HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-10-21 - Orange Coast PilotShot at Close Bange • ID Office
Art Colony Poli~e Oiii~ials Probe
Arsonist Atta~k
l ·n Rape Atte1npts On Mesan ~s Dome
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DAILY PILOT an e ears
· * * * 1oc *.'* * .:., . . -. .
MONDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 21, 1974
VOL. •1. NO. JM, 1 se:c:r10111s ti PACilS
Two Laguna JncideaJts
El Toro Artist
Held • Ill
El Toro silk screen artist Steven J.
Willett is being held by Laguna Beach
police today on charges of assault with
.intent to ~it rape after he allegedly
attacked a \toman and then a I>year-old
girl in the Art Colony.
Assaults
mother Jelt the station lo do some
shopping when she was ~potted by a
leeri:ig man in another car.
sHe wrote down his license p I a t e
number. Police alle~e it matched the.
licenses of a car involved in previous Laguna police said the mother or the
teenager actually led them to~ Wjllett cases and they traced tbe autG to the--
when she ran into hirn by chance whlle, suspect.
shopping. '°' uet. tit'bo~ .. ::iaiU lin: :1rst assault oc-
The mother claimed lie p u 11 e d curred Friday night as the 15-year-q ld
alongside her car .. said "wow" .and then girl was walking along Coast Highway.
drove off. according to detective Gene He said she told him the attacker
Brooks. drove past her, stopped his car, got
Willett. 22. of 24902 Branch Ave., Et., out and began following her. He began
'Toro, described hin1sel£ as a s e 1 f • talking with her and she became nervous
employed silk screen artist. He was when lhe questions turned to personal
arrested Saturday and is held on $10,000 subjects. -
bail. The young girl frantically began look-
• I s
The teenaged girl was b e i n g in-ing for an open store, or restaurant,
tcrviewed about her Friday ordeal. Her and when un able to see one, tun1ed Steady Job
up Myrtle Street, a residential street.
Police Probe
Arson Attack
01i Mesa Ho1ne
When the man asked her where she
lived, she pointed to a lighted house
and began running toward it.
The man then grabbed the young girl
as she tried to flee. Her screams alerted
nearby resident.! who burst from their
doors and came io her aid. One man
chased the attacker, but Jost him.
Sibieda Sheidayeva has been
awarded the Red Banner of
Labor in Russia for 100 years
of employment at the Kuba
Ru g Factory in Azerbaidzhan.
Said to be 114 years old. she
was cited for her productivity.
or ree
S11iffing' s .Out
,,1 oonshine Cou.i:iction Scotchecl
WASHlNGTON (UPI) -The U.S . Supreme Court today let
stand a lower court ruling that a warrant is needed to search a truck
that smells of \\'hl skey.
'fhe standard for a warrantless search is whether the incrilninat-
ing evidence is in "plain view" of a Jaw of ricer. 1'hc 4th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals ruled that the odor of whi skey docs not 1nake the
liquor itself in plain view and that a warrant \vas needed to search
the truck.
1be appeals court overturned the conviction of \Vill iam G.
Bradshaw, who was charged with 1naking 1noonshine in the Dirty
Ankle section of Cleveland County, N.C.
The ·arresting agents smelled liquor around the truck and
searched it without a warrant. They found 144 gallon jugs of moon-
sh.tne.
High. Court Lets Stand
Hospital Abortion Rule
From Wire Services
\VA~HI NGTON -The U.S. Supreme
Court today let sl8.!ld a ruling that
municipal hospitals may iiot re st ri ct
abortions to those re<iuircd to save the
life of the mother.
Arson investigators today were probing
11: bizarre-Molotov cocktail-attack on
a Costa Mesa home which caused an
estimated $7 ,500 damage Saturday night.
A half hour later, a 36-year old woman
was assaulted as she · walked to her
central Laguna •par1ment. 0 Ii SI t t D th ~°:"t11e1o:i.=~~~,~~:-:F-O: C€man -.10 _ o _e_a==-
The court, ""ith Juslire Byron R. \\1hi1r
dissenting. declint'd to re\'il'\V I he
decisions of the U.S. Ci rcuit Court in
Sl. Loui s requiring public hospitals to
pcnnil •ualified staff 1ncmbers · tu
-perform abortions.
-TJlc ca·se a10"~· from a ctiaHengt• h_v behind her In his car. He asked her •
The structure at 3 O 7 O Yellowstone
Drive was not badly burned itself, in-
vestigators said, beyond a living room
sofa and the immediate area where
.the missile exploded.
if she wanted a ride, and _. when em·
phatically lold "no," left the vehicle
and began trailing her.
As she neared a reskience, the man
barred her path and grabbed her. He
1fled after she bcg'an screaming.
h1 Los Angeles Mystery
Fire Marshal Ed Lewis said today,
however, that the lire I i t e r a 11 y
superheated the rented home or Mrs.
Dolores Campos, consuming all the ox-
ygen inside.
"Plastic items all through the house
were melted," he said, describing the
situation as almost creating a gigantic
'
Del. Brooks said that as he interviewed LOS ANGELES (AP) -A stale
the woman Saturday in his office, the policeman died at County-USC Medical
J>year-old's mother was present, and Center arter being shot in the licad
heard the descriptk>n of tbe attacker. early today as he was working alone
Brooks also worked wilh an ''ldentlkit" in a State Police annex office in the
which is used lo create an artist-like downtown State Office B u i I d i n g ,
sketch . of suspects. authorities said.
Willett was arrested alt.er an all points The olficer1 Da vid A. Jack , 23, of
oven. il'A •1 bulletin wa~ broadcast to the Laguna Riverside, was shot in the left side Arson investigators and .,,.,st.a l' esa of the head. SJ>l>arently at close range.
Police Detective Tom Boylan today were Beach Patro force after the mothj!r's authorities said.
seeking any possible motiv(tl for the license plate tnfonnatlon and description Authorities cordoned · off the are i
arsoo attack on the campos home. ol the auto •llCJ!'Pri.ly matched up. around the Los Angeles Civic Center
Chief Lewis: said tba tenant and her after Jack·s body was round in the
children were gone /or the weekend v· c A il I ground-floor annex shortly after I a.m.
nnd returned shortly before noon Sund•Y te_ t ,ong SSS e( A scardl o1 the area foilod lo reveal
to discover the cht1rred sofa under the any clues to the gunman, authorities
llving room window. SAIGON. North Vietnam (APJ -The iald, tnvesligators were unable to ex-
"Thc liquid ran out and lhtfflrt bumcd United States Embassy today denied plain a moti ve for the shooting.
lobby at the Lime of . the shooting, police
said.
Because the bui.lding is in use around
the clock , the doors always remain
unlocked. they added.
A police spokesman said Jack
reportedly was shot at close range with
a large~al\ber wcall)n. More than one
shot was believed to have been Ored
at the officer because traces of cllipped
marble fron1 a \\'all near the office
were found near. the victim, t h e
spolteSman added.
Authorities said Jack's service
revolver was still in, its holster.
Bank Hcduccs Hat e
Itself out," Firt MarshaJ Lewis aplaln-Viet Cong statement.. that the Central AutOOrities said Jack's body was found
td._ Intelligence Agency · is involved In b)' an office worker returning to lhe CHICAGO fUPJ I -The First N11lionat
lie safd the res Ide o c e 1n the demonstrations against Pres Iden t building after tak ing a break. Dank of Chicago today annou~ It
-oorlho<.,..om.d:O~~ol.,j)cO.,..MaoU:"--l' ll!.)'.Cll vy.n Thieu and accused North Jack, who was responsible for checking will lower ii~ prlme lending. rate to
-owned by ~lax 1lllcs, ?212 Continental VMtt.rlam o 11 °'cruC1ely 1ottrl\tfempt ~Sffife CtnploYeS BllCrtng th&· "uildJng, JlYf .i>erceilt from 11 ~1 ~rccnt, effective
i\vc., Costa l\lesa. to exploit the dissent." was the only person on 'duty Jn lhe -1'UCiaii)i. --
' • •
t"·o physicians. Dr. Charles .J. ~lo('k
and Dr. Chorlcs A. Tielz. to a n1lt'
of the Virginia. \!inn . ~lunicipal Hospital
prohibiling nonlherapeutic abortio ns.
Appea ling !he decision or the circuil
coort. officials of lhc ho.c;p1tal said ir
would rn ean that "{'\"er~· s1n:1ll 111unicipat
HIGH COURT WON 'T REVIEW
OBSCENITY APPEALS, Page A4
hospital must open its doors to aborlions
on demand e\·en ·hough !here may be
other hospitals and clinics in 1he gf'neral
vicinity 1~'hirh are ag reeable to perfom1-
ing abortions."'
They sai d the 1!17~ de<:i~ion of the
Supreme Court .c;trlkin~ dov:n stale an!i-
abortion l:t\\S docs not require th is
resul t.
They nlso contcnrled the circuit court
lgnort'd a ~linnesotn 1:11v e x e m p I i n g
holfpltal~ (rom liability !ar refusing lo
perm!! nbortions.
'"!'he stalule most clearlr and unc
qul\'ocally expresst's the public pollr~·
or 1hc ~1111c ... that no hoepLt11\ or
nny kind in the state mny bf' roerred
Into becoming an :ibortiQfl mill ." t~
ho!!pital officials told the c.-ourt.
The SilprCn)(' C'-0utt tilled 1n 1973 1hn1
IS.. ABORTIONS. rn ge A21
om
Maii1tai11s
l11noce11ce
h1 Slayii1g
Cy ARTHUR R. \"INSEL
01 !ht Dilly f'ilo! Siii!
James Rav Russell \\'ill be taken to
a Los Ange!Cs County courtroom Tues-
day but the ordea l is not over for
the former I.aguna ~rills man accused
cf a murder he niav not have committed.
He has 'Ileen h('ld in Los Angeles
County Centrrr l J~iil for 743 days as
of today. ·
He has been held since Oct, a. 1972,
\\"ithout bail. witOOut arraignment and
V.'ilhout anv dcfinili\'e results of more
than a dozCn hearings of va rious kind s
involving extradition to Oklahoma , to
face trial for a killin~ that occurred
on ;1 Saturday night when evidence in-
dica tes he v.as in California .
lie has been clearl'd of imp!icalion
once already by Or;ingc County Superior
Court Judge \\'i lliam ri.1urray. v.·hG i~
:ighasl at 11hal h..'ls happened in the
1nore thnn l\\"O \'ears since.
"I never donC <111y ki lling .... ·· Husscll
aid in a jail intervie1v Friday.
ltussell. 27. IS an cx-ronvict who did
four years al a1cAlcster, Okla .. for a
burglar~· con11ni1ted at the age of 19
!See ACCUSED. Pag~ A!j
Weal her
Considerable low cloutltness
through Tul'~av n1orn1ng \Vllh
sonic sunshinl· tn !be afternoo n
Tfh'sday Sl1~htl~' 11arnicr l'Yith
bc;ith hi~hs Al 60 rising to 73 In·
Ii.ind. U>11s toni~ht 57 to 62.
l:'\'S I DC·: 1"0D.\ l'
l1rc.~1d1•11t F111·c/ tnirl .\f(' r.1cn's
pr.-.~i<l1•11t f;rl11•c11rr-1rr /t111'1' Sl'l'o•,·.
ul rl111111:i n1 1111ud r1 s /hey n1c1•f
rndt1y. Frrrtl is r11fer1'.~led 111 !ht'
111•11; 01/ j111d~ in Sc11Jf/1cn1 ,\1 ,·;r-
iro. f:c·l1t'r1•rr111 1s 111/('l"rsrefl i11
rc11l'tt'11117 i/l(' liraccro u·flrk pro-
01·0 111 ,,, 1·111rell Stale.~. Set•
story. Pav<' 1\·I 1
l e,oln• •• '"" L•nlletl ..
' • llevcl " Movie• ..
t••l!Of'll .. .. N•·,~nel Ntw• ..
(lat••H"' ... Oran•• (•~"'' "' c....ict .. ....... 11·1
Cttn•t•ll .. ·-· ... ,.,,
0..0.11'1 Htl+fn "' '"'" M ... -tU ..
1id1i.rl•I '"' .. 'l•lt~l•ltn •• l;~l@rl.-ln,...nt .. thff .. r1 ..
t 1M!IC.I .. WtllMt ..
H-ttO•t " Wt<ld H~w• ..
'
,l.
·~f2 CAIL Y PILOT s Mond.u, Octobfr 21, 1974 -----'
Ni.xon Coverup Advi~e $30 MJllion Fraud?
GeoTek Swindle --
Played Before Jurors Case Scheduled
\VASlUNGtoN (l..'P I) -President
Nix.on ad\'l.sed hi$ tQunsel, John \Y. Dean
Jll, on ~h1rl'h 21, 1973. lo rnakc a
"rather gt-ner:il" !s!:Jl('ll\l'!ll c I(' a r in~
each \Vtti1c House: aide of ru1y contplicity
in Wntergale, according to a lllpe playl'CI
Ill t'QUl'I, today.
The tape of the disrtission on the
;J.'elli119 A Tale
afternoon of l\1arch 21 was played In
U. S. Distri'ct Court as Dean, th e
go\•rrnmenrs first v.·itness In l he
\\'atergate cover-up trial, appeared to
be nearing the end of four days of
direct questioning by the prosecutors.
Nixon told Dean in the tape-recorded
conversation that he should prepare a
Rim a Kumar, 7, and her sister Seema, 6, fisten 't'o a"ctress l\1aggl
Swope who with actor and teacher lt1ike O'Neil will tell children's
stories at 4 p.m. Thursday at the Laguna Beach Library 363 Glenn-
eyre St., to celebrate United Nations Day. Powdered milk and other
staPJes will be collected for the Central American survivors of Hur-
ricane Fifi.
Fron& Page Al
.~CCUSED DUE IlEARING • • •
and no\v lhe stale of Oklahoma v.·ants
him back.
The California Supreme Court h as
recently rUlcd that he should remain
:,behind bars without bail. pending resolu-
: tion of 11 ·web of technical legal en·
.langlements involving superior and ap.
;.pellate coorts in Los Ang eles and Orange
• . counties.
· Justices said he di d not have a full
•Jlnd complete hearing in Los Angeles
' .. County Superior Court follO\\'ing his re·
arrest there. despite being arrested and
cleared earlier in Orange County.
One basis of that clearance by Judge
1'.1tttTay was lhc result of a polygraph
test indica ting Russell told the truth
"about being at the Long Beach Nu-Pike
~ amusement park v.'ith his \\'ife Karen
· and friends the night of the murder
I,000 'miles a\vay.
\\"i tnesses will be called and affidavits
presented. Tuesday to that effect but
a teller apolog~zlng aft'er her ex-husband
,\·as jailed, clain1ing she was coerced
into signing the allegedly untrue state-
ment by Oklahoma autho rities ..,,. h o
threatened to prosecute her as an ac-
cessory to murder.
Russell is accused of killing and rob-
bing a 9'2-ycar-old male invalid confined
to a wheelchair.
"To this day. 1 don't know v.·hat led
thcn1 to suspect me ... " he sai d Friday_
''I used to li\'e one town away fro1n
Stigler. but I never even knew the
old man."
Agajanian said today that 0 range
County's polygraph technician Dean Hen-
dricks. v.·ho administered the so-called
lie detector test to Russel.I in 1972,
is supplying the charts and graphs to
hi s counterpart in Los Angeles County,
Kenneth Scarce.
Oklahoma authorities v:ho fill'd l ht!°'-D • ff St ff teletypcd rugiH,·e v.·arrant say they are lSt<l U ers
na,•1ng troubl e rounding up prosecution
\1 itncsses.
One is anticipat.e<l to be Russell"s ex-
,,ife. a Fort Sn1i th. Ark .. ha irdresser
V.'ho signed an affida vit that she saw
At U.N . Drops
_ her former husband that fatefu l night
and ta lked 'vith him. Attorney Roger
Agajanian. v.ho lx'<:a1ne familiar with
the case of Russell as a Jaw clerk in
th<> Orange County t->ublic Defender's
Office 2·~ years ago. cla ims she is a
Jactor.
UN ITED NATIO~S (UPI) -The
L'nitcd Nations, v.·hich ha s proclaimed
1975 International Women's Year in a
drive to promote sexual equality, is
under fire from its employes for not
practicing v.•hat it preaches.
According to the l:tiest report on
etnployment of women in t h e pro-
fessi onal. policy-making ranks at U.N.
headquarters. the percentage of fen1ale
~taff in the past year has actually fallen
-from 19.87 percent in 1973 to 19.56
percent at the end or September.
. ..
..
"
" ..
He ~n1d 1!1(• ro.rn1er !\lrs. Russell \\TOie
OR ANGE COAST st
l1DlrlQ![1}I
ln~ O·~~Ol' (1>d<1 0.t•IV Pno•. wt!ll "'"''" I•
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lo• °'"~ M•,~. N""'P<>" ~•<l'I. '"""11nqion Bo!Mh OounM<n '-d"~" l~<iUnll ~..,,,,
, ''''"" '"-'<l<ll<·l'l•t~ .~ "'""""'""'•'!>a" Jwn (,op<llf~l>O A '"'U'-<0QJQt>ol! t<:lil!M I\
O\IQl ....... <I ~·1~,., .. , ... onu .\wui. .... Th~ Prll'lt•O~I
"""'"1>1nQ 1>•enl •-~! lOO w.-,, 94141•~'1, (Q1t.i ,,.._ . .,,, c.i.1,•o•n•d •l~l~-
Robert N, Weed
P•~\1<llll>I •Mt Put>IUJ"'r
Jack R. Cur!ev
\lit~ p,.,_,~n! '"" ""'""'" M&"'"9'1r
Thomae;. K~e'lil
E<l•lOI
Th omas A. M urphine
M.J~IQ•l'ljt EdnOO"
Charles H. Loos Rich,1rd P. Ndll ·
.U\i~l~nt M.11,...Q!"°" Ea.lo.~
Ott ices
(o\.filM~W ll1M"•llPl~S1•t"I
Nf.,M,, fl~lt ~ l)JJ'i•.,f>l•I Qc.,.•t•f"" LA~ ....... a~•th lllll>G ......... r••SI
1-l .... 1 .~qton llP•!l'I I r$1S "'~~ l\OUIO•••d
'!...,, Clt""~~lt'. )OH "'0•1h Cl C~"1•fl0 ll•AI
TelepltoM (71 4) 642~321
(liassifled Advertising 642•S671
f fl:lrn CDKI•• Ar~•'\<><;!~ Ill._..,. ..... ~«II
492-4420
f'ro,,, IYOfll!Qtfnt'l'o p.,...i, CM\INlll'llr'
540·1220
\Vith the addition of all 20 agencies
related Jo the United Nations, the percen-
tage is even smaller. \Vo1nen account
for 15.94 percent or 1.823 of the 11.439
professionals employed-by the organiza-
tions ~pread around the world.
From Pnge Al.
.,\BORTIONS . • •
1 he decision on whether to have an
abortion is up to !he doctor and his
patient through the first Silt months
or pregnancy. .
(;o\'emments may pass lav.-s baning
<ibortions only during the la:;t trimester
or pregnancy and even then they are
pennisslble under certain circumstances.
The 8th Circuit sald the Virginia City
ordinance "demonstrates no compelHng
circumstances· \Wti ch would mandate this
hospilal's abortjon resltlcting rules."
It Mid )W() doctors v.·ho dlallenged
the law tia a right to practice medicine
at the publicly supported hospital based
on their professiooal belle{ that abortions
IH'C an acceµtable plan Jor their paUr.nts.
The apJM':als court Pointed out that
lhis y,·as not n case of forcing any
Jndlv!dual doctor or other medical pro-
fesslooal to J:rforn1 abortions against
tollY"ql\'f. 1•u n •• .,.,. <0••1 ""'"""'1.., h' ·11 Th I I I did t '·' '~""IM"Y· ,.o ,,,...., "~-,,,,.,,AHi"\•, is wt , e ec son a so no requ.ire
"11•10•'•' "'Att•• o• ~ ,,,~,, .. '"'"" ""'''"' .,.. ' private or chuf'Ch.su:IWV'lrted hospitals to
bP •~ll"..,U'ftl "'"!~~"' Sl'*'.•tl Pf'fl'Pll\••Otl nf l'r' 1coY••9"' o"'"'' permit abortlon ope.Nlti(ll\S,
~0..., ,1 •• 1, CXJ•'&~ ~"' .,, 0-·1~ ,,.....,, "lnste:od1 we deal with unnecessary
""",,"'" ":o"o"-"P'•on "" , ..... ~~ u llG rcsfiictivc rules lmpos«S by a slate --r~~~r.'b ··,i•11•&' ,!"~' M~-~·~''":i...~··!~"·~·"-'j---4·ffciJitv-u,....... a consUtutlana.11\! .protec.ted O.·•••NIUOn\ ~ J ~!"'" I • chO~ct'," lhe lower co11n said . . . •
written report "'"·hich is a very general.
understand. Understand, (laughs) I don 't
want to get all that go ddan1ned
speci fic ...
··But if you make it rather general
in terms of my -your -investigation
indicates that this man did not do It,
th is man did not de> it, Olis man did ·
do that ," Nixon said, emphasizing the
\,did" and "that" the las t time he used
those words.
Dean, who was said at the lime to
be heading Nixon 's investigation of
Watergate, then repeated ror Nixon an earlier suggestion to allow witnesses,
including \Vhite House aides, to go before
the grand jury under the protection
of immunity from prosecution oo that
they might give full testimony.
John D. Ehrlichman , then No. 2 White
House aide who was sitting in on the
meeting , resisted Dean's suggestion and
said "you end up with people in and
ou t of the White House indicted for
variollS', for various offenses." ·
Ehrlichman, one of fi ve former Nixon
associates on trial for the cover-up,
proposed instead that Nixon issue two
or Utree papers sununari zing the White
House review of the case for the Senate
Watergate committee -which at that
time had just been established.
Dean also proposed that a specia l
panel made up of the deputy attorney
general, the head of the J u s t i c e
Department's criminal d1vision and
others conduct an investigC!tion a n d
report at the President's request.
But White House chief of staff H.
R. Hald eman, also a defendant and also
present at the March 21 meeting, ob-
jected that such an idea would prompt
cries of a "super ('{)Ver-up."
Dean replied : "All right, Is that, is
that better? Or is it better to have,
you know, just, just keep going to have
the thing build up and all of a sudden
collapse, and, then people get indicted,
and people, uh, get tarnished?"
Nixon added ; "After we've stonev;alled
it?" the transcript supplied to the jury
put a question mark after Nixon's state-
ment, but on the tape it sounded like
a flat statement.
Cross-examination of Dean by the
defendants' lawyers was expected to
consume the rest of the week. Today's
session was preceded by an wiexplained
hal!,,hour private conference of t h e
lawyers at Judge John J. Sirica's bench.
Yolcanoes llit Crops
GUATEMALA CITY (UPI) -
Agriculture authorities today said there
was heavy damage to cotton, sugar
cane and sesame seed crops [rom three
volcanoes that spewed sand and ash
over much of Guatemala's Pacific coast.
Would Nixon
Take His Life?
NE\V YORK (UPI) -Evangelist
Biiiy Graham was quoted as...saying
one possible cause of President
Ford's pardon of former President
Nixon was a fear Nixon might
commit suicide.
Graham was quoted by the Na-
tional Enquirer as 5aying: "l have
heard whispers about the possibili-
ty that the former president might
commit suicide." He refused to
disc lose his source for this in-
form ation.
Graham, who has been close to
some of the nation's top govern-
ment leaders, is considered a friend
of Nixon.
Taliiug Slaape
Llfesa&Jer
James 'Tito' Olivares· 0£ San
Juan Capistrano was awarded
$50 and plaque by the city for
saving al least two lives when
he put out early morning fire
while on duty as a street·
sweeper. I-le noticed smoke
from second-story apartment,
dashed ups~irs and· put out
bl aze in a mattress where two
people we re sleeping.
Supreme Co1u·t
To Hear Co11nty
Marines' Plea
From 'Vire Services
\VASHINGTON -A chal\enge by eight
f\1-arincs stationed at the Marine Corps
Air Station, Santa Ana. against the lack
of defense counsel at summary courts
martial will be heard by the U . S •
Supreme Court.
The court today agreed to review
a decision of the U.S. Circuit Court
in San Francisco that defense coµnsel
mUst be made available iil such pro-
ceedings in complex cases.
Government attorneys tuined to lhe
U.S. Supreme Court after thii San Fran-
cisco decision arguing that there is no
constitutional right to the ~istance of
counsel in summary courts martial.
Summary courts are used to t r y
military persoMel charged with minor
of defense counsel would overturn .the
connnement, reductioo .in grade o r
forfeiture or pay.
"Since there is no prosecutor in sum-
mary courts martial , the presence there
of defense counsel would overturn th
balanced procedure that would tmduly
favor the defendant ," governmoot at-
torneys contended .
The case began when Daniel Edward
Henry and seven other Marines stationed
in Santa Ana were brought before a
summary court martial for minor of·
groW'ldJ they had a constitutional right
to have a lawyer paid for by the gov-
ernment.
-A. <ii.striCtcourt judge rejected their
contention but the 9th Circuit Court re-
versed it. The appeals court did not grant
an absolute right to a lawyer but said
one was necessary iI the complexity
or the circumstances waJTanted.
In a summary court martlal, a com-
missioned officer serves as an inde-
pendent fact finder and judge. He
can render any sentences short of death,
dismissal, dishonorable or bad conduct
discharge, confinement for more than
a month, or hard labor without con-
finement for more than 45 days. He
can also order forfeiture of up to twir
thirds of. ooe month's pay.
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Business
promoter Joh n "Jack" p_ Burke, p.-in·
cipal figure in an alleged $30 million
GeoTek oil drilling swindle, is to go 011
trial in federal court for fraud Tuesday.
The 4&-year-0ld Burke's a t to r n e y ,
James Ma cinnis, Sflid he will ask U.S.
District Judge William T. Sweigert for
a pootponement because bf alleged pre--
judicial publicity, much of lt swirling
around Atty. Ge n. Evelle J. Younger's
investment in a Burke oil venture and
a Joan to Y9unger from.the promoter.
Younger, seeking re-election, claims
his opponent is behind the controversial
publicity and denies allegations that he,
as Los Angeles district attorney five
years ago, ignored requests t o in-
vestigate Burke's operations. ,
Macinnis .also cited neW5 stories
about Los Angeles Times publisher Otis
Chandlei's involvement in GeoTek. fonn-
ed by Burke to sell oil drilling imitOO
partnerships.
Chandler is a derendant in a federal
civil suit brought by the Secunties and
Exchange Commission in May, I 9 7 3 ,
alleging that Burke, Chandler and others
violated securities laws and defrauded
2,200 investors wJlo put $30 million into
the various oil drilling programs.
Chandler. who testified be( or'? the
federal grand jury which indicted Burke
June 17, has denied any fraudulent con-
duct.
He said he invested and lost $248 ,000
in Burke ventures and that he returned
$373,000 in free stock and $109.000 in
finder's fees he received for introducing
potential In~ to BUrke.
A court source said that a c t r e s s
Natalie Wood , Nancy Sinatra Sr. and her
daughter Nancy Sinatra have been
subpoenaed to testify at Burke's trial
about their investments in oil drilling
programs.
The souce said the government is
expected 'to call about 30 witnesses and
Burke about 12. The :rial is eatimated
to take from 2\.i: to seven weeks.
Burke is charged with unlawfully of-
fering and selling securities -
spec ifically investment contracts in the
form of co-ownership interestS in the
1968 J. B. Oil Exploration program and
pre-formation subscriptions to a GeoTek
Resources Fund limited partilershij>.
He also is accused of making untrue
statement s and omitting necessary facts
in selling securities, and also with crin-
spiracy.
Two attorneys, Arthur J, Lempert,
42. San Mateo, and Robert S. Rose,
44. San Rafael. were indicted on con-
spiracy charges in the case. Th _e y
allegedly conspired to conceal material
Police Hold Trio
In Drug Deatl1
ST. LOUlS (UPI) -Two young meit
and a woman today face negligent
manslaughter charges for allegedly fail-
ing to get help for a suburban Los
Angeles man dying of a drug overdose,
polioe said.
Police said they seized half a million
amphetamine tablets, said to be valued
at $100,000, at a St. Louis County house
where Jerry uuerra, io, ot Rosemead,
died Sunday.
Thomas Kelly, 23, Rosemead, and the
occupants of the home. JaCk Wishnuff,
26, and Sharon Reed, 25, were all charg-
ed with .negligent manslaughter. John
Petrik, 26, Woodson Terrace, Mo., was
charged with uo1awful possession of a
controlled subtance.
Traffic heading north oa Beach Cities offramp in
.Capistrano Beach bypasses major bridge and' inter-
change construction project at notorious "Y" whic h
l1a.s been the scene of serious .traffic 1nishttps'. Con·
struction, caJculatcd by California Department of
Transportalion Io cost abo'ut $3.4 mllllon, will last
well into ne:tt year. Eventually it wUJ pro\'.lde a
broader and safer link to Pacific Coasl Highway.
Bridgo will span Doheny Park Road and San Ju an
Creek; e.ndlng near entrance to Dana l>oinl Harbor. ...
•
facts 1n helping prepare for the SEC
an affidavit purporting to full y reflec t
Burke's ownership in various firms .
Their attorneys arc expected to request
a separate trial.
Assistant U.S. Atty. F. Slee 1 e
Langford. who will prosecute the case,
has alleged that Burke d i v e rt e d in-
vestors' money from various J. ~· Oil
programs, combining led it wi.il his own
funds and then used it to a c q u i re
numerous oU prospects of his own.
The indictment said $3.6 million
obtained rrom 177 investors in the 1963
J. B. Oil program and about $6.7 million
from 466 investors in the G e o T e k
partnership.
The SEC civil suit v.'as filed May
17, 1973, against GeoTek Resources Fund,
Inc.; 13 related firms ; Burke: his
brOther. Robert : Chandler; Lempert.
Arthur Young and Co .. accountants, and
others. That trial is set for Feb. 3.
Among other things the SEC s u i t
alleges various schemes were used to
obtain money fraudulently, that untrue
statements were made and that proceeds
from the sale of securities were "misus-
ed, crinverted and misappropriated."
1t also claims that materially false
and misleading reports and registration
statements were filed with the SEC.
Younger's involvement became pro--
min ent with a claim by William Norris,
the Democratic attorney general can-
didate, that the Republican incumbent
failed to tell the SEC that when he
v.·as Los Angeles district attorney. he
was called by an investor and asked
lo investigate Burke 's operation. The
Wall Street Journal carried a story about
the alleged complaint two years ago.
! The Sacramento Bee, looking into Nor·
-ris' contention . interviewed Be rn a rd
Kamen of Los Angeles who related he
filed an affidavit about the call with
the SEC.
Younger told a news conference he
never talked over the phone with Kamen
and that office records showed no such
call being received. But last week he
said a call had been made to the district
attorney's office but was handled by
a deputy. ·
The attorney general also challenged
the Bee's account that his investment
v.·as "risk free" because of a loan made
to him by Burke. The loan was used
to repay the $16,500 he originally bor·
rowed from a friend to invest in the
oil venture.
Younger contends he still has to pay
back the Joan for wh ich he had pledged
his drilling interest as C(ltlateral.
Since the SEC began its investigation
of Geotek early in 1972. box after box
of evidence including depositions, letters,
memos and finan cial records have been
accumulated. They were ordered sealed
by the judge.
Last week, the judge ordered lhnt
35 of 50 boxes be made public. Another
four boxes, not involved in the order,
were made available by the SEC Friday.
Younger in a Jetter to the Bee called
its reports a "calcul ated political effort
on their part to re-establish t h e i r
Democratic credentials under the mas-
querade or investigative repo11ing. This
is not journalism, it is plain old po~'er
politics.''
C. K. f\1cClatchy, editor of the Bee,
replied : "The Bee stands by the ac-
curacy and fairness of its Stories in-
volving the attorney general" nnd sai d
that the newspaper has no political
ties to Norris.
A spokesman for Chandle r in Los
Angeles took issue with quoted Swartz
testimony, saying much of it appeared
to be Swartz' "conclusions and opinions
rather than statements of any fact.
Mr. Swartz is a disappointed investor.
Mr. Chandler is a disappointed investor
with much more at stake. They h;ive
that in common."
Nixon Ter1ned
Loser in State
Ral~e for Senate
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Former
President Nixon's political following is
at such low ebb that If he ran for
U.S. Senate only one in four Republicans
in his native state would choose him,
the California Poll said today .
Pollster Mervin Field said tha t in
a survey pairing Nixon a g a i n s t ·in-
cumbent Democrat J ohn Tunney for the:
1976 Senate race, Tunney led Nixon
by a *point margin, ~O to 12. He
said that among Republicans, Tunney
outpoHed Nixon 43-to 26. •
Field said the poU was taken because
of speculation that Nixon might decide
to seek ,tleeted public office ogain.
The poll also :showed Gov. l{Onald
Reagan trailing Tunney in a Possible
race for U.S. Senate. by 13 percentage
point.a, although the Gov~mor has a
relatively high standing in pubUc opinion
ratings ai1 he closes his sctf>nd term.
"All things considered, this is not
an unusually large vote deficit 11l this
etage," Field said. 11Voter support !or
nearly all Republican candidates Is lower
now than in previous years."
He said that before Gerald Fo r ti
became president It had been thought
Reagan might seek that post In 197~
but that 1'most polldc.al observers now
fetl that It will be difficult il not in>-
posslble to deny f'ord the nomination
In 197611 he want3 It." ,
•
-
'
•
Monday, Octobtt 21, 197-4 5 DAILY PILOT Ji S
Nader ~Hits All Bases at Chapman
D•Hr PIM! Sl•ff ""''
STl l L ON THE ATTACK
Consumer Advocate Nader
B oarcl Dumps
New Shop ·
Ce nter Plan
A controversial proposal for a general
plan change which would have allowed
a new shopping center in San Clemente
has been dumped by city councilmen.
Cowicilmen received a letter from a
lawyer fur Downey Savings and Loan
withdrawing the application for the plan
change.
Essentially, the withdrawal means that
any new developer assuming the project
would have to · start all over in a bid
to cllange the land-use from manufac-
turing_ to general commercial.
The 14-acre parcel lies immediately
west of ·the San Diego Freeway and
south of Avenida Pico. Spokesmen for
the savings and loan Insisted throughout
lengthy hearings the land is not suited
to indus1ria1 use because of terrain pro-
blems. Commercial ventures, notably a
neighborhood shopping center, w o u 1 d ,
however,, make the land pay off, the
spokesthen argued.
'Ibe savings and loan firm shed its
interest in the property recently and
the new developer Is Raymond Watt
and the Magnolia Land C-Orporation. 'lbe
CUJTent state of the loan industry, said
Downl'!V Savings lawyer Robert K. Llght,
was the prime factor In the change.
The withdrawal of the applicatioo also
means tbat an offer made by t h e
developers cl $2,500 for a marketing
study of the San Clemente area also
is gone.
City Manager Kenneth Carr already
had chosen a consultant firm r r o m
Beverly Rills to conduct the study, but
that deal DO looger is in the worit.s.
Singer Attacker
Killed Herself
MEMPJ-DS , Tenn. (AP) -A medical
examiner says an autopsy confinns that •
a spumed woman died of a self-inflicted
gunshot wound after she scalded pop
singer Al Green with hot grits.
Green was reported in good condition
at a hospital Sunday but a spokesman
for him said he was "in a great amount
of pain."
Green suffered second-degree bums
on his back and ann when M a r1y
Woodson, 29, of Madison, N.J .. threw
hot grits -a cerea1 -on him as
he took a bath Friday, according to
the sheriff's office.
Big Firms
Get Blame
For Cost s·
By TOM PAIMER
Of .,.. O.lly ''"" ,,..,
.Ralph Nader addressed a lull hou!e
at Cliapman College's Atemoriat Hall
Sunday nigh~ tld<lng off two hours of
comlD'Oer abuses and sending his au-
dience of 1,000 scrambing for pencil
and paper as bf: !¥1vised them where
to write for remedial action.
lie placed the primary responsibility
for double-digit inf1atioo oo large cor-
porations, saying labor had be en
restrained in its wage demands since
about ttn'O. "Big business can't exist
as i1 does DOW without big government.,"
he charged. Despite what businesses
claim to want, he said, they built and
sustain a large federal bureaucracy.
Nader, in his deep monotone and
characteristically slumped over t h e
podjum, spoke in favor ot the . consumer
advocacy Jlill he said has beeD sup-
pressed tour times in the last year
in Coogress.
'II would cost taxpayers $15 blllion
a year," be said, "but those Southern
senators call it a drain on the feder~
budget. The Pentagoo spends $9.6·otlllion
per hour all year long and they don't
complain.''
Nader also said the recent abolition
by Congress of the interlock system
requirement for cars was unfortunate.
"I would have preferred. the ajr bag
(passive restraint system) two years
ago," be said.
"The interlock (which requires buckl-
ing of seatbelts before the car will
start) was a minor inconvenience to
many, but a great convenience to people
who survived {accidents)."
Nader called the Lo! Angeles basin
a gas chamber, sayirig the Air Re!IOUl'Ce!
Board has lost effectiveness and political
action is needed to overhaul It.
Lambasting the priorities of th e
present American system. Nader said,
"We spend more on alcohol than on
the enviroamelit. He oontrallled the en-
Uie federal court l)"!em. w!lidl he said
Is run on $150 mfllioo a year. with
one nuclear submarine, the" T r i den t ,
wbi~ now bas toSt more than $1.Z
billion.
Nader opposed the constniction o f
nuclear power plants, saying they are
toots <A. self-destruction and charging
that if "the 40 percent energy waste"
were eliminated from the 11 y 11 t e m ,
nuclear power would not be ~ed.
"The nuclear boondoggle ls o u r
technological Vietnam,'' Nader said. "We
can't live with it but we can live without
Jt."
He added that the cleanest, most plen-
tiful oource o( energy, tolar power, Is
not being developed "because Exxon
doesn't have title to the sun."
His other criticism was directed at
co=ers who know nothing aboot food
value and nutrition, meat i n d u st r y
"tricks" that fool the consumer, l the
~Ilion-a-year pet food Industry, ad-
vertising techniques "that teadi children
to nag parents, and the "impotent con-
sumer," who buys strictly' on brand
name. ·Sounding a little like an evangelist,
Nader promised his audience that getting
involved in improving S>dety "does
something to }'Oil. Alienation. boredom
go. You become fuller, happier people."
Nader continues to claim he is not
interested In elected office, saying be
is more effective in working for an
Wonned electorate, to which politicl.arui
can be responsible.
D•llY Plllt It .........
FORMER LAGUN A TRUSTEE BILLIE l. SUMNERS HONORED
Noarl Fou r Y11ro on S<hool BNrd ind 15 11 Alloo S<hool
THEY'RE OFF ANO JOGGING AT MISSION VIEJO WITH A TARGET !JF 200 MILES OR MORE
N•w S•ddl•bick Coll99e CourM Stresses Physic•I Fitness When You G•t Out Jogging
College Board Chief Jogs Early
Most south countians are still enjoying
those few precious last winks of sleep
each morning as Saddleback Community
College Board President Patrick Backus
jogs aJong under the stars.
Backus alights from bed as early as
4:45 a.m. to run the Dana Hills High
School track.
The charter member of the Saddleback
OOard also is a charter member of
the newly formed 200-Mile Club, a col·
lectk>n: of jogging enthusiasts who, ap-
propriately, set 200 miles as their first
goel.
The club was the idea of Doug Fritz,
chairman or the Health and Physical
Laguna Council
Delays Heritage
Tree Ordinance
A tree planting project In central La-
guna Beach, part of a $1,000 donation by
the Laguna Beaclt Clamber of Com·
merce, is under way.
Twenty trees, at a t'OSt of $20 eactr,
wilt be planted during the next two
weeb a1ong the sidewa1ks on both sides
ol Coast Higbw~y between Broadway
and Legion Street.
Eleven of the trees are additions and
nine are replacements for failing ever-
green pear trees damaged by pollution
and disease.
The rest of the funds given by the
Oiamber will be used for future tree
plantings, Clyde Sweetser, public works
superintendent, said.
The IS.gailon paperba.rk tr::?S, whose
scientific name is "MelaJeuca Leuca·
dendron," are 10 feet tall now and may
grow as high as 30 feet within 10 years,
Sweetser said.
The paperbark, 8 natiVe of Australia,
was chosen for its ability to withstand
tire dust and salt spray from the oc~1n,
he said.
Sweetser .said the city spent $165 to
have public works employes cut holes
in the pavement for the 11 additional
trees, being placed about 35 feet apart.
Sweetser said the trees will be water-
ed weekly by a water tank truck until
they are established. He said thev will
then be able to survive on moisture from
the ground.
Most of the di.SJ)laced evergreen pears
will have to be destroyed becai;se they
are badly damaged by fire blight, a virus
Infection, Sweetser said. The others will
be nursed back lo health tt poosible, he
said.
Aliso Secretar y
Billie Sum1iers
Receii1es Plaque
... Fonner Laguna Beach school trustee
Billie L. Sumners bas received a plaque
from tntstees to honor her retirement
after 15 yean as Aliso EI em en. t.a r y
School secretary.
The plaque was presented at a Laguna
Beach Unified School District Board or
Educatton meeting. •
• Mn. Sumners. who 1en the school
boanl In 1959 alter a tllree and one hair
year appoinled term. has been a resident
of Laguna Beach for almost 39 years.
Educatton Divisioo at the college.
Backus hit the 200 mile goal after
87 days.
"I'm not quitting now,'' said Backus,
who bas been running for years. "I'm
not even taking a breather. I plan to
hit 500 miles, bopefully by December,
although that may not be enough time."
Fritz is seeking others like Backus
to participate in a "jog along to fitness"
class during the winter quarter which
begins In January.
He said the course wruld start with
medical Instruction on the benefits of
jogging, followed by actual running.
As persons reach the 200 mile goat,
and multiples thereof', they will receive
achievement emblems they can sew on
their running attire, Fritz said.
"We'd like to build this into a com-
munity thing,'' said Fritz, who can be
reached at 831·9700 or 495-4950, Ext.
342.
Fritz said he will keep a list of
persons interesled in the course and
the 200-Mile Club and contact them
shortly before the start of the class.
"We're dedicated to the idea that
jogging is one of the best thinp for
people who otherwise get I i t t 1 e op-
Saddleback Panel Mulls
Viejo Campus Projects
Saddleback Com m u n I t y College
trustees will dust off the crystal ball
tonight and look at ways of best handling
future comtruction on the Mission Viejo
campus.
The board, meeting at 7:30 . p.m. In
the James B. Utt Llbrary, will consider
~.4 million in new projects including
a music-arts building, a road around
the campus and swimming pool facilities.
They will also consider updating the
college's 10 year master' plan in light
of a recent announcement that Sad·
Son of Solon
Fac~s Drug Rap
FORT COLLINS, Colo, (AP) -A
warrant charging possession of mari·
juana and LSD has been issued for
Steve Jarman, 19, the son of Rep. John
Jarman (D-Okla.)
Dist. Atty. Stewart Van Meveren said
identical warrants for Jarman and a
woman identilied as Janet Harmon were
issued after their cabin near Estes Park
was raided Oct. 7.
•
dleback no longer will be allowed to
receive state money for construction
ot'"new buildings.
The state has been pkklng up St
percent of the cost for new construction
but will cease to do so after July
1, 1976, a·ccording to a c a m p u s·
spokesman.
Heading the trustees' agenda is con-
sideration of a resolution a p p r o v I n g
preliminary plans for the $4.7 million
music--arts complex.
Original plans for the building pegged
the price at $3.3 million, but first round
bids came in at $5.4 million -more
than 70 percent above cost estimates.
Plans and bid specifications were then
revised to bring the cost estimate more
in line with actual construction costs.
Also up fpr review fs a $549,000 project
to place a paved road around half the
campus; a $1 million locker room and
pool facility, and $148,000 in gym and
physical education equipment.
One probil'!m that trustees will wrstle
with is how to fund new construction
projects without state aid, according
to supt. Robert A. Lombardi. He stressed
that the music-arts building project will
receive state support.
•
•
portunity for physcial activity. And with
a definite goal in mind, )oggm: have
something to aim for and can (eel a
real sense of accomp!.ishmeot," I'& Id
Fritz.
Fritz wants to set up · a program
that is non-competitive.
Those v.'Orking toward the 200 mile
goal, he said, will do it on an honor
system.
"We don't Intend to tell anyone when
to run, where to run-, · hlw much to
run, or follow them around . 'Jbat isn't
the point. We just want to offer a
program that offers fimess and tun
at the same time," Fritz: explained.
Water Officials
Oppose Rivers
Bill, Prop. 17
'!be Boanl of Directors of Coa!lll
MunicipaJ Water . District, serving local
water districts from Newport Beach to
San Clemente, bas approved a resolution
strongly opposing Proposition 17 on the
Nov. 5 Dallot.
The prOP.OSilioo the so-called "wild
rivers" initiative woo.ld halt construction
of the New Melones Dam on the Si.arm.
lat18 River in Northern California. Work
on the dam is under way and more than
$70 million has been spent.
The Coastal boanl charged the In-
itiative v."OUld benefit only operators of
white-water raft rides in u...,.~laus
River. It would bann water users,
especially in Southern California, the
board said.
l'ropo<ition t7 bas abo been opposed
by the boards of directors or the South
Coast Cotmty Water District and the
Arson Suspect Held
PALM SPRINGS .(UPI) -An arsoo
complaint was ismled Thursday charging
Van Busb, 32. with setting three fires
that burned 20 acres and three trailers
near the Palm Springs Aerial Tramway
Oct. II.
Tie a
yellow nbbon ••••
Beth and Blake ·
found !he ribbon
arouoa uie tree ...•
or could those
·-Mopy laces" have
something ro do
wilh hk1ng !heir
atl'YllC separates
designed by
Berrun1 of Italy?, , .•
Navy sweaters with
camel red and na1Jy>
Skirt and slacks.
Available at
The Red Balloon •
THE:
RED BALLOON
LTD.
$he and her husband, Jewell, a pain-
ting contractor, are leaving their rest·
dcnce al 1039 Van Dyke 0r= ~. L ..... ,na
Beach, to dividt their Ume between
a cabin in Colorado and an apari\'Mnt ~~~~~:~!IOI
In Photni1, Ariz,, where lhtlr AOn's ,.
I II I
• /"$Ho«! !IOIJA'"~ am y 1ve1. i;.,.,.,.,..l,u '~·"•'
Mrs. Sumners sai d Abe plam: to '*play uuNl•NG'Df' ~ ... ~aOIJ"
for 1 while" and II particularly looking ... ""'· 1 ru) ..... ...a ~lorw~a~r~d~to~l~i•~hln~g~and~hor~se~ba~ck~n~d~m~g~. ~~======~=:=:;::=:~::=:::::=:~~~~~;:::~:::::::=:=':!..--::::=:-:::::::"--::::::-~~~_J ,
,.
A" 4 DAIL V PILOT MondQ', October 21, 1974
The Bicycles
Are Coming
MISTS OF MONDAY: These glum
gray ~londay mornings are a p u re
mJMery. St.a.rt the week under lhtse ·
kind of skies and y~ figure everybody
would be in hiding along. this best of · aihpoosil>le coasu. .
I! is not so. For some realOa, the
aeem to tum Ollt our bicycle
unprecedented nwnbers. They
all shapes and sizes. They
s old, tired automobile oxn-
nuater's eyes water.
No longer are you worried about the
cop behind the billboard or If the nezt
traffic signal Is going to change ju3t
as you charge toward the interaection.
You fret instead over where tbe nut
bicyclist is going to pop up.
picyclists themselves seem to be
dividing up into various cults and types.
lt'J getting so you can recognize them
u yoo tnvel our coastal byways.
Take these bike types spotted only
today through the mists of the morning:
THE CO.\STEI\: This chap Is muafiy
along Pacific Cout Highway, somewhere
!Jetween Laguna Beach and Corona del
Mar. He is riding ooe t:J. thole lightweight
bikes with two jugs of sanethi.ng strap-
ped "' the handleban. lie ii wurillg one of lhooe blue Jog. gi· ' !Rlits wltb the red pln!trlpes. He w a yellow helmet.
Coaster gets his name beca111e
°'?.'I' hills and dales between Laguna
arid Corona de! Mar, he doesn't pwnp
all,.the time. He pwnps like fury up t~ hills. !hon puts his head oo the
h~ebars and coaMs down. You think h~ jun resting, doo't you? No, he's
r<iljly Sleeping ...
flRoUPIE HASS TR.\Nsrr: This l!lli
~ one biker; it's a bunclt. A good
eiilmple can be seen In the mornings Mar Dover and Westcllff in Newport
Bqch. They are headed 14 high sctool.
Tley are headed there all together. 'I1liY come swooping out of lbe residen-ti' area onto Dover Drive in one huge m,.,.
fhe Groupie Maa Transit bunch ap-
~ly belteve there II strength in
numbers. They defy traffic by coming
at you like the Charge of the Light
Brigade.
'lbere are 52 of them. One pant leg
ca11Jdrt in a chain aprocket and the
whole outfit crashes ..•
THE PUMPER: This biker Is almoot
always alone. Head down, he watches th6" podals, concentrating on pedaling.
Wtlch out! He doesn't see you there .••
' SbcIAL SADDLES1 This Is another
group. They are coed~ riding ~y-two.
1bey are carry~g booka, magazines and
shoulder bags. The glrll. in front and
turning around , talking to the girls in
back. Watch out again! They don't see
yoa either.
THE WHEEUE·BOPPER: He ls about
13 years old and Is aJways riding with
a couple of budd~. He has one of
those litUe bikes. Big bandleban. Always
rides it in a wheelie, standing on its
rear wheel. Plays bumper tag with you.
Has a smart mouth if you honk at
him.
I ho!>< your l<lllg hair gets caught
In the spokes, you smart little rotter.
1llE DISASTER: 1bis one ls always
In his late 30s and just bougbt the
IO.speed bike 9!?COO<l-hand. Now he'a off
on the side of the road. The chain
just came off all those sprockets. He
just sils there, looking sad ..•
THE JUNKER: He rides along slowly,
on an old onHpeed rust bucket. He
is carrying his brown bag lunch. Just
trying to get to work becaurte his old
heap \lo'ouldn't start .
I can identify with him In the mists
Of the morning.
Echeverria Eye Oil,_ Braceros
NOGALES, Arb. (AP) -Proml•inK
a "new dialogue" With Latin-American
nationc, President Ford met Me.Kican
President Luis Echeverria at lhla border
dly today "' beglo nine houri of hop-
-ch dJplomacy. ,
Ford, ln remarl! prepared !or the
ceremonial exchange of greellnga at the
border, said the dfy's summit aemlons
at locations in MeJJco and Ari:,na "sym-
boll7.e the relatlooahlp betw..., our two
oountries."
OIL AND ECONObUC matten pro-
mised to dominate the lalks betwetn
the two presldenfl.
"It Is a workin« partnership of mutual
""!'l"":aUoo which exernpllJlOI the iu>lrit
behind the new diaJogue into wbk:h we
haV< ent«ed with the nstlom of Latin
America," Ford'aaid. _
"In our meetings today," he added,
11let µs give new meaning to the special
relationship el two good neJ&bben •• ,
thtouO !rank IDll frlendty ""'"
1Ultatlona."
It .... Ford'• flnl venlln eoto lcn!p
ooil stooo he became pl'Mldent CID Aug. t , 11111 ba Aid, "it prOYides a .Uvtng
~~"'bowweare~
lJnked ••••
The U.S .. prealdent -l!Ppe !bit tliO meellnp would lead ... "a -
penooal relatloolhip between 111 ....
contribute to the -cooeent1oa IDll
friendly relattoaa bet-.... peoploa
and go~"
FORD CITED eztoµng ......,..... qn
a .._ of ..._ 1D11 141d the Mexican
presldeot: "Let U1 IDday c o D I I d \ r
together -we con """"""'le In aoMng common Jl"ll>lems which wlli ...Wt in
a better llle for the J>Ol!J'le of our
Obscenity Laws
Review , Rejected
' .
By High Court·
WASHINGTON .(AP) -A divided
Supreme Court loday rellaied to ln\erlere
with the coovtctiaos ol nine perlOllS
and -_.tkln ID nine aepuale cs,.. Involving vtolattcm ol -..tty
Jawt In New Ycd:, Virginia, California
and Flcrtds. ;,
In all Dine cases, Jumice William O.
Douglas said be wou1d have reversed
the convicUons because of his long~
ding view that the Constltutioo. irohlbits
Police Seek
.
any federal or llale blJI .., obocenlty.
JUS11CES WILLIAM J. Breman Jr.,
Potter Stewart and 'l'hurgood Manhall
also dissented from the majority declslu1
denying the petltm fer a lull Supreme
Court review of tbe cuee.
-. SU.wart and Manhall said
that seven d. the coavlctiocs !hould
ha~ been vacated and aent back to
the lower comta "for a determination
wbether petlllooen llloold be allmled
a new trial under local mnmunlty It»
dards."
· In a maJo< obooenlty dei:ttl"" lat
June, the Supreme Court turned CJUt
its !ales! attempl "' clefine what ldqd of material may be prohibited u obac<J.,
without '1olallng the Ftnt Amendment
EalBVlllUUA WOllLD lib ID --
vince Ford tbot lit---ohould ba illowtd to wn ID tl!t Uallod
States -a -mmlll'. to,1111 bracorO project that WU a b a D d 0 Bo• under_.. 1rcm U.8. Llbot .-.
Ford, .. the other hand, -lo halt the ,flow o1 w.,.i immll'Olloa llltb
tile United Slates, ~ by lllOdllloC
uuemploymont IDll popilallan pOlllb ID
Mexico.
The U.S. '°"""' Aid Ford Wll uni!lalJr ·
"'graot any -In Iba ...... labor area in el\'llanle for ~
duced otl.
"Over.aJJ, "1131 the --ls not po&Sible, H the lol&ree ..
State Power
Officia"ls Set
For Extortion .3 in Bakery
_Shop Murders guarantee of free speecb and pnss. POllTLAND, Ore. -Slllto, mi ..
Th(lt decision ..., that local com-federal authortttts ha,. becmi ~
munlly otandardl may govem but that lion& 14 """1ler pc>lllble pc>Wer wlW""""•--w
local jUries do not have abaoiul. -in cue an uton1eo11t canlfo .,. 1111
NEW BRl'J'IJN, Corm. (UPI) -State
poUce laid today a bulletin has been
issued deocrtblng the suspects In the
S,turday night llbooling death! of Bix
pencm in a New Britain bakerj aa
a white man, a black man and a white
woman.
tion to outlaw movies, boob and other threat to dynamite more trwwrrJ'#•
material they consider obledlonable. At llne.Jowm in the POrtland .....
that tllile, lite court said the movte -Bonneville Power .\dmlnlllntloe-if.
Trial Begitas
"Carnal Knowledge" could not be banned
as~ In Gecqia.
1IVT IN A OOMPANION e",., the
court also said last Juna that lndlvlduala
can be convicted under federal law for
seiding "obacene, lewd, luclYlolla er
filthy" materials In lntentate commerce.
Eight former Ohio National Guardsmen went on trial today in 1970
Kent State University shootings. On trial at Federal Court in Cleveland
are James E .. Pierce (foreground) and Lawrence A. Shafer {rearj
each Of whom face life imprisonment if found guilty. At right are
four Kent State victims. From top, William Schroeder, Allison Krause,
Jeffrey Miller and Sandra Lee Scheuer.
~ wuman waS described as about
30 years of age, about 5-feet, £.inches
tall, and wearing an oranie ,pullover
sweater and dungartes. 'I'here was no
description of the men. except that the
\Vhite waJ wearing a tee shirt.
THE Grl'AWAY car wu described
as a white 1984 Grand PriI Pontiac
with a conlboard rear llcen!e plate
and a dented left lmK lender.
In two ol the cues lndny, lll'eMan,
Slewart and Manball joined Donglu
in ..ting 14 rovene the coovicllona Im-
mediately.
n-involved the --ol Don-
nell -and Arthur Goldlteln . ol Norfolk, VL
Wfnslow .,... Clll!vlctal ol llelllng IDd
diltribotlag an allqedly -movie
and map1lnes ID vtol-of a llate law.
So gNe90Jl\e wu lhe camage in tbe
T~tive Strike .. Accord
Ends Airline's Walkout
Donna Lee Bakezy Saturday night that
the priest who admlnisered lut rites
tem>ed the perpetraton ''barbaric
animals," and poUce likened the. eceoe
to "a slaught.erboule."
Detective ()apt. Georga Bereailk said
there Wer"e indications from tbe poaitioo
of the bodies that the victims were
lying down when they were murdered.
In a dissent Joined by Stewart IDll
lllanhaJI, -"""" that the ""'" vlctioo lftould be overturned be<:auoe
the caoe has not been m-.acainll
the standards 1e1 C1U1 by the Supreme
Court in its 1873 and 1114 obocenlly declstom.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Striking
madUni.sts today reached tentative agree.
mart on a new cootract w:lth National
Airlines to end a 91kiay aid walkout
that has Idled more than 5,500 employes.
1be agreement, which is 11ubject to
membership ~tioo, was reached
at 3 a.m. between representatives <If
the Miaml·based airline and the Interna-
tional An>c:iation of ,.tachinists, AFJ,
CJO.
The proposed settlement ·came fol·
lawing a weekend bargaininR ae:ssion
that lasted 32 hours.
Ford Visit Opposed
' TOKYO (UPI) -Thou sa nd s of
demoostraton waving clenched fists in
salute today roared their opposition to
President Ford's planned visit to Japan.
Police said about 25,000 demonstrat9n,
far short of the 100,000 the organizers
hoped for. turned out for the rally in
central. Tokyo.
They were all shot In the head -THE TllllEE JUmCF.S oller.d Iha
. . . me with a llhotgun and the othen with same argument for r<V<rling the -The negotiations, which r e s um e d ooe or more -lar)e caliber bandguna, vidion o1 Goidstein who wu c:barpd
Saturday alter· a !lklay break, "'" · he said. with eeJ\lng obecenO It.ms.
conducted by W. J. User;: Jr., /'iP~::lal. __ ~ "It W3.!I ~ln.g 1. would not want ,,,.
assistant to the president and naliooal fo see agafn, said Police We("nllmas /
direct'." _or the _Federal Mediation and P. Onruby. . Family Arrested
Conalialion Service. KILLED WERE the owner d. the
A spokesman for Usery said t he Donna Lee Bakery, J<*m Salemi, ~. F B tin' U
negotiators would meet later Wday "14 a clerk at the 11lor<!, Helen GiMM!i, Or ea g p
work out a back-to-back undemanding S9, of Newington. O:m., and four ..
that would end the 98 day strike." """"11er.: Mlchael Knln, 47• el New 'Rape Suspect' "Detalb ol tbe agreemenl wlll be Britain; Thomu llowJlng, 18, and hl.s
announced followi ng a ratification vote wife, Anna, 57, lx>th of New Britain;
by some 1,600 members of the machlnist.s and William Donahue Jr., 22, ot Wal
union, who have been on strike since Hartford. ·
July 15," the spokesman said. · Police said $300 was taken from the
He sa.Jd the date of the ratification cash register and the victims' waDets. ·
vote would be announced following com• Bu& the murderers mi!sed $1,350 -in:
pk!tion oC the back to work agreement. Salemi'• aide pants pocket.
"It ls my sincere hope that this ten-PoUce apeculated the bandita may baV!
tative agreement will bring an end to panicked and killed me ol the victims
a long and dJrficult d~pute that has when aom<body made a move or offered
had so great an Impact Oil the company, r'Mistance, then killed tbe others to
employes and the traveling p u b I 1 c , 1 • eliminate any wlbleaes.
Usery said.
The contract between Natlonal and
the 1AM expired Aug. 31, 1973.
NIZZA, Sicily (UPI) -Police ~d
today they have -n .. memben
of a peuant family who -· beat and robbed a local landowner they ao-
cuoed -ol rapliig their u • 1 • a r 'OJ d
daugbter.
Nice lald landowner 0 l u • e p p e Bonari:CO. 61, went tO "" V l n c en~ o
Cosdo, SI, 14 make ltTlll&'IJlllll !<Ir
the cxmUng lemon hm'est.
• M soon as he entered the Cbdo
1"'ne, !klllari&o was 1118ulled bY att eltbt .......... ol tbe lomlly, Wlto ...
( IN SHORT ... )
Cold Weather Chills East
ClllOd ltlm ol '"""' -Clocto, 1J, cJmln( 1&11 _.. ---blrtli to a bobJ llloui tbree moolltl
•·ti\, ' .ti Cuclol tied ~ to a pool,
-bit rtr1e, Wiiiet aod -. lleal
ltlm ~ 'daltt .... -ldm to write out a ... _ -tllai tbe -Snow Falls in New York nnd Pennsvl~ariia
CelNeiy of the 0o;1y p;1o1
is guoronteed
~.ll'llhf: ti ,ai ~ 1IOI howt ~ ~ t., .s JO PA. ml and IOI'
o:ip. .... bl brou;M IO .,a.t. C'.'*' est ~ loO'll~ 1 00 P.111.
""-"" .._ tt ,.. ..... ~ .,.., • t., ' U; Sat'°"*Y.· CJ 8 G.11\ Surdi:rf, ml and I CllP¥ ......
t» ~ IO 'fllU-ca en ""-" 11111~
"""
t
•
..
uP1 WIA.1111 •OtO(A.U.
• •
..,_
Re'sl" Befit
While tbe lllllllJ WU dec!dJnl what
"' do riett, Beoartp ,........ ... floe
11111· ""'t to the police; wbo arrellad
Cudo, bis wtle, 1111 -.... two . ofbllcblldrm. •
11lroe othe!-chi-, in c 1 u d I D I
Clmtelo, --freed ... boll. .
Putting It Off
' Club ~lans Trip-Son_ietime
PlllLADELPIDA (UPI) -The prealclent of the ~ton
Club of America u,s bJa iiroup la off to Rome tocll1 or mayb9 nat '
week, to take ldvanta,e ol Uctell to lbe-Clrcul Jlizlnlua. .
"We got the Uckell for llte 1~74 perfonnanw ftaturlq tbt
Lions and the ~" aald Loi )Vau, an 1dffl1llla1 lftCUU,.
who llllVU u prealclent. "!'bl only tlWtc la we'n llDt quite aure If tbt
date i1 actually 74 or 11174.
"If W1 14!' IM llid, ''we'll Diily be I 900 yun !alt." ,
Wau said. tho tlckot enrtaftd In foCli In ancient Roinan l!Jle and aood for ldnUttance of')() people wu donated by OG1 of Ibo · club'• memben In Rome.
Waas hu Hrved u pmldent of the l'rocnslinaton aQCe UM.
"We still haven't gotten ltOUDd to having I' 1957 elocllon, • he
said. '
•
•
•
Watergate
Sec11rity
Man Cited
fl'rOm Wire Services
Th~ Democratic Ntttlonal
Committee presented u spech1l
award to Frank Wii is, the
security guard who discovered
the break-in at c0111mittee
headquarters in June, 1972 and
set in motion the events of
tho Watergate scandal.
Committee chainnon Robtrt
SCtaun said Wills played "a
( PEOPLE )
•
' THE FAMILY CIRCUS
r '' • I,"\ •
By BO KeatM
Mondl,J, Octobtr 2l, 1974 DAILY Pl>DT A 1J
Flournoy Walks Tightrop~,
Says Reagan 'Not _Perfect'
---
', C\' SACRAMENTO ( AP l -keep hie ''""' wl1o bocked of Standard Oil eon_,.,•
SACRAA1ENTO (AP) l)' Houstoo. Flournoy c1ulionsly the governor on his.side. t-.1cCloSkty told the student.I.
Two 1ne11 h11ve been booked told the audience of hl5 b1a -And, st I.he same time. ''\Ve're not lrying to hi
2 Booked
111 Narco
·slaying -•
for murder here in connecUon c~gn contributors th a t putting enough d i s t a n c e anything f r om anybody ,'"
with the death of a 22-year-ald Gov. Ronald Reagan i 1 n' t betv;etn himself and Reagan Flounoy added.
lTl.ftn w~ remains w e re perfect· -to draw the Democratic and ~
lound last 'week in ?¥1inerttl "Sorry about tMt, Ron ,'• independent votes he ne«ls BUT S0~1.E of the crowdt
County, Nevada. P1oumoy added with a grin to defeat Brown. didn 't btlleve him .
&:lcramehto police identified In an aside to the Republican "lley, man, \loi1Cn are you
the two Sunday as llerbert governor, who sa.t nearby at AS TH.E 45-y-ear-old former going to cut out the double,
Earl Bayer. 26, of 1420 22nd t.be brightly lit head table. college professor hit three talk? AJ1 yoo've ~n sayi11g
St., and Brinn Farmer. 28. lt was the rt our no y university campuses. the qucs-is ju s t doubletalk," ooe
Bayer was arrested near tightrope walk again-getting shirtless member of the <.TO\\'tf
Take11 HI downtown Sacramento Satur-tougher each week as the GOP ( ) slM>Utcd.
Comedian Jack Benn r, day alternoon. F'amler was candidate tries to appeal to NEWS ANALYSIS At the UC-Davis cam pu i more i n d e p en d e n ts and earlier in the week, Flournoy
was in "Very good • ( J
Democrats lo close I.he gap e:'!'.plained his view of Reagan ·s
condition today at Sta le .. ,,_ ...... -with front runner E:dmund G. lion of Reagan was fired at support or his campaign.
Cedars of Lebanon Hos-.. 41" .... 1,....... Brown Jr. in the race to suc-him again and again. "'M a Republiean. l had
pilal after taking ill in ---------" "See, you just hit the notes with these wooden lolli· oeed Reagan as goveroor of Some of the student ques-expec:Wd Reagan to support
unique role in the affairs or Dallas, Texas, Sunday. pop•." CAllf'omia. tioners seemed 10 think that me." h<.-said. "I don't find Benny 80 was exa already serving a six-month '--t hooid be the nation" and when 'hist.me · m· · ·1 r f ----------'-------------Flournoy 'A'as just an o th e t hui support s con-'
do ha
ined by two doctors at Jal tenn or orgery. · -ltEAGA.N HAD just nntshed Reagan. sidered domina1ion of m Y,.
I<> t I.came. "Frank Wills 11·5 h tel d Lt. Robbie Waters said the 1 ~ · Fl · · 11 · " 1 o room an n1. ........ ucmg ournoy, u 111 n g "On b.'llance. l think Gov. campaign, my po c1es.
passed the test." ordered hospitalized. killing was "narcotics related" E • R d line!: that usually tum up in Reagan has done some good FI our no y' s search for l
Wiii s thanked the C(Ommittee They said he suffered and involved "a large sum ~ ~'ttOl .. 1. lO l'I ep01" te Floumoy's ov:n speeches. things," he rep!led to 0 n e Democratic and indepcnd{'nlj I
for the av.·ard and for its ef· "a mild stroke." of money, four figures." But "T "I probably can't te!I it a:. que1;tion from the cro,,.,·d \'otes to Ct.It. Brown's II -point.
forts in attempting to find him --'-"'-"-="-----he declined 10 immediately well as the governor does ," gathered on Sproul Plaz.11. at n1argin in the latest Cnli forn ia · • idenlify the victim, also from J F i Fl · ked p II · th " k ·11 en1ployment. G • oum<JY JO . Berkeley. o continues 1s v:ee · w1 l * Sacramento, be ca u se his n . oor •tleUW(' '\l Floum:ly's Mnter v:ilh the The r-pon·· lrom th c a .tour of \Valls <1nd t ~1 c parents are unaware he is •.) &i ".1 600 p1 heed f th "" """ U · r S th Dale Anderson, who resign-f{i'
2
h Pri'ce dead. • peo e gat r or e crowd was a chorus or lx>os. ruvers1ty o o u e r i:i, ed
88
Baltimore County ex· LJ • p "Governors Dinner" drew a , , 1 , m n 0 t rec y c 1 e d _c_al_if_o_rn_i_n_. -------
ecutlve after being convicted • Neav Co11.tract SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -IN was funded by personal laugh. and the Republic.an anything," he shot back nt
Oil political corruption charges Of AJ } J Police are investigating alle-contributions from Miss nominee went on to praise one questioner who had quoted
last March is going to school. . · CO 10 B u RB AN K (up 1 ) gations that two Black ~1us-Hearst's father, San Francis-much of' Reagan's record. Bro~n·s line that Flournoy is
AndeTS011, 57, is taking art, lims extorted t'Q0,600 from the E -•-"d nd But even at the d 1 n n er i·ust "recycled Reaganism ." ?tlembers of the lnternation11:I "'"" co xauw1er pres1 ent a he6ted by Reagan, P'loumoy
English and P s ye ho Io g Y D·1'scussed Association of ~1achlnists and rood giveav.·ay program set up editor Ra~lph A. Hearst, ....:ed to indi"'ate some di!-Flournoy kept his com-courses at Essex Md. Com-,., '" d · the 0
• k I A er -0 space \Vorkers at to help free kidnaped ne\\·s-and money from the family's fertmces bel\\'eell hls poli~ies posure urmg go;r e ey munity College \\'hlle awaitln;.r 11 F appeara•-""t Congressman , a decision on the appeal of SACRAf.fENTO (AP) Lockheed-Ca\iromia Company paper heiress Patricia ~rst, eant oundatlcn. and Reagan's. Pete ,,·~'c' ~Io k a
th San F · The nrn<n'am ....,.,.rated by "I'm sorP'\1 to say, but Gov. ' c s e Y -his conviction and five-year Alty Gen E ell y · a~eed Sunday to a new three-e raac1SCO Chronicle ,.·-e.· ..,.... ··~ Republ1·can popular on the . . v e oonger ts\. ""' distributing food from ghetto Reagan's record is not
prison sentenct?. being criticized by the chief year oonrtact thst includes an reponed in today's editions. \varehowes, many or \\"hich --feet." lhe state controller campus -stepped to t be "He's ellJO· ylng it very The ·d r "'" mlc-'-• sev I ,._ t much," said ~tlndy Voelker. author of a Senate report on 11'>2 percent pay increase. money v.-as pai a ter are ownl'd by the Black :?ttus-told the crowd at the cal '""th'M-dera
1
""'s
0
1 dd lhe t\\'O men threatened to lims. in San FranciSO>, ()a};. Woodlake IM in Sacramento. m e crow · Anderson·~ daughter. "There's alcoholic beverages for say-n a ition to a 5~2 percent sabotage the ~.3 million p...... land and other Northern Cali· Th e brown -haired can-"'He v.•ill say the same
..---------~·
Ewery S1tw1d1y tn tN
DAILY PILOT
••
•'
adott~ild~~ow_'?an most people ing California's high prices first year pay increase , ""' .. ...-·romia cilies. didate"s entire v.·eek was w.11.lk-things to you today as he
NN he he! · , me-"-of Lodg 7"" pie in Need (PIN) program, •-"ld say In th board -* may ping discourage a... u....::rs e ~· ac· set up at the orders of the Ross told the Cllroricle the ing the line he carefully paced p~-;;;;;;;;;';;;;;;';;-mmmmmmmmmmlli .. '"
Vintage car lovers take coho! abuse. ceptt'd second and third year terrorist Symbionese Libera-t\vo men, v.•ho said they y,·ere off that night: I
note. The f 0 110 w1 n g ad-The criticism ,vas sent to pay increases of 3 percent. tion Army, the newspaper business representativ~ of -Indicating support for H • SI G f I
vertisemeni was published in Younger over the 1A"eekend by The agreement included cost said. 1'1uhammad's Temple No. 26, some d. Reagan's policies to air aves, 0 ree.
i
the international l-1 er a I d State Sen. Alan Short, 1n. of Ii vi n g adjustments, in-1'11e paf\1>11" !'3.id infonnation offered to sell ltfusllm fOOd to UC ICE ~ I 1· t be r·ts ,--· PIN but were rei"ected '--PUB NOT llW ,..,...H ef ti. ""C""°' -*' ..,..,,., tM •••Ml Tribtme in Paris : S f creases n re 1rewcn ne J , leading to tht? investigation lM"l---~==~==c---1 -.. ~•t•· ..• "~ •,.. F . tockton), chainnan o the medical and dental benefits. "ded b Lee T R cause their prices \\'ere too LS1CT1T1ous 11M1 N1:1s -"' r.o -....... ...,, ,...... "For sale. King n1sal'.; car. Senate Select Comm'ttee on d d d . . 1 1 \\"as prov1 Y . oss, high. NAME sTATtMENT ,..,...,.. '"k. Let •• M•d.-e Y•• wltti ,.,. 1e1...,. .,.ii.,. Packard I 9 3 2 12·cylinder, -an a I t I o n a annua 26. a friend of the Hearst fam· 19'!M •oUowlno per$011 11 doing b~ii11e1~ n.t thet ,... ffMtl•• -4 .,...._.. ow ._, c.N. ........
special suspension. e u 11 et Laws Pertaining to Alcohol. holid.eys. ilf v.'ho helped run the food · E"1c Bus1NEss FORMS. 10091 K••k111 utt. •• _. ...,, .,. ,., tw. .,._ .,.... ,., -r.,.. _,
proof windows. hand made, Short said in the letter that giveaway program and his AFTER THE nRST give· 01~;.,~~nu~~'!'id 9·~~~-~~j~· f~, 1 ti.ar.
only model in the world, prac· Caliromia is the mos_t alco-• 3 Die in .Pla11e story was confirmed by form· av:ay, which included much Kllklll or .. Hvnlln;•°" ae.cti. c1n11;1r~I• IJN. ._Jet ,.,...., w-. .. • Nflen., •• ,,_. '" ..., t)cally new, all spare parts. er PIN director, A. Ludlow confusiOO aOO some violence, ;2~ bu1fl\fSs 11 cofldll(ttd bV •n ..,... ._,..,. wt ,,.., .,_., ...... TM • ..,.. ,., ... .., t'1et
Basic price: $100,000. Of fr.rs holic state in the uni.on . de-SAN DI E G 0 (AP) - Kramer, secretary of state in Ron, told the Olron.icle that 1""1vkf111~htr1v Ron1111 G1n1u1111 ....,., ...., ef Mir ._Its .......... ,..,.., t9 ..._ ... ••
Bo
'I An spite its high "fair trade" Authorities \\'ere attempting W ...... l.i....+.... the pair came to PIN bead· Thi• ,1.1e-n1 '"'' flllMI w1111 ttit .._ It. We ere ..... ltylfltL A tttti. Mt Mtter ,._ ... "'Y to: X. 7,371 , ll' 0 SS e -tod ...,...,'!i..,... C0<11'11Y Cle•~ Of O~•nvt Countv °" r.-1
noncen, AG, CH 802.J Zuri~h. prices on alcoholic beVerages. ay to identify three badl y-Quartlners and demanded $154,-lkober 10, 1•1' ,,,... + Short t 11 y burned bodies found in the THE PROGR..UI distributed 000 payment tor fish and PUllllllMd 0r111g• c~11 0111v P1!n1, wro e a er ounger V.Teckage of a light aJ...nJane -•• they claimed had been Octotitr 1" 11• 2:1. '"" Novem:i.r ~,1!1,', A $3.5 million civil suit has announced he v."Ollld take a .,. free food to an estimated ~&&-' ~· .. been filed against Bank or new look at regulatloos which near Mira l.1esa, about five 150,000 persons between Feb. taken by rioters from the Mil.\· PUBLIC KOTICE
JOSEPH'S SCISSOR STYLING
9544 -A••· H•""9foo ltoch U .. l5lS
IOI N. HeW llYd • ......,_ -Pfl. l79-3l6J
:
"
<
,. America by the widow and artificially hold up coosumer miles north of here. %2 and March 25 and was one lims' Hunters Point ware-STATt'Ml!WT o' A•AttDONMl!NT op
three children of John 1'1ax· . The wreckage, strewn over of the oooditioM made by the house. us• 0' FICTITIOUS IUSINISS NAMI
well, &2, a Long Beach .11.ircraft ~er mentioned alcohol· . a &-foot area. was found earl)'. St.A for the release of Miss Ross. said witnesses who ,..!"'111t'°1~;: ~~~~~ ":!i..::~:;:
salesman kiUed by terrorists · be "ik gl Sunday near Interstate 15. Tue Hearst, .~-•-· abducted "''ere inside the warehouse ...,,,,..,..11 · ..... _M cr.1r1ers ,, J10 w.
