City - .. America: The Promise Kept and now Renewed ... George Kelly, Philadelphia, Pa. - "Here Lives a Free People, 1'116· 1976." JosePh P. McGoldrick, Jackson Heights, N.Y. ~··Jn America. there are no impossible dreams." I Nixon and thus suffocate the legal process·to its crib. They reject the l '"'idea that the country would'be better 1t served by amnesia than by truth. , John Klunck, Sheboygan, Wis. - "If we can't get to Heaven we'll setUe WE RECEIVED one slogan from an ror Am erica.·· authentic American pioneer, 98-year· Jim Felton, Little Rock. Ark. - Jld Jesse L .. Hall, who was born in the ''America.is coming or Age.'' l centennial year ol 1876. He has speat William Eric Rohrs , Tacoma, • his long life pushing westwards. He · \Vash. -"Now, Let's Put It All I lived through the blizzard ol 1887 in a Together." · ,Morality Needs New Vocabulary {SYDNEY ~ARRIS) c TfiOujhis ~~Large: ObviOusly, the language needs a new word £or young couples who are living together more or less. per- manently, but are· not married. Any suggestions? <Remember, Ge lett Burgess invented the marvelous word. "blurb," only a few decades ago, which filled -a genuine.need.) The only effective punis~ment for an evil·doer is remorse; and if he or she cannot be made to feel remorse, any. punishm ef)t becomes self- defeating through· turning the evil· doer into a mor, resentful creature than before.· ~ , ~-Kindly keep i_n ibind that '"media·· is a. pl\lraJ word, 8nd there is no such \bing as ··m~dia=.·_· _ Reflectio1a of A11ti·A111ericanis111 Greeks Pull Out of NATO \VASHJ NGTON -The Greek gov- ernment ha s quietly withd rawn some ol its top mil~ta ry officers from North Atlantic Treaty , INATO) headqu a r· ters ih Brussels. one more indication. of ho\v se riously the Cara manli s gov ernment views anti -American sentim e nt now sweeping Greece . ( EVANS-NOVAK ) are unable to impede the move toward what looks like a form of dangerous neutrality for fear that the a nti -Am e ri c an current s now sweeptng GreeC'e"Woutd'pull illem un- der. Accordingly, rational diplomacy dictated by lon g·term Greek security Facin~lhiflirst parliam e ntary election on Nov. 17 since the military coup d'etat of 1967. the new l"livilian government oV Prime ~1 ini s t e r Caramanlis is torn •f •needs has been inundated by short· ~-term domestic politics. The toun· 't:' dation for this was built by Washing· between confliCtin g political' realities. The merest fragment or publlt display of pro-American sentiment eould boomerang, giVfng the Greek left a dangerous opening that Andreas Papandreou would be quick fl> exploit. Ca r amanlis dealt with this hard political tact by pulling Greece out of the mili tary organization of NATO . Now he ha s rollowed up by with· drawing some of the 400-odd Greek or. fieers-from their regular military bil- lets in Brussels. Naples and other NATO commands. ton·s long love affair with the hated military dictatorship. i\ CASE in po int \V<tS the absolute- ly futile effort by Serretary of State Henry Kissin ger last week to enlist sub ros3 Greek supix>rt against the then-pending congressional ban on U.S. military assistance to Turkey. Conrerring at his own request at the Plaza Hotel in Manhattan last week wit h 1\-Iavros, Kissinger expl_ained that tht! effect or <t congres"sionaJly. imposed Turkish aid ban was predic- table: it would make the Turks dig in their heels against U.S. mediation ef forts to remove Turkish troops from Cyprus and return part of Turkey's BUT THE domestic political Cyprus conq·uest to Greek Cypriots. demands for anti·U.S. actions raise Thus. it was in the self·interest of the gravest future problems for Athens to kee p the U.S. on good terms Greece. Friendship with the \Yest, with Turkey. and particularly the-U.S., is a b· Mavros was stunned. "That," he solutely essential for Greece in the t told Kissinger, "is not something for a long run, as a glance al the map/ Greek to do." proves. Greece ls bordered by three Communist states to the north and by • INDEED, f;1 1· from discouraging muscle-nexingTurkeyontheeast. Greek sympathizers in the U.S. Caramanli s and his for e ign Congress from voting against the ban minister, the astute George f\.l a vros. on aid to Turkey, top Greek di~lomats along with most other .leading Greek in the U.S. encouraged fl. ·one active politicians of the center and right , promoter of the aid ban \\'as the con· fully understand that fact. But despite ~ul-general in the influ enlial Greek strong pressure from the U.S., they consulate in San Francisco. who quietl y spread the word to friendly Congressmen: stop_ t\cmerican a.id to Turkey,·no matter what the impact on Cyprus. ~ In short, the political imperatives in .Athens on the eve of the parliamen- tary election far outweigh the . Ion&· range necessity or gradualJ;r restoring.the Athens-Washington link. No Gr'eek leader ~~ught secretly~ bying Gongress to vote against the tfwrki sh aid-ban could be elected s·ewer. in spector in a provincial Greek village. The unannounced detision to with· draw top Greek military men from NATO headquarters is simply t.be newes l s igna l . Having heard American pledges for over two mon· lhs that 1'urkey would be glad to give up some of its Cyprus conqUest once ta lks &_tarted (pledges wholly unredeemed ), the Greek government Continues to advertise itself as anti· American THERE IS no hope that this will change between now and the · mid· November election. and little expec• talion that it could change soon thereafter. Likewise. the hostility for Turkey so vividly· e-xpressed in Congress over the aid-ban thre1tens• politi cal retaliation against Washing· ton there, too. ·• ' \Vith an outstanding IOU debt to Russia for its acquiescence in the in· vasion of Cyprus last July, Turkey may find it harder than before to deny any Soviet reque~t tor overflight privileges in a future Middle Eastern war, particularly with the U.S . Congress so \;irulently 1;1nti·Turkey. As these Cyprus chickens come home to roost. the once·mi ghty U.S. is an impotent b.rstandcr. Economy Shakes Insurance Firms Despite the in1age of a rock whith t homemade muslin tent on the 1\deline Feinberg, Belmont, Mass. I Nebraska prairie. In Wyoming, he ·-"Appreciate our Differences ." --ii-'liwi>;as;;;elected to the state leglslal~u~re"'.~=!!'!'""'isw;G1gsberg, Pale~LN.J. - ' ow he abides iRlleno, · ev. " "Take no liberties with liberty.' \Vhat the world in the past has insurance companies have used over aJw8ys called a "great" man was the years to im press apon the public measured b~ the number or pe~ple mind the securit y to be gained by wh?fearedhtm ; what the.present and being indemnified lhrough thei r uture---must-learn-to call a·great-man-~pollcies, tllc ecQnomic tro ubl es be ing should be measured by the number of experienced in the nation may be ( EARL WATERS ) loan so much of it s rapi tal on homes or real estate in general. Other ty pes of Joans arc also li mited as to their perccnt<iges of the to1aL It may onl y invest a spcc1f1ccc1 percentage of the 1vholC' in bon ds or nn.v other fi£·1d nf sec::urit i(•,.;, Insurance ind ustry, Payne has been most atlcn ti ve to·the protection or the public and ha s worked to secure new measures to strengthen the insurance compani es. • l ·He summed up hi$ view or AmeMca J .K. Smilh, Sall' Lake City, Utah - t in a simple, three-word slogan: ''The ··i;•rccdom : 1776, 1976 Forever." Republic Stands." • Evelyn Conley, Pittsburgh, ~a. ~ . f ~From cell C-8 in the Florida slate · "USA : UndauntcdStands Amenca. pienitentiary, Raltord, f1a., Willie h-leanwhile, our search for'a .. Bicen- 1 Young wrote: ''Need J say, my life tennial slogan continues. Please.send has been a miserable road to travel. for your suggestions lo Slogans~e/o Ah.er years of ·walking it alone, I Jack Anderson. 1401 l~th Stree•, discovered one must believe in, N w •IV h' t DC 20036 . ., n~ 1ng on, . . . 'IDmelhing." ! He put his senlimentJ; into these • words : ··A Country not made by Han·d I blitby the Grace offiod and the \Viii of l Man." . ' I 1THERE WERE other poetic responses. "We may stunit>le but ' :: oner fall; Down throug)l the years, '*still stand tall," wrote Raymond Richardson from Chh.'\l.go. A Boalsburg, Pa., teacher, Ruth 1~1. carter, Jett "an extreme need for the children · to , knnw their country 's htritagc.'' She suggested this slogan.: I "So Ille Children Wiii Know." .In Toledo, Ohlo, the se«i~d and third arade stud ents at Lincolnshire School eomJ)Ostd a slogan together: "I r,rk tor Democracy bctause it wor sfor me." 111/INY OTHE't children sent in t 5Ji1c:ans. For tnstan~ a t2-ycar.old · I Forest Heights, Md., girl, Mary • Eliiab(!lb Henry , propos ed : · . "'America, a Homesteaded Jleart." '7f only you'd been ~A~H:.Year-o[d Peinjy 9h•n~ler of _ :_ dratt-dodgers ' ~JllO· CillT., eentln Uils ant: "Two ,__. __ ..._ ____ ..___. people he frees from fear. threatening even It is hard to believe, but true, that there is no such thing as a "rainbow" if there is no one there to see it; a rain· bow does not exls~elr. but only through human eyes. the in s u ra n c<' bulwarks. At le ast . Stut t> ln s ur ;i n cl· -c ommi ss ione r Gl eeson L. Pavnl' has issut-d so.mp gua rded \varninp_s Television"-'On'tcomeofagcunlil il tofhc crf ~l't tha1 acquires at least one commeritator --insurance ca n no who is as incisive, as welf.lnrOrmed, longe r he l>li nd ly accc11tcd as :in and as even· handed as the late la men· absolute su rety . ted Elmer Q'avis was on radio. CH Un· While Pay ne 's 1hesi~ Is not ccnUired tlcy and Brinkley were to Davis as on ri sing co)fls und inOation as much Mantovan1 is to Mozart)._ as the saggi ng stock mnrkel. the whol e thrust of hi s cuu tions is based upon the prev ailing direction or the economic \v1nds. Most polltlcal speeches remind me or Churchill's comment about Stanley Baldwin. when Baldwin was Prime Minister: "Stanley occasionally •Stumbles over the truth, but he alw ay!> hastily picks himself up and-hurries on as It nothing had happened.'' 1r I were the head of any company. T would s ummarily fire the fi rst subor· dinate who called me "Chi er." • P~ople who c:lamor to be ··rrec" C•,.hlch usually means rid or thei r obligations ), forge l Goethe's war· ninK: "Eve rything that frees our spirit without givina us oontrolof ou r· selves iSTill"ffous.·•-=--. .. As Payne indicates, insurance com- panies ar(l heavy in\·cstors in i;tocks and bonds along with oth er s pecul ation s. \Vh ilc they arc regulated· by the go,,crnn\ent and some types or policies like some types or bank s1.1vl n.ii11 ~ire "insured" b:r the ·gove rnm<'nt. th,e rrotections are not gc{lrt'd lo lht' full potcntlnl.s of a dis:istrnus rlf'prcs!lion. ALT llOUGll insur11nrc cnm1n1n1C!-. have 3 fiduci;iry' relal)on~hiv with thei r investors as do the b:inl\:!>. there arc siJ!niric:int differences. Banking 'JQW$ "})ft:~Crih.C. lhc J>CrCflfll;l ~C$. nf total 11Sstl!t which 11\3Y be.in.vested in any one ;.irea . Thus•a bank may.only I l11sur<1n<:l' r111npanir:-. cvcn though 1·r1111i r~d tu Oll!in l.ai11 a stipul alcd pt"•r · C'Cnl a ~l' uf tut;_il liubili tlcs 1n lh1ui<l rrscr\·C~. may 'ot h c1'~•isc pl unge the i:n lll'c 1·.::n1<111H.Jcr n11 thc :-tot•k n1urkcl or uny ottH •r fi el d Pnyne hu:' not charlled that th1~ h a.~ been dont• h~· ;iny ennipany. To thr. contrary mnny ar1• hc11vily invested . in lon.2 ternl 1.-inri <11vncrships and ot her real cst11tc nf the types aly,•ays con5idcr('d most sounr!, especially in the long range \'iC\\'. STll,I., to the extent thllt the com· panics ha,yc Invested on 1hc stock..- m1:1rket ht> has wf:lrnt•rl lhut further dips in stncks ('ou1d \\'Cli Jeopa rd1r.c the solidity of som e ('Ompttni es. li e has S:\1ggc~tvit th:l t th ere tare com · panics \\'hich shou ld he reduci n'1 their !<ltoekmnrkcts po1tfolios h~· 15 lo 20 fl('rccnl. Payne s11y,; thaL lhe rompanics in lhc ~rcalci;t danger Are not the life in· s-urcl's ti~ muC.h a:; lho cll!::ll:J\t:y ('Om~ oanics. The lallcr wi'itefire, auto and ''other types of lo~s insurance . A tor in~ura ncc cxecuOvc before he assumed thc's1fil's jotillf policing lhc HE POISTS to !he ract that the state has brought about the establish· mcnt or a ~u<i ranty fund to prote<:t the insu red against casualty company fai lures . Thi s is a pool made up of con· tributions fro m all casualty com· panics lo prf)v idc· aga inst the railure nr any on(' of them . I ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robert N. Weed, Publisher Thomas Keevtl, Editor Ba rbaro Kreibich, Editorial Pogt Editor · 1'he editorial pege ot the Daily Pilot seeks to inform and Stimulate .re<iders by presenting on this page diver!ie comme ritary on topics or in · ttrtst by syndi cated columnli;ts and rartoonlsts, by pro\:lding a forum for rt'atll'r$ · vit'W!i and by pre1tnting th1i; nr.,.,·:i papcr's <tpl nlonl! and ideas nn <'urrrnt topic!!. The editorial f}'lllnion~ nf thl" l>:idy Pilot Appear nuly in lhl· cdll1rr1a l rnlu1nn Dt jht' top of th(' f>:llZ(' <l1)ln111ns •."<pressrd b~ lh~ cnlumnl~ls an(I c:irtoonist~ an(l lct lf'r v•r1ter-; art• thrir O\\'J'I and no erwton-'tmt nt or their vie-A'~ hy tlw! Daily Pilot should be interred,· . ' Friday, Oetob<r!8. 