·-
1e verages, nu , eye ass-...i .. -shed 1.,.~ !i(ll}.f .. lAI ,..,, said it bad been empty and B.tbM Mvd .. N....,,,,.., •• ...,,, ea.
last Y ...... in Belrut Lebanon es heanng· aids and p~ .,....., ... era ,....., a oot Feb. 4 but la'-~-Jared -'--• TM "c1tt1-w,1Ns• ,..,,.,. relel'f'M
The
·-sw·l asserts' the bank. ' ,....,....,.,. hillside, said Walter Langham, ~"""" :nft: the Muslims' claim was never to 11>ow w1s flied 1n Cringe CouMV tion drugs. Bul on alcohol he F d 1 . . had joined the SLA. ~e cur-ed d on 1 5fllf 1m failed to protec~ Maxwell's life said there might be an argu. a e e r a Av 1at1 on renlly is sought as a fugitive support by any ocumenta-1. H•·;.,.., itotit r1 Mor1roe. 12s1 E.
d rl K~ el ..1 u.... Adm inlstraUon investigator. he Uoo. Lll9Cl"1' s,. n. Rtdl•""'· c111t. u ng a ..,,....,ur s ge UI "'ft: ment in favor or( keeping high He ··'d the bodi·es o! two by t FBf. H Id ~. H 1 mil 2. Biro ... • J•N MOf1•09. 1151 E. Beirut branch of the Bank · · ord _, e sa un:: eant a Y LU90lll• Sp. 71 , Rtd11nc1s. c111f. · be I pnces m er to discourage men and one mate yooth were told PIN officials to ""Y the s. Nor""'" P••kll'llon M••shell, of Amenca by mem rs o alcoholism. 1 --"" ·u hi ,.M E. M1rl1>1>1• or., Rtc111n01. c11u. the Marxist Lebanese Socialist bu 11ieu beyond rt'<Xlgnition. p Ji p b b1 -\\" ch had been reduced " N1ld1 A\IClrey M1nh111, 'N E.
Revolutionary MovemeaL as~:id:~es~or~~:a s~ 0 . ce i·o e to $99,600 -af1er the tY.'0 men ~~;"':,'11~; R:'~:""~~~:~ bY •
Jl..taxwell was the only une of cities to get rid of regulations e B1cses Rolli119 threatened that "if you doo't um11td J'"rd1r~h1fi., Mot1 M
<l-0 hostages killed. AJJ D } cooperate with us. v.·e'll upset
1
'
0 0
'. F1:10t2 * that artificially keep prices LOS ANGELES {UPI) . en eat I the apple cart every time PIN PIJllllStled Or1nce C~•I 011ly Pll~!. high. Conditions returned to near i.A~ di l 1~· lo d " Ddobflr 7, ,,, 21, 21, 191' 3ro1-1'
. Form-•-elary of State Short who · · · ,_.. a s r uut n ay. ---" -· . , is rehrmg this p-"··s stn"ke normalcy today "W da d PUBLIC NOTICE Dean Rusk Is out of I h e 'o::-uu SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -e were IO mne \\'OT--year and seeking no further as Rapid Transit D i st r i c t "ed about P tt " •·--I Id hospital after tests t h at office. agreed lhat "fair Police were investigating the n a Y, n.l.lli» o ic1cTrT1ou1 •uso11Es1 buses rolled through f 0 u r the Chronicle NAME 1TATllMI NT
hospital officials said v.· ere trade" regulations are "sa· S 0 uthern California counties shooting death here of a \\"ell· · ,._ to11-i,,. P91'$0l1 11 dolno bu11ne11
routine. cred ~ws" and result in high-after weekend runs without koo\\'Tl hairdresser, George PUBLIC NOTICE as: P'llOFEss10NAL PRINTING sE lll:·
Rusk , 65, v.•as discharged er pnces. problems. ~fartin Allen Ill v1ees, 1m1 Tiii..-Avll'IW. Or•"9•· from Atnens. Ga. Gener a I Allen 'll wa~ shot early Nol1cE OLS TMI r1Mla.UD "Lacr c=:~ 'r"comb• 13071 T 11 , •, --" Downt-0wn riierthants, who -· ~ gy "Jt:~\1g: T~BMMis~~o:G,,N; a-. Or•ftl;lt, c111iom11 "'" ijospUal after bei ng ndrnitlt:".i reported h 50 Saturday apparently v:be:n he Oii.i.NO• c 0 u NT y CALll'OllNIA Ttib b111lnm 11 condll(llld by 1n
while suffering neck pains. .Mai·i Die• S as muc as 8 scuffled 'with several assail-wH1N A l'llDl'Oj•D ' AWN•nT10M 1""1vidu~huim "·com~ -'"-k w\ii t h' percent drop in business dur· , TO COUNTY SI VICE AlllA NO. -•-0_,_ •• n .. w'lh Ille 1U1S resume eac in, ants \\'ho robbed him police ' OLS OlllANGI COUNTY AND O•· ,~,,,_ 1·····"'-"• o.·.... ,A .. ~., ''
I' t the u · II f ing the~y strike, said . • Jll!c T10N s AN D "110 Te:1T1 .,.,.,,. ... -itW a n1vers y 0 '-··s1"ness wasboonu"ng. said. THEll:ITO, WILL II! l'llEIEWTID Dc:tobtr I ' 1'14 r_,,,,.. ' uu · · LSOll Ml!All:INO •ntt1 '-'1'Vrgia. FrOlll L.Sl) During the strike period, the Fnends said Allen, knovm NOTICE is HERE1v 01vEN thft' PWltitltd Dl'lnot c~•' 0111v f.'1101. * pro!·~ooally as '!art All n • 11111111on ,.., llftn flllld with tM OCl'Otllll' u, t1, 21. 1nd NOVt~r 4. 197• RTD continued to receive a ......,, 1• Y e , Loc:11 Ag.ncr i:orm1t1on comm1111on ot :110&-1• President Ford ha_,. schcdul· '1137 • b Id "''as a hair designer for rock th• countv o Or•nuc· s1at• ot c111torn11.
ed rfi
. I · .1 · W hi gt " ,OOO-a1.1ay SU s y from . . r-.iue1nrte1 thll 11td Cammlulon •wcvt PUBLIC NOTICE o .icia visi sin as n on OlJerdose the state from sates 1 a... Singer Bette Midler. He also"'' ,,.ope1111 1n1 ... 111on oe1111n11tG ~n-, --------~---
wt.th Au•lr'" Presldcnl Bruno • had t ed 1 from M••llr.n No. 1•2 10 Couritv s ..... ,,.1--n The d" t . t . d re um recent y .. , •• NO .• cf °''"'' Coun1y, C11Uornl•. PICTITIOUI IUSINISI Kr~ltky Nov 12 and Canadllln revenues. IS MC s a I Los Ang 1 he h d I Thi 1>roPOse1 •ncom111u" '"" lonowlrte1 WA.Ml STATIMINT · aher daily operating costs had e es w re e es gn· g1n1r1uv 11111erlblld •••• w111cn 11 mot'• The to11ow1,,. Pll"$Ol1 11 lkllna b\ltlrwH
Prime Minister Pletre Elliott SANTA 1'10NTCA (UPI) been deducted, the RTD made ed the hair styles for the fi:i"e~~~1'm:K~blcl111~ :i,1~,i,:·~~ 11' PLus NINE 1NTE'tNATIONAt. lTD .. Trudeau Dec. 4. A 25-year-()ld man died and ....,...e ~-n u nu"ili"on during actors in a muskal called m1111on: '21 E. a11tio1 Blvd., 1111-. c111tornl1
The t I d . '""' uw .., '""--• Sito 1f\rlt~1llon c1nl1 ln• tP-JU61 wo ea en ore Cflm1ng two others became seriously the strik 111e Rocky Horror Show" fll'0.11lm1tely u 1er11 1oc:.1..:1 r111 •rod c111r11s Holm•• s1r1vti Jr .. f'll E. to exchange viev.•s with Ford e. 1-----'------·--l ...,.11 01 El Toro 11:1>111 1ovlh ot Ae<:kfletd a.1-111...:1 .. l•lb•, c111forn11 ., .. , ill from overdo$e$ of LSD they PUBLIC NOTICE lloultvard, In El Toro. Thi• 11u11n1n Is condVcllld 11'1' an Jn. qn in ternational matters and took h"I t nd. 1 .11 I'll• lflM ot "" ,,.,,11111 ~011eec1 111v111u11. . hat
1
bll 1 w I e at e ·Ing an Aro • Picket Protest 1------------I h1r1!n, 11111 bOVl'tdlri.1 m•v ~ 11'\0dUl.o Ch•"" stnub Jr. topics t invo VC atera Guthrie concert s a tu r d a y STATllMlNT ~ A•AMDONMIMT by '"" 1dllllklfl of otllt!' ttl'f'llorv In Thi Thi• sl•M-nt "''' flied wlth ,.,. COtm· \ tiO o• USI 01' vtclnllY of IM Pf0fl0911. Iv Cltrlli Of Or1not CCI.Inly on O'tcber 10.
re a J13. night at the Civic Auditorium SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -LS1CT1T1ous •us11o1e11 WAMI' NOT ICE ts FU1tTHe't 01vEN 1h11 1t1i. • * he p ol ti rd TM lollowlno persOft his 1b1ndonlld t&ld CDmmlsslon '"' lhrlld WtlCIMtd•Y , ,,,.,, re . r es ng ste\\'a esses set up 1..,. 11'1• cf Ille flc1lll011t bl.lslnts, n•m•: 111t1 30th 111y cf , 0c1-r, 1t7' •t 111t ll'~bllllled Or111g9 co111 0111v P1101.
• Or. CbrbUan 8amnrd, the Police said Carmen J06eph infGnnat.ionO\ picket lines in NEWPORT We STE R H IN-:~r or 1l·":oo:'~~k 911:·M.;.,11fff' ':~~ OClobtr IC, fl, 211' al'ld NOY1mlltr ~~~:! heJlrl frantphrnt r!oneer, has .Marino, 25, Santa l.1onica, died five cit' Sunda bee of SURANCE. 2082 llu1lne1~ C1nter OrlV't, be ll91rd In Room ~J in !M 0!'1r1111i-----.,.,-----==1 written a n 0 v e describing 1 1es Y ause suite 1u. 1rvr'"', c11uom11 926'4 cwn1v Admlnl111'1t10t1 a1,1l1dtno, JU NoMh PUBUC NOTICE at Santa Monica HospitaL Jer· \Vestern Airlines' policy 0 r Tiit F!d lll-llusl11111 N1me relmtld S~llTl<n S!rHI, 5lnl1 Af141, C11ttorni.,, ------------1 what he tenns the agonies · Ca •·• dt . . lo •bove wn flied L~ Or•no• ccuntv 11 th• 11m1 •nd J>l•c• for tM 11t11r1no 1-ry Esposito, 2 8' r~a ' ma x1mum weight standards Oii Ftb<11•ry s 1t7~ QI tald ~··I ICO•-' Wllh 111 pro111t1 FICTITIOUS •USIMlll of racial agregatlon In South N.J. and Sandra So\minsky for flight attendants A. J . ~-·,,,., C&., , cautornl• •~d e1111,11on1 thtrtto wnich m•v tit WA.Ml STATl!MIMT Africans u r g I ca 1 operating · C01110ttflon 11:11· XID4 Edmon!on Rd n!td •nd •t wnlcf'I '1""' end 1'1•c• ..tt TM to1lowlrtC1 •-11 ooino w,;,,.u 21, \Vallington. N.J .. were "We're the only group of Gltnd•'•· c11ttor0n11 t120l ., 11t,.~ll!!!.1 ,,..••~, 11«1 llltl'tl~ "''"' •c~•· •tr theaters. ..... .... r . HAR90R TOWING co dM MAltflOll: treated al the hospital and emplayes that are losing our 011i::~. c':\:~.-r1,:«tf'I Cmtni . ._~""dt'r.::r""c":.tv !.:i":itv1~= 1oov WOll:KS, '~' ,;11ctnll• Ave ..
Barnard has crltir.izetl the released. ability to eam a living if our Thi' Ml""' 11 COl1duc1M ...,. '" "' 111> cahooflceltY .. ..not "' e«ord._. cost• ~,., c.nt. 92627 govemmcnt's npartbtld ~Hey lound · ht ~-•t f ii "lhl l""!vld!.l1•. won 1111 C•lltornl• Envtronrntnr11 Qu11lry Owen J1tk M1wley, n" New YOl'k The three were by wesg ~" a V.'l n a ..,, J , uruiri ~ co. .1c1 01 1t10. AV!!., cost• Mesi. c1111or~11 .,"' before.. a n.,,,,....rby outside the certain category that the com .1 J La....., 01t111: Dc:tobeT 1, , .... , TN• t1111lne11 11 condll(ftd ov 1n The novel, titled • 'The ,....._ -"~"kk I IY OllOER OF THE LOCAL AGENCY lndlvklu1I. auditorium. pany has establishes for US," Th!s •l~1e...!'n1 WIS lllflCI with IM t8~:::fJ1°c'16~~~~11oN OF ORANG E ow.-n J, H1wlt-t' Unwanted ," is Barnard's nrst. Authorities said the three said spokesv.·oman Bel ty Counlv Clu1t cf Or•not C-ty .... RiCHARD T, TURNER Tiii• Sll!tmtnl WIS fll tf wll'll tM
It tel!J the ~tory of a \\'h11e had taken "w~•---," a F'·hrma "\" , t . to S..prtmbe• ,,, 197~. E•ecutlvt OHlur ~. 1Ctl'l'lr. ct OrtnOt COlll'llY on 0c10-111UV .. ,..-·~ · u n. '"ere ry1ng , Jl1N t.ocll Aro;:cv Fonn111on ...,. ,..,, , ,,,,. boY. and a )wth of m.IJ:ed clear crystal form -0! t h e get rid of that and the image Pub11th<td Dr•11g9 Cot11 0111y "uoi. ~=• 1111 "' °''"~ C°"'1f'P', ll'u&I~ °'•noe Cottt o.u.,. tuoi.
&Jood. l :~~u~;;·;;;";;~:;;;;::;;::;=::::=0~~-;_:~J=~=·=·=· ======":':":.:":'="=· :':"="""="=':':·:':'·::":·I ~·~'~'~'"~""~f"~'~"~·~·~~~":::;·~·~·"~'~"~"f"'~~l'C:IMI'~~·~· ~··~"~·~~~·~"~"~;:~"'~':·':'I ,. 0 ~• • 1'1~ 3'10-1~ ()clOMr U, 21, 1974 Xlf·14 ---
• Armand 11a.:mer, chairman
Of the Occidental Petroleum
COrporatlon, had talks In
Moscow with foreign l r a de
Minister Nlkolal s. r otollrbev.
the ofJiclal Tass news agency
;.fflr. C!J:bri~tian~
said. • Soviet PrC$1dent Nikolai V.
Pod1orny ~hot an elk i n
F inland while hunting w I t h
Finish Pmldtnt Urbo K. Kek:
bnta. He then f I e w to
Moscow, ending a four-day of·
ficlal vf~t.
PHARMACY
WE QUOTE PRICES
OVER THE PHONE •••
CHICK THISI tum SAU S"CI~ ~ -
Lavoris Mouthwash, 32 oz .••••••..•• , ••• s2.es
Buffefln Table.ts. #100 ......... _ .... , •. $1 .83 =ns ~ed1ca1ed Powder. 61<1 oz. •••• s1 .os
1 um prey Anlipersplrants, 5 oz ••• , .S3.SO
_ ... ,,.,..
S2.17
$1 .69
S93'
$2.99
2700·E. Coast Highway at Femleaf, Corona del Mor
For J(nirr,~ anJ J"ncint amontst the rtlics of Jint old
Jaili1t.f shipJ..
SPECIAL THIS WEEK
Frtsh Fil/ti of Ru Snapptr
SJ.,S
L•Nchton J\lorJ.-Fri.frOM 11:10•.m..
DinNtr strf'tJ Niglttlt /nM S:IO p.m..
S••J"l' ClwmpaxMBtwocli $J,7S 1-/O:JO .....
-EntttWinmtttt-
EJ.~r Hayti T•t$.-Tlt•n. Ert1tltfRI
D11nciNl Fri.-S•Jt. Nlghu
Fhha, Aluts, O,Utt 1Jo1, Notti w;..., Alu••' Splriu
JSJ Ii. Cout Rft'"°"1
MOW POI TOUI CONYINllNCl ••• OPIN. DAILY'
I A.Iii. to 10 PM-SAT. • SUNOAT t to S P.M.
SEE HANDMADE .
ORl·ENTAL RUGS
at
ASIAN ENTERPRISE
in
Design Plaza • 250 Bldg ., 2nd Floor
Donald F. McDermoll Jr .. owner·
TELEPHONE 644-8881
FASHIOH ISLAHD • HEWPOllT CEHTE.1
Health News.
Back, Leg Pain Needless
Suffering, Doctor States
An estimated halt m1ll1on the legs pas:-. 1hrough l hn
prople will be disabled this year openings between adjacent M'i;i~
by spinal dcrects v.·hich c11us~ men ts or tht' tov.·er llpine. "You
l(M.•back and tc/;! pain. \\'cask~ sa-. v.heti9onc of the se)!menl5 ~"
Dr. liar\' Couture ot the Couture dL~pial'1-'<1 . lne ncr\·es to thC' lci:i;;
C.:hi ropi-acl •l• Of111·t v.h:it ill mJ,l!hl I)(· 11111 r h('1I or 1rr1tatccl.
btul~ done lo ('Ot rl'rl th1:. gra\'t' !'h1~ hr111i;s ,1hOUt lh<' TI('f \'I" problem. 11ain that t.•xtends dov.·n lh••
··our rescar· le~ ·· rh," say~ J)r. "'hat c:tn t ~· donl' h1r lhl' ,,.., -
Coutur(', ··1n· snn ""Llh i.1 .... · l.1.1rh .Jlld a ,,.
dl c ULI'' lh:1l ~k'.l:lll'rlll'i: p:'l1n'!
rnos\-ln\\" h:i•·i. ".\I~ ,.,, .... r1\'ll•'t' 1>11'•""'"." ,,1\'1i
nnd ~'~OC'l:'ltcd l>r l'outu11•. '"lh:1i 1n1l1\ u!ual ..
leg p:11n.~ are ...,·ith ;11·utt' ;in1I 1·hro 11 .. •
ca u ~ ll II h !-' prohlrr'l\1' Ol lhl" nalure 1"1:Spon1 I
t r u I to t•h1rn\)r fll'l 1C' c:ire. Our X 'r.iv
1nc<'h:1ni•C'al an:.ily~I' 1·11 n r1•v1•:1t t'V,~11
th.•ret•ls 1n the n\1nu1c sp111al d1~1 or1u>11s. An1t 1
Or. o.,., :11 1,e nm e nt ot n1111ht :Hid," Or. '-;'.ouL111·e s.:ays.
Coutwe.o.c . on<' (}r 1norc "'(lar1yllt'lt><'11l'.lnot 1h1s pro111t•n•
!lt~nwntlioflhclov.·rr spu1e " .ll lo\\1' l'!l11c 11,·1· (':1ro oi111I
Thelll' /ipinal 1'1"',,: 111('11\S 1n11~· prt•\'1•1\11011 01 proJ:;rt"~S1 \ C' <,11111.11
be d1spl11ce<I. llr. Couture HI· <k•l •'!'I!> ·
d1eatrs. by ;i l :11l, ~H'l'ldl'nl . or 111' l'oulur1· rn::i1nt:iin' 111.11
bar!; 5lnun ··,\nulhi•r lr('qut>n1 h1w lt:n·~ un•I It·~ pain" oH••it
1·1111s(' 1·~ chrun 11· posturt :i1n11unt to ne\•dll·~" ... u lfpnn~.
1w11~·. •• h<' adtl~ •• \11d lt"t 111\' 1-;1v 1 h.11 I 1·un,1•lf'r
"It'" rea,,onahly ,1mplr, he lh1 , 11ct«lh·~, ~u11rr1n~ truly
not~. ""'h1·n ;i "Jlln:ll se~mt'nl \1 1ltlut1! 11·.1,011
1s d1spla<'c•I 1 h" 1'UIJPornn11. . U\•11.l' 1n-0rt· 1h.1n ;oo lt•:1d1"::
ttllL'iCles and h1Zaments mD)" bt' nl.'-urante ('\1111 11,11111·" reCogn'"''
11trcteht.'<i or t1Jrn t"Jtl~IO.lt l)tnlr 1•lu1ffl!i lor 1ntJ1l1•rn •·.irL' !oil• h ,,,
and d1iuthhni: h.1rk pa111 , "'hl"n th.it .nall.1hh· .11 lh•· l"outur1•
a . ilmt'nt1~d1~11lett'dbf'yorn.l11 cn1ro11ra e t1 ~· 0111 ct". 1':i r
en11calpo1nt ,'' llr.t:outurt't'On· l1f'ul:irl,. 1or !ht" 'l!)f'Lllll1 11'll
t1nuci;, ··11 partf)· closts thl' 1rt:itmt'nt tor In\\ h:u·k and h•i.;
ner\'l' 011en1n J:l" ht't11o·t>en Jd P.'Un:.!!tk,1·11~·tl ilho\'l'.l
j:ittni"M'll;ment.,. Thl' r~ull t! Or Couturt1n.i1111 :un!'>o1111·1"-
exer ue1a t 1nt: p:11n . "'h1l·h :.t1bcfo11ture('h1ro11r3cuco1.
t'l('edlffi{io sar, 1.s anything bu t h<:t. :.nu \\'<'slthll nr., Nl'v. rion
n.'flllllflllhle." l~at·h t~tlf'r l"itk & lr\'!nf" •
,.
lS-i • ~r.Oliltt.etiau'.a.
Nt"'"' Bt•th ,
R-Wti.oo1 (7U} '7S.JJ10
Or ·C'outurf' po1nl./i out lh3t nearCottl'SJ. l'hO!lf'&l."1· :tOO
the ~l)Jll:\l ntll'\PS. v.·h1ch ~Uf'f'IY il'l 1\ft:>;l'li ' . -----------'----~-------
•
,_
AS
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Bagley Best Qualified
On th e-basis or r>efformancc atone.'. \Villiam T. •
Basie)' is a standout candidate ror the office of stale
l'Ontroller.
After ne:.irly lSyears in the Legisluture, he has an
\Jnblemishcd J>ersonetl record, a reputation or putting •
public interest above politics und ~tn oulstunding 1Jst
of su ccessful legislation -much of it dealing with
state fin;,1nccs ··· bcuring "is name and support.
lie has been a constructive legislati ve lea der , a
moderate Nnd has demonstrated solid knO\Yledge in
lhefiscul fi eld a good base for the offi ce he seeks.
Beyond this, California voters must find it
disturbing that Bagley's opponent. Democrat.I<:
Assemblyman Kenneth Cory of Orange County,
already has been backed to the tune of more than
S500,000 in gifts and ''loans" from two Ora nge
Countiuns.
Th e t\YO :.1 n gc l s arc D e mocrat ic
\vh celcr .. d caler·r ancher Richard O'Neill and
investor-physician Louis J _ Cella. Bc>th a re involved
in investments \Yi th Cory, investments that have paid
handsomely for Cory. '
It is a money-dripping alliance that seriously
challenges any CorJ· claim of irld cpendenc e.
Bagley is clearly the choice for State Controller.
A Growing Service .
\Vith 3 collection goal of S3.l million, United \Vay
0£ Orange Cou nty this year marks the SOtb
anni\'ersary of federated fund raising in the county.
mailing \\'ill rt•ac:h indi \'idu al householders. repla('ing
the former door -to-door campi:li gn.
'J'he agen<'it.•s assistt'CI by United \Vuy ro\·er a vast
ra nge or ~1 m munity scrvicc!'i : youth programs.
familv counsl'ling. da~· rarr l'Cn tc rs, adoption
' serviCes and homl's for abandoned children. home
medical care for the uiling :.ind elderly a nd hos1>itul
C' ,.ire for prcmat u rt• inf ants ;.u·t· but ;1 fl'\\':
This is a prog ram that really docs "'ork in dozens
of ureas of humun need. It deseJ'\'l'S your supJ>orf.
Depression Cl1ances
A recent Gallup Poll reve<.1led that a gro\\'ing
number Of J';meritans· -51 percent in a SUr\'ey o( l ,5Zl
adults--beli e\'e the United Slates is h eadin~ to"·ard
another 1930s·type depression.
Bu.t leading economist s di sagre<•.
·soml'' sec abso lutely no chance or a trul'
depression. Those "'ho think it's possible. put the
chances a t a slim 5 to 10 percent.
·The poll sho"·s that 44 percent of bus iness and
profession a l people. a nd a "'hopping 61 percent of
unskilled \\'orke rs are con•·i nced a depression is
looming.
But the eco nomi sts "'ho rule out any such
possibility cite the major differences in today's
economy structure and banking system. including
such .. stabilizer s" as social security. unemployment
compensation, progressi\'e income lax and insured
bank deposits. -Starting: as a service to only six agencies, United
Way nO\Y h elps support community service 75
agencies by making it possi.ble for donors to
participate \Vith a single annu al gift or pledge.
Payroll commitments in business and industry
now are being solicited. This \veek, a countyv .. ide
\Vhile y;e may not be heading buck lo the 30s.
the experts do see a deep "rc~ession" '"ith !ittlc h~pe
or improvement before the middle of 1975. So keeping
the belt ti ghtened-individually ar:id go.ve rnmentally
is clearly essential.
' tr. ~nv?' 'Hey! What do you think about a 5 70 sur..,,..
Ho~pitals:
The Patient
Comes Last
(SYDNEY HARRIS)
' At just about this time last year , C
entered the hospital for surgery. A
few weeks later , when I was able to
return to m y s laving over a bot
t ypewriter,. I wrote a series of three
«lumns o n hospital treatment or
patients. ·
I made, basically,. three obser·
vations, known ~-every patient but
~on veniently ig·
norc d by mos t
h ospital s tarr .
Firs t; that the
hospital is run for
th e benefit of
everyone but the
patient. Second ,
that there is too
much re str a int.
too many rules a nd .
procedures ror their O\\-'n sake. Third.
that comfort and concern for patients
as persons arc almost nil.
'. WELL, the flak was even greater
than I had e:icpected -but almost
wboUy from professionals so clost: to
the hospital scene that they we re bh.nd_
to· every annoyance and absurdity ·
even a stranger could note in a two-
day visit. . , 1
This summer, however, a bare nine
month:; afler my "intemperate and
ignorant criticism," as one hospital
administrator put it, the Journal of
the American Medical Assoc iation it-
self printed an a rticle by a University
of Cincinnati physician that repeated,
in errect, all the criticism I had
made -and adO ei:J a few others I had··
n't thought of.
SPEAKING of hospitals gener::il\y,
he observed, .. 1'hc patient is the low
man on the totem pole." Oslensib\y
huilt for patients. they are run for the
t'Onvenience or personnel. If it doesn l
suit the housekeeping division, some
patients are restrained in bed when
they should be uµ and about. Nurses
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
\Va sn 't it ironi c to watch
Preside nt Ford te lling the
Future F armers or America
how wonderful his programs
ere-and just an hour later on
the evening news watch the
"'no1v" £a rmers slaughter young
calves to rot where they rell? V.G.
I and orderlies, on ~e whole, he asser-
to respond to lhe human needs of
ti' ts . • pa en . . . . ·· .
·1-1e himself during hts rounds, he
disc losed, will ofte n perform
"creature care" for his patients-lit-
tle but important things such as rear-
ranging bed-c lothes, shading eyes
from the s unlight, providing water
and making bedside utensils more·ac·
cessible.
HIS CHARGES, if anything, were
more cutting than mine. One omission
in my articles was the fact that,
elinically, a hos pital practically
closes down for the weekend. If you
are admitted on a fo'riday, and are not
at ~ath 's door, forget it until Mon·
day-yo u'll li e there like an unbought
vegetable. Because most laboratories
close do\\·n on Fridays, he pointed out,
"'The three-day weekends are killers
literally and rigurativcly.''
As I remarked last fall, the fault lies
not so much with the medical and nur-
sing directors as with the whole
bureaucratic machinery in itself.
11'hich needs a drastic ove rhauling.
Despite early visits, and personal as-
surances of attention, from both these
directors, my_:;tay was a series of un·
necessary a nnoyances, frustrations,
and operational s\upidities, with only
one or two s hining exceptions.
i\ND IF this hapt>cns to a man who
is likely to write about it in
ne\\·spapers a ll over the country, you
can imagine what goes on with a quite
anonymous Patient 'A'hose only im·
patent means or expressing his resent·
ment is to delay pa}~ng his bill for a
couple of months.
Tl1eSile11t Majority Is Bitter
Voter Views Reflect Resentment
LOS ANG ELES-Lo"·cr middle·1n-
come \Y h itc voters or Southe rn
California \Vho once marched in the
Nixon silent majority so fear the
economic future and so bitterly resent
lhe Republican party th<it ~1 huge
De mocrati c victory ht'rc No\'. 5
seems assured.
That is the only co nt:lusion tu bt•
dra"'" rrom our inter\'iC'A'S in 1110
!'.>i le nt ·ma jo rit y
precincts in the
San Fernando Va l-
ley-"'·hi ch hll \'t'
bel'n p,ood
barometer s o f
stale>A•ide results.
Our intervie"·s.
conducted 'A'il h
pollster Pat C<i<j -
dCll's :Cambridge
Survey Research organization, sug·
gcst no Republi can campaigning can
significantly h;i it the emotional tide.
TJIE PltlNCIPAL, largely innocent
victim is state controller llouston I.
F lou rnoy, a \vi de ly res pected
moderate \\'ho is ltepublican nominee
for go\'ernor. Out or 71 rt•g islered
1·oters inter1·ie"•cd, these 'A'Cre the
results: 42 for the Democratic can-
didate, secretary of state Edmund G.
Brown. Jr.; 20 for Fiournoy: 9 un·
decided. The reason most com monly
given: Brown is a Democrat, Flour·
noy a Republican. Though <1 statewide
total along those landslide propor·
liom; is improbable, such sentiment in
11recincts that delivered majori ties .
or Ri cha rd Nixon and Ronald
Reagan represent a political iur-
novcr.
The 01·rrwhelming preference for
Bro"'" derivC's from a J!rim economic
mood. Almost all voters interviewed
reel the economy is in dreadful shape
<i nd, contrary to traditional American
optimism, 57 of the 71 voters {!Uessed
it would be 'A'orse a_ year from now.
One in three saw danger or 1929-stylc
depression.
1'he bleak tnood is heightened Uy
unrclentin~ an ~l·r against Nixon.
The.'' di s:1pprove of President f''ord's
pardon by nearly 4 lo l . and feel, 2 to I,
that Nixon should still stand trial.
!ilany \'Oluntecred hope that the
Hcpublicans suffer. al least this clec-
lion . for Nixon's sins.
[ ..... _E_~_A_N_s._N_o_v_A_K~)
T\'PIF\.ING the mood is a 30-ycur-
old >:roct·ry store ;1ssistant manager
\\'hO is a registered Republican but
plans to t•hangc it ''the first l'hanc-e I
gel." lie is not sure he 1\'ill vole Nov .
5, a con1mon atlitude that surely
prc-sagcs a li ght turnout. If ht• votes. 1t
\\'ill he.· for Bro\\·n. I-le kno"'S litllc "
about either candidate but has Ont'
overriding, objection to Flournoy:
",lust being a RepubliCan."
Similarly, a retired auto salesman,
::i·Nixon Democrat and self-described
l'unservative. is worried Bro"·n .. may
be too much like his old man"-for·
mer Gov. Edmund I.. (Pal) Bro"'n.
Nevertheless, he \viii \·ote for Jerry
Bro"'n-"l'm so disguslt'd wit h thl'
Hepublicans, I've got to go back to the
Democrats.''
Such attitudes run counter lo high
Republi can strategic thinking. \Vhil c
Republicans stress Bro\\•n's youth
.<36) and in experience and c rumble
!hat his family name is a major. un-
fair advantage, our voters cited youth
:_ind ;1ggrt'ssi 1·cness :_is his J::reatest
\'irtucs and identification \\'ith his
father's l'ighl·year regime as hi :.
greatest l'ice.
TllE VOTER perception of Flour-
noy is drenched \\•ilh irony. Although
;i major California politician for :_i
decad e. re"' \'Ot crs · kno\\· enough
ahout him to list personal \'irtucs or
vicl'S. While favoring: Bro\\·n for
~ovcrnor 2 to I , the S:1n Fernando
voters ga1•c Flournoy a resix·t1able 5G
[>l'r cent favorable rating lcomp:1 rcd
"'ilh Brown's 69 per cCnll. Although
moderate Flournoy has oCten opposed
conser\·ativc Gov. Reagan, they arc
seen as inseparable coll aborators by
anti-Reagan voters. A young hospital
technician complained th at Fiournoy
is ··too conser1'ilti\'l'. too much li ke
Jlonnie."
No r did J;:i st Tuesday's BrO\\'R·
Flournoy d e bate O\''er pub li c
television, the onl y dcball' BrO\\'n has
permi tted to hi' telecast statewide.
have much imp:1ct. Only 20 of the 71
voters interviC\\'Cd sai d thev sa\v anv
part of the debate. amd none seemed
influ enced.
lti\1'11 ER. many t.':<p rcssl'd
di spl easurl· O\·cr tombali\·erics~ h~
thl• candid ull:s. ;\ t·o1nmcrcial arti:-.t
in Qi s <10s comp:irl'd it to ··t,to fightl·rs
jabbin~ at one :1nothcr." adding ht•
.. ,\·asn't p<irticula rly impressed \\·ilh
either one." Kor did the dcbate. he
confessed . rl•mo.,·c hi s misgi,·in gs
lhat Bro\rn is a ··party hack \1hocan·l
deal in complexities." Still. ht' said.
hl' supports Bro"·n .. because he's a
Dcmocr:11.··
Oddl.1. lht! Republlcun l'resident
escal)<'s the anti -Republican. bing~.
interviewed the ~ay follov.nng ,his
5 per cent surtax proposal. these
l'Conomically h;ird-pressed \·Oll'rs
ga,·e ll1r. Ford an amazlnis2 percent
job appro\'al r ating. They even ga\·c
him a slight edge for Pr('sidcnt in 1971i
again'st Democ r atic Sens. llenrr
Jackson and \V ::ill er ?11ondale.
But !\fr. Ford Is n·ot.ninni nJ? in 19;.1.
'and good feeling to1\·;ird him b~· \'ott•rs
\\'ho are so angry :JI hi~ party hardl~·
helps !-{ugh Flournoy. 1'he rc;1J
question no\\' seems not ,,·hethcr silen-
t-majority \'otcrs \\·ill exercise th('ir
\\'rath against Republicans this ~·ear
but ho\\' long that 1rrath \\·ill extend
into lhe future.
State Employes' Political Clout
On the last weekend or this month
the C;ilifornia State Employes A s-
svc;;:;.~;;;;i will meet in San Diego to
elect its officers for the next vear . The
matter normally would be or little sig·
nificanceoutside the organization.
· But the CSEA projects itself into a
role or interest to all citizens by its
! recent change of policy concernin g
elections other tha n its own. For the
first time in its 43-year history,the em-
ploye group is endorsing candidates
for statewide office as well as for the
Legislature a nd backing them ~·ith
dollars.
COLLECTING S6 D year from its
more t han 100,000 members for a
campaign "kitty" the CSEA has ac-
cumulated a tremendous fund for
polltical activities.
( EARL WATERS ]
While this m ay not rockel them into
position as a dominant force in elec-
tions, it certainl y goes a long way to
making their influence relt in cam-
paigns. Since their objectives must be
to improve the status of their mcm·
hers as 'employcs or the stale !he
results of success can be expected to
cost taxpayers more dollars. Thus
their efforts should be of more than
passing interest to everyone. And it
becomes of concern lo more than just
the membership as to who they choose
to lead them.
leadership and
nobody 's patsy.
demonstrated he 1s
' ' • I ' NOT ONLY has his leadership
brought substantial employe bene£il
improvements but during his year as
president the CSEA has handled and
brought to successful conclusion more
individual grievances than in any
previous year.
As he has stated "success and
progress is not obtained in just one
year." It is lo carry out his unfinished
goals that he is offering his services
on the job. which is unpaid and
largely thankless, for another year.
Indicative of the person is the rael
that a m ajor and prominent plank in
his platform is his declaration that the
need now is ror "great emphasis on
improvements ror the retirees who
have been treated most unfairly in
these in Oationary years."
Credit: Dollars Out of Thin Air
FOR TllE pasl year CSEA has been
head.ed by John Matheny, a n able at-
torney in the Department or Tran-
sportation. l\-1athcny is attempting to
follow in the footsteps of another at·
torney in his department , Robert
Carlson, who several years ago broke
tradition a nd became the first two·
term president• of the group. Carlson
in s tilled a n ew vigor in an
organization which h ad becom e
somewhat s mug and decadent. He
brought into it a capable general
manager nnd, for n while, the CSEA
was on the way to fulfilling Its role o(
employc representation in a respon-
sible fashion.
His recognition t hat the security for
which the employes labored faithfully
lo gain in retirement has been eroded
is a measurement of-his compassion
for the workers. 1-lis interest in those
no longer active is evidence of his sin·
cere interest in the overall welfare o(
all people. \Y ASHfNtiTON -\Ve nil hope tif.'lt
Rin Tin Tin and the Inflation
1';ighlcrs do \\'JN . hut only those who
believe in the efficacy of fi ghtlnl!
fire \Vith fire can reasonahly hope
that President fo;ord's pll1n \\'Ill bU\:·
ceed. You don 't fight inflation hy
crcat.lng more of ii. . .
Puttin1t aside the good·1ntent1oned
c,;horl ation s to
:;hare your 1{f1.·
over Alpo "'Ith
.rour ne ighbor's
dog, the kc~· >A'orrl s
i n Air• io'o rd ':c
Sl)<'ech "·er ... : .. I
ha1·c pc rson<1 ll:o1
been ai1:turc<I hy
1hc ch:11rm a11 or
th<' ind('llt·ndent
Federal Res\'l'\'l' Board lh:it the sup·
pl~· or monc.\· and crl'dit "·ill cxpund
suflicientl,\· lri mee t th\• n('cd:t of oo r
cronom~· ..ind lh;i t in no ~\'cnt "ill :i
~ t.:rtdlt crunch occur.··
( VON HOFFMAN )
thnl is. pcopl ~ and bu sincs.~C's are nnw
going to 1he hank lo borro\\· to }lay in ·
tcrest on the loans they'\'C already
t:i kcn. By 11rovidinJ( more crL'llll at
thi s junclurc, \VC 're turning oursch..-ei1
into a nation or loto111 shark11:. with
each shark chompin.i;: on the tail or th(•
shark in front or it and havJn J! ltS O\\'n
tail chomped on hy lhc sh:1rk in the
rear.
<1ir, and you and your friends have put
the c1ssct~ uf)On which thi s debt and-or
·money h11s been created into your hcl-
lit·s.
1'hat's infl:1tion. und lhal is, in <'f·
feet. \\'hnt \\'e've been doln~ on the
most massi\'C imagi ntthle scall•. Thus
lhl• l1r,,.shtcn1's recommcnd'allon thal
"at least" S3 billion he thrown into
housing via mortgage purchas('S is
most unrortunate. Nut only is this
hi,1.!hly inflationary per sc but lt con·
lil\U l'S the 1>r<1clicc of usini: Federal
rredit-makint: ag('ncies to boom u11
mort· inflation out back where ~pie
can'tsceit.
and yet these arc among the major
mechnn isms for Spoiling the VlliU (' of
our money.
Beyond the direct action of ihr
itovcrnmenl. our private bankin,I.!
system has been manut<icluring debt
.and Infl ation al a rate that not. only
sl:1i:u:crs c:alcul <itlon but defies it. The
banks are running amok printlnK
money. Li slcn to llcnry Kaufman, rJ
rC"spcctcd businessman-economist,
1\'ho i:t u partner in the Wall Street
f ir1n of Salomon Druthers: "An
American credit markcl wilh very
ft\V rules of the gnmc or restrictions
"'ill e\·cntually turn into u 1.00 withoul
bars. It "'ill outomatc further· dcht
crc<1lion and raise interest rates to cx.-
traordinarily high levels.··
But at the end or Carlson's serond
term a group or mililonts took over. In
the fa ce ()f that the general manager
_ ·resii;i:ncd and the organization undCr·
went !iomc stormy weather.
Mathcny's e lect ion slgnall<!d a
restoration or some or the 11:oals which
Carlson had set. A !iOft. spoken and
re~onable person, P.1athcny has an
ability to work harmoniously with the
m c mber t. a nd with th e ad -
ministration. Wlth all that he Is strong
<!OOugh and 5mart enough to give firm
Quotes
Rahbl Jnseph 11. r"rt:cdman. S.f . -
'"In unt'ienl time~ the barh:irittns bur-
ned clu~·n the librnrie!!. I.el us not
<it'hicve·lhe sam~ e nd today by our in·
ORANGE COA~T
DAILY PILOT
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
Thomas Kt1uJil, Editor '
Barbara Krtiblch.
f;ditoriol Page EdlJor
The editorial page of the Daily
' Pilot seeks to inform and stimulate
readers by prcsentinc on this page
dil•crse commentary on topics 0( in-
ll':resl by syndlc1ted col umnists 1nd <'artooni~L,, by provldin_J a rorum
fur rtaders-vicw$ and by ~ing
this neW'papt:r'1 opl nl0ns and Ideas
on current topics. Tbe edhorial
opinio~ or lhe! Dally Pilot appear
only In lht edilorla l cotumn 1t the
top of the paae. Oplnlona ~J1Preaaed
by the Mlumnist'I and cattooni!llS
and lttler writers arc their own and
no l"ridor!.e.ment of tht.lr views bythe
Oally Pilot !!hould be lnterM
··Monday,October21 , 1974
..
Tfle crcdil rrunrh h11s occurred
:ilre~dy, but. as the ~xpcril~rce of 1he
J;st years mighl ha1,1c tnuRhl us, th~
crunch ge1:1 ~rlttlcr \\·h~n )"Ou con-
tinue to expo nd credit. \\\•'re: cntrl1ng
!nto a pcrlodol' non·producli vc t:rcd1t :
1\PPARENTLV nobody but the F'ar
Right a nd ::i f C\\' octogenarian
populisl<; understand 11nd appn~c1ute
the capn('ity or the t 'cd('r<1I Rciiervc to
c:.reatc inflationary debt. It '-''Orics this
\\'a)1. Suppose yo u hnvt' one doll :1r In
\Wt b::ink accounl but you huve a
Credit ctt rd. So you take yourself and, a '
~roup of frl l'nd !! lO a restaur:int whC're
you spend SlOO on dinner. Then sup·
pose that.. \\'ithout your ha\'ln;: puid
them. the credit c~1rd conip:iny people
·make a loan for $100 using your di!bl
:is collateral. Two hundred dollvr~
have h1..>-f.'n manufactured ouf nr thin
Bi\f,t\SCING lhC' budget is an cx~r
ci se in futility if, outside o( oill
budgetary lin1italions. quasi-indepen-
dent government agencies coin c:.reatu
such hu ge c louds of dcbl. It is
l'l)timnt('d th ut this year the Federal
llom<' Lon n Rank Board and Its
brothers 1n 1nflallon will rnanufndurc
nbout $19 million in dcl:ts that aren't
counted \\'ht!n prominent flC(lp lc mnk<!
t el"' iscd ' 11Pe<-'chcs ;1bout getting
Federal i:;pcndin~ down lo s;m hlllion.
fo1r. Ford's tax J)rOl)O!lal ~ don't even
begin w ntem1l laG ng p;:iylng for tho.Lt
lt"s hard lo write h;:irsh lhinfts about
Jerry }tord. It's been so long sinrt•
\\(''\'t h.ad guch a like.able fcllo'A' ln bls
Joh. hut he's ~ot lo Rfl rid of lh:it cir-
<'I~ of eronomlc advise~. lit mu~tn'I
<·otitinue to rely on tho~ "'orldly
sophli;!icwlc~ from the Grund Rapid'S
t.~:1mt"ler or COmml!f're and intcllcr·
tuo.I bankrupts rrom Ivy Le:i gut•
department!\ or economics. Taken
logelher they arc a congress or fg. norancc,
~-~--~---~-~------,--~--dttrcr~c, apulhy rrnd n~(ott.'• -=========-~-----' -----
~ ~~---~~~~----~~ ..
I I~
' •
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
"I didn't say I didn't like him. I just said, for the sake
'of energy I wish they 'd cut off rus electricity.··
Motels 80010
Love In Afternoon Profita.ble
MANILA, The Philippines (AP) -
Four city oouncllors are preparing an
~ssault ou a cherished Afanila pastime
-hiring a motel room for love in
the afternoon.
They have proposed an ordinance ban-
ning the hiring ol rooms for a "short
time" at the city's numerous motels
which make a specialty of catering to
ardent couples.
UNDER TIIE PRESENT arrangement,
couples may rent a motel room for
a minimum four-hour rate of ahout $4
to be alone for an afternoon, or a
morning, or an evening.
Taxis bearing 00\.lples pulling i n to
motels in the tourist and casino belt
of the city and suburbs are a common
sight nmt afternoons.
·"Especially around paydays," says
Councilman Cesar Lucero, an a'uthor
of the ordinance .
Lucero and otHer councilmen claim
motel owners give lo.fanila a bad name
and refuse legitimate lourists, who \Yant
rooms en a 24·hour basis, lo cash in
on short timers.
only bis department could s u p e r v i s e
them.
HE SAID TllE TOURlSJ\t department
was as IXJlloemed about nlorals as the
cowicilors.
Lucero said the ordinance was actually
aimed at raising more revenue.
The t'OWlCllor insisted the ord!nnnce
YiOuld not end love in the afternoon.
"I have been advising my friends
who are, shall we say, prolific, that
they band together and take a room
for 24 hours and share it, cne in lhe
morning, one in the afternoon, one at
niglll.
"AciuaIJy, it's cheaper that v.•ay."
Band Of W ome1i
Bares Breasts,
Store Shelves
-;;-;;-;-0-1;-d---------i su~~E~~r~!~i~?un~~ ll:!!-ct~~~
• • '6 hotel earned about $18 daily from a
room while a motel, renting one room
P • to several parties daily, earned up to r1so11ers Free "?.Most people use the rooms !0< about
BECKLEY, \\'. Va. (AP) -Some
coal field merchants have a moll<, these
days -beware of bare-breasted women
and belly dancers. -
One merchant, Frank Raso. owner
of Raso J\.larket at Eccles, said seven
yoong girls and an elderly \1'oman \\'ho
entered his store had quite an act.
He said one girl was nursing a baby
but also-left her other breast bare.
t"W·o hours," said Lucero.
They are the only hotels in the v.-orki
B t N t J with a record of 300 percent occupancy,"
said a Manila tour operator. u 0 uro rs Guest> at motels oflen do not register.
They usually demand no receipts for
RASO SAID ntA T after the \\'omen
left, he discovered that some jellies,
spices and canned meats were missing.
You Imo\\· !hose fancy straw baskets on some Italian
red wine bottles? Takes about 14 minutes to put one of
them together by hand , which is the only way they're
made. lf you have any around the house, you'd better
hang on to them, incidentally. The flea (Jlarket experts
contend they'lJ soon be .highly valuable.
ONE out of every seven divorced persons never re-
marries.
SCIENTIFIC EXPERIMENTS
payment, a practice Lucero c I a I m e d
cheated the city of taxes. "While she attracted my attention and
the attention of the customers." h e
"IT'S A LEGmMATE business," recalled, "the other women began mov·
claimed Antonio L. Chua, president of ing around the store jabbering in v.11rds
the Philippine Chamber of Motor Hotels. no one could understand. They C<IU!d
"The ordinance would kill the motel have taken the hinges off the door
business in Manilla. and I wouJdn't have known any dif!erent
"Actually" said Oiua, "personally I'm while that young mother was doing her 1..~ ...1 · ~..1 act." no.t against 'su .. ,rt time' being a1minat<;U.
But for travelers who stay for a v.•hile Another merchant, Jack ltobineUe.
to take a nap, for instance, they should of Surveyor, said he also was visited
get a discount. I think the tenn 'short by the women.
V11ion 1Uovie :
Actor Robert Conrad (top) says
he will portray onetime Tean1·
ster leader James R. Hoffa
(below) in new movie. Co nrad
plans to produce fihn late next
year.
Monday, Octobtr 21,,.1974
...
DAIL y PILOT A T
7
The Lush Life
Public Television
I
To Look at Booze
By JAY SllARB UTT
NE\V YORK (APl -The
1> u blic Broadcasting Service
tonight is airing ' ' Dr i n k •
Drank. Drunk."' a one-hour
look at the lush lire. It 's n1u~t
sce vie\vin g for anyone 1.-'Vn-
Ct!rned about the m n j o r
disease ca 11 e d alcoholism.
(Cha,nnel 28, 8 p.1n . I
Produt'fli by \\IQED i n
Pittsburgh and hosted b y
Carol Burnett, i!s ma in
emphasis is 'Oil h e l p i n g
families and empln~ers of
pr oblrn1 drinkers s po I !hf'
symptoms or alcoholics and
suggcS'!ing how to best rope
\\'ith alcoholics.
BUT THE llEA \'Y boozer
might also do v:e!I to 11•a1 ch
it. if only ror a vcrv funny.
yet rnzor-sharp sketch about
:'In ;.ilcoholic and h i s non-
( TV REVIE\V)
drinking. nagging \\·ire . It was
"Tittcn by the husband·aod·
1•,.ife. te<irn or Joe Bologna and
Renee Taylor.
They're contestants in a
game shi>\\', '"YO!.( \Yaste. Your
Life." in which the ceaselessly
cheery m.c. (Ron Ca re y )
notes the game is played for
high S1akes : ''You can lose
your wife , your family. your ·
house. your self-respect and
your drapes."
in siluatiorui of this kind : Lies
by the drunk, nagging by the
v.1fe , re1non;(', ha!(', forgive-
ness , rage alld so on.
At one point, she threntens
to lea\'~ if he touches !he
ga rgle a~ain. ;idding. · · I · m '
taking all the furniture and
your fl.1a1>'0\'an.i r('C(lrd s anod
r m turning t~ c hi Id re n
against you ... "
It's highly effective, as 1s
a serious. a!brit occasionally
propagandiung minidrama in
v•hich Larry Blyden plays the r rustrated, uncomprehending
husband of a dnink, s h e
portrayed by Ellen fl.1adison.
THE O:\'LY SLO'\V. pprtions
of this othef'i''ise v.·ell-paced
program or vignettes. s o n g
and non-preachy advice arc
a pair of scven·m inute pane l
discussions on · w h a t the
farn11ics and employers o { ..,.
alcoholics might do to resolV(..'\
thC' sC'rious problems couscd
by the hea\'Y drinker.
But over-all. the program~
its production and pron1otion
financed by a grant fr o1n the
3~1 Company. is an hour well
spent.
\'ou might ask why Carol
Burnett agreed to host the
shov.·. She ansv.·ers the ques-
tion in unninctung terms in
the opening segment : ' · ri.t y
par<>.nts died when they \\'('re
46 years old bcceuse t h e y
V.'ere drunks."
seem to indicate that the effectiveness
of insect repellent lasts longer on
women than on men. Why?
time' should be eliminated." -
Contestant Bologn3. bleary-
eyed and in a bathrobe. talks
about hin1self this way : "Well.
"'hen I started drinking, I
\Vas a Supreme Court justice.
'l'hen I landed a fascinating
job cleaning rugs. and now
I'm scmi·retired and living off
my mother's savings." Philippine Tourism Secretary Je&e D. HE SAID ONE performed a belly A
Aspiras, a cabinet member; said the dance, hollering "horsey, ho r s e y ,
DON'T KNOW who first said it, Manila City Council had no power to horsey." , POl~"l'S IN TlrE game are
but increasingly of late you hear this regulate motels. He claimed that by "But if they took anything, I didn't . . scored by the back-and-forth
quotation: "America is the only coun-(' .IJ>resf~~·den~~ti:"al~dec~r~ee~u~nd~er'....'.m'."a~rt~i:".al~la~w~-m'.'.'.'.'iss~it'.:,'--' _:be"'...'.ad'<>'.'.ded~. ----------"'~~-~"""~~~=::"'::::":'.._ __ ~psy~cho~lo"!gi<"· c~a"..l _'i«:ac:'.li".'"'~'°:'.':m~m~o'.'.'.n~~~""""""""""""""""""~ try in the world where they let the
prisoners go home and lock up the
jury."
~fOST QUOTED
Q. "What's the most quoted book of tbe Bible?"
A. Elsewhere than from the pulpits, the Book of
Proverbs, probably. Ai least Bartlett's "Familiar_ Quota·
tioos" prihts 109 entries from it, and oo other Bible book
gets that many_
YOU KEAR some men referred to as rats, some
\VOmen as cats. Lazy types as slolhs. Little folk as shrimps.
\Veak characters as jellyfistt. If he's a good strong fellow,
he might 00' called a horse. If he's a fool , a jackass. And
you get an impression. too, if you hear so~ebt?dy l~beled
an elephant, a shark or a tiger. Should a girl 1denufy 1:f'le
boy as an octopus her meaning is clear. Jf a man des1g•
'nates a woman aS a cow. that, too, says something. But
why ha ve they left out the Arctic pol.ar bc~r, the Au,s-
tralian kangaroo and the South American ~ire ant? Id
just as soon be called something different like that.
TllAT HALF the men in this country own guns has
been reported. Bul were you aware that one third Of the
wpmen likewise own gwis?
TWO Otrr OF every three grownup female grizzly
bears give birth to cubs every year. '1'h:3t was repor~e<l
Client asks why that one out of tliree 1s the exeephon.
I\1ama Bear doesn't mate when sl\f's taking care of cubs
or yearlings, that's why.
Address mni l to L. Af. Boyd P.O. Box 1875, New-
port Beach 92660-Copyrigllt 1974 L. M. Boyd.
M<i.gazirte Contes Ou.t
For lJ.S. Drug Usel"s
NE\V YORK (AP) -High
Times is one of those new.
g Io s s y specialty magazines.
It's an above-ground quarterly
for drug users.
';If a (.'()Uj'.i\e of thou~d
airplane pilots can have 20
glossy magazines, why can 't
26 million dope smokers have
one, too?," said An3slasia Sir·
rocco, a magazine founder.
IJJGll Tll\lES articles in·
elude reports on h a s h i s h
market conditions in L:ibannn
and LSD manufacturin g in San
Francisco, as well as advice
on indoor marijuana ga rden-
ing. Ads offer items such 11s
an1phelamine test kits n n d
mentholated rolling papers.
The magazine's centerfold
is a full color photo 0 r
"Brick." a 21>-pound cube of
nlarijuana.
"We're putting an ernuenl
penpective on an old topic,"
said Ed Dwyer. 26, editor or
the magaiine, which is two
NUDITY GOES
issues old. "\Ve wanted an
intelligent and sophisticated
approach to a subject that's
been badly reported by the
media before."
' "WE DON'T advocate the
use of drugs. but do feel that
a trade magazine for the drug
Industry is" necessary," said
J\.iiss Sirrocco. who wore a
Girl Scoot dress and a liny
cocaine spoon around her
neck at a publicity part'' for
the magazine.
Party guests s a m p I e d
laughing gas from balloons ,
stood In line for Alice B .
1' o k I as (marijuana-spiced)
brownies and pa s s e d mari·
juana cigarettes around.
According to the editors. !he
first issue. published in the
spring, sold ahmst 5 0 • 0 0 0
copies at a dollar each. The
current "Harvest Issue'' will
have an initial printing of
50,000.
TUE EDITORS say t h e
·most popuJar feature of the -
magazine fs the "Trans-High
1'1arkct Quotations" which
BERLIN (UPI) -East g;..,. a Dow-Jones like report
Gemwn authorill@:I h a v e on drug" iriees in cities around
appartntly changed t h e I r the world. Miss Sirrocco says
minds a b o u t dtscouraglng the m1ga.7.ine has contacu in
nudity on publiC beaches. the drug underworld for the
According to the East Berlin price quotations.
Changing the shape
of your ~dy could
change the shape
of your life.
Why bulge when you can curve? Espe-
cially, when you could be as trim and slim
as these pebple. Dieting can help. But,
diet atone isn·t enough. You've got to
firm up your body 10 eliminate flab.
We can help you do both with exE!r·
cise programs and suggested pat~
terns for weight 1oss. The most
modern exercise equipment.and
pro fessional supervision will
help you change the took. the
shape and the texture ol your
body. There are even Sauna,
Steam, Whirlpool, Sun
Room and Swimming Pool
facililies to keep you firm,
slim and trim. You'll look
great. feel great. Re~
member, you don'I just
get a shape; you get in
shape. Make yourself a
promise-Call today!
There are.5 different
Pl'OQrams-one to suit
the needs of each
individual person,
illdllcll111JOW ................. ., --·-.. lllt Spo for eoly S I
--510$. Beach Boulevard, Sou1h ot
Lincoln Avenue
826-0381 -622 East Kaletla Ave.,
West ol Tuslln Ave.,
639·2«1 ...... _
2300 Harbor Boulevard,
Harbor Center
.... 3368 ............
6757 Westmlnsler Avenue,
Westminsler Cen111r
8!M..J387 ........... , .....
18585 Main Slretl. Main SI.
at Beach Blvd. 642·1451 .. .... -4101 AUan11c Boulevard.
~~7~1.caraon. -1703 1 Vontura Boulevard,
Wos1 of Balboa
98G·li330 ncWllpaJ)Cr Der J\.1 o t g e n • There are some problenu
be1;1.chcs along the Baille Sett In pUtting out a ma g a zi nc
coast re~rved to n 11 d e reaturlng illeRal commodltle .
bathers have been stretched lC sub&cribcrJ"oJC( .. afraldil-.&.J•:
1---lo %51'111¢rh'Oifltlro S:! mlll!'! of having their n11mes on mall·
_0_1 _20-'-yc_u_rs_o~_o_. -----, in,:: 'ltsts. l\liss S!rrocco said.
" '
160 lb s.
•' ,.
112 lbs.
34·•
23··
29··
34··
19··
23"
..:.,....,._ ____ --------·-,.....~·--------
. • '
'
' llf DAILY P<LOT Monday.bc:tober2t, ti?( __ ._.,_...._. ~ ---"""""· .....
TONIGHT'S
TV HIGHLIGHTS.
KCET <28) 8:00 -Drink, Drank, Drunk.
:t! Carol Burnett hosts t hi!> s pecial program on
otlcoholism \\"ilh E. C. !\1arshall. Renee Tuylor,
.Joseph Bologna anti l~:irry Blyden.
NBC t.l l 9:00 -"The Candidate .'' Robert
Redford plays the title role in this m ovie which
follows•• ~enatori a l candidate through his ('am·
pa ign. Do n Porter. \\tclvyn Doug las and Peter
Boyle arc featured.
1\8C 17) IO :OU -The Con1manders. Dwight J 0 . l:::iscnhO\\'t:I', tcrnicd "the mos t JX>\\'Crful man t in lhc v.1orld .. in l!J.l-1. 1:i. profiled in a revealing
biography \Vhic h follo,\S him from Abilene.
Kan .. to the pinnacle or po\\ e r in \Vorld \Vu r II .
. -""""'----~
TV DAILY LOG
Monday
Evening
OCTOBER 21 ... IWm .... . OJ ~(j) ...... • 1 1 maac ...,.,
Ni&fllt '1 l~••n hJ P1e•"' Jt I""=..-~:::·""' ,.......,..,,.ilf ... _ ---..... ----""'1-•m-...,....., ,_, .... -..........
7:11
KOCE, C.111\NN.EL 50
Orange County's U flf' tele \•ision .s t ation ,
KOCE-TV. ha s scheduled the following .spe<'ia l
programs today. Detailed listings of Channel SO '.!
programs arc carried in the D:iily Pikll 's 1'\' \I/eek
each Sunday.
' I
MANN
THEATRES
MON. fal. OPIN 6 1IJ IO.M,
UI. a JUN. • OHN .. , .. , IO.llL
SHOW Al t 1t S UNOll 12 fUI
Ht.Ill WUIMUO.tf OC10M1 U
At Plldfic;'1 HllJl!way lt
'TAKING 0, PllHAM 123,. ,_.,.,
•IL-SI.
52S.J'M
.... ~ •... .... c. ... ~ co. ... ,, ..... .
514·•211
J
a--Ma·-~ ..........
"IEH HUR ... • .,......c_
"THE GOLD RUSH"
....
-.c.-.
"HARRY IN
YOUR POCKET"
HOW THllU TUlSOA Y "MIXED COMPANY" ,,..,
All ST AR LAUGH
RIOT
SHOWM DAILY AT:
-flllll -'-J:ff H;I. • UT. 1 • 11:11 -. ...........
MOH THl:U SAT. t :OO
SUK. 4 • 1:i o
.Iii# "'T* MOO•I TUW'
......... IOIS tT MYITr Ill ................
"'MOON"'9MI WAI'" lNI
,_ ... c..,c-,_,_C.1-f
-~----__ ,,,..__ .. _ ..........
"'CAIAllr
"'COlD TUl!ll't''" , ....
•DIAJH WISH~
"Sii.PiCO~ Ill
s-; ........ ,n,s ....... ..._ 1-s....1-..1""'
Open Oaolv 10 15 • m
..~:·~· , -.;p
' • 111j,\f!'\l11 •
i\l 11\I\,,
H IE ·\JJD!Ci\TIO,
0
I
! 'Lorelei'
iwm Go
On Ice
NEW YORK llJPll
Producers J,ee Guber and
Shelly Gross, who know a
i:ood thing when they ha\'c
it . urt.' closing the "'l..orelei"
musical on Broadway Nov.
3, but they are merely put·
ting it in theatrical moth·
balls roratimc.
This r etr ead of I950's
.. Gentleme n J>rcfer Blon·
dcs," starring, now as thc11,
the tireless Carol Channing,
has haJi quite a "'orkout.
and the end is not yet , the
producers say.
The Nov. J closing t:ontes
after 328 Broadway perfor·
mances. But before Broad-
-A• ay, th e show t oured
nationally ror 426 perfor-
mances.
llo"'cvcr . it did nol gel to
all of the major cities on
that tour. and they urc On
the agenda for lhe futurl'.
Not to m e ntion London.
"·tlcrc Miss Channing is a
popular entertainer.
A L o nd o n run i s
scheduled to begin early in
1975 after Mi ss Channing
has fulfilled some television
co mm itm e nts a nd a n
engageme nt in a I.as Vegas
night clu b.
U.STCHAHCf
TOSR ••..•.
PAUL MIWMAN
IOlaT UOFOaD
"THE STING"
17k1' fA .... !I
.W..:SCMN
1"SUTHER0 IPGI
By Tbe Associated Press
The Collow ing ure Bil·
tt~oard's record hits for the
week ending Oct. 26, as they
i:ippear In next week 's issue
of Billboard's magazine.
HOT SINGLES
1. THEN CAME YOU -
7. QUINCY JONES -
llOdy Hea rt, A&&I
8. AMERICA -Holiday.
Warner Oros .
9. PAlJL ANKA -Anu,
lJnlted A Rtlsls
10. JUI CROCE -
Photogruphs & Memories.
ABC
Dionne Warwicke and Spin-----------ners, Allanll< PlJBLIC NOTICE
2. YOlJ HAVEN'T DONE -------,.-..,--NOTHIN' -Stevie Wonder, MOt1ci 1NY1T1MG •1oi Motown ,, NOTICE IS HEAl8'1' Gl\ll!:N , ... t
3. YolJ AIN'T s~EN w•l•d P<OIMIWl1 wlll 111 ••(•lffd bV c. llle Cllr ol Co•U• M•W •I Ille oflk•
Wt-sler11rr NOTHING YET -Bach· ol I~ Cllr Cl••" •t 11'1• City Hiii.
d i JI f'1lr Ql'l~e. Co,1• .,,.s., c.lllomWI.
Form l' r · · Lawman·• man-Turner Over r ve, un111 .,. "°"' 01 11:00 1.m. 911,.,.,.,....
J ohn Ru ssell l!uests on Mercury ~·;..;!;,~;1!::., 1~:'.1:!.,w11!'::
tonight's epi so de or 4.· JAZZr-IAN -Carole =:.~;'~A'°:A"LU:~::::a~\~·
,"Gunsmoke" airinl:! al 8 King,A&Pi1 TRANSPOATATlo+I AN O SUCH OTHliA • I k CBS Ch I l'ACILITIES AS MAY 8£ AEql.llllE~ o c ur on . anne s. TflE DITCH IS BACK FOR TMe: 1N STAt.u.T10N o F 1A-2. AIGATION S't'STEMATT EWI NW.L E -Elton John , MCA P.t.1111. ATMLETIC. f1ELOS WEST o"
Wynn Family
'Centennial'
Actor Keenan Wynn und
son Tracy Keenan \Vynn, a
leading writer and dirt:elor
for television, will observe
th e ramily's lOOlh anni\'Cr·
sary in show business in
1976.
11ZORR011 _..,._
"'Girfs In Love••
IATIOlll
....._WM., HI~ S-.
6. CAN'T GET ENOUGH
-Bad Company. Atlantic
7. STEPPIN' OUT Gon na
Boogie Tonight -Tony
Orlando & Dawn . Bell
8 . S WE ET HOME
ALADA1\1A -Lynyrd
Skynyi;d. l\1CA
9. STOP AND SMELL
TllE ROSES Mac Davis,
Columbia -·
10. LOVE . ME FOR A
REASON -The Osmonds,
MGM
TOPLPS
I. BARRY WHITE
Can't Get Enough, 20th Cen·
Lu.-y
. 2, CROS~Y . STILLS,
NASH & YOUNG -So Far,
Atlantic · '
3. JOHN DENVER
Back Home Again, RCA
4. WELCOM E BACK, MY
FRIENDS, TO THE SHOW
TIIAT NEVER ENDS _:_
LADIES AND GEN -
TLEMEN EMERSON ,
LAKE & PALMER
Atlantic
JUNIPEAO DRIVE.
A >II ol pl•ni, spic lllc11lon1 •11d
olh~ conl••<I doc11m11111 mey Ill:! '°"
l•itlfel !11 UM olflte ol the ~rt ... l!t
ol Ltilw•• S••YICll, 11 f1lr Dl l'tt, Cos!• Mew, C•Hlornl•. upon r«1lpt
ol • no11rt lundJDl1 ••• ol $6.00. II
blddef") ,,.,...,1 pl""' •nd Wl«llk..tlhlll~
De m•Ued, 11\1 ch•t gt wlH bl 11.so
Pt• ... 1. ~o;h Did !-IWll Dt m-on U. ..,_,
form ""d In Ille mir.n111r pro•ldtd in
!I'll! tontr•cl doc11m1n11, •ttd tll•ll bl
...C<on>PiAltd Dy • cortllled Ill" uslllotf'• ell •<~ o• • Did Dolllt lo~ not ltl>
111111 10 P••c1nt ol 11'1• •moo,1111 ol
1"1 Did, m1d1 por •DI• lo 1111 C.lly
ol Gal.II Mfw. -.
NOTICE IS f'UA THfR GIVEN ll11t
tt11 cu, Ctun'll ol 1•ld City II• s
111relolor1 •it•bll\lltd • prtNlilflQ rill
....i Kiie ol ••911, tn •ccOf'IMrlc.I wlllt
•••· te De p•hl In 1111 constt11ctlon ol 1111 •IMIYt 1nt lll1d lmp•e•tnMnH.
T ... t wid ••I• •nd 1o<•I• Wll ~ed
Dy 1111 CHy Councll I>• Ati.ohMlon "9.
,.,., o., 1111 1111 d•Y or J•nuaty ttu.
,.,d 11 on Ille In 1111 olll<• ol 11111"
City Clerk ot )•Id City. Tll•I 1•ld
tllll" 1nd sc•le It t'H!rt ln rel1rrll'd lo
oillld -ilCl<>Plll"d in l"i' noll<I 11 ll>ougn
h1Uy •nd complelely stl tort" lllrtl.,.
•nd 111•1 s•id 1c•l•, •s 1dopl1d ""
s•ld re101wt1011 , Is m1dt • Cl'fl ol
11'111 notice Dy f1!ffrtnce.
Tiit Contr1ctor Wit, ht llW
Pti-lorm•nce o l 1111 work I" d lm-
prottmenls, tontorm I• 11111 UDor C-
ol 1111 $1111! ol C•lller11l1 1114 o\lllr
11....i ol 1111 St•le ol C.litoml1 IPO!Ubll
l,..relo, wllh Ille ••t tpllo., only o t
•11cll ~•rl•Uon1 11 mly bl required ur>de• 11>1 1,..cl•I st1h1!11 pun ... nl to
wtolcll ptOCHdl"!IS lllr111ndtr ... Uklll
illd which l'I••• nol 1>11n •-•M-
bY I"• pro•i•lo111 ot Ille L1b0r C-.
l'reforfntt lo l1b0r ll'li U Ill:! 91...,. on!r
in 11'11 m.annt• llfO•~d Dy In.
No Dld shell bl consld•rM 11nte•1
II is m•dl Ort I lrl•nt form l11rnl1111!d
Dy 11'11 Clly ol Co1l1 Mes•. 1,,d 1,
"-ll\.•ctordl11C:1 with '"' pnMllon1 al uw ,........, req01ir"ltYll.,1s. ·
5, CA ROLE Kl NG E1c11 l:i11101r muu 111 11c,111td '""
W A d J A'·'! 1ho prequoillltitd 11 rtQulred O'f' ..... rap roun Oy, w.>• The CllY Countll ot IM Clly ol
6. BACHMAN·TVRNER ~I• ~W~Mn•••. Ille right'° f1!1t<t
"ntl Sl'ACI ODTSSIT"'
"CH.UtoT Of TMI ~S'"
-.cMMI SHILTEI'" lrGI
OVERDRIVE Nol e_11N11P.P111-w • C1!\1Clerk Fragale, Mercury P11DU11Mo 0.•11ge co111 o.uy Pi lot,
Oc:loWr 1•. "· ltl~ ll:S&-1•.
.. --..
$140/UM ..
' "-'-...
IPGI
,
'"WISlH • llLL.R'" , .. , • "UST SUMMll ..
'"'HAU.T & TONTO"' IPGI
&
""HMaT IM TOUa POCUT'"
• .,
. • . MISSiO , IEJO IMPORTS'
-MERCEDES BENZ-
Sa!es • Service • Leasing
21701 MARGUERITE PARKWAY
485-1700 MISSION VIEJO 131·1740 ' ~'!!!!!s.;,!11!!, .,.,..,;.,. teA""r Phy: ••.-rtl)ltt .. ~tt·
"llG MOMMA N
Ill
3:1M:IO.t:l5 ' .
,,.,
AIRPll,RT .,.
..
u ~•·""4 •""*• X :?!'~--lt--...... ;ni;..,.~
...,,. MATM•
•
. .
•
•
•
•
• •
•
Don't iust sit
there on your
small ·fortune •••
• • ••
•
I •
Look around your house and garage and you'll probably diSCOYer you haYe a
mountain of oldies but goodies you could sell. MoYe that mountain.
·Call a friendly ad-•isor at· the Daily Pilot. Use the direct line.
· Thousands of re~·to-buy ad readers are "shopping the ads in the Daily Pilot
e•ery day. Many are eager to buy just what you haYe to sell.
-.
· ~~e1iise in -the OranCJe Coast Newspaper with ~~ ~·
..
'
Ad .Line . 642-5678 • • • •
. . .
•
•
. .
I
·,.
DAILY PILOT
•
I '
•
•
\
I
ii 10 DAILY PILOT ' · Monday,Octobtf21.197•
Billie Jean
Collapses;
UCI Plans 16,000-seat i-dollle
Big Payoff
~AN DIEGO -Pro tennis star Ril·
lie J cun Kin g, 31, was taken to t.lcrcy
Jlospila l complain ing or chest and
•~Mulder pui ns Sunday after she col·
Jap.st.-tl on a golr course, orCicia ls say. •
After an examination in Uic hospita l
emerge ncy roon1, she was advised to
tclum home to Long Beach to rest.
'King was in the gallary watching
the Ladies PGA golf tournament with
her hus band, l.arry, ""'hen she collap-
sed. There was no indiccilion of heart
o r ches t t ro u b le, a hospit a l
spokesman sa id uftcr she was
r clcasctl.
Mfu.rr's tht• Wi1111 .. r?'
TIJUANA ·-A bettor ·picked five
\y jnners In the Agua Caliente race
track 5-10 pool to win $104,000 Sunday
~nd then failed to show up to claim the
111oncy dur ing the evening.
Jt was the firth major p11yorf in the
5-10 pool since the track reopc:ned
fl:Jav 4th follow in~ n fire in t97 L p .
1'he anonymous bettor picked rii:i:
t·ess Sun , $8.80, in the fifth; Deano's
Ruken, $15.80, in the sixth; Hintad, SA
in the eighth ; Evie's Port, $2G.OO in
the ninth a nd l'itiss Spotted Thong,
$1.80 in the tenth.
The wager e r missed· on Real
.)Joney , $51.40, in the seventh.
"It's not that unusual ror them not
to claim the winnings right away,"
said track publicist John Greensmith.
"1',or one thing we sell tic kets in En·
senada and t.t exicali and the winrier
may not hear the resu1ts until after
the track closes."
Nnsl!J Wh1s
• BA R C ELON A, Spa in -Ilie
Nastase or Roma nia beat Atanuel
Orantes of Spain 8-6. 9-7, 6-3 for the
men's singles title in the Spanish
Open tennis tournament Su nday_
N11stase relied on strong drives and
a powerful service throughout the
match against the tenacious Jefthan-
der.
[\10 Refire1t1P11l
ATLA NTA -Slugger Henry Aaron
says he is now ··99 percent sure" he
will be tryin g to add to his home run
record of 733 next year, but he still
won't say wh ere.
Aaron made his comments in an in·
tervicw Sunday on CDS television.
By CRAIG SHEFF
0t !1w 1)61 It PllClll 5oi•H
UC Irvine toduy launched a n am·
bi lio us $100,00l.I (und·ra ising drive
whil·h it hopes will lead to major
university a thletic status in the im-
mediate future.
Included in UCI's plans. as outlined
by assistant athletic director Rod
Sherrn a n today, is a 16,000-seal multi-
purpose mini-doml', which could be
Jess than fi ve years a way.
1'he rund-raising drive will encom-
pa ss a six-week period with Sherm11n
optimistic that UCI will have Sl00,000
by Pee. 3.
nie former use and pro football
standout outlint d the Anteaten;' im·
mediate goals for this year at a press
contcrence [oday.
··Jn the first year we hope to go from a very mediu m Division II school, as
ta r as scholarshi(l!:i are concerned, to
a top grade level.
Across the board, the added fun ds
wi.11 double ou"r scholarships, upgrade
our scheduling a nd travel, initiate u
top recruiting e rrorl and upgrade our
overall inter<:ollegia nte athle tic
(lrogram," says Sherman, wbMe
chief function at UCI is t.o raise funds.
"'We wa nl lo become a yery strong
Division II school and our in1mediate
goal is to seek majqr di \'ision slat.us ..
1'he fund-rai~ing e(forts should 1m·
mediate ly 00 felt in recruiting efforts
a nd in scheduling n1ajor teams.
Sherma n a dds th~t the multi-pur-
pose mini-dome has bccn disc ussed
by the UC! t1lerarchy and coul d be
built within five years, if the fund·
raising drive is successful and UC[
can secure grants from other sources.
Published reports have predicted
Aaron will sign with the ~1 i l'A-·aukee
Brcv.•ers or the Ameri can League as a
designated hitter, be<:oming general
m anager in 1976.
But Aaron said he has not decided
where he will play next season, and he
c alled the lt1ilwaukec reports pure
specul ation.
Ul'IT ..........
BILL DRAKE STOPS WILBUR JACKSON OF THE 49ERS AFTER A SHORT GAIN SUNDAY,
l\'ewc,ombe Roll• Beari, · Pack
MiX It U . p
49ers Manhandled
Rams Find , a Passer SYDNEY , Australia -J ohn
Newcombe won his second straight
Australia n in<loor tennis champion4
ship Sunday, defeati ng Cliff Richey,
who let his tem per i-:ct the best of him.
Newcoml>e collceted St3,610 ror his
6-4, 6·3, 6-4 triumph •while Richey
picked up S7 ,000. In TV Duel As l(arri,s Sets Pace
Richey thrc<i lCn('d to walk ofr the
court in the eighth ,l!a me of the second
set when, trailini! :l··I, a root fault y,·as
called on him for a third lime by the
same li nesman. llowcver, the Texan
rompleted the 21 ::-·hour duel alter the
linesman v.•as rl•placed.
CHICAGO (AP ) -The llllh
renewal or the National Football
League's longest running rivalry will
pit the Green Bay Packers against the
Chicago Bears tonight in a nationally
televised game.
• LOS ANGELES (AP} -James was that he executed the lhings that
Harris didn't mind a l all that the Los we wanted done .. Obviously, there
Angeles coa ching · staff,. with help were a couple 9f running plays that we
from John Hadl, ca lled all the plays put into our offense to take advantage
for the quarte rback's frrst start for ofhisability."
A sellout crowd of 55,753 will pack
Soldier Field with the Bears trying lo
even their record and tie the Packers
the Ram!t. . · Coach Dick: Nola'n or the 49ers, now
CndetN Colle<'I
''Ri ght now, [ have no objection to 2-4 compa red wit!t 4-2ror Los Angeles,
their doing it," said the 27-year~ld has quarterback proble ms he can't
Harris , who became one o( two black immediately ans wer.
AIR FORCE ACA DE?ttV, Colo. -
Tt!xas billionaire Ross Perot. a
graduate of the naval academy, lost
more than pride Saturday when the
l\litlshi11mrn v;ent dov.-n to Air Force
in a football clash. Jlc lost money.
011 TV Tfl11igh1
Cha1111PI 7 al 6
starting quarterl_>acks in the NFL J\1orrison was hurt in the second
Sunday ·along with Pittsburgh's Joe quarter , J oe Reed repl aced him and
Gil liam. was inef(ective. Rookie Tom Owen
for second place in the Central
Division of the National Conference.
He used the orders to engineer a 37· finished up and passed for two touch·
14 victory over San Francisco's 49ers, downs in the seC'ond half.
The Packcr-s boosted their record to
3-2 with a 17-6 upset or the Los An geles
Rams last Sunday while the Bears
slipped to 2-3 with a 13-10 defeat at
Atlanta.
throwing three touchdown passes and By halftime, the Rams had scored
. l'C'rol had a \11;1gc r with t he
Colorad<> (";11lrts that if"the Mi ddies
~ot sun k hc 'rl pay u11 ""Hh vacations
for ·hl Air f<'or te studPn\s and their.
da!C'S.
running rour yards for another TD. more points with their 27 than they
Alter the Rams lost to Green Bay had in any or their previous Sgames. ·
N~l\:y lost l!l-Hi. and the Cadcl<;,
whosC' nantl'-" \Vere chn scn from a
h:1rrcl rluring hal ftime, are trying to
r.lt ·cidc v.:hcl'l' 111 go
Hut PC'rot's loss \.\.':tS alro Navy's
ln~s -the sc,·cr<1l hundrl'd riiidship-
n1en \\'hn C'lllt·rcd the \.\.·a_gcr Y•ill have
togcthaircu1..-. _,,,-.
Williams · Keys
Lakers Defeat
The Bears "'ill rely on the passin g of
Gary lluff and a young but tough
d e fensive line a nchored by Wa lly
Chambers who is even playing harder
than he did last year when he won top
delensive rookie honors. . ,
lfuff 's main targets h:i\'e heen
Charlev \Vadc and Bo Rather, both
·ncq uirC_.d from the Miami Dolphins.
Wade has grabbed 19 passes ror 382
yards and Rather 13 for 196 including
two touchd owns.
Green Bay's dC'Ccnse apparently jel-
led against the Rams last week with
the return to form of cornerback Wil -
lie Buc ha non a nd the he roics of
linebacke r Ted JI end ticks.
Buchanon afipears to be roundini: f.()S ,\~l tF:r.F'.S !i\P) -lfesC'rvr.' into rorm aflC'r s uffering a broken leg
J\:1lc· \\'llh:ims scorf'd lhrC'c baskets in last SC'ASOn. ll is intercepti on led to a
lht• (':trl) rn1n 11t <'s of the fourth quar· . Cheste r f\.1arcol fi eld goal a~ainst thl!
lt·r lo hf'lp llu• K;1nsas Cit y-Oma ha lfams. Jtendrick!J picked ort lhrec f\1n~~ s1a\ l' nff J.ns /\ngelrs and post a
1115-9:1 N a tio nal Ba sketba ll As· Rams passcs.
!-'iociatinn \'il·lory over the Lakcrs Sun· The Packers, howC'ver, h ave had
day niJ?hl . trouble vl ith I heir of(cnse. Quarter·
17·6 a week a go, coach Chuck Knox .
decided to replace the veteran Iladl Cl
with Harris . who played three seasons
with Buffalo be rore joining the Rams
last year. ·
But where Had! did his own play
callin g, 1-larris had his come in rrom
the sidelines.
"It took an awrul Jot or pressure ort
me," the quarterback fro rn Gram-
bling said but added that arter a few
ga mes, he might like to do. his own
play calling. '
Harri s hit 12 or IS passes for 276
yards with touchdown~plays covering
SO-and 13 yards to Lawrence McCut· ..
chcon and 44 to Harold Jackson. Dave
Elmendorf sta rted Los Angeles otf
with a 52-yard scoring dash with ao in-
tercepted Dennis l'if ortison pass.
"'The diCfcrencc fo r us was lhat we
,:!ot the big plays," said Knox "'. ••
.something we had not done in our
pre"ious five games. That pass inter ·
ception m arked the first time our
defense has scored rorus all year.
··•rarris did a big job ror us. He
caught lhe 49Crs in a blitz and hit Mc-
c utcheon for a touchdown . The thing I
liked best about Harris' performance
l.os Ani::11l1•s h:id overcome a 17· back J erry Tng~e ranks 12th in the
point thirfl-quart('t' dl'firil and til"d the Nationa l 'conference with S6 com·
·~C'or<' al 7fi iii "' i! h the rourth quarter pletions in 114 atte m pts.
only a minute old when Willi:ims John nmt'kin,l!ton, who ga ined 1.000 _
n1;1dt his kC'~' l!'•al~. yard s in each of his first three R-• u • " * " • ..... ,._,,
Thf' J\inj;s "'l'rt nf'v('r thrcalC'nCd Al 1.m ...... s -10.010
aft('r thiil . season got orr to a slow start a nd not . tt.:tt."' -E•me 11oor1 ja p•u 1111~t••U~11 R•Y
·rhi~ 14·point st"c·ond quarter rqu:il· until his 9R·yard performance o{ last LA_ Mt CulcMOti so"" trom ""'''• 1111y
lrd lht• Lakf'rs low of a year,8 ,;:o. Sunday hadheshowntop(orrn~ Mtt.
hc .hownlop ro•m . ..!-,"' -MtCuttlleOll IJ ptsS fflll'1 H1rrl1 A1y ·Dunne. the quart('r, ltmj illillcjll!'it 25 v " .....
perrrnt of lh<'ir fir Id ~oal attempts. The Bc-nr~ a lso h nvc had trouble ·~:.. ":;~1~:"'::~~!~~om 0 .,,. Gositl( fl•ll~""" ~A~~.As1 ~"::';';':i0 ':' •• L•ctv s moving the hall on t~ ground. With 11k '
Jl·m ll•,1rn··. on 1·n1·urcd, Carl Garrell sF -w. Juk.on 2• oau ,,_ 0•9 °''""' 7 J 11 , Ar(fllb•IO I It 10, W.i••r I t•IJ 11, ., •lo:•
O"A111on1 a o.o o, «o .. ••1 ••••. ' •-1 '· McN•111 nod rookie Ken Grandberry have had ... -FG ••v.. • ) I I I, M~, 1 O·f ,, Wf'lltn.., 0 0-0 0, Willl•M' • I H ' • • )Joi t '"'•". ~-Jt. to t'arry the lond. Grandberry has 183 .t(llA -tt. J•c••011 • oatl ram Irr I .,
LOS aNGElES ti yarr1s 1n SI rush(I S (or a 3.6 average INOl\llDl.IAl U.t.Oellll
M•f•\10" • ,., 11 • ""•• 11 '·• Jo, ~"'u" biit G•rn.>tl has OOen ht.lit to 1S2 in $4 A1.1SM1NG -S•n '••n<hco. sttirt11o1r 11-11, ? I t '· Glllld•H fl J • I 10, P•+<" • 1 1 II, w J•<•MPI • 11. l.O\ Aftttlt\, M(.(lll<llton tt.16,
11.,,, o o.o o. t1r10111,, o o o o. 1.0 •• • o ~ nttrmpts for a 2.8 avcra.izc. ~'W'ft 1.11, 10.•r•1t t.11. ftM .. s.u .
I. W•\ft1~01on 0 0-0 0, W•Pltr .... ' a 0 • Tolfl~ AEttlVING -,." '••"<lt(O, k llr•ltll"r 1-?t!, "° n 10 Tho Dear. hold 'n: U' .1.a.9 cd<e In the w. J•~•,." l·t•. "'•1moW1<1 ,.,,, ... ,111, ''''· it.o-Cily ts " 11 " I~ o11r,.g '" H •-• ,.., M<Ollt"'°" t.oJ. A..-~ ,. '' n n· tt series. La~t«ea8on they defeated the ~:.:~,.tt"'" · · --·. ..
f'oullPd oul: WI IHI Mt. Tolot' kiiolJ; K.t"Wll Cilf :Packers 31-17 In Green 'Bay bul lost At P.t.!.S!HG !ion F•ll'ltl''°· ow-I0.1'•1, us Yf•dl:
n. l~~~"r"" ."· -il0mc.2l,Q-in Lhc,a.ca.aootin:iil10.----~-..,,.1~~;.Mo••lton .. ,. .... '-~ ""m' it-1------t!!'I: lf.'I . .
'
•'The mini -dome would ~tM:P th"
entire campus, not just athletics. We
could have concerts. speeches and
other things or this nature. aloog with
athletic events." says Sherman.
1'he UCI athletic staff is also di!icus·
sing the possl.bilily of augumenting an
jntercollegiate volleyball progran1
within the next couple or years-and
may even have a football program in
the not too dista nt ruture.
"fo,ootba ll is not a numbe r or years
away.'' says Sherman, ''it"s a number
of dolla rs a way.••
_ Sherma l'I h11 s ~i \·idc~ the fund·
raising setup inlo l\.\.'O teams-<>ne
made UIJ or the Big l l>ooster bo~rdta
group or 401 a nd the other compo~
or a challenge lttllm !about ~s u.1-
di,·idualsl. The the me.or the dn"~.1s
.. excellance den1ands lll\'E'!ltment.
··I've had people co me lo me and
sav they \\'OUld like to see something
ha.ppen· at uct, and manY. or these
people a re not UC I 11lu1:11n1. ~ the
ooinnlunity is really behind ~hts and.
that has e ncou raged me. 1 •• m con-
fident we can get t~e $100,000.
Arabs Ripped
Olympic Chief
'
Fires Broadside
VIENNA (AP> -International But IOC members a lready have
10lympic Committee President Lord , said priva tely they must guard
Killanin skirted !he issue or.two U.S. against a repetition or the Denver
bid5 for upcoming Olympic Games situation.
thiSmorning at the opel!ing or th~ IOC · ':Impossible,'' said Los Angeles
meeting and took t~e opportunity to Councilman Donald D. Lorenzen, one
denounce political interference in or the city's presentation t.cam ... The
sports. slate la\.\.'S or Ca l~fornia are different
Killanfu, without mentioning any from those or Color ado. Under-
countries by name, fired an a pparent California la w. no ~ntra_rt that has
broadside a t the Araborountries as the _b;een signed can be invalidated by a
15th IOC session opened. rfferendum. ·
Killanin referred to recent cases or ·~Anyway, public opinion polls have
athlete s being preYe nted from . sbown that 71 percent of the citizens or
competing ror political reasons. ·~s Los Ange1es want the city to host the
obvious re rerence wu to the Asian Olympic;:•· said Lorenzen.
Games al Tehra n, al which the Ar•b Lake,Placid 's John Shea, a double
nations boycotted t:ve.nts in which gold medalist in speed skating wh~n
Jsralies were competing. the Winter Olympics were last held m
The IOC meetini, scheduled to 18st Lak~ 'Placid in 1932, also said: "Im·
throug h Thursday, W·ill choose possible."
between Moscow and LOI.Angeles -as "We have all our (acilities ready
a site for the 1980 Surhmer Olympics ar\d need to do nothing that would
and will consider a solo bid by Lake af[ect the environment and cause
Placid, N. Y., to host. the Winter cont rovers y . And we ha ve full
Games. Chang es in t he rules fina ncial backing from bot h the
go vernin g athle tes' Ol~mpic federalaod:;tategovernment."
eligibility we re on the agenda for President Ford has written a letter
latertoday. to Lord Killanin emphasizing that
Members of the two U. S. what happehed in DenYe r could noL
delegations are expected lo try to .be repeated' if Los Angeles and Lake
hamme r home a simple message here Placid are awarded the 1980 Games.
.this week -"'Denver won't happen · Killanin refe rred briefly to the
again." ' problems or choosing sit'es for 1980
Both American delegaµons tnow and the prolJ:Osed changes in the ~hey have to live down the m~morles eligiblity rules. But he came back:
o( Denver, which was awarded tbe to political interference and said all
1976 Winter Games and pulled out two other matters ''are r elegated to
years later a lter a state referendum. unimporta.nce compared with this
That did the U.S. image no good.in the recent dapgerous a nd destructive
eyes ofthe lOC. element.
But at the formal opening o( the
session in Vie nna's impOSing 19th
century neo-gothic city hall, K.illantn
put' most or the em phasis in his speecb
on political interference in sport. -No .Panic
In an obvious reference lo the Asian
Games, Killanin said, "Recently
there have been cases or .the use of A Bl
athletes for p0Ulical purposes WheJI ' 8 aze
t hey have been prevented Crom· .•
competing against another athlete. • ·' .i
especia11y in contact sports, because H" En o
. lheiradministrators donotagre1;with l(S ' gme
the national or political attitude or the · 1 . '
government of the country, rro°" ' ,· . • '
w~ich .thelropponen~emana~. TERRE ... HA'tlTE, Ind. CAP) -"No
'This ls not sport. ~ntheA~abs · one panicfed, but I didn't hear a ny
rerused to compete against Israelis at laughter' or joking either,'' said coac!t T e ~ran the~ were . ba~ked by ·Torii Harp arter the plane carry ing
mainland China , wh1.ch is not ~ the Ind.Jana State University footba ll
member or the Olympic fn9Vement team mad~ a forced landing due to a
but h ~~ bee n ed ging towards fireinone engine, reet?gnit~o~ by the IOC. "Everyone got a little uptight, par4 Kilian•~ s spcec~ could also be seen ticularly whe n.the stewardess started
!-15 a_warn1ng to China or~st8nd~rds explaining emergency crash·landing
tt will have t_o confonn to rf admitted procedures," hf said. "I've never
totheOlymp1cs. seen the team hslen with such inten· U.S. Olympic .officials representing sity •·
Los Angeles and Lake Placid are ~ot The 48 members or the ISU team cx~cted lo go , before t~~ meeting and coaching starr returned safely to
u_ntil Tuesday with a dec1s1on on the Terre Haute Sunday after making the
s1tes nOlexpect ed beforeWednesday. landing a t Lex ington, Ky., a nd
changing pla nes. They were returning
rrom Cullowhee, N.C., after Satur•
day's 18-3 loss to Western Ca rolina.
"I'm a private pilot myself," Harp
said, "and since it was a chartered
flight, I we nt into the pilot's cabin.''
"Suddenly, I heard the warning be ll
and saw a n e ngine trouble light come
on, so I just tried to return to my scat
nonchalanty.''
llarp said some or the p18yers heard
the bell and looked out the window at
the ri ght engine on the twin-engi ne,
propellor·dri ven North Ce ntral
Ai rlines Convair 580. It was on fire
and had been shut orr.
"Eve n football players know
t hey're in trouble When the propellers
don't go around,"llarpsaid. '
The pilot extinguished the fire in the
air and flew with one engine to the
nearest airport -Lexington's Blue
Grass Fjeld. The plane landed safely
about 7 p. m. Saturday.
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MV's Schmidt--Lions Upend Vikes· Pro Cage,
' Hockey
Raiders ·Pull It Ont Standings
•
Bomb Thrower
1'1inncsota's Vlkincs fell t-Tcd lliletnikorr and t1o110 to with 17 scconds lert·
from the undl'l"v.:ited class tight end Bob fl'Ioorc>. Griese wus booed by fans
and Oakland ti.I me rrom 1'hc Bengals had taken ~1 throughout the game us he
behind with i.l last-minute 14-6 halftime bulge und ap-completed 11 of 25 passes
rally lo highli~ht Nation;,( f)<•ared to be on their way to and had three intercepted.
l-'ootb<.ill LcilgUe plriy Sun -Ufil'Sl·C\/Crwin atOakhand. liis off·t;1rget rourlh-
<lay. But on the opening play or do""'" pass kill ed oiic drive
l>ctroit's i~ions ended a the second half, Oakland's on Kansus City's three.yard
six-yt:a r jinx aguinsl the Jack Tatum intercepted line, and un interception en.
Vikings, 20-lG Minnesola and ran 40 yards to the ded another march otl the
had beaten the I.ions in 13 Bengals four to get Oakland Chlers· seven.
straight Central Division back in the ~ame . s T . LOU I S ~ T
contests. Elsewhere in the Nt,L llOUSTON -It to~ !!
PSunday : maximum crro rt ror the St.
Bula J~em Il<irneyinter-NEW ENGLAND AT LouisC<:irdinalstopreserve
ccption of what was intcn· BU t' FA L 0 -Pa u I their u'ndcfeatcd record
<led to be a winning touch· Seymour grabbed a pair of 'A'ilh a 31·27 victory O\'Cr the
down pass by f'ran Tarkcn· touc hdown passes rrom Houston Oilers.
ton wilh 16 seconds to play quarterback Joe f,erguson The Cardinals ha d t o
t!nded that string. to lead the Buffalo Bills to a stave arr a furious llouston
Detroit c1u<.1rtcrback Hill :!0·28 victo ry over New rally in the f inal going to
1'.lunson pa!lsed for 276 F.:n g tand, clippi n g the keep from joining Ne"',.
y<.1rds \\'ilh 22 tompletions J>atriots from the ranks of l:ngland and 1\.t innesota in
in 32 attcn1pt s. \\lidc the N t'L 's undeCealed toppling from the un-
recciver Hon Jessie accoun-teams. derealcd ra nks.
t cd for n1osl of Detroit's Sam Cunningham, for -NE W OR LF.ANS AT
passing yardage with 10 mer USC fullback, raced 7S AT L ANT A -The fans
receptions for I lG yurd-yards for a touchdown on booed, lhe players brawled
:..-inrl udin).! so1nc s pec-the game's first scrimmage and Norm Van Brocklin
lacular l'alC"hi.!s. p/:1y for the P atriots. J-lc ad· blamed it on the strike.
!\:le<inwhile, ul Oakland. ded <inolher o n a 12-yard But his Atlanta Falcons
Cincinnati's Uid for an UJ>Sct jaunt late r in the first half. lost to the New Orleans
was nipped in the waning K ANS A. S C IT Y AT Saints. 13·3, as the winners
seconds as Oakl<ind 11uar· 1'11:o\~ll -Quart.e rback ~b snapped an 18-game winless
tcrback K en Stable r Gr~esc's i::rrat1c pass~n g strcakonthe road.
enginee r ed <.1 52-yard pai d off In the clo_s1n~. At the final gun, players
:-;cor ing mau:h after the sccon~s to lead the .!\11am1 from both benches emptied
Raiders had t:1ken control Dolphins .to a 9.3 win over and brawled for nearly two
<.1f the ball with 1 :36 to go ~ansas City. . minutes before order was
andnotimcouts lcH . lie threw for gains of 29 restored.
Charhl• Smitli t•appcd il an_d s_even ya r~s to I.end ··1 haven't seen a good
\\'ith a t"·o·y<.1 rd s"·eep "'it h hl1am1 _53 yards 1n the final football team this se;:ison,"
eight seconds left after l"'O minutes for the only . Van Brocklin said as his
!->ta bier i:ot thc Raiders into touchdown of the game. club fell to 2·4, the same as
range with three' straight Fullback La rry Csonka theSaints .
first do"'" passscs (one to scored from one yard out New Orleans scored the
Broncos' Big Play
Cuts Down Chargers
only touchdown of the game
on a 36-yard pass f rom
Bobby Scott to rookie tight
end Paul Scott late in the
first half.
P lllLA DE L P JIJA AT
Di\LLAS -T he Dalla s
Cowboys s napped a ifour-
game losing streak by
defeating the Philadelphia
Eagles, 31·24. DENVfo~H (AP) -$1x
minutes r ema ined in the
third quarter and Denver
found itselr pinned back on
its own five-yard line.
f\ few seconds before, San
Diego had stored lo cut the
Dcn\•er lc:ul to 17·7 and :ip-
peared to have seized the
momentum.
J\ Chargers lineb<:icker
blitzed , and the Denver
<1uarterback clumped orr a
:-;"·ing pass to the bandy-leg-
~ e d running back.
'\lhatever hope San Diego
ha d of playing catch-up
(!Uickly dissipalcd us the
back broke free and
outraced t he C h ~rgcr
seconda ry down to the San
Dicgo23-~·ard line. The play
(·overcd 72 vards, and Den·
\'Cr scored lhrce plays later
to r egain l'ontrpl or the
game.
Flovd Little. who once
,.,.as 311 the offense Dcn\'er
had but \1'ho has found him-
self \11ith plC'nty of company
the pas t l"•o seasons,
P earson
Tops P e tty
s howed fla shes of his old
form Sunday in leading the
Bronros lo a 27·7 rout of San
Diego in a National l''ootball
League game.
Little has been slo"·ed by
a nagging ankle injury all
season . In Denver·s first
fi\·e games. t he seven-year
pro from Syracuse had
rushed for only 144 yards on
ft6 carries.
Lillie. admitting t he
:.inkle .. is not completely
well but felt better today,"
described the key third-
quarter play that broke the
Chargers' back.
•·1'he linebacker who \Vas
covering me blitzed a nd
Charley •Johnson picked it
up right away," Little said.
''\Ve knew just what to do.
"I gave the free safety a
head fake to get away. The
guy Y.'ho caught me from
behind is a 9.5 s printer. l
made a move one s tep too
late. Othc r\\•isc. I "·ould
have broken it all the way."
Philadelphia middle
linebacker Bill Bergey was
the target for the Cowboys.
··we had to block him ...
coach.'rom Landry said. ··11
was somebody different
each time. but each Lime
they knocked him out of the
play."
The Eagles had started
the C;owboys on the four-
game losing s treak Sept.
23 ..
Dallas qu arterback
Roger Staubach sneaked a
yard for the \vinniilg touch·
down with 9:22 left kl play
and Cliff flarris made · a
vital interception or a
Roman Gabrie l pass with
two minutes left.
NEW Y ORK GIANTS AT
WAS HI NGT ON -hl ike
l lull blocked his first punt in
seven yea r s with the
Washin gton R edskins to
turn the tide in favor of
coach George Allen's teon1
in a 24 ·3 victory over the
ow.roen; o o 1 o-;.-1 New York Giants. Bl""'"' 1 10 1 l -11 Hull blocked the punt Y>'ith
0.11--odtt!'ti s N U 1"'111 ~ nw. his mouth and fe ll on the Mr•oc•I o.11-1..1n1•••""IT11rntr r.kr.1 ball. Four plays later, Oe11....f'GTutnt1':W So J th I so-llcll'IMr•r1111tP•r1Hr.kr.1 nny urgen:sen rew a ·
o.11-.v1115tr0<>91or1111 CT1111Wkk.r. wo-yard touchdown pass to Ol!11....f'GTutMr10
R oy Jcffprson with 33 INDIVIDUAL LEADEllS • RUSHING -S•11 01e9o, wooos seconds left in the half to.
'1J.J•. M•Ul'lews 1.30, Bo11n.r J.u. put \\lashington in front, 7·3. Dln•tr. Ar111~t•on9 20-t•, un~ IW.
11.e.,.....nl'I S.U.
... Uv ED BURG ART
bl TI'I• Dl.11, .. 1101 "'" eAITERN CON•r••lttf
.Allelrtk DlwhJ ..
W L Pl:l
Da\'c Srhmidt is u bomb
or. <irtisl.
Plll ... 1"'11 &Gllon e..11110
Ntw V~l
1 0 1.000
1 1 .5GO
I I .!«I
I I a.!«I
CHlt.i DlfJ~
Not quite in the mold of
the ulphabet bon1tx>r. Not
quill' us frightening us a
hijal'kt'I' \\ith L'Xplosi\'t:S .
Not quite as dcstrut'tivc as
"' \\'ortd \Var JI bomber. W.\tll1191011 l 0 1.11(11 Alllrlll 1 1 .l«I
.-SIOll I 1 .SOD
CJt\'lllill\ll 0 3 .000 ,..,,. Otk..-s o l l.000
"" Ne\•crthe less. Schmidt ~ has mut h of Orange Couuty
"EITERN CONFEllfNCIE Mi<l,.,.tl Di¥hitll
Ole• l o 1.otll
C.ln>U 2 0 1.CIOO
II•-~ 01~•1 0 1.DOO .w-•" 0 2 .000 2
trembling . li e s trikl'.~
without \\'arning and hl·
does all his damage in
about t\\·o hour s .
Sometimes. it takes hini
only a matte r of seconds.
Schmidt is quartcrb.ack al
htission Viejo llii;:h. llis
speci<:1lty is. t hrowing the
.,, bomb. DAVE SCHMIDT
SllM1y'i kwe1 Ma11111 Cllf -Om11>a IOS, L05
Angtle~ •5 •
!iol1Ule 100,0e~l....:t 93 TllftMt'I Glomft ....,,. Orl•a"' 11 81111110
Ho~tori al '"'w Vor•
Ph!l-!pllla •I #.Uotnta
W1~hlf'llllOl'I II). K111ta~ CU,.!O!Nlwi
Ill IC1,...~ Cllr
Portland at Gol!IM State
Chltegg at Mllwaulff . ..
£aslff,. Oh1WM w ' ICelltutlr ' • Virolni1 ' ' ,,..,ll"'l)l'll!i , ' ~-Louil ' ' Hlrw YOl'li ' ,
"<L ..... ..... ... ...
.m
W1s1trR DhiliM
5.lll AMOllio 2 0 1.000
GB ...
' ' ,
''l-J e's the best l '\·c
Coached in throwing the
bomb." s ays Diablo football
coach J ohn J\lurio. "Ile is a time anti t•xprricnre and
\'Cry accurate passer." Da\'e ha:. l.ll.'cn \Vll!ing to put
Schmidt threw scoring inthetime.''
bombs o£50and25yardsin Schm id t i s indeed
the Oiablos ' opener with dedicated. 1-1(' \\'U S torct•cl to
Saddleback. miss the final h;ilf of tht:
Saddleback coach J erry 1973 season \\it h !'rJmc
\\'hitte recalls. '"he hurt muscle pulls in his lel't IL·g
us. I-le 'A':lS a super passer. and he remL·mbt•rs thep;.1in·
lle's accurate anytime he ful lreatments he rcrcivcd
throws the ball." during the off season.
~ ~ 0 I.CUI 0...~r I 1 .500
Schmidt continued to "I went to an orthopcdiC'
bomb opposing defenses. surgeon and for a \\hilc I
The 6·1 senior completed I:> couldn"t get my leg into my
of 20 passes for 309 yards pan ts. T hey just drcy. ,v. again Cosl<i l\tesa. llethre"' blood."
lr<llllW 0 2 .ODO
Ul;fh D l .ODO s...M.it't Sc.erei s.n 0""'90 11•, 1"• l'o•k HO
!Uontutr.r 101, 1...i;,.., n
2 for another 150 against El Schmidt a lso used a
J ¥:t Dorado and 113 against Tor· '-''hirlJX>O) three times per
St. Lollb 116. U1411'1 IO'I T11N1y•s G1111H Vlrollli• II SI. LOull
S... OifOO al Memphll
'" Dlwi-1
N, Y. hli~rs
Phl!-lplll•
1111...,1.1
W t. TPl!.C;F(;A 31171•14 31172111
31 1 1 1816
11 1l1118 N, v. R•noe•s.
Vll'1<CNWr
O.it;l!IO
.SI. l.Ollls
MlnneM1ta
ICanw~ Cot'
Ui¥i11tll l
ll,•••11
ll062011
12 151111
13 1310 13 osooen
• rey Pines in a brief ap· week and s ays, "I barely
pearance, lie sat out week's got r eady in l ime for
7-6 win over Laguna Beach, baseball."'."
but is expectl'd to return Baseball?
f'tiday against University. As great as he is in foot ·
Jt seem s as .though Sch· ball, Schmidt m ay even be
midt has been throwing 50 better in baseball.
yard passes sin ce he was a Diablos baseba11 coach
child. ~lowe\'er. unbl this l-l a rry lli lke thinks so
;year he hardlv e ver threw. anyway.
"I'm not us.cd to throwing' • •·1 believe h~.bas a car~er
long TD passes," he says. in basebal!, says I-like
"lt is a big change from last about Schmidt, '"'ho \\'as a
year." fi r ststring catcher last
Last )'ear , the Diablos ·year. ··with his s ize and
Lo~ AllOfle' Oelroit
MOrllr••L Plnsouroll
WaSl'l!rtg!on
01¥1""" J J03•11
• I 0 I ]1
1 2 l ) 11
12 041S
I • 1 J 12
Vlere a running team and speed, he can be a faster ~~ Schmidt onl\' thre"' for 3l5 eatcher. He lhro\\'S as
11 '·ards and One TD in five strong as any catcher and ~: i,:ames. Uut 1\1 urio, "'ho his only weakness-is that he
&fl•lo
loronlO
.... M
CllilMni~
Dlvi1itll 4
l?172•'1
11l11S11
11151'16
142~11 J1
'
'
S-1y'1 St-1
V•llCO\IWtr 1. New v ... ~ R&119f'is
,..,. Yo<k l•l•nd••• 5, W•"1l"910<>
MorllrHI 1, Phll10t1ptil1 1, l<o
"""'" 5. Pon\bllrgl> 1 Olitl90 '• MlnMsol• 0 S...lon s, C.lltor"l• O loronlo S. Bullillo l. 11•
-r ... ,,,,., l>imf\
A1t1n!1 '' Ntw Vo•\ l\l~~""• Pl'lll-lptiia 11 Lo• Anq<ln
O.troil II Wisl>ino1on
Minne.at• •I Vln(Q\IVft
Pro Grid
Standings
'" AM!lllC.l.N CONFERENCE
1!11 .. rR Dl•llM
Hew E911l1'>d
Bull•lo Ml1111I N.l' . .i.1$
Blltlll\Ofe
'*~ L T ,..l "'"'CW l , o .m ,,. "
S 1 0 .&33 111 UH
• 2 0 .Ml Ill 111
1~016/lllUI , s 0 .1•1 1S 1•• Clftlr1I Diwlslwl
Pltt!burlh • 1 1 .no 132 "
coached :it Tustin lligh in doesn't rel~ase £asl ei:iough.
1973, came to !\!ission Viejo But that v.·11! come \\'Ith ex·
and brought his passing perience.
philosophy w·ith him. premium in pro ball."
lf you remember, 1'.Iurio Schmid_l h it .313 l<ist
coached a fcllo"' named season v.•1th three home
Jim D<'Rord last year and · runs_and.19 r:uns batted in
OeBord ... :as Orange Coun· de~p1te his mus~l.e i;iull lh<,ll
tv's toppasscs. }!1\ke says h1rt h ts
· S::iddleback 's '\'hilev mobilit~1 def('nsively." . ~avs, ··sch1n idt thro\\'S :is As a sophomore, Schmidt
\1(;Jl::i s thatkidfromTustin batted .323 \Yilh· !our
1hd last year." homers an~21 rbi.
i\lurio does n 't like to All Schmidt can curr.ently
n1~1ke comparisons but say is, ··1 ·m not certain on
s a,·s, ''DeBord "'as the mycareer. .
mi;stcr of the s hort pass. J>resenU y. he 1s only con.
Dave still needs more "'ork ccrned about the Di:1bfos· o~ his short passing. The four remaining football
short game lakes a Jotlfllore· games.
llBliJll
ALL MODELS ON DISPLAY!
• JAl,\IF.DIATE DELIVERY!•
551 -2132
120 W. Warner at So. Main, Santa Ana
I
RECEIYING -S•n 01•90. w_,
l ·JI. Sonner l·lO. M1t1111ws l · l 6 . Oe11wr. LIUI• 1·121, 00orN 1_.., Nloiei 1·14,
c;nc, ..... u ~ 2 o .M7 1M1 101 BALTIMO RE AT NE\V c1tw11n<1 1 J o .u1 " 1u
PASSING -Sin Di.90.-FOU!S , .. ,..,,
1ill ¥l•Os, [)fnv1r. Jotln$0rl ,.11-0, 1"6;
V1n HtuM!n 1·1.0,41.
Ho ... lon 1 S 8 .1•1 1' U6 YORK J ETS -Baltimore W••t•rn DJv11;..,
Colts back Lydell Mitctiell Ook1-· .s 1 o .Ill 10 " . ee"~' 3 2 1 .sa 1u 110 gained 156 yards 10 40 car-icanw.1 cnv 1 , iJ .33l 19 11
ries to lead his mates lo s.in oieoo 1 ) o .1.i n 1
ROCKINGHAM . N. C.
(APl -David Pcarso.n won
his seventh big trark race of
the season Sunday and
Richard Petty used a thifd
place finish to waltz to his
Jifth Grand National stock
car driving ti lie.
Pearson. a 39-ycar ·old
veterun. roared home 2.2
srconds <Jhead of Cale Yt.ir·
borough to end the hotly
contested American 500 run
in sunny but rhilly wr~1thcr
before a crowd of 35.000.
their first win of t he season, NATl~~~.~.~D~:1!1':..ENCt:
" a 35·20 victory s1. Louts 6 o o 1.om 1"" M -t.
Quarterback Bert Jones A1!1-1p111a • 2 o ·"' 111 n
Pe tty , 37, nel·drd only to
C'Ompletc one lap around the
one-mile North Carolina
1'.lotor SpeCd\\•ay lo clinch a
championship no other
drivl'r has "'on more than
three I imcs. But he was in
co11lcntion for \lictory in the
rare until hl' spun his Dod~c
in the track 's !'t'("ond tum
OA•it h onl.Y 60 mile:t to gn,
Petty's spin drnp1x•d him
t \1·0 la1>s behind l)cnrson
and ,·u rt>o1·t111.:h und , the
best he could <lo was hong
on to third plal'e -nnd a
title that will tulcl 11 $75,000
bonus to his coffers a l
scason 'send.
MONDAY NIGHT
FOOTBALL
»CO ALL sroft .... G E't'El'ITS
OM OUll
'A' PROJECTION T.V.
Cl1ecking
X-country
ORANGE COUNT'V CHAMPIONSHIPS
IAIUCl•~l""I •·A DIVISION INDllllOUAL: I. M<Conlll!ll IE,,l 9'4ol. '· Wallffl'IOll!ie (MY) •:'4. l . Holltllblt• !lull 9.U , •. W•l<l•k CEO) 10,01, S.
M ... ,. !FYI 10.0J, •. Soe"o1er tVPl 10.oi,
J. C-IMV) lO;IM. I. ~r!11oe CYP! 10:01.
'· t<OQlll fEOI lO:O't, 10. Pe••• IYP) 10:11.
11. R11ley (VPI IO:U, 11. Ry111t~O10:0.
1J W--IMV) IOlM, 1(. Relh IYPI
10.1'0, u. Pl'lnce 1w1111 10:21.1 .. H1Wrf, \MVI 10:12, 0, M\lrtlY tCl'PI lO:U. II.
ICll'IQ IVPI 10:2J, 1'. Fl1her IP.Kl 10:Jl, 10 1omasl( t Eo 110· 11. T!AM: 1, V\111 P•r~ •t, 2. Edi!olln 56, l. MIH•Oll lllelo ~' 4. Fo""l•lll Vllley Ul. ). l111oll" UJ,,, We1tml11~ttr 190.
S.ADl\11510N INDIVID UAL : 1. S1r11a (Loi •:10
((_ .. •KO•d, old t ',16, Se• .... I'll), 1. Hui•! !LBJ f ;I\, J. HUllS•ktr «COM!•:».
~. ('-U !FOOi) t:SI, S. t<elillO (LQ)t ·~.6.
0-11.gl>er tLol •:56, 1. Sp!l\llvt'I' tFOOll •.SI.I. W.t11r (Los All t :sq, t , J, °"'IC. dM) 10:0., 10. Fr1n~" /Loi 11;01, 11, 0.
0of CCdM) 10:M, U . Ml<pto CLfll 10;U, u. lunOet•o ILD1 AO 10: I•. 1 ... Tobf•lf
/fOOlllO;ll,
W••lllnuton ' 1 o ·'" 11• n j. scored touchdowns on 1·uns 0..1111 1 • o .33.J no 1~) ~
Or nine and 32 yard., nod N.v. G11n11 1 s n .1•1 •1 uo j C111tr11 Dlwl11H passed 15 yards to Cotton MIMI~• s 1 o .w uo &1
Speyrer. GrHfl B.lv l 1 o .600 •1 •1
CNt•OO 1 l 0 .'400 7t 66
1T De1ro;1 1 • 0 .33.J ·M tO CLEVELAN D AT Pl • W.i1tr11 DlwlJI... ~
SBURG ll -P ittsburgh's Los"•""' 4 2 o ,..., U4 11 !:
I• d . t•d AllMllt l ' 0 .lll U M 0 Stee le rs r e 1e on so 1 Now 0r1eans , • o .m ., 11• ...
defense as they held off the -s.11 Fr111<1.co 2 • o .l.D n 1» i
Cleveland Bro"'·ns, 20·16. ,... om.':s~~''!,~11~11 I
A 14·0 Pittsburgh lead d-eu1111o JO, Now' En911nd 11 ~
windted to 14·13 at holfUme o.1i.1 s1. P1111.oe1p111• ?4 l • Balllmor• ll, Ne .. Vo•• JetS 20 and with 2:23 to play 10 the Plllsbu•Qf'I :ro. Cle~t•nd i. l
game Cle\'eland had the W11,,1"91a11 f t, New Yor~ Gl11!11 . SI. Lo..ii Jl. Hou~IOll 11 ball at the Pittsburgh 17. 0e1ro11 :ro. M1....,. ... 1. 1• I
[tu t Pittsburgh s afety Otn-21, Sano~ 1 . . I LOI At19fll1 JI, Sill\ Ftllltll.(0 u Glen Edwards 1nterccptr( a Ml.,.,1 •. 1t1nw1 Cit¥ J I
fourth do"·n pass a nd relur·· O.k1...a xi. c111t1 ...... 1111
d . d . . Ttlllftot I G.111111 ne it 59 yar s to insure vie-Grftll &.1¥ •t c~;<190 tory. Swl'Mll•J. 0t1. n , I , ( hd , Pl'IHildetplll• •I We .. Orie~ fhe Stec e rs ouc own OHt•90 ., e ... 0.10
drives, both in the firs t half, ~•on 11 C111t<11n.i1
.. .
·' l , I r I 57 0.~ff· II Cttwlall(I covercu a Olil o on Y c;,...., l'l•v ., 0e>1ro1t
_yards. nanimore '' M1a111t O.ll•1 11 ~w Vork Gle11ls
Prep Football
TEAM; 1, CO.Ollil <Iott"""' .S, 2. FOOlftll\ Set>l'lefl'tfft ,_NII
I.OS AllOfleS &t-New Yor k JI!• New E119lal!CI at M!,_IOI&
wa11Wfl9iot1 al St, Leult 1(;11.,..s Clly 11 Sil" Dle90
Ot-lill\ll •• S.11 Fr•ntlMO
MfMty. Ott. H
AU111I• II Pit11e..ron 11, J, LMrl Mid 8Utflil Par~ •1. i. U...... Mlr•W 0 0 0 91..c:l'l104,6.SMttaA11<1v~11e,1U. w1,1mlfl\I•• r 1• J
,_, ..... "'"".., ..,.,.u, 1
1-AOtlllSION Muina • , • 0 0 ' •-n W.slmll\\ltl" I 0 ) 0-1
INDIYIDUAL1 I, 00,.11~ !MDlf 44, 2. ·;= .. =·=M=·-=·:"'::•:~:"::'::':'::'::°"::;'•::; ~. JoM !MO! t st, ). "°"""''~e (\lallf•
• •'·'· Oulllt" Ct DI 10•0\, S 0-,..,U H!Ol IO·Oj, •· ¥1411 ~Gii 10'01, 1. llDlr (\Ill ) IOllO. I. Ktil!lllQ (Mtll IO?IS, t , ttHb<I
1101 10:1 .. 10. O'tt.IFI IMO! 10.,.. II.
S,....:NO lltPl 10 11, n. 6'11 ''°'"'·) 10;11 ,,, R11v ..... o tlO! 10:22. "· ciie..., IOG 10 11, IS. Alw1r11IGG,1.!,"i It.. Ro4lotf
LY"4f l0 H, O.Fut-IE1l 10 a .
JOE CARLOS
PLUMllMG CO.
llAM: 1. Miter °'116'. t. l!I OwldlolJ
1. v~1,,,..~ 11. 4 G .... °'" Gf•lll! na, I.Sill!
... M , I .. •• (MitF#llf ,,._
LEA SE A '74 DJ.TSull
710 2 dr. 'ltu MO.
••••• _, ... 1_
Llc. No. 219'S.1S .....
548-5~38
1675 Superior
Costa Mesa . .,..._ ..... °" .... ""f
Siiiiitinl
• zt' Aytirldgt Crol...-
• JI' Ayt.ridgl Crol...-
• J5' C.-trilblo
• Jr Coo•.nlble
• '46t Con•tttlW.
THI CROW'S, lf~T· .
We found a way lo bott le it.
NOW SAVE
1/2 Gal. s1.so
Gallon $J.OO
LIMITED TIME ONl Y Jt
RARE SCOTCH , ..
•
Monday.Ck!obf!r :<'I. 197.-DAIL v PILOT ... I I •
PRIZES WORTH
$tSDD 00
WIN _7'P."" TV
~ "'tNin Piclo.•to0 ·1.-winnen will be owar· died prl1n by AIC Col°' Televltton of H11nli"lten a.a.ch. fin! ploce w inMrt will rwceiw a $M.11 :z.Nth 12·1nch, dio1onol nwot11,.., black oM white
portoW. NL.vltion Mt. Second ploc• wlnnen .. t o
$16.95 t.nith tat.le model roclio orw:I third p!.u
priae1 .. Zenith "bilHold" pocket portable Nd* w..m. $12.95 each. All pri t H a,. 11a l119d oc<Mllnt
to ~vret'1 11,19~t9d ,.toll pric.1. ·
Entries may be de~1t9d 1,1ntil Th1,1fldo_y oft-
at the ABC CalOf' Tol~i1ion Pi91kin ,..clioroo '74
l-1ailq"'9rten or at Doily Pilot office1 in H"n1i!'91t•n
leoch, Newport hoch, Cotta Mtta, "°'"'"° IHch or San Clemente. .
, WMkly winnon will bo nDtified by moil and moy
pidl. "P their pri101 al
AIC Color Televl1lon
19046 lfookh""' St. H1,1ntingtan looch
~ for thi1 Pl91kin PickMOO '74 ploy.rs fwm ooch ....lo. In the DollJ Pilat tpcHtt uction. Circle
the toom 'fO\I think wil win in eoch pairin.1 In the
U.t flA 30 90'"" and Mnd In the ployer'1 '-en-
try blank ., a teoJOnoblo foaimllo. Then watch the or.a.,. P'lkit "*'' PGll" for each wffk'• list of ttw.
wlnnlfl. . /U the condinlon of the 10 -weelc competit1en,
I~ will inuile fint ~oce ,.intMn te try f., the Ow.NII pncl prite; D Zenith color tel~liion. The
14-inch, dMtoono l rnea1ure table model coLM Mt It wilwid at $291.11. It llOft lo the Plgakl n P'ld!.eroo
'74 cantfttont who bMt preclidt thi outc--' ...__. profnaional footboll games the -..Ir.end hlkM;~tho clot• of reg1,1lor pldieto0 Q AIHI.
Ta be i ... • fot the 9rond pri1e, Y°" how to win
one of he weekl y Pi91kin Piclii•roo ·1.-cetn• ~ianl. ..k>w o,. the ""'"· th. 1111 of .. in. _. 1W1try blonlr.. Good l~lc. ·
RULES
1. ~ tt......., WeM W.W • • •--11""'•'"''• '-1..wlil .t II .. -,.. -.. • ... ,,_ .......... 1 ... n.~ k .. 11 .... -..... ~-··w flll"" -IMo \lftl,._ Ill .i1e .... ......
fl Neill .... 1 ..... 1 .... Thtte wlmh ..,., .-fMM w1H 1Mo
• .... lflootl.
2. ...... If fl: rtOS«JN PtCIHOO. '74, s,.e..1 o.,.t-r, P.O.
.... 15'0, C..'9 ...... CA. t 2'26.
J.. ONr -_,.,.~,,._ ...... ii ... -h ...... C...lf .........
-...,..... ,...,. --lffldolt _., 1 ......... ,. _It+,.. ....n.. .._ • ,1.,.1 ......... i.,.i. _...,.. .... ~ .....lfy ... , "lictil'-_ .. ...,.... ,...,. .-......
O..W.. -' I ....... .., lhk ...... 1 _, IMo ~lloif • flMI .,., ......... llt.
4.. WM_, 1Mo ,_.,~ .. 111t lei., 1ho11 ~A.Jill. w
-IMo -.!1-.4 re t1w Doltii Pllet effice liy 6 P.M. rhotrt-....
s. ,.,,...~ .. ~ .... t+.elf ....,,..., ... lfMll Deity Pllet ••twww ..W th.if I""""';... I-ill" IN -........ 11 ... --'
.. 111 mAKll 11.ANI MUSl II flWD IN OI OOI Y II 'IOtO. . ,,. •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • •
• • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • •
ENTRY BlANK
..... ·-~~~~~~~~~~ ......... -~~~~~~~~~
Cty __________ l ip ___ _
-------
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • Orde teorn1 you think will win thlt Wffil'1 IOIN'S : • • Rams at New York Jets
Denver at Cleveland
New EncJland at Minnesota
Washington at St. Louis
TCU at Alabama
Flarlda Stale at Auburn
UCLA al California
Colorado al Missouri
Harvard al D11rtmoulh
Duke at Flor ida
Miami IFla.1 al Noire Dame
Minnesota al Michi gan
Pittsburgh at Navy
Oklahoma Stale at Nebraska
No. Carolina Stale al Maryland
Ore90n State at USC
Penn State at West Virginia
Orange Coast at Mt San Antonio
Golden West at Santa Moplca
Grossman! al Saddleback
Estancia at El Modena
St. Paul at Mat,r Del
Edi son at Los Alamitos
Cor6na del Mar at Costa Mesa
Newport Harbor at Marina
San Clemente al El Toro
Huntington Beach at Katella
Fountain Valley at Westminster
Laguna Beach at Dana Hills
Mission Viejo at !Jnlversity
TIE Ill.AKEi -My gu•t• ot1 the lotol n1o1mh.r
d point\ •cored lt1 all JO 9om1i It ----
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • "IJ'llln 'itkel'on h. a rfqvlar feo+vn of tM ••
111 SO. MAIW Sf ..
~A AMA. CALI,. •1101
COSTA Ml SA o,;.~
2145 *441101 ILYD.. C.k
540·6-4 I 0
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:.;::._;_;;.J+..•-nfWMN~oy. 0 4 • : , ......................................................
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•
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A 12 DAILY PILOT
Fo1· tl1c
••
Dissolutiou
Of itJa1•1•iaf1e
FINAL OIC•f!E$
l<1!tf"N O<;t-r II
K~!'llel'. tar11!(1• •11rn *""
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AMtr>D!I Pnihp M. ••><l "•U' nt
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ljt•' l'M .,, P•u!\<!e '"" Jl,Vln h~
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"'"" Garrl•M. PoJ~H ... f,' •nd P•u! C.
L•PI• £!•1<0f!n Me"• .na ,t,,IQftt ~un
"'"' C.rlflllt>, 5wS'l'ln S 11>11 Cu<!•"~ B Cltw-. Ann M •NI Elvor t J
P1.t11li.•. F•nn•I M•• """ ""°"'' Nttl P•r li.tr. P•mel• J ,.,., YJilhfrn A
sw11w111, Ceotoe c ..,a Bia"<"'
Pndllp•. Collf"" ICtY 11111 Evin cn.:1••••
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CttrOI E Jr
N ....... Oline (. •I'll M&rYln G. a...io..,,1r. l'11tl(l1,. •~a Row•• J.
BIK O., Rlcnt•d ltlcl 00'""" RK
JQl'IM, NU•CY Ann Ind DDntld Cl•r•nce
...,.klru, Jo19rllld 1-iowtra and l(a!ny
'""
Deaths
~· Elseivhere
d
SANTA \IONICA {UPll
Rosary services will l>c held
Tuesday ror Nick Licata .
reputed ~1afia chieftain for
ttie Los Angeles area. Licat~.
77. died at Si. John 's Hospital
Saturday after a Ions illness.
IJettl 11 Not iees
COLLINS
A-V Collin•. Otlt ot llt•ll• Oc!OM' lt , 197• Swrv1ft<I DY l\e• 1l•le<S. Mr>. LoYIH l'rln1 •nd Alrn• Gt•nd1 I •~. 5,...vlc•1 llf"(llf19. B•l1 B , o a a .. a y
M 0ttuuy. MATHENY Jarnts M, Mar/\eny, •111<1tnt DI Ball>a• hl1nd 01te ot aeMn OclotM'r 19, 191'
Sv••lve<I bY 111$ wlft Ma•g•••• L .
Al1!1Wny; """'· Mtl J~me• (D"J•O•e. G11.,.•l~e ,.,,vlttJ Wedne•<1av, Octoblr 1Jra, 10 00 AM. Lal Angolt• NaTlanal Comuorv. alrKleO DY l!ol!l·Btfgeron
Cmr1 Mtl• MOf~~r•ELL
Sylvia S. Cotwoll, •tll<"nl of C0911 Mn1. Dale 01 dt•!n OtJot>er 11. 1914
S!n°v!vtd Dy l'ler <11u;Mer. J oyce
MacArinur; II''•""""'· R • c II 1 r a C. M•cArth11r. Servlct• wilt be lwl<I Tut•d•v.
October 2)n<I, Boswtll. O k I • no ma . F or w 1 r alnci alrt<!ors, B1ttz·l!f<l1t•on
CoJlt Mtlt MDl'l~~ft'.i.ES
~!~. a .. ~W:,~;,;e&':~. o110~~;'/:'~u~:r;.,",;
:.~11 nur:"'/:!t., lr~~~ia~~~~!~~· "?~1~
11 7;CIO PM, B1tU·!leroeron Colla Mew F11ner1I ChtP81. CHAl'MAN
"""'" B <napm~n. ~\!(lent ot LIOU~• B11c11. Dalt DI dtttll Oc•ooer u , 191'.
S"'vlve<I ~ n11 •hit<. Judlrll ( T1r1>:
11\d fovr !lfOll'tt<'s. Se,...lcn will tM'
pr1vllt. 1n1tnnf"t, P • c 111 c ''"'' (!!rne1trv B•H1·B••QCron (<lfont ~ Mtr
Mortv1ry. airKl<lft.
O~IOllEITIS •-t J. 0.R-r15, ·~ .)f, rtii<knl ot Newport BfACll. 0110 ol O.,•tn Oct<>Dtr I!. 197• Su•~lvt<I tty n11 w•I• 8onnit
lltROlled;I' two ~on•· DDua al Ntwl)0•1 8t•t~ '"" Mar1< DI Sacr1m ... tP , '"'" <1augM"''• MfclW!te of NtwPG<'l Be1c11
ano Wenoy;•l S•cr1men10. n~••nh, Mr & Mrl ,. Btll•ll• J. Ot RObfr•i of Sacrtm~f<i, 1>ro111er. llon~ld ol
S•<t•m•nTo. •n<I <1r4"'1mo!n,... S•r~ice• Wt'•e ne!<I .i 11·00 ._., today, PAcllic v;.,.. Cl'l<loel lnterm•nt, P~clllc Viow Memor!al p.; ... dlfK! ... by PAcllit VltYI
M0th1ary. THORPE
Gol<1le B. ll'IOfpe. D•lf of dta!ll Ckrotie• 11, 1911. Rt1latnt al Ntwl)O•t 8••cn. Su•v!vf'd lly ht• ion. Pop Grtel' o! Ntwl)Ot! lltftCll. Seryl<t• Wt<lnei.dAV 11 ·oo AJ~, Boll BrM<lw•• C<IUMI. En<ar<1t1m•nl
Tiit Al>bey. Bell Broadway <llrec!o••.
AIBUCKL£ & SON
WESTCLlff MORTUARY
427 E 171h51 .Co~10Me~o
646-4888 -·-BALTZ-BERGERON
FUNlRAL HOMl
Corono de! Mor
Co110 ,....,.,o -·-
67J-9450
6J6.242J
Bl LL BROAOWA Y
MORTUARY
110 lll'ood"''JV Co~to Mesa
548 J4JJ -·-DILDAY BROTHERS
MOljTUARY
1791 I S.-ac~ 81 .. d
Huni.n~an B"nch 841·777 I
:'~.: !1PdOni11'1 A~,,.
L ~nq~.,ich •?13!438.1145 -·-McCORMICK LAGUNA,
BEACH MORTUARY
1706 Loo1°rio Co~y"'1 Rei.
4949415 -·-PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
••• ''" 11y
(~·w~I
J~OOP..c"cY•·NO"~~
N~....r/orr r.o r t_ 11 l')rn<o
6J•I • /QI) -·-PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
7.31)1 f!,.l '1 f, " W1!1'rn""'"'
ijQ ~5:1~ -·-SMITH'S MORTUARY
(>~! Mn·n )•
!iun'•nritnn P..·ut~
!130·.3~J9
•
E1troll1uent Mark Santa Ana to Make Bob Jones
Fullerton Lists New .i\.ide
Study of Its Crime ·-For Rile)' • 20,000 Students
SAt\iA ANA -The Cll.v
of Santa Ann h:1<1 formi:il
ii Spl.'C'i11l citizens co111mittcc
that will ~pend the next three
rnon!tt~ studying and critiq11-
iw:: crime 1>re vcnlJw.l pro-
granis u1 the ci ty.
~l ayor Jerry Prtttcrson soid
the. t'Onm1ission "'as C'reated
JS an advisory panel to the
c11y council as p<irt of an
overall crin1e ab.11e1nent pr<r
grnm for the city, v.·hicJ1 has
so1ne of the fflOSt nu1jor crin1c
problems in the county.
';The c o 111111 i si; Ion will
review all programs iJ1 tJlC
nrea of crime prc\'cntion.
rccornn1cnd aJ,>Propriate action
to the COUllCJI an<l rcViC\V 311
~
Nig·uel Designer
Goes · to Anaheim
priori!ies dealing v.·lth crin1e
.. ,)re\cntion." Pntterson said.
AHEAS TH E commission
11 ill explore include :
-r.1cthods or increasing per
capita police manpower.
-Stud.v of progran1s to
gel more police on patrol.
-\\1nys to bring more l'X·
perienced personnel into the
i;olice departn1cnt. including
lateral recruiting from other
cities.
SANTA ANA -Freshman
Orange C o u n t y Supervisor
Thomas Ri\ey has hired a riew
adininistrative assistant t o
replace Tom Fuentes. w h o
quit to enter the Rom an
Catholic seminary.
Robert T. ''Bob" Jones. 44 ,
of Anaheim will join the Fifth
District staff 1hat n o w in-
cludes three othe r executive
aides, all of whom were hired
by former Supervisor Ronald
Caspers, losl at sea in June.
u.N. Speed•
Alistair MathesQn. dep-
puty director of infor·
IN AN l/'lii'ER\llE\V, Pat-nlation for the United ''BOB Bftf~GS some very
tcrso.n said the c i 1 i z e n·in-Nations International desirable talents with hi1n.''
\'Olve ment in crime pre\~ntion Children's Fund, will Riley said. "He is cu?Tently
is not meant to be a, forn1 speak Thursday at 8 in his last year of study at
or vigilantes but rather an p.m. in Orange :fl \\'estem State Univcrshy Col-
FULLERTON -For J h e
first time in its 14·year hi s·
tory, Cal State l•'ullcrton 's
sludent enrollmenl llas topped
20,000.
Dr. Halph Bigelow, dean of
ad mlsslon.s and records, said
final regist ration figures shcnv
the school had 2<1,033 students,
up more than l,200 Crom A:
year ago.
"The number was higher for
two reasons,'' Bigel9w said.
"A higher percentage of ap-
plicants met admisslon stan-
dards and after declining for
the past five years. the per-
cent.age of continuill)( students
appearing !or clas~cs stabi-
lized." .
OF 111E TOT AL enrollment
figure for this fall . ne ar I y ongoing effort to improve Chapman Col\ege's.t:1t-lege of Law and has a tremcn-
police-communtiy relations. tie Theater. It will be dous bac k g r o und in ad-CJellICllle Gt·acl
"In recent years. our police part of celebration of ministrative management."
13.000 were con ttnulnc;
students. Nerirly 1,600 were
first-time freshmen, 3 , 7 O O
\Vere undergraduate tr11nsfur
studl'nls and there \Vere ~.700
ncv.• graduate studenls. -ms year·s junior class was
again the largest \\'ith 5,700
studen:s. The junior level is
ahva,\'S the biggest because
of incoming junior c o I I e g e
transfers, Bigc\ovr said.
THE RANKS o! graduate
students hl'td second position
with •. 700, followed by seniors
v.'ith 4.600, freshmen with 2,000
and sophomores with 2,130.
CSF's stucients have enrqlled
for a total or almost 212.000
class units, also a pesk on
'the record books, Bi g e I o v.•
n'otcd.
I n ano'her announcemenl.
dep..1rtmcnt h.as led ~he way United Nati ons' 29th Jones, married and the B e cri11s Classes
ANAHEl1\1 -Kn o \V ·1 to n recently as vice president and in new and creative pro-birthday. father of four children, comes "
FernJld, of r\e\\'JXlrt Beach, president-elect or the county ~rams.'' he said. "1'hey !'Hl\'e ----=---------to Riley's office from a posi-Lyssa Black. a graduate of
Bigelo1v said the universily
is still accepting ,1ppiicntions
for the spring, 1975 semester.
Forms are available frorn
hi gh school counselors and the
university's admissions office
in Langsdorf llall.
1he nian chiefly responsible C'haptC'r of the A ni er i ca n helped establish a fou ndation Life T e t'lll tlon as vice president 0 f San Clemente High School. ha s
for design of !he Lag ~i n a Institute of Architects and has from which we can \\'Ork /JO\V Daniel and Associates, an ex· begu11, classes at the American
Niguel planned com munity. served as chairman of a Pro-to establish priorities and pro-SANTA MONICA (UPI) ecuti've placement firm. Academy of Dramatic Art in
ha s been hired by 1he tiiy jcct 21 study tcan1 on low gr;i m directions. r-.1ichael Guy Severance. 24. Pasadena. Jr --~----
of Anahein) as its director. illC'o111c housing. "But to do this 1vc need \\'as sentenced to life in prison BEFORE THAT, he wa s Ms. Black . v.·ho was ar•ti\'e R TH£
of redevelopment. Hr has also been a director citizen support and J can't for the first-degree murder program marketing director in theater productions on the ' ~ EA.RJ.'S
Fernald. 45. will head 3 new of the Laguna Beach Chamber think of a better \\'fly th;:n of a Benedict Canyon for Rock we 11 International Triton campus, is one of 48 : t1urn1>1"9. Hea11na
department in the city nnd or Commerce, director of the 1he involvement of thC com-housewife. Audrey L. Cogen. Space Division for five years students se lected for the in-: T:i::.~
ivill receive an annual sa lary South Orange COWlly vr-.·ICA 1nunity direetly through a 47, \\'as stabbed to death when and was instrumental in augural class of the new West-.i,.,...aocr
of S3S.OOO. according to City and a member of the Laguna citizen's commissiori," he ad.I· she surprised a burglar in market d e v e Io pm en t of Coast branch of the 9G-year-~s-o•~" ,:~~';;J
l\lanager Keith ·;\lur®ch. _N_'ii:._•_<e_l _C_oo_rd_i_n_a_t_in_g_C_m_m_c_il_. __ cd_. ____________ h_er_ho_u_sc_. _______ _JRnci!A><~k~w~e~U~·s~s~pa~c:e~pro":':j~e~cls~. --~ol~d_in~sl~it~u~O~on~-~----_:_=-:==:=:':::=====::::::"
The ne"' administrator C'O"J)·
€'!' to Anaheim from \\'arner
\\'. l~odgdcin Co .. a finanC'ia1
consulting firm involved in
rede1·clopment projects in the
cities of San Bernardino and
Industry.
FOR 13 YEARS before
joining that finn. Fernald v.•as
vice prt'Sident for pl::tnnin~ at
Cabot. Cabot and Forbes. lnc.,
\rherc he was responsi ble for
all design functions of Laguna
Ni guel.
!~is department received a
total of 14 local and national
av.·ards for the Laguna Niguel
community.
Fernald serves as chairman
of the board of commissioners
of the Orange County Housing
Authority and a vie~ chair~
man of the county's Cost of
Housing Committee.
ll E WAS ELECTED
UC Irvine
Has Boost
In Grants
Despite a bleak forecast
of impounded federal funds
and congressional cutbacks,
academic departments a n d
schools at UC Irvine received
a doUar increase of 11.9 per-
cent in research contracts and
grants over funds received the
pre\'ious yl'ar. The tolal value
of the a\\'ards amount ed to
$12.630.712.
The fundin& .. P!O\•ides sup-
port f~'.' : \\'ifie ·:::~~
research projects with spccial
fcd!!ral priority io the fields
~ of he a l th . transport<ilion ,
<·ncrgy, ho us i n g and en-
vironment.
1\lujor projects currently in
pr ogress :it 1.JCI i nc I u de
:-t11d 1cs in nir and enf:i ne p111!u-
!ion . desert land use. nicdical
('ducation nnd !ruining. h('alth
care. devcloprnent of n c I\'
sourC'CS of energy and prevcn-
1 ion of crime and jul'enile
delinquency
UC l's P<'rcentagc gro\1·th in
fundin g \1·as one of the largest
in thr UC svs1en1. The total
of U5 awai-ds received b1·
L:CI for fiscal yl'ar 1973-74
also marked a 20.7 percent
increase in thl' number of
a\1'ards received.
A rl'porl prepared by \\'.R,
Srlufsky. n1anager of the UCI
contraC'I and grant of r i cc ,
noted that the majority of
:11\'a rds \\'as received durin g
the Inst six 1nonlhs of th e
fiscu l year.
Tht• rrpor1 said. ' ·The
l'('lt>asr of I fed e r :i I ) in1-
pounde<l funds launchrd :1 n
upward trend in 11llocating
IL'Cleral resea rch and !ruining
How To Hold
FALSE TEETH
J • • ~.. ..
• Ufdl °""" ~•towan 191•
JOGQlton
WAftRHIATU .............. w.. --. ,,__..,_,_,...
~ ...... (_....,
llG.••4•"9 "'·" 11 .
>,(. llllit~"
LAUllHY
' .. . ...... ,... .......... ... ....... _ ........... ... ___ ... .... ............. ..,. ....... _ ,.., ............. ........ ·llC.•2499 "'·"
Clean Up Sale!
c r eenDoors
'
·ndows
Spt cinl P~rchcuel
PAINT BRUIHll
• ,., ~·lltr bni'"''""" ltt% ....
h i1tlt1 ,., "'.,. •••
•• • We 've morlied everything in our screen door & window
inventory 25% off!
• Screen doers for every budget ond •v•ry
decor ... from the economy to the lop o.1 the line
in many sites.
• Nalural aluminum lo gold anoditH finishes.
• Allfminum frame sneen1 to replace the ones
tMI the kids bear up thi1 summer.
SMDP IAtlY JOI llST SEU<TIOI!
llMITID TO STO<I OI MAMD!
ltO IAllCHE(IS! _..-.
LATEX
WALL PAINT
• ltltl k11 peilll fHI • Mlltf. 4fl11
l11ltr.
• l ll!diel 'flllffl cM.11~,wil~ Wlltr.
• ltH-hff, 1111'1 M1t1 hf Hilt'1
'-·· --• S.tid1diM ..... ttH.
• J". Jl1", 4" wl4t .,, ~ lw 1111
wilh .u""' al,.,,
REG.JO' I !~ ~.41
·-
By BEA ANDERSON
OI .. ....., l'tlltl&lllt
Serving as racllitutor or one
group, Crump focused on sell·con·
ttpl. A good starting Point in any adult
"fi'larilal type relationship ls "1et·
U lo k h ln this group were a woman ng . now as mut as you can "almost divorced " (A); twodivor· about yourself." · 1 ''Then communicate It to each cees (8 aod C); a morned t-oup c d · d o ·d c with marital problems Chusband, other," a vise av1 rump. D wife E) •nd a m~rried woman_ counaelor, in the second ot a six-! • . · . .
somt•thing unplc<isa nt 1ny ruthcr
said. I want to be able lo tell hlm
"'hat it rl..'minds me or.
''I 'd like to be more rut.ionnt. ''
Crump -.. You're saying, 'I
would like to do my "''Ork better
with my mind.' "
.... -"l d idn't think you had to
think so much to be married."
oul -lhut 'I'm destroyed. I'm
lo~t. '? ·
.. For you to lose &igbt or
you ... that's pretty costly.
··Whut are your nct'<ls B't "
E -··Tht>y don't sound u!> nice :is
yours. I don't think I n1.--'Cd lo\·e."
Crump ~ .. 1.ht!:n "''hill do you
want?"
Crump -··oo you V1aaL
chunges?''
t;-··ves ."
DO SOME TRADING
Crump -"Some you cnn lake
earc or and some D can t:ike care ot. Do you btt ve unything to trade?
part public series, entiUed Mar· w th m arital d1rr1cult1es (FJ.
---~··~~~~ thll combination each --Nt;l:D Ci!TE·o--
K Partnermlghtriotbeawareofwhat llelpi11g members gathe r
.--Crump --"You 've ~ot to work
--Wit6 utl )"OU'~() ' Jts-you WOr
with it you become mort: whole."
I!: -"I need to pro\'C lo myselC
thar rm \'.'Orth\\•!Hlc, thatT can do
something. I don't want anyone in
my \\'ay. I d on't want un)'Onc
E -Aftl..'r a long lhought. "1
don't have a nything'tuoffer.''
Crump -"llow does thaL maak<!
_)'OU fecllo hll\'C llOlhincmoN lOO[·
rl..'r'!"
E -"I really ne\'er thought
about it before.'' n Ow "Ucksorr" hlmselforlheot.herper· technology about thcr:nselves,. son. Crump asked e~ch to "think ilbo~~
"Quite often people dump things yourself and what your n~ ar~.
on a relationship that are not really Then he opened the d1scuss1on
Own
Need-s,
First
Rule
-
...... ,,OctflltrH, H14
fair." """' saying, "I need a lot or love. I need
An example, he said, is an im· love Crom in s id ~ myself, ~or
matore p,etson who ·m.-..ries "to myself. I need to give and receive
growup.' lpve.Ihavearealneedto~ove.''
"lf you don't know much about · B -"Ive o_nly be~n divorced a
Yourself or each other, both are pul year. 1 a.m st.111 com~ng around -
al a disadvantage.'' still making d.1scovenes. . .
And. he said. if the"re is no conflr· "I need a nice, good relallonsh1p
million or anything supportive then with someone who can understand
there never is any peace or any run. me .-someone v.·ho,,would not
We know more technology about make a lot of demands.·
automobiles than we do about our-D -,..."I need demands. I feel thu
selves and others, he asserted. need to give., but I nct.-d demands.
too."
COMPILE DATA
To compile data, Crump sug-
gested making "exhaustive lists or
your needs, wants. what .. really
bothers you, whal you know about
yourself and what things you bring
to a relationship.
"\Vhen you're finished you
should know quite a bit about your·
self." This knowledge and the ability lo
communicate it offer a possible
honest basis for a relationship, he
said.
''Anything less really is
dangerous."
The sessions, which take place at
8 p.m. each Wednesday in the
Unitarian Universalist Church,
Costa ft1esa, begin with a short lee·
lure by the counselor. . .
Later small groups are formed,
providing an opportunity for each·
to furtber develop points in the lec-
ture.
e
...... ,
-
Crump -•'Whal do you mean llr
demand?"
0 -''I need lo be needed.''
Crump -"That's not demand."
·o -Demand' to me is having the
right to ask." Crump -"\Vh at 's the difference
between demand and give"?"
B -"To me. demand is like
giving an order .''
Crump -.. It sounds unfrien-
dly."
vNTENABLE
D -"I need to be loved. I need to
feet almost complete in mrsclf at
times. Yel when I am alone, I'm
lonely. It seems untenable. I need
both to be alone and with someone
and I can't get it to fit."
F -··1 need to do some sorting
out. I'd like to cut out the bad and
ket..-p the good.
"I don't know ho\v to deal with
same things. \Vh en my husband
says something that reminds me of
Good Memory
Cancels ·Repeat
1-· -"But wh :1L ha1>1)(!11S when
Crump -··You have a need. Do
you ha\'C thini;s to offer? You arc ln
;1 partnership. \·ou have lo gel
some tr:1din g goin~. Don'tyou ha\'c
anything tolrJde?''
'If there is no confirmation
or anything supportive, then
there never is any "'
peace or any fun.
r; -"No .•. l gu('S.S I'm a bad
risk. ··1r t 01llow myself to be
vulnerable I 'll he trampled. It's
hard work 11f>t lctling n1y~lf be
\'Ulncrablc.''
Crump -"So, a tot of your lime
goes to n1a1ntt·nance."
E -··Thal 's the way I li\'C."
OIAl'iiGt;s
Crurnp -"Change could be
brought into 11 .··
F. -··t h:1Vl' lo chance.••
l'rump -··\Vho said"!"'
E -··fdo."
you backslid e"• \\'hen the uglies
come out'!"
Cru mp -"\·ou don't sccn1
ugly.''
ft"-"Juslold."
Crump · "Old'!"
I'' -·1'm four years older than
my husband. \'cs, and stupid.
That's another \vord I get ii lot.
Stupid and n<.1i ve .''
t:rump--··tr that i s· true, 'why
are you here.?"
\VORTll IT
F' ··Be.cau se I 'm wort.h
"''orking on .''
Crump -"Th at's ~ood. But what
is lhis luxury ile m ~ou keep toting
making demands. I cannot kc<·p
fulfilling den1ands.''
Cn1m11 -"\'ou mu:-:.t be Dli.lrncd
to D."
t: -··vcs."
Crum\l -'·Lcl's 11('ar i.ibout
demands fro1n your side."
E ---"r.t aybc they <ire expcc·.
tations .. "·h;1l I think ht: expects
uf me." ·
··1 \\·:int to do somC'thrng \\"ith my
mind. (She is going to schuol. I
School cxcill'S and 1.-·xhilaratcs me~
But, if I ha ve to go back lo this
other rol e ... I can't do both .. .I
still have the san1e rcsponsibililies
as before."
Cn1mp -··rs th alrighl?" r:-··''c:-:.."
f) -"\Ve left the facts long ago.''
Crump ··1 am trying to get
~0111c data. I'm trying to get into
realities.··
To f: --"Ca n you stop being a
housc"'•ifc ror the rest of the
1.-'\"Cni ng"! Could you fanlasire being
something clst!?
.. Fantasies arc free. They arc
,:!real because you can change
1hcm anytin1 c you \Vant. That's
because they :.i re yours. 1
··And ,,·ouldn't it" be cricket lo
rantasize on "'hat you think a
house,,·irc shou ld be'!
··Then draw these fantasies into
your reality.
··\'Ou can make them real.
"fantasies are you.••
Ti-Grace Atkinson,
a pioneer of the
feminist movement
and acknowledged
theoretician, has put
together a book
containing
position papers on the
movemen t.
DEAR ANN LANDERs: A word
please to women who complain
because their husbands are
••workaholics'':
You could do worse. Our
daughter did . She married a
"restaholic." lier husband lert one
job arter another bttause he was
asked to do such "demeaning"
things as work overtime, come in
on Saturdays occasionally and ar·
rive on time in the mornihg.
yet. The Internal Revenae Depart·
ment has been busy, or late,
chetkJng: the records ol peop&e •ID
have never been checkH before.
That ••gentleman'' could be.est-
DEAR ANN LANDERS: This
is urgent. Please tell me whal lo do
about my sister. D was engaged lo
a man for several months. They
kept it a secret until his divorce
was £inal because his wife was very
vindictive and her settlement
terms would ha\'e been brutal had
she known he was planning to mar-
ry.
Feminist Critical of Gains
He couldn't manage without tOor
12 hours sleep every night. On
weekends he was so pooped he
eouldn 't m ow the lawn. lake
clothes to the cleaner or empty the
trash. Since he \\'as often "bet-
ween jobs" our daughter had to
leave an inrarlt to go to work .
Naturally he couldn 't lower him -
self to do any household chores
because he "'as a "man,'' so she
had it all.
The only time we ever saw the
slob attack anything with zeal was
at the table. Of course he \\'BS
disgustingly overweight.
She finally got rid of the bum. So.
you wives out there '"ho complain
about" ''w o rk a holic hus ·
bdns," count your blessings. Gran-
ted. extremes are never good, but
better a guy who works too much
than too little. At least you're sup·
ported. GLAD HE'S GONE
DEAR GL1\D: I hope your
daughter ha• a good memory.
Tho1e •·ho ignore hltlory are
doomed 10 repeat ii. Thanks ror
wrtung. /
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I
thought you and .your rea~ers .
might be interested 1n how a rnend or mine combined business with
pleasure and helped her gentleman
friend out \\·Ith his income ta"
returns.
He took her on a beautiful trip.
paid her an "honora1ium" ror her
sen·i<'es and w.-ote it orr. along
wit.h her tra\•el expenses. which
ga\·e him a nirty tux deduction . •Jow's lhut ror a unique t"'·ist to
the oldest profession'! -DUG ·
EYED . ()EAR BUG : &Ir. \Vhreler
Dealtr hasn't •nttrn a"·ay with 1t
Two months ago the man got his
final papers and the very next day
he married a woman he knew less
than three weeks. My sister went
completely to pieces. She had no
idea he was seeing anyone else.
Since D got the news she has gone
from 125 pounds Lo 105. She can't
eat or sleep. She has missed so
much lime from work she will
probably lose her job. As It is, she
is functioning so poorly I don't
know how she m anages lo gel out of
bed in the morning.