1974 · • • ' ---... ..... ~ ·- 'Ju11t Frie1ad11' 'Fanne' on -Mills' By the Associated Preu Eduardo Battlstella says his wife 't\'as employed for a year as a $500-a-week aide by Rep. W~bur D. Mills (0.Ark· ), but there was no rom:ance between the congressman and t~ former stripteaae year-old Mrs. BatUstella. He aaid people were trying to create the lmpreulon that there 't\1as such a romance. She , is known as "Fanne Fox, the. Argentine ·Firecracker." ' • Mrs. Battlstella was one of f o u r .. · persons with Mills, the. 8 5 • y e a r -o I d .. cbairman of the House Wa;ys and Means dancer. Copunlttee when police stopped Millf' "We are friends, that's it. My wife · 1 ~. Unlighted car <in W~op. and I lhink the f\1lfls are wonderful .Oct. 7. Mills said he was faking "ltri . people. I love him like a falher. He Battlstella borne from a party. and Polly {Mn. 1.11lls) are very fond BaUlsteUa'-ald he dld not wBllt to of our three chJ1dren," he said in an · talk abo\lt the incident. .. interview in Buenos Alres. He said he and his wlfe ahd the In 'uttle Rock, Ark., MJUs .denied that Mil19es traveled together to Antigua in Mni. ·s attl!lella had ever been on his the Caribbean in JUiy 1973. Mills ·had .. .. .,.~ ........ "~ :,;6 .reeti11g Governor's Wile . .. . personal payroll . He said she had been no eommefl$. on the :alfered Antigua paid to redecorate their apartment in trip. • · -• · • ~ - July. 1973 on a one-time basis. • Battiltel!l\.lf.ld lhat;lfter U,.lr AnUgua SUCCUMBS AT. 61 Fotm•r Pollet C1pt. Bltti . . . .. ' .. . . ·•· .• Veteran •entertainer. dancer, acrobat and stuntman zens were honored Thursday for work with retarded and f,hyslcally handicapped children. Benny and Ursua danced a polka for 'Mrs. Reagan during cere- money to show they are t'wo whO aren1t too old to tango. Earlij!r, he denied there wu any vacation ,~wife begkq"~ Wor:kin& for romance between hlmseU and the 33-Mrt .• llfll!l..as :a:. l'Ubllc '11tlatioos :and Edward· Bates Benny 1'"'ox. 80, remluisces on show business with ..... N'3rrey Reagan and Ursula Blae nkner. Fox and Mrs. ..... · BJttetlkn'eT are Fos ter Grandparen ts at Fairview ~ .:"··..,st-a~.~Os~ilal in Costa ?i-1esa, where 66 senior citi· • iecttfaiilll;lststiltll 111'.lhl!.:Wllrbome. , MIB a tin\i, :aijlj. al.to: Jrelped Mills From P,lige Al himself with aiiJ>oiritinenh, travd ar· , ra9gemenls aJid.i.imllail. db.ties.. • • JAILED . · Ml)la paid Mn.' l!atu.tell& a' -kly -. F ~~i·a;l; JP~es. Sla~e!l:·~unday : • TONIGllT , _J FOOTBALL -Costa Mesa vs. Villa Park al OCC stadium, 8 p.m. Estancia ,.u . Corona deJ ti.far, Davidson Field. ··B p.m. •"' MarORCYGLE. SPEEDWAY RACING ;i.t.7 i'.airgroundi. 8 p.m. '°11.NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH DRAMA -. .11'.!:&ffert .i..of Gamma Rays oo Man •t~l.r, the. 'Moon Marigold!," Room 120, ._1ti>ct .. ll.and 19, 8 p.m. Adults $3, students ..,..1. '!' ( 'J•'! ••. :o-11>'.0CO ·LECTURES -"GeolGCY 0 r ;..'CalifDm.ia." George Masoo I e ct u re r , Science Lecture I. 7:30 p.m. "Travel <""1il>lida)I l!botography," Ralph S. Gar- ~~ Jm:turen Science Lecture 2, 7:30 .1n.:. ,11•.·:,1 1 ... t. FRIDAY NIGHT FILMS -Fellini's ~ytkkln.'ffoo::: Forum . 7::kl p.m. Adm· 11<fl v· ·"Jl na .. 6':1 "THE R0A.t1 INSPECTOR HOUND" ~.;... South Otmt Repertory Theater, 8 nt11m.. lhrougl! Sun. , •. SATURDAY, OCTOBER 19 ' r rr,.u VA<;Cl~A TIPN CLINIC -C:.OSta l·:M~sa Womentf'Club, 9 a.m. • (p.m. •·, ~CYl'ARV ~CARAGE S!'LE -Orange aiia 16th Str~!°. a a.m. · -"SEWING FOR WARMTH" -Rozan. -1le -'RCillMOok-lecturer, OCC H om e ~ti1TiW il* Room 31 9 a.ro. , <:-·-..... " • t .. . ... -• l • From Page AI ~;n:~QNG . . . , : ( --: ii.nd would be port of total expenses 'for tbtracing...of $1.4 million. ~ ! Piesently~~roughbred racing in ; ~t~rn aillto1nia is author\ied at San· ) la Mlita,1fo~·wood Park. Del f\1ar and : Pomona. Only quarter horse and harness f. tacing is currently authorizl'd at Los •. "4uni tos. .. .... • . . -.. ! ;reaCQJ!i..' At·rested l l SAN FlANli1sco !UPI) - A young :; flan "dressed like a peacock'' y,•as ar· ; ~tt!'d ~ across the .street from t c ba~as accu!ted of robbing. :K e rll!'!WI. al.. Ricardo D. Ricafort. a ' year-old nat1ve of t h e PhU!pplnes, ~ ~c-wtttnn two hours of the robbery ~~Herth Beach branch or the Bank :t tr Ameri~ FBI office reported. J" .l:'Y.t) 1JiJ . • . ' • • • • . • • • • i • • • ' • • • • , • • • • • ·: ' . • • Robe rt N. Weed l>of,U'9nt •nO Pub!I""''" Jlfc k R. Curley y ,,,. P•~fllloftt ..... Glntt'1l INNQ111' Thomas Keevil COllo< Tf'lomas A. Murl)tline ...,,.nl Q•"'il EOllor ~ ClitT.'fe<JH.,t.oos Richard P. Nall ~.,111M ...,,. ... ,.no EOi!or' 'COS11 MfS~ Offic• lXI "Wll ,., 511- ,>*1"11\q '"'"''''; p 0 llo• 1560, ~ S.<ond (11• OMt•O" llltll at (!Kt. •t.1. <;llttorn11 $t10Krl,1!1111 llf ~•rill' U.• 'l'IO"ltnir, ~Y mall ._00 mon1111r; mmttr, dl'11n1tlOlll U.00 m!M'l1111't -----.......... ····-• • • • · Salary of • ~· from hia ~own~ ftlnds, Battlltella "sifd. He lalQ. bii-wife oc- 6elieves the client he represents ·.free casionally ' traieled 'Ylth ~ Mlll.lel as 9n Jegal prlncipl,. Is lnnoceot.,.wlTI be m:; of he•~ job,. !\!!c!t-laot~ 1fom CalhoUc-luneral ,sendces are scWduled )n l;,os Angeles ·County Supertpr ColJrl AUfl•l 1973 >mfil rectDUY'. :._ •:..~ • Sunday ·and Monday. fQ!! nttire4· Ne1fPOrt Citibank and Chemical Qct. 22 for a .new extradition bearing. -•. Baftlstell!I:· .ma· ~·f\1#' .~.fera. . Beach police Capt Edwara Bates. who . ·. Judge Wilham Murray of Orange Coun· Milb as a clf(!ltOt~oi iloc<!ta!ing died ~edneoday <11~6!.ol .lJlll'l!l a)~. II Supenor Court already re1ected the firm'ln~;&t.1.?,Tu na-ble Vi*ation· for .Capl Bale& will be Lowe r Prime Rate %% NEW YORK (UPI) -Two major relax credit reins. banks today lowered the prime lending Given encouragement by the decrease rate for top business borrowers to 111/., . in interest rates. irivestors pushed prices rrom 11 11' percent. '" sharply higher in active trading· on the First National City Bank and Chemical N~w Y.ork Stock Exch~e. Baµk , both !)f New York, made the ~Dow Jones lnduslli&I average was latest move in the recent downward ahead 11.97 at "3.41 shortly after the spiral ,or the prime from its historic announcement. But It later eased, clO!ing high of 12 ~rtent. It was erpected at 6Sf.88. • to touch off a ··new round of reductlons. The m a r k e t involving International Citibank, which reviews Its p r J m e Buslness Machines Corp., also w a s structure every Friday, uses a floating stlmu1ated by a report but the company rate rormula based on certain money , denied today any knowle<ige of a market interest rates. Last week lhe reported takeover bid by an Arab con- Federal Reserve Bank of New York sorttum. released statistics showing C I t I b a n k In a one-sentence statement issued could reduce its prime to 11¥4 percent, from its headquarters in Armonk, N. Y., 'Jbe move by Citibank last Friday the company sakl, "We ha.ve no knawl· to trim its prime to lllh percent touched edge of any rJieiotiations for the sale of off a. new round of reduction,, among mM ·stock to any Arab C0t'190rlium." the nation's major banks. Rumors of a takeover bid sent IBM Although the prevailing prime rate shares sharply higher earlier today on is lllh percent, Michigan NaUou•l Bank the J..ondon.$.qc.k Exchange. of Detroit bas announced plamt to lower The.report .about a possible.Arab the,~eoding rate to llW& ~ {JJlm ., ~eov.el"'was,f!tst,~~111 ,the~~ddle It percent, effective Oct. 21 . Eut'Ne\11' Agency, &ioSldei'ed !liO !lemi· California banks alJO 81\nounced ~~ ofHclal orgin ol the Egyptian govern- lions in the prime r~~~ today following ment. The report did not specify who the lead oNhe East OD.st bariks. 11 Ui~ ~~e!l\f~ the ~•ll94ja'"'"1 • nor Crocker Bank said 11 Will iower the '!>Or-'t'5 JnvQJ.ved in ~ &Jkged· con- prime from 11~~ to 111h. percent on Mon-·sort um. . + day. Manufacturers Bank in I.As Angeles also announced a reduction froQl 11 )1 '9 .. -. From PllfJe .Al 11 1/4I>ttcent. effettive Mond•Y: • . . -:-· c· .N· . ·._ .. ~ The downward spiral of the prime E TER sugiests bankers see at least a slight • • • extradition based on Orange Co u n t 'J Washington di.strict,.' -.. -.-- authorities investigation· and l~e1 woi-k.r-BattirLelfa teaicf be ;~.;._Jhj'*".'Miua Saturdayud~untY-Y at Baltz.~ ~ Loe Angeles Q>unty VIYD t a~pt and her hu!i-.nd 10· tbe ·SDV'er Slipper Funeral Homer Corona ·del Mai.. -- that. · • · · = · Rooary .jor tile' ve(<.ran pg~ .will AgajarUan, of the law firm of Sheffield. ~gbt .dub where U>e £Ciiiit~ -f!let • his Wlfe ....... be~ .!'ho '!II' ~ he Sund1111 1!-7:!0 p.<n, in SI. Joachim's .Cbarton; F!shnu!n and Agajanian, said lh .. •. -• Catholic Ch··~. ;..sta ·Mesa, .. fol' ;:: .. ~ Thursday one hopeful concession has ... ere. • ..-• iuo.:u ...., n.nnu been won. They are willing to accept Batttstella found an apartment for· the by Mass Mooday et 9 a.DI. IL· 'jhe the Orange Cowlty polygrapb-or ....,aJJ. /;!1~~~~~8!l'!~e ':1~partm'"':,';' oame.chureh ... , . . .. . .. . , ed. He detector test-findinga lf Russell . ' A native of·Chicago, Cipt. Bates mDY· submits to one administered by LDs Baltistella laid be -not hla wife -· ed to Newpotl Beach >nd. joined :the Angel eii: County. .. decorated the Mllls apartment. police depattminti:• • a ... patrolman in He insists-in the Meantime-that his Battl!tell~, 43, said he is an importer 19481 'WO.l.i .... up lh.~ ,the ~ · . . and travels to Argentfna. lrequentty. He ..... 16 · _., client who Is held wtthout bail for two said he ls se~ated from his wife. He was -event~y I ~arge m the ~years and. JO days, is being su)>iected Meanwhile 'Milli elicited laughter and depa$tent'11~~t~l diVlslp~ ~and ' then to unconstituUonal do~ble jeopardy. . warm applaUse from Little Rock JaYcees . became adn\inistratlve:"'rfcer ai welt. Appeals court justices ordered him in his first public appearance since the Deecrtbed·as a tadtu?n •man•who kept fret'd from Los Angeles County cust~y. ,Tidal Basin incident when he advised: pretty much to h~ ·es.cept for his on grounds he could not be extradited "Don't go out with foreigners who drink profesliOnal work,:'. Capt. Bates-retired to Oklahoma second lime on the game champagne" . in 196' due .to a.heart tondJUon. . ' alleged eviden~e heard in Orang~ C.ounty, "I did ~thini 1 shouldn't have done His ~ lat~ ~.and police deJl'.lf't.. where ertraditi<>.!1 had bet:n rehised once _ I drank IODle champagne when I ment fiie41 · uJ4 •• t;,4iJ!l. ~ tl;M:n;J)e- already. knew it went to my head rigllt quickly. came--eyen w l~ ~~·. lti~ Prosecutors appealed •and were· then And it did," Mills told the Jaycees , pr<llJ. .Mi ,,\O: !J9',n{'e."'°f1 .~gbtl upheld, placing the appellate court in in-a campaign appearance in Little Rock -bomt,",.~ .J_ ,. .. :.. ; -. ~ ..;. the position <:l ord~g Russell .freed Thursday. • . . surnYora~~SfitH~t~~1Ql1a once, then ordering him held JVIthout "Now l'v~ ·~ embar[aff (if)'Ond Fairmaii -liif"JOBnnfe~rw-amnet7'1iOtb ball. '. • ' '· . • : .,.or:dl abQl!I "'* J•wl!l":I'" a I've of ~J(,..,_ol ... 11.l~ l'laCllUla. "Some forms of• fn1usfict • ifl' r&~ • said. I've aj>ol~gized pJbliCly Oft 1everal <:l ~ti'lifmf•Biiiltlindo AJtfifMI fi outrageous . than o t be rs , ' occasloos for what happened . I apologize IMeJJCO and.flve gr~, declares. Af:,!~an. "Anet k e ela.i D g a again tonight for what happened. I\• , • •• 11 1 <':~ ~tn to ~e~~~~ at~~:i~ "ta~·:n;~link''~~!'~:J;.~U.: ~ L'~.~g' 1i'P.·'a .. i_ .. -.::'.'l: .• ~-iJ. ~, .... = of my Outrageous InjusUce List." i learned ye~tri a10, that l couJ4n't ~ . . -,~-·~ _ • Boston Scho~l' s ~=a~~:~~~ .. ~~; In; {Ji~y~i~:TJl~f.t · , Mills is seeking his 19th tenn in the • general electJon next month. IDs OJ>-A L8gUna Beach min who ' admitted easing in inHation and are optimistic the Federal Reserve will continue to Enrollment VP ponent Is Republican Judy Petty, a 31). beinJ m poue .. lon ol a bicycle that year-old divorcee who ha1 said she would was stolen May 3 from a c.osta Mesa the center or equestrian activities in' not make the Tidal ~sin incident a home bas been senteneed to one ye.ar Orange County was made-at Thursday BOSTON (UPI) -Attendance a t campaign Issue. . in Orange County Jail. nigbl" me.ting. 1 racially troubled Hyde Park !Ilgh School During his Jaytees address · Mills look· Superlqr Court Jndge James K. Turner Jlm. Cooper said that . a new group inaeased today to 708 stUdents, including ed often toward hls wife, Polly, who ordered' the Jail term and two years Mercury Drops Along Coast; called the ()range Coiµlty E;questrian 310 whites and 392 blacks, compared was seated in tbe audience. She was probaUoo for Chistopher Rted Mauney, Asitoclation had been fo~ed a mo n g t.o 628 Thursday. not with her husband Oct. 7. '11, or 8811 Palcfic Coast' Hlgh•ay, after those leasine ...barns and 8talls• on the Police continued to patrol the corridors "There Is no differenoe between us. the defendan~ pleaded guilty to char,_get fairgrounds. The purpose Of, this group, and students entering the building were After you've been married as IOQI u of driving a· vehicle· without Ute·COOsent he said, was to make the fairgrounds spot checked for weapons forlhe s-nd h t •• t f t'"' the fOOlS of equestrian activities in the day. """ ~t 8;:• %: ~~se soc:~ ~:nei:w1!: 0 ~o:~· p:illce btlok~ M.8 u n e y Fog Hanging On county and to bring this about by pushing One student was suspended Thursday you," Mills sald in denying suggestions after Identifying the bicycle as being for a· pro£essM>nal show manager on when poli.ce found an IS.inch club up -that he was romantically involved with one stolen · from a home at 191 Mor- The fog rolled in, but the Santa Ana condition rolled out so residents alOng the Orange Coast spent today in comfort and obscurity. the grounds and the staging of a Clalis his sleeve.. ~ f.1rs. Battistella. -~ -;_ distown St. May 3; -' A equestrian event. 