I a m the only person who knows
\\'hat is wrong and I've been s"'·orn
to secrecy. The doctor ha!> given
her every imaginable test and can
find nothing physically wrong. The
simple truth is she wants lo die.
and.she WILL die unless something
is done to help her. But WHAT?
Please. Ann . this Is an-S.O.S. ·
DEAR6.0.: You and I both know
Uitt the maa hts go\ lO be a M-
taral heel and your sister Is lucky
be married someone eli;e. But to
gel her to accept the tr,uth ls
another story.
Nothing In this v.·orld can· kttp
htr alive If she "'ants to die. IYs
only chanCe Is to acttpl prefes-
sional help. But she must seek I&.
You can't drag her.
Arc your parents too strict.? llard
to 1'('ach? Ann Lander5's booklet,
.. Rug ged by .Parents? llnw to Get
More f'recdom," eould help you
bridge lhc generutlnn gup. Send 50
centlli In ~in u·ith ~·our rcq\l~flt and
u long, titamped. ~elr·nddre~'Wd en·
\'t'lope lo Ann Lnildcrs, P.O. Rox
1400. El~in.111. 60t2Q.
Ry PATRICIA McCORMACK
·NEW YORK (U l>J) -In the
beginning of the contemporary
women's movement, persons in the
front lines included:
Betty Friedan. alive and well in a
luxury apartment tower across
from Lincoln Center in New York.
She's lecturing at colleges. helping
sel up an econof!ljc think tank for
women, and will he involved next
year in the international year or the
women. She is the mother or the
movement.
Gloria Steinem. an editor of 1'1s
magazine and a lecturer. She still
wears the aviator style glasses,
pants slung low on the hips and
shirts and turtlenecks or various
sorts. The journalist is the
movement's most prolific writer.
T i-G race Atkin s on ,
acknowledged as the theoreti cian
of the movement. She hasn't been
heard from much lately. But she.
·too, is alive and well, and has just
pul together a book containing
PoSition papers on the movement. or the three pioneers. only f\1s.
Atkinson is depressed over the
movement.
For the last couple of years f.1~.
Atkinson hai; been taking time to
recharge her batteries. She said
she believes ~he h.ad burned herself"'-
oul and is a differe nt person tod ::iy
-at leasl she isn't. in such a hurry
toeauscradlcal chonge.
Jn her activist days she l<'d
demonstrations and once in t!nJ,
while s~aking al Catholic Univcr·
slty ih Wnshington, D.C., so ir-
ritated fl.1rs. Palricit1 Bozell th l\t a
phy5ica l confrontation en!'lued.
Mrs. &7:ell rushed up tot.he gt;i~e
and slapped ft1 s. Atkinson over
something said about the Catholic
church.
"Catholic UnivC'r~ily" is the title
~ the chapter ht ?.ts. Atkinson·~
book in which I he incident is
ttcQ\lnted -and documented '4'itb
'
picture. In the first pince, l\fs.
Atkinson had been banned from
speaking al Catholic University
and students who \vante<f to hear
her had gotten a court order.
1'he speeche!ii rrom those early
days arc between the covers of the
book titled : "Amazon Odyssey -
The First Collection of Writings by
the Political P ioneer or the
Women's Movement, Ti -Grace
Atkinson" -puhlishcd by Links
Books in New York.
TOO MUCH POWER
Ms. Atkinson was on the board of .
the National Organization for
W.omen (NOW) when it was roun-
ded and "'as the first president o(
the New York Chapter of NOW -a
position that she believed gave her
too much J>O"'er. So she resigned.
Wom en, s he maintains. aren·t
goin~ to liberate themselves by
building more power structures.
·"rhe political mancuverings of
the \vnm cn's movement prove,
without doubt, I.hat lhc "ideological
boundaries ma intaining women :1s
an oppressed class have not l>c<!n
touched." sht' says in intn-.lducing
her collection or v.•rilin~s.
"\Ve S\\'irl in circles, building in
frenzies lhal cun only solidify and
lock in even more securely the op-
J)l'cssion or wo men into our
politica l system .•·
But what of 1 he gains? The
S u preme Court decision
llbcralizing the abortion policy in
the United States? Whal nr the
movement, l<'d hy ft'flcr;,i l agen·
cits. foy equal 11ay for t'<1u11I work·!
\\'h:it of lhe opening or previously
m;ile O<'c u11ati11ns lo "·on1cn?
And "'h:11. or the t'li m\oath1n of
sex quotas tin entry lo institutions
or hi 1:hcr ef1uc:\lion -11ot:1bly law
:ind medical sr-hool s?
These i;.:ains, ~l :l. Atkin~on s:ii<I,
t':1n be tak n nwJy a!'i easily as
given.
She reminded thut the fir11t
\\·omen's liberation movement, the
one that s tarted in 1850 and
.culminated in vicll)ry in 1920 when
women got the vole, lost steam af-
terlhi:" vote was gained.
If it bDd continued to succeed, ac-
cording to Ms. Atkinson, there
$0Uld have been no need ror the
second worhen 's movement, the
contemporary one.
''llow can you sit there," I asked,
"and say nothing is happening in
the movement and that people arc
c.Jcpressed over the lack or action~··
1 especially brought up the Nor·
theast Regional NOW meetinJ:: at
Atlantic City, called lo order al the
same time the establishment v.·as
running the Miss Ameri ca com·
petition th ere the other weekend.
Big guns or the wom e n 's
movement on the East Coast were
th ere. 1'he confer ence was called
··\Vonder \V om a n -No Myth
America."
It aimed at the unfinis hed
bu si ne ss of th e wom e n 's
mo\'cmcnt, including passage of
the Equal Ri ghts Amcndn1ent -
ratification needed in from five to
ei(?;ht more states ror it lo become
la"" dcpcndin,:! on who docs the
countini.:. _
i\ FANTA~\·
"Th:1l "'as mtnnly ridir-ulous,"
r.1 s. Atkinson Sll id . "\Vondcr
Woman i!'I a ranla:\y :.ind we cnn 'l
get forceful action thmugh fantasy.
The NOW march on the Boardwalk
was mass or coll~cti\'e Cant;:i~Y nnd
\V:1 s th;il much inure removt..'{I from
reality."
''hli ss Amcrlrn "'US closer 10
rt::ihly . 1'he f\liss i\m('rlca e\"e:nt
\\'38 based on accnmpli:\hment ·-
and lh<' :1im w:1s v:innlnJ{ loot. rrhc
tt11ss Am cri c=i "'lnne1:"s taik c is
$100.000 nr better ror her yf'a r's
rch~n . l'lus schol:irships.1
"1'ht" rc minisl" In Atl~ntic City
were husy lalk\n ~ but the Wi'lmen in
---
•
the Mi ss America competition
were di:>ing. ''
From the beginning, Ms. Atkin·
son said, s he reels the trouble with
the move ment has been "confusing
rh<'tnric with reality.''
· She wa s one who delivered a lot
of rhetoric and, as she described il
al the beginning of the interview.
"burned myself out."
Another sign nothing much is
ha ppenin~ in th e move ment. acCOr·
ding lo ft1 s. Atkinson's "reality yar-
dstick" -there arc more than 100
feminist publications, newsletters
and the like. The movement
people, s he interprets, are writing
instead of doing, talking lo one
another -sometimes in poetry.
"The feminists," she said, "are
empty inside. Despite all the
sloga ns. sisterhood docs not give
identity to one as an indi\•idual. ··
The despair l\1s . Atkinson detects
in the movement stems rrom a sim-
ple ca use. She said :
•'ILi. E1'1PTIN1':S..I\ •
''We ha \'C excavated our old.
identities -·· "'e have taken away
the sex object figure. There Is an
cmplinrs!> inside a nd we have nol
lllOVCd lo fill it. ~
"\Vc'\•c thrown off the depen-
dency rol e and are a nti-depcn-
1lency but, :lJl:ain. "'l' have not put
<.1nything in its place."
"I've changed a lot in many
w ays," A1 ~. Atkinson said. "[
rccoAnize that the changes we must
make \\'ill tak1• longer and will in·
volvc n less hard llnc."
\Vh c n s he was al he r mosl
r:idicu l sta "e . h1s. Atkinson
demanded S«:'\'Cn da y fl "''~k ser·
,,,.._.~ Crom lu!r collca.:,ues, the
r;1dical Cenlinlsl~.
"1'm ll~tening u lot more thc?M!
d:iys." !Cihc !\<1id . "And I undcnitnntl
JC a fcmini~t lakes u vucatinn and
ror~cts ubout the "''nrk we havo
ah('ad.
'
ICl DAILYPILOf Mond1y. Oc1ober 2t, 1974
Couples Say
TneirVows
Along Coast
' KEUS·STANTON
Judith Frances Stanton,
· daughter of the Russell S.
Stantons of Newport Beach,
exchanged wedding vows
with Wouter P . J. Keus of
1'orrancc in Sl. Paul the
Apostle Church , Westwood.
The Rev. John Collins of·
ficiated at the ceremony for
which Diana Stanton and
Peter van Krieken were
honor attendants.
The bride graduated from
Mary mount College.
Her busband, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Pieter Keus, The
llague, Netherlands, atten·
ded the Royal Naval
Academy and servcd·in the
Royal Netherlands Navy.
I-le is a member of the
American Academy of Ac-
tuaries. . '
• MOURADIAN·ADAMS ,
Alayne Alice Adams ex-
changed VOY.'S Y/ith RQbert·
Albert Mouradian during
double ring wedding
ceremonies in St. James
Episcopal Church, Newport
Beach.
The Rev. Fr. Levon
ApeHan officiated for the daught~ of r.-1r. and Mrs.
Albert Armen AdamS,
Newport Beach and the son
of Mr. and Mrs. Albert
1.louradian, Los Angeles.
llonor attendants were
l\liss Antica Christine
Adams and ltobert Camp-
bell.
Bridemaid s wtrc
Anastasia A.dams,. Lee
Ot.labashian, 1tlar y
Gilmore, Susan Desantis
and Karen Fishman.
Ushers were Albert Adams
Jr., Dr. Daniel Tevrizian,
Dr. Terry Zamadigan, Dr.
Kit Zamudigan and Brian
Craig.
Kristin Campbell was the
flower girl and John Meran
Saroxan was ring bearer.
'fhe bride, a UCLA
graduate with a · degree in
French Literature, was ar-·
fi liated with Alpha Chi
Omega. Her husband, also a
UCLA graduate, holds a
masters degree from the
University of Southern
Cali fornia and was af-
filiated with Sigma Alpha
Epsilon.
'"After a European trip, the
couple will reside in
l\l anha tt an Beach.
BREWER-KOCH
Newport 1-larbor
Lutheran Church was the
setting for the marriage or
Suzanne A1 aric Koch and
Robert Fredrick Brewer.
The Rev. Roger J. Berg
MRS.DALKE
directed the vo\v exchange
for the daughter of Mrs.
Wilma Koch of Huntington
Beach and Paul Koch or
Newport Beach, and lhc son
of r.-1r. and Mrs. Richard
Brewer of Downey iind
Newport Beach.
11onor attendants were
Shelly Snyder a nd Craig
Dennis.
Others were Berta
Rodgers, Pally Wimer,
Elvie Wilkinson, Chris Jen·
sen and Kathy McGrew,
Jim Mann, Jim Gormley,
Rich Sauder, Mark Bollman
and Garry Brown.
The bride, a graduate of
Orange Coast College, at-
tends California State
University at Long Beach.
Her husband earned a BS at
the University of Southern
Calirornia where he af-
filiated with ·Sigma Alpha
Epsilon.
SNIEGOSKl·AUBREY
Diana Lynn AObrey and
John Joseph Sniegoski were.
married during ceremonies
conduc ted by the Rev.
Emory Campbell in the 1'Ul-
lerton First Baptist Church.
Their parents are the
HUgh Aubreys or Costa
Mesa and Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph Sniegoski of Fuller-
ton .. .
Honor attendants were
• MRS.BREWER
Brenda I-Jil l und Jerry
Sniegoski. Others "'ere
l.inda,Ram·sey, Linda I..ce.
Dave O'Connell and Brad
J\'lillcr.
1'he bride a ttended
schools in Orlando and her
husband is a graduate or
Sonora High School, La
11abra. They will Ii vein 1'Ul·
Jerton.
DALKE·GRAHAM
During nupitals conduc-
ted by. the Rev. Harlan
Coykendall in St. James
Episcopal Church, Newport
~each, Barbara Jane
Graham became the bride
of Lawerence Wayne.
Dalke. ·
They are the daughter
nnd son of the Charles Ed-
\Yard Grahams or Newport
Beach and Mr. <1.nd Mrs.
1-lerbert Dalke of Salem,
Ore.
Debra Graham served as
maid of honor ; Ken Dalke
'vas best man, and ushers
'vere Paul Lubomirski and
Scott Graham.
The bride attended the
University of Southern
California where she
pledge d Pi Phi. 11er
husband attended Orange·
Coast College.
The ney:Jyweds \\'ill live
in Salem.
Clinic Services Expand
The llunliogton Heach
Free Clinic hopes to better
:serve lhc fa mily planning
I· needs of the Spanish-
spcaking community soon. ·
Jn addition, the clinic has
initiated a prog ram to r erer Spanish :)peaking
people ror additional family
recruit Spanish speaking planning services
volunteets for service in the •
downtown Huntington· Volunteerso(Llamadade
The c x pan de d Beach facility. Ayuda, a clinic·operaled
educational a_nd referral cf-s · h h t r ·u
forts will be made possible Under the direction of panis 0 .ane, WI par-
by a recently received state .l\1addy Newman, health ticipate in the training ses-
grantof $6,140. counseling coordinator •. sions, too.
Clinic coordinators have
begun to survey existing
ramily planning services in
Orange County and to com -
pile a registry of those at
v.·hich Spanish is spoken.
these \'Olunteers wi ll be
trained in family planning.
They "'iii learn the varied
options or birth control, as.
vlell as \\/here they might
There iS no ~amily plan-
ning information and refer-
ral service specifically
aiding the Spani.Sh speaking
population, iri Orange Coun-
t y, yet there at;e 95.000
within the county who speak
only Spanish.
Noting that existing ser-
vices 'are not adequately
reaching these people,
l\lichael Lyons, the clinic's
coordinator, feels the
si tuation is complicated by
the tendency of Spanish
speaking people to be more
discreet in obta.ining family
planning services.
•
Y Chan ·ges Occur
By JO otso~ -soeiety-th·en allowed 1he· from plaeint less-value·on,...Sa·xonl~rol est<1nl, mlddJ1J-
o.t11eo.11•P11etM•1t ~·omen to discuss them self.control and more on ugcd aud nlidd le-spread."
For an organization to among themselves .... to see self-expression. People are Now, the volunt~r is a
move ahead and achieve, It how they could benefit the "saylng it like it ls," Dr. per son .of any age. u1~y
has to realize that things Y\VCA. Schindler·Rainmenl obser-education, any ~thn1c,
a re changing, then learn Under changes in values, ved. b~ckground , w.ho gives of
how to cupitalize on these Dr. Schlndler-Rainman h1 s resourcesw1thoutpa)'..
changes:. said we are moving "from AISo, there "is less em· ln~ustry also Is .beg1nn1ng
Teaching YWCA profes-what was an industrial phasls on lifetime comn1it· to give workers time or! to
sionalsundvolunteersrrom. society to a society where ments lb a partner, e.xr!ore ~oluntee r nc·
a ll over Southern California workin.g for and with organizatiO'n, religion or tfv1t1e9, with thoughts I<>
how to do this was Dr. Eva humans is going to be a job, and more preference .s econd c a re er s or
Schindler-Rainman, lee-majorthing.'' fortemporaryties. retirement, and some com-
t u re r, a u tho r and Emphasizing that ''the Among some people, Dr. panie~ are hiring \'Olunteer-
organizational consultant. future is here now•• she Schlndler·Rainmen noted, coordinators to place em·
Her topic for the YWCt\ al.so said we are goin'g from there is a shill away Crom ployes in the community.
Southern· CEllifornia fall an achievement orientation materialism. "There are ne'v spaces
conference was Metamor-to self-actualization orien· and places £or volunteers,"
phosis -Moving Out of the talion. She then discussed the she continued. For exam· world of the volunteer, I h I t I R Rut -· Emerging lnlo the The English language has describing the difference Jl e, .t e . n ern~ evcnue
Future. 'changed accordingly, she between DO\V and fi\'e years Service is making , us~. or Dr. Schlindler·Rainman co mmented: Expressions volunteers who arc fanultar
also was resource person such as ".I've got to do my ago. with tax prc;>cedu!es.
for the 12-hour meeting in ow11thing"and"That'smy "Over th.e U.S. and O r ga n1zat1ons. are
the Saddleback Inn, Santa . bag" have recently ap· Canada, more volunteers changing -they a're. being
Ana. peared. a re available. Volunteers: flattened out so all the
She first listed trends iri Also society is. going used to be white, Anglo·· leader.ship is not at the top
PAULA SCHNEIDER
Betrothal
Announced
li'lr. a nd l\1rs. '.Fred
Schne ider of Newport
_Beach have announced the
engagement of their
daughter, Paula Ann
Dogenrie f of Laguna
Niguel.
The bride-to-be is a
graduate of Corona del Alar
High School currently at-
tending UC Irvine.
The bridegroom-e lect,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles
A. Bogenrief of Newport
Beach, graduated from
Ohio State University and
received his ·JD degree
from the University of
Southern California.
The couple plan
married next June.
to l>e
• of the pyramid, she said.
.Unions and wome n's
organizations are confron·
Horoscope: Leo
'
Must Slow Pace
By SYDNEY OMARll
ARIES (March 2l·April
19): You get instructions
decisions. Key now •is to be
diplomatic.
from various quarters. Key SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov.
is to be seleetiv.e. You need~ 21): Avoid tendency to fool
not jump at e very com· yourself. See in light of ac·
mand. tuality. Huld off on short
TAURUS (April 20.fl.!ay
20): Hold off on travel ir
possible. You require new
approach. Paths that are
worn may not be for you.
Key is to pioneer.
GEMINI (fwtay 21-June
20): Trust hunch. Share
knowledge. Learn by
teaching. Be open-minded
about suggestion proffered
by unorthodox individual.
Accent is on money. -
journey, if possible.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Money and how
you spend it -that's
spotlighted. Aquarian is in
picture. Some of your
wishes can be fulfilled.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22·
J an.19); Cycle is such thats
you met.'t challenges and
come out a better person for
the experience. You fmish
assignment. ·
ting volunteers, some with
accusations of taking jobs
away from those \vho need
them.
0 th e r t r e nd s in_
organizarions, Dr. Schin-
dler-Rainman noted, are
··shared power, shared
. dccision·muking. qaality
control. polarization or
groups and individuals, ac-.
ceptance and appreciation
for different kinds of people
and a re-e valuation of what
the good life really is."
How does this affect an
organization such as the
YWCA?
Delegates suggested thal·
with more \'Olunteers, the
professional staif will have
more time. There will be
more co mmunity input, and
the image of the Y vo'ill be
revitalized.
But Dr. Schindler-Rain·
man warned that "we will.
have to rev up our
recruiting skills" for the
much broader ~ommunity
interest.
CANCER (June 21-July
22): Avoid trying to force
others to your viewpoint.
Key now is to ride with tide.
There are obstacles which
could ultimately prove of
benefit.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. jjiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiiiiijiii
l8): You ma y not be
touching all bases. Means it
would be wtse to double~
check. What you thought
was over a nd done may be
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
A void rush, There are ac-
tivities behind the scenes
which require slow, careful,
seasoned consideration.
slightly raw.
A
.cmon'S
SPORTSWEAR
'NESTatFFP!Afk ."!JAlSOAISJ.ANr)
NewportBeoch ' 216/l'oineA.~.
5e-4121 675-1904
PISCES (Feb. 19-March
20): Pace is slower but
progress is possible. Means
know where·you want to go
-get m ap and sharpen
sense of direction.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept,,, ----------------~~~~~~~~~~ 22): What appears free-and· f
easy could be difficult and
expensive. Means remem-
ber cli r he about not judging
a book by its cover.
LIBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Situation concerning h<tme,
basic sec urity i s
spot lig hted, features
change and u1orthodox
Art Talks, Craft Sales Top Agendas
Fight inflation -
SE I
OiScoverles
The fall program of
Disco\·erles Unlimited has
opened at Golden \Vest Col -
lege.
No"' Jn its fourth
semester. "Discoveries" is
open to "'001Cn o f all ages to ·
broaden tlll•ir horizons, in -
crease their kno\~:ledge and'
't'xpand the ii' interests.
\Vomcn mccl from 9 a.m.
to noon on \\'cd nrsday in the
college community C<'nler.
No registration is nece's-
sary, and \\'On1cn may par·
ticipatc in as many or as
few of the programs as they
choose.
On the ag('nda for this
month arc a handwritin~
analysis Oct . 23 and a
"rreati ve hostess", Oct. 30.
Diar:a·story-
The second part of Joel
Chandler· ~larris 's ''Old Mr.
Rabbit He's a Good Fisher·
man" will be featured in
Orange County Public
Library 's Dial-A-Story
program.
Storyteller is Joyce Hen·
s i c ~·. Cypres s Branch
rhildrcn's librarian.
Numbers are 636-READ
and ~l-4581 .
Art League
Artist Ning Dennis Yeh,
an instructor at La Veme
Colle ge and m<'mberof Art-
a-Fair. will demonstrate
ink painting nt the Tuesday,
Oct. 22 . meeting of the
Col)l'1 ~lesa Art League.
The group will meet al
7:30 p.m. in Adam s
Elementary School
multipurpo:;c room.
Sweet Adelines
from Harborlites Chapter of
S"'·eet Adelincs ·will com-
pete in 1.tilwaukee Wed-
nesday-Saturday, Oct. 23·
26, against quartets from
throughout the United
States.
Making the trip will be
Susy A-tcGeHec, San Juan
Capistrano; Carol Ander-
son, lr\'inc : Valerie Im·
megart, Costa Mesa, and
Carolyn Chappell, Hunting.
ton Beach.
Toran a
Sculptor Laddie John
Gill, who instructs at UC lr-
\'ine. "'ill lecture on hi s
works \Vedne.sday, Oct. 23,
at 7:30 p.m. in Bowers
l\1useum to members of the
Torana Art League.
Hoag Auxiliary
The Auxiliary of Jloag
l\lcmorial 1-l ospit::il.
Presbyterian will open its
Gift Box C hristmas
Boutique, Tuesday-Thur-
sday, Oct. 22·24, from 10
a.m. to 5 p.m. in the
hospital's main lobby.
Ite ms ranging from
stocking fillers to fine gifts
may be selected from
lingerie, toy , jewelry,
toiletries and hand knits
and candy departmenl'i.
Trojan League
1-ligh school students in-
terested in attending the
Uni versity of Southern
C;,ili£ornia are invited to at-
tend the first in six forums
presented by the 1'rojun
League of Orange County,
Tuesday, Oct. 22.
l\trs. 11 arlen Martens,
director of special events-::it
use. will present a lecture-
slide presentation on the
Students and their parents
are asked to attend.
CHOC
Al Baiettj, past president
of the California AS·
sociation for Neurologically
Handicapped Children, wiU
speak Thursday, Oct. 24, at
7:30 p.m. on Parent Power.
·He will speak to par·
ticipants of a Children's
Hospital of Orange County
program for parents of
ch.ildre n l earning and
l)ijiavior problems in the
C-HOC auditorium.
Queen of Hearts
A champagne showing of
holiday f~shions with the
Gatsby look will be offered
Dy-the .. Queen or~ Hearts
Guild, Children's Hospital
of Orange ~unty.
!\frs. Robert Russell will
be hostess for the Thursday,
Oct. 24 event from 2 to
p.m. in her Laguna Niguel
home.
Bike Safety
Newport Beach Public
Library will present A
Bicycle Built for You, Thur-·
sday, Oct. 24 at4 p.m. in the
multipurpose room or the
technical services facility,
115 Agate Ave .• Balboa
Jsland.
A film, "Bicycle CJown,"
will be screened and
Newport Beach Police Of.
ficer Stan Bressler will •
demonstrate simple bicycle
repair and maintenance.
University al 7;30 p.m. in••,.::.:::::==;:;===============:.:;: the 11untlngton Beach home!
or Mrs. King Cooper. FALL NEEDLEPOINT CLASSES
Scheduled for later arc
trips to the lluntington
I.ibrary Garth•n and the J .
Paul Geltv Musi;um and
programs On pcr$onal ron1·
munication and ~he psychic
world. '
1\dditional information is The Shimmerons quarte'i~======================7ll TCIUCJht by •-y Crossen
.avallabl(' by ca lling the ac·r---------
livilies office nl 892· 7711, cx-
l<'nSion 561. 562 nnd 563 .
.
LOSE WEIGHT
OR MONEY BACK o.,,,.,.,, CAii n110 you ~om•
Ill• il!m. 1'•m 111•\on vo 11 w•nt lO
tlf. 8 •<:•1.it 0 0 •1111.W co nt•lnl Ir•• "'"n 1111i:l••t •tOuc1nq 110 ,1v.11l~bl• w1tll~"I .t l!rt\CllP1•0"'
Ont l •nv O<!H nt• tU•ll! J IH1!f
l'!Ollf bf!Jtf IT'&•I\ \Ulllllfl .. I \IOUr
• 1"1111111 -\I.JU r~I Ir\~. dDWn 90 ,,,,
1.•11.11uU • d 11wn 9f'"l inc weoql\11
Ollnl'll!~ ri.1 11eeli u••d \U(Cfulullv
11v tnou1•"4t •If O•ff Ill• countfy
''" 16 Y••·•' •I w•ll WO•~ lo• vov.
W•ll'I \t11 00"'"'' Pt•"'· Ch"'•C•tlv
'~'"0. you "''" f;~I l•,,1111!1 • nn ~,,. .. ,,,. • 1\1'1 \Of'C: .. ! f~t'tl•\fl , $.llt
"' u t ••f(l•Wt wf'lf"' ~•11n ~1111rtellO ,
V •I "'"\! 10111 UOl\I fd ."ir YOU!
,...n,.rv w•ll 1'.11 1~lu•1drd 'roo Q•Jtl•
''"''~•••Pct St•ll '•'II"~-~~· rtd C'Jf
f'>CP•\ f~! .1na II ~' IO<'g~/ w10I
l llt•lnr,,
THRIFTY DRVr. ...
0 1\.COL•HT \TOMlfl
Looi Cho•dl
s1sooto
Artist of Year
The C.."+l1i 11nrr Ar11,10111~
Yea, comm11tee seel<s up-
and-com1ng arllsts w1lh
e~cepl!o nal 1a1en1 In
lhe l1na1 qualifying
arf comoetilfon
hor o ar Huntington Center
Nov 3. Morelhan
s 10.000 11'1 l'lwArGs Wrife
Ar1 1stol the Year. 124
Hun11no1onCon1t'lf'. 7117
EQ1nger. Hu nl1ngtoni3eacn.
Ca 9264 7. LA artists
oonracl Drug9crs 734·212 1
Come talk to our electrolysis
experts. You 'II wonder
why you waited so long!
Our Kree melhod Is the gentle, permanent way
to be rid of that unwanted faclal or body hair.
Ask for a complimentary consultation with our
technicians . Robinson's Beauty Salon.
~~~r-··
•
fALL SHllS • Oc..._ JI ..... "°" ...... 20
....., • OdolNr 21
10:00 a.m. -12:00 noon Albbon Sampler (Advanced)
t2:30 p.m.., 2:30 p.m. Basic Sampler (Beginning)
T...,•Octoller2t
t2:30 p.m. • 2:30 o.m. Aran Sampler (infermedlatel ...... .. .,.0c .... 10
10:00a.m.-12:oo·noon. Orlglnal Irish Lace •
PllloW {lntermecllale)
12:30 p.m. • 2:30 p.m. 9u90110 Sampler (beginntng)
7:30 p.m. • 9:30 p,m. Aran Sampler (Intermediate) W••••i -o.t.-..r• 10:30 a.m. • 3:00 p,m. WorQhop
Oasses run four weekt. plus one all-day WorkshOp.
Fee: '35.00 -lncluOlng matel1als, Checks. payable
lo Bunrty ·0osson, must accompany ~lealion . •• ••
... !LEPO INT DESP
262.i L C"•t-Hwy. • t..... 4cf Mw • ~44-7t04 . -
---
' •
• . We've spent over ten years helping you
fight It by bringing you first quoltty
fashion fabrics at GREAT SAVINGS!
SINGLE KNIT PRINTS
and JACQUARDS
fpKWLOWprlct...,,. WM., Oct. 23
Values to
5.00
Sew a dress or lounging fashion for
~than 15.00! It's this year's favonte
look. Mact'lin&-washable screen prints ln Acty\1c and blends. 58-60" wide.
FG·sreg LOWl?rice 2.49.
GABARDINE PRINTS
Values to
5.00 2~~
Soft dusty tones for the 30's fashion·
look Florals and dancing ligures. Jt's
• inogreat tordecoraling. Poly·Rayon
~-OO"wide.
-POLYESTER D.K. PRINTS
SOft al"ld flowing tor dresses and blouses.
~ike double knit In caUco l!Orals
• Wld~metrics.EiO"wlde.
Valftslo 6.00
• IAGUNA BEAOI • 778 Forut Ave.
OPEN: Mot1-Sal. 9·5:30 P.M.
• NfWl'ORT BfAQI . 2o Foshlon lslond
OPEN: Mon•Frl. 9:30.9 PM.
Sat. 9:30.&P.M., Suri. 12·6 P.M. . . .
· MIXED SINGLES
ME 8ool(f0
Mf ~0((' l'M OATING
HIM ON
$A1UfWAtf 9ooMfR oN FIZIDA</
1Hll2SOAI/ Nl6~T! N IG~T ! .c. NtG.ir !
'TUMBLEWEEDS
l •
RINKY WINKERBEAN
r CQYT l<NOIJJ Wll'J .
WIJ'RE AFRAID 10 cums
l\lE rol'€, LE& I
RGMENTS
NANCY
YOU SURE WERE
STUPIP IN
·sc.iooL TODAY
THE TEACHER
SHOULD HAVE
!"APE YQI, Wl;AR
APUNCE CAP
·by ~m. F. Brown and Mel Casson
ANO Ml'~ 'Pt11l6
Mf 001' Orl
SlllWJW N16~T!
SOHPA</? liooJ1N6'G
OPCH Or-I
'' ~UrlOAI{ Nl(,~f !
YO U WERE
PRETTY DUM B
YOURSeLF
TO PAY
PEANUTS
Wt~ CA2f5 r AT
LtA51 I MAO£
1Hf f'LA'l·OFFS!
by Tom K. Ryon
IHIS ·
ISN'f PtllNG A
1li1N6 FOR MY
lll.C~R
by Tom Batiuck
EXC.EPI' ~ llE llME
HE 6C1l" l£6r ! ' I ' ;
'
JD
by Dale Hale
by &nle Bushmiller _,_,_ ... ~ ...... ,_ THERE'S
YOUR
DUNCE
CAP
DR.SMOCK
M tss c~ees6, e e:c A us e OF
1'HS PES'N N Y' 5M0~1"ACS6 ...
l"IHA.T'5 WITH
TH• Wl,IRD
LITT'U
C#ICK.!
c:;i •
)
MOON MULLINS
,.
;;
ANIMAL CRACKERS
Of eotJRSE ! u.IN FAC.r,
T>la.MA HAS Dl'.CIDEO ro
BOCOMf." CANDI PATE !
Monc!!y.Oclot>et21 , 1974
L.61"'5 PO .A.L-L-OUR
0 11...L.1 ""'6 IN ROUNP
NUMe6R~ -L..tl<I!!
• 100, • 200. t4o o
A.NP SO ON •. ,
~
0
0
OAILYPILOT 83
by George Lem9nl
"Mft. C11"'1 ~•N "
POSS H 15 PAi:t1"'
A GA l>.i ~--')
by Gus Arriola ...-~~~"V"~"'.""""""""'ol
WJW!FAR.. ovr 1s
12EAL IN1
ON, 'IOUTH
15 ON T"11$
..Sl)PER.>IAWRAL
J<ICK1 LATELY!
&·::::,::;..-..::::..-®
.. . .
<JJi?
L----!!:~::............J .
by Ferd Johnson
EMMA! Musr >t>u i i:t.vi: Youi< NEED~EPoiNT ~YING ?
,b.ROIJND UNGUARt>EP.
r
by Roger Bollen
by Charles M. Schulz THE GIRLS
.-----~."'-·"'"· ... ~. ""--=>-............. ·~ _,, .... ,._,,... . ·~ ...,. ·--· ·-
.
TDDAY~s CBDSSIDID PUZZLE
A.CRD$S '!1 W1ffle
1 Radia!H eoaliog: Vtr.
I F'1mlnin1 titlt 52 M11bl
10 Flin With: 54 Chemic ti :::.'!'I; compound
14 We11 Pointtr 58 Ctmt 10 rest
1S Ammut1ilioo: 59 Himself: L11in
lnlorm1I 61 Vl1d1mir llkh
16 A1b!J1y1s Uly1nov
62 Of sound mind
17 leg1le11cuse 63 L111e1s
S1tutdfiy"1 Puule S~:
18 Time of d1y 64 Ancien1 l
19 Church part ch11io1
20 Entirely 65 01g1ns
22 M11ried 1oai11 of vitlon
2• Hita 66 Woolly
26 Spudt: Dial. · · creatures IC.
27 S1r1r lttine: 67 Russian
2word• ruler1:V1r. 21 R1sln·sectet· 38 fundament1I
JO ·····YOU OOWN . ing lo sect princlf:ole
tea<ly}" I "On your 23 Saseballet J9 Ttl'ldlng to
31 Pul0flc1rgo w1yl " Roger -···• raiSollUP
32 Hunting dog 2 Nlmbut. 25 Mutic 42 ConOitions
37 Annual l Super11i1e playefs: of life
raturns; Abbr. a paper lnlo1mal 43 Ruler
:J8 Leadt ••tray 4 019r1ded 27 Wlflg~kl '46 Threfl: Preii11:
40 Int.Trade 5 Quiet: Poet. 28 Kn~e 47 PaawgefOf
• 01g. 6 A man ol -··· 29 S1rika with e~it 41 P1rf1c11 by a whip '8 ~ancel
repetition 7 I love: l•tin 33 Plea$11nl 49 Pus along
43 SIUOgtr···• 8 Cupid fla'tOf • 150 Think
Si.ughter 9 01 mooey 34 E. Indian 53 Eject
44 DirKllon: 10 Aquatic insirumr:nt SS Saturn·s ring1i
Abbi. m1mm1I JS Shelley's .. projectloll
'45 C111hioro9d 11 L1 .. en 'l'llm1 matar 56 Kno1t11r
foo111ool1 12 Stpar110 3$ SelfV····;' ;57 Fillistle1 -48 Ofk1v1 ll P1y11ttenlion Am1r.P111ibt 6o View
JUDGE PARKER
MISS PEACH
i • ' ' '
:tit.A ALWAyr; !OMES TO
YOtAIC' HOIAiE TO WATCH .,-y ? .....,_,
DICK TRACY
'
VES, AAD IF VOU SCRATCH
IT WITH F.fOUR: STUPID
ELBOWS, I'll POUND YOO!
. Yl!'S, Ml~ PEACH.
HE P0E~N 1 T l#ET ro WAl'lH I l'
VE~Y MLA'H Ai
MIS MOIA~.'
·-·--·----'1'0!.l'RE CUTE l.LIHEN
VOU'RE 1ND16NANT !
.....) n
by Harold Le Doux
1 DOUBT TAAT IT WOOLO HAVE SEEN ARCH
BECAU$E HE WORKS FOR TilE ORGAN-
IZATION ... AND MEL WOULD
HAVE SEEN PAID! UNLESS
HE DECIDED TO
DO A LITTLE
SU51NE55 ON
HIS OWN ...
by Mell
MY MOTME~
w~v OOES M05T OF
NOT, HE~ YELL.ING
1 ~A? OtA~rNG
Pr"IM e 11ME' •..•
by Chester Gould
REE OF THE SUIOS TAKEN FROM THE
DOCl MATTRESS WERE FIRED FROM ti.. SAME
GUN TWU' KIL.I.ED CRYSTAL!
"l'J bcucr lry on some1h tng cl~c-:ill he s..1itl wa'> "Which bank do
you plan 10 rnb"!'"
DENNIS THE MENACE
.
Ll ---·----··
l
l
I
.. •
.
'
l
8 4 DAILY PILOT ~-i. Octobot 21, 1974
'• Ljght Airs Hamper • PVBUC NOTICE
l'ICT"IOVS •llSlllll.tt
MAMI ITAT&ldflfT
fN tol1Gti¥tne ,.,._ -• I 111 1
llullMte "'
.. The Blccest Mlrketplace on the Orance Coast
DAILY PILO"J: CLASSIFIED ADS
I • ftAMCO IN\llESTNllHTS. lit• . ~ • .., Drnot, H'"'"'' l••c-.
Newport Fall Race CtllfONlll "66t.
,.,.,~ llfl.-vtr Otll ns. 1'1' ~'I Ot-. H..,.rt &Md!, Galltllt!IW
Alllhltly M. Ottl1'18. U7• Gf,ltll't'
Or .. N""" ktell. Ctllforllle 9>MO.
TM1 bu•I ... •• ll ~VCIM i.y 1 .......... ..._ .... .
You Can Sell It , Find It , [ 642•S&•s' ] One Call Service Trl\de It With a Warit Ad . I' __ Fasl..Credit ApP-f.~I
Roal blot. •••••• , • 1000.2999
Rontali ...•.•.•.• 3000-<l699
... , .... , lnV*sl-.t &
flnai!c.lol .•• , ••..•• 5000-5049
numonts, Per •1--...c.' Mtrchondi1t ..... , ·8000-8099 ~-' Fon ...... so .,,,,., Boats & Marint itt epolB 600M099 fqUlpmtnl .•••.•• , 9000-9099
Ught aJr and hoze Sunday
turned I.be ou~ide classes In
Newport Harbor Yacht Cl ub's
t'all Regatta ln1o a study In
still life as they g h o s t e d
downwind with jUJt enough air
to keep spinnakers full.
There were 204 boats in 1~
l'lasses sailing on lruide and
oul.iide rourses d uring 1 h e
tv.'0-dfly rl!gatto. L a r g e s t
turnout \\'as In the t "'' o
dlvtsions of the Laser class
with 46 entries in lhe A and
B divisions sailing inside lhe
COUJ'St'S.
Trophy 'Ainners: P.U. t PT LEOE Gola CUp -,., ... ,HAii' l~I -I. /lol'f' It, HtlllC Ttienr. NH't'CJ i. $GlllU'lllNI, Kltllft
DIN_., IVC1 J. LWHlno, 511nl Cle-. NHYCl ~-C.-motloll 111>1> AkutllbrlC, NHYC; J. Rec1m;;;Jo, 1111
1""'t1~J'in) -1. Chic T•1mlt AAJ~ty, WllH1m Flelcl•, 't'1tYC1 1. .Sl1r G1i.. T.,., Wiii.or\. IYC1 l .
H-,...,, Jade Dolllrtwll, llYC. Tt.M,.E$T II) -I. ,OSIUll\, Lff
We\SOfl• sccYC 1 '· SYZ, Ktn WllH,
Dilly Pli.t Sllll Plltle
'NOT THE FROSTING'
c;.rry Drltcoll
Cheet,ali
Captures
Lnurels
,Qleetah, an Ericson-39 sa.il·
ed by Dick Pennington, King
Harbor Yacht Club, was the
overall and Class B winner
in l..D5 Angeles Yacht Club's
Sail East Race, the second
feature of the Harbor Series.
(!IU. A ""IMlf Wll Trlblrlt, I ca1umol1-51 co-,klpperfl! bV Dick l!1t-tt•mtn •NI 8111 L1wllorn, 1!11lbol Yt<.nt Club. OVERAL L -1. Cllffl11!: 2, Seit, OeMls c1101111. ~I BYCJ l. Or•fll" a1ouom, M. Klflriey, PMYC. CL.ASS A -I, TrltwltJ ?, St,..,P!oer, Ot•n BrOW!I. LAYC; J, N1 .. 18oy. J•C-a1ll+l1, LAYC. CLASS I -Choll1l11 2, Flrttllrd, OsbOrll 11111 Wllll•ms, LAYCJ l. 5um-ll'Mllrwlnct II, OkM MtlM. LAYC. CLASS C -1, S(1h 2. C1n1o:ll1n R111>ln, J. P. w..-mlnvton. NHYC;
3. Odl1"1. Slle'Clan GollllOO'I. SllYC.
CLASS D -:-Gholl ,Jdlll •1Ylllllds. '-'"f ?. GrHll\Opplr, Hl!ch 1na 81m11 rt, LAYC. f>Hi.F -1, Drl l'IOI Blaa:iom: 1, Dlff!trtnt Dr\lm....,., Al J-., WC:YC; l, Trin'L Dlrwll1 0,,.,,, l!luc: YC.
1.10111' -POP "N111, ... l1r Kfjlt, LBYC
Jano Wins
.=>O'Clock
Bell Race
Jano, skippered by Bob
Kahn of California Yacht Club
\1·as the overall handicap and
C:Jass A winne r of cvc·s Five
o ·c1ock Bell Race, Saturday.
the final of the current Fred
Jiarris Series.
The 171/i·mile race turned
into a Class A sweep \\ith
Allen Puckett's Blackbird CYC
plaring s e c o n d and Bill
G i I b er t • s Zeus. Pacific
~lariners YC. correcting out
lhrid.
There \\·ere 76 entries ln
the Ocean Racing ( I 0 R ) •
Cruising Club of Amer l ca
( C C A l • Performance Han·
dicap (PHRF'l and r.i Id get
O ce an R ac ing (ti10RF)
classes.
H.-ncy lllltl'flrt'lr Otting
"il1.A1 l. et.roll• Ttm DftM1 Tlllt •tti.nent ,._, fl ltO wllll IN A VC. ' ' C-1'1' Cl"" Of Ct•• C-t't' On £mployment & Automobiles·& other ·
Pr _ollon .•.... 7000.7199 TronlPlJrtolion , ••• 9100, ltHOOIWl lll -I, Tht11..,, Gl'(lf <kkllw IS. lt1'-"°''· IYCr 2, IPf\PlllM, ~ ,.JllU Ctft'lltl!Ke. NHYC1 l. Ttllle. Mlllk Ll11lllJlhecl Or..... CNft Diiiy Pllol, 111i.-1~ fYC, ~-21, 21.. H-mbllr '· 11. it7( "All:R I•> -J: OrlfHn, Skl11 flli.tt, 31115-J•
-G.oor1l,R.E. __ ..;1-"oo:.:2 Gonorol R.E.
ERRORS: • A,dvortl..,.
1002Gentr•f R.I.
BOATING
ADY(; 3.. Spoiler, Clrl HHYC.
• '\!~~,, . ~ t_rJ:..r"'&~'. s.~:,~i 1 ---==ccc~-~---ErcH Ls.ff ili'1 -'T.''NDl'I St PUBLIC NOTICE
1111r1irk •k ~'!\'~ •o•Y'c: 2. ~ '---=:==:-:o==--L!:!w W'r)Gln~":'1H1fc~VCJ ). Olt~ ,. FICTITIOUS IUtlNISS
S-0-l Lt ) -J. ANI TM World N.t.MI ITATIMINT "I Al111 J~-· CIYC1 L Tiii! tollowlllf .,.,._ 11 doing bu1h1tu W ,.., llotl flr.IMli Cl!IYC 1 3. 11: A •r:.~M11,J•I_ ''~'!f~LAJS;.1~. i:1tucrus FVN01, 1u Mltn. 111rioa. L..., 'l ~ ~T\.m •• c.11foMt1 ttWl. B't'Ci '· Jim l[ICtr. ng , NltYC ; c•···O •-, O>Ol --• :a. Ty lffdl. IYC1 4, Wt rwlt 8tlllt. ,_ ,_r .,.,_ Fronl, NltYC1 1. ~~ 11.ulfllo. 8YC Nirwport 8Mcll. C1llfCll'nl1. LI00.14A (IJ -1. Ch'4 Twlchl!U Thl1 b<.ltln.u I• t'Olldllt11d by 111 LIYC1 L M1rly Lockney, LIYCi l lnalwldu11. RINIY Rl\'f'IOlllll. CllYC. Cllll'YI L. Mly LI00.1.18 lt) -I. TOii' l"ollAc:tr., Tllll lllllfnllill Wfl lllld wlfh IN
W'l'C1 '"":.-" Mlndlt, LIYCJ J. Coun•r Cle•tr. or °"'"" County .. Rmht A l~jC:_ I. Willy Gerrl1, OclOOlt' 11• lt14. NHY(I 2. Stt'f't RIOol, NHYC 1 l. ,_ f<lf114 Jactr. ·~, LrYCI '-5t1 .... ~i.... Pwl1$1\td or.,... Cout 0.Hy PUlll, AIYC i I' Mlkt 5"1ilft. NHYC. Oct-21. ,., efllll NOW!tltllr '-11, SAIO I rt! -I! OOUD Ct/111, lt74 lll't-14 llYC1 !. C1rol Mytl'IOll. NHY1 l. L111rle Cltf.Y• IO!YC1 4. Klrtr. TUpj)fll 1------------NHYC1 s. fM•~ Whhtllol/w, ave. • PUBIJC N011CE SAaOT C Ill) -I, Jollll l"l~lltY 1 -~· ---~=-"----llC'l'Ci Z. Mlrlllfl Mor..... NH't'C: I 41111 -
3. Will lllnl1, NHYC: t. C••ll Anell1r, SUPSRIOR C°'-IH (HI! THE
should chock thtlr oda NEAR THE IEA~H
dolly 1 report 0""" OWNER WILL Im mod lo to l,y. Tho
DAILY PILOT 111uino1 F1NANCE'
ll1blllty for the flrtt Grand entry. 4 bt.'<itoom~. Inc or r •ct lnMrtion Family fy.n arou. Garden onl)'. v iew -kitchen. G r ea l backYard patio, fish pond,
gas 'BBQ pit. LU I h pro-
fessional landscaping • w.
• ean1 mo:ve in ~Y ca.IHng ( ......... llM) .!!w~L~t.•rT'SFIMJOBEN!al
Ge_•_•_r_•l_R._E_. __ -_;_002 ~ 16~1111
PANORAMIC TURTLE ROCK VIEW I
\Ve 're real excited over this former Presi-
dent model home! Really elegant! 3 BR, FR,
Jge DR, 21h baths. Cov. patio, air~nd, s;-
car gar. + many extras. owe $75t000 1st
TD, 8~ %, 25 yrs. due 15 yrs. Exciting? Hur.
ry ! $129,500. _
2111 San Joaquin Hills Road
NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910
ave. J. J .... Mlt!l11, NHYC. ITATI °" CALftl'OA llllA ...... LASER I 121) -j· OoWI Ayn1, ~,. NH't'C J 2. STl't'I Arr 119. J'fflYC; l . THI COUNTY oir GaAlllll Jttt Scott, LIYC; t. $call R1mser, 1111, A•lffl
TOP BLUFFS I Am A Daplex!!
LOCATION I'm .. 11 locatoo 1" old i """""""""""""""""""""""!J!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!'!'!!~!!I!!!!!!~ Corona Ci.>! Jlitar, 'vith u General R.E, 1002 General R.E. 1002 NHYC1 JI. l r1I &1r11erd, NHYC. NOTICI 01' HIAalNO Gf: Pl!TITION FO• PRO•ATI Oft •ILL AN D COOICIL AND l'Oa L ITT 11! A I TESTAMINTAA'I"
Great three bedroom plu. 2"' bal1:t=· L a•r g e patio.-.,aundeck • overlookt one or f l n e s t
green be1tt. This.home has
been u.pgtadtld With n e w
vinyl floPrs, new fixtures
& new -kitchen appliances
Cull us for appointment to
see Gn-8550.
charming 2 br. &: de.n home I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
In front and a SUPER 1 Br. I• ARTIST CHALET
No Bitterness E.rtat1 of 'Al.NIA W. YOUNG, 1l:io k-n ''Al.NIA A. WlllGHT, Dlc•1$9d. NOTICE IS .HER1i8Y GIVEN lhlt
.... unit. New cCa.,,.i-In AT BEACH den and fresh paint and new
MARIAN W, DA•T tlH fllfd ... r1ln • pe1111on tor Problt• ot wm 1nd caz~ ~~~iciirr POOL $35,950
at $89,500 Firm. Call 1111 Lor Sl!<:luded entry to enormous ' W C Cl '
CCICllcil tNI tor I Muina al L•IT..-t
-to wh.lch Is ~ for f\lr'llllf P1tlfcul1r1. e -ame ose '"'-"" " ................... ~. a showing. 644-7211 U st s(udio llvlng room wUh 20
fl. vaulted open beam ceil· 11111 11111 1119 Time 1nill pt1m ot heiring
'"' umt hi• bMfl Ml for NG'llt-5, Hl.t, 1t t:JO 1.rn., In thl cou-rtr-.i
of Dtllirtmlflt !ff. l o1 wld coutl, 0P£N T1l.. t • 1T'6 fVN 10 IE NICE/
Intrepid ) Pilot /.Jn NIL[L
~AILEY &
ASSOCIATES 11 100 Civic Ctrrtw f)rf't'I W111, 111 I I ~~~::~f.;i~::='•· ~l~lltl11
NEWPORT BACK BAY •n Oii .... A-. · --.-... -.JJ Large, Qualiey conatructed
no "breakthrough" in the :;.:i-..i:: ~ c11111n1t1,.... EASTSIDE' family home on cul-de-sac
r d . T-41 1n•1 ,,..,.,. w uwtn DOLLHOUSE H~vy •hake rodf, rusdc ex· By ALI\JON LOCK.ABEY a um1num esigns. . Att1nwY1 fw: hill"-• • ter11>r. Three bedrooms, two ,.,., .... 1,....,. Driscoll agreed with others Puti111hed OrMOt cout D1!ly Pilot. Hardwood Floored be a u t y baths, family room aod
Disappainted yes. Bitter, no in the eastern yachting com-October 21' n. 2L 1'1' ltn·rt• graced by· lntit tn.>es on heated pool. $57,500.
That was the way Geny munlty who believe th a t PUBLIC NOTICE extra spacious lot $29,'500. 389 l.tira Loma, Costa Jli1eso
Driscoll of San Di.ego sununed I n t r e p id ' s b r i 11 i ant I£ IQ ·1 l Call 6U-l060 for appl
up his "summer of t h e performance was responsible stATIMllllT oir •••NDOMMINT UGI Prlnclpa.ll Only
Twelves" as skipper of the for sharpening up the ,1CT1T10:' ~~1::Ss NAM• Placil s E CLUDF.;D atrium entry.
ch [n · I I h The 1o11ow1., ..--"'"' ,,.~~ Prap ... ti•es ·. .. Patio kitchen. Family room. Ya t trepod m' her unsu~ pe r orm a nce o t e .... :-·· ,,..... .... ,_. tlM 1111QI1111 flctllo-Ml11ett Mini: Big bedrooJ1U. Boat door.
cessful bid for a third defense Courageous crew. In fact, he o -.. A LOCIC.SMITH, m w. 1t111 752-1920 Lushly t.nd'""ped ya rd 1.
id hen the t ~ $1,, "H", Cosl1 Mtu, C11f!Oml1 '2421 l<IOQ.QUAllSt lllfW""'ll llACH of the America's Cup. sa , w wo yau1ts The Fldltlc.us ,..,,,,..,. Nllnm m.rr1c1 '·i ..... Walk to all schools an<l i;nn·
"We· won everything but the were not racing against each to •boY• wu 111.0 In Or1nt1 county BAY OCE\'t VIEW jor 11bo1,1p~ $43,500. Vets . I . the " DrI-' lh the 1· . on Julr l. 1'14. ..... I-me 1" now 847 "10 rostingon cake, """I <! er Y were prac 1cmg A11p1i M. eh1111"' l656 K1t1Ybrook1 NEWPORT · EIGHTS 1 "·""-.u ·..., ...,..
told the combined men's and starts and other maneuvers. LIM, C051• M-•. c.nfonlla nm Sb 2 •-• · di 1 ,_ AgL • "W j •~ o.uu R1r· Aker1, 3DS6 Klllybroo1<1 r, '"'l""cs• ll ng rm, .. ~ ON THE•-CANAL women's luncheon at the e en oyed a «11VOrable u,,., coe.11 Mew. c.111Mit• n.u Jot. 128 Kings Plate $98,000.
Balboa Yacht Club. response from thee astern Tllll buslneu w1s conouc:ttd "1 • By owner. 548-4477 TWo story, 5 lll!wlroom11. ~tin 'I b h 91Mr11 .,.rt111rlhlp. pJ .. sh -mfort th-'""l ~--k
HE WAS REFER ING TO Y·~ g commwu y, 0 t Ralph M. PhllllPS • "" 00(11 ...... _ "'-• .... ..t..1 .. .... • ......... .....,.; Thi ""'' · , ..,,, ..... ,, + s.-...... to Water's Edge. Sacrifice
Tntrepid's near miss in the from the standpoint of the CO<m~ ·~~~~~:,, w;1.,.1n.ci ~! ': Ing pool. Not ·a condo. f.ove. ..: -L 179 500 bo t and " ~-11 said " ty -Iden"·' ·-·. ff•......., -vacan ' . . August seJeclion trials at a crew, Ul~v . kP!miber 2., 1'14. ..... ....... ........ -·J
Newport, R.I. whetl a running "We ·had good sailors aboard Plllllllfl«t or_. ca-st Diiiy '"tf': °A.gi:n't Jut! Call 847-«llO , . ,Q .. uail ~
backstay tet go on a weather and they b e h a v e d like 5"!t1m11er :io.. •rid Oc•-1, ''*' ,1:
leg as Intrepid was leading genUemen. We had no "house 1'1• lt\21-14 LAGtfNA HlLl..$ Plac• .
<{_ourageous in a sudden death ru1es" yet wa experienced no PUBl.JC N<mCE .... Neat as a pin~ twice as Prap.,.t;in ·
race to deter mine the discipline problems. nicer A real ooildotninium 752•1920
defender a g.a inst th e .DRISCOU. OOES NOT '"':IJ:e'°':A::~kN::' buy in one · of our fastest 1•00 ®AIL Sf. Nt_wioo.t IE.t.CH
A u st r a I i a n c b a I leoger agree with segments of the :ht fol1owt111 Ptl'Mlll l• doing M l..-n growing are a s . Existing OWN~
Southern Cross. yachting r rater nit y wbo ••· "E w Po 11. T · w IE sT E 11; N '"" FHA loan can be as&umed. , SAC:.RIFICE
In the June and July trials belleve the upenslve I 12 ~::~~Eirv2::. l.1=. ~ or.. $34.S:i:sT BUYI 11
Ifttrepid and her a 11 • w e s t meters have about seen their °""" E. ,Toild. 11122 LlmlMnrrl'ood H•rbor Vl•w Homes Best location. LUsb landsca~
Coast crew had out s cored day ln America's Cl.Ip com. WiY, 1""1"'· Ctlltoml• t'J.6U. ing.. Giant yard. Country Thi• tltMI""• Is bll119 Corldudlcl by Bea,utitul 3 BR., 2 b a • kitchen. Great noor plan.
Courageous in their r a c es petition. •n IN1lwldui1. • "Cannel Model''. Profess. Family •bed ·~-m•. Ex· "I "' that the Cup Chlf'lff e. TOdd unuvu against each other and two am posiuve Tlllt "'"'"'"' nitc1 w1111 "" CDll!llY decor. OUered at $72,500 cellent temu. ·O.vner mwit
o t h e r American ti-meters, competition will not be sailed c1tflt or or11"01 c°"'"lf on ~ber sacrilice at only $ 4 o. 9 o o.
l\fariner and Valiant, which in smaller boats. There Is talk 26. "1'· PJJ~ Talce. a dvanta ge cull
had been excUsed earlier. that a change may be made Published Ora!IQe Col•' D•lly Puo1, 842-~ Sitp!tmblr 30, '"d Octoblr 7, 14, 21, 21 As the final two contenders, to allow yachts rated under 191, 3111·1' • OPENnLO •IT'SFUNroBENtcE1
Intrepid and Courageous were the I.nternational 0 r f s h ore I ~
even in the final trials as Rule (!OR) to CQmpete. butl ----=coP=UB=LI~C~N~<m=C~E::___ · -
the deadline for selection by l think they will find these F1CT1T1ous •us1Ne:as CORBIN;MARTJN
lh N Y k Y h Cl . st I il not NAMI STATEMENT R I e ew or ac l u b JU as expens ve, more TM ta11ow1no pe"""'l •r• d D 1 n g u tor&
committee roUed ·-.. ·d. so," he said. bullnau 11: * .. ,7662 * ·-__ , ''°'' -Horbo• Vo"ow Hom es Intrepid, the old wood e n (The reason for the pro-ON lNvEsTMENT.S, 111•1 Murplly AwtiUe, .Su-!11 C. I r v I 11 •, An invitation to gra' cious liv·
boat of 1967 vintage -twice posed change to IOR cruising c1111or1111 t210S. PUBUC NO'flCE
Your ings & sun terrace that
Horne overlooks pres t lg loua
harbor. Studio lort I: library
HCl'I! + \\.'et bar. Go11rmel kit·
chen. huge master with
Free ol ~e OCEAN VIEW, Abundant use of woods & glasl adds
lo a r l is 11 c atrno&phere.
!m-7981. Phon<
673-4400
ltnrbor Investment Co.
"VETS' NO
DOWN 4 HUGE
BEDROOMS
9112 °/o INTEREST
No do\\'Jl to vets. Formal
cnl.ry with large I iv I n g
room. Huge formal dlrting
room. 4 family s i x e d
bedrooms. Covered patio for
California Uvtng. S h a k e
roof, Garden and fruit trees
compliment large lot and
help heal cost of living.
OPE/II nt " • rrs Fl.IN 10 9E HICEt i 11~$'1tl
Bac:helor Pad
Corona del Mar
With l'ool
Call us about lhls desirable \
c.otona Highlanda: 2 br 2ba.
pool home with ·l arge
master .Wte private beach
access and very special.
f In anclng atTangementl.
$69.500
Call 614-7211
/Jn NIGlL
GAILL¥ ~
ASSU(IAllS
S<e ii oow. Call 96H767. EXCLUSIVE
OPEN TIL '. IT'S-FUN TO 8E NICE! BA YSHORES
, IU-111 !~~::~~ ~!!~!~-~!PVT . WALl.ED CO~t-ii MUNITY
FABULOUS SA~CE AT $&4,950
TOWNHOUSE
IN COSTA MESA ' 1t 1auail ~ 3 be d roo m ~ .. 2 :~ths., Plac•
"'"tlllo!ly dcooraJed, II"' Pra _._ · sbag carpet11, mll/ly extras. p...-•l•S ·.
)'OU must sec this sped.al 752-1920 ~ !Uchmond model. Priced at 1400 QUAlllil. HIWHMIT llACK ~
$33.500. CALL 540-1151
~-HERITAGE
. • REALTORS
od led t boa•-· that the ······'d Nick &«~1r, lnl .s1n t'l1go ing. Darling family home! rem e -was leading the ype wi IS Y wvw 11....iirv1rd, NIWPOl'I s~Kh. c1t!forlll1 custom detailed Car m e I
new aluminum Courageous on be more useful a fter the CuP '2660. F~~~,· .. :~:-.'::r" model· 3 bdnns f a mi 1 y ;'4 ACRE ESTATE
the first weather leg when competilton is over.) Pir~'c4..1~=.·~~in1 c"'11' Vlll• Tiii ra11ew1n; 111~ ••• da!ng rm .. dining rm:· Priced to Sl29,500. Sale or exchange.
NEW LISTING
Newport I&la1l9 Channelfront
home: 2 bdnn!., 2 baths + den; 2 frplcs., blt·ln&,
Approx, I ~ yrs, n ew.
Xlnt. cond.. Pltr &. float.
$135,IXXJ.
Dill: 673-36113 641r-2253 Eves. buliotn 11 : """'"'AN 7 u~•-5 b the "running back" let go. "IF A CHALLENGE 1 s Pl~'::!~~' b conducted by • Olfolr•l p .. L llOOKKEEPIHG SEIVICE &ell at ,.,,,,5w &. you own u.;ui ...... ms, a th•.
It took the crew 20 minutes received immedlately in 12 Tiii• ~'~~~ir w•i fl!M-.Wth ,.,. ~i1~~· ,,:;~1a, Ml•Uan v I• Io; the land! . ~~~~·· 209xWe:,Lo ~t~ asso cia ted to repair the damage, but meters I believe the New York County Clerk "' Ot1nge County Ofl Ratllrl F. ,...._, 2"42· Vito °"' c. f. co1,,~orthY' door Rccrcalion Are a.
Intrepid lost by little mo re Yacht Club would accept it October t1. 1'1'-~iJ. Sin 1111" C.p~ino. Ctlllornl• REAL TORS 640.00fo Room for Tennis Court. BROKER ... -n r AL roqs
101~ W Reiber ~71 lol l th:,OE~~IT~~ FACT that :~:~1u~ ::;:=~"!noili:; ~~~.~~no:,., co:~o:!~ ~ f~~~i=ct-~~~s~; S ~~~R. i!:.e I ·jQuai~
he favors wooden 125, Driscoll boat to get a challenge,'.' • .,.r17:!i:; F. Pee~• 160 acres. $lf!Oi000. Plac• OJNOO Jn N.B.!
said he thought the two boats Driscoll said. PUBLIC NOTICE Th11 $1111m1n1 111t11 .. 1th 1111 c111,1111v 240 &ere\· $24o,OO), Properties · ' NO, HOUSE on Lido
were pretty even in speed 1 -===-==-------l ---,~,~a=,,=,~.,~,'""'"~'~'"~'='~'---~~~,.,:' or•• COU!l1y on: October -GEM-752--1920 $79,500
indicating there certainly was ___ P_U_BLJ~C_N_<m __ c_E ___ I NAN.II! STATl.Mll!NT l'llltJ 1•00 ®AILS1. NtW l(~H 1 blk from watl?l'. 2BR 2BA
Holo11ui
Takes 3
Trophies
Thi fotlowlna P1r1C111 b aorna bvstiwn Publl•hld or11191 c1110 01nv Piiot, l20-F Tustin Av,., N.B. PRIME CdM INVESTMENT + den, 1400 II( ft, at q\ttet l'ICTITIOVS IUllNISS 11: October 21, :n, 1nd N'av1mbef t, 11, REALTORS ' 642-4623 2 dJ ' MAMI STAT•M ENT Mlkl'I Home lmpro..-mtnl. 11111 1tU 1 lMl ·1• I\ • R-2 loll, 90. of Hwy. end of Isle. kleal for aingle
Thi 1o11ow1llll .,.,_. ••• do 1n 11 Gdden wes1 st. No, p.., Hu"llJ1illon Pr1·c:e Reduct1•on w/4 unit bfdg. Fix·uo or or couple w/oo maint. Fee buil"'ts 11· 81acl'L. C11Horni1. PUBLIC t land I -•Mo PLYE ·ave · NYTE iUt PomGOI Mk"'1•1 J~ Ct«. i1111 Golden NOTICE To $B5,000 1<J.r dn. Owner sacritlce at , terms aval . 61~u
A••·· cost.I Mt11. C•lltcrn11 92'21. ~:i,lor~ No. P"-HunllllU!orl &Hell. less than Inn d v a I u e. BY OWNER
Jotin D•rD Edmondion. '54 A w. 11111 busJne,, is cClllductld b "\ff~T~o,~sA:.U~~N::s Lovely 3 bedroom hotni! \n $115,00Q, lf'K!I. plans for 2 111~s1 .. cmt1M111.C1tllornl•nn1. lndlwldu•t v •n T,. "'' , the mlddl• of ol~Coo-M new dupJ...,,, •-. 67"'"""" THREE LITTLE Don1ld JtmH eamono-.. '~ A. Micr-1 J Clor ow ng perlOl'I Is dotllO bu1lneu . u u ~· .n>'7UIJ HOUSES ON ONE LOT ~i.21~"" St .. COst1 M~··· C1llfoml1 Thi$ 1111 ..... nl WI• flltd wl!h 1111 II: UN1VElll:SAL AUTO SALES OF de! Mar. Haf: separate· din· $225 Per mo. PBY.ments may 2 •. 3 bedroo-". Ex"""llcnt
TM• butlntll I• conc1uctftl bv 1 11-r•I C011111Y Clerk or Otange Countr on COSTA MESA, 1011 Mirbor •IW<L, Cos•• ing room •llChlous l 1 v In a; be usumed on this sharp ""' ""
111rrrieru.1p. Oclober J, ltl•. MtN, c1111or11r1 tMt6. room plus huge family room pool home. Full price just renla1 arcn ln Costa Mesa.
. John EdmondKlll Puonllllld oriroe Co.st 0111, "~~ Htnrv 11111, 61l w. Sl0Mtiur1t or., with \\'et bQ,r, A gnat buy $37,500. BeS1 buy • h<tl"" lnvest before ii is: too lale.
CounlV Clerk o! Otll'IVf COU!lly Oii ' :wo Thl1 bulineu 11 ,Ol\d\Klld by en ..,....,....,.., •.:ro.JoJV• WT)'. O't ....,...10 Agt. Tho1 •lite-men! w11 flied wl lh thll:°'::::'-:::.~··~·~,~·~·cc"-::_>~n~·--~·~-~~· All1dlr11, C1llfor11l1 fHIOI, at •=-· Call 6~ ~~ h ••r .,n ..., Call 646-7711 ,
0crOC1tr 11. nit. PUBLIC N-c 1nc11y10ut1. OP!.NTILt• rrsFVNTOBE HICE! 1~==-"'-'=-"'"'---WALKER & LEE
George Pascoe's Ho l o nu i 1'>1111 vi• E H..,,., Bin ~ ' REAL r:5TATE • &~:a~fi::'E':~~~:~! ~~~·~=~ .. !~~~ ~i1·.-.~-.. -.. -:.-~-f:-... -.:_-r-.. -:-~-~-t-,,, .. -.. -.. -.. ---~=~~:~.zK:~;; ll~~i)l\lJJ :~l:~~~E~~ ~:~~p~~~~ ~
Fall Pt. Fermin Ra<:e Sunday CALCOUSTIC, t»I F•lrvltw Ad.. OchlOlr 21. :n, •nd JIO'f'tl'nlllf° •. 11, r r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;~ The race was sailed on a .,1cr1r1out 1usiNISs ::.'l, s 101, ce111 Mtw, c.111,,,1111 1'14 Jl.52-7• BIG HOA!E! 4 Bedrooms + 11 n NAMI ITATIMENT huge 1tep down family room. inverted start basis with the Tfl• fol'°"""' PIF'IOll 11 d.>lng builntu Robert Piny Gormly, JrN 2:m PUBUC NOTICE Master ba& ad J 0 I n In g
slowest boats in each class '" ...... ,. , .. ,, 1 .. ,.0,,,, '"' ,.,._ ~::r,=.~::... Apt. s 101• cost• MtN. -" 01 A v .. ••• " "' ,...,... 1 41111 office, private sun balcony, starting first. 1·~ .,..... .... Fou!l ... ll 1!lly, Tiiis llUSI-11 COl'IClllCtld (ly •n IUPI .... CO"•T o• THI and room &ize closet. A Calllornlir '21GI. lf'ldlvid111I. v Holooui was ay.•arded the 1rw1n fM111e11. ins Otl•w• 1u..... 111:o0 Gor""Y STATI °" CALl,ottNIA "o• real beauty + a IMRGAIN
pt. F'rm'· r~~t"'' for !he ···, .. '"°"", 11111 '11Jlly, C1l!lorril1 t:l lOI. Tnl1 tllltf'Mnt .... .., tlltd Wit~ 11'11 THI COUNTY 01' o•AMOr-a t -s 51,9 So! can A"'t. .,, • !"'" ..... Tn I bui llHI II canduc:lld Ir)' In c--·· ,,,--.. c N1, Alll..0 ... r, · I h l!ldl•ldu1I. ~" '" "' 11191 """''' on 0•01• TO ••ow''"'' '°' 847-6010. ' trst sing e ull yacht to finish, 1rw111 M1n1t11 5ep11m11er l" tt1•.
!he A d B T ph f Tf\11 1•11m1111t w-• lllftl w!tf\ IM l'J7W1 CMANO• o, NAM,IS * lRVUi'E * C U ST 0 tif U re rown ro Y or Coun1v c1rr• 111 0r111111 cown1y on Pubtl~hld Ort1'111 co.st .O•lly Pllor. 111 -.hl Miller °' !hi ApPllt•l!on or U n-"ITY EASTBLUFF VIEW
ti Coldwell Banke
the fir st single hull under 60 0c1e11er 1. *'"· ~••mbOI' 30. •net Octotielf 1, 1~. 11. MARC kEVI N HUNKAPtLLIAA, 111 N1vc.Jw ·~f 0 DEL, OVEll:illl -· l, J1>10; 7, l!ll1ckblrd; I FJ1611 191• 3'2l It Adu 1 t , MI CH A EL I( EI TH 11parkll1l4, 1J00!, 3 BR, 2 BA, ~. l•u~ eet to finish and the Ken P~1111,~ Or•rie• Coe$t 0111v P1ta1, · ' · Hu N k AP ILL I AR . 1n ldull: 111<1 1 ..... yd, jacurzl. patio!!, ....,at
'.
'.?,'.A -J1~0· 2. ll•c•blrd; 3. o•,ls Trophy for the single OclotMr n. 21, Ind NOVlmblr .. 1~~19·'•'• PUBLIC N~CE ELEANOR P. WYNNE, (>fl bel\tlf al ,.. ....~
Beautifully decorated 4 bedroom home wllh
family ~oom . Close to schools, shopj>4>g and
lreeways . $84,500. ¥ .. ...n Ull MICHELLE KELLY HUNIC.APILLIAA, • decorating, many x t ra II'
tOR·t _ i. J;?ubblr Ouc•y. aovm hull under 40 feel to finish, PUBLIC NOTICE Ml>10r, For Chl!lfl• al N'"""' ROOucOO' to $7),500. OPEN "'td Mm~. OJ;?YC, 2. ChlPlll. Jl m ,ICTITIOUI IUSINIJS Tiii 1pPl!c1tlon ol MARC KE\/ IN DA!LY b., 0 551-oo21)
l'O'llr. CYC; ~. Mtrlrn, Jltk lo.th. 6 NANll! STATEMIHT HUNICAPILLIAR. MICHAEL Kl}T H " wner. SMYC. OTllER PEllPETUAL win-FICTtT1ous 1u111111ss The · io1iow1ng Plf°SOflS '" doing HUNtcAP!LLIAR, ,,., ELEANOR P, MESA VERDE.
CCA _ 1. p1,~aD>, Tom Armi!rong, A I IV Al N~I .. TATIMINT builMlJ •5; W't'NNE, an lllNlf o! MICH CL LE cvc1 2, Au•or•. H•r• h•t<.i. eve. ncrs: quar US , ex 1111 1011~1111 "*''°" I• ooi.,. tiutl.,... THE REO IUlll:L. 425 30lfl s1.. Kl!LLY HUNIC.AP!LLIAR tor cllll~ This Al.ij>er executive family
"HllF.,,. -1, C>••~nv GOC11~. Jo"" Kosloff, CBYC, first yacht to 11: ROBl!llE'S RAO A MOP, .. T"'''" """"e..'.,~,•K,'. ,'.,',','"', ,.."", .,,, ,,,_, "'-, .. Nvlno 1111n 111.c1 r11 • home has o huge farnily Wllll•mt. CYC1 l. Wl,.,,llOl'ne, Howtrd fjnJ h d fi I I 'h'\I A N v v~ " ·• Ind I ll)lltlrlna trom st!d lpPlle11!an TOOnt 1\r\th eYl'V\•..,. t.•runa A ,~~. CYC. J, l!ltndll. Frt<I Otltlnqtr. S an lfS TilU tl I 10 ':{ot,111,1"~'~PI= .:xi T\lltfn Hunl,l!!glon ll1ec~, ,~1lllM!t1 Vol~ lhel MAlll:C KEYIN HUNkAPILLIAR, """~ '-"' PUYC1 4, Wlndllll. L" Ntwllt1d, finish; Sugar Plum, Dan Aw1., Nll'WpO(I e1ac11. Ctlltorlll1 ~ ~•c-.... 11111 .... toll GuP Orlv•~ MICHAEL Kl!!ITH HUNKAPILLIAlll: lfld nnd Moor to celling plua CYCt '· Soop111. Don 111C1 Mo"!' Cl C l~,1 buliM$I In t:OllduclM bY in .... Hw11111111tan Blech, C1lllor11l1 9™6 MICHELLE KELLY HUNICAPILLIAlll: 48R. 3.8a and a poof. 9~~ Co1>tn. wvc. app. B\'C, Greer Trophy, dlvillut• This"""""' 11 co11111uc:11e1 by• vener•I 111 .... fllld •n 1pp1k111on Pr0110Stnu ,,.., VA onanclhg available with PMRF·• - 1. Ft'ley, 11111 Ind first sino)c hull oder 20 feet · •oo.i, DtPlt,•o ttrlftlfMllp. ' !Mir lllUtW• bl ch•rrotel IO MARC KEVIN loll M1rll11, SMYC. ~ u~ U • lPll, •llf•fl'llllt w.t• tlltd llrl!h !ht JICQUI A. lnt11 WYNN!!, MICHAl!l.KEIJH WYNNE 11111 Small dawn pyn1t. 0 n) Y
PHllF·• -I, F1111:1. 0111 •NI lob Drambui. park Dcnsmort c-r Cl•r-of or.,,.. (l\lnt'I an Tllb ••1tttntn1 ... n1t11 with 1119 MICHELLE KEU.'f WYNNlt r.....,. SS3,1XXI. ...... 1111. s'MYC 2 Vtr•tl ty, ' CBYC s 'It • 'I f I • Oc:!-'0• 1"'' County (llrll OI °'•• COUl!t~ on llwly. ,. DAVID BOUR"E 1•r•LTO" win11m1. •saYltc i · J "''''" ",!-• mt Y S "ug. rs t Plmt ""tfrlblr':lll. 1t1• N 0-~ ,, , ' ~· " Cl CYC ' "'" J\t • f f' • h ~ f • Publlll!td or1 .... Coiltl Otlly Pllol, "' °"'' ,...,.,..,.,, S lllf'tll1 ~ C.u:!.Mel!. .-:y, ercury o mis : u.in u11.on 0ctoe1tr 1., 11, 71, _ ~ 4 1n, PvMl"*I or-. c..u o.i1y "~:; •nd dll'K!lll. ttw11 ·~ Mr~il'llrllitO ~
MORF·A -1, LG'll• 11. Crum •I'd ' John Sehl bier. CBYC, f I r Si ~ ... ,, s.1-111r )D, n Octollrtt' 1, ,._ ti, ~ld,11 me:;.,,"!...t~ • it.! ':'!l SP AC I 0 US! Four huge ~~v~rc~. 'R.~~.~' ,:~ =' ,~~:
1
Ge
1
aryk ·Sc18:00Til~ld lo 'Think Rich, PUBlJC NOTICE 1'1' )UW4 city If Otclr!IMf, ,.,., ,, 10:00 "~ bedrooms. Ct an 1 pinnet PMYCi '· w1rr11t. Jim Worlh l11tton, an re , A.BYC, first PUBLIC_Nat'lCE A./'A., 01 Wkl d•v le WW c11111 wl'l't' Jcitchcn. Vacant. S u p e r b
SMVC1 J, Mnk, H•fll'Y PlfNr, SM'rC. C!l-20; Lo taJ.fti, Dick Speer, ·~J:~O~A•~::;s . J---:::::=~::-".==c=---=.c.•::i:11
;,111:. clll!llfl llf' flllftlt coodltJon. Only $&3.950. C.ll
MOR,·l!I -1, ~oirv Lldr. '''' CBYC Don KnutM:n Memorial Tiit t111tciw1110 ""'°"' .,.. Mlflf bull· ,•CT111ov1 1u11N1ss " 11 111t1111r ~ ,,.., , 1 ~, ..,si~T;-60-iiil~O~Agl"".~===~
Lodo;WV(ld, PMYC. ), S,,,..m-1, Jim T • '"'f.l' . NAMI lTATIMINT If It'll• ONer To"-C•-1D1t .-illlflrld l. N~WPORT RIVIERA .. ~ .... I. ICCYC; ,, Orocvlll, Lou S.Chl. rophy. AllrtlT,ttO ANO MlllCHANQ!$o Tk ~ ........... 6tl"9 M lllnl '" Int OAILY ,tlOT # ~ ...... ., IM,.C, '· M111. JOI MOO"-. sev•c. I G ASSOCIAflL llJ1J Ctlkwy, lrvftw. ... flt .-.1 clrtllt1tltrl. ,,...,.. 911 ~ f BR. 2'' Bn. ta.mlly nn. -~~~~~~~~~~~ CLAS$ TllOPllT W'INMIRSt Cll. "'" C•lllOmll ltlll E1lltl ,...,,..,l!'ltfl' (OU!\t'I', .. ll•Jt .,.. ~ --flt' Xlnl l cat>I tor only OYEll 10 Ifft -I, M0'«!\11; l lll'an H. ~It!"" 11315 (MW)', C ....... rw, JM ,I;, 11111 ltrlfl t.!1 IOlll" W«htr .... ...ti& );lw Ira 'I"' dly """,-, O-•·o '!'lvanto .. Uf -F111 .. ,1. ••v Hocil!lni. CIVCi .. trvl~ ~-'ft!: Mitt Cl M7 • OI Mlf hMrlN. NO ...... ·-..... . Good Deed , le 1.11r1111ro1, !a llmrntrm.11, CIYC: i Ml~111t• J. .,.,1tk., 1J» s 1. Iris· "'"Y 'k. Gritflll\. «is • 4lltlt st IHtM 1111• 1•"' ell¥ A Oc:~. ,,,, this r.: now. OwMr wHI ~111,.19, ll't'I JOll, CIVC l S, Flp-.' lo41 ltnll AIM• (II, mot N.....,., lllldl. Cl. m6) "' FRAHK .DOM!:!'flCltlMI ,. -~L~ i.... Sdl ~11~l1r W'YC. ' .,.Jr,,:,~lt fl ~Itel "' I ..,_II Tl'lll Wsintll I• ~ffd by In J\lftl fA Jlfd ~-(outt ht!lp, blllCe.
flMll'\lll t1111:' scene UND!lll ')iO '"' -I, Susi•• Piii!!!! 81rlllll H. ,,,., ... "' h1cHVl4!.lfl. Vl•'J'VI AliD •C~ICll'., INC. MILLER REAL TY
2 PLUS 2 PLUS 2
2 Bedroom hotne plus separate 2 bed roo m
gues l quarters oU o! garage plus~ bedroom
gara ge apartment. El(cellent Corona del Mar
locallon. $85,000. ·
WH!Ti WATER VIEW
One o( California's most beautiful lots with
foraye r ocean view. 70' Frontage in exclu~
slve Corona de! Mar. $150,000 .