1 ~:;~;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiii~;;m;;;;;lijl;;;;;;m;~;;~;::;;;;;;;;;~~~~~;:; .. ;;;;;;ili;;;;:-"We feel lhiit there should he the sarrie situation here as there is in Santa " But the temperature drop to the low 70s "'as being greeted with r e I i e. f following t h e pressure<ooker tem- peratures of midweelt. The National Weather Service ~id today's conditions would continue over the weekend. That means coniilderable fog in the mornings with only partial clearing at the beaches in the afternoons. Otherwise it will be mostly sunny. .. It's back to the usual gluck, fog at nights and in the morning&," the we~ther service spokesman said. "The heat wave is over." So is the heavy surf that pounded the beaches Thursday, reaching lix to eight feet. Today the forecast was for the surf to drop . The weether report called for a high of 72 degrees along the coast today and over the weekend wit h the high reaching 77 degrees inland. The lows both inland and at the beaches will be in the 60s . • Barbara, Del Mar and Pomona," be said. Fall' board members said they wou1d welcome. advice from the new organi1.a- .Uon. The 'fai r board Thursday night also approved an operating budget of $758,000 and approved renewal of the contract with International Speedway InC. for the continuance of motorcycle races at the fairgrounds oo Friday evejllngs. The new contract would last three years and provide the fair with an estimated $46,000 a year. A new $100,000 c:oncession stand Is going to be built ln the porking lot of the fairgrounds . Tel-Phil Enterprises, which runs tbe swap meet& and has the concession rights to tbe swap meets and motorcycle races, wants to put in the new building· The board instructed a c:ommittee to go over the t'Olltract and then !"1ake a telephone poll of the board for final approval so construetion can s t a r t within a week if everything is acceptable .. ·shot ID Arm"' • Ford Signs Bill on Housing WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Ford signed a bill today that will help finance $7. 7!5 billion worth of howilig construction. Ford said tbe bill will give the dep~essed housing industry "a sbot in the arm." ~ The bill is expected to spur construcUon or 100,000 new houses across the co\Jntry. Under the legislaUon, the federal government will be empowered to buy conventional home mortgages from savlngs and loan assocJa· lions and otl!er lending Institutions and In this way can pump more home loan funds into the Ught money market. . A number of leaders In the housing lnduSlry and construction unions along with meotbers or Congr·ess were in the Cabinet room wile nFord slgned the blll. · . Ford said the bill wU\ "m1terlallJ. help the housiruU!l4!!•.!D: In turni ng the cOiner .'' The 1nduMry lfai ta1leii l 'i1to·a aeip Slt'iml! cause the shortage ol.money )las brought home conatl'J!i:Uon clo!e to a standstill · I . - LAMP SALE CONTINUED .. -..... : ·.~:- • r • i , •.• , • From the finest collection ot ·1amps in South ·Orange · C~unty. Select from such we.II known :names. &i Marpro ..... , .,- St1ffle, Knob Creek. Norman Percy ar'ld ',many others. :. ; . · . . . "' ' . Fantastic tnvemory of Quality LamPS All Ready Fbr tmmedlate!°&li~. r ·· ~ ' . . . . . .. ' •. • W_HICD,t. YSlSA TUlDAYS t :OO .;. &:Jq . • , • I I • ,J •• •••• j •••• ... ' "· ... "1 ••.• "' .. .. . .. . . .. . ., I I I I ' ' THE J".AMILY CillCUS' By Bil Kea!19 Both Drop Dead ? ' Friday, October 18, 1974 • DAILY 'lLO'G-A SJ·. ' I 2 Indians kres -. , . I In Murder Mystery. Disease Claim~ Siste~s - NORTHRIDGE ( U P I l - Two sisters, 18 and 20. drop. ped dead in college physical education classes within I 0 days of each other, apparently the victims of a mysterious disea.8e' which aged the i r hearts prematurely. autopsy en Janet , said her heart tissue "looked like that of a little old mJR that had been exposed to an awful lot of stress over the years.'' ··11 seen1s th:it this is disease . the girls' parents something genetic. A runn ing said. and bolh led nor1nal , out of lime no n\a\ter where _::"':"::''_:_•_::Ii_::'":':_· _::_J·_:_'_::"_:_e_:_t_::w_:_••:_.!:.::=:.::..::~.=4J':;.;.:;;:;;:,...:,, PHOENIX .(UPI} -1'wo In-• dians were arrested h er e Thursday on charges of stab-~ bing to death a cab drlver in California, where authorities denied a rep o r t that the driver had b e e n scalped . .._ Police took into c u s t o d y Paul Blue Cloud Durant, 29, a-n"tf. R-i e·b a•r d -T-b-u n-de r • • J\fohawk, 25, on charges of .. Vie:kj Ann Penfold, 20, col- lapsed and died Tb u rs d a Y while running up and down stairs in a warmup exercise at Cal St.ate Northridge. On Oct. 7, her sister Janet, 18, -felt 'deal::!· while jogging at Cal Poly San Luis Obj.spO. Dr. Karl Kirschner, a pathologist who performed the (.._ __ s_t_at_·e _ _..J ··· "Would y.o.u undo thi• oronge, Momm y?" killing the taxi, driver Oct. --------------------10 at an Indian camp in Bot WHALE BITE IVORTH CA SH Canyon, il;I Ventura Cowity. The driver, George Aird, 27, of Inglewood, was robbed and slabbed to death when be ar- rived to pick up a fare. In Ventura, Dis t rict At-, tomey c. Sµinley Trom said a report by a sheriff's detec· tive that Aird ba4 be e n scalped was "erroneous." In an affidavit filed in Municipal Court Wednesday, Detective Braden McKinley said t h a t after Aird was stabbed t o death, those of the c a m p celebrated by "chanting and kicking the victim and pl!Ssing his· ha~ around.''··· • Liz Taylor's Beau SAN DIEGO (AP) -A Superior Court j u r y has awarded $ 7 5 • 0 O 0 in com- pensatory damages to a former \\'Oman employe o f Sea World for leg ilijuries rur- fered when she was bitten by Shamu, the killer whale. Faces . Arraignrrien t LOS ANGELES (UPI) Elizabeth Taytor'• I a t e s t boyfriend was scheduled for arraignment today on f o u r count! of grand theft, t h e District A«omeyls pttice said Thursday. • said. The verdict Thursday was ·wynbeJJ, a forme r bellhop in favor of Anpette Godsey. in his native Amsterdam, was the former Ann E. Eckis, of introduced by Peter Lawford San Diego, who worked at to~ Taylor fn 'Jl.U'le, 1973, tbe . aquatic park as a as· her marriage to. Richard secretary. Burton began to come apart A-'Jrs. Godsey was bitten by He soon became her con-the whale April ~9. 19711 when stant ixxnpanion, in California she rode Shamu three times and Europe, even before Miss in a show tank during a film Taylor and Burton w er e and picture taking session for Kirschner, who had j u s t completed the autopsy; said Thursday he was not surprised to hear that her sister had died a similar death. They were the only childrffi ct Ted and Gertrude Penfold of Northridge. The p a r e n l s said they had no history of heart_ctisease. _ Kirschner said Janet died or ''obstructive cari.Jion1yo- pathy, '• describing it as ·•a very, very mysterious diseas~ ... that occurs perhaps once in a million, or lf) nliltio11 people urc or y,•hat they 're ...doing,'' he s11id. "It is n ' t unusual for people in the sanie fantily \\'ith the disease to die at ne::irly the same Lime. no matter where they are or v.·hat they're doing.'' The Los Angeles C o u n t y C.Oroner·s Office scheduled an autopsy today to detennine the cause of Vicki A n n ' s death. Kirschner siid he was "sure her heart v.·as just as involved lby the disease ) as the heart of her sister." 11edical checkups had turn- ed up no indication of the ORIENTAL RUGS at ASIAN ENTERPRISE in Design Plaza • 250 Bldg., 2nd Floor Donald F. McDermott Jr .. ,owner · TELEPHONE 644-8881 . - WESTON STATE UNIVERSITY COLLEGE OF LAW OF ORANGE COUNTY C_.Ll,ORHIA'S LARGEST LAW SCHOOL • II I •aPFERS.A NEw PROGR'A 1M•l OF SPRING-ENTERING FULL -TIME LAW STUDY jWith 1 y,. •fld 3·1••' t•~•ll•n •••i•1>1) • . A CHOICE Of fOtJR 'ROG~AMS Of LAW STUDY IS .A.r .A.I LAI Lt: e IH EITHER l'fl or l YEARS ol FULL-1/Mf /a., ,1~d1 frS.16 cleu1oom hp~tl per wee•), OI • /H EITHER 1'/i or of YE.A.RS of 'MT·TIMf doy, eve,/~g. o• wet1end ro .. ,,~d, (1 do:.e1 pt• wtel. J ' l>Ollr~ per clouJ. e Yo" con eo1n yo~• JURIS OOCT_Oi JJ.0.J d•9'!' ?"d b•come e/;9,ble lo tgle th• Col.l011'1HI !or f•o1•,.1>0l101'1. WllTI 01 PHONI fOI CAfAtOGUl 800 South Brookhurst An•htim, C.. 92804 17141 635-3453 A'PlY NOW FOR DAY, EVENING, 01 WEEKEND CLASSES BEGINNING FEllUARY 3, 1975 ,.OVISIONAUY ACCllDITIO I Y.TMI COMMtml Of I AI lXAMINIU OF TMI STATI IAI Of CAUfOINIA . e FBI Na!Js Tico LOS ANGELES (UPI) The FBI captured two fugitives in Long Beach, Thursday night ·wanted for the kidnap-ex- tortion of a Ypsilanti, Mich., bank.<manager and his family last week. Henry 0 . Wynberg. 40, has beeo charged with rolling back f he odometers of four autos he sold when he was a used car salesman in Norwalk in 1972. divorced. When 1he actress reconciledl l...'p':'.u::b::lic:it::y...'p'.'.ur:.'po:::::se::':_· ----'-====================::..:...------------------- Special Agent William A • Sullivan said Luther Leath, 24, and Timothy Thomas, 2.5, also known as Lionel Fisher, were arrested w i t ho u t in· cident. The two men were charged Oct. 15 in Detroit, along with three other suspects still at large. e Budget Oka11ed SAN-FRANCISCO (UPI') - ' The finance committee of the University of Cal if o r.n i a regents. in a move tantamount to acceptance by the f u 11 board. ha• approved a record operating budget QI. $ 5 8 9 . 2 million for 1975-76. The budget approved niurs- day is 14.9 percent ~hove the current years. U.C. Vice President Chester Q . McCorkle said nearly two- thirds of tht: increase was caused by inflation and a pro- jected rise in enrollment. Since the cars were sold for more than $20, the alleged offense is grand theft. a district attorney's spokesman Judge Lifts News Bari On l 1i1nates with Burton. W y n )) e r )( ap- peared to be out of the pic- ture. But when the Burtons divorced earlier this year, the Taylor-Wynberg romance resumed. Many'have predicted he would become .her shcth husband. Salesman Awarded STOCKTON (UPI) -San Joaquin County Superior C'.ourt. Judge William Woodward has A Jimony rescinded an order that ban- ned 10 newspapers from S'IOCKTON (AP) -A local publishing the names of in-salesman has been awarded mate witnesses who testify at $200 a mooth t e m po r a r y a murder trial. alimony from his \vile ol 35 However, Woodward s1a id years. along with use ot one another method would be u~ of her two Cadillacs. to protect the n\en's identity Superior Court Judge -allowing them to use fie-Norman C. Sullivan · s a id tltlous names on the st.and. TOOrsday that he be I i e v ed. The judge said this was to Joseph Raffia], 58, is the first protect three lnmates testi-husband to recei\re s u c h fying at the murder trial o! alimony in San Joaquin Colµt- two Deµel V0cational Institute ty. prisoners accused of killing guard Jerry Satmders. .THE AWARD is temporafy Robert P. Uecker, publisher pending dissolution of t b e of the Stockton record, said, man1.age: "the judge should be C')m-Raffi~'s a t torneys con-• Body Founil plimented for finding a119ther tended he is unemployed. POWAY (AP) _ Sherlfrs way or protecting t hese While court documents sOOwed and coroners's office officials witnesses without violating the his wife Sadie, 57, owns a first amendment." downtown furniture store. are attempting to identify the -;;;;;;~~~;;;;~;;~~;;~;;;;;;;;~-1 body of a woman discovered i sprawled in a secluded area near Highway ft/ on Thursday. Sheriff's officials said the woman was between 20 and 30 ... years of age. The body wa's nude. except for h i g h shoes and orange-red k n e e sock.I. e Bus Vote Today LOS ANGELES (UPI) - The Rapid T r a n s I t D!~ict 6oatd of directors votes today on a contract with bus drivers, closing the only gap remaining in officially .endln~the 68-day- old bus strike. MINOLTA SR-T 102 . . .. ~ ' . -·· -"~~·~ ... ·•" The tioard criglnallv · waS schedulet1 to v-0te on lhe coi1- lract Thursday, but bal!Oting waii de\11iyed f~r fear c ( violating the state 1 a w1 re- quiring 24.-hour official notice be given before a p u b I i c meeting. But even without the final okay by the board, which is expected to approve the pac~ mechanics and b u s drivers continued to be called. back to work to prepare buses for service beginning Satur- day. MINOLTA SR-T 102 List $450 • WH11 Fl .4 .... , I Cne NOW 5315 HUNTINGTON PHOTO SUPPLY · 115" -SI, H.l.-f47-64 I I or 142-9589 5 Point Shopping ~nler YOU ARE INVITED to• ' HAMMOND HAPPENING Famous ·Ramona Gerhard wiit entertain you with a program on the fabulous -HAMMOND CONCORDE ORGAN. She Is a musician par·excellent in all reaJms from classical lo jait. MONDAY, Oct. J I 'el 7:11 P.M. Jf you haven'.t. heard her berore, she is a must an<l ·ir you have heard her, you will enjoy hearing her again. ecrn. ~ mit oll c..d etiioY' IN flll'I. Ref1ei~ 2154.L c-1 Hwy •• c ....... Mw. 644-IUO ·---"o. ----~-----HAMMOND ORGAN STUDIOS of Orang• Coast CORONA del MAR STORE dNL Y I ... , • Antique Auction .. . .. . .. at South Coast Plaza this Sunday October 20at10 a.m. in the Jewel Court. It's all part of Old Fashion Days Week. All antiques to be auctioned Sunday are on display now. Come see. · - I . South f oast ?Iaz~. Bff/STOL AT SAN DIEGO FREEWAY, COSTA MESA • I • .• I + • • ' ' A&· •,~ DAI LY P I LOT EDI T ORIAL PAGE Police Aid Consum.er •n A new legal protection is availublc through the Costa l\1 esa Police Department Detective Bureuu, one \Vhich de serv~s the ctllention l:lnd aY1arcness of every citizen. This one sho•ld be especially. Interesting to the chronic citlzen·complainers who gripe that the police their taxes support never do ·anything but write l raf· ficUckels. <.;osta Mcsu has created and rinet nced a full -time Consumer 1''ruud Detail headed by Detective Gerry Thompson, in uddition to the crrorts in Irvine by Dclcttivc J ohn Stoneback. \Vho is ussigncd to that area. Consumer rraud is one of the most prevalent forn1 s of \\1hite collar crime, costing hundreds of thousands of citizens millions of dollars every year. And it is one of the more di£fi cull forms to prosecute. because con artists classically prey on people under the gui se or just being good business operators. If they sailed ships, their identifying banner wou ld not be the black·and·\Yhite skull and cros~ed bones of the Jolly Roger, but the slogan: "Lel The Buyer Be\\•are." • They don't sail ships, but they can turn up in virtually a ny commercial enterprise. ··c~nsu m cr fraud is big business ," explains Detective Ston.eback, "'ho handles it in the rapidly-grO\\'ing Irvine area. "Buloft en, people don 't knO\Y they've been had. And just as important. a lot of peoplethii:ak they've been had when they haven't .'' J-le points out that often it is a matter of civil l<:.1\V ,,.~i c~ c<.in be settled by a court suit, as opposed to cnm~nal offenses. But recent legislation permits relat1\·eJy ne \v consumer fraud delails in local po lice departments to go after the shams and shysters operating \\'ithin the legitimate business community. Cons~mers "'ho feel they have been defrauded by local bus1nesse.s should contact detectives Thompson or Stoneback. They do not offer legal advice. but can Bicentennial Slogans Reflect American Faith WASH INGTON -We have been hearing about America from its people. We asked, you may remem· ber, for a Bicentennial slogan. The response was spontaneous; tens of thousands or citizens from ·all wa lks or life have sent us slogans, phrases and p oetr y expressin g how they feel about their country. .)t a n yh~'r writt en ac companyin g l ett e rs or testimopi aJ . To read them i s to unders tand that the \Va tergate ho rrors. economic uncertainties a nd other affli etions have not shaken the American (aith. and poetry expressing how lhey feel 3bout thei r country. ~Jany have written accompanyin g letters or testimonial. To· read them is lo understand that the Watergate hor· rors, economic uncertainties a nd other affli ctions have not shaken the Amef\can faith. SO~fE with a lifetime behind them have written about the turmoil they have seen. Youths looking ahead have written about the challenge of e'vents. \\le have heard from aliens about the dreams which brought them to this land. E ven a fe w convicts have responded. \.\'ilh a special poignancy, about the mea ning of rreedom. Some have applauded President Ford's attempt to return to the While House a humanity and openness more becoming a £ree republic. Others have taken issue with the President over his decision to pardon Richard Nixon and thus suffocate the legal process to its crib. They reject the idea that the country would be helter served by a mnesia than by truth. WE RECEIVED one slogan from an authentic Ame rican pioneer, 98-year- Jld Jesse L. !{all, "'ho was born in the cent!'nnial year of 1876. He has spent his long life pushing westward-;. I-le lived through the bliz.tard of 1887 in a home mad e mus lin tent on the N'cbraS ka pra irie. In Wyoming. he was elected to the state legislature. Now he abides in Reno, Nev. He summed up his view or America in a simple, thrce·word slogan:."Thc Rcpuhlic Stands." From cell C·8 in the Florida state penitentiary. Raiford, f1 a .. Willie Young wrote : ··Need I say, my life has be«>n a misera ble road to travel. After years of walking it alone, I di~cov crc d nne must beli eve in -;omcthing ·· lie put hi s S{'nt in1enlo; into these words: ··ft. Country not made by Ha nd but by lhr Grare nf fiod :ind the \Vii i of j\1an.'' TH E RE WERE othe r poeti c respanses. "We may :;;tumble but never £nil : Down through the years. we still -stand t :tll ," "'rote Raymond Richardson from Chieugo. A Boa lsburg. Pa ., teacher, Ruth ll. Carter, relt "an extreme need for the children l D know their country 's fttrltage." She sugReslcd this s logan: "So the Children Will Know." II) Toledo, Ohio. th<" second and third grade students at l..intolnshire School com l')()scd a slogan together: ··r work for De mocr3cy because It works rnr m e.·· MANY OTHEilchildrcn ~cnt in '1oQ:ans. Eor Jn.s.tan~JL!2·):'9<i r:9~­ Foresl 1-lelghl:oi, ~Id ., girl. ~t a ry Elizabet h ll c n ry . p r o posed : "America. a Homesteaded Heart." And 14-year-<>ld J>e nny Chandler o( sno. Calif., sc·nt In this one: ''Two .. • (JACK ANDERSON) Hundred Steps -and More to Come." Teenagers, too, responded by the hundreds. From Annapolis. Md., 18· year-old J a_mes p. Gough told or his frustration over "recent acts by men in high places." Yet he could still of· rer two beartrelt slogans : "America. a Theme that is Ti meless'' and .. America, Something Warm ihal TouC'lied'my ffeart". ·• A 19· VEA R·OLD, Johnny Carter of Long Beach, Cali(., suggested this sign be posted across America : .;Conquerors and Corruptors Beware. This Nation is the Property or the People.'' And a Wilmington, N.C .. high school studen,t, Stewart Moshe, sub- mitted this slogan: "There's No Way like the American Way.'' From John Lauria of J acksonville, f1a., we received a simple, sincere motto: "America, Where People 'A:re Ha ppr..'' He added meaningfully : ··t shouHS kno"'· I came here in 1903. '' HERE ARE a few other offerings s elected at random from our mailbag: Florence A. Tracy Revelle, Ard· more, Okla. -~'Pride in our past; Faith in o ur future ; Forward America."· Lionel Wernick, New York City -- ••America: The Promise Kept and now Renewed.·· George Kelly, Philadelphia, Pa. - "Here Lives a t~ree People, 1176- 1976." J oseph P . l1ol cGoldrick. Jackson Hcights,_N.Y. -··tn America, there a re no impossible dreams ... John Klunck, Sheboygan, Wis. -··1r we ca n't get to Heaven we'll settle for Am erica.·· Jim Felton. Little Rock, Ark. - ··America is coming of Age.'' · \Villiam Eric Rohrs, Tacoma, \Va sh. -'"Now, Let's Put It All Together.·· Adeline Feinberg, Belmont, Mass. -'"Apprec iate our Differences.'' Louis Gins berg, l'aterson, N.J . - .. Takl' 11n liberties with liberty." J.K. Smith. Sall Lake City, Utah - ··F'rcrdo1n : 1776, 197fi Forever.''· Evcl~·n Conley, Pittsburgh. Pa. - ''US A: Undaunted Stands America.·· l\lranv,.hilr, our search fo r· a ·eicen· tennial sloJ,:a n continues . Please send for your suggcslions to Slogans, c/o Jack An derson. 1401 l~th Street. N.\V .. \Vashin~ton . O.C 20036. 'ff qnly you 'd been draft dodgers/' ' be or uld in explaining consumer protection la\i.'s. 'fhcy \\·ill ulso pursu<.• prosecution. in cases ,,·here that is inditated. 1 A simple bag of jelly beans rould become a $2,500 example, according to Delecli\•eStoneback. ~le said that. $2,500 is the maximum fine allo\ved under Calirornia CJvil Code for con sume,r fraud ,·iolations. \\'hich could extend to even selling a ba g of jelly b.euns ad\·erlised as \\'eighing two ounces \\•hen examination shO\\'S it only \reighs 1.5 ounces. "That ••. , "he emphasized, ''is consumer fraud.'' Candidat es Needed The s leepy atmosphere s urrounding a three-candidate race for a single vaca ncy on the board of directors of the Costa l\'lesa Sanitary Oistri<.t is so strong that even the competitors wa nt more competition. One aspirant, ~lsie Kroesche, appealed for greater citizen interest in the workings or the special district which h a s a direct influ ence on every household and pocketbook within its boundaries. She deemed the special district an "invisible form or government," yet one that levies taxes and administers waste treatment and t rash coll ection throughout the community. Her fellow candidates, Dale Secord and 1-lenry Paniao, agree that the board r3ce deserves more in · terest. Applications for potential candidates seeking appointment-not election-to the vacancy on the board still are avail able at the Cos(a l\1esa City Hall offices of the sanitation district. For :Wmeone interested in public servi ce the jou is worth considering. C· ~.-..i-~1...l ~IT is MORE BlESSEI) TO rAY OFF THAN TO BE PAID Off.· --1-• Dear Gloomy Gus How can l go about getting a poli ce badge ·like citizen 'Pinkley? It ought to be good fo r a variety of courtesies. WAD. GfM!fty Gvf COlnllMJrfl Me tllll!liftt41.., ~ .-ii .. llOt llKHUrilJ reflKt a. ..;.,., .r .,. -~· Se<WI ,..,r Ht'"" tit ~ c;., ~ly~lol. Morality Needs New Vocabulary .. · (SYDNEY HARRIS) Thoughts at Large: ObviOusly, the language needs a ne\V word for yo.u.ng coyples who are Living together more or fess per· manently, bul are not married. Any suggestions? <Re member, Geletl Burgess invented the marvelous word. ''blurb," only a few decades ago, which filled a genuihe need.) The only effective punishment for an evil·doer is remorse; and ir he or she cannot be made lo feel remorse, a ny punis hment becomes self· defeating through turning the evi l· doer into a more resentful creature than before.' -~ Kindly keep in Tnind that "media" is a plu ral word, and there is no such thin_g as "medias." \Vhal the world in the past has always called a ''great" man was measured by the number or people who reared him; what the, present and fulure must learn to call a great man should be measured by the number of people he rrees from rear. It is hard lo believe, but true, that there is no such thing as a "rainbow" if lhere is no one there to see it; a rain· how does not exist in itsel(, but only throuj?h human eyes. 'felc\"ision won't come.of age until it ;.1cqu ires at least ope commentator \\•ho is as incisive, as well·informed. :ind as even-handed as the late la men· ted Elmer Davis was on radio. CHun· tlcy and Brinkley were to Davis as i\lantovani is lo Moi art). ... l\1ost polftical speeches remind me or Chure!hill's comment about Stanley Ha\dwln, when Baldwin was Prime M·lnlster: ''Stanley occasionally ·stumbles over the truth, but he alway5 hastily picks himself up and hurries IJfl as if nothing had happened." - Ir I were the head of ony company, t v."<>Old summarily rire the fi rst subor· dlnale who called me ''Chief.'' r oople who clamor to be "ttce·· ..-f\\·hich usually-me-ans rid of -their obligations ). forget Goethe's war· nin~; "Eve rything thal Crees oUr ~plr1t without giving us control of our· sci Yes Is ruinous."--. ' Reflection of Anti·A•nerieanisn& Greeks Pull Out of NATO \VASl11 NGTON -The Greek gov· ernment has quietly withdrawn some of its top military officers from North Atlantic Treaty INATOI headquar- ters in Brussels. one more indication. or how serio usly the Caramanlis gover.nmeol views anti-American s entim e nt now ( EVANS-NOVAK ) quietly spread the word to friendly Congressmen: stop American aid to Turkey, no matter what the lmpaet on Cyprus. sweeping Greece. Facing the first parliame ntary election on No v. 17 since the military coup d'titat or 1967. the new ci vilian govern m e nt of Prime ht inis t e r In short, the palitical im peratives in a re unable to impede t he move .Athens on the eve or the parllamen- toward what looks like a form of tary election far outweigh the Ion&· dangerous neutrality for fear that the range n ee essity of gradua ll1 anti·American currents n ow restoringthe Athens·Washingtonllnk. ... .._.~•r,w¥ee!p~i~n~g~Gar~e~e~ceHw~o~u~ld~pu:;Gll~th~em~u~n~--~N:o.