1974 HOME GARDEN TOUR
I Bedroom family home has everything. For·
rnal dining room , family room, lrr~srsteble
pa·ttos, warm decorator colors, gorgeous
garden, waterfall, pond and much mOre.
Special al $168,500.
POPULAR "PRINCETON"
University Park favorile l 3 Bedroom• 2-!>at~s. f~rmaJ dining room. Cathe((ral ceU-
·lng tn Jtvlng room. Lovely cOvered patio.
Near park &.pools. $55,900. ·
s
B
'
'
Sunda J· 1111• ~1') s~1n kl'~ "Ive-: Thi\ 1t••-1 w11 llltd wtlll 111t l'19fY H, Or't11rlil ,,, NtwlMl'f CMI~ "•" •a. ys 1, \',,:il:'c•. :~ =~%\cSci"ci Cou'!•Y Clll'l or Of'•,,.. ~..,. Oii thl• •••'-1"""111111 wr111,.,. tOll"'~-"'~ a.ac11. ~· ,... ~1 01rt•ll 0111 "AW;::::e11 c: 11 .,. ... ' Ot~ l4. 1J7L ~<..,tr. -of -<lrtJl!IW Ctl\ll'ltr"ltl-tl(rft,;, -1-~en~ uw
I lll,·1A11 II M.VLttHILL -1, 1..ou1rluJ IY '211H l. lf14. ""~ tw A,,_ilc.H11 Have aometh~,.,,. )'.OU watll tG '+ i I l. l>ttrOUJlllC•. W•ll..-Ro111t11, CBCJ j P11hllthtd Qrtl'IOe C~!I 01Tlr Piiot, ttmn Pllllll•~ °'*"" to.id o.nw PUo1, M!ll? 0 ... 1.i~ •.••• do It •••••••• •• 11.C, Al•ll W1v1tt, CtYC. ' Ociablr U. 21, :n, ...0 NO't'llllGff '· 1•1• ltublhl'ltll Ool'lllOf Cotll t'l•lly P!lof, Ott-,ti, tt. ~ Hl't'lll\blr ._ ll, ll~'ll """ ,, noa.1• Otroblr 1. u. 21 , ,., "'• l~·'I• "'~ ~1,._,41 v.·ell • enll NOW GtZ...1618.
in the
DAL 644-1766
2161 San ".Jo1qu1n i1 1 Ra.;-N.:r..---f .. -+---1--ll
A COLDWELL BANKER CO.
•
I • ..
Mond.Q, OtlObtr 21, 1"74 * DAILY PILOT BS
l;G;;';;";;";;r•;;l;;R;;.;;E;;. ;;;;;;;;;;l;;:OO;l;;G:::;•";';r;;•:I R;:;· E:.;;;;;;;;;';002;; I G;nar• 1 k. e. * Balboa Bay l'rapertles * 1662 G•neral R.E. 1002 o;;;;rol R.I . lll02 C"t• Me ..
REAL ESTATE
SALESPERSONS
N11r p,_,oc1 Morino LAKE PAllK OPEN HOUSE SUN I·~
\\'llhin .... ..:iJdna: dtslancf to ~:i~niev'few-NEW
1
BEACH
COTTAGES
,
NEWPORT SHORES
SHARP II Noocl A Now Ou!looltl
A Frt•h Start?
:!:irm~a~h. i!t~ • .!~' ~11~ OR IEACH 0rtm111c mn. d.n. 3 ba.
1an1lly rm & t \ r e p J a c e , Beauurut older ) bedroom. ! fpl'1, IWf"Tnt't kitch. lond·
Uull!.ln&, dllh.,'Uher. t.um Stparate rtnJal In rear "''Ith ed y,'ith 'l'OOd I: c I a 11 1 .
low·malntentUl(e y a rd a priv.te entrance. PttsUlfi Ov.•ner "1111 carcy at ~O $39.000. Call fM..1120. ' net 8 h b or h OOd. Artist's eontr11ct of asl•.
11tudto. Boot pte and 1i•b. SAVI INTllltlST C.D.M. •
IN UNIVERSITY PARK, IRVINE
The scarce Stanford Modc l-3 bedroorn and
fami.ly room townhouse next to Green Belt
-(Great for kids). Attractively landscaped
\vith 1ninlm111n cnre-tGt·c11t for pur ents).
Anoth er li sting or Gil ldc. Reaso nable priced
al $62,000.
2 BR. & den. Move-In· teW, Reduced to
$49,500. Gi~o&o
NEWPORT DUPLEX
Near everything. 3 BR..
2 ba. & garage, each
unit ; one unit avail. at
'350 ino.ol-F u l l price
$89,500. 642-7491.
V.A. REPO
EASTBLUFF Large corner lot. 2 BR.,
Depressed?
\Ye are inte~ m•n and
womeri. expertenced and 111-
t"Xperten<: · f· r cale1 posi-
liooi 1n OW' Corona d•l Mar
olftce, Earn and leem ln a
della'httul atmosphere of
a.nt1que& and nautlca v.1th
he 1pf11 I , compatible co-
worker• and lndh~dua.I
broker a.'lslltance.
I IH'9S._ lo btl1ch. ?iofu1t ace to ap-vlev.• ot ocean. AMMumiblt a real doll hotde lhe. otbe:r (-ftllll!l IJ 'Ai block 10 purk. S block• 2 BR, den, t ~; bi. Terrific 1\t;-o on one lot • <IDP ii
~ ~~~·, ~drat~u·fo~ ~\\~f';o:k:~:~~-c.1 { has ";[NiNS!u~.roo.
Super clean 4 BR. hon1e cov'd. patio, $700 On.,
l·Iuge fan1./din. rm. $500 costs & impounds.
Nc\vly redec. O\vners Payts. $245 mo., P.l.T.I.
a n x I o u s! $70,500. $ 2 5 , 5 0 0 Jl'ull price.
29l'l ltarbor Blvd., C.t.t. ll ~eaut lBR t'Onclo. 2 ba, fur n. j
MESA VERDE NORTH t6Z..4471 ( :"JtJ 546•1101 nr ocean. $350tr.ro . S1'UDlu A ttal CaPt Cod culie •
Z..fUlt 54!11 Se.II Our Dream apt turn. i1~1r.ro. In c . Htu• &ep&rfl!l" utility room
040-8484. 556-8800 House. Leavlnc State. 2200 uur~. • dlnlni: roo111, nrcpluce. lovl"'.
sq tt, 2 Story, 4Br. 3 ba, 4•PLEX \\·E HA\.'£ 0111ERS ly trrr Al111drd pi1tlo. A
UNIQUE HOMES, Realtors, 67S..6000
2443 E. Coast Hwy., Corona d•I Ma r I] 4~cal ~~:e~~~:.~eYou m YOU WILL NEVER. I-TEAR
A OlSCOUR..'.GING WORD!!
Call Nigel for app;lntment
H0&e Fam Rm. Wa t e r Sal E h AmerlC'lln llorne Realtor. 1uprr little hol1Mll $68,500.
softener, gprlnklen. 0 n I y e or XC ange 4!M-7513 or 4g.~1001
138,9!0. By o .... r . .Wum• Ex"U<nt Hurtlngton Be.ch 815 N. eo." Hwy. NEWPORT SHORES
General R.E. 1002 General R.E. 1002
CHOICE BUILDING LOTS
Large R-1 on Cherry Tree Lane; $25,000
1h Acre on Mesa Drive . $39,500 •
Also, 70 acres. ~74 ,000
Colli;# e lfJQ;I
BAYand BEAC·H
675 -3000
1002
General R.E. 1001 .... ~r,..I R.E. 1002
LIDO ISLE
Like new 4 BR. & lge. family rm., 6 baths.
P ter & float. 30 Fl. lot . r.160 ,000. ·
Family home; 6 bdrm s., 4 baths. 36 Ft. lot.
Pier & slip. '$~95 ,000
Attractive 3 Bl{., 3 ba. :single story home on
60 ft. street to street lot. $152,500
40X90 Fl. $250,000 30X105 Fl. $165,000
WATERFRONT LOTS
VA loan at 1% w/lg down Location. 4 • Tv.'O Bedroom,
pymnt. 3323 Nevadn, Ot. 1 Bath units v.·lth patios EXCEl'TIONAL
557-7067. ... """"" 011""' "" ••• TWO HOUSES $69,000. Call~ ... dt>~lrn Ii the f In, st ma!rrWs used In this 3
&14-7211 Anytime
$21,SOO EACH level t•u1ton1 home. Cedar o .... ner wlll cany financing. I.: stucco exterior. Lo111 of
East•kle Co1t a ~ft>sa nes.r c ' d A r I n •I d e v.· I t h
* BAY VIEW * trnnsportatlon anc.l shopplni:. sandbl!isttd vaulted ceilin~!I J& 1 & J rcks. Frplc. ln k>ft n111r, :; v.·~!i ~ ba~ ' .. an;k,. rm. • Quall ~ bdrm., ~·hlch 11 open to
lt. lot. Vac:. .. t'.c 11·64.500° 40 PICIC9 FRANCISCAN li\'lng rm. below. uwa.dl!d -· Pro appt's. lhruout. Due to be Owner 67>'7!.l p.,.tln ,. FOUNTAIN oompl<I"' ""n. llM.500.
(673-1664 Evenings) 7J2-1f20 MODEL HOME
Balbo1 Penin1u11 1007 1.ioo OUAllSt NIW'°'i •«ACM One ot t~e models! Central ~I 11 H
NEWPORT BACK BAY air, h i ghly upgraded v'TOea.,,~
PENINSULA-FIXER Large, Quality corustructed ~rpets, dr11~s, v.·all cover· REAL ESTATE
This 2 Br, 1 Ba dollhouse In m I I y home on 1ng1 ~ zpecial eUec11! 4
needs TLC. 1 blk tr 0 111 cuJ-de-snc. HeaV)' shakt BR., 1nrl. master w/1tudy 900 Glcnne)Tt St.
ocean. Xlnt rental area. Fee roof, rustic extmar. Three + private sund~k! Forni. 49-1-9473 !>19--0316
land. R-2. Take advantage bedrooms, two baths, faniily d I 11 · , c e r a n1 l c garden
now. PrincrJa only. room and heated pool kitchen has bar & S ft . eP CE MILLE REALTY $51,500. . b!t-ln china clo!oit>l. Huge RI SLASHED• 2 STORY 642-48ll 389 Mira Loma Coit.a z..tesa tam. rn1. Y.'/open bean1s $3450, V•cent
BARGAIN POOL i ,;;;.,;,;;~!!!!!!!!!!"""~"!"!!!!!""!!!!!!~!!O!!!!!!!!'!'!'! Call 642.-looO for appt + brick frp\c. 2 Ral~ed Very Serious Seller
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR
341 8oy!>1d" Ot•vt· N 8 675 6161
General R.E. 1002 General R.E.
1------..;.;..c;
Just Listed
Irvine Terrace
Owner Will Carry
I' BAYFRONT Prlncipala Only patios w/open wood cover, T11·0 story Colonial. C1.--ean•
$27.900-General R.£. 1002 General R,E. 1002 Pier & float. 3BR. +i\}Cst CHECK ~""'"' to11·ering trees, ext er 10 r vlC\v. P alatial, 4 BR & fan1. I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;. t Try fl .,,,...,.,. lighting. Company transl er
Low DOWN I• 3 BEDROOM-ap ' $= o:;::c· /3 BR Fixer Upper, VA . ooly $06,500. Bkr. !16>-55ll •m., 2~o BA .. 30' 11v;0<
LOW YARD ~r.-hall R•·'ty 67"' Ar11n. no down or assume PALATIAL rm 11-lth stone fireplace, all
""I ' EXTRA SHARI' IMMACULATE " "' '" •or'"IQUV bltns. dahy,·i.;hr, ceramic tile ~ ux --MAINTENANCE FHA $32,000. PALACE WITH POOL
A t~ J11od 111o·o be d r o om
main uni! \\llh " nlce one:
bedrur 1 l'l..'ntnl. S u pe r
financing. S62.:JOO.
WEST NEWPORT
On 3lrd St. nl'o r beach ;ind
shops. Loi~ CTI' pofentlo1 tv.v
be\lroon1, large hvinll' room
~od dining moin. I. a r Q: e
sli:l'pu1i;: JJOl"l'h. s;-,9,500.
675-7225 . .,,,~ ................ '
\ \IJ,E).
HE .\t:r\
A BERG fNT[RPRl<;ES CO
BEACH
COTTAGES!
C.O.M. An e)'tra sharp 3 Bit Home
on a large 11'1x135 II oorncr
lot \.\'\th wa1111 natural \VCOd
wxl brick tcxturr;;, self
clea ning oven anr\ n1uch
more
2 story bargain! Pride or CUSTOM oce&Dtront duplex. & lndooN>utcloor carpeting.
OY.'llCn>hip abounds. Deco-T_AKE LIFE EAS'i NEAR BEACH $149,500. Financing av a 11. Ocean vie\\', jacuzzi too. 3 Sha& carpetina and cu1ton1 rat or dC'Jight y,•ith gold veined I~ this . corner lot C benuty -Olalt Prope:rtles 673-5UO <14 BR, custom Cape car garage and b on u 11 drapc.s thruoul. Huie patio, f \\'O on one 101 -Ol'lr'
1'
1nirrored "·alls. Difl(> over-in a pnnic North 0 5 t a ASSUME Cod, owner may carry room's n e. w . Spcctac:ulo r O\'ersizecl yard, do u b I e 1 a re.~1 doll .~~e-::uooo~othtt
J\tesa area (hvner never C d I M l012 ""'''· 169,500. T•-•. I has char1n · · ~. ·
PLUf'
The owner 1v11nls a rn101 snlc
and \VJlL CARRY THE ls!
TO.
Corona del Ma r
Super loc•u !inn. 2 lxlrn1 hornc
+ guest roon1 + ne1~· 1
bdrm VIE\V opt. o v C' r
gn r age. $8 '.!,500. Yor
pa.rticulurs, call:
loo king red bri<'k patio Y.1th . · p e r re,. t I y manicured Orona • ar 111 TD. $75,500. cmpc. ror size bedroom and "" PENINSULA . . . hke yard v;ork, so he 110lved '"" • ----------·' U bl CAR PE ' RE ALT 0 P. S ' l!ubbllng waterfall. Spark· it ,vilh 3 Unique beautiful landscape. Secluded entry. 1' Ccll day or nite a.ithn&: room. A fantu c g 6~0-8612 -~r 499-4m •
lu1g blue pool and BBQ area. lundscaped Jan. This 4 Br Cozy parlor with rock Don't CaU Me CENTURY 21 643-722l tamUy entertalning home. .,..,..,....,,..,....,,...,
Low dO\\'O p11yment to buv.I · ~ ' fi replace. Family dine . 1£ IQ ii ~ Central rov.·ne tocatiun Take home d1.d haves. but the O•cc-k>.t <h•n. H•••• A Duplexl.I, MESA VERDE ' UD EMERALD BAY . · . resul ts 1s truly the most. ·~ -Pl advantage or this bargain. r.f ,\ s s I V E J\1 A s T E R bl'<lrooms .. ASSUME 5~ % I'm a dcllghttul 2BR and den VA-FHA DC• • Great v.·hlle v;ater \•le\'': ·l
Call 963-a/67. IlEDROOJ\I & STUDY lhnt Fl~A LOAN with payments O\l'llel"I , -,.ie ... ce with beau-Assume 5% 'i'o FHA Joan Prap..-l:i•• · . bdrms., -I baths, den \Vith y 0 u , 11 CVC'r see!! !rs Sl60/n10. All this plus walk tltul private rzrounds or "'WII, Korean or Viet-752•1920 ::i. frplc.. forn1nl dining nn.;
absolutely iminacul!i"t(' with 10 i:hopping & sc h o o Is. nam vets buy VA. Even 1&00 OUAllST. NlWP<>IT llACH secluded rndiRnt heated ter·
nluch .. prirlr..._.ol oivncrship" L.ood11 of wallpaper and PLUS i.f you bought VA before. l .. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I race. Central loc., nr. tennis
evidenL SEE TT, AND s hutters + BOAT Acharmin&'.lf: rental with $44,450. See ih"1s Now! ct•T·us1:N.000ER ASSOC.
YOU'U. \VANT IT' $4" 950 GATE -ex c e p I ion n I private yard r.urrently pro-"iiiiiiiiiiiiii~I ' . ~. . value-full price only $43,950. ducing 225/mo. I aauail ~ Beautiful 3 bedroom, huge 1105 N. Coast }lwy., LagUna
OWN
• ER COATS llu"y ""' oow 8'Z.2535. ALL Pl lomily room, H: b•lh,, ___ 4:.:,94-.:..:.;llc.77:....... __
& o"•.TIL I • IT'S f'UN TO BE NICE/ ~c· professionally draped and I -p . Oc
1
on a generou.s 47xl18 lot iJt pmhra-p••Wt;i.. .. . landrcapcd, close to ocean, rime ean Front r~'!:1.s3E~~. Y~~. . _r~z ~V:.14~1t~~~~ . I ' 1!a\at.,1!1 ~0~1.1W'.s00~-hwy loca· ••oo OUArLs,~-~r~4:o.,,,ACM ~::fsJ..~ways. Just re-Spectacm!!2!=ine \'IE\V
hon1r comp'ly derorated in ~ • _!?~!!~_, Call 644-7211 1, surf &: rocks OYO I r g . .~ out. Good crpL<;. & drps. 3 BR; 2 DA, Combination delwt apt. 3 BR 2 Ba sldg.
lrptc, \iv. & din. a r e a. (Open Evenings I Family le Din!nr, Paneled &: &'llW doors (rt I: side corner
Dclnchctl go.n'ag<', ne\\1 toe-Jl-::::l-::-:==~1:::i:==:==:==:===I Steps to th• Beach com1ortable. Good location. t6Z'"4471 ( r.:.J 546 .. 10J unit, POOL, elev. to wide
h Qulet street. Secluded yard. · beach, J..... sundeck 3 car
1ncnt d1ivev.·ay fron1 i;trt•1•\ Prime South of Hi g w a Y n-. S • .,
lo i;11r.1gi:. SprinkleN h'Ont STUDIO IN HOME house with 2 bedrooms on "t"'n unday. 313 Esther, apes inside, id sec. 2-1 hr
& I . ... lot 'th •iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l.,'::c~.M°'.c:645-6~~130~·.!14!'2;,.!I00~.--1 JOG TO BEACH attendan• loan avail 0v.'1ler rC'n r, nut trc,.s. an oveniz~ V.'1 al>' 499-roai"
c .n .v . Appraisal. $34..600 1Jroved plans to add wiits. A CHAPEL FOR LIFE AS.SUMETotalp ayment,
A real Cape Cod cutle •
!las separate utility f'OOl:n,
dini11J1: r<.JOtn, fireplace, klve-
ly ~ shaded pntkl. A
'NlwPoRisH8RlS·
A Ice lnnd t11n bedroo m
main unit \\'ith anice one
1iedroon1 rental. s u p e r
lloWESY NEWPORT
On 33rd St. near beach and
shops. U:its ol potential -
f\l"O bedroom, large living room and dl.nina: r o·o 11) _
Large s Jeeping porch.
.$59,500.
675-7225
-. . .. .. &~39'lS or ~83 A r 1 l srs. ar,:111!1cc11s, mu1si-$69.500. Before this ,,...,...,eous rn11.rble $169.48 per mlh. for charm-ONE MILE BLUE LAGOON VILLA clans, S('(' I us o \' e y ·-·• •··~ 3 BR born• ~--· fireplace. Versntile 2 story. -· · .._..,.,., Prime Jocatlon, view. 2BR,
COSTA MESA OE,,,"."1',}nd',·;,,~~ e ;, nCloo"c'. "1';"",· , Star.t Thinking .Des9r. t c!O;tom built & VIE\V honie lo 'I, shopping & ocean Top appreclaUon area by the 21; BA, aJI appliances, " " "' ~.. ~ C 2 1 ·u 0 h Call Agent 5.f9..S398 · beach. 1700 Sq. ft. including _, __ P<>1_ --·-'-'-··•. •·no· u• s e 11 a I' a IC n1othcr-in-law ln _this ondo. EnJOY SWlll!" for am.1 cs ... nug ter ' 4 bedrooms &: A e par a I e ua.v ... u• •w-•11,,.1cu .x: 3 BEDROOM a~rtnll'lll plus,lhc sluilio. n1111q and lennis. Buy th.is used accessible fnn1ily room OWNER ANXIOUS, 3 Br, family room. Sacrilice a.t seller-First time oUered. Lachenmyer \ \LLE)
BE \LI\
$1575 DOWN
l'::iiii:i::i:ii::I Full Price $48,750 l b«l.rooryi, lgedressing for Piano StudK>''. Perfect 1% Ba, DIR. ftpl, )&e yd, $38.~. -Only $69,SOO. terms. RED I• area. E 1 I he r co mpletely teenager home, 5 bedrooms, a5Sumable 7% loan. FltA ~ PLAaJ1 CARPET, RE ALT 0 RS
Beautiful thrrc bedroon1 on 2211 Newport II. furn !or $26.500 or unfurn fnm·rm, den, (XIOI. Beautif\11 or VA terms avail. only t ~64fHl612;:.:;,=o::o.°'~......,,,=,:..=:.:.,..-~ NEWPORT HEIGHTS
quietc u l ·dc -sac,ticw HORSE COUNTRY C01taMeta for$25,500.SceyouinP.S. Karas t a n carpetingi, $35,000.673-2749.AGT. ~ VACANT, v;eU deail[ned '.! Bay&oceanview.Complete-
;. eE~r.1 •1 1rnPn1~ts C-:> Realto r
ca rp el~. nl'w pn l n 1. Ba<'k Bay 1/2 Acre v.·ith Q 646•8811 I love you!! storage galore, electric air * ASS\ThlE $16,100 rnA 7o/a 142·74'1 BR.. 1~; ba., 2 level con· ly remodeled 4: decorated.
Landscaped iuxl complclC'ly n "harming free" h n de cl , 644-7270 tilter. Take advantage of 2 BR townhou.e-J\ieu Verde,I .. ~~~'!"!!!!!!!!!!!!'!'!'!"""' temp. Bltn. kit. w/rmack 3 BR., 2 ba. Flnt time
fcnL1!d. Can~on in b a <' k ph;krt fl•ni ·c 1 hon~~· Th t• U owner/contractor specially front unit, patio, pool. G.I. NO DOWN bar; sunporch w/ocean vu: 0fff~~-~r·HOME
gi\'CS added geclusion. C<Jll s~· ll'r wilhl ht• r 11'1t11.!,'"!IOOan-J i Sun/Eves. built with hm um er ab I e $29,500. O"'C 2nd. 833-8974 la-c. Jh·. rm 1 w/beamed to S<"C 646-1171. cing ut l l' pncc o ... , . xtras. SHARP 5 BR 3 Ba .,.,. lk VACANT. 4 Bedroom, 2 cell. Needs paint & minor 5,016 Beautiful sq. ft. of 15tlnd
OPfNTILB•lr'S f UN TOBf N/Cr • Call 566-2660. 546-4140 to all Schls & Jr. Cone:e. bath1.bltns,bra~ne1vshog fix up but a real buy at on Lido, Largest avail. lot .
THE REllL
ESTllTERS •
SELECT · I•-"'."•-"-..,-'!'-'""'""..,!!!!! ia9,500. WILLS REALTY, cpts &; ney,· paint t!1ruout. $12,9aG $95,500.
• ~~=~~°""7"-~I new Sears shopping, Marina 1,; blk from ocean on semi-2 BR. + den, single 51~'. PROPERTIES Fast Occupancy ~=:=::::=::::=::::=;:=::::=:::=::\,~!!~!!~; 54&-7739 or 64,;...9733. 1.fove 1n condition. CI08e 10 Beautiful tamlly exec. home. NEWPORT SHORES Eastbluff 11..01 SSUMABLE BY O}VNER 3 br, l ha. pool Hl school. ·ruy $38,900. prlv. Mc Knight Dr. 3 BR Walk to beach. $50,000
1 ri 10 A nr beach. $38.~00. S4.9:XI Broker 84Z.74ll or Eves: 3 b POOL. rl uo Ov.·ner wUI carry.
FHA VA BUYERS Call us i•bout th is extra ne~t LOAN dwn., bal. at 8%.%. $299. mo. 968-l178 & 963-4002. ..,,•· 1125 000' ,,Rpa••'tvtcoryr CONDOMINIUM
3 br fnml!y room home in HAYE YOU PJTI. 642.6289. 1 ,,:::::;..:::,;:c...::..=::..::=~~ " "" '
4 BR POOL
F.aslbluU with large park Beautiful 4 BR, 2 Ba Corner -'-"-'-""-"=----13BR. 2ba. near school, '""'""7260'-"''-------IWatertront. 3 BR.. 2 ha.
4 BEDROOM
2 l11.11h, double gnr <!, con1l'r
Jot. l:.:nsl11id•', Cosln l\lesa.
$34,500
like yurd and possible boat, Pool Home. 4 Years new 1032 $42,000. By appointment on-$1ll,500. Owner may Cart')',
BIJ! fH1nlly hortW. 4 to 6 tra iler storage a c cess. \vith lovely Atriwn. Beamed OVERLOOKED 1.E:::;..I T.;.;;c•r:.:•:-----"-'-ly, ov.'?ler, call !IS:J.1856 i ::L::•Vu:".:;':..;.:N;!lg!:u::•::.l_....;1~0::57 1 Older couple, no chlldt-cn.!
h C' rt t'" o nt s . Convcrtibll' Quic:t occupan<.'Y 1:· "i short Ceiling, large family room 7% Interest no pets.
ho nus room, plumbed for escrow desired. Owner will & kitchen. Home centers 2-Story l;';";';";;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;l;;044;;;;
1
__)/di LIDO REALTY
Roy McCardle Realtor
1810 Newport Blvd., CM
548-7729
1\·L't t111r or bath. Convenient help finance ol only $64,950. on unique decorators pool. This opportunity to own this location :.> schools, shop-Call 644-7'lll Just listed -won't la5t! really lo"'1y horn@ .situated Country Side ~--"'°"
p1ng,al'cess.Beat thetough elm ~r complete details. only 1~ bloc ks trom n;~a~~n!,!:;2~i1:_bia~~s: GARDEN HOME t;Wffl•
I\ -\,, I .. 1. ' II
*6 73·7300 *
hon1r nnd fl'l('l~y market Inspiration Point in Corona Dlshy,•asher. G 0 r g e o u I Master suite, 2 additional SPECIAUZING IN
\.\'i!h lhis o!ll". Call 54&-2313. I ~ del Mar on ocean. This full custom drape Large e _ bdrms. and 1 bo.th upstairs, HOME LOVER'S
DELIGHT PRIVATE 'IBEACH
View the CN.~an from thi~
4 BR. 21~ BA home whl'n
:,oo nre not enjoying: the
prlvarc IX'uch. Xlnt ~urfini:.
lan1 rm 11'/chur broiler, 11'[::
liv rm y,"ffiN'placc, cnclos·
eel pa1io. ""Ov.•ner flexiblr,
\\•Ill lenS<' opt ion or ca11)'
2nd. Sll.1,0CKI
OPfN Tit I • 1rs fUN ro ElE NICE! , , 2 story home is yours for posed a.ureg~'te patio ~ 1 bdrm. ~ bath dov.'Tl. LAGUNA NIGUEL VIEW
$142.SOO OR your best wa1k\1t'llys. It' a RE AL ~rg~ family kitchen open-SEPAROTPEERRTIRAESCE
THE REllL
ESTllTERS I "EXTRA, EXTRA ne8Qtiable oUer! BARGAIN 1s 144 000 1ng into &arden area. An 67s.a600 ·a ' · attractive 4 bdrm. home PRIVATE GUARDE: AREA
\ HEAR ALL SIDE y SIDE 58&-5950 Principals only. that's been beaut if u I I y B VISl•H Hunli""'on llHch 1040 1~<""'°',ooo "" ""' pri<ed at OCEAN vu 10'"'°m'" 2 *' BP 2 B•. s:n.ooo. owe ABOUT IT" .... -or 3 BR. 1<9.500 -m.ooo
2nd, $1lnta Ana. nr. c.r.r. &-auliful pride or O"'ncr'llhip Two 4·plexes, close to shop. RIAi.TY TAKE OVER CALL 552.7500 *
An enchaiiting end arti1Uc
modern 2 story home oo
a lovely site. All th e
amenities are contained In
tliis 4 Bedrm. tam . rn1.
& d/r home. LA>we1t priced
PALERMO n1 o del in
Harbor View. Reduced to
S77#1J.
8.33-8971. 3 BR 2 BA, rom1aI din lng ~~iliatle~ood~~~ ~~ Government LHn1 • VISION • ~~d:J11 ~et~s :!1~
roon1 , lall!:C 20 x 20 fan1lly $61,000 each! 3 & 4 BDru.t homes in all wtatrlum. 2 BR, den. GP..UBB & ELLIS Real Estntc
675-7DAA Just a few wards room in COsta Mesa. Prlccd N 11 f l
BEAUTIFUL
GREENTREE
ut $45.950. Call 64G-7I7L FERGUSON °ESTER areu. 0 qu a Y ng . REALTY * "11 llU,000. to !15,000. ;, .n BUY th" .... tand;n• 4 BR
in the right place... Of'E"' T!I. 9 • ir'S FUN TO BE. IJICEI -. OPE AILY you need. For more in-a red h!ll company ocean vu on oontruct 1v/
rt''"',''·' ' Realtors, Inc. N D formation, call BK R. Tlniv. Park Center, lrvlne $10,00'.l dn, r.fove ln ton1or·
67S-a600
VISleH RI.ALTY 2 bdrm divined bath. llu);\' ro o n1 s , cathedra l criling.
Ownr r v.·ill h e Ip finance.
Cf1ll G4S-771.1 .
Dally Pilot
Classified Ads
WALKER & LEE
REAL ESI'ATE Dial the dirett line
S27 .900! As!:ume 7~~·;, llllln.
$l5.'l mo. j:'lenn, s h il r p ,
rearly. Call NO\V lo !IN'.
W--0010 Agt.
642-5678
Gener•I R.E. 1002 Gene ral R.E .
macnab I Irvine
realty
BIG CA~YON CUSTOM
1002
Expert crafts1nanship-lg. family roon1 "''/
cathedral ceiling-luxurious master suite-
4 lg. bedroo1r1s-professioaall~ decorated.
Excellent fa ir\vay VIEW . Maxine Willi a1ns
642-8235. ( U66)
UNIVERSITY PARK
Special condotniniu m in popular Villa~e I.
Lovely & ltnmacµl ale 3 bcdroo1n Cambridge.
Excellent location . S48 ,500, ~is Mill er 642-
82.15. ( U6il
''PEEK!"
Prestiglous Bayshores! Private \('()mmunl-
ty-n'-beach! Precious 3 bedroom dollhouse!
$65,000 .• lack Custer 642-8235. ( U14)
EASTSIDE COSTA MESA
Owner transferred & needs to !iell this 4
bed roo1n, family 1·001n home on lg, Jot...
Offe rs requested. !17,500. Holen Ball 644-
6200. ( U21J)
16U'Mic:Atthur 6At•620G
TAKE OVER
Gn-al FHA loun on I h i 5
beautiful l~i ve11r old
home. 'l'rnnsferred o wner
niust ~II. Jusl llstcd at
S~<l.500. Cnll 545-!ml.
Walker &Lee
•t•l llllo1l
1401 Dcve St ., Ste. 220 Spacious 3 heUroom '' o Id 841-3584 TURTLE R,OCK row.
N Be h corona" channer with a $ ""UICK $ BROA MOO ewpo rt ac lam!ly room. formal dlnlng ,.. D R Enjoy The Geed Life UP~;:~AY ~::ri:t,,:'/d~ ~\!,P~.~ WE BUY HOUSES Luxur~~~~~ .. tm· ean 49a...;13
319 Poinsettia Ask for Ed. maculate m i n t condition OWNER must sell. 4 BR,
3 Bdrm. rustic, beams, knot· A N k 2 BA din rm. trplc. b:>nus ty pine paneling, 1·3 Acre Cull 61a-n'l:i K SABIA :=1:,...m t!hag e "'~r 10m'uh=~, .:.rmo;:..· ;,:153::•,;:9fltl"'-. .::<!!H:U4:::..:::::~=
on corner lot. toned for Re•I Estate 962-6644 mo,·c. ' v • '· horses. Exce.Jlent property L•k• Forest 1054
ror small buslneu i.'Uch as POOL Table stays v.'ith 7,4.o/n I£ 'Quail l kennel, nursery, etc. E.'€· VA exlstln1 loan you take , •
cellcnt investment possiblll· over $2.19 n10. 3 supf!r sized Plac• ty. $38.500 n:am1s, new ryt c,,en-new Prapwl:i•• · ..
DAVID O. CARLSON 1,-;;;_;;;;;-;;;_;;;;-;;_;-;o;;_;;;-;;;;;;_;;;_iii;;;_;;;_ii I \ttnyl floon;, f.rpl c. Agent 752·1920
REAL TOR llJ..9293 im-&i33 1&00 OUAll st. Htwl"O•T II.UM
7°/o INTEREST
2-STORY
COUNTRY SIDE
l..AKE rottEST
BIG CANYON
CORNER CONDO
$119,500
'l BR & F'm. Rm. 3 bths,
E .~ p e n s i v c "'allpo.pers.
r u Aton1 d r a ped &
! lnndl'C'a Pt'<I. \\"allC'<I in com-
• plC'tr. prl\•nt'.'.y. Vi£'\\'. Zlyr.
11·: loan. 110 µ\~. _
6 P.ue Chtlllll'llli'< \11\CANT
Ov.11(or tHO·OOS.IJ
~II 1dlr ue:ns with a nally Want a 10w-1>tlced car?
P1\ot Ch1.!Ulilied ad. 642--0618 Read todQ'!I Clautfted Ads.
DUPLEX J\tUST SELL! e TURT' ...EROCK e
Owner will c1n1-y! 2 8C'droom Thls beautltul pool home, President J1ome. 4 BR, or
and 1 bedroom on" lovely "'!th huge faml!Y room, 4 3 &. Den, A-C., prof. dee,
treellned street. South ol lge bdnn11, Mk1ni: o n I Y , bea ut. ldscpg, On quiet cul-
lllghway-pticed to se11 et .$49,9".J(I. v.1th lo~ do1,·n. de-sac. Fee Land. Good
$79,950. No lonn costs or SCOTI REALTI 53&-Ta.13 Tenns. S89,950. &12--0'288
pre-payment. 67:>-4000. TAKE OVER e BY OWNER e
Beautiful 4BR .. 2 full baths. I "'""'""''""""''""'""'""'""~I Shag carpets, but I t -1 n s , EASTBLUFF BEAUTY
Dishwasher. Gora;eou 1 lllghly upgraded 3 Br. 21;i
cu1tom drapes. Large ex-Ra, Trina J'\l(l(lcl 11·/mini
posed lli:'gregate p11.!!o & \'l('I\' 0r hay. r.J ust see lo
"·a.lkways. 11'1 a RE AL 11p 11 t' f' r i::i 1 r r In e np-
BARGAIN at $ !J -1 , O O O. Poin'1111'nh1 111 th111 ko1no.·.
Ii PEGNO ,S
I I' I I I
,!. S 0 W H E I ,
I I I I '
l
I N A B I R j '
I 1· I I '
I H E l L A T
I I' I I I
I
' j·
Now~•y,, one ttn live I i
t.httply--· 10-ll I 0 (Of!lfJI~•• ltl• ch11CU. """"'ct
.., '"""! " ... """1 -·· \'OU dn•loP fOlft lltp No. btlow.
BARRETT REAL TY GOVERNMENT LOAN ASSUME IV.% LOAN
~ 3 &: 4 BR homei'I In All Brand nev.', 3 Bit, r.1 o 1 t
•O\\'N'!:R WILL SAClUFICf: nreas. No qutt llf)tng. For des l r R b 1 r, \n den1~1nrl
$100,000. Oimeo Shotta-IUgh· mah! Information call BKR .. Unl\'crslty p 11 r k locution.
111.nds home. w/prlvate beech S.16-33l':" $51,950. 640-00,,1
tor tm1.1"'1. sale. 4 Br, 21; NE\I.' CUSTO~t llO~tE BY OWNER
B.'t, fain rm. Brokers wel· 4 BR, 2 BA. fam rm, v.•et FOR Sal~ by O v.• n e r , ~me! Open house Sfl.t It ~. 3 cat gar. Beaut dn. Universit y Pnrk, \'nle
Sun. 4626 Cortland Dr. (213\ ln. atta, nr La"-Park. r.lodel, 4br. 2\i ha, 'hag
472-0&M. 1123 Main St. Open dall)' Cfl'I&, lT'JI: patios, fl1h pond.
\'OU \\1LL LO\'E IT! N1:w l ·S. 53&-4022/~1 •67 eve. xlnt oond, $70.000. By a ppt,
unusual duplex. 1 j DR. llt::RE 11 Luxury, Privacy 5.52-0988. 3 ba houso It t-2 BR, 2 I. Prestlae Deane Garden·"w"'•"°LN~UTC:-°"SQ"u=••=E= .. "'T=w-,.,,-,.,,
ha. \Vood panellne. italMd mod e I y.•/lsland pool-luah. Air Cclnd. R~tr11. hlithly
slass. Ji"rpl.c's. Beach Foot· ntriUf!:!. Roman tub. Aatnt upgraded. $32,500. ~7
brldat" 1 &lk, 42S Goldenrod, r968-1<5G"'f.""°"'"-:--;::::::::;:;:l.,!JAl~I ~6j•~·kod~S;_· ----0 .1n•r/Bulldtt. ~1 ~-BR, 1 .. ba. Au umable •NE\\1 4 en, 2 B:\, Coll-
Operi' 11).5 ~f 1'i", VA loan. $Ziel m o . p ~ tll f A/C .., '"500"
SA VE $!,340. 1')"PIC, encl Uo, ? 6 8 2 1 ~~;~ .. e ~47~ . -
l\'tw Unique Duple!IW 4 Br \'1,ikon Or, H.r. 0 w n c r .1.,:,-:.::~~;=.:;.'-'~~
& Dc.n. 3 bllthl 11nd 2 Dr. 84M696. BY O"'NER Ca llt. Jlomt5,
2 e 11. Ownftr/Oulldtt f\luit HERE I• L.u.1urv, PrivaC)' 3 Dr. 2 ~· ai.;s~unable 7'0
Se ll ! Sl 39 .0 0 0 . 42 . k Pruttre ne.iie Gan:ftn lonn,$21 1.mo.~l-1142
Goldrnrod. 615-Ql21 mndel Mth \1\1nd, po o 1 ,
~950 Principals 011!~'· 011 ne1-..i 111l)o.1uus, n1ov!ng out
-ol u1·r11.
NE\V LAKEntOST J~0:\1r,:o MILLER REALTY
rron1 $.'>1,950. 10·;, <;r ~'ti '. r.i2-"1t
dn. 3, 4, 5 Bit l1ul.t & lnke ,· ~=~~~===~ 1
prlv'1. A/C, 1\•/v.· 1·rpts + FINAL CLOSEOUT
1nany more feature~. * ~IODF.L.S •
lJawkln~ Re11lton 830-3-l?'i 011d
Ml11iot'I Vie(o 1067 • SE\\' uor-.tES .. _ ~~. ·; 1"l11f11l<·lng fl\ all.
4DR. 2be, 2 at<H'Y w/lrpft', HA RBOR VIEW leti~ rear )ard, a1.,umc 7".0 I HOMES
VA, SJO.s.9}? Dontil I lh 13n•n Cu.
Newport Be•ch <L1 069 I 1829 Port Sh>Jtlirlrl .
, ...11 Ne,,..1JOt1 Stot•h 833.0780
Bl:AC)I ~ROPEP. .. Y rn~ OPEN-VACANT ~J:: Nev.1>0r1 Bea c h ' I 2100 SQ, Ft. 4 1-.:tnn .K. fam
\\:•li'rfront y,•fboa.t 'I 1 P • nn. \'I<'"' or l:1k~" J o 1 "1
SUf)ft r Btt.lboa C(J~e~. ~ br, i.:rt'l'fllx•lt, H;u·~ llay 9';
2 .. bl. &~! btU: Slla..IX'O. lr>rul. tmn1t'd poi;•, t.ta y 919-9'".>ST 0\1ncr. i.11~~ (>JMio!I
GREAT LOCATION 11111'1 11tt1um. Roman bl.th L•gun• le•ch 1041 f} '~~.! t•UV~l ~ro tt lll t!. IN 1•11~t ~ "' Bl<>ek 10 beh. 112 BR duplex Ag:ent. 96$-44~ THREI LEFT •
JIAJtDOR Vu r.lonttgO 4br, Oulnti11YI GC-29!11
drn, 1> r In CI Pl IS only, J \\'i'lnt Nt'wpor1 Jlou~IL'I
SS,!},900, m~kc. ofler, \\pp~ lhn•e ~e\\.,...Jt1 IAt $.O!l.500.
onl" 64-Mil ,g ' -I Eni?l!•h Vu 6 Nn~ s:-1.;,r(X),
NE\\1..Y rcmod. Nv.'Pl Hgh Santa BRrbtU'll 2 A..: pines
•"'"'· 3 Dr, 2 b&. New Ctu'fM!l !lOO Ac. lr11ils nr lnkr J!l,ooo.
k paJnL fi9.:!00. 645-3 Sellltr&Ut> .. lN·IK!1' ~s.s:w, " 1---t' .... __ _.,Nt'!fR9!'l BJ!EhL C..lllOl'nil 1111.l __ Ut•'·'"~M·f.\l ~&ovl tllll~$ \ \ • \ j \ ;nl~·n1:;~1~td ~illl Sellln&anythlftlMlh11 Dally Choice NE\V \\'O RLD hlll11d. • ~i..t--w• , , _ . . Pilot Clauiffed Ad 111 1 SHH. aBA con~. As1ume r>on•t , gtve 'Jl{E IlLllf'f~ 1'-:.tlrly 1u~11.
1.-J~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-_l ._..!~~~~~~~~~~~!.!!!~~~~~. l~S(~l~I ~td'.!lo~ll~•n~u~wt~trhJe~b U~UA~ll>f iffijll6 ti\li'lfdt" " JUI\ i~~ ntA.1M;llOO. .. SCRAM-LETS An1wert 1n Cl1t1lflutlon 1080 J'llt1t Ch1.111nt'd ad. ~ J<;_!•l!'.1.!6'2-!:::5!1~711!!1L..----1'D~•o!!!l!"'~n.!.A~'!""'~·=-......!m-~"c'.:7Jl!;!.!;1CJ..'~~!..!!!~!!:...!'.!!:=
>kl!l>-"-dcq. l-.<.Y li 1n.;.:>. ~ A~l'nt
•
'
. '
'
B DAil V PILOT
Newport &e1ch 1069 1-..:..;..;_..o----
BIG CANYON
EXECUTIVE HOME
.. 'or Snit' o.r Le111oe or l...l:nse
Oplloo. 401', l M, po o I ,
\'I''"' \I 11 I u " d 111 n\'c•r s~.Ooo. lll'lllK't'd lo $179.00ll
t1Ul' to rm~nt'Y !'lllu:u lun.
Cnfl 6-1 1·:5:':.fl or &<IO--OTTT.
CUSTOM 4-PLEX
:! Bi'dt'Ol'JrtL, :Z bnth u1uts
r•t•\ilJl' n.'llidt'nt\ni 111' <'II •
::;p11nlsh 1-xtrl'io!'. B 11 n ~,
(' n C 1 0 II t' rl 1.:11 I'll lj'. I' !I ,
Sp r I nklt'n..'CI, l11ndt1env1ni;.
Onlt $.l 1?.,000.
Century 21 642-1771
Santi An1 1080
'
MOtldar, O<:tobtr 21 , l<.174
Income Property Hou ... FurnlsQ Hou'" Unfurnlsh
BEACH DUPLEX Bolbo• Ponln1ulo 3107 sotrfus:i~"~r.IVAY Irvine 32.W C.O.M. CUTI[ Cost• MoN 3724 Cost• -. 3124 Hunt/,,.... -3l40
EWPO llAYrn<>:rr ""'" "°''· ~ $230. mo. ......,, RENTALS A .. _._.,_ I HACfENI),¢~ ·~ WALK TO BEACH N . RT -Br. 4 Ba. winier or )'1!.Uly CllAR.MING 3 br w Ip'!_ I 2 BR .. 2 ba., ~· ....... $3'75 One bed.roorn PWS -IOUlh mUUUlllUUT nn ~~ CROUNi>s 1, 2 & 3 Br. crpl, W,,1, $]2,375 till-2Cm patio ava.U Nov U.. $-12$. 3 BR., 2 be., bonu:i ...... $425 of ;,'/~ay -tl,r!ftw Jat'Pt'tl BRANO NEW Adults -No Pell blUns. c:ar. 221 16th SI. or
Corgroua 7 1ilOry' !'\ewport I ~B~ayi:;sho=:::"~':._ __ _:3::_:1c.!1~21;ii":;;~y.:211:;;6i;;:°"or-;67>'i;;;50'i:C,u;':;. ;-;::::;:: f BR., 2 ti. .. fam , ·• .••.• $425 ,-S C 0 M." TnlNolSers. $2t..50 & Up 10 mlnutel to oceitn. ?..arge 205 15th St., Huntlnrton ~ach dupl~x? 51).l fL 10 1 • . Nl-..1\1 3 br. 2 bil. bltns. trplc, 4 BR., 1~~ ba., ht.m •• ~ • • IU1 SINGLE STUDIO APT 1 k 2 Br. 1 r -$11$., .;:."";h"-"l<c:;T-39517=':==-::::=;.f Surf and Suntl! Jwst S32.l73 BA\'SllORES. 3BR, 2 ba, K~r. SUt•En VlEWI ~ 4 BR .• 11' ba., tanl ·• $4'B -SPECIAL WEEKLY RATES 2 BR SJ!K>.w1th-!>atlo $196. 2 BR -apt; newly pajnted,
bU)'s it (dov.·nl or sub1nlt frp1c, yard, 2 car IC!lr, Kint 673-29'.lS or 61:.-202-1 Tv.'O tK!droom, w.·o bath , m7 Jlarbor P~vd. G&S It \Vatt:r inc.,, new sbq cpt. clrpf, Jots
oo yuur tl•m111. N l: \\' ! • ~.~':f1.1",14· 75 6-U-OOCi. ~tr. Costi Me.. 3224 1~111e. &undeclc, quiet street. Coll• Me&a 64S-4840 Orapttiel, carpet&, g a & <1f cloMl.8. Car age· No
Ca1hcdrnl Ct'i llni;•. ~"'"'.. $3tO heal. pa atove, air chlldrtnorprts.423A12th llrcplace~. ct"ramic t 11 e Coron• del Mar 3122 F --~-M-IL_Y_wtrn __ lod_2_Br-.-hiod-C.O.M. CHARMER EXIT.A lie l &: 2 Br, $165. condltionlni". • w i mm l n g .,;:;Slree;;:o:l·c-:-,.,:-:--;::--:::c-1 kltche~. ·I car a<•ra1i:e. 1'rut' d It= d 1 od • ••~ ·~---1_.. .......1 rec. room. w1sben CONDO 3 "'· 2 ba. cpJo, deluxe unitll. 4 bcdroon1 plia 3 BDlt, s balha, tamlly rm, Y " °"" P x, move t 1lY, · "" ........,, ·~·a "CQ, new _.. 2 bt'droorn. Good terms, tul'" cnrn<>fed & d r a Pc d , K.~DS & pet ok. 2, Br Sl!IS. O\lerslze three bed r 00 m , crpt. Ideal for bachelon, ~&,.;d!Ye~~"~·-=-.,.,,--=-°" drpll, patio, WIO, reftlg,
•· u I ; 1129~· "--fl y _;-•-I 'h •-~t I move today ta1·11y -m. 'l\."'t .. ~-. ,. .• 1, adults. 1993 Quach 548--9633 Off The Beat"n Path &: stove. No fee. $22S mo. ll pr ce ust -.......... .,.,"!; eet~ poo w t ca ...... na. ·SIDE 2 8, ·kl,_ ~t " '"" .... vou " v A51< ror Bev or D a I e
10 Lovt>! Ci1ll nnw (71•1\ \J blk trom beach. $1200. • <~, ""• of highway. $475. or furnish-~17S6 963--4567 7~-1100. per n\O. No chlldren, JW> _ pro.se~ lncd. $200. ed. $525. Huntington Beach 3740 •
lNVESTJ\.tENT DIVISION ~et s. Ca 11 for n p Pt . Hom1f1nder1 * 642-9900 1st \.\'e&tern Bunk Bldg. WATERFRONT LOW WEEKLY RATES * ~~ ~e~arpeu DOG RUN (213)345-5W EASTSlDE Costa l\f es a' I p k I In Bl In . l DI h _ .. _ Spac. 2 br, apt. All xtras. Univer11 ty ar , rv e Executive Sultet * t· s 1nc s v.'ll ... ...,r 1'-'rom $159. 1~ blk. V.'es\ SMALi. furn house in rear, Cnpc ~cxl. 3br, 2 ba, large Days 552-7000 N l.nhts B •• u t It u 1°3 b-.. ro·o m * Lrg Pool & Gas BBQ' a n-h • SI I i~01 l Br, single person pref, fenced y I!-rd . completely • tov.'llhouse , private""'boat slip 727 Yorktown Blvd. 1 & 2 Br RM $115-$195 .?,~.~K!i~~ ~ •.>:i $29,000 Avuil Nov 1111, no pels, $ro(J, retlec Inside & out. $375 *NE\\I 4 br, C.Ollege Park, ..... I ptlonal •::n: Beach BJvd. a t Yarktov.•n Ca.a & \Vater Pd -Garage
f\ill Jil'lfi' for nrnt, i;ll•an 41 2u ~ I r "'"'"' '"''"' n10 499 F1ov.·cr St C'l 2 ba, 1Ue roof, A/C, $425/ -,,,.rn ture 0 · .,..,,. S" ~11 NCH A S rtnl'., ORO APTS
3ht•. I '~hn hOl11(' n .... !'' "'""'v;;A=cAss' UMABLE mo. ·ll ~ r:rn 1':8 ............... 642.'.ai.74. . " _,,1""'=:..· .::833-="':::'c:'·c.....___ CHANNEL REEF---LA MA A PT • .....u:...8234 Atlanta \\'ortu•r 1,n1 75\:llO. roof 2 STUDIOS & 1 BR's. 778 Stott Place, C.M. Prl pool >rs old. isublnit ~,IA ol' FOURPLEX Cor ona del Mar 3122 LEASE10 PI'ION, i\tesa l 3l4I e FuU kitchen 642-)JC7 or 6C5-6318 1•2& 3 BRd v ~ '
(;! Vwrl Co. Hl'Al•ors , Lo\\" intl'rest k high spen-Verde 3' BR, 2 Ba. llrand 1gun• Be•ch CdM's most ·beaut\(ul •Heated pool ERRANEAN ~:1'.· ...... ~~· t o "''""' dable Only 4 Id new plush crptg tre11..i.. 1.. ..... tront location. Very • Laund-•-cillll•s MEOIT · ......... ...._ ....,,..., ""' St>ll 0·r exchangc.~ars o · CORONA DEL ?ofAR p ii. lnled. i.nunae," lhru~"f. $175. NICE I BDR apt, bllNI, kri:e tv.'O bedroom furnish. e n-ee ~filitl'e1 VILLAGE $150/1.fO., large 2 BR. 2TBedroo.~, .. ~naNI, blg~lioh, Huge trees & trple. $375. carport. ~. $600. 0 Free linens 1 Bedroom $200 Carp./dr$pe&. Sharp! Nr.
l[i't'} ·~ QPl':.~.il l ~.:19h~theie':~~; mo. Century 21. ~I. ~;o~Rn~ V~~~c:!le11s Llffi( ISLAND •. !·!·a&~,aid serv. avail. ~=~&Den ~ stores l beach.~ 6T':t-6700 . Iii -Includes gardener. i\l~A Verde, 3br. 2 b a, $2.30. 2 BDR, ocellll clt_y view ua.o-.,....., , Ei\fERALD LANE 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiO::iiiii Prap--LI•• , Cole of N'.51jj' Rllni bluns, water so fl n er, apts bll.Jl!, ga.ag•. L hom ..,. _ _. • Phooe service 2 Bedroom Townhouse $320 1 br, unfum. $155. I ....-. covert!d pnUo close to pork u x u r Y e on """"'' e 1 mile to~ 2400 Harbor Blvd s&-9366 752·1920 675-J 11 &: .. ~1 · ·_.. 1375 $360. UTIL pd, 2 Bdr., frpl Baytront. Completely Co6ta Mesa , (n4J 557-8020
Mobile Homes 1400 OUAILST HIWl'Otlt 11ac~ [Qjlli::\"'fo';;"'J""ifr'."'f'lJ::[~~se~-~·~1!"~'"~'~...:_occu:.::~~:.:_:-.._: house, ·n.r. Divers Cove. fW11ished. 40· slip available. 1 BR. Condo. Furn. \\'aaher, 1 :::;;;c'='C"'°"='~'"='=-=
--
for ale' 1100 -cco-----o,~~~.-CHINA Cove 3 Br 2 Bu nio, 546-5,900 $36.J, LARGE 3 Bdr., 2 Ba.. $850. drayer, D/\V. 'Pool, pa!lo. NE\V BREED APTS. Irvin• 38«
,--lx_:n_·-. -,-,-,-n-.-,,-.--bd-,-.. -". Tw0 •• mn e,r u.2 ,u,dn~tss. ~~~ oc~an ~~·4~30: ~~mo~Rco::~1~i ~1~·. bltll!!, dbl gar, yd, BAYSIDE DR. ~:r,~~r~: oiJerAe~~~!d 1j:!zz1f.P~~riar~l~~i 2 BR 1 ba WHITE WATE R
Dlshw,br, a h e d , uwninga, ., 673-1838. ' yard & att. garage. $'.lOO $400. UTIL pd, J Br, 2 Ba adults with refs. S 18 5. paid. No pets. Adulb: only. VlEW, deckl, trplc, ref.rig.
8:-.:3:?' porch. <.kill t.'Ol1rsl', At! 2 BR. :!Orne w/bt'am M 3124 nio. 646-5855. frpl, beon1s, view, 00' deck Two bedroom and den. 548-3210 $190. 393 Hamilton, 64.5--44U .1~265='/~mo"--~494-~2339=~---I •· 1 Costa es• 642--""'" rest & ...... r, 11utt ng grn, Cl'il. i\Iassive &tone faciug. ----------3 BR, Air cond, lge fed NU-VIEW RENTALS New p or t Ar en apt. BEAtn' rurn. apts $165 &: ~°':;.,~~-~====,....,=""
lilluna. Adlt pk. ~iG--'664. Lgc. palm tree•. Be.au t . 3 Br Condo mosUy furn yd, garden space, & fruit 673-4030 or 'l!M-3248 Unfurnished. $695. $175 Spanish style building, CASA VICTORIA APTS l•gun• Beach
J UR Furn, Alun1 nc-ros..." 1nalntained. Moden:tte rents. I e; cmpry '+ w a 8 her' trees. $325. lease. 646--0715 OCEAN view: 2 & den. Call 67£7225 pvt. enclosed gar., pool, Adultl. , '.". 3 BR w/patios ----------
3148
1mn1 pool. adult pzark. Perl. Prin\~ location $184,S.10. dryer, dbl gor, pool. S2G5'.i,0•~'~045-~·°"'1S29~------$350 Mo. lmmed. occupancy .r sattna, laundry, ad!ts 1T301 From n69.50 No Pets OCEAN VIEW 2 BR l bs
t'Ond. &c 10 UJJPl"t'C. $.IS.. \Vesley N. Taylor Co. 2348 1\.1inute i\lan 540-3006 J BR, 2 BA. ne111 cpts, drps, 49-1-S566 E:<t 301 Keel11011 Lane ·1 blk West Pool, rec rm., elevators apt., lush gardens, this
5:t.17 REALTORS 6444910 1 BR duplex, encl. garage, Ige roonis. S 3 0 0 . 3149 --~~~=~=--of Beach ot! Slater. 842-7848 Sec. gate. Gas & water pd unit separate from maJn
Acreage f~r tile 1200 16 UNITS -ro pets. $170. mo. 131 E. Yello\\'Slone, nr. So. Coast L•guna Niguel 3252 AOUL T GARDEN APT 5~ Victorill, C!.f, 642-8970 bldg. $295/mo. 494--lll.15 or
BY O\\'NER. OeM.'.rt H o t
Springs: 2 1, acre pa.rt~I
& JO acre pnrcet. $930/ttCI~.
Tern\& or 1rndc. lntlio 4{l
11cre!'i, l'i1rus or agriculturC",
S!lOO/acre. Terms or trade.
Vuil Lake \•ic: 2.W UCl'Cli
18 ml 50Uth of Hl'n\et. div
illlo 3 HO ui;re pa r el' l s.
$600/acrt'. \'our terms. Tax
ii h ~I I er. agriculturi', or
sn1a1I ranchl'I. 49.)..lll'li
$225 ,000 12 0'c, 21st St, house A Cln back). Plaza. 5'M)..7823 3 BR 2 ba dbl t 1 BR furn. $145fMO. Pool. APTS Unfurnished. 2 Br l -,'4'H>602"'-'=-i"'~·--;,---;3=:1
/1 644·0030. l..ARGE 4 br. 2 ba, St'p. •• • ,, pl. (n •• .,d. crpl, Nr. Lake Park. ]QM 12th $195. Util pd, pool. lndry l -'L_•9:."-"'-'--N-'lv._•_•_• ___ 8_5'-ll
I Ba ·ps. ]' c, c Y • P!l • St ·~,,,, att s • kod r 11 " •-· '·h •--
Business Pro~rty 1400
HOUSF. on C·2 lot. $7,000
dn. 'i% JnL 1963 l-larbot',
Ci\1. 836·6670. 12·7 or 962.i;.tl,}
Cem•tery Lots/
Crypts lSOO
CASH FLOW Ligun• &e•ch 3148 nn1. rn1., r Harbor ;P~a~o~o~'~a~m:i~o.:.~:·:_'.$3:1:0'..l .~~~~~~~~~q~~· ~-1-~~~~~w~!'t' ac • cp • ... ...,, Ull w,,., 1 -~--------·I home. $425. i~I. wtr. &: 830-8563 MEN, 1mall beach hotel . closed gar. No child/pet. 16 Garden type units. Quiet EJlJERALD BA y gaNiener. ~ Roo $21.SO k A ts Hacienda Harbor Apts o l f s ll't't'l local ion. \\-'ood· II II tu . h-" 2 B 3 BR. + DEN, 2 ba, frpl, Condot Furn 3400 • ms """l v.'ee • P ' 839-7476 '··· . 1. 1 T ouse we rrus ...... or un-*4BR, A.~ .• childOK, 01,·1 rm l/drp 1350 ----'--------'-$95.mo. ;>;;<1'"'056 -~~~-=='-'-~--~-1 uunung irep aces. erazzo I 3 B 2 Ba . ., cp . , • T I p I • entries. Enclosed garages. w·n. r, • ocean $275. New Pair..t. Large yard Lse. 49&-4728 eves & wknd. PALM SPRINGS 2 Br 2 BEACH Single, turn. 0 ff rop ca1 • 00
Spar:kling pool. Large 2 6~'169 beach side. $550. Sll-8974 3 BR, 2 Ba, waJk to beach, Ba, pools, tennis, sauMs, street park'g, $125 l•t &: last. 2 BR, crpts, drps, bltns, b«iroom uruts. Earns $3040 1 guard S390 jacuzzis. Weelmd, wkly, Eves. 551-16591536--0862 splral staircase, r e a 1
1no. 12 'iC spendable. 6.LX Newport Be•ch 3169 D•n• Point 3226 ~~[~ or 493~ · mo. monthly. (.213)547~ or Newport Bl•ch 3769 fireplace, re.frig, lge patio,
Gross. Good temlS. HWTY ~~~;"\;ii;ii;;'~-'i?A> I J83~1-4~8'1~0 _______ 1:.::.::":"':':-::.:.0,::;_:--'.~.;.;. gas &: v.'8.let pd. ~8-1168
II (n'l ~•1no C .. IEO SHORES 4 b• 3 NE\V OCEANVIEW Home Mission Vie1' o 3267 -ca ,....,.. . •u• · Le tio 2 BR. ir 2 BR, 2 BA. \Vest Nine, WINTER RENTALS LGE 1 BR. Poot. adj. to ~-IWJ:STMil~ll\~I ~i!d.F~~~c ii.e:Wo !rr:: Ba~~~P mo: 641}-5078 ' J BR Condo. 21n, poo1, patio, ~; Niguel. 496-8871 or 2 br, ~~h~;tW:p1. $215. =~ies~. i;:p DeS:~
I .. ']~ : N6;°;7~antront, Panoramic Fount•in V•ll•y
3234 -""'~'"~'~;-~1~27~;~"~1·1~-~~.'."~8~10-0811~gar=,~Ch-U_.,C ,~ond'-'-~·~•-Uc..n_fu;..'~"~·-...:34;.::2S:1 ~til~f~a: c~e:·~1. ~: ~;F~11M4 ~~~\~ ~kia~ t.~:
---•••-View. 3 BR, Frplc. Beau!. HUGE 3BR + rumpus rm 3 BR, 2 Ba, Family mi, -6801 W. Seashore Dr. Call D'IO'VJ furn. 3 car pi•kg. Avail 3+7 Townhouse. 3 BA, 2 car Patio, Great view! 4 Rec. FOR Lease. majestic ocean l\lr. Pattison tor key. -"':<;C~H7..,IL~.D~R~E~N,.,..'O~K~-
mo. $450 675-8249 gar, all blnts, swim. pool. centers. $350. SJ0.2452 view, new 3br, 2~~ ba, inclds ~3698 ·00 · Kids OK. S2SO mo., no fee. N 1 B h 3269 clubhouse, golf, pool, adlts .. 1 -'"-'='-=~~=-1€e 2 Br $170; 3 Br l~~ LUXURY TRIPLEX
3 yrs old, Huntington Bch. 1-!AR ll & oc_ean v,,Jew, 3~!". Agt. 842-4421 ewpor ••c no pets full crpts & drps LAS BRISAS APTS Ba $190. Duplex &: 4-plex,
O\l'Nf:ll has n1nved fro nl Near ocean, wood burn frplc, 2ba, frpc, $650 S550 unfur. H . B h 2 car liar, $385 n10., smoi 5515 River Ave 6-42-2566 2 pools. crpl!I, drps, ~
Stutc & \vlshl's to sell buriu.l wet bar, dishwasher, heovy Wtr pd. agl., 642-2237 untington ••c . 3240 NE\VPORT BEACH, tr 0 1 y fre e s an CI c 1n en t e Elevator bldg on beach, 1&:2 LARGE 1 Br on West Bay
plots A & B of lot 6.'» shake l'OOf & encl. garage. Sen Clemente 3176 2 SUPER SHARP 4 BR, 2 beau l ilul scttlng--large 3 ~127 ' BR. Pvt balconies, htd pool. St. Cpts, drps, bltns. $155.
in V!.~to dcl Ms.1· plot, Seller will finance al SM.%. -Ba, Frplc, Crpts, Drp s, Bedroom, famlly r oom , 3 BR 2 ba CONDO on El Security. Adults. Incl. util. No pets. 6/:>-5800.
Pnci ric \'it'\\' ~I e 1n o L' la I p f W B fj fd 2 · f t f 11 .. t 1· h·" wood fl ..... '"~"'"'"' UP 1 Bd 2 " Cd 1•50 ho GU • rum e oce ... 1 ron. u._, urn covered patio bltns pou; = oors. uo.:am Niguel Golf Course, ..,...wr. · r., i:.l.fiB~ro""k"';::,,·~"°=f~"~·=-,:--..,-.,.-Purk, M. · for lh. & Assoc. deluxe ooodos. 2 BA; h & dishwasher. Be~u\ifullY ceilings. Ye&r1 L e as e, dishwasher. garbage disp., & Bach. t:olor TV, mal~ Call Lu\v OfflC't' or David f pool., gar, elev, Uli l Incl. lands ca Pe d, No fee $575.00 n1th. 2 car gar $325. 831~4 eve. serv. pool. TifE MESA, 415 2 BR wifurn Garden Apts.
r . DcLnncy 677>-2711 642-&i50 or 546-1081 EWe $225. (Zlll 284-2367 $356./365. mo. Ask Ior Bev Cole of Newport RJtrs N.B. Large 3 BR, 2~i Ba., ~.~9681Newport Bl., N.8. ~1i~:.:'·~~~~0·:::
SACRIFICE Pacific View FOUH·5 unit apt bldg under Houses Unfurnished or Dale. 963-4567 or nft.5 675-5511 , ~-=-="-------
i\l<'n1. Pnrk. Ohl. L'Ompanion construction lor sale. Close I ::---:-;-----;::::J-~&~w~kod~~"~96J.,,.;;i~1~71l6~963-~~l71l6~-~~~~· ;!!t&Nrd~o!~· $m~'8EAUTIFm, 1 br, Close to 1..:55:::c1·=2841""=.,.-,==,,.---
crypr No. o;o In Logunitn to major shopping centt>r. General 3202 SAVE YOUR 00\VNPAY· LEASE IT NEW mo.Adults ·nopets.642·3293 Fash. Island. Comp. furn., 3 ~E.SA ~O~TH $33> C~t. ~rlt~ A.Rdo Li?d· ~ ~~O v.Tlt~~ S~4~f. can l\.fENT, while renting. S50 With Ocean View T nho Unf 3525 linens, dishes, etc. $315. mo.. mo. includ!;s w&ter.~ ~--••' Rlir .... ~l'Oll!l.9Jlll.1 0'·,· .. 11 or 1 JlLA llNTALS a mo. refund on purchase. Great kitchens J BR 3 be ow us• rn 64G-l<O> Mk for Bob. ~· ""' JO' ....... way to 0\\'11 .....,,.,. own · · ' ., ., ON th •· "' •· h I -::;:,,:"'°'=:c::...-----phone 805-9S9-ll74. I d ·Ip 2100 Wfll'K1•urt1NWIVJCf ho_, 3b l • ba,~b1 . fireplace, y,·cl bar, lenni!"I, SEC URJT YControlled,2 e .,.,a""• ..,..c eor ;-BR 2 Ba new · 1 .
Comm•rcl1I Prpty 1600 n ustr11 rpty. nr ~hoo1~· si15. 962-<tr:;ns, jacu:a.i, swimming, e I c. story, 2 BR. 1% Ba. Adults, singles, from $125 11JE ,. Adult condo . (over Mi rnb
LEASE l,000 sq. ft. w/ortice f fji} HOllSlS OVERLOOKING NEWPORT no child ~ 16. 't'enn.is, SECOND STORY. 103 Mc-gar w/opnr, shops ~S· blk.
OWNER WILL ll().2'lOV, h~·at, hot wtr., ne; W J ..,•",',·,. LEASE HOME for $350. per BEACH! From $400 month sauna, jnCUUJ. 6/lOths mile Fadden. 675-1865 E·slde. &15-2:.\45: 548-S545
CARRY 81/i'/• bldg., gd. localion. &-15-2244 \ ----C'~~~~.g&~w~ Ne\\~ ~l~ealty ~beach. $Zi0. mo . FREE BOAT DOCK!~ BR. $1B5 EASTSIDE 2 Br dplx, ~),~· ic JOS' lo! or\ Ne\\'pnr1 Lots for sal• 2200 tttWPOl1 1.a .. y,c.M.642·tJIJ LY REPAINTED. Familys fpl, sundeck with view. yurd, CID tresh p a int
Blvd., Nc11oport Ben i: h. --------=-"' iJ-IEY, ~'O\v! Bach sro. C~f only, referances required. HARBOR VIEW HOME DLX DPLX 3 BR, 2~~ Ba, Winter or )'Tly. On the JtesPonsible adults apply'
$.i5.000. 10 •;-ti dov.·n, owner T\VO l.DTS total 104/209. Ot><1.n, fun1 & utll txl. Call ag~nt 546-4141 3 BR. 2Ba. $4.75 F/P, new crpts & drps. v.·ater. 675-6169/174-4384 646-2612 or 64~ •
y,iJ\ curry. C"\\l for in· Choice location. Huntington NICE bach EC~ $125. Furn 3 br. 1 % ba., $290. lst Steps av.·1:1y [rom Park , Beach side of Hwy, CdA!. 1 BR apt, garage & garden. 2 BEDROO!il, NEAR NE\V
formation, PREST I G E Beach. Zoned bus i n es s, or un.lum, uvail now & last in advance SlOO EI em· School, Swimming $500 u:;o·~ ask f Or Like small house. S 18 0. Cpl& dipe, forced air heat
HO?.rES &~ Professional or offices. ON BEA_?! bach.\ & 1 Brs clean'g. & sec. d~p., ~~ ~~~.&T~~~~'CoMPANY Doro ' • 642--0657 or 645-0145 $185 'mo. Call wkdays 10:30
SPF.ClAL OFFERING
THRU OCT. 31st: 1-"'ree rent
mo of Nov. 3 Bdnn condos
reduced lo $325. Oiildren over 12 in adult pk, under
12 aep. but eQ'U&l complex.
Tennis &: golf membership
an.il. New lrr; dlx • view
3 br, 2~ ba, 2 ~ central
air cond, Jpl. 23821 lfillhurst
Dr.(Ofl Crown Va 11 e y
Pkwy) (n4) 49S-1700 olfice.
U no answer, 4!jg-1625
Lido Isle 3856
LRG 38r .. 2be, bltlns, crpt1,
drp8, 2 car gar. Adlls,• HOO
lease, 675-3007 aft 6.
MeP Verd• 3863
e HOME ATitfOSPHERE
Delu.."e 2 i: 3 BR. Rental
Otc .309S Mace Ave.
546-1034.
YEARLY lovely 2 BR, 2'Ba,
Frplc, 2 blkl beach.
$280. mo. 6™"620
Newport lffch 3869
OCEANFRONT
3 BR, 2 ba,-Yrly SS50
2 BR, 2 ba, tum $400 Wntr.
2 BR, 2 be, winter. $300
BAY FRONT
3 BR., 2 bl., unf. $4.75 yrly.
STEPS TO BEACH
3 BR, 2 ba, wiote.r. $27S
2 BR, furn., yrly $27S
CORONA DEL MAR
4. BR. unf.. house. Fam. nn,
2 ba. $500 lse or !~,./opt.
NEWPORT CREST Condominium~ $21,000 t'BCh. TE R ~f S. Sl:QJSJ!f.,) yrly, util pd refundable. Children OK no REALTORS/DEVELOPERS TOC WNIHPOIUSE 2.:br, nr. So. STEPS TO BEAOI lo 1:30, 645-0395.
lo' sale 1700 l\Tlle: KANPAK. 1993 Kihei NICE 2 Br Tri $150. HB pets 846--0809 ' T:io" n'"" OOll ~~~ .. ,· ipo. 3 Br, 2 Ba, $275 Wlnler ADULTS, 00 -is. Lik• "-·•. · Rd., Kibel, A1au~ Hawaii Stv/ref, C&D, pt1tlo, avail · VV't\JU ~ 213-728-3354 ,.. '""'" nr Ph. ~·87!l·l:i~~-SEE no'v 2 Br Uplx $165. NE\V 2br, TownhOf!le, Wlins, YEARLY duplex, 3 houses f · Quiet , LJ:e 2 B r .
2 BR, 2 be. Condo. $S25
COMIAl:RCJAL
Ottl ulf. N' I $250
2 BR. 1 BA. By O\Vner .
Studio, c1111s/drp!1, p o o I
prtv. SJC. $31.900. Ca 11
1vkends or a fL 5 Ji n1 :
·193-5331
Income Pr operly 2000
PR0~10NTORY Bi1y Loi,
finest location, \VIII sell or
lr11de fo'. house or sml apt
biding. 213-278-9966
Real Estate f;xch99 2800
2 blks ocean, v.·on'I last plu~ shag crpt1ng, Ir g frotn beach, 1•2 bi·, 1~~ b11.. Ap1rtment1 urn1shed ON TI-IE BEACH, 1 n r , Dishwasher, d1Sposal. patio,
$185 ge t 2 BR house, ylll"d pa.tf, I~ gll[.:d & cklo" 'w0 $275., 1·3 br., 2 ha. $375., BalbM Island 3706 W~~;7S 21;~~~· """'• garage. $2lO. 644--0871 .