-steek leader 4;:~ught seaeUy W>-,. der. According If . rati6nal diplomacy bying Congress to vote against lM dictated by long·term Greek security rrurkish aid-ban could be elected needs has been inundated by short-sewer.inspector in a provincial Greek Caramanlis is iorn . between conflicting political realities. The merest fragment of pubiiC display of pro-American sentiment 1 could boomerang, giving the Greek left a dangerous openirlg that Andreas Papandreou would be Quick to exploit. Ca ramanlis dealt with th1s hard political fa ct by pulling Greece out or the military organization or NATO. Now he has followed up by with· drawing some or the 400-odd Greek of- ficers from their regular military bil· lets in Brussels, Naples and other NATO commands. BUT THE domestic political demands for anti-U.S. actions raise the gravest future problems for Greece. Friendship with the \Vest, and particularly the U.S., is ab· solutely essential for Greece in the long run .. as a glance at the map proves. Greece is bordered by three Communist states to Lhe north and by muscle-flexing Turkey on the east . Car aman li s and hi s for e ign minister, the astute George ~1avros, along with most other leading Greek politicians or the center and right, full y understand that fact. But despite strong pressure from the U.S., they term domestic politics. The foun · village. I dation for this was built by Washing- ton's long love affair with the hated The unannounced decision to with· military dictatorsttip. draw top Greek military men from NATO headquarters is sh:pply the _A CASE in pOin('was the absolute· newest sign a l. Having heard ly futile effort by Secretary or State Amf!rica n pledges for over two, mon· Henry Kissinger last week to enli st lhs that Turkey would be glad to tive sub ros<i Greek ·support against the up sortie. of its Cyprus conquest once then-pending congressional ba n on talks s tar ted (pledges wholly U.S. military assistance to Turkey. unredeemed), the Greek government Conferring at his own request at the continues to advertise itselr as anti· Plaza Hotel in Manhattan last week American. with Mavros, Kissinger explained that th.! effect of a congressionally· imposed Turkish aid ban was predlc· table: it would make the Turks dig in their heels againsl U.S. mediation ef forts to remove \urkish troops from Cyprus and retur-n part or Turkey's Cyprus conquest to Greek Cypriots. Thus, it was in the self-interest of Athens lo keep the U.S. on good terms with Turkey. Mavros was stunned. ''That," he told Kissinger, •'is not something (or a Greek to do.·' INDEED, far from discouraging Greek sympathizer!'! in the U.S. Congress from voting aP.inst the ban on aid to Turkey, lop Grfe:k diplomats in the U.S. encouraged it. One.active promoter oC the <1id ban was the COQ· sul·general. in the... innuentlal Greek consulate in San ~ancisco,'. who THERE IS no hope that this will change between now and the · mid"· November election , and JU.tie expec- tation that it could change soon thereafter. Likewise. the hostility tor Turkey so vividly expressed in Congress over the aid-ban threatens political retaliation against Was~ln&· ton there, too. · With an outstanding IOU debt to Russia for its acquiescenc.e in thi in· vasion of Cyprus last July, 'Turkey may find it harder than befon; to deny any Soviet request for overflipt pri vileges in a future Middle Eastern ' war1 parti(:ularly with the U.S. Congress So virulently anli1Turkey. As' these Cy prus chickens come • hoqle,to•toost, the once-mighty U.S. is an impoten.J. bystander, • Economy Shakes ... Ins:Urance Firms (-EA RL WATERS ) insurance industry, Payne has been most attentive to the protectk>n of the public and has worked to secure new measures to strengthen the insurance companies. Despite the image o( a rock whi ch insurance compa nies have used over the years to impress ~pon the public mind the security to be gained by being inde mnified through their Policies, the economic troubles being experienced in the nation m ay, be threate ni ng even loan so_ much o( its capital on homes-or real estate in general: Other types HE -POINTS to the ract that the of loans arc also limited as to Lheir state has brought about the establiah- i>ercentages or the total. It may only ~ent or a gu~ranty fund to protect the invest a spcciriccd percentage of the 1n~ured ag~1~st casualty company '~"hole in bo nds· or anv other field or fa~lur~s.Th1s1sapoolmadcupofoon. securities. · lr1b_ut1ons fro!"l all ~asualty ~om· the i n s ur a n ce bulwarks. • At leas t, St ate I n s u r a n c e Commi ss i o n e r Gl eeson L. J1 <1yne has issued su mr guarded \.\'a rnin~s to the: eff ect th a t in s ura nce cun no longer be blindly accepted as tt n Ins urance com 1>ani cs, c.ven though r<"quircd t.o mai nt11.ip a stipulated per- centage Of totul liabililie$ in liquid reserves, muy olherwisc plunge.the .t'.!'!lirc rcn1 alnder 011 tho. stock market or any other field . <lbsolute su rcty. While Payne's thesis~ not centered Payne has not ch:irged that this has on rising costs and inOttion us much been 9onc hy any compuny. To the 1 s the sagging i;tock market, the ~ntrary many it rc heavil y i.nvested. whole. thru5t or his cautions is based 1n long te rm land ownerships and upan the prevailing direction of lhe-other rcaLe.staJ.c of the lypes a lways econom·~c winds. considered mos\.. sound, especially In As Payne i ndi cates, insurance com· the lon g range view. pa nlt!s arc heavy investon; In stocks a nd bo nd s a lnn1: wlth other s 1)ec ul a t lo ns . While they are regul ated· by the government a nd some types of poll cl~ like !iome types of bank savln1&s are "insured" by the go\'crnment. the protections arc not geared to the full potentials or a disastrous depression, . • . STILL~ to lhe cxlent that the com· panies have Invested on the stock markel he has warned that ·rurther· dips in 111tock!I cnuld well jeopardize the solidlty of somo companle~. lie h11s !iuggestcd that there are com· panies whic h s hoUld be reduc ing their stockm e rkcts portfolio.,. by JS to ~percent. Al~TlfOUGfl lns ura'nce ('nmpanies Payne says .that lbc companies in ' hilve a fiduciary rel:Ationsh ip with lhc greatest da nger are not the IU'c In· tl'lclr1iiWS do'1hc00nRs. fi"'er"'e-,mrcn-n11 mul:h 11~tho casualty·com· arc .stknifi cant differences. Banking.. panics. Th e le tfcr wrilerire, auto and laws prescribe the pcrctntages nr other type~ of loss tnsuraheo. lot.al assots wh ieh ~be inve'it t in A top insurent c executive before he any one arcQ . Thus-aoan_k may ·nnly ":SS:umelt lhel tatc'sjobof polrcrna the· pa.n1es ln provide aga1nsl the fa1l.ur• of any one or them. I ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT Robtrt N. JV.ttd, AabltM ThomOf KHvll,Edilor Borboro Kmbich, Edltorial Pof' - The editorial pare ot the O.lly PUot setts t.o iarorm •nd lllmulmte naders by p~tln1 on thll Pfte dlverM comment•ry on topics ot ln· terest by 1yndic1ted columnllts and car1oonlsts, by provltfin1 a forum for readers' views and by prewntln1 this newspaper's opinions t lld ideu on current topics. The edltor11I opinion~ at \ht Dally Piiot 1ppe1r only in th e edltQrlal Cf>lumn l l lh~ top of the pa1e-. Opln\Oflll e111)rnsed by the coluP'')Jlt• 3nd ca rtooni sts and letter writers art lhelr own and ! tlO<!ndorsementollhtir VitYr"l"'by tile tt>aily Pilot aho~ld be inferred~ ·Friday, October 18.1974 · I I ( • Gas Saver Big Bank Bows-w_:__ • t; I DAIL V Pll.Of 87 • Fr:iday'e Closing Pncee NEW YORK .STOCK EXCHANG~ 'Year't tligh·Low1 Ap~ar Every Saturday HlW YOll:J:, ni Pll -Ui!& WI U. Mt! Sditl lilfl *" llof ~ 191 ,..,..., ... ,,. prktt oO ti. • •.f. ~ O. 09 114 ll'GI ar. . Olo P.t NW 0... QwJ -t !IOl o. °'IJ ,,1 tt0i Clriw yr.a· flit• Ytf). """flt~ 11 ' • P <-[§1,W 6 110 lJ~-Iii "-•1 ~ •• t 1.,_t Iii IOffl&otl\o •• I toO • lYI ,,,..,,. ..... ,.. t ' f .... , All G<p ~ • U l'.lo+ Ii -1.111 J :;.;~· \:. r,essur,e -..... ~'··"•'• ',', 1!~ .. , ~ fOSCll.WIO » 111.1.-\li io..11oyll l 1• )\o• \lo Mi,.,.Eq ,»' 111 t •• i:lf!Gpll,10 .• i 11\o• loo -AWi .. lliiti ._.. ,.... .. E\«t lrMn'lo 3 &1, 1;w, • llo 10$tlt11 I...., J .0 1' -\o MhailU-I l lj 11'4 • "" AtlO Pl LIO 1t ltlli • 1111 -pl j'°' , • ~ P-l~Qilt 0., :fl1.•1 •t IS\'lt Y,El,...,.,~., ~ ,,, UIC.nlnlJO l 1S 14 ... , .. NOPaptl ., 1 U •1111 tltf1111bll<C:PS t1 1\.1-"' ~P .M J tiU D-ROIT !UPI) -One .......,.u, ~."';;-,,¥• -~ '.:'% 11 '"'-'i\ = i.Jii i~ I"' ::: ::~~:t~:: ~ ll:?:,t: =~ '.: ! ! •t:• .~ =::"~sj~ J ff ; ·• ·~; :=.n.:~ J "1 i 10i & .fl$,Jllf!d 1,.0 t '6 )4~-'ii t:j" ~ 6 11 lt\li .. , El"-(a It i M II • \0 I+! Pwr t.M I 11 Ullo ... ,,_111 .1Clh • . ...... lto • YI RtlJIO.Sl\ 1.611 l Ill lSVI • "° ti; Elf !,IO 1 ltt W. d.ri after il launch e d a ACmtelin< 1 I I ~ .. "' F.itr·I tA w S114+t ... EIV•Co 1!/i I u ti>'"• .. llilOO!W.toll • fl4--ill Nil::ldlOI ;J..JO l l1\li•I tlttiviOU .10 s tH 6 • '" ·~'· .. ,. J • " MmCr ,OW I t t , .• GOll'I I Jf lo •. , ~ii .10 11 111 :lt'-'1.t I l111Mrl1! Cp • 1,.S 1~1-"' ~ 1,10 S ~ UI~ , .. i:tflllKl"OI l 1 l UV! ., • •~I"° 11 • U li po Icy that would force ~E,.11.»o .• 1• •~ 1" a sc 1 • '" *'"' ... &rwvNr ... n .o 11...,_, •MA co1.10 • 01 ts.-.-111 /llWlrolll< 01 ..... 111o •.• Rtw<o0!..11 • 1CMi " • "'t•• 1<1$1r '' Jt• MMlms.•• 1 ,_,_!:~!$ ... ttJ ,. t11~ .... =1r1 .:M1 IS I •'-!""'lnw l.!<l ., "" ...... ._Abl ) S10 -\0o flt .. .-C&8) n ·~•"'l•o.asOll .01 11IH • cth"a'n10.'!e1rn•lhteolrkseaevplngmsoarc~ =::~'.' ~ :~-;"' c.u1Jr.r,·, ': ,!~ ::: iM1u1it ! ll ':"'";"t': l~~:l:::: 't l!!::: :=""'.1·=: ': :~~.::: =::::..'·.~'! ·~ ~:::-: :.~ri~; 1~: -AtlntUl.OI S 1.i ltilo-11o C.t.MILIO' 'J U W.+ 11o fMIOl 1.11 1 !111._ •.. lndl.tftGest S 12 U.._+ i~ Nli:loW"".,.. 3 19 •'loo• 'vo lilt .. rcl 1.Cll J )I 1l""• "'4 t1Go.tlt 1.JO 6 ...... counts, the s tate's sixth ..,,,.u p1 t .. i 1111t+1'-UrKo 111 .aott ., ,,. ... ~a .JO •• ,,oo •o..-"' llldPwL 1.n • 11 101.:.-... ,,..,.A .M s "' ... .• A•~ p12,,.. s is • ~ .1111 ,..,.. • "° -......~c·• JO S'l:o "'!:?.".it•.,. ·~+W.ElllpFll'ISll1 1610 •\')ll'l(IM.1111.20 • JJl1 \lt-Yo~l.4'0S•31Sl .... .,R.,1ni:12.•1•n•J-·~ t-'lt1Qfl110i .,. targestbankbowe dtopres·AIVMotl•• '' 1•+1oa lld1.n11su +1oiEtfWll,.Gtit 1 "'""""'"'"co 01111i1 6 -1 ~p1 2~ .. ,,. .1i.11tr1n p1w. .. ,, .. •' •>d:•plt.OI •• 'It' Ali.tfl lrKP ~ I t • -'lt Ill 1 ... 1 4t ''I'll+ " J!oljtlftd .IO 5 ll 1l"" • _, lflO tltl'ld t.1113 4tJ 6.1 • 4\lt ~CM l.Ot 1 I• 2t\lt t 1 Ae,111Mii1 J IOI 11\o . tll\rpf 1.«I , . lei ·~ sure and dropped the ide~. Alt Prd .20ci IS SSI 41 t 1 (!'Ill PS 1.20 1 .. I~ ... ~ .. F .U 4 I SVo-\/.o lllQlil pl t .lS •. i lJ\lt • 1~ ~ I.Ill • 10 llllo-\lo PttrMlpl 4\1 . • •• • 'It ~ TO J a l "" "ll made "S look li'k e .\lf'(oln(.'10 J 12 1! , v. c:.nuE 1.111 ''' ult + v. f:M9iln 1.20 J 1t 1s ... 1"" 1nfC0<011.20 • i JJ:io ... ""°"llSI 1.10 . 11 !'0'4-"' ",!,~"'"·,,.• •, 1 •'-.. flttt :n 11 , +4 .. " '" /A.Jt"°~~ri •. ll 'It ••• CllM"'-1.:M 1 "11'-+ Yo En\llrOteU1 I 2' \Oft •• lnlflCIS.Ut.40 S 100 U \l.o + W /<lofl,M ."9d t It •"' . '"' Ill -<t Tl!Omlll .Q • ~- ogres/' said bink president .t.t.1-1.20 ' 11 11\lio • . . Cl<llSW 1.!l • in 1s .. \lio £Qulnv1t .• s 1t 11 • .,. 1...-.40 • •1 1 -1~ """'1i NI( AO 1 ,,. :J0'1r • ~. "~"""'' ... 'I ,,, 11:i. + •. n-...iw r " 11 1 Ii-"' Georg' e A. Pierson, "and w e =~~:!:~~ ,J ,;\ii ::: c...!E1ti'1:ii: 11 :f.,.; ~ t~1~0~ t ~I ~;""• "' ::~:~r>~i~ .~ 1t ,tv, ::: =t: 1': 11 ~ 1!~:'~ :t-~1>:l ~ '~ :~~::.. t: r;"g::g,_~ ' ~ ,t~•-: all 'I '' Aln.kelnlM •• llf • •IYI roClrpl 1 14 12\11-l'lo EstNrli.!n 1 I IS J61'r+1~ lt'IS(loGOpJ . .O • 1 11 • t. N!Orwfl Pr J ... l \oo •• AleQ!l>1.10 l 11 It"'• \o ldJ,,_., .tO tt Ji~ ... re yaren . o11111n,111t .60• 111•11o+v. m.111 • .011 ,. 1\ll-'4 E.llefUn .:J01 u l't-:it 1""'t111w .v112, 211o+1"Nw'5tl .illlcll JS J .. t1t<00.r1~M1 • 1110Yo•\~ n1 ,.:d•1'11'9-~ .TbeD_ettoit. c tu1pterofthe. ~=...~.-:·~ ?! i~v·:; ~ =111t~ ! ~f :1::·.~ ~J~=-~ ~ Y~ : := . ._: ! ,! ,i=:;-,~ =~~ : · J~ 1?t : ~ ~~~l'.:::'i ·i '"'",'i ~: :; R~~~J : :r, ~ -~I< NA/\CP calle d lt a victory A1C.,...._1 1.20 • 111 2s + " Oltu p1 1.20 •• 10 15\0-""' E-.-P .aSfl > lt1 -!"" + ""' 1n .. Kon o~ 1 11 ,,,. • YI M:S1.. 1,., ·'° • u u <.io . 110.1..,, u 1 1J:io. ... 1......, 1 . .0. 1 10 2t-ll. • '" A1CO Sid .40 t ,, 1--\lo °'"""p . .o • 115 9\(0+ "" fl om 0 I 5 10 I l4i ••. Inlet~ , • l1 15VI-'" ~ .10 lS ... , ..... \'t """''""' .9<1 I ,. 10~. ~. TI~ .409 • . 41 .. for poor peopfe. Alc.otl lb.20 It ,. 11""+ .. c-c. ),J.$0 1 ~ 11'111+ ""' EK•-1.1111 •. s 1tw.. i.:. IBM Corp. 1S •10 lM\/o + .... Ml fuel l olO 1' Ml 6l>lo -.. Jiobf"Uri 1 XI • • 14'1 ..... ft)dd ~ I 16 ~ • ol<kM11 .10bt 10 11'1 •.• ClllrlrkY11 2• Jl:W.+~ f..-J..•!lcl 5 44 61\lo+I* 1~1 F11 •. t1oll ~ 11"'1+1 1111$1Tel 1.S2 I 1211!•• '• Rol .. flA1"1•11111 11•-V.TOlllODEOl' 1J ""'' '• THE NAACP HAD called Aliton1.Md1 tJ 5\.11+"" ~lld .n .. 1• 1 .•. __.,._ 1n111, .. 1\tla s *"~-Yo M.o'o!Ofd .:n l 11 '-1' R<><nG1 149 1 36 11"'• ~ ,.....,co .«i J 1 1 • '• 48 h 1. f J)Al~~.,.1'4-V. M1.20 42:M2'Yl •f'oF~4()t91i"'tllllfltHOl<ltlO .. ll\.o•\o MurllclP'.40 . }4'4t V•R<><:~l•llli 611•1•. ootlAl .1ZI I S...•<• M. ohu,rs ea! Nier l .or a I :113 l~l l ·: ~~:::: .1~ i 1Jf t~.!. ~ ~rfi:: :~ : .,~ ':~; ~ :.~.:.~.'.•,",,~,'.~ !, ·~ ~~. -~· ==:,. 1:: ~ ,~! a:: !: ~:::;. ~ ! I~; J~: ~ ~~=·.ff'~ ,:~ I~~: ... IC 1gan a 1ona AllgPo01 1.s2 ·; •tl6Y1+1t. 1m 161,.K1\oo +""F•lrmlF .ws • 11'1•"' » 1:10 •40"'1urrv0111 s ''l'4•'·11"'\"'•" 11 }6 .h r,.,.1 .. 1.it 1611~.1 -. t • hd AJlfro(;rp 40 l J l h Y 1 • 6 1U Uh 'Iii FM\l.ttl llr • · 19 • I -YI l°"Nc\ I ..0. 6 llS l •lo -"' Mu!Oni 1.32 . 1 t ,..,.. · ROl\mli I 11 ~ 41 611 • l\l fm5(llfl .U J S 6'-'t , cus ome r s to w it r a w o11111c-c1c.t1i.,. • :1u ll11t.1ii: C11HCi>1'.ots , "":;..,. FilnSllll 4'0 • J 111o-""' 11111Peiwr11 221 ,, M.,..-•t. Mi 1 • 4~•-'• 11onr1n<1 .'lll • '1ot~•" mohF 100 • 111 11*•-I • their money and can cel any AllllclPrOll 1 4 1 1n•. "' CNsPd 1.M 14 s1 ll1t-1YI F¥Wi1F ~ s f ·~ •.. 1n111ec1 .110 s 11 ~ -1. -N-110111~.i .. n 9 1n 10:00. '• r ... u .. 1 '6 ' 'I 7t'-'. '• • AHi.OSi I.Ml s 2• IP'o-v, Ollsltl t.lO 5 1M il'l<IO+ IV. F•ltl NII; . . 10 s-"" l~I T& T I.St • 142 16 • '. Ntb!KO 1~ II ,, ,.,,. _, Rom.on .149 I 1 , ... 1.,",.~ 1~ •• ,",, IJO'. '. pending loans as a protest. Allcl SUllnlkl 113 u J~-YI Oii E UI ,50 1 J ~l"i •.• l'IOOet .Jlh .. JU ,.. •. I T & T ptE •.. ~JOO !I • ·~ 'WICO QI .SJ u ~ 11•0 •• ,. RQllP•( I. 10 • • u •. • (-w ... ... • .. The bank Wh'ic h Ji'sls Allll c111 .1t s u • -\/.o O'll Mll•(p 2 n 6to t v, ,,_,!Co 1 • I 11"" ... 11&~1-1 4 . 1 JI"', ~. Molr«I S . .o 6 11 11• • 1. Ror.r A .BO ~ •• •1 f • '-' lW/IWI '""" 6 U~ .. o.. ' All•O~IA .}6 6 t1 SV.t .... °' F'Mvm 2 • 1• 211'-"' F.a Mg I.BO I 11 .1 • .,, • I n 1.1•11 .. 1• JtVJ ••• ~ .!1 10 11 11 • l,1 ROWtlG .., 11 1l8 1!'11-~. TrnW~I .uo • JI 6 •• , total 3SSet S Of $1 biJJiOD and Alphl Pl .12 l 11 t YI + Yo Oii tltoc:k 1$1 ,. 4 9-..-Vo FON\IMI ,If I m 14 .. • "" l T& l)IJ 4 .. 'I :15\tl + \lo 'WIMM .SO 3 In 10<• • V) Ao,alC.C .. ~ I] I~• \. lrl•!•i l.llt J '" lllfri • .,. . al' Al<Oll 1.U 1 no :M'lro-1t 0.:k F )I 10 20 ,.,._ "' FedP«! i.111 l • 111'1 .. "" I T& T pt K. • . ll )II,. • .• "-IA"" ,..., . . 6 .... \~ tlto~I D I Ila l 94 II • 11 l••~!ti pl 1 . . 20 2)"'. '' s avings accounts tot 1ng Ame1Si.19 21 • 2• 2111o+ v. ow1s er1u • . s. 2Y1 • ,,. FOP!llll 1,111 .• 2 1• + ~. 1 TT ptN n •.. 11'1 21\'J+ 1.1. "'911 c.o.. ·" J u '"' ••. i:io,11 •n 1or l 11 •-"-1. TRE ep si 10 .. •1· • '"' $200 ·u·. d AIMXl.ISllUJS'lfri;+l'JOWliQ"(pl •. I l\/.o-V)l'edSl~Jll] 12 ''"+V•1n!r;>-•C 1.106 JIS""~~NQW'Mll .2111! 41ll ... RfE Cp .I•• •I •V. lt!O;on2.SIO .. 12n·~···· m1 1on,wantedto rop AMAxp1sv. •. '' "111o•'"" 0r1sc:reo1 .. 1 •""•....., Fed0Sl1.16' ~ ll\o ••. 1n1put11G<1 • s 11 _..., Mc.tt12.s: • 1 31•1-~ t1tubbmd .:i.10 1 u , , rno1p12v,. 1 21 1•+,•· II d 'I b ' Amlllc to. s ..... YI Clworn• .lo . t 9V) ~' s ,, 1/V.+ 4'lo lnt~<•l 8rncl 1 I S"'-• \\ -I D!sUI 1. 1:11 u .. ""RIKk" Co 9 1"6 l0\1t c, rn 'io 1.1/d l ' I• sh-sma epost ors ecause 1t AAltord :u , 11 •Yo+ YI 0Wy51r 1:40 1 •st 11 -·~ Flbt*d .to 4 s<i u -"' 1"~ unc1 .1• J , J\l . . . M1Fu11Gs t 6 6 1•'-" •.. Rui.sTOQ .it 3 1~ 1 • Trll11J1n .to • 11 11~ • .., AeroBOost devices have been installed alOng side- pnd top edges of truck van to reduce air resistan· ce. Pasadena company, AeroVironment Inc., says devic,es save fuel by up to 23%. said it was Jos ing money o n Ami•;!( 1.:io J 2 1s11t • •• ChrJ11et -' . . '' w.-\\ FICltl Mt• · " ,~ YI 1.,... 11e1101 2 s' 14 • "" Ml GYP 1.os • us 10Yo-"' Rv""'~' ·'° :1 116 ~ -. 1, r ..... 1,1n .IO • u u1.1i • ... • Am Hts·~ J 114 11'.ii-\lo (.I 11111,. .6110 .0 3*' • "' FloUBc l.«I 5 10 2SV.-'lo lo.., E1 1 JO 10 11 \~ , , . Nill ......._, •. 40 1~ • \lo -5 5-Trpc:M Ula 9 l:M ,_ fo th m " &.'I AekWI 1.olO. " 12111+ IO 1-11G1 .... ' •••••• Nll llldu .20 s 14 J:W. ....... 'n••.·•11 ........ ~ TAWii\ i.11 • ur •,•,·:.· e . . AHHpfJ ., " •'WI lf .6lrl ,. 10 4\\ ... w-•• .-.. ..., .,.. ., The ba k · l lh I AmAl•FI .44 J )I ll't • •• flilll 1 ... s 15 u--Vt FlltrolCp .tO 4 .S 1111 •.. lo..aPL 1.1• 6 1• I ~ -• NIIMI' UISll II 10 ,_ . . S.t~rCI lnO • 11 1i.-\, TRW p1 '"' •• JI n pu e new p a n AmAlrllnl!!. 16 204 l\lt-\\ (lft Gli '·"' 1 5' IS\\ •.• Ancl Fed SI l » •Vt ... IOWolP!. 1 H I l IS\\ • . . NPJH l.Kl.i • 3 ll!/i . "" Sa!fw_y 1.IO • 4l'I ~\·. •• lo!W (lr ·~ •. • lJ\lo+ II• • l l ' T d b Arna.it 20 11 l \' \\ dolGIJl9)D l30 M:it.+l'lli Fl~ .. 1.10 6 l1f u v.+ '11o 1peol1o5Plll 1 IS 3,,.• \\ NH 5'micon t 112 t-llo+,. »GIWP'n s 12 sv. .. , TuuanG.M 11u t -'" ID 0 BC ton ues ay. ut Allr•lld 1:s. '6 11 :n-~ "' ClllMILl'1AI. 6 11 ltl'I ... kl°""" II 1 .,. 1\11 + \\ ITE 111\p .M J lilt 13to-"• Nit S«v .n s 23 H•. "" SI.Io Ml...,1, 6 Sl lSloo + "' fWC F• .ISO I 0 sa-\« be£ore·it actually c losed any AmBrc1.1 .ID 5 11• 1•11o+ * cir Fill t.» 1 n 11¥+ Vi Fst: OilC .tel • 2n 12'4 +•Vt tltlo. eorpr1n .. •I •v.-.\i NI Stano .10 • 1 1J ••• seL~nF tYi s ' t•\o .. \1 Ti'<O L..ttlDfl • •• 1•,; .. • Am810g .3J• 20 s ClllcOl'Cl.IOllllJ1 ll'lli+I"" F9tln&fu111 ~ :Ml't .. l'llo IU MU .ti. 11• 10 ...... N!StM~h .U\1 ',.14t l•SlP•v•S.h .. u 11 +I· l)WCp .40• » 11 .•Iii savings accounts con-AmC:.nt..10 s •2 26 ••. CllSN1AOll 6 269 .. ~•l" """1Ml9 .1Sli •• 101 1-"" -.J J-tWIS&et• t Vi s 29 u 11o ... se11e111.1 . .o • Jt ts\lt+ 11 181.ni'ng less than .;. the "c.... p1 1\o •• 10 2!1""_• 141 ClbM\o .no 1 11 sv,-'Ill kNb t11 6 . '' 21w. • i. ,.. F .61 • J 1 -"' ""-'' r .. c:o • . 20 111o •.. Sa1.1n1c: 249 1 4 '"" , •. --u u-~. AC:M\l.Ul'I •• 1) l \It OtlSo1.60d1 31 S\<'o ... ~KSlln<.lt I 21¥1-\li Ji<nll91'1 .HI 4 1 11 ~Ill S!!G, "'°,, -~!SlnOG)l .1'16 •}J 11<• ., UAllt11;.17d S tSO l-t14 1 "Iii Holiday Inn Chain policy was dropped A OYln 1.20 • 10 1•111 + "" Oty lnw ·" l M ~+ \lo Ff."-'P 1.J:I s /3 161'1 ..... .MpFO 1.tlO . . 11 s -.... "ICR CP .n: s ..., • '• S..0-JM.c 101 6 I 11, . U...«o l.IO • )It UI'; •• . " ""''!"' 1\lt 7 ljt 21:it.+ ~ City '""Wis ,. 10 11·\t t 1·16 f'sl'Mt 1.llcl 4 19 Siii-\\ JeffPllOI .611 11 I• .ts . . Nev Pw l,«I 4 II I~ · , Sa"""< ~Wt ~1 J -\o 1JG1 {.p 1,)2 6 11 111/o-~, A rival bank even laun· Amo ~111 .so1• 1 •111+ 11o City 1nv Df 1 •• 31 1511o •••• FstVlillE ·"' 11 11 ,..,_ "' J cnPDI' 1.• •• i100 sa • 1111 ,,...,"" 1.u . 110 u"" . Sing E1t .10 1 10 !\o-~. tJMC 1..,.. 1 • 21 '"' • •\ hd d ·1 ADl~IT•t.S2 10 4ttl +Vt O.rt!;fl.flOS •9 26\lo•'ll.htY6k.U(l6 Is •""""c~Lpl• •. aoll t i MEngEt1,181 /11~-~SM>Fln1 .8061;8ff(\.-•.UMETl"""J 2'I ~··· c e an a vert1s ng cam· o11rno ... 1 v,1 .. 103 1Vt+ "' e&1n. 011 .to 2 m 1111-2111 FtWbe '·" u 1• 1•"' .. "' 1, 1.10 1 31 11'111 + ~ NE~E 1 z• s • 10 •.. sF•ln p• so .. 1 ,.,. , 1~ Ul'IMco .JO • ,1 1aio.• '· • · I ADul pl Ma • 11'io + 'tit CLC Am 10 l 21 • + YI FillCl'IU,I .96 1 " n VJ +I "'-kor In 2 116 JI'•-~~ '!Eol T l llo 9 11 1•'4.-'• ~Felnu Ml 11 11s U , H• Ul'llMY 1.uo • J JI.,._ ._ pa1gn tn a n a ttempt lo ure ArnEl(PW 2 ·• 161 v v.+ 'tit c....c111 2:.o, a •~+i:ia Fl'llW F AO•· •• 9+'11+ w. J•rnw.a .80 s u1 19llo•"" New11.t11 lll • u •~ ... s.i.r1w.1 .J1 1 • 11 •• '• \Jl'l8fl{ .Mi , " '" .. v. ' away J'1'lted .,. h ' AF•mi1, :M. I s +"' Cll-\'El ?.40 , :u 2•1t • ... F~.20 I 20 S""' ... JlmWptl.O ., 10 21'"• ... -160 l lOS 20•.r.-1. Sau 1111)10. 1J~ j \, uc.mp 1.60 9 11• to\.io• .... N • I 1~ I C i gan AFlnS,l'.aon 11 .......... ''"Epll.S6 .. r.IO ,. t1 Fi.tEnt .t•Sl SOI "'-• ~ Jl1ntS1.l)a .. 11 16 -v. NYSEc;1.ZO . ((I l)l.O ..... S.WEIP111 1 )j II; IJl'l<Mt>2.20} 915 •3"'1•1"' a t1ona cus tomers. A Fln"' tY> •• 160 uv. 0oni.c:. .st 1 1~ 1Vt .. 11t Flemlna .11:1 • n 10 ... J H•n1 1111c1 . 1 1t'4-v. NY';!E 1.80 . r10 ao -1..., s..e1A 1 3' •. 1 1D\•. •• Un c:om 1.n 6 , .t h •.. A Gl:la 1.6Scl . • 1• 211'1o ... (:k,oflt P .SO 6 tel lh .•• Rd Viii 51 S 211 1¢11 · Johnlol• 1.20 $ 61 lt\'l t ~ Ml 1.11 6 II t V. • <I. SavA SI C1611 . 11 llt-\.o Cllrp ~ 10 l~•-.,. "ITIJINK \VHt\T we've AGnS<l.olJd •• JS '""-l'o Outl!Ppll ..• 2 11/o •.. f!~,-Ol:..J:!' •• .•,, 11"'-'-'Jonn&Jn.IOJI n1 lll'o+t\\ M! 160 •. r!Ollll -V)Savln8Mtll , II 111 ... Elet l.111 IU II -·· • th h J A Gn lnl .60 4 ll ~ • , , (:Ml lnw (p l IO l \0-'l<IO .. ,.. ..._,. I~• ;w, ~Svc .IO S 101 IYl-1\lo N..,..._ l ,lli · · Jlto llWt-4 S•OnD< .ISO 6 '1 )1.:,-\, El pl :wt , , ,IOll JJ -I seen 1s at t e poor peop e " Gn pt 1.ao •• 11 u~. "' CHAFr1 ,2911 •• 2•9 ''" • \ro Fil GM .80 > 1• '"' + ....., .-. S• pj z . . s 19,,_ \lo NI• s.ti 1.:JOO . J n ..... ~""" 1ndu• J 14900 z:i... '• e1 p1 •·'° .. ,50 ,. • 1 Seeking Customers By MILTON MOSKOWITZ ·The h otel business is not like other busine sses. Io most businesses, what you •• can't sell to4ay you have a chance o! selling tomorrow. In the hote l business an u nrented room m ean s reve n ue gone forever. Holiday Inns, a company that didn't e ve n exist 25 years ago, i s currently bumping its h ead against Money Tree AmHl!ill ti) S 24 10"-t YI (:NA Pl I ID UO 1 • \It FM!Pwr 1.'5 I 'M lSYo~ "' JDflLoQn .40 l 41 S+'o • • NL 1""'61 I 117'3 U · · SCA Servi<• ' 'I • • \o V" Elec ol I .. 1 111 , \'t establl.bment. T he Old do ha ve a voice in thing~ AmHOm 'eo1s 10/ll UI~· .... CNAl!'l(l:o.:: 1) 10-.-.... AePwl. I.» 6 4'S 11'1o-1 Jonefl l.60 6 12 ,, ... NLT(rp ·* s 1$1 II -..., $(,,,.,.,,p B ' )lio vn FiOt'l llYll 1• 2~ ••• th t fr cl th .. d J AmHO lO Z2 ~· ll'orl I CNA u..i... 11 1\lot \\ Fl.s.rt ll't l t ll\lo + ... Jorgln• 1 . .0 • 3" 18,,.. IV. --Wt s s n ~,..... . ' !><"'"•In<) .80 ZS SW. Sl ... l'l<o \HIOCa! I.ti • 14' i. ..... ~. hotelshaveeltherbeentom a 8 e e m , 581 oe Am1nw~:10 .. l 1v.! .... C:NAU!li.10 '.'. 1 ,.....,. w. AwcP .2016 492 21~.111 JMIRn• '1116 10 n v.+"' NDrln{.l)111o J 1 ""' •• W111uo.1o111 69 21 ~.-1•. ll<!Oicp1Jv. .• lt ,,~ ... • M a di so n , exec u-t iv e AMedlcl.12 • •• Pi ... eo..i S1 Os l 2so Stil t h "~ a -· • 1oY>+SVJ .io, Mt!l"" 11 14( J:n •• +1i """'' 1.12 • 6 """• .., so111.mb .n :rz w.a 101 •6-lo Un Ptc 2.llllO 1'2 .., .... , down or are in a decrepit " Mealcorp s 63 2v. • ..., c.•SG!lf 1 ,, 1 11"' FMC ep .• s 611 u • v. Jin.Mii .1•a s 6 1v.-,... HA Coll .to 1 u nl'I-"" SCM Cp .so J 21s 1oY1-v. Vnlofllrn .io 6 21 JYo • .,. State . Holiday Inn •--U secretary of the De troi t ArnMot .lOCI • ~ro , ... _"' a 11>0o1t:tl:: 10 16 ::: Food,.., .20 s 1• s ..... ..., . ---« x-HAMI: 1.vo • 101 ~· v. scoA1no . .o s 11 s -"' Unlro~••.io s " 1~ •.• •---N AC P ArnNGi25"6 lO JIVl+V. CauiC:.11.1l1S612 S1"° 'tit "°'*CB.IDS 1 IW. ••· K.l"'°'"''ul3 :u. 11 -Iii N.AfrlPhl.20 • 111"'°-"'Xot YO .S&4 u 9\'i +~• Unin)tllpll •• 02016""-+'"' in that situation, virtually A -Am$Nr:681S 131 9""•"' C:OC..8o'U .Ml 1 U• ...... -; .... Fm!Mo1201 JCl1 n'lfri;-::KAl51pl•~·-1 46 +2 NQl,klr .\Od. u l .. •i.$(olll'tl1rl. S910 •V. VldAlr<rf2J •s 21\11•"" "They don't h ave the big Am~m1 ,.,., l •65 11'-' ... c:.kfW&ll ,,. 4 • '""•"' kr"Mtlt ·• • t3 04 + KAIWpl•llo .. ' •• ... NoOIAlrtlWI .. 11 1 ... S<ott FOf ·" s 'I l l'r + v. vtctAJrc pq .. rt00 ,, -ta by default Am ~!n<I .llO • U2 • -"" COIKO!n,Ot .. '5 2111-\lo Frllll pl 1.80 •• t 20Yt-I' Kalwrct .so 6 • S\/o-'At ND1$1UI 1.02 ' 1•1 6'1fri;-"" SCOttP.o ... 6 , •• ltloll • . . utd Brlllds 2 •l ,:W,,-"' • money but t hey ;J re not AmSlt•ll .11 I SI '"" .... '°"""' ... II 1S5 u -"" ~......!..okl.., ii u ll\lt .. Ill KC! P"otl lloll ·-l 12 + YI NOlllG$ I.fl I 11 1~-l'lo !o<oll~ 1 '10 , JI IV. '. U111f pf I 20 -· lt ,.,., + .. IT'S A DIFFERENT 'J lh I . AmSlo•l..O • ll 2''"' ••• ~k .SI S 42 S + V. ....,,,.._. ~· U-1>11-1"' ICl"'Mll ,16 J 11 1~-.... NllOUw"l.1111 •. 1 20\lo-\.'o Stovll1Mf91 • 26 10'11-"" Uneorp.11d .• S6 J:W.-\lo necessa r1 y a poor tn Amr&r i.ao • 1•so •sl't+ w. to111n1 Fooo • , Jv. ••• ~ 1 • l16 1tl'9-"' icacPu z 20 1 u 19 ... + l't N111nP$ 1.» 6 112 ,,,,._ :v. sco~u pt 2,,., . 1o " -:i.:. utdFtKH .211 • 111 '"' ••• story inthebigciUes wbere Power'' ol<rnT&Tptl ., 91 tt\O+ Vt"'"'""·*' I t•t ""'t" Fo<bOfll • .015 ll Ul'l+I"' KCPLpt l\'t,. 140 •SV.-~ NoNl:Gtl.IO 6 St 41¥1 +1~ $(Oldcler0V .• l '"" •.• ~PL .XIII',.. , ..... "" • ATTplAl.M .• I 40 + -Co1on$11.IO s '' 16 ~I F•riM ...0 10 Ut 1' ..... KCSllln .SOcl 9 1 11"'•'\lt NDSIPwl.M I 2111 -\• S<uo o•.60c .. II ,...,,, ... Ufl1Ullu2.tz ' 21 1~14-~ Holiday Inn has to vie with \Vhen the bank announced ANflfllJ.u .• 1s ''""• 'tit 01111nc1u11 l m 2.-.. "' = t:i i 1ft ::~· :; ican GE 1"' 1 21 1J11o ••. koSPDt •.,.·'° .. 110 U l'l•I SndCLn 1.1C1 • ~ 21"'+ •11 v...rn11c11 .:.. 1 , a11o -"" b • ht! f Amt&lwl lllJ 1i.o. """'Al.ti) .• tl9 +I '°°-··Ind t flO ... -"KenPLll.511 401SVo •.. Nr1!9t . l 40 '""•"loSt.C,.,,,tr .20 • l U -'•un1ndplAJ •• '' +i.o. lg.name 0 e S, many 0 its deCiSiOn, il said One in ArnW•lr .14 'j . l 1 '. :: Collin pl 4\li . . l 41\lo + '1111 r-~ G---Kol l' lncluM 4 5 3to t 14 Noi'tfirp 1MI 6 t'l 11\lo-1 .... Sea W Alr 11 8 Sl 3'11 • ''o UIO 1nr1• 10 I 2f 2A.-i. lhem r .cenlly built, So f • g l Awtr pr 111< "10 11""-\\ COi (;1$1 ... 1 54 21 ... ,., .... , ,-,, , 1 ~~J,P,!_1·.~,. ·.· >>o' •,•._+ ~ ftlfwppl lAS •• I 2i -1;w, ~"' .2Sn ' 4 4 . . U!\Jiy8 I.Cit t 2t 1o..4 Ill every our s av1n s accoun s 11.wa1rp1 n~ :: 1100 n + 1 Ol!Gs p1 ~ •• 180 SO\!>+ VJ ._.. ... ,,. ... ""W' ... ... ~1r1 .u s 1sz 1a1.11 • .,. StefPow .n s J 811. • i.. Un MM 1.40 1 21 M'4-.,. Holiday Inn ls drawing a tota ledless thanSSO but the ..1.me<an .90 • 1 1ov ••.. Cll!Plelurti .. n 2v. ... GAC C«Jl 2 16 1"" ••ut8Pt1VJ. 1 101<. ,...aon 1.110 1 u XI\\+"' Sor••tGD .•6n )94 1•""• ~ u.. M11ellar .... .-. .. • • Al'llf,Sl ,10cl 3 • l'l<IO-\\ C-olSOfll,16 1 22 1' .. GAF' 2' 63 l:lot loo ica-(k • .a .S 1 11 ... "'6\lnl.20 1 n• 20 t 'lo Star~ 160e11 •Sl SO\•-'lt utdPkC:Nn 1 t bead on this target. tota t ·small d eposits accoun -Ameftk .eo ' r 11111. \(, C:CW.M 1.11t1 2 n '"" • "' GAF 1.20 • · ' 13-"" Koorw•A . .o ' • •v•+ v, -lllCI "" •• u 1011o • 1 • ~·t••ln' Lin . 111 i v.• o. unt1tt11'1Q . .o ·; ,. 111 • ·.,; I . Tb ANIFl11 1J•ftl1511'h+lo\oC.,,,..,.EllD1111 29"-t .. <*n '·'°' 10 :10 ···K-Cp .10•" l \lo•\lo """51ifl ptS •• nu •'"''>fiOC0 .10121~7·~~·?•uSF!cM'l1 ... , 412 \i tl .... In ads runn q g m e led for only about one·tenth ..1.m1..: :IO r 1 '11ri.-v. CamSI• 1.2o 10 1• JS"-• ~ G9mbfp1 i\ro .. J 11~ + \\ "''"' 1n .so • • 6'1t+ ~ Nwsup1 •·• · • 1:rz ""' • n Serwit•C 10 4 i.. ,..., ~ "° usFos 2.tOO 1 11.._ Wall Street J;ournaJ. the of I p e r cent of h1ichigan ~~~:]g 1~ 1~l 2:~: 1~ =:''-·:' ·; 13~ i;~: t: = 1 :: is 1J ~~. '* ~:::=, ·tj 1! ~ 1~~~ ~ :=l~.~ '6 ~~ ~1: ~::::::::rwornn :: ~ '! ~~+ 11 ~.t~'·t2 ·; ~ 1~ • ·:; H I'd I cba1'n i's ap-N · t ' I · ,, ,_ , c e ,.. , , ... GerOl:M!t .11 u u1 21 "' ,,.