& garage lor family poo ·. • "'1 s 0 • \\' both w/fresh paint & tUe, . ..,,.....,,...., or ~ $180 PER MONTH. Lg 1
$185. Get 2 BR dplx HB consider pets. 847-9701 frpl. &: gar. 979-1521 wknds, MODERN 2 br, 1 ba. Close oc_EANFRONT apls. avail BR. Cpts/drps, b I t I n a,
.
associ ated
BR O l<f P'.i -1,E AL TO~<;
~r )\ W llol'>·•r 671 lil l Child & pet, ~~ml, beach TOV.1NHOUSE, 2 br, 2 ba, 675-4910 wkdyi. 10 Bay. $300. Ciill before wtnler/ye":_l'IY, plush 2, 3 dilhwasher, rebia;. 1130 Vic..
NU paint, 2 Br house $250. 2 car gar, pvt yC: · pool. F OR lease Lido N 0 rd e GPM, 6449030. & 4 Br. 67:r14.0t torla. ~5099. I ~~:!"!!'l!!J!"'lil!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Boat do!>r, pet & chld, 2 $275. Ask for Carol 832-63.35 S Cl 3776 ""~ Ide THE MOSl,,
4 ON A LOT 17 Unit.!f: close lo \\•atcr, in Clll' -• or eves & v.'knds 532·73M waferfronL Beaut. 3 Br, 5% B1lboe Peninsul• 3707 •n emente LJUU.IE Easts 2 Br, Carlsbad, trade all or part FMffi.Y 4-le 3' Br 2 Ba Ba, family or pool room, cpt!l, drps, bltns, pool. $165 EXCITING VIEWS
$72 500 I ...... Nit\ • P x • 3 BR, 2 Ba, crpt., drps, 2 frplc&. Dock for 00' boat. ~ SPACIOUS 2 BR close to Adults no ""ts 675-5800 JN NEWPORT , 0 """•""" equity for your S2251tl50 ·See to~appi;,ec. bltins, dishwasher. Fimced 6T:r5998 after 4 pm or 337-OC_EANFRONT 4 Br, 3 Ba, shops, beach, VIE\V, NO B k ' , ... -• ' PRJ~tE Co!rla Mesa loc11Hon. HL•.·dm'e. ':.kNf'o'r"°H"• r ,',·,'.•,a ROY ALE·3 BR, FR, w Ba yd., gar., newly dee, no 5909 winter: $400. mo, yrly., $650. PEI'S $210 mo. Perm. ro er, noulee. LUXu"" ....... -..., 8"""-•"I ·' l ,..,. $320. Frpl, v.·asher, 2 car, rv>•~. -. ••T-SUS. mo. 1 -2 Br, 2 Ba, wmter: •""-•!"• SINGLE ad t&, no pets. 3 ·~ "'V" "" t--.... " Four lndividua.a pr va f'e Brkr. 7'.!9-49'13 now ""'"' _.,., = LARGE 2 Story 4 br, 3 ba, $300 -:;.,, yrly "~. mo, So=~h~L. Br, 2 Ba. 1 yr new . ..,.-,.:. llving. Boat allJl8 at YOW' ho mc!"I. AUnched .1tarnges. ~~~--~----4BR 1'" b ~ 3786 -door Walk to •Mn.i. -.. All have private patios. 2 Real Estate Wntd. 2900 OCEANFRONT 3 Br, $350. • )'<1: a din. rm., 2 frplc's.-one in &t2-896l or 6T<l-8008 ut •9Un1 mo. Eves 640-4161: 6'l'5-M88 .: th --.-• ......... u-•~room• ,., '''"· ~,, 1,.,, now. frpl, lge deck·all xlra1 Call 840-ll50 ~faster 1 u it e . w/balcony, STUNNING 2 8 2 ho ran.... eattt, ocean. A
II<"• rtt GO'M' Go 2 3 8 1 Lg. patio leads to water'&. 112 BLK ~ bay or bch. BACHELOR APJ' OCEAN r. • lst few elegant, very private, s1•tting. Qu ie t s 1ree1. DR Nttds 1974 Ta." Shelter A ( I r. poo 4 Br, :t Ba. close to schools, ...A .... T . , 1 rl . :i Br, walk·m closets, shag VIEW fint • lul n--ol, ftr ganl.en apt, pool. $195. z. ...... ~-, •~th .. -•ts -"'th
Sho · > I 1· \\'ants 2 or 3 4. · p I e x e s . l~_n1es. Take your P I c k , 1375. very cl•an. 57c "'.,.., ... _... ennis o.: poo P VI· • carport Jaund -" Ad·"•• 710 W JBth Sf l."""1.lVlllU .--wu w• pp1ng ranspono 1011 $350 .,.......,, leges $535 lea:e. ~~ crp., • rm · no pets or children.499-1656 ...... · · spacloua teJTacts, po o I ,
11ithin 3 block!. PRIDE OF' Col:ls1al area, H.B., lo Dana ~l/\NY LJ\RGER & or {213) 592-5768 eves. $225. per mo. 1116 W. f EXT'R.ALrrdel•'Xe28rapts, subterrane~ 2-car parking.
O\\'NERSHIP UNITS~ Call Pt. Plenty Cash ava i 1, SMALLER 4 B~, frplc, f~ )'.d. bltim, ~~!:-_ 4 •. ~~: ~t1· .... '~.:.: Bal~. catl 673-4526. Ap-rtmentt Un U{fl. cr.-ots, drpt, bltim, No pett, ..A.!Ladull full '".ecurib' build·
for previev.·. 17141 T::4-l7W. ~t'.~fu~.: ;;,:.;~ :r:terst. Agt ALA Rentals 64J..a383 patio, crpt, ~s mi to bch, jacu zzi , tennis. pro I BAYFRONT WINTER Balbo• lsl•nd 3806 $190. ~llBl lng. New carpet, drapes,
DMSION V.' ED 4 '"°""""o"D'.:.::::::::;--;::·/~$.150~.'-mo~."Sl'.".2':-554""''."l>_ ___ , decorated. Extras. Close to l BR $190. Bachelor $190. BACHELOR $125. utils. pd, built·lns, dPoor. Leases lrom
·, ~ ~~ ne~r <XX. \~'il~rn~ \~e~ ;..,~r $90~~:!;;lH_u_n_t._H_a_,_bo_u_r __ 3~2~4~2 I -'h<""h~. ~~~·.::,c:::.:•~•..:645-<:.:o" ~l~77c.__ Util pd. ~ E~~~boa. GRAND Ca1nall3002 BR,~Bltns, 3 br, 2 ba. $21li., 2 br, $500 per mo.
I'."" b••Y o• •-d• 3 ~~ Il l k0d > • I NEWPORT ~--· Canal ••~ W/D, fTp '-. mo. yr . l ha,"°"" $18;. 548-8915 (714) 67' "51 ·"--· ...... ..... .... rn1 sc ng, l s, Pl"! s, sing es. TOV/NH.OUSE 4 br, 21"i ba, • ~""""'· N hildren/""IS 6 >r9oJ hou~. 25 blocks south o! 2. Br house . Costa Mesa, pool & gar. Av"'l. ·fo• 8 iront, beaut 4 br, 3 ba Corona de1 Mar 3722 ° c .. -· 2 BR upstairs. Cpts, drps, ~-rt B T
s. A. Civic Center. J-lon1e kids, pets, smgles. 2 Br, wks. begi.n'g. 0cL 20, y,·alk hOme, ateps to ocean & B•lbo1 P1nln1ul• 3807 bltns, garage. Near occ. 3iO""r. ~y s~WINS B
ph. ~~19·1'!1."i. 2 Ba teahouse Newpo r t 10 beach. $3l5, mo. 9&8-4545 pools, &. tl'nnis. WJ5, mo., 2BR, lba, over garage, lease; $175. mo. 557--0350 erne O ., • • Ufe81i8.AU WILL BUY YOUR Bc11 "','~~ ... $195.a~achant. 12 1Br aft. 6Pl\'I 548--0143 ~u~111on~ the ocean, SUPER DELUXE 3 hr. 2 ba, 2 gar'a., nr. PARK NEWPORT
HOUSE llll 1,'b,on P<=llc • s ng es CAMEO SHORES 4 br, 3 ..-. • 3 BR, l BA. patio, trplc, stores &: offices. Adu 1 t,. APARTMENTS
INCOME HOMES ForrC'losuN' O.I\. ok, will give option. 1 Br Irvin• 3244 ba, Fantastic VIEW. Im-Costa Mesa 3724 513 A West Bay Ave, $300 By Owner 546-8391 Bachelor l or 2 Bedrooms
NE\V TRIPLEXES ~.950 SCOTJ' REALTY ;,36-7~133 810'1mho,.1,~,·, !~l~F .. •U..971~8430°' 6m~7· • .,,.occ'y. Lse. 0 Pt · e:Vt. WEE!< & UP ~~ DB.Ya 886-4832; eve 2 B~. Adults, ~ ""t!, East· and Townhouse!!
Bl'll\ltlful 3 Bl'. 2 Sa, OV.'1"K'r's .. ·'b . . ;;r ,.,.. -.-~·"i side Costa MPSa .. $t60. Fr. $2'24.50 Open 9-6 Dally
unit, frpll'. privatl' yllrd. 'l-LANDLORDS! * RENTALS * WALK TO BEAC!l • $6.50 Night & Up. NEW xtra lge 3 BR 2 Ba. 645-0343 Spa Pool& Tennis
1 Br 11pls. 2675 Eldt>11 A\"e. Ren~·... II JD.I We Sw talize in N--3 BRVill2~ha3, Univ. Pk. 3 BR.; r.ID-$385 •Studio .t 1 BR AptS. Oceanfron1 Apt w/d,bl gar. Act'OS& trom Fashion Island jn.:ar !\1l'!<R Dr.J, Costa -,. ,-~ " .. ....,., ., ,;i • •••••••••• $425 Caywood Realty 548-1290 e TV&MaidServiceAvall. $500 mo 642-2164 day s· D p · 3826 atJambon!eonSan Joaquin ~h·s11. 642·•190;; ';;iiijijiiiiiiiiijiiiii~iiijii &.ach •Corona delli.1ar • University Park •Phone Service -Htd. pool ~8549 Ma. ' •n• o1nf Hlll1 Road. • & La&UM. Our Renlal Ser· 3 BR., 2 be. •••• , ••••. , •• $385 \VATERFRONT 4 Bf'.. p\11.. e ChiUlren & Pet Section (714) 644-1900
Builder Desperate Houses Furnished vice ia FREE to You! Tn· 3 BR., 2~S ba ...... $380/$425 i:ommun., boat slip 1 n c I . 23i6 Newport Blvd CM 1 BR Fum/unfurn, yrly, util PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW 1 ~~-~~~-~---, Must Sell I I I Nu .View? The Terrace $700 Yrly. Agt. 67f>..7060 5'8-9755 or 645-3001 txi. $215. mo. N ew port Lg 3Br duplex, 28' \iv rm. ON THE BA.Y, dock, opt.,
Brnn1! 111 .. w ·1-r;ll'x Jlt"'a r llun· Ger{eral 3102 NU-VIEW RENTALS 3 BR., 2 ba. ••.• : ••. $400/4.25 LARGE 4 Br, 2 Ba., fam Bea.ch. 613=7'll9 evn. -~. AdltS. 49:3-"?S57 or 3 br .• 2 ba, sundeek, upper
1ing1un llnrhnur & t hr• ----------673-tOJO or 494-32"'8 Greentree Homes rm., din nn., dbl pr. No l BR Furn $165 LARGE 1 br, 1 blk. to bay ;'~~:;.-..,,,.,....,,--~ duplex, full din, rm., trpl.,
lx-••ch. Sll l.000. Call fur SS5/Slt.i l.ITIL pd, bach apts i~E\VPORT Be.a.ch b a ch . 2 BR., lTurUbath ....:..;.k···· •.• $315 pels. $375. 646-1454 eves only Lots of bltins, pool, walk or ocean, utlls. incl. $195. NU 2 Br. 11,S Ba twnhse, utUL incl. S450 mo. )Tl)'.,
t11•rails & 11.n riµp't. to :<f'f'. nt beach. Laguna d_uple:ir Sl3S., near beach,
4
BR 2., ho:':.';."' •~so lBR. ram rm, 2 bn, oov'd to shopping, ~· mi. beach. mo. 67S-78'7S eves. fplc, shag, balcony. $235. ,tum=~·~•~v~al~I~. ~6'15-<Dl"';==~·-~
The Real Estate Fair S125tSl-IO UTIL pd oceon· singles ok .• n u"" ........... patio, nr pk. & element. ?Jl \V. 19th St. NEW 3 br, 2 ha, frpl, cpt. mo. ~or 673-43X> NEAR new 3 Br, a few
S.'9-61:7..1 5.11r2;;51 frorit bachs. Newporl. Costa i\1~ 1 BR. fenced, 4 BR.., : baths ......... $4.15 sl'hl. $450. 644-ru4 548-<H!l'J drps, dbl. gar, nr. Ocean, feet from ocean. Frplc la
INFLATION-TAX $160 UTJL pd niet> I Bdr., util pd., ll75., single ok. 3 BR., 2 ba. , ..... $475w/gdnr HARBOR V11 2 Br, oonv $350. 67l-3T58 Eestbluff 3130 bltns. $3.15. Yrly AND 3
patio No. end Le.gw1a lluntinnlon Beach. pool, pvt C,ol.lege Park d 1 1~ 1 . 1 El Puerto M--Br oceanfront, $32S. winter
PROTECTION SIG:> UTIL pd 2 Bdr.. !~ honie ,.,3 Br 2 Ba ....,"' 4 BR., 2 .~ ba .•• , ••••••• $-150 en, tenn s poo pnv, ease •-Coron• del Mar ;1122 e DELUXE e or $500. yrly. No pet a ,
hlk bch, 11•in1er. i'>r"'....,,rt · • • ._,..,, p k 1I 960-1692 dayll 644-2696, I & 2 BEDROOMS 3 • s=-• .... Homeflnders * 642 9900 ar BR. 'ii BA apt (llr least!. '""°""'· 1; un\1"' hr:111rl nl.'11• :l & 3 $195 tlTtL pd. flCCnnlront • 3 BR., 2 baths ..•.•..... $450 A·FRA~1E, I l!ty, 3 Br, 2 No Otlldren. No Peta EXTRA large 3 Br, 2~ Ba, Incld spac. muter suite, "n....~~n=cS~.~,~/~S~un-~12~t-o-5~ hr, c11i. drp:(, £1·111~. bl1ns. bAch. Beaut. vil'\\I & loc. JL\N"0-1 STYLE 3 Br, boat Udo Isle Ba. frpl c, Near pool&: len· Pool I Recreation Brand new! Frplc, sha g dln rm&: dbl prage Auto -r-
"' ,ar, 1iar~l:(, n1<llv. yrls. '""una ·1 · -~• Ref -A il N 3 BR 2 ho l500 · ~1-1 ~1706 1959 M I A crpt full dra~ oil w · 403 Orion. OONDO near ~ •ct.. . .... ,. 11a . ov. ., ...••••••• , •• 11111 . .,, :i. yr y .,,... 1p 1 ve. C.M. • Y l'C"• ne door opener avail. Pool & 21.19 <lr.111~1·, C~I. $175,0CkJ. S130. 2 Bdr occan/rity view 1, $3.~. 1no. 557-3159. 4. BR., 2 ba ••••••••••••• $600 N t H i ht 3270 ' applns. P.fo. to nlO. or year Recreation area. Adults Hoq. 2BR, 2 .BA. Ut\l rm.
1114-7111 upl \1•/gru-ni;e. Lfl gun11 Ba lboa Penln1u11 3207 CALL 552·7500 twpor •SI s Ft-J:~1 GfR2D~S ~n lease from $400. 613·0930 only, no petl. ~Uo~c, ~ean. $295
4 Plex Needs Work NU-VIEW RENTALS • VISION • NF.\V CUST. Duplex. 3 br, adult section. Pool, no' pets, DUPLEXES, 2 br, 1 ba. $290. e $)22 e n · r ·
Hunrini;::ron R1•nrh 673-40:!0 or 491.-32·18 YEARL y RENTAL 2~J be., forn1. din. gar, 177 E. 22nd Sl., c. 1\1.. 2 br, I ba, $270., 3 br, 8G5 Amlp \Va.y, NB S350. EXECUTIVE APT
1.-"ll'I:\' 3 UT! t :i • .:1 h•·Jroo1l1~. S:l5. 1 DR llf'lu~e. utll. 38R, 2 BA downstairs unit sunkl'n llv. mi, 2 ell.I' gl'lr, 64.2-3645 2 bll. $325. AU w/a:arage Manai(ld by On the bay, Ice new 1 Br. ~"',~,. rlo.~·,·~I i.:ur., ri,, w, ,1 n1 pr'!, Cosln ~Te811. \V11lk I!) urtfurn. $325. yrly. Avail. Ott. REALTY 838-C:Plll!I. ,,"~·..!.ltns, frpl, $375. NEWLY. ··-al~ 1 u •I'\,~~·~!~ -·~,~·~"!_'~L~':~~~"'°"·~;l~ed;.: I !~l~\llLUAM~~~~W~Ali!!!TE~RS~CO~~ r~·~'!" .°"" .. 1"02 d:~u!:O """H · •.:•sY0\'ITII ')I ~15"911 9ri501 c. !Ji.>.nch. Ne"'110rt, $135., va· 20th. l\ red h\11 conipa.ny ... ~.... furn. 2 br~pt. """saw •tar .,.............,., U'..,..,......, Runtlngton ieacfi ~l4o s~~~ s75--8M1~ ·-·
urry n Y ~ ' can!. 1 Hit h11u~ Corona SAt-.1E BLOC: 4BR. 28A un-Uni\'. J>artc Center, Irvine San Clemente 3276 2 or 3 worklnlil'. people share. 3 B~. 2 BA TownllOWle.
Fitst Pioneer R•alty ttl'I i\l11r, si~l<'s, coupll!!I. !um uplital~. $40" 1110. yrly. Ltnens Ir: cle~aervice S:it1C10ua &: Modem. So. or LUXURY APTS YEARLY 2 Br, 2 Ba,
842-4421 Alt1<1 I Br unit SUO. 1-lun· Aval\. NO\'. t 2 BR~".~ •.•• -/ ...... , --l.ARGE new 3 BR, 2 '9 w•"· Utll pd 6'2-+t Jlwy. $490 nlO. 549-9191, Newport Shores. 2 blkl !ingtt'ln Beach. Agt, Fe e . IBolh hl1VC ci.-0111, 11rp!ll, gBJ'b. 2 BR~ •••• "'m'i s'm BA con d o w/11pectacular ....,.. · · 833-11<14 Just being complete4, 1, 2, ocean. $260. 548-8912 or FOR TRADE 979-8430 dlsim.t. D/Y.', !pt) C1ll eves. 3 BR Condos ••••• $26S 6 $71$ IJ(.'l"!An view in Pre$1dentlal Lg• Fully -Furn 2 Br SUPER PAD I Br house & 3 J>e<lrooms, fireplaces, ~m.:JJ00~;::="-=-~-~-1
or Sti lc-l)!<luxi-1.PJ('ic lri xlnt Balboa lsl•nd 3106 613·3770 or 615-'Z'l.14 3 BR ll.>mta. PIO. $3:.lS, s;w lfclghts. Teenage children Bllns, W/W, drps. pool. In pvt Jurw:le. Must see. IOmt with padoe or 3 BR, 2 Ba, b!k to Beach
n·nt;1t nrt•;1 uf IJ unt\n>tton PIER. n\3.ln boy, pvt heh, 3 BR Homei , '360,$375, $395 " pets. S 3 5 0 I rn o. Adlts, no pets. $190. ~ $250. yr. Jae. 64Z-S666 balconies. GREAT LOCA· A Ba.1. F'rplc, BI t n1 ,
tll"r1rh. \\ill mn~idt·r 1111th: 3 BR., 2 b:t., bllln.t. frplc. lf:1' 3 Br dplx. ""Ill furn, 4 BR Homeg .•• $335,$395. $423 COMP roRN 1 br npt. TION IN ntE BEACH Dshwshr new1,y mlec. $350
for ~111.ll.•ur C,)·, 1111n1e Xlnl locatlt>n. \Vlnlrr or yrly. 613-fi640 RANOf .REALTY Sin Ju•n Sl3S. ·Adults. ·no pe~ Jli 2 or 3 BDR..\t, 1 bl~. bch., Al'tt.A. Call 961).3221 or yrly. ~3810 '
,,,. llrnral. 6T~76i3. 32'2.'l * 561·aJOCI * C•plstr1no 3278 Fkw.-er, 646-1883 ~ ";·~c;"ODF ahare. ~ ask for Ailene or ~P"AR~K.;N:;:..,=po<t=--A-pt-.~,.~plan,-1
.JADE lll:AJ.T'" !lli.1~i!¥l:a 1 Balboa Ptninsul• 3107 Corona del Mllr RA.i.-O:CR REALTY NICE I Br dplx Qui Marlen. only $329 t ll et
t.:i\S'l" C.-.111 ,\!~·~ I -µ \ 1• x, $275 UTl14 pd uni..1~ A. * Sfili-5800 * SPAN1$1f duplex, new 2 Dr. by..,.,..,_ E~ploy:J' :Ji NICE comer 1Bdtrnl • u n 2 BEDROO~t delu:te Condo. ~ mom~ ei;' e\u c
>.Int l'W';1 ll'ln. \\ulk to i;l"IOP' 700 E . OCEANFRONT IW.'<'ludl"rl 1 Deir., 11 if •ood TllSTCN REALTY 2 Bft, drps, shag cpl, rlbl O\'J:ls. .... ~ petsMl.1021 deck to llnale rcfiMd lady. OmununUy alnlMt new. BAYFRONT 3 Br, 2 & cm
plni.: . .\ M)lld ln\1 • .. 1m.,n1 lnr \\IXTl-:1' ftet"T\L .\ alau hlU!'. • 832.Slll * r:11rare. lge )'lrd, tlnc area. Rel•. $190. 673 6274, 64U'19 Bltns, refria., yOUr o wn ..._ .. ~~nri-'r lll\ll'!'>lur:1. 0 ""., Nl'W :IHH. :nti\, :! •'M gtu', $300 2 + DEN, 2 Ba, frplc, IRvtNE RENTAlS sr.,s. $7876 cvn. S1'tn.'NlNG l br g~n apt. 2 YEAR Old Channlnr 3 washer It drytt D\V pool main Uf0.3, J>V\ bch. W/p\er
v.'flir CllU ''°" rnr a10t1· 1...,., .. 1) vii'v." rpl, 1'<1 n1p. fum. rronl houtt. child/ pct ok. :! BR ................... $325 NE\V 3 BR, 2 & Condo, w/ pool,.,rec rm., Sl85: Adults. BR, 3 BA •pt. w/patlo. le clubhouse. 2 chndte;, OK. 91'9-l9.l5; &44-4£ i I t l rt'-1 TV • _, no 101 • l8th St. ${2$.. 675-5nli. No Pets. S229 mo. Ask for OCEANFRONT plulh. 11orm1:1 1on. /"·~1 ..... ,T. co , D/\\,$3.iO 4 BDR .• 2 Ba., f,1H,2BR-................... S35(1 dbl auach. g1'r11.ge. erp.,QUtE"I'l>tthBa Br Bev Dal No f 13 •4 Br win
MILLER REAL TY crpt.s. drp11, bcdsprdll, c1e.1 1tt1 r. y11rt.1, pnllo. 3 BR .................... $375 crp11 A hHn1. $310. mo + p tio 1 ;Jcy. \1• ~ pc1' Costa Meu 3124 963-l,: ~ e • • iinusua ~ S'lS-l«M • tu ~IH I etc $GOO. 1110 fllrn or $500 S36S LARGE 2 + loll. 2 3 BR. FR ............. $425 $50. cll'sninll'. tee. 831·0100 Sl~ i1UiruDtl Mpoo, u · -• · or)'Nr •
[,/;'It Partnrrshlp-2 )'r ·ntd uo Cu111 ..... ~:iU e11rJ1. 673--JnO Ra, lrpl, 1ep, dining rl!'• 4 8~.i.:!]. ·• ....... , S4!1S SI A 3280 ' ll.1' 2 BR. E41t11de, ntAr •hop-NEAR ~ 1 Bn Upper, NEWS br, :r bl, Watt:r1.ronl
-Yt unlr ,,11•11 fl f/lll In Nui I nr 67!>-2Z~1 I uar, }'d •• SJ~~N·DUNN RE:ALT'i nt• "' __ DUPl..EX l BR, furn. \n C.M. plna S~ rno. :m Cabrlllo, nr Frwy. $150. mo. NO apt. Lease MSS. mo. Oem~nl,., s~;li)O cosh tor 11111 _OPl"i:'N_ SA~N l-1 $4.'ll:t 3 DDR. trpl, dbl 1tl\l'flllf' S.U-J!DJ 3 ADRri.I I 2 BA111, lnJ'll! Quiet, no dogw, c•lll or mo-apt 8, MS-4691 PETS. 847a(l(l70 or 545-0760 640-5886
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•h~l1l'rt'd I 11 r, ~lA.NAL:I·:· 1 ~IONTHL\• ttnl'nJ, ibr~ 2 car Nt'firVChlnW .. CoR,?E T LS Don't y,tve up tht :.~I lot, $300. Ntw crpl It. painl, to"-1'CIW. 54S.7i2(1,_ 3 BR, 2~ ba, Irr tlv rm LARGE 2 br. shag cpl,, drps, 1 BR apt, sm•ll, qulel, ~· ~ £ ~ ~r r· R fi f;, j 'i l ·11 Jtfl.!•. on t~ lie11ch, 18th St, N_U· IE _ N A "!_.Is~ ~n_ cla~lf~~: f..190. Lots of tr .. u., $290.1 eon:t ~lve up the. ship! • r11m nn. AdltJ,fno pnb. g1r, nr. SlaterllitalOlh, $11.iQ. bl1' to Wl\tcr, lf(rla. no qet1 .
. 1!)2.m .1 • S2.'.iO }ler n\O, TiG-ml im-nm or ~fS to S'~~_iw:roo·1:J. en , • • . iotJ ~ Cind.Jt.Jn QI: ~Otd l..!:r.:!l5::C•.!G~l!M!~:::tll:o·-----l-OO:m::•~· .::14'1!::!·624:~':..· -----1 ~Sl;;;S$.==--"--'=-----t--~-I
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Ap.1r1ments Unturn. Apts FurrW Unfurn 3900 Offic• Rent•i
Monday, Octobtr 21, 14J74 OAILV PILOT B 7
6014 Helo Wonted, M&F 71ilo Help Wonted, M&F 7100 Help W•nted, M&F 7100Help Wanted~&F 7100
Newport Bt1ch 3169 FOR LEASE $34.188."6 lll:I T.D. on ptltne c AR p £ N TRY. c.nblnets,
Com111J 1Jte downtown, SJ ru.oitom <A~'Orlclna:, home Capl3lrano, "50. per mo, l"t'pain:, remodellna;. No job
nan•t •llf ca>t1C11'11 • OFFICES "'"',,.'"""mo. Strong too m aJ1. ....,. "'· Lo" MIUU WESID( LIYll' lnnd oy,·nc:r. 15"..ti discount i ,;;rn-6739.;.:_=o,.:1!34-:.:.,;1:::299::__~=I
• Ba<helo<s e RETAIL [ '. REMODEL. Add-110. c or
•1 BR ,28R Prime Hu11ting1on Bea c h -Lost Ind,_., conversion, cust. & new
EXPERIENCED
PARTS COUMTERMAM
Delivery-Sunday Only
OF DAILY PILOT TO CARR!.ERS. RE-
QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STA-
TION WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR.
BENTON WILLIAMS. 330 WEST BAY
STHEET, COSTA MESA:-TELEPf!ONE
6'12-4321 FOR APPOINTMENT. i """""""'"" • MED(CAL CaU 49"-1153 ~orpentor 6015
• 2 BR & Den f ountain V81lfy loc11.tiorui on'l liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiii coml. 25 yrs exp. draw X Int '-'•• From $175. $435 Broot.hUNll & Beach Blvd.I' l.,!'.pl~""':::.,:;U..::o;":::'::.·.:""'=3439==-I -·pay, 11-.e benents, etc. An Equal Opportunity Employer
Vista Del Mesa
ADULT GARDEN HOMES
IRVIN!-.; AVE, AT llo1ESA
Near New:>"rt BlwJ, f'N'Y
&. lrv:lne. lnduni·ia.I Cwnple,.
1 BR $190. 2 BR '230.
Rec Bldg \\'/om. Biiiiards
Color T.V. Pool & Jacuzzi'.
SecW'ity Patrol. Refrlr. inc. h--,-,'"""'•,;54:;:~;4855;;:;::"•~~-1 M1JO V.rde fast & Adams
*LA PARISIENNE * 540-1800
Over 11,0IXI sq, n. ol ttn-Lost & Found 5300 COMMERCIAL. RESlDEN-Apply in person lO Puts Dept. Mgr. ·1
tublt'arca ln c l udlng ;3'1---------Tl.AL odd jobs.Free H•lpW1nted,M&F7JOO HelpWanted,M&F7l~ ~luxe Profeuional ~ult" CALIF. ANIMAL. CONTROL ~timatea Tom Mac Leod MISSION YllJO .... PORTS 2 Br. unrurn. AU cJe.cU1c.
Flt·epluce. li'eatcd Po o I .
Adults. $185. & up.
979-1268
At l'Olis fron1 goll t'OlU'liC
20432 S1111ta Ana Ave.
3 & 4BR beach duplex, $400
ye a rly, Davld!!On Realty. 645-75/J'
$550 Mo. with tull faclhtle& · Huntington Beach Shelttt' 497~3120 *' IJABYSllrEft, ~ 1· a n d -II co 1 L
Pl u!I or~c.-e & retatl !!pace 8311 Edison St , 1l6-6551 CUSTOM Patio Covers 21701 M•,.11• , ... ., n101hrr 1ype n10!tern scpa-
Rooms 4000 lro~ 6.16 -1640 sq. fl. al .45c Back of Hum1111e St-oeiety Red ~ & C Deck l'!:\!e tip! + board •'-' snu1l! I ________ :_.;, It. ·ln new prhne center. ANIMAL ASSIST. • .. ~AGUE "" one. 5 IJ1·17.. Mllllle = 4tS..l700 I 2 · 1 •" 5 ,. 1· h
COLLEGEStd d Good !ff' ~ Freeest6~6-7598846-9495 • ....__ -AAary.girN.)ot.,r~ni.;1s WINDE~ u ent ne e s expcrjure to ra c. adoption, 8puying and _ • ...,,.,..,_ ........... spc'\king n1us1drhl.'.610-01R2 room in vicinity of OC€ For details and preview call neutering inform. 960-2900 CUSTOl\t carpentry ol all ~
in exchange fo1· rent 'or (714) 752-1700. AN IMALS lltfPOUNDl:':D 0l~YPl'~'~·~'u~b~lu~e~"~&=-~q~""::::'ty'.L~~ ~~~~~~~~=~~~~~~~~=~ li.ABYSITil::H. adult , f6r 'l )'r preJerably yard work, Pvt INYI:::ITMENT DIVISION Gcnnan Shep, blk/tan, ti.tale -;concrete, 962-1961 ~~~5~:i. ~kJ~)·s~r R~79u~i 1 1n1rni'i!. uJM:n\n;.; on li.1 shift.
=nee/bath des Ir Cd· ~ l\tixed Terrier, b g e I w ht, REP.fOOELING, Pa I Io s, P•lntlng/P•pering 6073 1 Help Wanted, M&F 7100 posslblc. 671_611.1 aft G.OO I '\Ill lraln lu 0111•r:1h~ t1uR1
· 00. maJe ·°"~~"'~·~JRoo~"~'~£A~d~dl~tlo~"'~·, I~~:;:~?,~~:::~? *'===°""'::-:::--: ~ $if!lndh· 11 uwhn~ h1 1h ,, ii . J>,RO!\l $82.50. Priv rms & P.tlx Terrier, BI k I b r w, _Cabinets, 673-U66 Mr Ryan A/PAYABLE $600 IJARl\t~ID, Dflyl!, nl1es, ..'~!I R l' q • ~ ~ u 111 t' n1.1 ('h 1 n c
Newport Height• 3870 apts for seniors. Linens, Safomomaly•cd. whi't•. male FENCES/GATES etc., CUSTOM PAINTING l()(Y,(i Frw Td Applicant &: p/l1n1e. Bet.·r & \\111(:. opo:•r111ln~ t'i.JA'r & lfil:itl in nld serv, Xlnt security. B 'Id n-Ir Exterior ~ialiat State ,,.._ I .. _ i,.,_.,_... ((Ill 548-91}1() for lnteiv1e<.\S (•n1plH,\Rh'OI l'\-'CON I. Co NEWPORT HEIGHTS 11. ~1 ·'"" o '<I• •-•1,·,, blk/"•t, femal< w n.cpa ~ , .....,nstruc ion uar"*''VUI"' IOA'l 2A'I I ...., ~lar: SC. =v-o430 -------'---1 Bo~o'j;" Terr., b'i k / w ht, 5'18-7637 evenings llceruied. No. 254931. Bond· Al&o J>'ee Jobs " -' · pnirl nlt'<llt'nl & ll!c> in~
New Duplex, 3 br, den. 2 ROOMS $20 wk up, with female CARPENTRY _ PAINTING ed. Uablllty Ins.~ Color WESTCLIFF BE OF SERVICE TO .\/Cond Jnc1l1t)..
'A ba., frpl. 2 <:ar gar. kitrhen: S30, wk up apt. Lab, bJ.ack, male REMODEL & REPAIR ~ul~pettiv~st~~: Personnel Agen<'y YOUR COMMUNITY DUNCAN 216 Palmer, $375 per mo. 548-97'":>5 or &15-3967 Hound, ~I, male ~$7'!.hl'~.iOiifffiiITT:R:i646-~f,3079f'l.:;"~2-6005;~·:...,..,..,..,..,.~ I Mark JU Cenlrrl & Gel Paid For It \\'el('Olll· ea., a.gt. 833-a!I4 or 646-7414 FOR 1 or 2 people: men l\tix Poodle, black, male _ ttllNOR HOME REPAIR 1651 E. Edinger, S.1\. in g Newccnnl'r.1. rt\·xlhh.' Electronics
1
Inc.
646-7414 ar women. Kitchen pr iv . Cockapoo, grt>y/bge. female p I um b Ing, ca rp en try, PROF. pnlnter, honest \IO'Ork, ~~=~"~2~-~-==~~ hrs. Nred 1:ar, l~'JH'.'\\ rill·r 2865 F . , Rd
2 BR, l ba, cµts, patio, Outside pct OK. 548--4464. P.lixed Beagle, blk/tan, male Cf.>ramic tile. S.lo--;,500. Reas. 1 n t-e x t , tree APPT. SECRETARY & h.-i ppy d l s po s i I i on· OfrvteW ,
gar. elc. Adults, no pets, ROOM to man, $70. monthly. •••c11tl•I etflc• . All Ger Sh .Hall· Pl Pups, Liver ALL T~ estimate. Refs. ~2/;;iS, Telepho•~. pllime. f>..9pm , 517-309Zt. Costa Mesa $19i 548·5.n. 27-Fl s •--1a 'I & tit'k, !entale ~ ..--~ 1 ·8=Ec-,;Ycc-,-,=-c":cc-... -,, ~,,c-c
::i O\\'t!r t, ~ .. esa. Mixed Shep, blk/brw , **Big & Small•• 1,,:64>-=-~39=13c..,=-=~~~ Our oflil.~ Cdl\I. Xln 't ou r 011'" ,,.,,;,, u 111 1Cornl't' ~)11r1·i.-11• &'.\dunu11 S.n Clemen1e 3876 646--9136. !emidc 536-1648 0 &. J Painting ~ The salary to persuasive person p/timr. Cnll for apl)l. :-.1011
$110 APT on beach. 14'xl8' Cockapoo,gt'('y,female Personality painters with w/PR or sales ex11 c r . 12-llpni, 615-lll:t fF-<1ual Opµc.w. Eni ployr·i· ni/I
REDECORATED 2 br, 2ba, rni. and kitctien and bath. Husky, grey/v.'ht, male Carpet Service 6016 the personal touch. Since 0833-iii~-~-iio·iiiiiiii;;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiii BEAUTY OPERATORS - ---quiet ne\gl)barhood, close ·lo N 1 Be h 673 U41 197 I COLL""f' SI d I .,, ewpo1 ac · -· ?.Ilxed Terrier, grey niale 1 Full or p/tirnl' for nl'I'. y "''' ~ u ens. over ~ :;:~~'."loo!~~~d4~~Ji95· Business Rent•I 4450 Mixed Sheep dog, blk/wht, JO~N'S Carpet & Up~olstery R.B. Painting ext, li-1 0 s I ASSEMBLER decora1ed shop in !'\ .. B . ! In \\Ork 111 rir..ta '<hop.
Guest Home 4150 F Dn Shampr , (Sol l Re-homes 25 sq, It., paint IN ES area. 5-lS-j2J2 days. 5-lj...!O~;l p/lhnl'· $:!.2J Jir. 673-1:\j;(;,
NEW Jge 2 BR, 2 BA . ----------OFFICE OR STORE Terrier, blond/white, female tardants.) ~greasers & incld, al!IO int painting, free TRA E eves. v_ ,\· n Pc·rr,\l'il Piz1.a :lH).')~~
Prestige area. Pool, encl LOVELY large private & 500 or 1000 Sq. Ft. Cockapoo, black,_ !cntale a~ color brighteners & 10 est. 673-3658 aft 5 App ly In person BOOKKEEJiE R ~lt'P11ntr11nt. NB
gar. fo'antaslic view. $240. semi-privute l'OOms. New •h•g '''pig, noved ""i'k· Mixed Husky, t1'1., female nnnute bleach for \\'hiler----~----= VOLT CO~ll'ANJOr-;/LIV t-I N. '°' 496--0616 ...... ·-· c I t Sa Ex TER I 0 R PAINTING bkk\)ng: Conlrn<'lini.t l'X)>r'r. -,--~-""=2-927-=~'c,.·~· -=" ing, on busy t.'Orner. '1 Blks . as carpe s. ve your money LI 'd I 'd Ref Terms' Temporary Services pref"d . Pcl'nuuient tuJ! ttu1c. r J d i· r ! Y l11dy-visu111ly i111-SPACIOUS 2 BR close to V , 4250 from beach, Hunt . Bch. Ideal Calico, lg hair, .male . by saving me extra lriP8. c • ns • s, . ' paln .. "CI. Driv'i:. req 'd Non• shops. beach. NO PETS. acatlon Rentals for Jn1;w11.nct! Real Estate Orange & wh.ite, Sh hair, Will clean living rm .. dlrf.ng Richard. 979-3335. Anytime. 3848 ~7:1 Drive ~~pl~/010 o~\~ss~/~. ~~. Q'. :-n1okrr•. LVN pn•fer1·t'd.
Perm.$190495-47&1. Rent My Condoll Gift Shp ctc ,538-0211 Ext' F rm.,&. hall SIS. Any rm.PAPErulANGING & pain-CA f OC A' tl t= C •1 C 586-:!l~or5-l-l--0799 ' · · Kittens, blaek)wbt. .Ie.male $7.50, couch $10. Chair $5. ting. 21 yrs Harbor area, cross rom · · 1rpor Box """• osta "esa. a. NEW 2 BR, 2 BA. Refrig, La'lc, 1 BR apt with view 2U7, 8-4 wkd11.ys. Or1U1ge & v.·hte niale · 15 yrs exp. ii what counts refs rum, no 183281, 642-2356 l\Iajor A1edical Plan , 92626.
range. dshwshr, lndry. Sor-of mountains and overlook-COMMERCIAL Larger office White, female not method. I do work lst CLASS Ext/Int Painting. Now Available Conventional Loan
ry, no pets. 49Z..193'1 ing pool. Choice PAL :!\1 spal.'e from 24c per sq. ft. Grey & white tabby, male myself. Good ref. 5.11-0101. Paperhanging. Air 1 es s \Ve have a complete package BOYS Processing Clerks
San Juan DESERT location. Nr small 3 Room office/central Joe., Grey&: white tabby fen1alc Spray, 125 vrs eXJ)) 979-5294 ol employee benefits. \\'e or Do\\'1wy Savi1~i;:!t •. I.nan h;i~
Capistrano 3878 shopping cen1er. Weekly or $240 mo. Dr's. office, So. Calico, female Ceilings 6011 PAINTING-lot-Ext 15 ..,... pay top v.·ages. All oUlce GIRLS 01icnin,i:s in 11un1. B.:h. ofc.
1llQil1hly rates. For in I o Laguna, 6 rooms $350 mo. Calico, male ... ~ & industrial skills are p R 0 ('on,. en I ion11 1 loan pro-
2 BR. condo $Zl5. Pool. No 642-0596 or 556-8868 Store space from ~ n"IO. Bluck/brw, Tabby fem ale local, refs, free esl, Stale needed. aper outes pen ~sing back!'.;l'Ound htilpfu/,
pets. Days: 1213) 48&-3581 PALJ.t SPRINGS/DESERT Nolan ReaJ Estate 494-!M24 Brown&: black, lg hair At ACOUSTIC CEILINGS lie no 77822. 64Z-0238 Equa1 Oppor. Employer In Laguna Beach in Jirt'ferrahly exprr'rl in prn-
Eves/Wkends CTI-I) 968-26al Shadow 1\-lountain Resort & NEWPORT Beach, Cannery A'>SOi1et1 Kittens & Puppies BY' CALCOUSTICS * 10% DISCOUNT * Many Locations. 1·1·ssing loall!! for Fn.'firlic>
R Cl "--· Villag 1100 f 14' il LOST TIGER ~·N 6 \" U · & p · 1·og ASSEMBLY, Pu n1 P repair, Call Mr. La mbert 1'1nc. Con1111·t ~I~. Brt'hm Santi Ana 3880 acquc1 ub, 10 C• ..... uP-e, sq t, ce - : iu• 1 .c..i APPLIED, PAINTED .~a papenng am 1 d tennis courts, luxury accom. ings, 8xl2 sliding door , mo. childs favorite, strayed GUARANTEED Free est, Call 536-0548 \IO'a rehouse ma.n · nee s 642-4321 al 96.1-!G2f !or further 111
·do · ho ·-' 900 Blk me c hanical apti!ude-no E Io E I ftnma 1ion. 1--BR.. trinlcv nr. So. Coast Cnll lTI4 l346-ii123 many win ws, off spac10us or n"O\\= l FREE ESTIMATES *Wallpan.r Hanner* qua ppor. ni r>oycr
T "' brick palio w/trees. S-475, Temple Hills Dr. 1 O.] 3 FREE GLIITER r-··• pr i or training necessary. F..qual Oppor. F.:mplayer ~l:::ge.'tt:S'. ~9293 bltns. Rentals to share 4300 673-0535 or 64fr9li54 , RE\VARD 833-6677 days $3 OFF WITII IBIS AD C. REBKO 646--24-19 Wage open, Call 557-5400 BOYS & GlRLS
3 PHASE POWER 497-TJSJ eve. 645-9880 E>.~RIOR -INTERIOR I -''°-c'~'°'P"P"°t.~c====-The DAILY PILOT has COOK~ E),i)erienced Apts furn/Unfurn 3900 CAl.....State U. Long Beach Yoll!' ~hoice of .... int. Ref; ASST MANAGERS routes open in COSTA Pan-Tin1r -student cmpfoyed by l h e RESTAURANT -DELI ATTRACTIVE Woman 5'6" ..... MESA, COLLEG!:: PARK & Th "'d Uk ood Neat· Lie· Bonded 979-3850 D"' to _,. p-,.01 rapid e RlgJter CHOICE Daily Pilot in Laguna Beach 2400 !"' rt with l.'old nn. wow ~ lo meet .a g •ACOUSTICAL * ' ' ' u,,.. ''° EAST & \\'EST COSTA 16 o h' Isl I NB
'"' 'I 45158 1 _, p ti 6075 •• -.,,·,. pro~., •.•• ,.... r llS IOI\ 11111 . ' LAKE FRONT \\'Ould like lo share v.•ith Smlr. stores a\•ail. 83S-267S ••ormon ma.n, a,e-~ . Apr ic!::l·repalred-repainleu a OS .. ,..... ... ¥ " '" MESA. 642-4321 Be1 9 & 11 3 & '· · i NB "'-k -•1 RI RI! 64~775 seekina ene..,.•etic & ag-v.·n · arn or ·JPnl LOCATIONS :~u~Pu~ ~~1cisinn1~~~ LAGUNA SCH. Shops-Of-842~· '""' pran c11.1 s. dryv.· I, v.• tex, ~,, BRICK, TILE, OR CON· grei;;i~e you~g people v.·ho Equal Oppor. Employer EquaJ Oppor. Employer
VERSAILLES Pl''"° .. ,,, 548-9865 fices for lse. $100. & $160. . . Ceme t/Co c ot 6019 CRETE Patios qua I wi.sh 10 pro""'°ss n 11ickly. BOYS & GIRLS COOKS & DR IV E H s, -• l'rtme Coo•! ll•·y 497·2175 LOST-6 mo. male, Amen-n n r e wo"·mo--"'p, 1,.,· • ho•d-'·, &·~ "y · · 1" '~" .. = If you prove to be s!able, Newi>paper Carriers. r.11.n, p/t1n1c. 0v('r 18. Earn xlra GU'i' 23 desire~ roommate or '194-9907 ' ca~ Pitbull, dk brwn'brindle CEMENT WQt:k or aU..kinds, 557-ii563 dedicated & poues.'i th e age 10. Lldo Isle, Balboa US. Apply Mc n E:dsPiz1.u,
ON ..... .,. LAKE male or female 10 share l ~:C,.CCC.-""'Cc~~S~ho----,.,cl white chest. ears l.'ropped. Re bl free r t r~~=~-----= ability lo lead, as v.·e\I as Peninsula. Contact l\1r. 410 E. 17rh St, Costn l\lcsa_ icu:. 2 Br, 2 Ba Apt, near So. SMAU.. OVAL p ava1. Hnmll ton & J\1aple area. asona e, es ima es, Pl•1ter/Repalr 6077 Ba<"-lrol" al the DAILY At & uth Coos! Plaza. Coast Plaza Call R 0 g er Loe. 1n the M t l I at CM Reward 548-G84l ~~_JCa~ll~638-332S!"::o~'C...~=I -~::;-:;;-;:'.'-;:;:::::;::;;--lo motivate people, you r ,.. , COOK, full·!inie. ina I u r 1•
Poo.I • Acapulco Aqua Bar al!cr 5 pni . S45-818l THE FACTORY, $90. mo. · · · ·. (.,ntractor 6021 PATCH PLASTERING futw~ Is ""'ith us. Manage-PILOT or Call 6:2 !321 ·.~ •1om;in. Exper or "'ill lrain.
&: Jacuni. Spectacular 8 =co::=~O-'"'-=~~-425 30th, N.B. 673-9606 FOUND: Yng. male G~. All Types, Free Estimates ment exper. is deslrable, leave apnhcatio:i. l\Irsa VPNIC' Conv. Hosp, Acre Lake w/To1>;•ering 1::1-1&.RE 2BR apt; mature . S hort hat r . 10/18 Vic HOME 1 Addi Call 540-682-but not oecess. X\n't salary Equal Oppor. Employer fi01 Crnter St. Ci\1 ~8-558.5 f;n\ 25-35: $100 + ulil. SPACE AV AIL for lease tn Bayview &: Orchard Santa mprovements-. . a & co. paid beneDls, profit
Fountains · ~I Million Dollar 979-3343, 6AM.7:4jMi or aft Boardwalk Shop'g. c23661r. at Ana Heights 557-8243: lions, Remodel, sunshade Plumbing 6078 sharing incentive. APP 1 Y CAFETERIA Help -.·anted. Coo K • TACC\li, parl-lilll('
Oubbousc, G)'Jtl, Sauna, 5 3l1P'I Hunt Hbr Call · 84&-patio rovers, benches, elc.1-----''----=-betwn 2 .. 311 & 4 •. 311 pm dally, kit. & counter. Dayi;, Ca.II : needed in1media!ely. Total Secur'"v : " · . . . . LOST: Bick Lab with wh.ite Brick planters, walks, fin:: L.R. OTIS p LU M BJ N G ~• '394 Cail "8-99 .. , • I d st lal'Rental .. ll0 -b11 .... er H•mlet, , ,-.. , .. ~ ......... iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii; I ... -19· Imnlediate Occupancy FEM lo shr w/same, p1ivate n U r ...., on Black neck v.'l'aring red ring, etc. Good work, fair Remodeb & Repairs, \Valer ....... ~.. I'
ADULTS bath, bedroom. kitch privl, collar \\'ifh tag, if found pri('t'S. Free de1tign & esti-h ;r. e r a, di s pos ls, Adams, Costa l\lesa. See c 1 1 . COOK. eXper'd, p /li mt'.
Sony, No Pets stora ge, 9 7 9-8 69'J aft P.flSSION RE:i\LTY 4!»--0731 call &tG-1780 mate. References. State Lie furnaces. dshwshrs 642-{i263 li-lr. Hagen. No phone calls a cu at1on i\liiturc fem ror guesl home.
B•chelor, 1, 2 &. 3 Br's. 6/wkends 5000 SQ ~ ~iL space with LOST: on Lido or Newport No. 18W30. Phone me eve.&: A1/C & BIA O:implete please. Bring photograph. Hrs lDam-6pm.. 646-611G.
from $175 nar mo. CKRJSTlAN P.1. Straight. On lro3 "'h oUice,. lge ~ar =~· Village, Heirloom Ladies 1\-eekends, Ken 642-1770 PlLlRlbint:: Service Li c . ASSISTANT Mana ge t s • I' t OX>IC/LUNCHEON
·-Bay, Own room s 12 5 . p ase, all' ro ' . gold wrist watch engraved Co 2'7269'1 trainee, counter girls, fry pec1a IS * FIVE DAYS * S•nt• Ana 1240 G Logan St 646-5033 · ' GERWICK & Son. Bit%: nlT.I"°~-"='°=======~ cooks, evenings, gr&\'l' yard Call 6-12-7880 for inf(.'rvif'w
3700 P•--Dr. 6734.'i>S. or 1:>2--0100 !.l r . day•, "-.UO. """l eve~. Vera Reilly. Reward 494-2982. Add remod. St. lie Bl-114371 RAYS PL.ta.fBING ~E. RVICE h'ft I 11 & . IUMI Kelley. ......,..,,..., ~ ~:2170 Re s i • open u part t1mt . COUNTER HELP
* COSTA MESA * FOUND: cat. B WI th 67:Hi041. 54 • pau:o-Installabons Apply Jack in the Box 385 Rcquil"t' an indiv. v.tto has. 714-5~ FEMALE Roommate 20/25 white flecks 011 omach. Electrical 6032 24 hr. sel'Vlce 5-18-8638 E l7th St C!\I * A lt1ath Background Days. :!\la1ure aclultll 18 QI' vrs to share nice 2 br CM Almost new M-1 . Yi'hite flen collar Santa Ana R mod I & R I 6081 ~=· ='='~·~· ="-~·--~,-over. Lt-;, & 11-2. Start $2
•NEW•
YOU'LL BE GLAD
YOU WAITEOI
lntroducin~ new bach and
l bdrm apta well worth
11eelng. Refined y e I af-
fordable e Grell BEACl-1
environment • furnillhed
and w1fumished, •
eS185to$21Se
646-8453
'afe/la1rltul
ADULT APARTMENTS
house. S65 mo. 6 7 5-71 O O t'l;OO sq. ft. $185. l\10. O:iuntry Club. 548-5703 ELECTRICIAN * 0 l d • • ep• r A'ITENDANT, cxper. Io r ~h~racc~\~~Ju~ academic hr. !\1on lhru Fri. 838-2314.
leave message for Doug. 644-Z36t Yi'llOEVER AO OPT E O Jobs-New Jobs. Service ADD -A· Rl\f · P~MODEL &: ~=efi~~~t.A~ :Ji cxper. in el ectronics. A A C U ST 0 D I AN, hos p exr1
WORIONG gal has lovely 1,000 SQ. IT. office o r "Sabbath" behveen 9 21 & ca 11 s Anytime-Anyplace. REPAIR 23 yrs. exp. Uc. Station. lOOO lnoine, N.B. Degree desirable. Pl'f'fl•rred. lmnlCd opo111n1o:s
.1 Br hon1e to share. CM. s1oragc. Plenly ol pru·kl.ng. 9/25 in G.G., please caJI 540-542-9829. No. 238-014 £MJTil CONsr * An understanding of ror 111u1.1in1e 7-3:30 .I:: 3-
$1.50. incl. utils. 645-9662. ;?°:!>. Newport Shores Area. fi.125 aft. 6pm. ELECl'RICIAN-llcense n 0 ·':'4~0~~347.'-74~----~= AUDITOR/NIGHT circuitry. A basic test cover-11 :30 Su n Clcn1ente General
MATURE man share v.·ith Cnll6'12-8252. LOST: Bos. Terrier (Bull-233108 .. Small jobs, maJnt 1.Roofing 6081 Experienced NCR' 4200. ini:::thcapplicationofOll:!\ls !:;_•
1
spital. 1714) 496-U2:2 C.\1 sam~ -New mobile home. Storage 4550 d(lg'J, Lo. Bch. tag, vie. Lag. I c&~re~pe~~~·~· ~54~8-5~203~-~=I ";;';:;;:';';;;--::;;-::=::-;;::-Full-time. Apply in person, Jp.w will be given. c'~---------I i8~40-ll58.;~\t!-~'g11~e~o;6~pt.m~.::-;;7.:l ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~-;;-;1~Po~•~t ~O~f!~.~RE~W~A~R~D~.~~~~ll~36 Gorden'tng '"'5 REPAIRS. all type' s. Reas. Laguna Hills Hiiton, 2520j DELIVERY'IEN. eat•Jy A!\! -~-I Li d •-k ( La Paz Rd, Laa·una Hills. DUNCAN ~· Ro I C t M RELIABLE Male share 2 br MINI-WAREHOUSE FOUND Female Irish Setter. · _"' l'l <-""C es. c • ""' or 0-· 11mcs u "· os a ('~;1
o"t. Sleps lo bch. $150 incl BARRAGAN & AGUILAR Walt. 830-5020 anytime AUT0~10TIVE MECHANIC El • I 1lJ'ea. No rollectlni;. l\1usl
Y' Private, locked lndlviduaJ Mesa Verde (IJ'(!ll. Approx. · ' . 609 Req grad lron1 high school ectrOnlC$1 nC, huve, dO'pend. cNr. 546-6-1:!7 ut.il. {7l4l 529-5601. stor.ige units From $7.50 ii,a yrs old. 557-4391 Mextca.n gardeners .wtlh. 5 Tile 1 or GED certificate + 2 or 54&-1780. G I R t 4350 · yn; Exp. o"' s"'""' ,.. 2865 Fairview .Rd.1 ~,c:;;:..;.::~=~~~ a rages or en per mo. FOUND: Dog. female blk. eludes Windows. cau CERAMIC TILE Warks, kit.. yr exp in r e Pair ol DENTAL AS3IST. Or!hodon·
ALLSPACE Retriever w/white chest. 7-548-2049 from 4 to a pm. bath, entry, shWT. pan automotive & diesel equip. Costa Mesa Tic rh r. sidr. Approx. 4 ,lay!! I SjStl~N~G&~L~E~~Ca';"r;:G~=,:~ge-M~"~~·~U'.'."th~ 1 '""""""~960-~~19~7~0;...,..,.,.1~9~m~°'~·~•~ld~.~H::·:";· 'j;963-fu;1~7~32isih *G d , S 'ce•* repair. tl ·ee Est. 494.2135 Salary range $831·Sl010/nm. Eq"'' Oppo-. Employ•r m/f a \\'l:'Ck, Ortho. exp. req'd. v . ....... . 19th ar en1ng erv1 "'~" nA"" 1 271 Apply Personnel Office, Ci-• ... s I' '·' h = ~6 ov-. FOUND: Siamese kitten Home• & Commo-lal• .,.,.,...,...,, ex . H 11 Sa Cl tart ... to .,,... per r .. •·~•0• « INK .... ty a , n emente. ------d ~•· N 4400 L and Balboa NB. Sprinklers Free Estlm. CERA~11C TILE NE W & * <192-SlOl * e(lenu g. on e x p. o
Office Rental STORAGE UNITS 642·7557 534-3144 534-7187 remodel. Free estimates. CLERK TYPIST ~mok'i;:. i\t:c :!0-30. &12-2626
OFF I CE S p ACE & A .P':rsonal, business, recrea-LO_ST 10/15, BEAGLE ma1e, EXP. know how ma 1n 1 , Sr· Jobs v.·elcome. 536-~ AYON De ntal Chairsd Asst.
Secretarial Services. Ex-~nal s1ora~e. ~m SS. rn:olor nr Ad a m s & c I ea nu~ 1 , tr Im m!ng, * 547-1878 * E 1 e c t r oni(' manufacturer Desirable So. Orange Co.
pe r i en ce d I Professional Jamboree & :;;an Diego Free-Bushard, 962-5413 Reward re n 0 v a.ting, landscaping, Kitch, i!:ntryways, Bathrooms needs accurllte typist. 60 location. Sor~ eve. h 1' ~.
liceMCd real estate brokers w Y· Call m-OJ.50 FOUND: Schnauzerfferr!er call after 4, 968-3486 T Soll 6092 Need Cash For w.p.m. 1-'G&S63~-c.=:::1'-"""~'~"'~"-''~'~"'-"1 P"="'--.t
1433 Superior Avenue only. Prime Costa r.1esa Rentals Wanted 4600 Type dog. Male -gray. Vic: LA\VN SERVICE _ op Ch • 7 Electric tvpc\\•ri ter, f i I in g OF.1\'TAL Rrccpl. fo:-busy
Newport Beach loc:aUon·delu.xe 0 f f i c e 8 -----------1 ltB. City Hall. 536-4295 DEPENDABLE -1, rQP SOIL * 00l\1P05r* flStmaS • diversifiid duties. oh:. A1 leas! I )'I' ex per,
percentage lease. For ad-DESPERAT:l::.:; ....... ..; .,.,, .. ;; "'eeklY !\taint e Cleanups *'<ULCll * REDWOOD• S600 n1i11. Very good
ditionil information -write 11 f " JI ·~"'-omb1't~"' & •o c··'l f or APf>I. •· lit So o 0 -t 11 B SANDPIPER INN house. 11.pt. or tra er or Free Est. 642--9907 CaJI 586-6930 .iv ''° "' .. -tu ut:ne 1'. n1 .,.. s. . , ASllOCiated South Coast elderly Mother with limited
1
~ 1 thuslastic, you can star I Jndus1 rial ftf'!ations 846-:f>.IO CORONA DEL l\tAR Brokers, P.O. Box 1595, ioc-omr. $l00-$125. 552-7552 I• TI-IE :!\loney Savers-Compete Schools & earning money immedlatcly (7141 494-9401 N rt Be h ca""~!l266.J~!:_l i'iiri~f';;;;~;i;;;~';:;t;;I hnonalt Garden Clean-up , Tree . 7005 as an AVON HEPRE.<.:;EN-DENTAL assislanf. 1\t leasl \VALK TO ewpoWATERaoF,R0NT · 1 BEDRJ\i:. apartment, nice • Trimming & Fire~iood. Ben. __!,_nstruct1on TATIVE. Meet people. !lave TELONIC 2 yrio eh;,1r-;ide 1·xp. Ex
FASHION ISLAND neightx:irs, S140 rent. 2071 ~;;.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;,;;;;;~ 6'16-8016 eves aft. 6 COLLEGE siudent givi n g fun too. Call for details: panrled r!utir~ \\'/4 hnndr(l Prlv:.iey-Peacelul·Spacious NEWPORT BEACH &Himore Apt AH B II INDUSTRIES d e n1i~1r~·. Lui::un;• Niyu1'I Executive offices ' · · · Perf"onal1 5350 EUROPEAN GARDENER piano ll"s80ns. Beginners 540-7041. 49:)-4600 ui· .~~t-J::21 .
LUXURY APT. LIVING 2 ~ 3 Roo -1 Landscaping-tree servi~ and intern1cdiatcs. Ca 11 "'""!!!""!!!!!!!!!!!""!!!!~I L B h l""t•I A•si'•taot. Cli•I-. ,.,1• J & 2 br •. furn. suites: or Vl••~'of hoal•m&s~o~er I~ SPIRITUAL READER reasonAble, 642-5329, 685-1425 Bruce at 7 5 2-13 2 3 or BABY SITTER WANTED: aguna eac ~ ... "r • .1 ~" "' ,,,
)"1n1nci1I • O IO Al\I lOPi'I. LNDSCP/GARDEN/MAINT , ~54&-14~~78~·-------Newborn neecl5 TLC 4 ~':I :-• r ()\1•11, r-;J>('r {. <J Day .. , unfurn. suiteL $295. to $'150. l Sn1all office Sl6S pen · to ,. days a "'eek. Ex c h a 11 g c Equal Oppor. Employer !!-r> 11 111, Sn 1 a r y (1 pen. Bill Grundy Rltr. Advice on all matters. Sod, Spri.nklen. Cleanups, DIMfOND & colored stone references 494-4025 a ft cr ~el\'pttrl Ctr. 6~£H'l300. 2 Swimming pools. 2-1 hr. 675-6161 g , O SOOS 312 N. El Camino Real Soil cd, 642-3331 646-490R classes, starting soon, by Clerk or,rt1Tions
'wll<hbrd., "tils. pd., elev .. 1-.-;-;o:::::::--:;::;;-..;::::;:c:;::I =~u~11=n="='='-=~p~po::.;_•_...::.:.;.;01 San Clemente. For appt. MOW & -•ge ho-apt• -adunte gem 0 J 0 gist, 1:00 p.m. To 01·n A Phrase DEN TAL 1\ s ~Is tan' , 36 '""" ' """' "; -BABYSITIER, after school, chairsidc ex(X'r. l\lon thru O:iU. shop &'rm. sen-., elec. **Corona del Mar** RESPONSIBLE PERSON Call 492-9034 \ 492-91 & J-' -e 1~mmi'ng & 53'&-7548, 962-6195 p, ... Poi'd Th S r • , ""· ,,.., i·o my home, North Bluff. 2 ~ urs. , n fH)' OIJ•'ll. Xl7·3.ifl1 kits., dshw1hers., patios or Professional Ollices and/or \Vanted 10 own &: operate DIVORCE yard clean up. Jim 646-5631 VOICE, Piano, Theory P.l\t. _5 p.m. l\t 0 n _Fr i . Sharp, st:ibh: indi\•, $'.)ught D 1 ba.Jcys. & mueh more il.etail. Deluxe, air cond., candy & confection wnding BULK COW MANURE l.\ty Home Or Youn;. G44-6636 aft 6. for kep spot in plush ne\v enta Receptionist
ample prkg, jan. serv., utiJ route. Costa Mesa & sur-ONLY $65. EARTH\VOR~fS ~1r. Newman 833-2320 ..:."-'::::;'-"===~--ores. Your coll("J::c traln1n~ Ex~rienrt'rl .·i~"-AAM Opt. maid serv., opt. tennis. pd. 300-2000', Hwy frontage '°"-'log"-•. p 1 ea 8 a nt Comple1ely reliable 757 1570 1 BABYSITIER is an a:i.set here. x Jn · 1 0 1 s tr\\' A 8 11 1• f' \V 1 1 & ~· n •· fro .... "" ..... * ::i -* \.\'ILL tutor E e m e nt a r y ""-ai'bl• li've-io. • . , '" an Ci FOR LEASE OR RENT ""' r. iuitcs m ,..,. · busine5s. High prolit ilems. 67:!-5793 children needing help for """' 642_2615 henefit 011110Mu11!ty. Ca 11 Davs. Ueat•h•'Onit. ""ll eor.
Owner, 675-6000. 2855 E . Can start part time. Age PREGNANT? General Services 6046 reasonable pay. 642-3844 ~----'C:..="---,-,-Trish Park, S..13-1700. Ali<o ll't" Shop, 21''33 \\", Coa!<1 •,.;;;;i21;01ii.iE.ii;;iCOiiiiASriii;iHWYiii~·~· iiii• I ,~eoo~s~t~l~lig~h~·~·ay~·=C~d~•~t ::-"'I or experience not important. Caring ronfidential oounseJ.1---------= H11.ve something you wanl to Ft'(' Job!<. Denn is & Dt>nnis lh1'}'. Nil 612-,...4TZ>.
" DESK snsa-available ISO. n~"~ car & $1395. to Ing &' -fo-•. Abor!Joo, 'nnNGS" by P.1oose. Gcn'I sell? Oas.•dfied ads do ii Personnel Agt>nl')' of Irvine, -='="'c'c~-'0''-'=~~~1
MESA
GARDEN
APTS.
2 & 3 Bdrin1., crpts, drpa,
utn1t.le1 paid. BI t I n s ,
laundry facllllle1. R e c .
room w/pool table, gym
room, sauna, pc-1. Adults
only, no pets. 2881 Bristol,
C-Osta Mesa
751-4187
....... '"" •"-'!"""'" '" ...... llii} DISJl\\"i\Sll.·:R ll('<'(fN\ Jnr n'l<I. \VW provide furniture $4795. cash tnvestn1ent . For adoption & keeping. AP-carpentry, repairs, plum· 1 ~·=•~1~1 ~-~"";:' ~N:O;W:64~2-;5678.;:~:;::'°'::2:':':ie:h':':~:•~D='"==~ I tt A I d tail 11 & In \ude oor b' 1-J "'"5813 111 ... )liiMI 1'()11\'. htisr1. f/hme \\'knd!I
a ~· mo. n s we r n g e s .,.,T e c > CARE 6424436 :~""'~·;·~=~··;·~~Fc~;;;injf:l~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;i;:I off. Full bf'nclu ... lii'\'1'tl~· service available. 17875 phone Number. Department · · A t t Cl • ' Beach Blvd;, Huntington BVV, 3 9 3 a l.\1eadowbrook REAL E~tate TralnUlg. lnd1v. par men ean1ng SEEK & FIND I) Frontier Life Terms l•l!lnor. iw \flr1nrl:1, r:-.1
Beach. Cl2-4321. Rd. Minnenpoll11 l\tN 55426 Instruction. Personal attn. Exceptional Services at Fair Job Wanted M•I• 7025 lli~f)l..t\r"rr -~"='"""'=-"'='"'""'=='°" J•;;iii ... iioiiiiiiiioiii' ... iiii""iil Sales or broker exam 2-.J Prices. 536-4662 ' HOT LINE! OFFICE SPACE FOR wks. Academy M8-ll92. Hauling 6051 YOUNG man e'"'...,..;0--• io S R E G NA R S AXE T S TN, p C H C · RENT. Costa Mesa, Hartx:ir DEL TACO 1 . ,.,......... '"-"""' Pro n1 i nt n l t11111 Si'f'k" at Adams. Beautlfu l · *Palm/Card Render * pa nt1n g, aparbnent tulk11t1\i' 1nd1v. 10 nrindlr modern . Air, music, FOR SALE Ar'ReJuctionl0831BeachBI, LOCAL l\fovlng & Hauling m a ln ten anceandron-T 0 KN P 0 NYE X. REH WY 0 0 I E hi•rivy f)ll"~'~. r ,i-1I r;ir«i!
janitorial, Cla.<i!I A. Walker t .r~o~c~i~o:fo~nn~n~llo~o~,~'°~"~"'~"~'~~l;~~St~a~o~ro~o~. ~5~71~-"1~06~= by student. Large t r uck• strucUon seeks pcnnanent s o c 1 w E w N o p T s o H G M R x Vt' :-pnt. Trrr1llC' 111ipu1· c .. u & Lee Bldg. Call Gene Hill HE\VJTI-KENNY CORP rea90nablc, Bany 531-1 235 job, Call Greg: 979--9621 )larion ,\l:uin, 'i :; :l _ ~ 7 O O
557-0136 or 642.{)200. 979-7817 YARD. GARAGE cleanups, Job Wanted, Fm ale 7050 8 0 0 M T IJ W L X P E T M N E C P E E U.>1111ls S t. I 11 .. 1111\s 1'1'1-..;nn
S C IFF DR
[ l~ remove dirt, tree1, Ivy , C CT H a OD E f: OT C E S U R t. I> I. ll•'I ,\t:t•n•·:-()f 11"1'1111•, 21)..'I~ tSOl WE T L . • HEALTII FOODS •-L..,. ... -~ , drive1vys, grading:;. 847-2666 Secretary, Pt/31.t Time l\l !'·h1•l."'111 l"lr
NEWPORT Flnancitd Cc.ntC"r bll hed -·~· C o s a --CO-"-==== S Bcuulifulwellesta s Heating&AlrCond6053 70+typing,dlc tnp ho nc, .. ATHYB 1 SCOS1i<:1.E C OOCTORSASSISTANT Le•sing Office pace ,--In --! d,, l r ab 1 e11iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiil ability to ·•11, 0-•1-• wn·--CE "''" '"'"' I' .. .,,. ""'" "' NBMM C~PNOYITT ~!\8"'"'' Younc l•1d.11l'-~~110\\'t1r~ -~ CAl.L ON·SIT1'~ i tANA • It N cw port Beach art!a. A t' 600I GRAHAM BROS. •••\"-"'~ letters. Front o t t I< e 8"-••. • • • • t r . f, • ( 3 '"" ccou 1ng "7'rorW.J ,,-:•lt '11clor ... 1 s~1i1 ton! fl,. 714) 00· W cx1 .HQ. 673-3409, eves. n Furnace reptncemt, "'all pen.ranee & personality. W w o s o O O H HA G R f. r T o N s ,\ /1·c·1·rpl 1n 11.·.ihh ,.;1111 i\1 •
. 1,!:!'.t•.., 1 MO. FREE RENT DRESS shop-very attractive. ~t 0 NTH Ly bookk . heaters, g\Jller & d1vn 5.57-t!OTI ufl l i''<IX'1' 11"""~~ \\"train you N8o~re~"A'i' '!".,· DH~e1.or~ces/C, Active lluntingtpn Be a eh service lncl. all tax:~:l ~~~-!a'irebBOn ~~~n$~ Ff;AJALE w/ool\ea;e d~ 0 0 0 P T W G 0 T D I X A S I 0 A E R .\pf11) hi 111 1...,011 af!n ,,r C'\"C
2 BR. ..!fownhoullt, frplc, ..,,, , ,.,:, •. ~m 1145 Mo. Center. D tabhshed seven reports Gordon \V a r re n di · ary · It art minor wants jbb in 8 c M o c o 8 N ~ o v R 0 N u M I. M G :!t 12 lh11'110r· Bht._C ·~'~'--·I trom $250. l BR, trom $1~ •I"' .... "'" years. Flexible. 962-3121. P.A ~ • scount Interior design or photo . Ol'!:l\"flf
Pool, teMls. conllnentaJ 2.;=n1f.uR: ~ GO.,. Shop, po sh locatlon Adci.A-Roo~ 6002 Housecleaning 6054 644;8490 Arn .Tuea -Sat C IJ 0 S W LI r ,& A G TEX C A I DO r :irt limt> for il;inl'f'" llludio
bttaJdAIL separate le.,mlly ' Promontory Point. G r 0 s R Ot!R. 8 her' K PRAcnCAL nu~. age 411. I •• g T B 0 R • 0 c K N A R H G H <; t>-l"4fl'2 ~:::·heir.~ J:_~pplng 161:sw::r~~~:T NB woo Mo. Broker 552-8666 LICENSED Sub-contracior5 Hou11eho~t Se~ v i ceeesp~o; see1j day work. Ho n·es t , Y o B w o B o I v A T N A I. I G ' \ I -o ry-c1-,-.-.1-ng-P-re_1_•_er-'
Mort, Trust Deeds 503$ wnntr.d, room additions. All Bachelors. 673-7755. r I." ~ b 1 e ' have a Clt. 0 1111b1ro111on :-..,1111 l\!lffl.""I.
ntE EXCITING Cpts, drps, A/C. free pkg., Ira.des, South Coast Builders • cll30-"""'i"°"~~~=== S S E R P X E Y N 0 P 8 O y C I \' N \' :\lridf"m ptun1 1..-r11U1Mnl
PALM MESA APTS. utll, 10'.clnp. A.gt. 54.l{ill.'2 LOANS UP TO 80"~ 003-4688 EXdonCELLENTb Hou1~1''""1"1 Help W•nted M&F 7100 cn1f'lo, nirn1 4!12-'.'371
NEW Pl ush offiC"e Bldg., 2 1 t TD l e Y laity "' elCJ>('r. De-' O M R W f. L S t" A R G O R A C fl I N G MINUTES TO NPT. BCll. to 6 RA1 suites. Confcrent-e $ oa n~ ~iby.!,!!~ 6008 pend, own tnmi. 8-17-3637 Apartment Managers -E loctroniCAislmblers
Bach, 1 A:2 BR. from $l:'t7 Rm. Xerox copier, Near \l Maintenance 6069 Fully qualltt~ 11 nd eic· l••rM110111~ rtie lltddi• W1>t• l11t" ~ •PPfaf fflf'l •N , J"rutnt;tpe \1!n•r \\Hh Hlronn
Adults, No Pets. O C. Airport. 833-3640. JI d TD L YOUNG Grandmother with perl<'nct"d profffllional reil· ::!:.a:.~'."Ndo.;::·11':'11 :!t:,"::~ ill 111' '""'"· 1''114 •tll b.1r ki::mund in r <'ll 11In11:
(5 ... _ 1'6lfromMN~po~ Blvd.) nANK or ~ .~t!"M Plata ~,n oa OE TLC will lake ca,re of your HUSBAND & Yl'lfe I e" m . dent mtlj[1" couple v.1th pn> ~rhl"!l1(11U·~1 ~ 11·\rlng h'tl!ll
u... .... otnce r urn l s h e d . Nice ' baby. NEWBORN-I YEAR. Oea.n Ir maln1 11.ln nfflct, ven 1.1blll1y In admlnb:lratlOn ~&~~~;!'r°~~t;R r.tt o~TOWS MOllF:O ."ltm•· E -.; p (' r J rn r r cl tn t---~-'-' rerept. area. $&5. 5."16-3900. Lowe$t rttt' Ortnge Co. Evtnlrq,'I & v.1eckcnda, $2.00 ::1!-t. home or re-renc.ahs. k maintenance of IAT'gf! ht:c· COM~TOCK :!~~,~~~~~.s~ ~fl~"i1t"~~4.~r.•:M:< -~ol1ti•rin1? Pl 10 11• \l>lrln,i;i: + LA i>ARiSIENNE *I~-'"'°'"='""'°"""~·""°='" Sattler Mlg. Ca. PC'r h o 11 r or $lO per P. Rel. S.SS-.Sto.1 ury adul\ apt~/n1arln" rom. COWOOl' kANf"tllNf: v.'ELL~ t' \JU ;o h11r111·,o;1<
1
1p_.r: or •'l~cll">n1t·1: 2 ·Br. unturn. All clectrlc. DELUXE .2 rm. office: East 642-2171 S45-06l l v.'t'ekend: PlellM: eel! uf t Masonry 6070 pl~x In LA County. EX('t'llcnl To..,nrrnw: ll•rilw!Htd• R~~1·m 1 ,.., ~ 11.~. boon1,
J>"'lreQl&.-1!'. Heated Pool , Cm.st lll;y., Cd)!. -l3c Ft. • 6PM, &1.,..2666 -(l(lpor111nltict1. Sobmit dclnS... ~-----=======--~----' r-.•11 ltr!tf':IN'h. l.~1() Sou1h Alltdls. $18$. t up. Re11lonomle-, Bkrs. Sis-.6700 S<>rvll'IQ' lln:rbor .,... 2f yn, BRICK BLOCK & Sl'ONE fd ttsumc 10 Clas!rifleor! l\d Th ordtr •ny or 1U IJ( thf r1p1ndf.d "Se~k & F1n1I .. t)IJ(tl \. ,l-yon•. SA. S.U-1616. ~14GS •111vo M>mtthint: YolJ want to 1Nit'TR.UST DEE1)...$!0XI-:-llAaYSITTI~'lG in my horlle. "'alls k Pt1ll011, q u 11 I No. 26-i Daily Piiot. P.O. niimht" 2 throui::h 8. ~endstiO 1·tnl! for tfl\h m11k1 n1t 1•httk~ Cln!ll'lll!!'tl ani 11eu 111,. lttnui,
Ai!rOM tmm aclt courle IUlll'!' OauUltd ad1 do tl lO<'Ai 3 yn. M% dllCOlmt. ~net<! yard & refer~n<.'t't, workrn!'Nlhlp, lie a: bonded Box \S60 Cost" l\lesa, CA payable to "~;cr.k & Find," • 111.r-T,lepnm S}'lllhcalc Addre:111 1tni1tll l!('m~ or tl1Y ltr!n 1---'-~k,,;...J!ij;Jiiiilil.fil!llJl!il .... ..l.,.»;s'~l,;,.ljlll!.lliSiJ~ili;i!!....J,~...J.~6!!$;;\l~·~)l!_!•~·~·c___l ,i;~ .. ~··~·~1·~ .. !..!·~"'~"~""'~~~~-~4i~"'~il-!:;::-~~"--~·~---l.~9:1ll~:lll~--=====::.:;:=::-\.J;~t~~~"'~l~ ..... ~ ... ~oLJJu>~~ .. ~·:··~ .. ~ ... ~·c__ ________ l~JO~"~l'ltll~:!!tl~::::::~ .. ' t
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•
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-·BB \AJLY PILOT Mond~Y. Octo~, 21, 1?74 ==~....,~=v.-..-::'°""°'""'---;:;:;o-:rr,,"°'::----;;;;;;;r.11..::tt;;:;;:;;;;:;--"'iiiii l
-ilelp Wtntid;"'M&F 7100 Help Wanted, M&F 7100tielp W"a-n'"1ed-.-, M=&°"F"'1"'1oo"'"""'"H'""1'"1p-=w=1n"'t-ed-:-,-:""'=F"°"7"'100""""'•..,-p °"W""1-n""ttd-:-, M=&"'F"'7"'1oo="'H"'•'"lp Wanted. M&F 7100 Aj>pllanc.. IOIO ~nary 8071 Ml1ullenoou1 -
Electric C •rt • & ~~ NURSES Aidt & LVN, ex· SECRETARY J ,;;;;;;~;;;;;;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;.J1tt:.AVY-d-u~ty-V-•-cu-.,,-,-,..-.-. SCRAM LETS
Ground• M•intena nce pt•r'd. &Y'itw Conv. Hosp, . New '74 White D•luxt w/lli hp, 3 phau-electrlr • C:\t 6t!·3500. t'or jOb iv/lot£ or VIU'lety WESTINGHOUSE n'IOtor $123. RI dW overhead
t;
0 ' ()o.•n PROOFREADER /PASTEUP COMBINATION "'11"11111 gr 0 w 1 ny tlec· rooter lor iYOOd or soil ANSWERS ,,,,1, 1, ''"'"" orncE GIRC tronk• mMul. w •ood WASHER &.DRYER """' "'°· Met&l n ok with • lr1lrrt. l.ull!t C. Club r·or bui,;r II. U. ~nli 1tQrt:. bencfilL b:bat h'1v.i. xln'l ~lu\~ w •ow:uncnt 11\th llQ 8 .. casters, 25 .. 'Aide, 26 .•
' lr<>i " Coo" II•~. N.B. IBM SELECTRIC 1.1 TYPIST ifil~i . Expcr. ,,.rd. C:.ll lyph~ Sldfl•. Dtll4 EJec. ,_. .. ,, 1 ,..,. wor,.nly d<ep. <8" ""h $00. G<nrl St>oni• -'""°"'.-Brain -r-ELECTRIC IAN -t r onlt' Con t r ol Corp .. & uset! only 2 Q'IOntlul. £X. f\>duction boic w/V. hp UOv Utha.1-AS T\\O
WANTE D Offaet Prt t l Tr•lnt e 64fr.777G. ceUent condition! $400 for 1110for. Light rnetal shear Nowadays, one can llV!_ as
-r'\tHvT h~mr rvn.;trurrtnn Need to l..ype.65-\\'0rds-per minute eccuretely, ----"'fl)~fr. \Vt'fk; $2.~r trr -,fStc'YI, &ooNketper1 -~:&ft'~~,~~Jew. 2r'' clcu.vlr. c .. 11 ratltr n cneaply s--mn.