-,, 0.-, , ,, MwA<:1 .oi • • uv. . . · .:.--· · -01ay nn a t1onastota sa v1ngsac . ..1.mpe•ep1 .... -.. •Pr ·-·· 6 .. ,.Gerflnkt'llls 11 ,YI•"' •w .. -NWSt11...,1101, ...,~1 .103 ¥1 11ovs1-.n l1'1sll'll-'- pealing directly to the ArnrcpCorp l ' ui.-Yo c.ame11P"2 .. 1a 19V>+ ~ c;.r1«k:. ~ • ,...,. ...... Ktncon2 . .o • J20 11"".1"' Nrlneo ·i.o • ,. 12._•.,. ~10112.o111 1 1•1 •t •1'-usu1se .u, 1n 1o~t .,. counts. Amt!•• 1.10 • lZ 31~ ... c..., E!lpt 1.•1 . ,. lS"' .. ~ s...c I If I 1• '""' ,',',,u}!',• •. 1~ I~ 40 ~. :.·· •• ,t Morll'ISi jog 6 112 '"'. ,,. Sl'illll 1,0'Jd l ) l•W.. v. V$ Atty·-6 11 •loll-.. Presl'd e n•n Of COrporaUona ft 'd l Amstrpl.l>I .. 1 ll'a .. -II'" 1.90 ., 11 19 t V. Gii I I 3 ,,,,._·ii, ~~, 'uoil 2 + Stelltl'G .S.' to 6 -14 U5Sflo:w .9S J H 1"1t \• "° • sa1 som e cus omers AmU•d2.IO s 1 JS ... eom.eow1 .. 2 1y,-1. GCA~'C.o.~ • 11 J~-"' ~~ro:.el ~ 1: 1!~ :·: ,..,...,.p11. .. Jl 2 :i.:.+"' sr.o.1"w 1, •s ll • .4(, UMIN11-40, ,,. ,2 • 11t telling t hem, in effect: u sed the small savings ac.' ~~.e~".,}2 s, .~ ,!!!! ~ ~.Oli'.:i .~ l~ 1l~. -~ G.fll!nl Cap •. :io 1 ... K~LlO .. 3 2s •• ~cg,-~ ~ ~~ ::;:• ~ !;rw"Wpl •.40 ._ l100 wl,l,.111o us Tob .IO • •1 1J~• \• 'Look I ~ .. -· "" .. ,...... ... unc 1 1 11.,., .. 0-• S1Hr1Pc .fl • l3 9 • ~ UnlT•I 1.111 I lU lltlo+ ., " , your sa es men are rounts to lake advantHge "'"'"H< 1.111 s " u • '"" c.omm s.1 1 6' t)1 26Y> • 1\~ · · · • 111m 11 .u • 111 2 .... • 1;w. 8:J ':1.~J 13 sgn1eo .IOQ , n ••:w. ... Un1Te1 •h .. ,3 ,. + 1-1t • ._ ______ ,,/. t th d _.,__ f h' k ' • ......,.,C ... yl 6 ll 21 •l Com(lulrScl n •• 1'-... (;Ami l.1'1:1 .. ' '""+ ""'KklQlDSA_.i.__n__.i.... ..... -~-'"'" v. Siv(<lpl z.M l lSl't-~ Un!TplA\"' .. ''IJ'-'-" • , -'QI.I On . e O)a SJ)e1~ O[ ree C eC Ing -·Wh!Ch Angietltl .11 I ? 6 -V. Gcwl I.Qr• In .. 10--l:iti ... (Wri()it-;9)g1!_,....,I ,.--_... ICfru.n C: .'Ill S II llY, -:-. Oil... .IM 1 l ,_,' "" Silrl<*CP 1 I • 2914 + ;i. UnllrOdt (:p t 41 4'.fo.-16 lik ter ttb bk lo t . Ani.utCotl6 llO lO +\o C-.\1"1 1.10 4 119 CltnATr11D~ ..,19 .. v;KL M AJr1 .. 1 1~ • .....,0tciO,..,.l•Jt 9¥.+'losmPre..10ll S 10 J '""'uni••• .Ill 1•1~ .·: this hars h law o f hotel· you r money e wa m cos e an cen s a ""*'-'.so 5• 1 11"' • • .. CGM.M1 1.eo 1 11 1J'i-vo GMT p1 ,.,, . · •lllCI lll'.lo+ -. 1(/1.,!t: ,,. n • •I 1• • v. 0<cPtpt J..611 . • 1s 11,.. Y> 51""'° .11 • 1s il-'*-<it Ul'llw~LHI 2 s , u1>11 ~ w keepl'ng. Now the wo,rld's thos.e ritzy_ hotel.a. They're c heck p lus $1 51 f or s tonng Apco Oil 41 .• '' '°"' ... Conr•cc ·'° • 11 u -"" ~%e 1 ~ ! ~~ 1f~-; ~ ,'-'•·"",· ... '. ',' ,,•~-. ,'• ""-~"'" 2.!t ·.; !! ~!"' -, '~, Si""4"M .33 10 J21 10 •."' Unl't$0lt .1D s 11• u • 11 d the . . ' , . ,..., "'',, I IV.-\.'O Con EO .6Scl 4 lOI /\I• ~ "" •w ---C > .. 4 "'I to · YI :m:: .. ,. ,~,... •; h g a Joy rl e On f t t '-· " Gen rw . .U ! OI> 8\.'0 t \.'O '~' • -> >> ,,, •••. Ofllo 1 ... 1 111 Uh• V. • -· -,., ·jargestinnkeepe.,•the av1n Jnorm.a 1o n1n1 s com·APL <:o•P •Js'"'· .. •·""' pl•. 2 4J -.h ,.._,.__,..J 11"'.,.. .. _ ....... ,.,·.,. --•s ... si=1VJ .• 2131 u1FE.:r.• ,,;_,,,, "-''~ • Do 'tlet AllPllfdMoS. 1 1:0.:.-... Coi\$fO plS .. • ll\\-to -· ....... -K••tCl l.fllO t7 >'""-\\ (;;Ep •':i ''jiii)Q,,.,:..l\'t .«IS \l 91.11 ""'V!.1..FIO'IC .'6 .• 11!16•1rt Meaiphis-based Company company S moner . , D puter. AltA Sv 1,44 11 56 SI ... • ill Coflsf'd I.JS J 'XIJ U~ ... ~.~~ 1~ 1011~ ;:~ ·~ !Cr~ .12 JI 9t7 2Slt. t \9 "''•GE'" ·; 10 '''""+ .,.. Slltl! 1.20 I 22 4114 • .... USM eor.1 l I 13'¥1• .,. • d • ~ 1 · tbemgetawayw1tb1t v .. ve ~•t.aN ,11 s n '" •.. <:onF<lsll •'I'> .• •• •2'1'>-1 ........... · • K•ot1111-r .10 s • 1n •• 14 · , .. S1111 Cofllfl».11 9'h ... lllllltu•"-''° .. 16 • .,. .. ,as sprea its te(JlaC~'so • ...,_ ArclWrD.H 9 11 11\'>t"' Confr(lt.lll ' Jtj 11"1t v. GnFoocll.«I I U• ,,.,,_ ......... 1366 li Ii ... + 1(4 OIU1NG 1.40 • Ith~ ... S!o'l'llnCp .U2'1 3"' """'+ ... Ulll'IPL2.'6 1 61 1J~ .,. "'d I th t 'th th them check into a Holl.1-.. Edi ' Ar<tlC Ent" 2 1"' • Yo Go111.NG 2 10 1 .. 20.... c;..,.a.-l.116<1 1• 29 11\lo ~ "' ·~-1 .. .'BO 4 a ,~. "' 0 1n11.ren , 4 11 "~ • "" $mi1Mo .11 , , , .. uv .,,.,~1.1 1 l ,5 19-.. ~ ~1 e Y a t a s more llJl .....,. Arlill• .12 ·.; 12 ~.,.-v. CoMm ,.;, z 1 11 1111. ;:: cw--. .ioo 1 11 sv.-v. -L L-Omarktn .'Ill • 1• ,.,._ '·• $mit11ini .u 11 3n 11..,.. ""' uv1n 1111.1• ... 11 22...,. 2,,, 26(),000 rOOm S avetjab)e',~fnn." •, , • son 8 A1l1PSl.S.S II UVl-'lt COllPpll,,.. •• 110'6'\oo .. 0...lf'61r 1i 4 41 l~•YlllcGKl.56' llSV• -·· Onflclll .lt• 1 1 ·· 5mill'lk!IN211 9l "2'1<1•1"" -JV~ Th l 11 tb tcb the Ant Best "" 11 1~~ + :ii, eonPp1 1.16 .. dO s• , 1 Geri1.:::.f J · 1 16 -'4 Ul)'snSll lo J 11 111,. omotc:o . 12 s J1 4~-~. Smitfll 1 45 , 1 10,.,_ ,... 'veryn1'g ht. -8 Brea Y. Opl • Ark~Gl.10 t •S 19'.li .. Cof\Pwr .. 6 •. l Sl'-11 ... Gin .I• S 11 ,.1"'•""' u,..e.r .n 6 J 10•11+·~ Orllck11.20 I 1¥ 116+ ~. •--··· '°, , u ,,. :-'.!'"~, .• ~~ t ~ _!~+ ~ • k Atlfn Al!OY SI M• • 'ilo c:antl Al• Lii • t1 'I, -"" GerlMiH 1.20 11 141 V.-Iii rM °'"El ).20 S 1'1 tJlllo-'-' 5;;i';'"jj; :.0 4 16'1 I V.-v. ._....1 . t -1 ~·.,,-"" : • , world's largest inn eeRer as E . "'"*II "' , u 6"' . c... can 1.'° 6 11s 21\.11-""' GflMot 2.sld , 1111 31\lo-"' t:r...!: :tii:: ! ~ JYI OUtlldNI 1."lll , u !4\IJ-,.. ~ inu , s 1 _ .,.. '"'*""'°"°. 11 , ...... . ;· : FILLING A o vA RTER of using. armngs ArlTlcoS I.Ml s ID 11 + \lo Cnll(:opp .IO 2 IM ,.,., • -~ ~ '. 1 ., ... "' l..IMS.9 .11 • '10 ·i• • ·~ o..t .. 1c:. .70 '. It ........ SoflyCp Old 10 JS96 )Uo-.... Vtttvr I.IMO ·-• n v.-" .. ' I e c enl ad Armpl 2.10 .• u -'Iii CllMICpJ • .O I II• 11"'•' ~pt:i' ·, .! •2,v.-~ Wr$ptJl'o . l ""' ... O..rStipll .10 . I 11 ..... !ooot.n i Old s • )1¥1 .. ..,.,,"!.?'"',,',' 2u, .... ""· ~ a. million room• is .no ea&'"'· n o n e r """"'""' .-. .. 1411 ........ v. C111:1Ci> pt11ti .. Jt JO'lli. 1v. .... , ~• · 1 ~ ,. • .,. L.l•swy Miii ' J .,,. ~ ,,. owr1rr1 ·'° + ll 1111o. "' m 0\$. io • J s · ...,.p • • •• T ,-jj' hti S :.../ ' Armi.(;k ,'2 I 110 1• CCppt821't •• 6 20\lo• \~ G PutlUl. S 2'1 1J ~, lff0s6ff .Sll6 1S ·~-\lo °"'*'CF ... 11 1(1'1: 3ltt• ~. S.CarfJI .• I 81 11 ,,. VI.com lnl S • i\ro .. u. .t ask in times of h igh spo 1g ng a n rranctsco, Tak S ..1.rm1it1t 1.60 5 11 1,v. .. c11u1c:p1.20 • 221 ;111 .1,. Gen t1tot1•«• 1 Js s.,., . Lile...,,. 50 2 11 "°-w. o.en1111.611 s 61 31¥1 • 1-. ~E,.1Vt .. 2 14...,.i·· v1ewcc.so • 1 •li•.., I. . d I Holidaylnntoldco-•ate e port AnlCorp!lnlS 312 -llo CUIHPl.•'ldl ... lfo+\/.oGn5l!J'lil .1'• 5123"" ··t:~•Plc :IO • j10lt-~o.n11p14~ .• JU •1 5Q.Jlnd1'61 llll'r+11i'J•flfc;1.1166'1 l~-h gaso 1ne prices a n ga • ._. ..1.n11n1rii1 .sJ 10 '" "--.,., e11111111.JOc1 2 20 ,\'o . •• Gn 5ift1 1nc1 •1 11 · ,.,,,_ v. ~ V•l •nct , 2s u .16, 1-1• 0~10ro1n . .o 1 J 111o 1, ~ J , l l'I • "" v1EJ "''·'°.. .uo •1~-'"' loping inflation .o n other 'chlefs thatlheirpeoplear e ASA Udl .11111\ll +:t1teon11n""·· s1.16+1.J? a rE 1.1D 1211 21". unm1.14d .. l4 9~•"' _,,_ 5<JM1pt 180 1 u"''"' v1E1Jlf1.10 .• i200w""•'"" $40 d ~ ht ""11<1 011 1.olO • ... 11V.+ _, CollMtj .4811 I Tll 1\lo • "" GTFllPI IV• .. UO lll<'o .. • ~en .... r Cp J II JVt-•,;, Pa<Aln 1,20 • 31 12\li • \.'o Sofst Ille :.0 .ii It IJl'o . . Vl fl l)f l.t S . · dOO ti •I lroots, causing f a m llies to spending an up a '4'i ROSE ME A o · (A p ) -ASOrvG '·'° s • 11v. + v. c.onuo 11.ID s lU :11:it + 1v. ar1F1p1 1.xi •· ixr u"' · · 1..enoa 1 ... .a s 10 13.,.,_ \0 Pe<G.s 1.• • s10 11"'. 1\ SoesiPS 1 21 1 10 9\o-.,.. Y•E1 !If...... '"° 1• • 1.,. ' f f ' 11 slgleroom ~«Ill),! l -V.Co1'11011 pl 2 . 1ll\i+21•GTl<e l.lot• 'llll'lo-YILo!vF11(:1p .• 5VJ •h Pt<Gn'•h .. SlS2 1.l.+l-.. SQ!Eo1'.61 Stzs11•h •. Y!ltn.OOlk)IOI '"'•!":> c·urtail vacations, a nd o r a1rs-cass n SouthernCaJiforniaEdisono111ko 1.isd l 10 6Vi+:t1teon11n1r.11111'11.,..;w.GeneKUlnc•102 •1t.•Vruv1nc.1,. .. 1•16""-it P-.:L10 1.1>11 .s.Jult-v.!ioJtheo i .0 6110 10~ vs1eo.p.60• 1 •tr-w b ,,51·nesses to red"~travel in a name hoteJ; plus $4.50 a Co. reports a s harp i'ncrease o1111a_yt1 1.,., • 15 1J .. + "" Cont•• Dlu 6 •21 11 ... ~.·'r11·" •, ,..1t1 ?!~.-,•. u'f'l,51,. .•• • u1 1~-'lo PK~tr1 .1s 10 " 19v., 1 SolnGE 2.'2o 6 1• t•on vu•cnM 1..0 s 1 ~• ~ "' w .... ,,._ MICElpt 'I~ , • 2 56 • 1 C-. 1 1 6 21'h t h ,_ ~ • ... + Lo!vlli Fum S 21 llfri-~I Pk"-1.60 I ,, 11.,., • \lo SoNRft 1 6S I Sl JIV. --W W-e x pen s es . Last ye a r nighl for parking, whe n in sales and earnings (or the At1Akhf 2.,., 11 111 N\lo+ 1'4 eoo11un .u. • • 101o . GllPwl'I 1· · llOO 68 • ~ LFE eor.., s s 2~ • Pc T& r 1.10 9 19 u:i. • ·.~ !oNETe-1 uw 1 26 t1Y>-11> WKl'I cf •1• 6 11 u '4-~ th ldbe t Ing t ~lkhflf341o . 110•2"+Yo '-1fl1.CM6 92 '11\<'ot\(o Cltrbtt"Pdl 1 16 l~-V.LiOl>YNl('ll I 11 4 tYIPc T&Tplt . •!0111'tt"-SoP.cll214 I Jl ll"'•V•W.<RI SOl\4 I S'4-l"o Holiday Iniis earned $46 ey cou say a one three months e nde d Se pt. "':lt.lp1 2.eo ao s1 ... 1 '-'wt> . 119 61<1-"' GtT,, 1 JOO 11 ss 126"'•1,. LlbrtyCp .«1 • 11 ~. "" P.c 11 .. 10 • l 111.. i. So Aa11 2·11 1 1•1 11v •• 1v. w.1r,"" , ~ " 1o1o+ ~ f r. Hol'day Inns which •• , -' . . 11 "'' •• ,.. '"-Tire . .o s 1• 1 -... GF aus .n • 3 s~ • v. Ub Lllfl .1or. .• s l '-' . . . P•I"' Wtbo .. 11 1111 ......... ,,. ·• , , .. , ., ••• ", ... ,, '" ,. •• ,, ml'll1'0n alter ta·es. In the o ive • ..,. "' ,,,.. "~ •• ......... .... Cil..tPCm • s 01 '°"" ""' ' , ·~ ·~ ... · "· ..,,..,. · •• · T " ON. AtlaS Carp :Ill 11 1\lo• I.Ii CoopTpfl\4 . I 11 + V. -UDl -.6211 .. 6n+ " ,..l,_,..1,30 . S 9 .. • ""' Sol't.all of J . 1 41 t "° W.Ut,\ur .60 J t J"'t-V. fl'rst 51·• months of this year h ave cheaper rates a nd no Th d ""o Ato 11'1( :io l n .•Y> + -. eoi:ie•n0 .llO • 11 9~• Cilt>t F1"' 1° + 1:rz ~"' • "" U9Q , ZVi 1 :u 1111o-.,., P11m e11 .Js 1 1J ,.., • 111 Sol.ll'IG!. 1.60 1 , 21,... + ,... w.flfl L .Otd , lll 11.,.. ••• • 1 kin e c ompany earne ""° ""'o.1 .200 19 11 11 -~ c;op Ao 11rK1 2 so :io .... • "'• G1011 u.w .. s 10 l-ft + "' L.IQQM1 "' r .• riO n • • P .... 1c1. inc • t'l'I '"" • ~~ SotAhld .40ll , 1 1sv.-.,.. w .. d "-s.. 13 s .. + '" n ..... rits came to onJy $12 mil-charge o.r garage par g. million, or $l 33 a s h are, o n ""'""'' 1n0s 1 u• 1 ... t v. Co1>WIO 1 . .0 4 10 11 • .,., Gill 1-1011 .SJ ' 1 1~ • ,. u111 EO ' 2• 11• 6S14 + ..., p.., ...,.,. "''' •. 1•11 J • "" Sowsi;F• .JO 3 2, s>.1.-.,... w ..... co '° , ,1 •l4I-,,.. I"'" AV1;o Coro I \01 3'1•~ V. Conlv•a (.p . . 2t 1;w, , . . Gillette 1 SO I 9J lS\li+ "1 Ur.;NU I.II) 6 110 21\lo-~ Plnl'llfldle l 6 JI 26 • \It S..ForJif \'h . 1 IS"'-V. Warncpl \\'t . . 4 llVi-1"" liorl, down a whopping 44 IN ADDITION, 8 at d r e ve nues of $407 million. AVl;o"' wts s 11·1•+ !·1• o.rna 1. na 11 1t1 31~. + 1111 Cilnot 1nai• >. 19 8 unc,.11 pt J .. 10 "3 -1Y> P-•cr1 . .o • • ...,_ •.;, s..s1PS .et 1 3o WI + "" w.rnc:m ·'° 1 • im. + I• ~ Aw pt?.olOft ~ u Ult-It. CmwlEq .«1 • • Jv •• ""' ~ .J:ltl1' 11 '"'" liMIF<:l 1.1'. I 11\olo ,,. P•'9fi .9• I 1 '* ... 5plrlon~ •• SW.• \(o WiCfl'IPl•V. •• iv ··-percent. Holiday Inn, "We can offer This compared with ~6 miJ. Aw<vPr .J0 16 u xrv •• ""' c:own1.•S11 1 16 1\'o-YI GdYI -• 141 10 ... "' LJone• Cor"P s 1i. 11'>-,,. P1r1<ttn1.06 ~ 1• isi,;,-'"' ScerryHut 1 s 3 1-._"' w•rnreo .so s 16 s\:.-.,,. H l.d J · t th · I' 88 l h Awls 1rw; o111 s •1 1 eow1 ... 1s.i 9 1 s°" ~· GMDeVn ·'° • • 13''" L•t1l;lfll.n_1'1" ..., 1'16 '"' • . • P1!.l:o inc. • 63_11 .. l'I'"" lo 5"t<'l'Hlll·l .• t 21v.-:i.:. ,,...,~ 1a 212 1•.+.+..i•-. o 1 ay n ns is. no e _youL c_Q.mpall)L..ev_en_morc ton , or cen s_a.s are....on AWlfl1t'I( .xr 3-xr -11"'. o;r eo.-ero 1s f ,.,,0,,._... Gal~ FM 6 ,..,_.w. •11 tlt1n ,. Pf" 2 . s 111.io • . Pe1ien .JO ~ • 11o0 ... 5" t1tan.:r .1• 1 S36 ,."". ~ w .. l'lt'S 1.JO , ,, ".,.. .•• o nly one suf£er1ng but·, lrresi'sti'ble g r o up o r cor· r evenues of $285 millio n a "'\1(111"' 1.• 11 * 2•1-t -•'!1. cPC 1n111 e 1ss 2'1"'• ¥. GooOrlc 111 • •s xi -"t.«IOleed 1 .a •111• v. Pe•DG1 .oat a n 1111+ o.. Sllf~ E1 , 120 1¥o-"' W•VIGl1 • • 1 n""• \• All..: D!l&G 1J 61 J' t "-C••nt C !.•O 4 116 JO;I,(,,, 1i,. ~Tlr 1 • 286 1•.ft • lot l..oewCP l,20 l ~I 13 • VJ ~nn IA~!• . . I~ 1\lt .~ Sor~ .IS • 2 10..+ \It W,HhMll . .:I 3 21 !I'>-'• bein_g the biggest cheese in porate rates." year earlier --•-c: ... 1111 Fl .•2 ' u ·~•. \'o ~J :12 • 1 ' -111 Lomas"F1 » 11 19 •I•-\'o Pe~ne.,_ 1 16,. 1ao .. 11 ... SQu.ai'D ,, 1o 1o uo 1sVi-ll'> ,,..,HI Pl,,.. • . 3 J)!i) ••• h d I h Bill:l&WU .10 I 1" """• 't. (:roc~er I 66 '-4J H&ot ~. Gouklln 1.111 S Je 18!lo • \'> loMIQ 3 . ..., S 9S 11 + .... Poe~nD1r 24 • U ·~ . *"° .M 16 101 301';• "' w.,n !.ti 11 4 ) ui.-.... t e tn us t ry, t 's t e most Picture what's going to Jack • K . llo r ton , cha1 r · 8lclle 1or. fl ss J~ v. eromp K 80 4 , 1"-GOlolcfl>I 1.11 13 ., • .., • ~ ~ • .t00 3 9 s"" • . . P• co pt•11 . 