( 'l"T T1111 !Ill' lw.•nl·fHi; f\nO\V ne\r.'ipapor page and a d pasteu p. Professional t-inrenlh'L'S, Auply In 1k: Relndf'l'll Agency ~~~~~~'""""":"!1642·4321. Ext. :rn: day11 .• II A L L 0 \VE t: N COS-I
'J',. -~'! f'i'f"i1,1~·no ln•" un ,._,. I d ' • C Pt'~n. Pl'nnysuvt'r. 1545 40'.ll Dirth St., Sul!e 104 c"r.os>-.. -0UT. Comn•·-l•I 54.1.3417 nl~hls. . TUflll.'S *, • .,., ~o n1e proo reu tng experience help ul. Nc"''JlOrt o.t · ...... 1 r~·1' i~·-1 1:~;. · NDewlo""I A" J8'0••boh 1.BfJ!_l!fJ
5
hcnvy duly Eureka vacuun1 BR0 \7N & Sharpe No. lt~ $()rncth1n1t uuusu11t • Lrg !ii.
I exec. SECR E-TARY-! Placements PARKING LOT ~ clc11nc111. Reg. 1189.50, DOW llorli. Alill stock of anUc1~e & '!Id Ir~-> 11 11,111. ro rt.,1 1111n1 Mk -·"PPI Y tn person -CONCESSIONAIRE No Charge To You oo I y $1 14.~ .. A.Uachmenlll Pv.•r. 1-'ecd table, ~!tr. Jt clo1~·g .. acreM. 111 the \\c1il.
I E bll heel 1965 Sl9Jli 9'19 \V, Baker, c. Elcc. Sttn· "· n11p.1u·c•I, uld llneN. "''"1111'..; !\lu~t IJ1• · fllr>:i'lll!I! ORANGE COAST DAILY PILOT · · lmincdhittt opportunity. 1114 !I r.t MG-6212 KEN'r·O\\'NENS No l-~1 Oll'ltl'l"lnl11, Crot.'hct, laros & , .1 hl,• 111 111'111 \1 Ith·· riul•lh· 642.-7380 ror ln1crvlt'11'. SERVICE Sla. salesman & · 1 1 11 ~ 1 .t · F 11 lurs r..tilitury & etc. J 1038
,\!u;,111;111•111•.11 app1•11r111w•• 330 West Bay Street, Costa M esa at PBX Answtrlng Service lube n1an. Top pay'& trin.ge GAS DRYER & ~LECTRlC 1 ort i\I w/r se · a c~'l'dt>n Grove l:JI .. GG,
1:.11ly 111 Cla!Cs1flt•tl 11d no. benefit•. Ex.per. man pref'd. DRYER $50 EAClI, Xlnt ~oolant, Mtr. & Elect. 636.1583
::; t•/oi i\1111 Pllor. IJo, I A~k £or f.lauJ \Vnrd after 2:0() p.m. Dt\YS or eves. f'uJI or pit F 11 It s•-u !1th & corw:I. &l6-58<lS 9 LOGAN Lathe w/4 Jaw ..:::::::·C:::::'-------1 Ex""r pre('d EOE 54()..1962 u or. P ' '"' • Chuck JI.l it . & Elect. M' W t·• •••1 :f'.~'.~".1 •il1. l'r.>tolll r-1t•1111. f'.'.1 AAMES -...r ·' ~____: Irvine. N.B. T H ~EE . av ocadosu i'iGMASTER ?l·lodcl OB 1sc , anwv -
I · · '·' _ ---------Equal Opportunity E1nployer-Personnel Counselor SHA~tPOO usslstant to busy rec1.~s1fil.a~~ke new. 14 71·l-99!1·3883 W e Buy Dental Gold r;:\1•11 1:11k 1•ry SuJc.11ad} hnmcd. o""ning in ou r , opcrutor 5 da)'ll. go od De 1 '' 1uh d ruu 11111(', nt>1•ly "'" au 1 .. rv+, Newport Beach, Blcyclea 8020 M iscellaneous 1080 BridJ:"es· Crownll-n urei1
I .1, \!;11·111•· ,..,,. na11i.,;1 ~_...... Career Center hcttutiful ore. Sa.J11ry I;Uarn. &1s-i:ws ANY TYPE-ANY A~10UNT l~l n1<i +comm + bon1.1.5. E.~1ier. I BUYl,I, H1GtrESl' pr--xs· PAID
H I W fed M&F 7100 H I W d M&F 7100 pref'd. Goori loca1iol1. Sl lIPPll\'.G & RECEIVING BICYCLES SUNSET CO.
FAR OUT I 1 p an , _•_P __ 1nte , J B t A N~ I _ .. ._.ft..,. No r~ ··--• t ·1 '~
e.z MONEY I I-'•·• )"lll' 11·1!1,tl 1·q111hll111 .. ~.
J lf'll $1111) ~ Jlt'I' 11!'• k l,.1·
11 ,,, tu,11 ·. !p111·'.'ip111 or :i11u1·
!I . ; ()JI Ill IU CllllllOrtuhlt•
<fU\1·100< vlfh·i· at'l'U~~ Ilk'
,o,11v1•t rrnn1 (Jn11ti.:l' Counl)'
\lr1ior1. Ft1f 1~·ri.ou:1t lr1·
'"r\ 1r"1 l':d! ~Ir 1\1-ylll.'r,
N::::-xr~is
F/C BKKPR TO $1200
Ou1s13ndin.: 0111l>w. fHl' indl1.
f 11/,:untl 11ork h:u·ki.:1v1.u1d ,t, I
11!'t•hitl't't\1r11I '''II''"
AAMES 100o/o FREE
Bllfl'i•U llf
Insurance
Underwriter
Con1n1l'r•'H1l: l'rt•perty/C1L~·
u:U1y. I .\'111. 1'\IJl't'. $6i5
1111!. •
NEYER A FEE
American Career
Agency
V<n•n111rly lli111 nrl!
Newport Beach 640-8470
Orange 54~·1694
ason es gency .. ~ .... ew '-'uuu """"""s. Stock tron1 shop that htts uvuo" .....,.... urru ure o: U9 forest A\·e, Suite 5,
, LEGAL SECRETARY lQQOYc FREE li400 Brookhun;:I, F. Vly c1•1's""c'·,",""',.ss1.1~Ve"~hlll ~~· moved. 10 speed, 3 speed, '1POli11 11~of1\litl wUfor you Lagi·--Bch. iabo\'Cl..aguna 0 · Suite ~13 963-ms · -· · 1 ~ ........, • s speed & iingle snn<Wf bikes MASTERS AUCTION 11,,·•w•>-1 l'u"-. •0 3 o ru·1y ~lln :1 yn; cicpcr, lu •'-'fJl, krepin~ preferred. Start at to be sold at deale~"~t. 646 1686 or 133-9625 u ~ ~ "'" u-
IH \ & probate. T}pini; ro PICKUP .~ deh\•eiy auto $3-1-1.10/rno. B usic ~; Voiles Cycle Sl.29.95 now $100. aft. 6 or SW1dl_8390074 l'..p.n1. ac:curatC!ly. Sh 1)()1 ~ l 1t s s trail'le(!. Dickerson's rkinal training opp. .....,.,... Pun '"orld $l29.9S ooW $90. ,:;;:;::::--:;::;:-:-;;:-"r :=:--::=::: 1 Musical lnstrum't1 8083
ne('ess. F'ashion I s I a 11 tl • National Auto Glass. I 2 5 lringe. Pd. Vac. Free Many n10re bikes at 1an1e Heavy duty Vnc:uum pum p
Gtl-9190. , COMPANIES PAY Roeht'Sll'r. Ci\1642-00.'!4 Dent/~tcd .. Olher. Call the reduction. Parts & Acces \1'f I~~ HP 3 ph. Elcc. 2 s.c. Speaker Cabinets, 2
LEGAL &>rrc'""", exp d, ~larincs, The Career Corps, also "vat!. motor $125. Radlal overhead 12" sill'akers in "a ch·
...... ' cc.o ""•1 ~91n ° 1 ~ ~' 1 w/L"overt rru· P. A . or inalurt' lor sale lax attornt'y ALL FEES Promotional Sales * ,,..,,......,.., """" 83J.J644 router or "uoo or so I ~uitar. A.~k $175 or b s I .
in Nf'\\pDr! ccnler. fi..11-5J32 5(Y;, C.Omniission. 28 I I~ , SILK Screen Printer, Part Buy noiv tor Chri.!ltrua& &: n1ctal $250. ~1£'lnl rack "''\th Ul 31 St NB --• 11 I I t F Uy 8" cast('rs, 25" wide $50.1-· ::.;,'~··-=~stc.c~· ~-·-==:I Ll\'E·IN Jlel11e1· fo1· l'i rll'l'i)' \\1eek. O""nln,s for 5 nien. n1c eves o s ar · u save. 26.. ~-p. , •.. high. C"ll ·--•·1 1 u.."' "° .. J.~I NE Acl-ordion, 11rn plifier \\'fllTifl!l. l{OOI\\ ln !)) 0 b 11 1• Neal llP'"''""'OCC!, 0\'cr 18. l.!KP in S('f'l.'Cn nltu\ ng, SC 10 Sl'EED ,,.. c "-· T I · -us to m Olll"ar at 612·4321 J;"xt. 279-:ind rnusic. 2060 Nev.·po>1 hun1e, bo<U d & i;f1!!11v. Non· . 616-·1137 for lntci'Vi('I\', up ,t, pnnling. op pay or , .. ,,_ 1 .. 50 ,,, 8 , ~ ~inokl'L". ~houlr.I h;•\·,. 01\11 Think $$$ to $1200 r ight penion. All r c p Ii cs ~n~~rt, fil Ln oct & "· doy1i 54·l-3 · : nights. Blvd. Space 21. 642-8049
t I' II n "po r In ~!on. Phon1• REAL ESTATE conrhlentilll. Ow· en1ployecs ...,.,....,,,,,96 c11l rry WAN_T_E:D:---Ofc. Furn. & Equip. 8085 1!;,u i:h1cr a1 G7.1-2i::4 u r Yoor t!a.ir fur rlgures will SALESPEOPLE. \Vhy 11 0 1 know or this ud. \V r it c Cameras & Equip. 8030
f,1,-.<IJ'.• \JC! d\'µend;,.'CI on Uy this top '\'Ork In lhc holiest areas, Ci"~",·fi-' Ad no 3l4. % TOP CASH DOLLAR PAID · II 01· t B h/F t . '"'" <'\• EXEC. DESI( & C1'<!<le_nza ,C-,~~~-~--1 Orungc Co. fi rm. F/C thru u uigon cac oun 11.1n Dully Pilot p 0 Box no. e WAT S ON 35 n1m !'OR YOUR JEWEL1tY,
LIVE·IN Housckttpcr .~. t·on1· P&L & archilectunil exper. Valley'! Lt>l us 1r11in you. i= C la •t C I'! 92626 , ''Daylight" bulk !Jim loader. WATCHES. ART OBJECTS. CR EDENZA. C o nr e 11111 , · I 1· Coll p1,,·1 •, 1··N•n•••o ......,_,,,..., JIM, OI> "esa, a 1 O•k, • ",·,thcr, nC'ver used. pan1nn. n l't' su1T01111c 1ngs. req'd. Above avg groon1!ng 1• ,_ """'-,....,, -p Hardly w;cd -Like! nc1v! GOLD, sr .. :.-~R SERVICE, u.: t:n1ploy111cn1 A~l·111·~·
C<"l:t .\ft'~a !'l!'il;..1100
'.!7(JN H11rhor l!l\'d., ·'uilf' :'07
ru.a lnn f.00 N I:;uC"lid 776-)1110
Uri::• C11y HI Jo:;i~I fVl-1:?2'2
646-722.1 l's scntiul. Lovely creative I ~~~V~H~l"~••_R_•_•l_E_,_,_.,_,__ Tax Return reparers 646·3612 FINE FURN & ANTIQUES. I c"'"°''~· ~$84"'°9.~~~7~3-~ll.'«I='-==' I
--..; Lo AN p Bo c F. SS o Jl. envlronnienl will 1nakc the Real Estale P /tinic. ~·or CP1 A o f,f ice· CAMERA & Dark r 0 0 01 ~2200 EXEC swvl chrs $15125,
I F'l!A·\',\ "'' "'""'Into••. hours fll" GRO"'Ttl Cotn""'ny \Y ith N.B. loc. Rcp y stuting ex· -,-.,.-,:--;,-,-,,--....,-"" secy chrs $8/24, Oki!. aces.
FoOd Serv. Attend.
I;,\ \T-:11'~1. \1011 thru t" 1' I
IT\'lf'll• lndu~. Compll!X. Call
lrtl' llj)j>I, G:~q....1:!14.
*Ga rde;e rswant•d*
Guum. t'u~1on\cf'll;, !::am
nct1\·, pay lurer. lll::h $'~
;.:J.-71S7 5.14-314.1
-G"' '''"' ff'ANCE-11\VlNE PERSONNEL FCLC TJ'1 f. SERYICES"'AGENCY
·:.\:'olt11ll·::OA.\I 1· kk I P&L I 1•'" Pos-ill(ln ldr•:1t for o t rl e r "Jll t'rfl('r I in1 · o '""
11o.•1"Sf\n h111 ai:t' no ha1Ticr. l-'IC l:Jkkpr/Constr ll<'l ~i:'JIJ I' 1•.;. i.: ra n111K'I' Hl'li:!/IHr.1 flt'Sli'~ .• llr,.;., 111111!1, 111n. 3 $800
•l<11\s .i;; :.;1!n. n1alr11 . l'n•\', ,-,-·J · I l..1•i.;nl S.:cy/Pro\Jl~h· ,,. 1:u11lur1al t·:~ll. f'll't:' e11·11<1 hu! St•, •IP hll J . $ti:i0
!llPI Ill'(', \\1• Olff'l' i:d. puv .. () u. SlUl" •
ins.. /Jll. 1 uc., se<·urily ·& l)l•n!nl ~ rh!/~t·k Ole lo S??ll
olht'r lll•iu.-·~. A p fl I y j11 I H1•l·1·1•l/A/Pa,1'11blc to . SJ.)()
1w1·son 10 i\li;r. '.'11·11 llllrl>or l~;11·lc lJf1" 1\!Nla·:il $50J_;
Blv<! c:-.1 f\<'.\J.11111~·h U111•ra111r S4::.0
--··-' .---1Gf'111•rnl Orfi(-1• T1·;1illl'f'
, GH IL\·. C(XlK ~ 1\1111111111 'fypc 35 wpn1 S41 ~1
t or 1·.~rr11•d:i, ;\ll)n-Fn. ~ E. 17th St. u1L lrvincl C1\t
1 __ :•_·1~-::'.!.l2 l-::«:1. E..!!..._ Suite 224 642-1470
GUARDS 'II
ln1n1cil. N{!('fl f11H f..· p/l\mc I='--'--"='--"--°"'-----'-= ~ t O C JACK IN TIIE BOX. immcd gua .... s or l"lllll!" o. i1rea.
C.:lll 1~13 1 11-r ;1:l.2.'i. 11.~nl· Opt'l'llnJ:'.~ !!PJ\I · rnidnile.
i pu1. • .\Jf/n rhr~1 ~'l·I. i\lso. 12,\ .. 11,·J.R,\1'1. l20j Bitker
L;o111\•111•t> S..'<·urll~·. JiU". !::'.I, Cn~ta ,\lr-s;1 "~~--
fWR :i;tylisr 11 /client£'!(' JANITORS
rK't'dffi 111 busv nC'I\' Sll!on. NEEDJ.~D: J.;JG HT GOOD
llighr-r p.:•i't'l'nlag,., QU.\LlT\" Pf.RSONNEL I * 49?,..2~:! nn 7:30 pnl * Fnr rull & part time \\'Ol'k
II \JR DRE ''l'R I I ;it Jl modem facility in SJC. I . , ~ ', . IN'rl~l'f , ,...1
shop a.\SIStanl. sal:1ry i;:llaJ'., c..;1~~· \\'Sgc"S. ~~~mo \) ~.11lm:u1, 8 hrs 1• ;\faids, ·1-j hrs
HELP WANTED
l arge Company
Expanding
NOW HIRING
l'c rn1a 11 C'nt "ork i11 1
mnn11f11rh1r\n~. ili "!l'ibutlng
&1n!tlall.'l llun. No {'XIJcrwnce necessary due tn cxcelle11t
tralrung Pf'Ob'l'ani for men &
~om~ 18 & over.
TOP WAGES
::1 Janitors, 4-6 hrs
Call 97~::.W:.!
JANITORS
P/!irnr C\'C~. Nc1\'por1 Bch
a1·i:11 •. Arply 17 1S:!
Arn1stron).( Ave, S.,\. bPhl'Jl
l & :1::J0pm. Ph o n e:
:).l(}...781~:·, =~~--~
J1\NITOJlJAL \\'01·k ll v a j I,
a \ so s u b· contrttct v.ork
:ll ;1il. T..2--0'!88
-IUNIOR~SAL=Es=ME~N
Call A~e !(}.. l:i. Earn $2£l.$·KI per JoW. '-tnr" Jnrnrni:itlnn
17 14) 898-3541
Call Tuesday Only
11C!t'.'k i:e1ting nc1\' <'U~toniers
for 1he DAILY PILOT al1 er
sc.'hool and &l!urrluys. You
I ' nntst be out , • ~hool h\'
It 0 TE I. ~l.\ll>S. •"'>p .. y~:ir J:OO r•n1 and be able 10 \\C>tk
1 D\llltl Joh In Lu!.!un.1. Xlnr 1 ii' lcust 3 tlav' µer 11cck. ;\o I r;'SQrl :1urk'1~1.: t'fln1\. Good i...ilclil"erics ·ur 1·0Uc_t·1ini::. '"'b'~. 111.s, hnnu~ f. flll ld I Tran~JJ0r111!ion prov 1 d ed. j \'U<'\1tlu11s. Cnll <194-ll!IG r 'I ~12.
Ill 0 u ~Jo:l'Ll::,\N_EH \\'%}j.{>~ ,u~· 1~uul~· .. o~p~pu ... n~un~;~ty ... E~'"~·-·O~> .. "•' \lc11. \\ctl. ¥n 9·1..\.12.7:,1 •
· ~f~s~~-11 tr~ri~p. H f s. KEYP'UNCff
Ill 0 us r. ''Jo: F. PF:il. 11·unt I rruflHl1t:11._l~·1us".kt•rJM'r, 9-:1. OPERATOR llltlll·fl'I. ,,,,i-:111.: -=-~-1 HO l'Sl·;l\l·:J>;PJ>:I:. ('nn1·
par11n11. fl'tn. l.!1·c-i11. non
'Ill'''·•"!'. \1!1~' dil\I' flli;!.~oi:/I.
1 1l~h1 •1: ~ f\1111P:-111i-;;-,;-Eltkr
ly la<l,1· lo Ii\ • 111 ,\· 1 <l"k
rnr ,,1,11•" $'.!IHl 1110. tii .. 1-l!f'.:~
L'111\:11· L\lai:hinl', 1 )'C'nl' <''i·
I" l'· S11 ni:.; ~hilr. $:>~:. 111<1 . .i.
NEVER A FEE
• ~· t 1 ct ,._, od "'"'uipmenL Call n r t 6BAZA AR . Oc t . 23, l9 C' ·••1411 P1rll!le f"flll !or ;1n RPPL newly established office re· pc.·r .. _;,nc. 1' o""u. •=Pilol ~n/Frl or other eves aft 1P~f-6PM. Boutique gifts, Pic.rcc,8671/oi u1,6'w--(, 1,.10 •• 1 1 S · "''i••• •··l·,..rv~ple. ,., .... , no. ~=· c o a Y • ~· & 0 8090 a min" or s11ge ervice. ...~ "' ""' ~".-··" " 1, 0 "-•= Co 1 •t "" 10, 5-15-3879. plants, to1s more. c h r is t r 1anos rgans &.~2022 Think People $548 location and aprolntn1e11t~. · · uux ....,.,.,, s n "e....,
Applv Vl~ion Realty, 675-8600 ~C;•;;;92626~------;; VIDEO ln~~lnc and Church by the Sen, 1400 l.VN. c-halll·n~ing JIOllilion for If lik 11. ·king \\•/people Chnrlrs Gerenraich. camera al xtru, cord TV W. Balboa Blvd., NN-port
fK'l'B'ln l\'/~upervl!OOrv ablll· you e 01 · · t~~~====~~= programs r 1nak yo u r Beach
ly. F'or P:'ll & NOC shirts & ha\'e ~· checr.y sm~e1n R.E. APART1\IE.!\IT SALES: Telephone Safes own. 642·95 4 ''0~1~N~E=1=·1~E~S~ET=.-,-w-i~,-,~,. v.·/11·knds off. G~ut wages you~ voice 1 h ~ '!,-. young a g gr cs s i v e ore ·"-bcfl('fits ror right person. t~nn1s1 /general ort1cc po,, sf)C!ciali.zing in inveshnent Costa Mesa Area Cats 8035 upOOt. chrs, p c des t a. I
Accepting applications u 1 lion offers a c:h.angc of pace prop & exchanges needs 2 Nevamar. Ible. Sl50. 10"
e PIANOS
• ORGANS
Rentals fr $5
P;irk Superior Hcalthc:nrc. lrom dull rout1n~. Type liO highly m 0 ti vat c d R.E. Work From SIAMESE REGISTERED Radial arm SO\\'. S2 00 . 141~ Slif)('rior Ave. N.B. +. Son1e sh des.irable. s u I f' s m c n. F'or appl., Your Home 7 V.'ttks, beautiful . 311-6th 846-3166 Open Nights 'tll 9
554i-f1n Top Commissions st. Apt. J, HB ~eves. * PLUSH • Sat: 'tll 5:30, Sun. 12.5 LVN Rl'nl Estate Sa lesperson * 558-73ll * Dogs 1040 CARPETING * *Pianos & Grands*
Think Challeng.e $800 WANT A CHANGE? F.qual Oppor. En1ployer 2j() Yurds 2 tone g r c en , Baldwin · Cable· Chickering
:}.It Shi fl DHfct"tntial S.'t"1 Be part of the top echelon
11-7 Shilt diUcren!ial S36 ll'/lhis No. Orange C o .
85'/o Conimisslon • PUPPY WORLD • Super Buy I Shores Interiors • I-'ischer -Kawai ."Kimball
sas. Liccnsinit Schoo l -B u J 1 Te r r i e r , 1. a b , 642·225.5/548-4654. -Knabe • Pi1~ on .!i: 1-IBJJ'", ·
Huy\'il'<V Conv. Hospllul firm. '{ou'll need xln'I lyp. Co~ra J\lei;a fi..12-3.iO:J ifl)t ,i;, sh. r-.1us1 be depen--
LVN, con\'. l1ospital. 3-11. dnble. seU moti v al e d ,
/o'/l 'n1l'. X!n't bclll'fll!i. Q1JJ carCi:'r lype. This polijtion
REALCO, REAL TORS TELLER \Velmar aner, Bull dogs, ~lb. *DECORATOR ~IusS<>tt • Sotuncr • Stein·
••• '"'" 831 m o Husky, Chk·huahua:i, Tiny \\oBY · Storey &: O ark · \\l'ln-
";)-1.Qj\J Or • ~\'un!e<t experienced Teller, Poodles . Pit Bulls, PICTURES* er -Wurlitzer · Yauulha
REAL ESTATE lull Ume. '"·= 1~1 A I Cockppoo. 100 M I X E D ~lirrored fran1es, Rosa.moods, New S~inet11 4 •••••••• ,,,,_
"'"SO.M. oflers un exci ting challenge ;\hu·hini~<'-------1 for lhe r (' s p on s i b I f!
E )(P e rienced/Profci;sionot-Bonk'o'i"'Am"'e'rica PUPS S!ud Se1vicc Most Super Sp:;inl $49.9:i, Shores Used from ............ $9j
Bl'okcM> Only. Mnlnlaln in· BrePdS. Roller Canaries, ln!C!rlOrl!, 642·225.'i Playi N " , ••••••••• $895
ENGINE LATHE sccretal'y w/stablc w o r k
ln1ckground.
dependent slalus in deluxe 18691 Main St, 11.B. R 1·1 & T ti o Grand• " .,~ .cp 1 es, •· ur es. J>C!n NE\"PORT B••oh Te""., r ·" ··" ... • -~ orfices with co m pc l e n t Contact Ellie Green E 5.TI 502'7 ~ " " *ORGANS* secretary. Pcrt:entagc leas('. Or Bill Peterson vcs. -CI u b F a n1 l l Y Tenn l s
J.'01· addirio•ri! inforrnlllion· Equal Oppor. Employcr LOVABl.I:: Old Eng I i sh it e n1 b c r" hip. Sncrilicc. Baldwin -Coru1 · Hanunond ·
\\'c nl•ed a rrw good cngir.c \\'rite Associated s 0 u th !===~~~==== I S h ccpdog Puppies, Chnm· I 7 I •1 ) 8 3 3- l 8 1;; (213! Kawai • J\:ln1ball • Lowrey ·
lnlhcs 111.•oplc for high quill!· Tb. k p t' $600 Coast Brokers, P. 0 . Box ----pionship background, Sl95 &: 113-5700. Rodgers -ThontaS -Yantaha
111 <1lrcrell \\'ork in our fine, in res ige 1595, Nc"'lXlL't Reach, Ca, * TEMPO * up. 496-5583 art 4 & wkends RUGS-Sm mixed l 3 x 1 3. • Wurlitzer Gulbransen •
C°Jenn shop. \\'1· ha1·e a la~c L.'irg£' in1 '] c o n (' c r n . Op-92663 SHEL TIE/KE[ ~ONO mix Green 1Jx14. Ova.I braided ~:en.
baC"k log or ordC!rs :is~uruig poi1uni1y ru work side by l =R~E=r=iN=ED~-,-, ,-m-,-,-. -rom--puppies, 8 1vk.~. $5 to good 9x11. Xlnt cond. rea.s. Optlgan ................ S1!iO
long l" "ni f'tnploynicnt. side 11· Ip c rs on n E.' I ad· p;inion-cook for ii·kcnds /or Needs You Now! hon1c. 5J5-104 '. 645-i267. Lowrey Spinet · ·• ·• ... S.195 Pl t' :i s 1• co 111 act 1\ I ,,,,.,, .• ,, ... lor ,., you h n v e \l'urti'"•r 5 .. •-1 -w .. ~ " " YOUI'"' int""a pacllatcd SI ,., * Ft' le Clerk$ PO:'llEP..AN !Ai"lS, AKC, male ll"icl<I" Q1to1· Ph. ''lg,.phs """ .... "" •.... •· ... :R lta·h:111t,;on. ~." •t·-1nr•··"' ,,,·11, & 2.3 ·"" ~ H·-·••0 •J A 100 ~ •.. , ..... '' " old \\'OtlWI. 673-3078 Bttl. J & S 10 mo's. Fen1alc 9mo's. n1ountcd or unn1ounled Sl5. ...., .. ' · ·•··•·• ....... YARD NEWPORT exix.'r. "'orklng in pcrsonnel. P . * Secretary r r * WIN FREE *
I t i!nin. T . 642~241 Call :i18-fi:?9:J. ORGAN LESSONS Herc is your c Ull\CC o Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I* yp1sts :r!2·1 l\', \\larncr i\\'e.
Si1nla Ann
56-TI54
1iccoml' inl'nlved "Al the RN 's * Accounts Clerks AFGHAN Large Surfboard FULLE TON MUSIC
Top" 1v/a ra p id I y e)(· * CCU'S . , \'our lime is valuable. Invest $50. fo good home, of/J\' e I I $20 R paneling co. it wisely w/high hourly tempered dog. GT;,-2351 638-868-1
1
18191 E.:uclld. Fountain VallC'y
rates. Cati Sandy, 540-4450. -BLACK l.AB Pups. Sell idle Items with a Daily 585
7
7
1"41
18
3
0
6S
Full p-tlmC'. ".'1·11 & 11·7 NE\'ER A IBE AT TE~lPO 6 wks old. AKC. Pilot Cl a.ssi!ied Ad. Ca1J I ·
rqu:il oppor ('lllployl'r 1\1/F
MACHINISTS
Produ<·lion or liht'cl' lal!H! Think Potential
•)\l!·n1l<>r. Pii n 111· !/lime.
$600 Excellent Benefits Tempo Temporary Help 673-6235 aft. 5 642-5678. 122 N. If.arbor, Fullerton
1i;;r or 2nd shif!. 5-'l{l-5206. You'll hav~ p I c n t y or Good 11'0rking l'Onditions ADORABLE E s kim o Pup-
COST A MESA TYPiST pt lime, flex. hrs .. pi es, AKC, Shots & \\'ormed.
Memurial Hos pital nice off., nr . airport. Box 979-9601
642-2734 EOE 4.l09. lrvint> 92664 --. =c=n=EA~T~D~AN=E~l30~-
Moil Cll·rk Tniinrc di\'er.;illc:l!ion in this job ...
G P C Tvping, filing, A/R, phones.
reat er ormance /;hie 10 \\'llrk indcJM'ndC!111lv.
~::;:::=:;::::::::::::::::=:::;=:;
1
Vau.ll CIC"l'k GOOD \\'ITH KIDS .--------Stash The Cash a.18-Q'l97 utter 6pn1
Fee Pn\d \VEIMARANEH.
Play an in1portant role h1 n"·· ol 111u\tl million $ U.S.
\'f'I)' flri'stii;:'<' co:-ll1rppy in· (irm. •
fl1v. sougl1t for f:1.~t n1ovin,::
~po!. Cnrcel' Op1><>r. Ca JI
~1 a r ion !IT11nn, 833.2700. • to $700 ~nnis & Dt•nnis Personnel Think Money
Ai::C!n<·y or Jr ,'itlC, 2082 F/C Bookkeeper do P&L's ~hl'helson Dt·. \\'/asr<ist1u1ce. Local lending
~li\LE \\':intPd lull or p/I. lnstilution. Gen'l accounting
Arply l\enlu<·ky 1', r i c d anu!ysls & bank rcron·
Chick('n, 2929 E. Coast H\\'Y, l'ilia lions. l\lortgagc ('XJ>Cr,
Crli\I lll'(.'CSS.
RN
i fed·Surg. unit 1J.?:30Al\1
shHt, f/llme. Xln't bcncritt1.
EOE. Contact ,_!rs. J ('nsen,
Costit itl'M M cnio ria !
Hospital, 301 Victoria, Cl\!
&12-273'1
RN-L VN-Aides
1\1GMT trnC' 21·30 $150 wk Beautiful hospllal \V h c rt'
gu11m st. College prC'd ~tr. good nursing care L~ top
l'tichanls. 71·1/84&-:il:la Think Career $750 p r iori t y. Xln't fringe
MASSEUR bcnelils. Various s h i ! rs. . . . :)n1all (irn1 seeks take ch:'lrge En1press Conv. Center, 1020
t/lnnc for n1cns ~P.1· i'>1u~t 111di1'. \\ho ca n interface '_I'erniinnl, Long Bch. Apply
hr hc'r.I. Apply Tu('s., Fri I\' I i m portant cllentelc & in JK'l'SOtl.
All!. run HK' offil'('. lnsur11 11cc Balboa Bay Club wn·k~toond prer'tl. Typinl! RN. fu•lit'f, \\'~kcnds, D,,._:t"S·
'l'l \\' c H N u I $10 per 1>hifr R$)'View r,,!'k. 1_ .. J . 011s1 "'')'.. .o. &:1• sh 90. Xln't r i n I' c Hosp. Cl\ot 642_3505,.,
/'.tf::CH,\NICAL 1-;ngir>C!l"r or benefit s. Congenh1l work al· 1 -~~==~~=--
J)r;1ftsn1an, n1alC' or fcn1alc, n1osphcrc. ROUTE SA LES
son1e CXl'JCl'IC!l\CC. $600/$800 \VUI Train, Salary, Comm.
pr.r 1nnnth to sta11. Call Bonus. Vehicle Furn. All
Paul Oniohundro, 546-6100 Think Personality $450 Exp. Pd. Estab. b~ & terril ory. l\fcd. cove1·agc, Medi~al Front. Ofc Bubbly f)C!rsonality & lronl P1'1!it Sha1~. Retire at 57.
J:f'crr:1 I" x p (' r . Hl book· of<' nppcaron('c !lrc needed No S1.r:kc, Layofrs 75 yrs.
krl'pin::, apfXl!ntmrnts S: for this Iron!. desk Tcc.cption 5'19-3110. Mr. Tucker, 7·9P/'.1
;::rn I nr<· t\'01•k. 644-J;722. sJJOL Expcr. is ni!cess. Posi· EquoJ Oppor. E1np!oyer nl/f
Responsible inrliv. needed by PUPS
lnt'I t'O. lo complete staff. 846·1471 Variely & advancement will
be yours in key position.
Call Lyrm r-.ta.rsch, 833-2'100.
Also Fee Jobs. Dennis &
Dennis Per.sonnel Agency of
Irvine, 2082 ~fichclson Dr.
WAITRESSES
Exper. Neat Appearance
21 Or Over
Ap ply SUrf & Sirloin
5930 \V. Coast Hwy .. NB
WAITRESSES
Dinner & Graveyard. Apply
in pe~n. Odie's Restaur
,,~_J4tl0 Pnl"ific C'.Mst Hwy.
NB.
"'ANTED, maJTied man 25
or over, must own truck
& be 11vail. on call. 54&-01(}4
Call aft Spm
\VAREHOUSEMAN for
i\ u tomolivc/Marine parts,
to work in fast-grow'g, bus:
i\fust be: c:«:p'd., gd. phone
p1.•rso1111li!y, Call lo r ln·
tervicw. 54[).i 063
Furniture
MATTRESSES , , ,
Bedroom Furniture
Queen, Full & Tv.in Sets
PRICED TO MOVE NO\V! !
ALSO 11 r:imous line of beau!.
King &: Queen BR furn. 10
be sacrilic:ed \\'ilhln next 4:-i
days.
64&-8686 & m-9625
BIG Old Brass Dbl BM\.
V ic to r ian Love seat,
~\r/Mrs chairs, a I mo s I new. Marble tab I es , pie·
tures. lamps, boudolr chalrs
& antique cuclroo c Io c k .
Come see at 2244 Po r I
Carlisle or call 644-5609.
For an ad in Woman's World
Call Peggy 642-5678, ext, 330
Graceful Princess
" I'. . 11'·· " ..
. " ... ~ \ : ". ...
Holiday-Glow!
11 (J u-:-;-1-::-1.:1-.1-:P!Nt:
~111•·r\l'-'•r. ::.1 l ~o 11111.
l\/Jlo~p 1':\f) 111'1' \1"11 Jloll'I
i\IUDI:;!.S · r. \LE/'."E:'llALE 1iun req's lite typing. Be Sulcs
('u~ring-cic11'us for fC!n!UrC! ri){hl 11p fron1 mc:eUng &
Amer ica n Ca reer n'"rir•n pil·turC!, no (' x 11 grccling VIP's. FACELIFT WINE MAN EXPER.
J UHGENSEN 'S
3431 Via Oporto, NB
FRENCH Prov., liClft wht.
9' couch, llke new. Grn.
Nnug. fold·a·bcd, r nd. bed .
Queen 111att/box spg., hnnr.I
made Chinese style klnS(sizc
hdbrd. Numcrou11 o I h c r
items. 543-4464
WANTED
t 11r11r 1•1n h1111 ... ,•J;p,·1w r. S:"1
(')l'lll\'!\lt' 1:r111•r ,l ll·•~pl1·ol
til :• 1·~•-ti:::i , .. ,, "'1
tt I) [I" 1-: J( ~.I· I'~ 1: Eni.:.
"IJ<.' 1k'~ IJ• •Ill l!ll'' f".
li\·1•.111 ,_,11 t .1.111 I,\,• \"
··nl!•h···11 h11! h:11·" •In:.: \:lnr.
-·•' ll\1•r 111 '!. '"' n11w1
.\f'1-. n•! s. n·1(d _1;~·1-:liiO_
I IOUi;f'.Kf.F.PEr. t,1Vf' 1n. 1
1lR1 \\~ nlf, f{1••j)\1l~!hlo•
.~11•11111 (ll·r ~on nnt ~.
1;Jl./illi.~ ln'<"..:1111'! Heh
'li on S1' KFJ>:1·1-:n-c1~ 1 l1u!.1' lot shul1'nl. l.111• h~•·wk 1
Ul I 'l:o"il'.;. l"r Ill' ,\· l~JU11!.
7,.;,~ .... 141; I , __ --
IHOIJ.<;KJo:EPI\(:. p1 I I 111 I''
<lutl••111.-! 11,. ~~.l~J rir. hr
?,(<.; (':il 1nll11. Apt (', C.\1.
·~;x.i~j()i
1 I ISKl'H~(.'11111111t111i~I~
\ l~11y 10 !11" 1n "' f'1'1'1k !"r 1 !ifi 1111• l'i:!l-1 11. 1;;;, 1 ~ !'.{:!
I INSPECTOR
I TRAINEE
Agency I nrc,,~~. ;1!1 lll:(l"S. G1}-20ll
f,1n 111·dv 1>:orr111•!1 1'111·: PRODUCTION CO.
SPECIALS Ne wport 8 9ach 640.8470 Nl '.!~n :l \\'Onicn ln11r1t•rl. to
Orange 547·1694 1lis1rihu!r Chr!slmas pro.
,h1r1 ~ ruH/p/L l\lr. L1:\·i sir. ... ;1 1.-~"J. Legal Secy
KEYPUNCH
OPERATOR
l'f1rr11•' ::-i11111. ~1or1.J;1~ 1hn1
~·r1d.1~
t:1tfl fi'll1 !t-1.~~':!0I .,,; ~'\ii
F11r ,\11 1\p1>11n11n•·n1
CLA-VAL CO.
1i1h & Pla<'t'nt111, r~t
E1pi.1l Op110r. ~;111111'•.'t'I'
LAB TECH
1•/1 11111.' 111 l.11·~· ped1 . .inc
,.!l'llllfl. Cl >-11\70. :'llri<. ,\1]';IO'!l
LEGAL 5ECV
PROBATE
-NEW FACTORY G e n 'I Office
Bl'an,•h outlets JU!! 01>enlng
111 a1.,·a nel'!i1i the lollflwln~: F /C Bkkpr
\L:n11 Tr111· SISJ "'k
·"•'l'\r111•n 111 $.1 hr Rectpt/T y pist
&1lcs111cn Open
Pn •f o\·r :!~•. n1nrrted. car. Gen'I Office
All bctl('fils, car~r positions.
I 494-1065
~F.\\' Spu npenin~ Hun·
I r1n;:to11 1: •· 11 ,. h . alll'aC!l\'t'
t:U"!~ nt'L•d1·1I for n1:i ilo§l.•t1!\C
,\· 1· r t'!' JI !11)n1q 110,llinns.
l·::-.pt•1'. 11 1! Ill'(''~~. \'¥11111·11 111
Duy & ni .:h1 op('nin~~. cult
lor 1011•1'1 1<·11. !Jli0...1Ji7 &
~13G-t~i:.\.I bet 9 .'.: J _____ ..........
NCHS\N\~
. AA~IES
Burt:au Of
Call Today
556-1100 \'li•lt:1\•' ~·Jo.tx•r \r'1 !I . I (~\r\ I
11f1 1:1ot:•I 1.1 p111:.,: .\. ~ 11
SUPERVISOR
ICU-CCU ~ :ro .•I Iv!·~. Ah,.1 1H1rkin"e: 2706 Harbor Bl.
WITHOUT SURGERY Call for Info 673-1442 !.:.
COST UNDER BE1\UTY SA· -\VHO WANTS 'Y'O WORK?
Lo\'cseat/soln
in good condiUon.
\\Till pay to $100.
• 492-87&1 alt 6 pm '*-LON f'AC!Al.. I DRIVE A CAB!
$700 f'l)r Oen1onstrution nn · or CllOOSJ>: ycur hours, work
lnfurn1a lion call: for you;,ieU, be your 011•n FURN ITURE, tbl. dc$k, gun
cab., lamps, Teak·din. 1bl.
I:. chrs .. blue sola, end tbl .,
coffee lb! .. armchr. 833-0818
COUClf & Love SI. Nr
new. Green &: Gold. $1'.!j.
tiTa-1041 a.lier 6.
$500 ORIFLAME INTER'L. boss. ~:en or "·omen. can
I 111 ftt>-l •IOll be shghtl y handlcappe<!
$800 21:1 ~;ryi .. 1~ Neu l · Clean Appearance.
Vis , retired. Age 25 to i O. $545 Nole~ /'.lark('ling Sec'y
A Pearl In An Oyster
$550 fl'C Pnld
Exe l uslvc op p o r . !or
t' s pec1nlly 1olcnteft poised
lndiv. in k"Y position or
exclusi ve nu1.nuf. co. Call
Barbara ~1nc, 8.1.1-2700, Al.'JO
t'ec Jobs. Ocnn\11 & Denni!!
Person11C'I AgenL"y ol ll'vine,
20~2 l\lichcl~n Dr.
SALES
ESTIMATOR
TR AI NEE
for f'On ll·&ct'g. !irm. B~1s ..
1\IRlh .. r:: n g · g . bkground.
For ftpp>lntmcnt t•nll :
TI4-S35-9161
Sales
Suprilen1(!~f your inrome.
Drive u r'ib 6 hrs or more a
day. Apply in i;,eraon,
Yt-!low CAb r o., 18S E. 16th
St., C<>t1la ~T~n .
I~
Antfque1 8005
CONTE~1PORY BR. Couch
xlnt cond. S85. BR. Chair
S25 3 lamps 13 ca. 557-8794.
BOX Springs& M a tt r es a
v>'iU1 headboard, Ilk~ nc\\',
cheap, 548-5689 or !mH)-165
* SOFA & Lovescnt • \.'Cry
gd quol,. C!tnl n1t1dc, ncv('r
uSl'd, u11unlly hm. 968-7!.llO
9495
10YJ .22 Vi
"" 1Tf ,...; ,_ 11T .... i'-
Your oll'n mll'l'Qr wllt fl'll ~IOVlNG:contemporal'Y dlri, y11u 110" 111tr11c111·.e. you lonk EAll LY .100'.ls c h C S t of BR & hrkflll set a lnJOSI 11cw In lllt~ 11rnt:l'hilly fh1 rt'll dN"na,
dr.1wers, cheJJ')' & I u I l.P 4!).l,.225J .aft. .2: oo :i.111 !t 1111 "Ith or ...-tthou•
\\:rod, china knobs, $45 or ~"°'""'c='-.°=.,---,-,=.,,.I no1t~r ··rnl1r•1111,.rr. be~t off. Sl7-&:178 GOLD HcrcuJo,1 oouch 7'~ II. !'rr 111r d 1'~1u .. rn ll •tr. ~75. 8 U. &r .Forn1lc11 11111r ~1 .... 10%:. 1:•f, 14\,. B E AU T . & Ulltl ~tJ(l l NSU.11:ab)'dc. $75. 839-1716 Hl'~.1 ~•,.211w..2:1,i,l'll~ .. 1•i,
handcarvOO :u1tlq_. CIU'OtJfl'el H 8060 \bu~• :l~) 21, )'tit. 5~·. 'rl'lln~.
horse. Call 673-t:nl C\letl, orstt St!nd Sl.00 ror e•cll pattern.
A fl 8010 o\dd 2" Cl'nts fOf" eath P•tltrtl • u!1't .... s.~t(l I
SECY /R E C E PT.
,\1·1·11r .. tl' !.•11111~. t:,•n'I 1•fc
PP ances Q U ARTEIU10 RS E GuldlllM' lor nl'll-«:la~j mail and 1pcci1l
f"REIGlfT 0AMAC£ SAl..E w/OVcr 1000 hn ot trllinlng. ll•ndlln ~; alllt1rw11e third· Sulit 'J:07 Costa Mesi JUDY'S .. 111111.) \\ill tnun for ud· f),\\'S. 1'1J1..L-Tli\JI::
\11nn·n1r111 $.'JM .\l~N l B l: N 1:: PIT PRO.
R ECEPTIONIST LiHA.\I 600 No. Euclid Has po11!Uorw avallAble for
par! & full time &ales pro-
New Hotpolnt "-~-,,,_ Bc11uL nnlm;:ll for only S400. ~l•u dt1livt'ry ... 111 111i:e thrte """ ... 11>"''" v•" T k al to we<'kl or more. Se1'd lG Mi ri an Wtihers, Dryers, 0 I g h ~ a.c "° · r sale. Ke_pl M•M ln, 442. 11\e Dally Piiot,
washert, New \\'ArTa.Dfy. 81 Irvine Equc!trlan ctr. P.Uj'm Dept .. 232 Wtsl J!lth
ln1n1t'tl npt•nntt:: lrl <; ni:i l I
rtftl ts irt11 /IN'htin. IJ •' ' l r •'
II.!'\ R'J'ilrf l'l·/l<iral• uwlu~1rl.1I
l""'Pl·r l'n fll.U(f 111+'(1ir-nl k
\1fl' 111-;11rt11nt"". 111 o d c r 11
u/Cflnd facility.
r 1111 1 hl'f't'I""· pf'\'11n:: A/T' S.\\.AR Y NEf'..f).
F'1Y1111 nfc !i.pf>1·ur f',n....J op-PERSONNEL DEPT. Anahe im Call 776-8120
()l)l·lwtU~· SIT~ 1 HOAG MEMORIAL
Credi\, &L\, 3623 W 6~\.-58&7. 51. .. N1w Vork. N,V 10011.
'VA.l'l'Wr Sa.nlA An .. near Jewelry I070 PHntNAME.ADDRESS.ZIP. llll.rbor, 91§..2921 .., "IZE and STVLP. NUMBER.
~·· Appl;<' SO. COAST PLAZA
NEWPORT I HOSPITAL
PertOflntl Agency 3't1 Newport Blvd 2 City Blvd. E. No 103 DUN~AN I Ne wpor t Btach 642.Jl70 ' Nowport BHch Ocange 634-1222
Electronics, Inc. f !!-~~""':~~~~~!
1rv1ew • .n'l .. .1 .~1 .~! , l PF.El~l!iC~S e.od bOU In 2866 Fa . . Rd A OAS OF PETRtJl.F.U'1 I S.\VE THO$£ A pp L E
C '
MeSa lhrt'lll'!~ Of flniz~m.iil pnl]Jl;h 11h1mh111r11 p11n11 ~ntl po!.•. os a · aoo glut' 00111cc 11·111 kf'Ct> I n.~y 1v111 brt1th1en 1hc
l~quaJ ~·. t:mrloy...r m/I I 1he llrls lrnn1 "tlcklrur. 1'r)' I tnfllal to a "li!tc--04•w"
11 Dall.)' l'Jlot Cla,.,,ifJcJ Ad •'lnKllunn lll1ve 1111ythl~ IG
Cll~1•tl1cd h Qall 642.J.fi71 I lti buy, !l('ll tJf 'r ~· n l lfcll~ Uac a Dally P\101
100a)? Jillmt>!hing:. 1 Cl/\f,lflM Art, Call 6<1Z.M7!1. -· __ ,, __ _
l
SAl...ESCLERK, lltb!Ul'C, for
dNQ 11!or'(>, Juli lime, Call
4Jl!M201
Sii VE SPACE W H E N
MOVING by 'ft'ra pp t n 11
dishes e.nd other fragtlt'
l\t'1ns in waah cloths. lOW1!ls
Md other llnrns. yo1.. ~I
moni 'Pllct In the an
find CIO!lt•l~ by aelll"K
ltema with 11. D
Oassllled Ad. """'' -
\
GAITi-:ns & Slttt1tor btlin WANTED :ir~~~!,,~~~~1;:~
dlt1hwt. :hf'r, lffu'\~st Gold, TOP CASI! OOUJ\/l PAID lern h11lde NEW $PRIN G·
1 yr old St OO. Kenmort 00. FOR YOUR J SU MMER PAT TERN
Olll GM ~t'r H!I:, Kenmon! E\VFJ.RY, CATALOG. I001tyle1,1ll1bt1, ~·~ \VATQ{F.S, ART O'!JECl'S. Model 70 1u11her S&S. Cuu COLD, stLVElt SERVICE, ~ p111tern roupon. Stftd 1.SC k del, S.l&-8672 f1 NF' FURN & U\ ,iQUES. now. Sf:W + KNIT 8oo111 with
".E. v•n ·.-·rnoNIC R••·•·· ba~t~ti11r.uep•Utn1 ...... s1.u v '"-,.,,, 61:>2200 lnsl1>r l t'18hlonllook ••• ,JIOO
2 .Y~ old. 2 ovttll, xln1 I "'t~n~.rw.n"". ~.-=8-,-.~1~,-,0o=m~l-•l\O-. I lnst1n1 ~ .... 1n1 6cri •• , .ti oo
l\.nd. 5l8-2J11 Shndow boJC, mo! ·hcd tel,
1''REE P?CKUP-Rel's Squ11ah, RlnJ, Ellrrll\ltll lt
Ap pl's j, Scrap Metal Sraee1et. Pvt pty. S 2 O O O,
1111 ru1,Ytlm<'. 61>0258
~1Ji1d, 11a1t.111y cn.1tru11 ... ·1u1
1111~ ~IRmorou~ IOlo.
r.~>i'r 11Jo-..1n.:. '""Y. n1rf!1••I
1111• ""'f' 11 ~11111 or<l1t·~~.1:on1·
hh1" w;ulol or all1'o•!' Y"l'r1 1•h11
"0"M\"d (01• Quick. cl\a)·C1~~
1·ti,•t rn~h. l'allern ;:;o: 11be11
~ I~ !owl.
1S CENTS for e•i:h p111terft .
Add ~ tcnls for e•ch p11llern
for nr11-e111s1 m•U and •pe1:l1 1
handling: other wise lhlrd·
cb1AA tlt livery will 11ke thr~
Wttks or more. Send '9 Allee
Brooks. !OS, the Dilly Pilot,
Nerd1ecr1n. llept..., Box ll!IJOld
C:htlMI 8'1tlon, New vorlt ,
N.Y. 10011. Pr1nl Nam e, Ad-drtu, 7.ip. Pitt~ Number.
Nt wl 150 moil popular
dbl«nt In~ 1174 Nffdlecr1n.
C:at1\ng• 11\l "r1n.11 Tl11\EE
Jo'reede1liin1 lruide ..... ,,. lk New • Sew .. ~alt 8ol>ti: -his
S.skTtasueP1ttm1 .... ti.is
NP! Needlepalnl Boe* .. t l.OO
Nf:w' lt'lo~r CrochttBll Sl.00 Hairpin Crothet Boot.,,. t1 .oo
lfllltant Crochet Root .... tLOO
l111t1n1 r.11cr1rneBk .... SI oo ln.stan1 Monty Book •••• tl.00
Qmll'tfet•Glf\ 8ook .••••• $\ 06
Cornplt lf A(lh•N llJ , .$1.00
UPri~Aflhtns •t2 .... ,.SOc
nooa:or16Qullu•1 ....... ,*
MUSC'\lm Quilt Book 12 . , , .~
t$Q\rt11srorToda111 •.••.• 50t
Uoo11t:or1&JUr1 R.i.ra ...... JOt
MOnd'Y. Octot>tr 21. 1974 DAILV PILOT B ~I
Pia&t1 & Organs 1090 Boats. Power 9040 C•mpers, s.1.7 Vans fS70 I BMW 9712 J •guar i130 MG 9742 Volvo 9n'J. Chevro •• -I
FREE 23' UNIFL ITE _R:.;":;":.;1 _____ 9:..:1c:2~0I e 'Tl Dc:w'-.c Traf' ian \00 ======== 173 XKE 'G:i A1G completely o\'crhaul 71 VOLVO 1 OR. '70 ?o10NTI-: Oirlo, k>ftdt:'ll, I
Adult Organ Classes 1''1y llrld{;I', Cfit111 \\'ulnut intr. '£,6 Chevy l'wnom Plek up Vim wilh 1.'Ulltom Surfer AUTll DlAlll u111 2 2 ed. new palnl A l'll'w uphols, !7290.JNl ni.•v.• 111crl RacHal.5. Lu w
Now .fl.C'Ct'pting 1'e!ltrv11t1'JM. Bo\Jghl tl('W f.!3.r:il ~fUil wllh Lak~"' ~rt' Pup-top 11petli1l Interior, air (,'()ntl, BAVARIAN + $1000 orbeltolr,61~196 71VOLVO4 DR. milc1n1c. low book s11 ::i o .
1''01• irlfornl'ldon pie l.\C CHll Sell t1!eklng $ll.nl. Ca J I Ca1nper, ln<:hJdeS let-bo1(, wldt> ovals, ~ \l.•heelM1 I A\llOn1aH...-, Rtl.'ltO, rhrom<' Op.I 9746 f214DJS• ~:?'206'--------1
96l-6'l33 In Founlaln Valley. 22' R~""TORED Mercury lwnt('r, 11nk, lreM "'Dl('r "'il.h Wint 6 t'OJ:lne, "'l.red 0 -,, 1orlor, 11..Qv.' milcJi • 83:.lll '73 Opel GT $2995 LOl:ldxl.. Very aoo<.I L'Otld.
Our lnstroctor ~1111 Uutl Classic rn'in screw inboard. holrllna lank. 1lee111 4. Call Jor tOund, $3195" <88UJ) T CALL OR COME IN $2500. Salettrude. 4~
6'12·28M In OMla ~1e1m, nr 0&1&-1;,::..:':;;"'"·------;! bu.tTit·r 11toV\•, O\'lln, SHARI,! Cus savln~ 3 spo M & i "lrt' "·h~<tl11. red "'/tan In· __;________ YOUR CHOICE '12 KINGS\\'OOD v.·a gon .
only thOle ~n::ly lnter~•t· Bimini' top, full covers'. ~940 or~ • Robustt>lll Moto" 4 • D TO SEE US 4 ipeed, l2,m mUei. 513-7250 '69 U.IPAl...A CUJoii'0?.1 2 clr
_ ed ln leam!!Ja t~ the. ~--$4550. 8!....GAB e l'I.~ 18641 Dt'acb Hunt Bcb R $3495 \'!--auro rrn.1,-: PIS;--1 .. 18.
'lrrp.n &:fiiUid lake Advllfl. 64.5-0792 or 646-4131 bed, t~ver-~~ov"'r,i; S.lS-l . CALL OR COME IN 'ii VOLVO I4~E \\'ago11 4 Burke1 •·111s 4!H-2-l90
"'
t-ae ' this free offer. 1971 SKIPJACK box, nice $500. 645-.7335 73.Dod&'.e Van. l'llpeed •Utk, Now In Stock TO SEE US ~kr~!i~~c~ "1=:,~::e~ 1-'""'"'--""::!.:""'°"'"----I Coast Music Servi • v.1th hlih catnper top, new ., c 1· 1 I 9930 NEWPORT
IMPORTS ce 20' Oj>t'n Loaded, 16 5 H P 8 Camper, sleePf I w o. 2 cone brown paint J 0 b, • '74 3.0 ( 6. 3.0 CSA 831-2040 dlr. on 1nen • KN A 8 E UP IR, 18 8 2 , fl.Jere C'nli.ler, 110, L ike Storage cablnctl, lee box. empt;y bn.ck. RUN & looks c 2002-2002A &c m Tl!
handearvi!d Role'<llood, f!X· new, $5900, 642-9'l59 $200. 873-3658 .irod. $3000. 499-lT;il • '14 BAVAr.IAS" Speed
eel. cond., o.llD upfr player DIVORCED, must scJI, new l97-I DODGE VAN 2000 nll • '74 BAVARii\8 Auto.
piano. 960-115:>. 30' custom diesel Trowler, Motorcycle•/ "~II/VI .. ,. 1 u ' ' • '74. 3.0 S & SA's SI ' S 9150 .,...,.,.,. or r.:;,s5-4o520er. -XI.NT LE' 0 E "' "'S -PRIVATE PARTY \VA.'ITS • ps ~. flybrldge, pvt pty, cooter1 .,.. ""' ~-..,.,,
TO BUY PIANO FOR $19,500. Anne 645-a759 •73 DODGE Surfer Va n , &
CASH * 547-94~:'! * Auto. swivel 11eats, lee box, EXCELLENT SERVICE
Boats, Sall 9060 -& bed 831 'lt'c1n rllr •
2 NEW flberglau Surboords. $75 or be~t. 552-7097 or
96>-5905.
Store, Rest., Bar 8095
KNOCK OUT SMOG
KnOCK nox
Tht ntw ••ices will decrHH pre•ioMsly
~ MOX em.issiont. Stott low recpal~s
1966-70 yftic!.1 to install OM. Wt can now
llwt doing ~ to mallt Califonlia's oir
dtcolagaln! •
IF YOUR LICENSE
PLATE ENDS WITH -IMST ALLATIOM MUST BE
HO LATER THAN
4 -15" x 8" BLACK Jeep
Wheels; flt Bronco &: Scou1
• also, $35. 89J..64001-EVEN·
INGS.
'66 OIEV'LL Body v.·/posl
rtlU' end, mags, $12S bst
otr. 968-3737 aft 7pm. ' ,,.-.,--"---~tif!ua• & Cl•sslc 95_20
1941 PLYMOUTH CPE
6 cyl. suck. New engine &
clutch $450. 586-5950
-.yru · 5 year· rio,ooo mile \Varranty Autos Want9d 9590
Berlina
(demo)
Priced to Sell
$4952
(#2014.)
-.
5::1
Fiat · 9725
3100 \V, Coa!lt 1-hvy., N.B.
642-9405
280 COUPE
(Ser. No. 3201). Dk. red,
s~e1-eo, po1\•er 1vindows. 36
mo. open end lease al
$174.75, plus ta'\:.
Jim Slemons
lmportS
1301 Quail
NeWp:in Beach
833-8300
ENTER FROM l'ttacARTHUR
OVER
35 USED
MERCEDES
ON DISPLAY
House of Imports
523-7250
NEWPORT
IMPORTS
Autos, New 9800
3100 W. Coa1t llu:y., N.B. NE\\' CAR SHO\V
641-9405 Free In Hu111in1tton Center's ---.11,...:.0;.:P:._EL:._:::.IJI00=--1 r-.tall. Bea<·h Blvd & Jo:rl lni,:el'
Gd. conrl., lo n1l., at the San Diego t\\'y Thru
&16-1186 f\lo1ld.rey
Porsche 9750 AUTOS USED
BMW
TRADE-IN
'74 MK IV
Only 1.700 f\111es New!
Full po.,..·er, full f11 c t or y
cqulpn1t'nt with every l~•••·
cci \•ttblc extra <'X''lJ •I
i;unrool! Prlc«I jO s l' I I '
tdlr.l
831-1040
'73 914 1.7 Buick 9910 Oodg"-•-----99'-'3_51 Sil\'. blue ml'!'lc .. brand new . . paint job, Appr. group, '73 BUICK E}tttra Llnutcd,
Alt11Frll tape, terrific cond. loaded~ S36 '·
$5,:?00. 675--0469 Sl2·i:i60
L:NBELJE\'ABU; '00 Do<i}:e
t.!Onu\'O Ne"' rad. 1 i r r ~ •
PIB. P/S, "1r, xh. n1~·rh,
r'l'lrwL 67~29'.ll •
Ford
ATLAS
?ontiac
'69 F'IREBIRD, H./H,
PIS, PfB, $950 .
• 5.16-7649 •
9940
9965
i\/C,
T!lrarh J1t11p1111~; Chevrolet 9920 1---------Thunderbird 9970
ti •JIJ' W<"»l .. ,,..,., n ,,,..,,.,, .... , ,..,~ t41..t>
'74 Chevy Blazer Cheyenne,
ll,000 mi, fully equipped,
.. $5,000 firm. 834-2081. days Directly across tn:>m the or 963-1424 eves &"'knds Bal'..oa Bay Club" .
Sales • Service '56 OtEVY 283 eng., auto,
64>6406 ne1\' brakes. smog device
4 dr, S295 or oUer, 898-3675
Toyota 9765 FOR COMPLETE REPAIR
-'--------1 Work on Corvair & Corvair
WE ARE
No. 2
In Orangf' County.
But Only
YOU
Can Maka Us
Buggies, Call 5J&-O.W4
'57 CHEV. 2 dr. 6 cyl. Stick.
Needs some v.·ork $ 1:? 5 .
83>-8693
'67 P.!ALIBU, P S, P/B.
air, Runs good. $500.
673-9358
'$ T-BIRD
Near perfect body. Cni,gcr.;,
port hole to 81,IXXI original
miles. \Vhite v.ilh nice blaC'k
interior S2500. will consider
trade, 549-1600.
Voge 9974
1973 VEGA \\'AGON. GT.
Rally whee ls, 2 door \
Al\ffRailio, 2lXXI miles cu~
1'0~1 inlerior ( B LA CK )
832--0371 AFT. 6 PP.t.
•n VEGA, mags. rebu i lt
engine, .shag. $1060.
&12-4002 No. 1 Datsun 9nO Datsun
Sec us Firs1 or Last and we'll
try harder for your best
deal.
~mlemi&
-TOYOTA
1966 1-farbor, c.r..t. MERCEDES '67 TOYOTA Corona 4 cyl,
'73 450 SL, yellow wftan Int., 3 speed $399 (29103) dlr.
stereo cass. tape dk., rully c•~IS-#~~"~------1
loaded, 30.0CIO ml. $11,500. '69 CORONA 4 dr, manual,
979-3815 a.ft. 10A1'1 grl. cond., R/ll, l.Jl $795 HEW 1974 B-210
s2579 '68 280S MERCEDES lakes. M8-ll64
F\tll power & factory alr,
new t i r e s , excellent con-
dition. Complete s e r v I c e
rerords e_vailt ble. $ 3 7 5 D.
96S-9:!86 Eves.
PilERCEDES &nz 4 dr Sed.
lS';'~. PeI1. cond. 18 mo's
new CIU' .,...a r ran t y re-
maining. $9500. 644-0768.
'67 r..mz ~ Auto. PIS, P/B
Triumph 9767 MO DOWH PTMT.
100% Fin. OAC
* FREE AM RADIO WITH TIU~ •n *
OCTOBER 31, 1974
Rte Vehicles 9530
i!h\tdt ]h11p1111;;
i •!o tX:.1 I'/ ( ''•l>I l'V'Way T'· •i. ... , •• , B<> 1(1> •'4~ &406
Honda 9727 &: Xlnt. COnd. 831-2040 dlr.
I:..:.::::::.-----= '67 ~mz 250 SL . Both tops,
HEW 1974 610 or 710
STATION WAGONS
Sadcleback Volley Imports
28402 Marqutrlte Partcwoy, Missio11 Viejo
495.4949 831·2040 -Harbaur Volkswa91n
18711 ltach ll•d.
H...tlOCJlo• ltaeh-4142·4435 -Hause of lmporh
6862 Manchtsltr llvd.
1 .... Pario-523-7250 -Beach Imports
1000 W. Coast Hwy.
Htwporl ltaei>-445-6406
Mission Viejo lrnporh
2170 I M...,_n. Priway, Mission Viejo
495-1700 131-1740
Crevier Motors
201 W. hlStn.f
SanlaA-35-3171
Johnson & Son Lincoln Mercury
2626 Harbor llvd.
Cosio Me,_S40.56JO
Connell Ci..vroltl
21Z8 Harllor llvd.
Costa Meso--546-1 200 -Universltv Oldsmabllt
2150 Hcrbor ll•d.
Cosio Mt,_540.9640
Victory Dod99
2111 Hcrbor llvd.
Costa Mt-556·4620 -Sonta Ana Uncoln Mercury
130 I Ho. TW1tln
SCMla •-i47·0SI l
SunHI Ford
5440 Gordeft Gro•• ll•d.
WHlmmi""-'36-40 l p
... -··-·· ' CHINOOK·TOYOTAS round "DilC?CUy acMss '· ,.,, the
tripper now on . dlsplay .. , Balboa Bay Club"
Ready for vacalion trips ..• Sales e Service Buy now! •. , Jn1pect and '45-6406 drive out ... Reduced to1 ___ -=..:::...:.::.;:_ __
$5499 at Bill Maxey Toyota. Audi 9707 18881 Beach Blvd .• Hunllng· ______ _.;._..
fbn Beach. 847-~. •· '73 AUDI lOOLS
4 Whffl Drives 9550 4 Door (3571-lHN) 523-7250
Auto., po\\·er s t e e r in g .
po.,..·cr brakes, & lo miles.
831-2040 dlr.
'TI 250C Full factory equip-
ped, $4500 For quick Sale!
wkdays 83.\.8300
'Ul MERCEDES BENZ 220S,
6 cyl., 4 spd., .sunroof, well
kepi , $900. 546-4922
9742
'70V\V Squarcback, new eng,
& tlreii. Automa tic, air rond
radio. Xlnt rond. $1700. or
best ofJC'r. •199-1939.
'66 VW. Good Shepe
$900 Call 968-1413
·ss BUS, R c b I t . eng ..
AM/F'hl tape, Xlnt cond.,
$1450 or bes! offer 847-4235
1968 V\Y, 4 ~pd .. R/H. wry
gd. co11d., rec"nt l'ng, \\Tk.
$S50. 557.549-1
'71 V\V BUG
$1600. 40,000 mllcs
Call aft. 5, 673-7'!89
'66 V\V, SUNROOF, rcblt.
eng., new tirt'~, rlenlecl.
r>-1S'4!559
'69 BUG, Clean, ll('w, tire1,
lo rnl, ~t('fCO. $1050. Pvt
ply. 968·914-1 aft 5.
Vol vo
WE ARE
No. 2
Jn Ort•nl(c Count ... .,
But Only
YOU
Ca n Make Us
No. 1
SC'r u~ J-~1 .... 1 or l..a~I nM 1\'t''ll
try harrlrr for ;,-our bcost
de1t1.
flw.Ltwi&
VOLVO
HO DOWH PYMT.
100% Fin. oac
* FREE AM RADIO WITH THIS AD *
HEW 1974 PICKUP
52885
MO DOWM PYMT.
100% Ftn. OAC
* FREE AM RADIO WITII TillS AD *
HEW 1974 710 2·Dr.
52899
HO DOWH PTMT.
100% Fin. OAC
* FREE AM RADIO WITII TillS AD *
LEASE
SPECIAL
260Z -'128 + lax
610 • '85 + lox
8210 • '68 + lox
Pickup • ·•74 + tox
HUGI SlllCTIOH ctf HIW I USID
2•0 t ·. -•• c.._ • "-"cffeft htl..,.,
All C1rs + Tax & Lie Del & HnOlg ,
' • • ---· . --·'
(
'
BJO OAJLYP1LOT Monday. October 21 , 11l74 -
'
__..___~ ·-----.. -
'
---------------------·•I ----·
•
----
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• -
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a
da
I or
Co or
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.Lag~na/Souih Coast
EDITION
Today's Finni
N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 67, NO .. 294, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MON DAY, OCTOBER 21, 1974 TEN CENTS
• 'Innocent' Priso·ner Will Have Day Ill Court
Dy ARTIIUR R. VINSEL
Of Ill• D.ilt l"Uol Sl1lf
James Ray Russell will be taken lo
a Los Angeles County courtroom Tues-
day but the •ordeal is not over for
the former Laguna Hills-man accu~
of a murder he may not have committed:
He has been held in IAs Angeles
County Central Jaji for 743 days as
()f today.
He has been held since Oct, 8, 1972,
without bail, without arraignment and
LUesaur
James 'Tito' Olivares of Sa n
Juan Capistrano was awarded
$50 and plaque by the city !or
saving at least two lives when
he put out early morning fire
while on duty as a street·
sweeper. He noticed smoke
from second-story apartment,
dashed upstairs and put out
blaze in a mattress where two
people were sleeping.
Trustees Hear
Plans for Reeves, ·
Ranl·h Tonight
Development plans for the spra""•ling
Reeves Ranch of San Clemente will
be presented to Capist rano U n i r i e d
School District trustees tonight.
Tbe meeting wUI begin at 7:30 in
Serra School in Capistrano Beach."
Representatives cf the c om p a n y
developing the ranch have asked to make
a 1$.minule presentation on t he i r
development schedule. School district of-
ficials hope to acquire elementary school
sites within the master·planned area.
Other items on the agenda include:
-A report on an "altematiVe high
school," a pilot project whereby students
might attend school in different loca-
tions.
-A teacher protest of a recent board
act. which in essence reprimande d
department heads who participate in
strikes.
-Consideration or a change in junior
high schedules to reOecl a change back
to standord time.
PIGSKIN PICKERS
VIE FOR TV SET
The sitth ~eek ol Pigskin Pickeroo
~• c:ompetitJon for pri1.eS including •
color television set begins today.
Each week, Daily Pilot renders are
invited to predict the outcomes of 30
weekend football games.
Winnen are awardtd Zen.Ith television
and radio products worth $130 following
each week's judaing. F\Jrthcr, nm place
weekly WiMen:. are ellglble to compete
for the eolor televts\on g~nd pr;\ie. ••
Plplclo, Pl<l....O ;, • rtgtijar real\lre
of UlO ·Doily Pilot sp0rts peg<s. ABC
Color Television' of Huntington Beach
and Zenith Jn<. arc ~ the
contest.
. ~
without any definitive re.suits of more
than a dozen hc.irings of various kinds
involving extradltion to Oklahoma, to
fare trial for a killing tha~ occurred
on a Saw,day ,night when evidence in-
dicates be was in California,
He bas been cleared of implicaf.ion
once already by Orange· County Superior
Court J'udge \Vllliam ?.1urray, who is
aghast at what has happened in the
more than two years since.
"I never done any killing ... ," Russell
•
aid in a jail interview Friday.
Russell, 27. is an ex-convict who did
four years at McAlester. Okla ., tor a
burglary committed at the age of 19
and now the state of Oklahoma wants
him back.
The California Supreme Court h a s
recently ruled that be should remain
behind bars without bail, pending resolu-
tion of a web of technica1 legal en-
tanglements involving superior and ap-
pellate courts in Los Angeles and Orange
1cer
Two Laguti(I lncidetits
El Toro Artist
Held • Ill
El Toro silk screen artist Steven J.
\Villett-is bel'ng held by Laguna Beach
police today on charges of assault with
intent to commit rape after he allegedly
attacked a woman nnd then a 1>year-0ld
girl in the Art Colony.
Laguna police said the mother of the
teenager actually led them to Willett
when she ran into him,;.by chance while
shopping. The mother claimed he p u 11 e d
alongside her car. said "wow" and then
drove off, according to detective Gene
Brooks.
Willett, 22, or 14902 Branch Ave .. El
Toro, described himself as a s e I f -
employed silk screen artist. He was
arrested Saturday and is held on $10,000
bail.
The teenaged girl was b e I n g in-
terviewed about her Friday ordeal. Her
mother left the station to do some
shopping when she was spotted by a
leering man in another car.
Assaults .
As she neared a residence, the man
barred her path and g'rabbed her. He
fled after she began screaming.
Det. Broob said that as he interviewed
the woman Saturday in bis office, the
15-year-0ld's mother was present, and
heard the description of the atµcker.
Brooks also worked with an "Identikit"
which is used to create 11.a artist·like
sketch of suspects.
Willett was arrested after .an .it ~inti
bulletin was broadcast to the~guM.
Beach Patrol forte after the mother's
license plate information and description
ol the auto allegedly matched up.
2 Men Held
coWlties.
Justices said he did not have a full
and co1nplete hearing in Los Angeles
Coonty Superior Oiurt folloY(ing his re-
arrest there. despite being arrested and
cleared earlier in Orange CoWlty.