1 ~i""'-1'.' SIM, 1.4() e Q 31 -"' w•lll w 1.41 1 1• n o.ii .. • • 'bl H ad J hn ' 'd Th d lh t Bai<.erll'l .20, 111 7\lit"' c.ro.....1<.10 1 l ""'"• ·~ Gr-Wl.llO ' 2.0 11111 'Lone!.lncl l. /1 ,.,._,,.. Pe11nPl1!11l6 S2 16\i• Ii< 516mcl18JIJ llS ,,_,_..,, w. .......... OI ' u 6\oo -... v 1s1 .e . ow r • o son s happen if corpora.l e man, sa1 urs ay a 6'kef"Ol1.n 11 '" 31 •• 1 c.owneork 1 31 16 ......... r-,,;omu 11C1v 1• a,,. .. v. u:n!.pl •'>'> 1 SOI'>+.,., PPL1>11.f>ll . rlo eo .ti'> 516......,1,.2811 1• 11"41, 1.1. W.ll\flJ .lSd 9 s2 u 111 + 11t ·earnings are runnin g«; per· pres idents buy thJ's m es-third quarte r earni n gs wer e a..io OH ·"° 1 • ''"'• ,,. c:rw11z11..0 .s 1• tJYt-"' c;r..,,1w .:101t 4o 106 J"-v. u.n.s1c; 1VJ ·,; tt ,,i •... P PLp! 160 •. ''° ,, • '"' sioo;1 Qi 1 • 111 11 .1 ....... .,,. G .611 • l '" ••• 8a!IOlrp .tO .S ll 9"'"t "' CTS Cp SO J S4 1\0 t .. O.-•y0.11.to l 16 61.\• \lo l.Olljlll l,llo I 108 11"" + \'o P1P&L II'" I . t6t 1t + 1\lt 51.<IOI"° J.MI I :ior, fO"-+ 4'"1 Wf!lnUn In( •. I l\o + \lo eent behind la.st year and sage. Joe Wl1son, ace h e lped by above·aver age Bait~ 1 '16 6 '" 1sY>-"' cun>QBn oo 6 11 6(1• v. OtAM11·61a 1 1• .1 1..11.. pt 1 w. 1 w•-11+..,. PPLpl•.io . 1110 •s • , seOilOll i . .» 11 u. JO\\-,.. .,.,.,.,,., ·'°, 1 •5 ... R d I ff32 Precl.pi'lati'on mak•'n g e..c.i 1u • • 1li. cumfns .ee. 6 11 12~••"" g:j~·i$a 1 ; 1~~~ ;.:. Lo11JOr11 .1119 ~ oav.+"" Pli"nw11.211 st ,lil\t t-1 St00f>p11i •.. ,10 ,, w.tbbDltlCp , ,, 1~-.... amaa nns 1so per-s alesman for the XYZ , 8a->OIQlflCU19,,._.,.,c..,,,,0r9 ."lll• 9 s•.. ,1 ·~· .. +·•u.r-..ieorp1 "l""'•0"'Pt""'"p12v,_ 1l111ti-\lt StaPo0<1.'1 1021v..""w.uM<L . .02 1.1 ..... ~. eel h • more·lhan·US"a l a m ounts a..oor Pn n 2>11-Y1Curr1nc ."'3 , •110~."' OtNir .1oon 211'"'-v.~Uo'd1.<W•,.,14\t+111tPnw1p11 . .o. ''"'•\•5"'11nt1 .«1• •1" WthM~1 .s1 1 11 1 ..., • .,., n • • Widget Company, as a tnp ... 8al'IQo-p1c 2 • 11 11~+ "' c:urn~· .JOll 1 n ''•-v. OINIVk , 1111 • '2 •o -"' YP..:11c n • is1 •v.-"' F11nnl0!1 1g s 211 .. ,._ •,; seo PruCI .tot 1 , 1"', .,.. w.1biu c:51 • • it 11•16 ... Stuck with a.11 those e m-1 to San Franci'sco an• he's of low·cost h y droelectric BMNY z.20 s • 11\6+"" c: .... nuwA1 1 11 . GCWsFln ... • •11 13"'' "' ~ 11o1 • n """• l,I, ~1 0r .1C1' J •Vi ••. si....,.. sz 2 9 -.,.. Wt11s Fg.111 s s. 11111 .. '·• ~ • £ 8'1'11<11• .II 4 10 10 + U. CutlefHl60 5 8 1l t 1) GI Well Un 1 l9Q lt -H, ~n l l • 11~ Pl!oJIG•2.l6 6 ll ,.,.._,, Slar>Wk.S ,'It. )0 1J WFM!i l.200 4 14 7~• ·~ pty !'OOms , Hobday l nnshas planning o n stayin g at the en.ergy availa ble or the e.-rru.i 1 s n M +1,,. ere'°"''·"° 1 " 1•""-~. ~:'~~ 1'~·6 3~ l~l:; ~ LTV co.11 2 so 9Vt-·ii. P1ePl1Co1.4011 2,. 39'4+ "" Stant•, . .o , , ,..,_ ,. WtnsrtG . ..e , 11 1,,,. ••• d ecide d to take out t he Fai'rmonl or lhe SI. Franc1's company's own pla nts in ~,', .... -,·, ••' '••"'• ~ CYP"us ·~.1 .•_.111 2•~· •1• (;ryloO 1 °"'" ~ us 11~ ~rv QI s pl •. , ....,. •.• Ptr-1nu .»11 :io. 20\'o+ "' 51ar,..,u t • • n-"' wn T• 110 ' ' i1Vt . ~ -.. .. .. ._ Gr hfl!I wt 11 1 ·~ IJ.b70!(tl I \I 111 361h •·• f'f1 In< L.O 6 S 18lo+ \I StNlllw l.l!Qi:j • 11 6'i .. wPtf'pl•V> .. rio •9 ~I brass knuckles. It w, ill, or 1·he Mark Hopki'ns or the Cal1'!orn1·a e«Mt 1.60d 2 ' '"•..., Di.._ Cr> 1 360 ,,,..,._ ~ • .,."•· ''" · •• ,,· ,,,', .. ~·z:. ·,"' •, ,., !l'!_·:.:. Fllte•P11.2011 6 10•.o-.... St111.1:1x %(!. S9 --v. wi.1P1 ""'"1 • u 211;. .. '" • Bale In .«I l 1 I + V. 0.ntltlwr .60 J to 6t. .. 11 ' ""' ....,.._ 1.08 10 • .,. ... Pft,...St• .IO \J 1 :M"' ... 50...,ner 110 1 ~s "6~, 1v. wi.tnAr .'°Cr • u 1 t + • • believe it or not, compete n ew H yatt' Regency.1 But his H e said o theda"to-con· SMes Mf .10 6 2• 1J.ljo + h o.neep 1.l6 • s1 """'. 1•~ G"''"'1n .o ' 1' 11" • 0~ u..n su 1 6 " 1• ~ "' Pt1•01ne l4 • •l 10,.. + ....., sitrefti .... ,. 1 s'I!-.,. Wsll.lnc 1.40 1 ,, U\l , '• ... ';, ~ pl 1 , • ' 3 llV. + "" 0.rl lf'l ,lOQ 5 191 141'1 + I> Guetll I . lOcl • l) t \o-;. l Y 0 (.orp 13 16) l'tlo f'llo1rlC: 1 4/ill . 9 11\lt + "" Slt<IQr; 10 16 l1J 21\1• • ;i. W!t<n(:O NA 10 1SI 1 ... + .. lor bus iness, jus t Jike 3;1l.Y boss says , ••No, Joe. tributing to i mproved ear-B.1111 1""" .• 1 1• ''-• .... D1r11n0p1 >. 11 121 •• \.o GuM1i 131n 3 11 l'• · Lvi<e.Y 2S11 l ].It 13.,,._·;..; P11~· 1n ,~,. 1';1 2&\1+1"" se-o.1 .11 • u iv.-..., w~P•clnd , 16 il-. . , r d blooded free enterpnse h r • 'd . . I d 8ilukhL AO 11 ,,. lll't• Iii °"'' Genr•I ll 111 1•v.. '' ~::~· .i: j ~ ~~:-.,.. l'(lu! pl ·2..., . 109 ll -IV. ""'Ip D 2 Ml ~ I u ,. -"" si ...... 1.10 • S• ni.-v. Wll\IPuD ,, ' ' 1011 e -· Enoug o these JOY n es. n1ngs tnc udc a general amtr L .11 21 1~ 11Vt+ 1Yt o.-,co 1.1• • •• 11~. 1, Gull oH 1.Ml , •.o 11VJ + ~ L,ncns~ ·'° .. s-1.noo 1~ YI Pri11~E• 1 " 6 11• 11~ .. 5:1ewwn 1.'1 6 ll 11 -v. wu.i1o11 1.40 s 11'9 1011-~ n"'triot y 1 at the Holi'd ay a t ·n ef£c t '. · BNrtnOs .n 1 n 1s •"' o.-,cp1 •v. .. 1100 •• ., ,.. .. ,, ,, , l --... Pti11E1111•1, 1J10 no,..+ .4(, S1o1<11v 1.10 1 ss u"'-v. Wsunp14.o .. 1 ,. -11, .,... • o u s ay r e 1 crease c l\e in Beat Fib .n • 1-M Uh• 11o o.,11,.1,. .<W . u 1_, __ 1,, ....,r • " 19s a • • loll M«AriF 60 t 1 1•.., • "" Ptit1e1p11•. 110 n + ,,,. SIC*etr 0, 1 .. d:io 1°""-"' w.sin El .ti 1 '°"" ,,, , .,, .. •.In many s mall a nd Jnn." When Joe ~hecks in October 1973 increased 11«krm $10 21 22Vi-'l<ll DltVtonH .60 • w 1Vi-.. G0",•,•,• .• Jo 1 11 • """"«0oni4 11 • 1"'•.,, PriE1p11 as 11:io 6311.. "• S1on.Crit 'iO J J1 1ll'olo . w.1 .. 4{ 1.ot0 s 1l u t:.+,.. .. • •. • l'!ft;ton0 .ol01'11'tt tl O.VPU1.M>t116U~ .... j~p l,. '"•''MKM 30• .) .. PriE•ttl llO 1110U'lo•"••SIONlWll10!0Mll•VIWe"nOl28S •u . medium-size cities across h e's going to be in a lovely a \·a 1l a b1l1ty o f low· cost Bl!edlo1< .6!111 ~ 11 •--.... DNflWtr ·'°" 39 6ll> . Gu+1siu 1.12 1 t&l 10'•· "' MK...,11 ·.» l •• • • i.; P1111E1'"' "" 11•0 •3 .,,, Sl«>&SN» 1 • 1 11111 , '141 Wi!T'"''·'° 17 ,10 3,..,, ,.,., h r • l •I d l ' ll'k*erlnclu>1ltlJ2l ....... Oftn1 1608S1740~"',"'° Gu!!&W•.'lll 16101••'•/.M(.y 1.IO S •14\lo,l'OP1111e1 111 l ,1I SOMI •l ~-IH.:l16 1s 1l .. •hlNl'IFrye401 '11110 -'· le country the l ocal frameomind. naura gas, an s nngen 11t1coPttS1sm 1•'-''""'0e1Nti:10 s s~ •'\•"" Gu1•&W•w• 91 •"'·01 M1o1tF0 .4Sd •1 '~•"'PtiE101•.60 .tl'OOJ1 •'*5l•IOl!Rot6)$ e 6'i 1v..w111PSi 3!1<1 7 4l 2z""-"' H oll.day . l n n_,1·s th.~_class _,... 1t'4, ''""1'•.•.-1'ntc,na l cost controls Ill!!..., 1.10 s 11 1111. + 'Ill 0e1 ......,1 1 JO ' 1e 1a~. • "" 9~!;~..!.';'.!l,; 9 s, ',3"-' ~; MllQkOI .:rz 1 "' • PtiE1 01 ).80 tto 1' • 1 Stu0ew 1 l1 1 6 n o,;, .. "" w11ee1s1"' 6 . 1110 u • ,,,, -.::==-::::o-o.::;-=.::....:::~===~~..:::3'i::===::-;:"'"-="--_::::::..:::....::::::..:::::::::.::::c··---= !leklgH ,30Q l 1 61t , • OtllllAlr . .0 q 'Ill 0 .. o I ... "" ~· ""' ' /Nqt• \YI Ji 21 .... ' Iii f'fli!S+;tt 1,30 S ) U ~tiWpt l.«I I II''•~ •,. -ISi pt S. 1100 •l , • t 8e01""'1.IM 3 •• 11\o',-V. 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York Sloe• lltn SI 2.11<1 1 II ,,,._ v. DIS!llOlll .60 s l'4 S'ilo. ... H~ndlem ·40 e lJ -011 I IO ) 10. ,, • v. Piefl •mprl ' 10 ,..,_ '• !io.r1'>trpt J'~ • 321-\--.... Willl•IM tO 11 141 "'""-'. EJIC,...., lleflqeB .01• • ti l'l\o •.• OttE~ 1,., 1 es ,°"_ l'i Haody-H .11(1 I I '1""-~~ ~Of(ftC 1 • Jl!6 16 .. ..... PW!.bry I 80 1 116 U •1r-"" s..r...,,;,. . .a '' 18 9 ..... v. Woll(.~ ~.I . 16' 43 ... _ .... Net""'"""'"'""!: CflinOfi 6(1 fl'tl rNDEXES lltl'twv .10d 2 •1 l"-... OttEpti.tz •• 1100 ,. -1 11.JntiC:p."" l ] 11•-~\ Mlr'c'orpl l 13 31 + .... Plofl'IG!.'161 It U~-l. Sup0.I 1.11)11 •1 111 •I W•flflD•l.Jll~ st i.~-.1~. tll~ tltlWttl'I lie "''"'-CIOSlllO llttt """"' ' IOI ,...,_ 'II OerE pl , ..... i !SO Ml~+ 1 :!:'~ l·~i 1: 1?~ ~;1.,. '\, ,,,..,.,,,., ·'° • 11l l:lo ~ .... P11,,,,, II .Ml . 110 IO'IOt "' !ooJiler(ln 20 j n ... ' ,,. 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Mitblflt ~-6 .. t "'-Al<ll!Old ~ J 2W. l•111· "°' h&ii1 ,,__....,....,~··"·••.__,,, lilvkllnc"11111t.. l••••t-lJ--t11 ••II• ...... ,," • , , -.. ~,0 ,, • ., --•i,.. • It tf>\-rtit ..,M"t w11 • l"' la. "' ,., 1 ,, ,,. , 1-.wf C_,l 1p,r.··Tft 11 l~l \~N'~rlc-•. .,,. • -... _ • "' ID<t~lftJl"'I' ,, I"'' '•llll""P\.tf)f f IJl<o II> lbll i.t.P., I o0'"''1• r· Finance Briefs lloi"· llot1'1 l\O l S~. Idaho (i\lJ' ··· fioi!l-e C'a :-r:1dc• Cnrp . l,r<.>Sidf'nt Joh n H. • Ft.''°' "'"' s a s t n•nl! pc rlormuncc hy ilN 11:1p1•r d1 vi~ion1. nrrsct pmblc mK In the hu1 ld111 g 1 nn..;I ru<"I ion 1nrtu~try und thJJ t•nr1M1rn11nn '-ho\\'t.·d u 57 million ,::11n 111 l·~1rn111 i.:" for the third <1u:1rtcrth1~ '1'111· l1rnL u cl i ~"f· hoth in p:ipL-r- r.elol<!d hu~lnc.sscs .and bufldln~ m ;ltl•r l .i ls. 1·c1H.lrlcd third·tiu:.irtt•r car- ru ni:' fir Sl1i.!» millfnn, -.r !tH tt:r'll$ per ~ho r1• 'fhrit t·nm11urt'CI \,1th t•urn1n~ u{ S21.~I Oltlliun ur 1U. c..·1rnL'\ IJl!t" .Aoi~" l.r-.1 \ l'lfr • I I , . \ 88 ~LV PILOT Friday, Oct.obtr 18, 1CJ74 ' 1 .Unisex s~andal lf en, Women. w Share Pronouns? By DICK WEST Furthennono, the proposal is delTIU1'1y dropping one's eyes based on 1 faulty premise. when one accidentally enters When f e m a I es occupy the wrong locker room. masculine pronouns in double Wllhelim' wrlseii: pronouns, gooder situations, there isn't oo the other hand, bring about actually a ~mingJing of the a definite fwdon of t h e sexes. 'Jbe feminine presence genders, with all ttiat implies, merely i.I implied. Those are the klmb of pro- nouns that invariably a r e a widow of William Hale Harkness or Standard OU family, is unable to bankroll Harkness Bal- let and the dance com· pany may have to dis· b a n d, a spokesman said. • -MERCEDES BENZ .:..._ Sales • Service • Leasing 21701 MAAGUEAITE PARKWAY 495-1700 MISSION VIEJO 131·1740 s...,.... """ ... .._...., ,..., .. ..-. rttw • M•.-•lf• 642-4321 Direct or Colle~ to ~ubscrlbe to tho Dally Pilo,. YOUR Homet-n Communl!}' Newspaper . . • • You con Charve DAILY l'tLO,T Cloulllod Ad• 642·5671 • ONE IS AWARE there are followed by pregnant pauses. kmal,. in the pronoun but U. God had intended males one doem't see them. It's all and females to have very discreet and a b o v e prenomin~ togetherness, h e board. Even prudish. T h e woold have made us a 11 ,~gra'.'.'.'.'.:mma~l~ical~~~~w~v~~~enl"._o~f'.....:neu~·1~~~·~~~~~~~~_.:._~__:~~~~~~~~~~~~_.:._~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~==;~.!=::=:=:=:=:=:=:==: WE HAVE "he-him-his"I- WASIUNGTON (UP I) - There is a move under way in · certain clrtles to ad\lance tbe "unisex" trend kl th i 1 country to a point w h e re males and females will be cParlna: the same pronouns. .Se JiU ~ly segregated pn> nQUDI are, ol course, as much ~,part of American culture ¥ aepar,ate bicycles -one -· for g!Tls and ·one for "°"'"" . -propouns for males and "she-- heNJers'" pronouns for · females. 'lbe thought ol both sexes ushl,I the same pronoun \\.'OUld ha e shocked our grand~ts and I must say · j, !iild 1u a bit scand~lzing iD.YJelL •• Yet, o:m.l,tlons in our socie- ty ~ 'il'e such thal Sllch a ~ appears in such a 1'ellplldable publlcatioo . as tf1e.-.National Education -llloft·s journal. II you .., knallne such a thillg. In Che CUn"ellt Issue, Fred W.1 Jhtlmt,~ fonner esecutive ~ ol the Associatioo for SUpervision an d Cur· r i cu l1I m ._Developmen~. ad- vocates lkklption of three new unisex pronouns -"ne-ner- nis'' -lor use in double geodes' alluations. THIS PROPOSAL, a.s you might have stispected, is an outgrowth ol the women's liberation movement. Ub leaders contend that pronoun- &ilarin« ~dy is widespread in.> such sentences as """'11>ody ls losing his halid." ~.women as well as men are losing their heads, they anNe, that sentence is bisex· · uaJ. But women are. denied e q u a 1 pronom.ina1 represen- talion.~eed. they are sbov· ed Into .IJie masculine pronoun. The 'o D 1 y aJtemat'lve - ~ ol aeparai. but ;,quai . .....,.,.,. ("eveyrbody is losing his or bet' head") - is cumbenome. So, u n d er Wilhelms' lntegratiob plan, the pronoun would become uni9eJC· um ("evecybody Is losing ner bead."). . THIS PROPOSAL prompted a distinct narrowing ol. my chauvir\i.st pig-like eyes. I OOn't like It. Not one biL That sort ol thing can ooly lead to further a>nfusion of serual roles, which already is creating identity c r i s i s . Trial Slated BAKERSFIELD (AP) -A Ridgecrest man is to go on trial Jan. 6 oo a cbarp of ,murdering bis estranged wife's date. Jack W a y n e Bumgarner, 33, pl.e:ided in- nocent to tbe Aug. 25 stabbing death of John Stanely Bugay, 44 . administrator of llidgecrest's Drummond Medical Group. Monk-ing . 4round BOLTON ABBEY, England (UPI) -The Rev. Frederick Gril'fiths &a.ys" he and bls family share their home in the re<!t.ory on the Duke of Devonshire's &\too Abbey esta te with a ghost -an Augustinian n1onk who wanders through the living room in black cassock and cap. ··\\le ha\'e seen him many lin1es and happily [ ept the fact !hat he here.'' lhe 61-year'1lld • urch ol England rector said . "Sometimes ·we have the smell ol incense floating Lhrough the house and receJJUY \\"e ha \·e had the 'smell of l e rm c n"t.lng -meadrl'· \_~ flYwtr l'wf a 11 --...-...... C..hwyl•l1 ... • ,..,, • .., ... ""9p Coolactlllo I.HM &port• .. -HARBOUR .vw 18711 lf!'och I• Hr.finqtoft 1~11ch 842-44JS 0,.., °""' .... ..,.., •. , ,,.. & ~ •.• t • , • 'MICl'loWAve. ove..:t SEEA LIVE . D~MpNSTRAr10,N at our EL TORO STORE · Sat."Oct. 19 from ~ o a.m."4 p.,m. ~---,----1-Amena'$--tiome-Ecoriomist-will-sh·ow-yl!U1iow lo prepare delicious food lo v .. th normal time. .• ·:; SIDE·BY.SIDE 'AutcimaUc ·.R•lrtgerator C9fnpletely Free·C)'.frost . 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