One basis of that clearance by Judge
~turray was the result of a polygraph
test indicating Russell 1old the trulh
~?out being at the Long Beach Nu:Pike
amusement park with his wife Karen
and friends the night of the .murder
1,000 miles a\1ay
\\litncs~s "'ill bl' called ond affidavi1s
presented Tuc.~da.\' to th<1t elfect hut
Oklahon1a au1 tioritic.~ who filed th e
telctyped fu gillvc 11nrrant say they arc
having troubll.' rou11di1:g Up prosecution
vritnesses.
One is anticipalOO 10 be Russell"s ex·
°"'ifC, a Fort Smith, Ark .. hairdresser
.,..,ho signed an affida vi t that she sa .... ·
her former husband that fateful night
and talked .,..·ith him. ,\llomey H.oger
0
DlllY PolOI Stiff Pllo .. Sbe wrote down his license p-l a t e
numbe r. Police allege it matched the
licenses of a car involved in previous
cases and they traced the auto to the
suspect.
lr1 J(idnap ,
Rape Attempt
An alleged attempted kidnap and rape
in Laguna Beach was broken up Saturday
by a Laguna Beach police lieutenant
who arrested two Los Angeles men.
JAY PANNELL, JULIE FLINT COMPARE f'jOTES ON ANIMALS
They Study Iguana and Guinea Pig in Thurston School Program
Det. Brooks said the first assault oc-
curred Friday night as the 15-year-0ld
girl was walking along Coast 1-lighway.
He said she told him the attacker
drove past her, stopped his car, got
out and began following her. lie began
talking with her and she became nervous
when the questions turned to personal
subjects.
The young girl frantically began look-
ing for an open storer or restaurant.
and when lDl able to see one, turned
up Myrtle Street, a residential street.
When the man asked her where she
lived, she pointed to .~ lighted house
and began rul)lling towa rd iL
Tbe man then grabbed the young girl
BJ she tried to nee . Her screams alerted
nearby residents who burst from their
doors Baj came to her aid. One man
chased the attacker, but lost h.im.
A half hour later, a 30-year old woman
was assaulted as she walked to her
central Lagana apartment.
The woman told officers she w a s
followed by the attacker who d r o v e
behind her in his car. He asked her
if she wanted a. ride, and when em-
phatically told "no," left the vehicle
and began trailing her.
Charles W. Roberts, 32, and Franklin
R. lttaltman, 27. were booked for alleged
attempted kidnap and assault with intent
to commit ;~. The!' were released.
on $25.000 each bail bond.
A 20-year-0ld woman was punched in
the face and a man attempted to pull
her into a vehicle in the incident al
aboul I :50 a.m. Saturday in the 12000
block or South Coast Highway .
Lt. Neil Purcell reported that he was
driving In a police unit southbound on
the highway when he passed a car
which slowed down and waited for him
lo pass.
Purcell swung a li·turn a n d ap-
prehended two men a f t e r allegt'd.ing
observing a struggle be t w ee n a
passenger and a V.'Oman.
Bank Reduces Rate
C•II CAGO (UPI) -The First National
Bank or Chicago today announe«I it
will lower ils prime lending rate to
Ill/• percent from ll'h percent, effective
Tuesday.
Beal Rat Trap
Tluirston Kid.~ Out I.Airing Rodents
By JACKIE llY~IAN
Of Ill• Olllfy Pllol Stiff
Wild South Coast rodents will be snif-
fing peanut butter in the next few weeks.
That's because Ann Becker and her
zoo class from Thurston Intermediate
School in Laguna Beach will be doing
some live trapping to find out ""'hat
kind of rodents come 'out at night.
1be creatures. attracted by seed or
peanut butter lures. v.·ill be released
after they've been identified and looked
over by IO curious yow1gsters.
Not so lucky will be the ants ltlrs.
Becker's class will commandeer fro1n
an anthill to staff their ant farm.
They will remain in captivity to be
examined as they burrow an9 go about
their business.
"\\'c had some ants last year but
they all died . fl \\'as very sad."' ~!rs.
Becker said .
Among the other animals >l"hic h inhabit
the classroom zoo, most of them on
loan from p;;irticipating students. arc
a guinea pig. t"·o \\'hite rats, a teddy
bear hamster. t\\"O gerbils. l\\"O frogs,
a gopher Sllake, a gecko (a small lizard )
and Igor the Iguana
Igor. v.·ho dominates the classroom
v.ith his sparkli ng personali ty, 1v a s
bought for SU'i \Vil h school funds two
years ago and is a st;:inding feature
in ihe school's vcarbook .
Students in 'the class pla n to 11·eigh
and measure Igor re~ular\y. Il e is no1v
tv.·o feet long and may gro1v to five
feet. ~!rs. &><-ker s;iid.
Jtlo1llto1i Rancli Pla1i
The cl ass teaches studcntq al">out thl'
care o( an imals and each 1.\"rrk focuses
on the habits of a particular SpC'Cif's.
. Greenbelt May Be Intact
'
A new plan for the 9,700-acre l\1oulton
.Ranch may result in 100 per c en t
preservation of t h e muciK'onlested
Lagwla Greenbelt portion of the ranch.
Officials from lhe Orange County Plan-
ning Department, tbe private planning
firm of Chapman, Phillipi," hrandt and
Reddick, and of the Laguna Greenbelt
organization met today on the acreage.
Purpose of the meeting, acej>rding to
Jim 1'901 a county .sanior planner, was
to determine Just wtlat the bou.ndari~
of tho Laguna Greenbelt on the ranch
.... J u the greenhelt Is ien unt he<! In
open space or conxrvalion zone, about
1.100 rtsldentlal units now shown near
Wood Canyon probably would be moved
to a plain along El Toro R08d , Tao
511id. • --·-
Last map Bhown for the massive raMh Low ana low-mediwn density develop-
called for BO percent preservation of ment had been proposed along El Toro
the greenbelt Road. Originally, a high school site also But repr ese n tat i vesof Laguna
Greenbelt, lnc., a non·profit lobbying was proposed.
organization striving to girdle Laguna The property where the adjustments
Beach with open space wel'fl not are being made is ov.>nc<I by lvar Hanson
satisfied. -the L.F. Moulton Trust. II Is lhe
The Laguna Greenbelt, about 10,000 largest parcel of the llix O\\'ncrships
acres tota1 ,·was designall?d.i.n \be Oranlfl tnchKlif'lg 5i$f!O acres. ·
County open space t'Jt:nttnl ·~ )'ffr COUnty ·•fficlals began reevaluating
as one of five lop prlorl{y greenbelt grtenbell u;es Rl the requc!l of the
areas to be preserv«I ff. pos.slble., county plnnnini:i comm is.,,ion. Al tilt Iii.st
About a !bl.rd of Ult. I0,000 undevtl~ meetina on the ~toulton Hanch,, com-
aerts lie in the MOulion Ranch, which missioners asked county planM:rs 1 o
Is being planned Dow for up to 60,000 come up with an All~mali\'e showing
resJdents. Many of the population cutJ 100 pcrce11t preservation of the gretnbelt.
proposed since "ty heorblp began A htaring on the n~w praf)Mal~ is
on lhe ranch plana were In the Laguna ~ulod for 7:30 p.m. Oct. 30 a t
Gr~b<lt. , __,~---~-~Mlliiti' v;~· jqJJJiJt$chool. ..
t
"It's not terribly structured. Primaril~·
the students are irl teresle<l in hnndl1n~
the animal s <ind taking care of thL1n1."
l\frs. Recker said.
Several of the stud<'nts are intcrrsted
in careers as zoologists or vctrnnarians.
but mainly "it's a place where the
kids can relate to somet hing." shl' ~aid.
Ind ividual initia1 ive is enc.'-Ourai:cd. One
student. for example. is cxperinH'nl1ni:
by pt11cing different colored "'hN'ls in
front M lhl' gopher snakl' to M-e ho"'
tht' colors 11rrcct him.
"Today purple upl'iet hin1. I don't kno"'
""·hy," l\lrs. Ht:!cker sa.ld.
Tht' class Is taught tv.ie(' a 111•rk
froin 2: 15 to 3 p.n1. as part of Thurs1on's
extended day program In \1'hirh stude111s
can choose to tak<' extra cl3"CS after
the regul:ir iiehool day.
Sludmti; may reg!~er for a Six·v.·~k
session or tiny in the 100 class for
a I rim1!11ler or mort'.
"Each trimc~t l'r the nnimals 11 n d
students chan ge." ~irs. Becker io:a1d.
r.1rs. Becker. a science l<'Achf.r, ha~
tnu jrtlt the 1'.00 class for scv~ and
.. cidllluttM•rs !or. \l\tcc-y"'1ts-
'
L
Agajaruan. \\"ho became familiar \\llh
the case of Rnssell as a lal'• clerk in
the Orange County Pu b!it' Defender's
Office 2 L~ y('ars ago, clainl.~ she is a
rector.
lit• said the former l\lrs. Bussell \\TOie
a le tter apologiting afte r her cx·busband
11·as jailed, cla 11ning she 11';1s coerced
·into signing lhl' allegedly unt rue stale-
nu·nt by Oklahoma author111es w h o
threatened to prosecute her as an ac·
!See ACCUSEll, Page A!J
eat
Autl101·ities
Co1·do11 Off
Large Area
!.,OS ANGELES (AP) -'A s tate
policeman died at County·USC l\1edical
Center afler being shot in the head
early today as he v.·as 11·orking al one
in a Slate Police annex offi ce in the
downtov.·n State Office Bu i Id i n g ,
authorities said.
The officer, David A. Jilek. 23. of
Rivf."'rside. l\'3S shot in the left sidf."' ·
of the head, apparently at close range,
au!horities said.
Authorities cordoned off the a r ca
around the Los Angeles Civic Center
after Jack's body v.•as found in. the
ground-floor aftl'eit shortly afte.r f a .fb:-7
A starch of the area ftilcd 10 rt'veal
any clues to lhe gunman. authorities
said. Investigators were unable ta ex-
plain a motil'e for the shooting.
Authorities said Jack's body was found
by an offi ce \\'Orkcr returning to the
building after taking a break .
Jack, who was responsible fo r ch eckin g
state employes entering the building,
was the only person on dut y in the
lobby at the time or the shooting, po lice
said.
Because the building is in usc aroun d
the clock, the doors always r c m a i n
unlocked. they added.
A police spoke s m an said Jack
reportedl y v.•as shot at close range wifh
a large-r.aliber °"·eapon. ~·lore than one
shot was believed to have been fired
at the orficcr because traces of chipped
marble from a wall near the office
1vc re found near the victim , the
spokesman added.
Builc1i11 g B11r11.e tl
In San Cle111 enlc
San Clcn1 en!c's fi rst·evcr practice burn
of an un11·anl ed buildinl{ smudged th e
sides over the "'eckend and 1n l h c
bu i!rling's place y.,·il l be a new br1nk.
The burn. \rhich took plat-c under
close supervision of thr fire depa rtment
Sat urday morning, involved a small st uc·
co office building at 121 Victoria v.tiere
the ne\\' Bank of San Clemente ""'ill
be built in ron1ing months.
The ci!y's regular and v o I u n t e e r
fi refighters honed their tcchni<1ucs on
the blazing stru cture after intentionally
setting it afire.
Orange ,...I. Coast
~'-=-
\\leather
Considera ble lu11• eloud1ness
lhrough Tut>scla\ monung \\'l!h
some sunshine u1 the aftcrnoort
Tuesday, Shghll\' 1varmcr v.•ith.
bt:ach highs at 60 r1s1ng to T.l in·
land. Lov.·s lonight 57 to 62.
INSIDt: ·roD.\ y
Pri.t.tideut ford 011d litrrrco's
111t·.~1tle11t ~;fh'1t'flrr1a luzt:c llt'!!Cr·
o/ rhinos 111 111111<1 us tlrC"y "'"''t
/JK/u y. f nrrl 1.~ r11terestfd i" flu.•
llrw oil f111ds HI Soutlit'rll J\1 P.1.·
1co. F.chei.:errin is i11.tcr1•stecl HI
rt'IU'IVUlf/ t/1(' brtll.'CTO work pro-
!P'fHn i11 trnl!rd States. Sec
sioru. Pogi: :\.,,
a .. 11.,.. ,,
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(ll t t<lld ••• C ..... c:, " Crtn,.,.rtl .. °"''" MtlJCt't '" •• 1 .. r111 , .... ..
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Mlltloftal '"'"" Or111• C111•I'
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:
!._A 2 DAILY PILOT l/SC
~Sniifing's Out
.ltl oonsliine Conviction Scotclied
WASHINGTO"N IUPO -The-u:s. preme c .. rt lOC!ay ltC
a.and a lower court ruling that a warrant js needed to search a truck
that sm~s or whiskey.
'fhe standard for a warranlless search is whether the incriminat-
ing evidence is in "plain view" or a law officer. The 4th U.S. Circuit
Court o{ Appeals ruled that the odor of whiskey does not make the
liquor itself in plain view and 1hat a warrant was needed to search
the truck.
'fhe appeals court overturned the conviction of \Villiam G.
Bradshaw, who was charged with making moonshine ip the Dirty
Ankle section of Cleveland Courtly. N.C.
The arresting agents smelled liquor around the truck and
searched It without a warrant. They found 144 gallon jugs of m·oon·
sluhe.
From Pnge Al
~t\.CCUSED ...
cessory to murder. •
Russell is accused of killing and rob-
bing a 92-year..old mule invalid confined
to a .wheelchair.
"T&· this day. l don 't know v.·hat Jed
them ·10 suspecl 1ne ... •· he said Friday.
"l used.. tp live one tov.'n av•ay fron1
Stigler, but I never even knew the
old man."
-· Agajanian ..said today that 0 range
County's polygraph technician Dean ~fen-.
dricis, who ndministered the so-called
lie de!tttor test lo Russell in 1972,
is supplying the charts and graphs to
his counterpart in Los Angeles County,
Kenneth Scarce.
Thlll'&ton Youths
Plan Yosemite
Park Adventur~
A group of 31 students from Thurston
Jn ten11ediatc School in Laguna Beach
\rill leave Saturday for a week's study
et Yosemlle National Park.
'nte seventh and eighth grade students
\Viii study zoology. botany, geo logy and
arHhropolo-gy under the direction of the
·staff of ·the Yosemile Insti tute. which
Cond1:1cts programs for colleges, high
·schools and junior high s c h o o I s
th~roughQut ttie state.
Students w)\l hike and bicycle through
parts of the park 10 study lichen, Indian
caves and rock fonnalions first hand.
Tbe · studentl will be chaperoned by
Art F'lSher, a Thurston science teacher,
and three parents. Cost of the lrip,
v1hich is pa\d by individual students
and _their families, is $115.
•
Armed Bandits
:Hold .Up Market
r T\\'O armed bancli13 wearing ski masks
t;.9Caped with $35 Jn cash early SW'lday
from a' Huntington Beach market.
Ponce reported the pair, both describ-
~ as in their early twenties and about
,five reel 10 inches tall , entered the
Stop N Go market, 6441 Edinger Ave.,
al 2:12 a.m.
Officers Jaid they ordered the clerk.
Donald Gene L4ngfellow of G a r d e n
Grove, to open the cash register at
gunpoint , then forced him to lie on
the floor.
The n'ICn. both carrying small caliber
revolvers. th!!n left in \\'hat was describ-
ed as a battered silver·bluc car.
Fire I-lits Big Basin
BOULDER CREEK (UPI) -A fire
that ra c<!d through 150 acres of virgin
redwood trec!i in Big Basin State Park
was contained today by the st.ate Division
of Forestry. Nearly i.ooo men. in ad·
dilion to air tankers. heli co pters ,
bulldozer.~ and fire engines. had ballled
lhe fire in sleep terrain.
ORANGE COAST ta
DAILY PILOT
r11~ o.-.... 9'1' CN\I 0.0.1 , Poot, ,.,,11 wf'olcll 11
(""'b!"'<I t"t Ht""'·P•tn. •l PIJOl1~t0 lrl' l"t Or•-i:...i Pub!•'"'"" ea...,,....,. ~·•t• f'Cllt"'"' ... ~ CNl>it\tle<I Mi>"'3tY _.,.,. Fti<lty,
,.,. CCKM M~w. Ntwl)Orl 9".o<ll, H ... l lllqlDll
&f.ttll1Feun!•o11 \ltllt' ~-&t.:11, 1•v1,,. S.!Kllto.Kt t...i !..111 Ot,..111r S." J~" CAl,.1U•"" A 1111q!f rt~-1 t~<1•on ,.
~'""'° S.lu<dty\ t f'l<I S""'31 .. \. ~ 11"111<!.stl
ttulll•\l!•"q pl~,,, •\ ii JOG W.•t a., Sttttl. Ce1t1 ~ .... Ctlolo<111• ll7•U.
Robert N. Weed "''""'"'tr>!! Pwbtt\l>O•
Jack R. Curley
\11tt l>rt1l<1tnl tncl c:.tneo-11 M.IN91r
Thomas Keevil
E.d•IM
Thomas A. Murphine
Wl'l<lgl11g Editor
Chart!s H. Loos Ri cha rd P. Nall
·'"''"'"' W~119 t<lol .. ~
La9una Btach Office
1 lM GI<!""'''• $1 M•lh119 AM•ttt. P 0 . fie• 64'6. t ... IJ
Other Otl ices
to\lt Mt,. U0 Wt1I &IJ51N'f't """"'\ Ill-•• ))Jl kt•-1 llo\lltY..-G Hullli"'l!l!"l llMcft · 1111) &t.:11 lo<lte'f¥d
~II CJt-11111'!., f<O<"lft El C.lfll<IG Ali!
' Tetepfittne (714) 641-4311
Cl11ssified Advertising 641·H71 •
l..agun11 Beath All Depar1men1s : Telephone 494-9466
Irvine Bowl Set
For Possible
Graduation Site
The Irvine Bo\\·! amphitheater In.
Laguna Beach may become the gradua·
lion site for Dana llills Jligh School
in Dana Point.
"It is just one of several ideas v.•e're
looking into," James \Valshc, activities
director at Dana Hills, said toda y.
The Laguna Beach Festival of Arts
Board of Directors indicated it woulll
have no objection to use of the bowl for
the Dana Poinl school's waduation. The bo\\'I is the site of the festival's
Pageant of the !I.tasters -living pictures
-.presented JOr six weeks each summer.
It is used by Laguna Beach High
School for its graduation «remonles.
Walshe said the new school .w a !'II
outgrowing its present g r a d u a t Io n
facilities. The gym, used last year. was
overflowing as 380 students w e r e
gra~uated. Tbis year there are 4 3 3
seruors.
Other ideas for coping with the bumper
crop of students include holding the
graduation at San Clemente High School,
or renting bleachers for the Dana Hills
field .
"There's nothing definite. We bave
a group of seniors and parents working
on the graduation plans and we're look-
ing into all possibilities,'' Walshe said.
The Irvine Bowl is in a woodsy natural
location, behind the Festival of Arts
grounds. It seats 2,500.
Ettinger FUQd
To Aid School
A hmd 'aaf bten establll'bed to dedicate
a classroom at \he planned L a g u n a
Beach School of Art to the late Margaret
Ettinger.
Mrs. Ettinger was a part·tiroe resident
and a supporter of the arl'I: in Laguna
Beach for 50 years. She was a publicist
for several Hollywood. personalities and
for businesses.
Muriel Reynolds, an organizer of the
fund, said $25,000 is needed to pay
for the classroom. Names of all donors
\\'ill be listed on a plaque in the room.
Donations of any amount may be made
to the Laguna Beil.ch School of Art,
6JO Laguna canyoo Road , Laguna Beach
92651.
Kangaroo Keeps
I, olice J rim ping
CHICAGO (AP) -Police are having
trouble trying to find a kangaroo which
reportedly bounced into the Chicago area
over the weekend.
Police said that the kangaroo was
spotted rummaging through g a r b a g e
cans on the city 's Northwest Side early
Sunday. But a check by police tun1ed
up no trace of the animal.
Officials at Lincoln Park Zoo and
Brookfield Zoo confirmed that none of
their kangaroos were missing.
Ex-Lagunan Gets
Post in Society
Barnett S. Salzman. former Laguna
Bench resident and rofounder of the
Laguna Beach Free Clinic, has been
appointt'd to the Royal Society of Health
of Great Britain.
The society is a branch of the Royal
Society foundt'd in Elizabethan England
ond recognizes individuals 'vho h a v e
made significant contribulions to pro-
1notlon of health.
Dr.Salzman is nO\Y clinical director
Dr. Salzman is no1v clinical director
in Provo, Ulah. He received the recogni-
tion because .of his work in mental
health.
Dr. Salunan "'as personal physician
to the Sakya Lama Sakya Truz at Debra
Dun , Jndia in 1973. Jte founded the La·
guna Bead! Free CJ!infc in 1970.
Police Stop
~J.·vine Cove
--
!:rea Brawl
Laguna Beach police arrested a 27·
year<ild Gardena g a m b l i n g club
floonnan Sllnday following a claw ham·
mer allack which left a Long Beac:ll
l'ietim with a dei!p gash in his shoolder.
JGSeph A. Jappe was held today on
$5,000 bail on charges ol assault with
a deadly "'eapon.
Andre J. Jones, 24, required an
esti mated 20 stitches to close a Wound
recci\·ed in the incident on Pacific C.oast
Highway near Irvine C.Ove bet we f. n
Corona de! ~tar and Laguna Beach.
Police motorcycle officer Ca r me n
Pollastro was hailed by several motorists
\\'ho told hlm ot the brawl between
the tv.·o men along the highway.
Pollastro sped to the scene, and ar-
rived just to find one man held up
against a chain link fence by several
others.
The noise of the police cycle broke
up the altercation, and the man against
the fence fl ed into the Coast Highway
traffic lanes. THf~itag Sfaape
' '
.,
Dtilr P!l•I Sl•tr P'tt.19
I
I
I _, I
I
Potlastro was faced by a burly ma n
'A'iclding a claw hammer. Drawing his
revolver. Pollastro ordered him to drop
the hammer, and ordered the group
lo lie dov.·n on the ground. Back up
police units arrived and a tangled story
was related,
Traffic heading north on Beach Cities offramp in Transportation to cost about $3.4 million, will last
Capistrano Beach bypasses major bridge. and inter-well into next year. Eventually it will provide a
change construction project at notorious "Y" which broader and safer link to Pacific Coast Highway.
has been the scene of serious traffic mishaps. Con· Bridge will span Doheny Park Road and San Juan
struction. calculated by California Department of Creek, ending near entrance to Dana Point Harbor. -'-~~~~--''---'O~~~~~~~~-
. . According to witness statements, Jap-
pe was the driver of a green van v•hich
dar1ed in and out of three cars driven
by members of the Long Beach family.
Pollastro said the harassment v:bicb
began in Corona de! Mar, ended when
tbe van stopped abruptly in front of
one of the cars.
Laguna Planners Study
Witoesses said the van driver exited
the vehicle carrying a claw hammer.
A chase and free-for-all between Jappe
and members of the family ended \\ith
them subduing him against the fence,
police said.
Parking Structure Bid
Gas Leak Cited
In JJig El Toro
Honie Explosion.
A powerful etploslon and resulting
fire that ripped through an El Toro
home Friday night was caused by a
gas leak, fire investigators reported tc>
day. .
Results m the probe by Orange County
Fire Department Capt. Ron Oywater
pinpointed tbe cause aa leakaie in the
home's natural gas ~em.
The blast In Ille home o!' Mr. and
?..frs. Robert Power, 24131 Eaglemont
Ave. blew out walls and started a fire
that caused an estimated $ 5 6 , 0 0 0
damage.
The couple was watching television
when the 9:52 p.m. blast rocked the
home. The Powers escaped uninjured.
Firemen listed $35,000 damage to the
house and garage, $11,000 to a motor
home parked in front of the house and
$10,000 to the contents of the residence.
Investigation continued t o d a y to
determine what ignited the I e a k i n g
natural gas.
Prelimina~ far a parking struc-
ture and a proposced lalld use plan
for Canyon Hilts will come before the
Laguna Beach Planning C.Omntission
Tuesday.
The two.level parking structure on
the site of the clty~wned GlenP.eyre
Street parking lot near the library would
add about 100 spaces for a tota: or
192 spaces on boll\ levels of the
structure.
The preliminary designs w e re
authorized by the City Council last
week after a parking consultant's study
revealed a shortage of 600 park ing spaces
in the downtown ttrea in the summer.
Plans call for the structure to be
built so as to permit the addjtioo of
a third level at a later time.
The Canyon lfills land use plan•
scheduled foe discussion only, ll.'OU\d
HtabH1h sped.fie: zoning to permit Use!'ll
which are now legally nonconforming.
The area is partly zoned ·R·l (single
Boosters Furnisli
.$3,000 in Gifts
The San Clemente High School Triton
Booster Club provided more than $3.000
in gifts to the school during the 1973-74
school year, according to a club report.
Gifts included gym equipment, awards,
and scholarship funds.
Among club events scheduled for the
V• C A il I rail are football replay films at Sbakey's Jet ong ssa ec Pizza Tuesday nights at 7:30, staffing
of the concession stand at home football
SAIGON. North Vietnam (AP) -The games and a family dinner prior to
United States Embassy today denied the first league football game.
Viet Cong statements that the Central The club meets the first Thursday
Jntelligenc:e Agency is involved in , or each month at 7:30 p.m. in the
demonstrations against President teachers' dining room at the high school.
Nguyen Van Thieu and accused North "We would like to see parents of students
Vietnam of a "crudely obvious attempt new to San Clemente 1-ligh School at
lo exploit the dissent.'• our meetings," a club spokesman said.
~-'-~~~~~~~~~~~~
•
family residential) and partly AtlA {light
manufacturing) but includ~ some
duplexes and busine93CS.
The plan, proposed by three
neighbor~ , aseociation, affecti thP.:
\\'oodland and Arroyo Drive area, Canyon
Acres and a proposed townhouse site
bettA'een Top of the World and J\iystic
Hills.
Also to be considered are:
-Proposed addition to the .~ressing
rooms on tbe Festival Arts grounds.
-Replacement of a worn .!edion
of sidewalk on Broadway just ;iorth
of Coast Highway.
-Appointment to the Social Needs
Element committee or John MeQuade,
Grant McCoombs and Jean Hamilton.
-A review of city hall space needs.
-Proposed abandonment or a portion
of Alisio Avenue in. Arch Beach Heights
at the teqU@st of a property owner.
The meeting will begin at 7:30 p.m .
in city council chambers.
Com·t to Study
Age Bias Case
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The U.S.
Supreme Court today agreed to decide
the constjtutionality of a Utah law Riving
women adult legal rights at age 18
but denying them to males until they
are 21.
The court will hear oral arguments
ater this tenn on a Utah Supreme
Court decision upholding the law. The
Utah court said there are valid reasons
for debate about the age discrimination
and that any changes should be left
in the hands of the legislature.
The U.S. Supreme Court has held
in past sex discrimination cases that
such laws can be upheld to foster a
reasonable goal.
•
Three Boats Hit
By Burglars in
Dana Point Area
Boot burglars kept Orange (~ o u n t y
Sheriff's officers busy at Dan.a Point
Harbor during the weekend with two
boat o'NDers reporting the tl:ieft of equip-
ment from three moored vessels.
Deputies said intruders who .pried open
the main compartment door took fishing
poles and a portable television set frmri
a boat owned by &twin Howard Koester,
48, of Temple City. The loss was valUed
at $250.
Boat owner Michael Earle Deaner,
27, of 33951 ·Mariana St., Dana Point,
has two boats moored •at the south
COllllty dock and both were broken into
during the weekend.
Burglars look camera equ.ipment and
fishing poles valued at $450 from a
small boat owned by the real estate
dealer am fishing pol.es and radio equjp-
ment valued at $450 from his nearby_
cabin cruiser.
Plans Ordered
For Double-deck
Parking Facility
The Laguna Beach aty Council hll!
ordered that plans be drawn fore double-
deck 200-space parking facility near the
downtown area on an existing city-owned
lot.
The parking structure would co s t
$450.000, an expense which caased two
-xiuncilmen to question the worth or
the project.
Vice mayor Carl Johnson was critical
of lbe project sayµ,g that it w o u I d
only enable people to park "a 100 steps"
closer to their destination.
Councilman Jon Brand agreed, btlt
said construction of the facility would
give the image that the oouncil was
doing something to help the business
community.
Councilwoman Phyllis Sweeney ques·
tioned the parking deficiency claJmed
in a report given earlier by a consultant.
That report showed that at the height
of the summer festival season Laguna
was short 600 parking spaces. '
However, Mrs. Sweeney noted t h e
report was based on a destination walk·
ing distance of 600 feet lor oommerclal
and 800 feet for beach parkers.
The councilwoman said the Chamber
of Commerce statemenl3 noted t h a t
shoppers in Laguna Beach doo'l have
lo walk M far as tho&e at Fashion
lsland.
Laguna Student
Wins Bookmark
• (
11
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I
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7
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l
Monday.Ociot)er 21, 1974 DAILY PILOT .ii 9
Monday's
Clo1i111 Prices NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE ..
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THE 280 SEDAN (BDTTDM)AND COUPE ARE MID·RANGE LINE FOR 1975
Mercedes·Benz Models Powered By Oo\itile-o verhead Cam Slx·cyllnder Eftglne
NMX 1.1' t .. » • 'Iii CN Mliwl' CD t ... 1"'+ :,,. Fd~l.20 .. I 1• ••• i-1t1. 1.14 • 41 Uh-lllo NII ljtl8 ,.,. .• 1 11 + "' AMAltptS...... ',911 + Ill OtlMHCD pl ,, J 11»'te f\ Ftlll ..30 l • 4 -Vo •-PS l.S2 I 4 U""+ \lo NIIMI' 1.W\ 11 13 2i;, + \,II Nnbt< Jll • 11 71'1-'ltl OI Pfttlll!'I! I 11t 22 + "'° "9d~ 1.1t t 101 2•¥t+1n !oc.tHOSOlll t 21 3'4-\/o NPfwl I.Hit • t tl\lo-W
Amtwd ·'' • IS l"-"" O'll Rll<k hi .. II '"'• .... ~p I J ao 11"+ .... •TE r ....... s ,,, 12111-1"'-NU Stoniton 1 "'' , .. + .... Amtt~IJO t 3 I Ill •. , Clock l"JllO 1 3\lo ... FllnlltO .to 4 2J 11 •.. l\P;Gotpr"!n .. 19 6V. , .. l'QIS«w .1J S 11 l'lc-1-o NNrOf l.tO .. •1 2' .. 'Iii Orlt Crlft .. t 2"' •.• !!'!k~Ot •5. ,.·~. ••. . IU ll'IU .IS ' SI 10\/o + \II ~ SIR ,IQ ' 2 13 , . , ArrlHll ,JOQ 3 Mt 11\lo ,,, OW-.10 oi 20 9\fJ ••• r..., 4'"60 • ., -JJ-NlStaf"th.1'\2 10 ~¥ft W A Hnpl)Vi ,. 11 '11\11+ 'Iii Ov.ml pf !.. 1 51 -\I, l"ltl<IMI 1.40 4 3 12'"' ... ~ F .61 ' l 1'4 + tit ~ t \lt S 2'1 J.11'1+ "o
-·Mercedes' New Line
AmAlt'fl.4' J ll t"-• .... Qw-,,lr \,<IQ 11111 10\ii-\I, l'l!trolCD ,o6CJ ( •2 1ti.+ 'Ml .._,~,. .70 ( 1 1~-\lo NllU Tte CO.. 11 3'°"+ "' AmAlrLMlJ 2tS '"'•'II owni... wt .• •1 , .... •·· Fll'ICIFld )I l 20 .-.. ..... U..FOl.6/CI .... •h-W ... '°""" 10 5 32• ,,,,,,.,_ Atn.IM, JO ,, I •111 ''' Cl Mlgs .6111 2t 11'1-\II Fll'SIN 1.\0 '193 l•'n-\I, JlffPllOl .loOll ts ts ... NCA CP ,n s JCI """'• ... A8t.nd 2.M • Sf U + ~ 0 ltll'f .t,Sh •• 9 4111 ••• Fst Olltt )I 1 m t + -JOI~ 9 .••• 1100 11 + \II l'lllO.,.,. .*> J t l'li-V. Aln8tcllt.9D.$ JOI lS\lo+ 'II 011111"11.4' 5 IS 1J:W. •.. FstOllc;,to 9 7• 2.:i.etl't J«C,LPll , • .lJO .0 ,,, -P'Jo1.40' 11 l~--..
Arri B1C19.U • 9 5 , . . Oti 0.. l,M 1 31 1S -.... Fstll'l9"'.I 1 11 lt :M'--n ........ C t,10 ·J I »ti.-..,, l'lf.l'llEI 1.11 1 2\t U + ~ ""'CMIL20 s u• 16\'J ... Yt Cln G, .. , '' a:MO 41 -1 ~ 1511 U• 1\lt-........... le.or lfl 2 5 Sh+ .. 1d:Gt.E 1.1' • 1t 1Q'4• ...
• • c.n Oil !'Ii .. ll to'IO ... OflGl!pf.W. •• iso !oO -2 ,,.,. .. ·, ... , .. 17h+ ~ JlmW•ll .• 5 95 1•v.-\lo NEtT T t.» 10 ,. 2s .... h
1975 Model 280S Economy Luxury Ca
~~.··,"'.-·.· •,• •• ·~.· •• c,,"',,',",!·,.'° ,• •'• ,.",~•'il. klNS8nc1. U tlYo •.. JlmW•ltJlt1 •• l1JO 10 ,,, """"'II .Mo I 11 II'••·· ,.,__, ... .. .. ,.. ., '°"PQl.31.$1(1 11 • ~ JlmWQl'IMI ,. 12 224• \II ~ 1.loO 3 "l'O'-+ :i. Amcw.nll'> 1 '" 22 +\II CITc'<'lll511J .. 1111'>•1\.'i "'PMt1.'1r:I' 13 5'4 •.• JMlll$1.1)11 ., J 1• ... NYSEGJ.20 • lO 11\ii ... AmOlllH.JGl6 1 9V. ... Ot~ •il1M1 JO'Wt.+2 F11UAIE .•ll 4 ,,.._ ,., J H.,11 .•.. 112• 1t +Iii H'l'IEjltl. .... z9G U +2 ADIHT1LSIU 20 21'•+ " gt$tY1.a;;; 6 17' Uh-14 F11Vflll .4'd ' IJ 44-i.r. Jot111Mv1.IO 5 .0 1•\lo -llo N'l'liE 2.12 ,. 2 lltli+ h Am~tvii .• 1 JY, ••• t1Mt!:L·.m1 10 '""-"' FtWbC l.1612 UH .... Jolll'l&Jt1 .IOU36ttl ... +lh~ 1.11111• •h-111
By CARL CARSTENSEN
DIU. O.lly Pllcll !.lfH
The new Mercedes-Benz
2fllS, latest addilion to the
North Ame rican product
line of the world's oldest
automobile manufacturer,
might be described as an
economical luxury car. 1 The 280S offers the !'ialn(
features of the 450 series.
plus increased economydut
lo its 2.8 liter 1168 cubic h\·
ch) six-cylinder engine.
Pickled
According to U.S. gover·
nment tests or 1975 model
cars, the 2805 can get 19.5
miles per gallon when being
driven on the EPA's high·
~N HIGH GEAR)
way cycle. Since the car has
a 25.4-gallon tank, this
would mean a range of 495·
miles.
Prices
AOUI pf .M6 .. 16 11"°+ Vo gu Sol .toll 2 1• 5 -.,_ FlKfl&M ·" 1 ti tlllll-1 Johll lw: .IQ 1 11 1'-• \'> HI . f.IS .. 1150 "°""' ... The 2805, which is on sale AmEJtPw 1 • "' ""' ••. h '"" ... s n '"' ... Fl.,... F ·'° • 1a '" ••• .,1o1w1 • p12 .. i 20 + v. "'" t.lOd •. • uv.-v. AF1mll,.:M ' 19 .$ ,,, gtyl1111'1111 .. ( ... -1·1• F1""'5(,2Q 9 1 '" ,., Jolllo91 .40 l M 5::W.-'4 Nt.lndu$1I5S21Ullo+14 TIO'!V costs $14 ,548 at East. •F111s.,1 . ..at1 u ,.,.._ ... 1,11wr.:2 .. 20 1s ..... "' F-.ttnt.2•s2 2.u ...... JoMsl1.60 • "'11..., ..... "1.rero .«1 s '° uv..,.
a nd Gu" Coast ports of en· A Fl",., t\11 .• lJClll 1sllt.--~ E Ml .s 1m 2•\11+ "' "*"'"" .10 ' 2 '""-"" Jor""' 1...a , , 15 29-. .. 1 N011o1k\llB s J '°' st • 1:-. u '4Gtd1.UO .• 24 tt'IO , •• o.tllOU.$01: Jt 9\11+~ FltlllV' ... SL J SS.,,.,_.,."'°'""' .tll6 11 ll\li , •• Hclf1llCD1\ll l 'IS +"-
t "thW tC t · AGftScl.ot,. 215llto•-CLCAm.lOS 12 '"'•"'FlltllllOll.14J toUl't+:W..io"t~1Vt l1291:M1'11+:V.Horr111.12• 1016:W.-:W. ry, w1 es oas pnces "c;.. 1n1 .eo , :n1 '"' • .• 0ewo112.40 • 1 u" .. . F11ntk 0111v. •. 1 2211--MMo f.1~ ' 11 1-w.-,,., ,.,,, c..i .IQ 1 11 2• ..... 1-.. being slightly higher. AGl'lpfl.IO ,. H 1J--\li 0....Ell.40 7 .. 1 ""'-"' Fl1V. ,IQ 1 li '"' •.• ' --IC lit-'4AMl2.lld 5 IOI 9lii>+ -NnHcl\11.tO S 32 1IMI.-V. Cl0n&Pl!8 .. 1'0 JI'> ••• F!1Pwr l.'5 1 511 11'-•"" ICllMt Ah11 3 11 Hiii + I.Ii NAmPh 1.IO 4 t l•Yo+ '-The decision to p_roduce Ami-tom .IQ11 '°' J.1v.+ ,. CIOl'o•ca.u • J11 1y, •.• n.PwL. 1.ll • "' 1•1"t-"' 1CA1s1p1...v. •• 1 •lh+lt1i NCnAlr .1Cld • " 2~ ....
h AH0.,.0/12 .. Ul52 ··-Clult!P.JOI !1 Jl'o ,., FL"511Mt l\lio S J21h+-V. ICAIMOfA'll. .. 1.,_ ... NoOWIJr1wt .. » '"'•"" the 2805 for t e U.S. Mark·. Am'*'P .30 tl 121 29\lo+ 11111 CM• Inv c.o s 41 191.+ ""' Awlt co .JO 16 211 ~. 1 it.••tCt .so • 20 s1,1, •.. -ut 1.m s m •Yi-v. t rd" · l Mercedes Amln'llt 20 ' '"'• "' CHAf"n.i.h. tu s + "" A~ 1 •. 2 10 -.,... Ka pret 1-.... 1 11~-11o Nome>. 1.t:z • 19 u11o+ 'II .e ' acco 1ng 0 • .. Mtdkt '.12 .. 29 l'"' • .. CHA pf 1.10 :: SS 11"1.+ " F!j!IC .ft 5 JI ll'h+ ..., KIN.WI ·" 2 tJ 101/1-"' NUGSPt 1.90 . . • 20111+ -Benz of North America A M1c11ur, 1 12 2v. ... CHA1"'1.ot .. 21 10\lo+ :i.. FMC 211o •• t 21 +1 ic.cPL12.20 • sJ 1ttii+ v. Noln~ '·" • » ""•"' . !£. d N rd ..MIMlll.ICld' 400 4:W. ... e~wln ,. t 11111 •.• FOClll .20' 11 Siii ••• KCSotn .SOcl t 10 11-.+"' NON!Gf,3.\0, "" + v. President Kar r1e o • AmN6S1.s. ·• 14 11"'-11o A1.p12.10 .. ' '"+ -l'oallea .-• SI 1"'+ Vii 11;c:so1nop11 .. 1100 ,_ .. ""_.G(ll uo .. uo u , .. · t Nn 5hlp ... 1, 13 t -\lo St ~ 1 111 S'-,,, ~I.Ill J 660 lJ~l:W. lean GE 1.$6 e \6 1J -.. Pw 1.lt I 117 11V.-1111 mann, came 1n resPonse o .t.mSmlt 11111 1 911 11~. "' c.t~ 1.1•.. • 11"' •.• ForMCl .• ' .. ,,.,..,. "" icaMN 1.:121 • 1 it\lo+ v. NDSPDI i.1111 .. llO » -1 the continuin g concern Atns11111 .10 • 1G1 '""• v. c:.1 1.a .. '' 1, •.. FrMOfl 1.10 •. u 20 -"" 1ca"P1.11.s 1 ,4 1stii ... ND!.PDI 4.1• •. 110 •1v,+1 i.r. . AmStdpf~ •• 'OYo+ Cix6 2.Ul6JU Jt'll+I'"' AClltl.1.CDd •• 1 I~ .... ICllylMu11 •• 3 l._, ,,. NOSPpl1.M •• 020 16 .... 'Al about fuel e conomy Am5t9r11 .n • •2 '"" ... Coe• 11.411 • u1 •1111-\11 FormwOAlt » 1'"' ... "'''"1"'·· 'n ... Sf,.w 1 10 4"' ...
ed b I t · t' , oil Am51ot1,o6CJ ' 27 2•111 +1 Colft&k.'6 • 1 7¥t ... ~ 1 1 .3' '°"+ illlo Kaul,llr.i.., llO J"'+.... 1..0 1 M 2S + illlo spawn y as winers NnT&TJ.40 t 1111 .. + v. Cot«oll'l.06 .. •S 2 .... -.... ,,_,, .601' 1, :rne+"' 1cau111o1111o,. 1 1011, ... n . .s • 413 11 +.., •mbargo and 1· ncreased Mir&r Oii• .. 101 so11o+ .. CllllMI• ·" "•'" n--""" Fr-M "'° 10 '" 1•~+ "' iw .. ,_ ·"' s i 1~-"" -e.n 1..0 1 116 J1 + -C An pl A ).M ., Jto •t +I Cllllf&Aik ,$6 5 a. 5 . .. Ff111:11M I.JO 5 It! to\lt+-1111 Kl'l'WfA .60 5 2 9\lo-\lo Nws1 In 1.20 J :US 21h• 1f\ gasoline prices Alrp1eJJ•.. ., •2 + 'h C0111111 Food • 1 Jv.+ "" ~ 1.10 ' 131 11n .. v. tCeeneCO .10 s •2 ,,,.. -~ ,..., ws •• 21 11 + \( · Al'llTl.fwt .. 1206 1 ........ COIPtM ,)OIO:l012G +21"1. fuqulll'ldu2 25 S -t .... IClll<lrl".$11' 1 6'-... Nwtl lnpls .• 1161Vt +•Vt •·our six-cylinder twin.-1vnw,., ... 2 s '""-"' C1111t11S11.10' •" ... ~ca--1C111000 .Mn ,05 ''""•"' ,,....p1 •. 20 .. • s2v.+2:i.
d' AWlr rifl.'3 .. Jlto """ ••• COl!lfldull 'm 21-•I Glble llllbl .. 2 ,~ .... KelMlllll .IO' , 9"i-lti -llljltCS .. 10 .. +4""
t d "g· · ...,..,$l ,10ll • ' 11'1 + \ti CllllGnl.911 se to'ltl-* CO-i2' ., 111--n Kenc:ont.60 • 2'3 Uh+1\lo t.1wPldb' 11 ts""'-"'
Inflated Buck Stops Here
cam, aS One Of the WOrJ S AINl'Oll .• -, 111 10 •.. Cllll!l11gf (llo ,, JJ 411'o+1'4 e Caro 2 SI l\lo ... "911mt1 1."60 S 11 21 ,., NwMll 1.W I 11 1114+ ~
mos mo ern en in es, in Mleltk "" , 12 11v. • .. eoiGs,,. s-. •• 1• .s1w. .. :w. pf 1.20 • . 1 1• + * Ky LJtu 1.7' 1 :tt 16'ili-* NwS11 i.'°" , 2 17 •.. combinationwithourhighly AMF '"'·''"' u2 11111-111 c,oiP1ctum •. 1• '"' •.. v...S1i1 .•' 10 ~·'"' "-«MtG11t •11 .. -.3-. Nnneo1.eo 4 122,,. ••• "AnlfK ,IQ 7 11 Ullo+" COIS()h1 ... J 7} IS ,,, °""'9tt ..W1' lt tJ._:i.. Kll"I-1 l 10 11~+ \lo HDt1n5L..XlLI S 410 tt't-t II< advanced 450SE chassis MP IM,'311.002•14•2 .... ColwM1.r7h2 11 ""•"' o.rootfl .76U ll22 •.• IUclClllW . .03 2t t 'ilo+l.lo NrtSlpfl.60 •. 1422<\!o ••. • 1 AmDcoP A ' .St 9\i:i+ 1111 Comb El.IO 1 17 3IO + * Gwfinll;I ,96 J S I._ \lo l(!rnDCI IM • 1tl 2Sllo + \II HualrQt .2' 3 J I' -n makes the 280S & very up· ....... C» ' •2 1v.+ "' c.omsh 1.20 10 1• ,.*_ ..-. G4rtoc:to .• 1 s 1• -v. K1nosos . .eo , 115 '"". v. N v F Co )I " 2 u 1t¥t+ ~
DETROIT <UPI) -Lln·
coin Sack opened a bill from
the company that sells him
glass jar lids, saw the price
had jumped from $31.50 per
thousand to $40.16 -and got
~ad.
"I said •to hell with it,•"
Sack said.
So he· wrote all his
customers , announcing he
would not go ahead with a
previously announced price
increase or 10 percent on the
pickled herring his com·
pany f!lanufactures.
Hypnotist's
Financial
View Aired
Cil Boyne, hypnotist and
director of a school of hyp-
notism, will appear at
Psynetics Research a nd
Education Foundation, 1212
E. Llncoln Ave .. Anaheim
Thursday at 8 p.m. to give a
ncv• slant on financial sue·
• cess.
Jn direct contrast to \'iev.:s or social scientists. he main·
.tains that success in any
area, and most especially
financial i;ucce ss. is the.
ditect result of one's sub-
oonscious altitudes.
After his lecture. Bo~1ne
\\"ill present a d e mon·.
st ration of hypnosis.
For further informntion
C'lill Margaret ~'l crritt at ·
1133·2311.
"1'1'1 JUST A little cog in
the \\"heel," he said. "But I
figured l would try to stop
something. This was just a
first step in combati1;:1g all
these price increases.''
Sack's company, Sea
Fare Foods Inc., sells as
many as 1.8 million jars of
pickled herring and rolm· ops -herring< wrapped
around a pickle -every
year in Michigan, the Mid·
west and the East Coast.
The loss to Sack and his
partner, Sam Cohen, was
estimate d at between
$15 .000 and $20,000.
Sacks said jars a re not the
only thing going up so shar-
ply and quickly· in cost that
it makes him e specially
mad.
llE SAID llE ordered a
forklift truck priced at $650.
By the time it arrived, it
oost $850. Sugar that cost
$14 .50 per hundred weight
one year ago nO\V costs him
$39.
t • t b 'j f th. Amt19COrp 3 I t ...... , CmwEd2.31(1I117 12h+ '4 V.M 1.12 1 1 10 + V. l(l!'KhC .90 4 t 11:-.-\fo --00--0-ua e automo 1 e or e ...,,..", 2.10 4 11 32.,.,. "" cwE Pl' 1.i. •. ' " +i G1MMr 1" • ' 1""• \Ii "L M Alr• .. 2 1..-... o.11 Ind .40 i " 1:w.-v. American luxury car A1Uor9!2 • .s .• 7,4J.,..+V. C01nEopr2 .• 1s 20v.+'llo v..n1t11C1P •• 1 • ..._ .. 1<n1Qh1N.3:lt 4 1t11i+i.r.oa:111Pttr1310 '°"•""'
d "d "'"5t•pf ..... 1 lh ... CWEClpfl.•2 .• l 11v. •.• Gtmltlllnoc 1 ., 1 11111 •.. Koellro .30tl s 12 Sh , .. Oall!Plplt •• 10 <IO\lt • v, market " Nor mann sru .· ""-tldl.IO s • J.l:W.-"' o..,, 1.to .. 1• " ... GAm1 1.1'10 .. 1• , ....... 11;_, 2 . .eo s IS 43'ilo+ v. OtcPlot' 1.1111 •• 3't lt'-+1v, ••w f "1 h th 2~ Amt•ll".205 13 1~-V. ComWOUSl 2J.ll 11o't ... GMOll.IO!ll1 S.tO'Wt-'Ao l(oclptrpl• .. 1>0U\oo-l\lo ~ptplt.l•,. lfl\lo+'4 e ee tat e ou;,per-An4ie0n .10CL • 111 11 + ~ Orwolip11.12 •• 2• 16141-Yo GtnArr 1.111 • 20 .,.~"" K••tt,01.tt10 1J nw.-111 Oildlll'IC».IQ 4 :h 1•11t+ v. rectly fl'lls the gap· between Anc.P1Hc1.c. s 42 1s11<+1\lo eds.1 • 111 21-..1n GnATOll 2"" •• 1100 31 ... "' Kresoe .2220 'Its 2•-.--. OfiloEd 1."' , " 1•n+ 111 Ndtt0111 J 111 21'4-h 'S<l n J2 2\11 • '4 GtnlkO M 5 I 1ov. + v. ll;rQOlt 1.36 6 xloCI 16~+ "' on f..O/l l.IO •• tlO "60Yi-1V. t.he smaller 280 and the "'9U~.n• 4 s:v.-11. ~or•tn .. 9 sv.-11. Gnelbl•.M 1n•to•~11;11101"tn .10• 11 '"' •.• oriEp1o1..40 .. ~1oou~v. "'-"I Qoi! 6 •J 2GV.• Vt C:OO.Mll.20 • 6 1tn• n GnCar 1.JO 6 J 111(,-"I> --LL-OnEjlt4.+I •• lJO UI'> ... 4~E ." he added. ..... ... c .JO ~ 11 10~-"" ConllMI , .... 11• 1l\lo-" °"' 0.. .... J I .... • . • ~<$;$ 1.5' 'I 3 U"'-"' Of! f. jlt 4.16 .. 110 '' •··
T · t 1975 U S em· ~ Oil 41 ·· ls 10~ • Yo Col'lriKC .loCI 6 lt U ... -'Ill Gn 0.WCap l • JI,\ • . . UrmnSl'l li l e 1t + I.Ii Olil~E 1.llo 9 27 U:W.-:v, o ·mee ·. IS· 1,petoCorp .. 41 1"' .. , Coll Ed .lid•,,, • + 111 c;..io,.nam' 11 11,,._.,.. u ... er1 .n • •1 101,1o .. ,,..OkGEof .1Q,.i200 ~-"" sion standards the 2805 APLCMD• J6 '"" •.• QlmEclpt• .. , '3 ... GnEIK1."601111' l!I ... 1 .... LlrMIQ .M~ 2 !I ,,,__\l.o (lkl1NG1.40 1 '17 .... • AllDLllCL MQ$6 I 1'11. .. Cllll'l'Ellp!S .. 9 JS""+ Vo GnfoDd l.40 I 116 19lol. .. I'• Le~l9Q .11L' ~ 4\<io , .. ()inCo l.10 S 1 .. 19 +1'11> engine is fitted with a two-AJtA sv 1.tli 11 16 .0141 • l t't c.onE. p1 •.•s .. •llXI 31 -1 GenGr 1.Di!'I 1• 10 u .... • •:. u•rS p1111o . . 4 n v. .. ~1 01Jntr•1t 1 4 111 u l'o+ ~
h b , . h · ArcNN ,21 S 20 ''-, •. CclMF111.lS S 127 13\'o • •• Olfl IM\r 21 ' 22 Ito + It'. l.JllWy .loOQ 6 1 14Vt-\,\, Om«•I" .SO ' 6 '"" •.. cam er mono.:o.1t ICAtc61 p1 c2 .. •20 ... Gr!llF..,,,•1'" .• ,,,1+.,..0M111M1111 .. 1i. ···L.Moh&N .SO• ., ....... ~1..1••-1111o+""
Platl·num catalyst mounted .Arthlro .2s • '° 11"-• "' ecw. F..i .10 • 11 11v. .. ~ r..n Med .u • 11 6'tlt• .., LHIO!">I .)0 2 29 '""• "" o.....o:i ,12 4 1s • .,.._ .... Ardl( ElllD, I l~ •• . QlmNG l.10 1 66 19,.._-'• Ger>Mill 1.20 11 5' :W.00 .,. '·" U~l P!C .IO t l l 10 -"" Or .:lt~l 1.20 6 SI ,,,,_ \lo on the exhaust manifoldfor ·Art11 .... n' at ,.,,. .. ""'Ci>n5'"-J • 111 11 "'-"' GnM>1 1.sl<I 81"6 Js _,,., 1.e~v.1 1no ' 1 ~-.-1.1• 0t1,E1 2.l'O s ,, 21" .. 1111 Arir PS 1.lt 6 11 13'11.+ \<. Con P pf (Ill •• 110 31 .,. "" Ot'nMlll 111 S •• t ~., ... '" u~m 1.1411 , 76 'l'llo ... OulbdM 1.10 t ll 1'V.-\lo control O( hydrOC"a rbon and Ml Be!.1 .'4 2' 3 l:V. . . . ConP pf J.4S ·. rSIO Si. • 1 Git! Par! .IO 1J 2S S>t' , .. 1.J!nn•r Cp 4 76 l._ + \lo Ol,ILl~CO .JO l t I""-"'° "d · M1~1ro • 11 19"'-+...., Cal'IP0/11.n .. uoo .o .. v, G~l.68 Sa110 11:i11 ••• i....no•l".to s 19 n i;, ... ~.10 4 J 1oh-11t carbon monox1 e em1 s· Ar1et1 AnO.. .. ls , 1'41-~ Cllll'IP" 1.1• .• 1100 .o .1 ~ Retr11:1 s •6 sv. . , . '-"• Fii ea11 .. • s""-"' 0¥9•Ttn .IO , s 11 1111 + 11o . N l Cal'£ ...,..._Ci>' 2S •I'll •. Cal'IPwrpl6 ..• 51 -\~ Cd:olgnal .lb 9 24 23'.lt-<111 L•••S1•1.4'9 46 16h+... ~l'-sions. 0 separa e 1or-""'1coSl60 J tt n Con11AlrL.n 10 53 s~ .... •,~ Gn S1~1n11 • tl lh • •• Levlt1 Fu•n s 111 2'.lt .. P1"AmAlr .. 6JJ 3 ...
nia model will be required Arrnp1 i:.o .. • 2• ..• enc.n 1.80 • &a 12• •... Gr E 1 ... 1 31'1 21\oo+ v. lO" 1.10a 6 l' 11:i.:.-'II. P•M¥n111•2 • 21 1s11t-111 • Ar1",lr1lf •Yo .. JolO # + lllt CntlClllpp .IO 1 21 '~+ 1/o G Tore 1.10Q ' 51 ll ..... • ~. lOF pl·~ . 2 SlV. + 'llo P4~rcrl .60 ' 11 t !ft •.. as the federal version also An'!ll 0; .t:z 1 n .1tv.+ "' eonuei> 2 . .0 J no JO • iv. Gfnnco Inc: 4 1s ''" • "" l i1>t>, McN1 • 11 , . . P•r~t .9' • , 9\1.-11o
h t t ' . "d Anrl$tA1IO s 26 13h-'l'o CnllCPpfJV,,, I l J tlV. ~P .5611 u ts+ v, Ul>rt~Cp . .io• ,, '_.,, PariHfl1.Ql 5 2S 1S:V.+14 meets tat s a es r1g1 ~, s 5 11,,.-14 CQtol&1v. .. 20 31~.1 o.P1<.llOQ 't t6s :io .1 <. llt>Lon .10ti .. n J¥O• v. ~(l(•P.SOQ s 20 u +v. emission standards Atvin1..a .n 11 41 1"' • "' cH111ei. 2.;oo 6 lo() >0:i.. "' GoiPwpl 1.n .. 1100 u . . . l•1>1. p1 .61n . . , 1 • .,, P1tco •"" , ,3 1~+ ._ • ASA I.Id I •. '"1111) i si.r.. 2 CllllJP 1.•'kl 1 ~1 ·~-, ... Gertler PG 1 , 31 ~.j!.. ... l!!IQ My lV. ' ll 19 ... P•ylH' .JO s ] Jh.,. v. The 2805 has more than ~ 011 1.411 • "" 11 -v. on11R 1.J0<1 2 38 ' -•.. Ge111 1 • .Jlld 11 8• 12t + 7', L•!IQMv pt 1 •• r:lO 8ov.-1>.:. PelbGI ·°"' 1 s• ,,,,. + 1i. JUO<TG 1.40 j 16.1 11 -\lo COnt lnYIS1 . . Jt 1J-ll. l·l2 Getll'Cll 1.10 . . 3 11\• l.JllV Eli 1 1' Jll •l 'h• I"' Penn tl"!r . SS 1\1 ... adequfte acceleration (0·60 ius.., 1.40 s 1 1111?. 14 ecw.M1g .• ' 1•0 1.\'t-"" GF ·e... .31 • 1 s,,._ '"' unc Nu 1 . ..a • 110 n h ... •,;, "'.,..., '·"u 3&I ,,..,._ 'h · ) d . . A-t0 3 7S l V.• '4 Cont!Ofl 1.IO 6 ltJ 39""• 'llo GIMl!PCm 1 S 2 10 -,., Uro:NI\ pl l .• 10 '3V.• i,, PtnnD!r.14 t 11 ) + .... 1n 15. secs. an cnus1ng Alko 1..UO J n .-.-"' eon1 011 p12 .. 1 s2 • ·"" v.11r Flft• '' • 1) 9V.-"" LinNFo 1.h .. a 1111o .. "" "'nn Fruit .. n 2~ •.. speed tmaxi'mum speed 1• M1CtyE11V1 • u U<\!o-\'o Col'l11n1ret 1 ' 13 11'1!1 .. GIOd Ln•s s t 3.,, •.. ~1 Corp 5 10 ,,,..,. ""PennPL1.IQt Si. 16~-.... S AtlCElpl l'lo, . . l M . . . Col'ltrl 0.1~ I J.11 ll\> • 'I> Go ll Hill ,Sl 4 l 101> Llttollln J"'i , , '19 ,.,,_ \'o PeP&.L pr I .. 1110 13 + 1 v.•ell over 100 mph). AllRlcftt 2..., 1J :Mt 89'1o• 11'1 Conwoo<:l l ' l 11\'•• .. ~l~te 1.SO I ll 2H •• '· Utt"'~ pl 2 • . u n,,. . . p PL pf l.SO .. 1490 " + J . Alldl pl )II, •• l90 4Jn . . . c-.u" .?M ' l6 n.-.... Gorm lnctl• s IS ..... • ... L.llCl<Ned J u ' -\It ,.l'lnWI 1.29 1 "' 1' + "' Atllcpf2.IO .. 161 51 .... • 'llo (Dop ln1.IM 6 9 21111+ Vo 0....... .3J!ll1 70 I"'-~ L..11fftCP1.J0 3 1'1 U~+l'lli ~wpl1V.., 1 31\'i+"" AtlAdlprfJ ,. 1149..,, ... C-•Lllt . 6• 6 -~• Globlil Mlr t 17l 10""•Y> L.Drn.HFl.J6 1llo"'3 4y, ... Pnwipll . .O . 3 llV...-Y.
All•' '°'" 10 ,, lt't . . . Coop Tire .lo() 5 2 J • •• ~Un ,IQ ' 13 ""·. ~ LoM•g 3.Md 5 " 161'1-I.Ii Pennroi1 lg J .•l1 It... . .. ATO 11'1( .10 3 30 tl<o-\lo Oilpel..a .to 6 S tffo "' GoldWsl Fct 6 JS 9'111-1111 L..ndl-.4' J I s ... -\'lo ~ Or .20 6 l lV, ,.,
Aul Oii .100 19 311 ~ 111 Coll Ao 1\'><I 2 l50 21Vt •I GooelrlC 1.11 ' llM 70V.• I'• ~ S Ind 1 ' 1-9?'o+ " PeapGs 2.:16 6 l9 26"' • "' All:amllnOll l JI 2..,,-.... CDp\llld 1.l>G' lO 21¥<~ "-CioofU"pfl,"5 .. H0 6t •2Vt i...ore Spl t i,, .. 1 511v, ... Pt!IMC.01.ol011 IS4 ..ov. .. 1 A"'o Corp 10 :It 3\<t + \lo CordoJr4 Cp .. 11 , .... _ Vt Good'l'<Tir I 6 91l H!'o • V. 1.#"eStG IV. J '91 201'1 ~1 Pllr•lnEI .2l ll SS 20\lo + Vo A"'oQt wts . 13 11·1• ... CornG 1.12111 191 19""• -., ~ .l2 4 l lllo • 14 l..Df"4!LI 1.'6 6 IO 11111-It Pet tnc 1.40 6 10 1'1'1+ \lo
""" pl 2.4111'! . . :M ll"' .. "" er .... 1f.q ·'° 6 I 11 3'4 • . Goo.Mdln 1.10 s s 1l!'o ••• LIL JJI E 4.ll .. zlOO 34._I,,,, Pt! lfl( jlt 1 .. • 11VJ-v. A.....,.Pr.3011 11 301.t-"' Cctinlnl.tSh 3 .Si. J'li +"" GOIJldpll .ll •. S. 15 -'h 1..anODrtl .6110 u '1 "ll +1..,, Ptllt"P11.201t 7 10 -v. A\111 Inc: .40 S ll 6V.-\lo C-llS . \SCI 9 I $.... , •• Gr.mW 1.60 S llM ;211'o • .• l.Dral Corp 1 6 21'11 ,,. Ptt,.SI< ,IQ 1l J :Ml't-\lo A-Inc; .XI 3 l3 6 -"'° Ola 8"11 .JS S 3' 10"'+ Vo Gr-U .IQ 2' M ' 9'11i • ft Lil.and l.Ool 9 2f16 14111> ... Ptll'Olnt .36 6 9 10'--Vo
Shirt Firm
In Irv ine "In fact t just got a call
from the sugar company
saying it is adding $3 to the The Shirt Factory, Inc.,
cost immediately," Sack . llonolulu-based manufac·
said. "That makes it $12per turetibf "Cra zy Shirts," has
hundredweight.'' t'&k6n occupa nC'y of a new
A-.Pr t• II lt9:Z 14111-._. CP(. 1"112 I :U 29\lt ... Gr..,.,. 1.20 3 12 l •liro .. \.\ LIP..:!lc .1S ' '61 ,..,_\lo Pttrl 0/11.31 ,. 1 20\lo-I.Ii Me<:Olll.GU II .. ~."' er-c 1.411l 131 ~I"'•" Grll'llW .30rl •2 _,. ,.,,. ..... LOo.IGa!.l.&I' s 21»11 .. -.PttrlC 2.'6CI ..• ,, ..... ," -e a--Cr.Oil Fl .tl J 27 th . . Qt•10ro .411 J 1l 61'11 • 14 ~tn 1 3 11 ''"' + ..., P11nr 1n .J6 u 513 18Yt-14 e.t>i.W!l .IO 6 lit ""'"*1"° O'ot-ffl.66' 3S II <t "'° (;(l.Mlf:lld I 2• 2h-.,_ I.TV Corp 2 90 9~+ "Iii l'tll-lpD!.20 S •9 191'>• 'It
8"ti. .10!1 93 ,21 lh •.. Cr111J11 IC .IO' I 9 + \lo GtA&P--'Jd I 31 9""+ V. L.l,lt>rJ!)l(.p 1 18 31 38 +1 .... Pl'll .. f:t 1.M ' 115 ll V.-1111 a... In .:zo 1 5t 71'11 + :ti O"OllMH .10 1 ( 14~+ 1' m:Ol l.20 ,, I 11\lt • . . i.J.Q;.JS .Sig 8 92 816 + n Pl'l!IE1pl IVo ,, 12i0 72i..-V.
BIM<Oil .11 11 94 31 . . . Crown Co<"~ I 3 111'1-"' Nei 1.80 ' n Ml\-"' WdlOw I.Oii 6 6 '"' .. "" Pl'IEI pl 7.to .. d lO &J + .,, BtldOH .tc 3 • 6V.-l<o CfwflZl1.60 S 21• 21......... Fl"·"6~11Jliio+ \/) L..ukf<>Stl 1 . 49 Jel'o+n Pl'lll Ellll7\I0 .,1200 •l ••• lllLIClll"p .to S t 911>-\lo CTS C., .ill J 29 71\-1ol Gt Wtll Vl'I 2 12• ll:W.-14 L v o Corp 1l 2SS 1"" ,,, Pl'IEI pl t.30., 120 J6i..,, • 'h Sack contends that many 14 .000 squ are foot facility at
of h is suppliers r aised 1732 McGa\\' A\•c. in Jr\•ine
prices for profit reasons Industrial Complex .
\\'hi\e his O\\"n pri ce in· The Shirt F actory silk
creases \\·ere based on the screens design s on T-shirts
nee d t o st a y c v c n and , ·according to Prl'sident
economically. Van S. Bird, the company
Th e last Se a Fare in· ''"ill supply a network of
crease came in February -specialty s hops and depart·
an 8 percent boost Sack said me nt s tores throughout
was forced on him by a 20 California from its new Ir·
percent increase in the ('()St vine I ndustrial Complex or her1ing. location.
BailGolis 1.96 6 121 1'\lt ... Culll~l'I .411 6 12 •1111 ••• GtWpf S.17< •. 11 1)~-\I, L,k.,.V .25CI 3 J61 llllo• 'lo "'1£1 pl J.IO ,, UOO J2\lt-1Vt ~ 1.:U • • 1Jlilo.. .... c..mr ...... 6 2• 22"'-.... °"'GI• I.QI ' ' 1,...,_ ..... LrM" 11/t . . 99 11• ..... ~ PtlE! Pl •.ML .. l'° ll'h ••. ~ •nc 2J 1$1111\lo-:W. Culli"l.SQpl •. 110 ..... GM'!d1.0M '·IOI 1111.-v. lvnchSv .40 S ii~ , ..... \<. Pl'lllS!.1111 .30' I 1• ... 8ltlgDr' Pll .," 2~ •.• 0.rln<; . .00 .. IJ IO'ilo •.. =:wt .• 21 l!'t-Vo --MM--PNllpMO .l(IU }jO i!Y.+1v.
81n!:rpfC 2 •. 212-11o ... Cwt1u.30llJ 16 7""+.,.. .1Jh .. '' 1n-v. ••.•• "" "° 2 ·• 7111 Pl'llllP1ln.20 u" Jl'o-"111 h°H'l'1.20 J Ill JHlo+ V. Cl>rll1,WA1 .. J 11 ••• 60 '111 llh ......., • ••• Pnll tfl"l'.1 10 '"' .. . . '. ····--' . ,,. .. =. ..... . '' ,._-:-< MlcClorlld 21 3 1\lo .... .. • .. • V• • ' •·• ....,,..,H 1.-"""::.. '" .,.. Mlc-f lO 4 t l\<o ''" PNIPill .IO 9 2°' AS\lt.j. V1 IWll!Trtr$1 J s .. )6~· .. C...CIOPi 1."ll 3 30· 19til+ .. o.2.m ~ " 3'--v. Ml(mlll '.1s J IU • . .. PlollVH ·'°"' s J •\fo-.... ll«tlO!I .IOcl •• J6 72 + ._ Cvprus l.tO S 10 It>;.-'II t:l'llfl .SO 4 5' l llo •·• W.M pt 110 1 llllo-..., Pic•w1n1 .fl! l 61 6:lilo-V. ~~~ . .:!~ !g l:'rio.:.t: Oemon c;4~il't:w.+ \4o Glll:~.·1~:: '~ l~=-·.;.; Ml(y 1."10 ·~ 12 U...,+ ._ PleCING1 .21 S It 10, -""
•-•· 3 > >" • •••• , -' ,3 •• • •·•• ,., •• 3 " o•-• Mii<! "°" .tl<I , . ss ,.. Pie•! !mprl S n 1..,, ... ""' _.._ 1" '411 ....-.....,. "'" ·---..,... "" •• M9c:1 SouM• 1 6 -.... Pi11Uory l.IO 1 100 ll'll ... BMKNl ,20 6 I U +\lo ~1.1' 4 :1'911 -.'Ill> GlfApB1 .JCI .. t,1( ... IMO!<Ol l2 'i 11, PIOl'INGt. ... t u 15""+1 ...
8Mft 111(1 A 3 21 ..... _ -Dlltl In .«ICI J '' 1~ ... \I, G<lllSIU I.It , ., II .. .... Ml(ll'W'•,i~ JS 's 6\4o ... Plllley B .60 .. 1:1'1 n ....... lltutdll .60 It ft7 ll-+111< C.tUnOpl} .. I 12 -14 Guifl.W1 .llO 4 4S ~. V. -1....,.C:O 1 ~ •u UV.+ \It Pltf'orl .IO!t 1 1 1'W• <!'>
aui.r L .II n "' Jt'A + "" Diii• Gltlr•I u 1n 15 + "" Gulf&W• W1 . • 50 ll't-"' -.... 10 e 11\11 .. I PIHJk>n .60ll 10 'liS JJ-.. '"' BwrulLCO .l2: 21 • '"" • •• 0.-,Co 1." ' » llW.-\ti Glf'NI pl llil •· I ~--.......,,Ind .411 , . 32 J"lli t "" PUii Hyl 'I 6 1S'-.. 9M(lnoJ .Sll 221•1111-Yo DllJl!fll11 .0ol .. 40 l~\liGlfWsp!S\<o ., ISS'4 •.. ~.·4 310 ll'Al+'A P.l_,Rn.rc"t 10 2\11-lllo
o.ttHl .12 • 11' ''"'-"" Difl'tonH ,40 • t• 1.,+ -Gulb'lllllllt O 11 •~-"" N«>Hn 1n 1 140 2llil• ~ P!1,11ov .n 6 l 3\t+ l'I Bed!""' ~ 11 I tt +-Ill Dh'Pll 1.66 6 8' 12\lt+ .... ~ H-MAPCO _._ 17 llS l• • 1 Plnvy .110 t )1 ll:W.-\lo BKIDl'ID.4011 41211'11+°" Ol'Lf1'117.41 .. 11JO 61-3..,,1-YtkWJ ... 1 1 2•~-\l /Mr;Jfl'IOnM ).I •V.• V. PN8M1.1'd 3 21 '"-1VI l!llKM .60g I II l\.'i+\t 0Mnwt<.l01' 21 1 +ltHlllFB,441 6' 91.>1 ··· /INJr OLl 1.llll.i 1S.l10.•tV.Pl:ll1~kl .12111'11tlV,•1'4 BtMr lndul 12 '°' 2)V.+ 'II 0..... 1·60 I 150 '2 +l\11 KeUlbtfll ,202' 2911091.+J'lllo Mlrcorl"' 1 ~ llS 16 ... Pondt•°"S l •U t\11+ l't Biiai Pl! SI J M " -.... DILP&l .20 I 206 Mii+ ~ MlmmlPoJ I ( 111 1.-~ .. IN.rut• j1t 2 .. SO JI.,._ .... PDlll l .loOQ 9 21 10h-~
9llCltn 1.10 ( 1 1Slli ... OIL Miii 1.:1) 5 45 1t +-'Ao 1-Yllllltm .40 1 " )\lo-"-IM,.mn .411 ' 299 ·~~ 1 1'1:1<1~ Inc '! ( 11 11 + '!> &tldCLH .lOcl • I '"'-.... DIL!oJAir .60 • 14 •ll'l• "' ..... ., M .to I ' 11Yo-..... Mir-1.IQ s 11 uv,~ .... PIM1Gl 1.J 6 ll ,. .. _ .... 11111 Hwl .Ii ) .. llV! • ., Ot!tKIU . .cl I• 5.1 2~-......... ~~ ....... , •• ,,• ••'"·-·;:. Mlirionl. .411 lS 141 llV,+1 Pl:lll•IC 1.411 ( It 2)~• \Ill B1m11 CO i ' 11 11 •.. DILIDfll Qt 1 " ·~-.... .. 3 "''EIP116' 11' 101111 9l!odL · •1 tMI> I'll o.w.1s11 .90 ' n 1lJ'o ...., Mlrttt 1.12 s 1 u -'II MlriM 1 . .0 1 10 J9 + v. · ··· l'llnllLf ~, , ~ 2 J1\lf~ ¥t Dlmys :12 I 21 I*: \lo H"llH .Ooln . • 1' l"'-"'° =::-:{ ~ i : 1;\lo-+ ·~ ~~:= tt '.: rt~ f~V. ~,r;: 9'lt Qt l.U ' 22A l•:W.-\lo ~y .7' 1$ .. 21\'J+ Vo l-tl'"lll 1.40 ' I t!"' •·· /INJrtott i\ool 11 191 I'll-v, PPGlnd 1.10 '5 17 2Jtn-.... ~ 21111 .. uo l•'lt+lllo Dner"Pli .n 1l '' M+ ~ MllT611t .72. IJ 11\lo + .. Mll"\;llF 1.l• J I UY) •.• PremlnCl .l"l 6 2 1,,.,-"'
U.S~ Wage Earner Seeking
-' BlnC,it.ao •• I u:w.+• DISOIOl".IO. »'+\II HltTllCl.2GJ JJ 1J--'4 Mtor!M t 20 j 106 IS •.• Prempl .IO .. 2 11llo+..,,
Anti-inflation Leadership
• •
8'11st t.1'ad 2 I , ...... IS!dlS 1.•) • , .. 1~ 'lo 1-Ut"S(e 10 ' 31 IMt-W. NIO Ciel ,f,I s •10 Ulfo-.... Prot&GJ.1(111 251 •s-·a ... B«IOtB .OJ!J • 1,1 3 + '>\ Oil 9.:12 ••Sito Jt ••· .._M$M1 .• S 13 7h-.... MM<oCl:. l2 1t 1129 11\t ProOR'' .20 ' 1S • • Vo
Bll1ilr .~ t u llt-Ill E pl 1 ...•••• ~ ••• Hl'1fflk .10 s I 1'111+ .... '"'"'"'~It• :,.. 7 912 UY) : :· PrClllr!nl lQ l ., 21 • '" 11111 Pnldel 4 :t1S I~--0..E ot 7.4S ,, tlO S9 -I Mlttrt 1,:IOd .. 'I U llo , . , ,,,.,._, ,61):1 , 11 IS""+ \fo p S A Inc: 1 tt '"" • h Blf.~SIN!2 I JllttJtli+VI Dl\Epfl .••• lll0"9'h+1\lo Hlwt£11,"7 11 11 ··• MICpl i.lld .• 13 ll"'°-"" PuSCol 1.J01 1l0 111'>• l/o 8/fllllld ·.toa1' 'l 'l..__ °"-EOll J,,.,,, , .. .._ .... 111"'1Alb1 s • 10 -\lo 1""61 .. 1v l.of·,, l8 u . \It PSl&Gl.n . lll 1214-\,11 llllC:k&D .tD U '' 2 "'-llt o.lllr Qt .J6 1 I i2 •·· "'9111,. • ' 3111 ··• MM!lv \,nd 6 "Jt 11n .. \fo PSEGpl 1."60 ,, 6 13'4 •.. 8111rJfl .41 ' 1' ,,._\It Oii! Fin .Sol 1 l ll't ··· MCAMlrlln 4 «I ,,,,,_,...., Mill""E .:M ~ 116 12 -.... PSEGpl,,OI ,. 110 ltV.• \lo
KANSAS CITY, Mo. LI
(UPI) -A noted public !i&i'.l
opinion researcher says ·
Amt:ricans are "hungry for
inspired leaders~ip" tq R~ll
them out of inflal1on, l:iut
they r eruse to shell oul their
1nflated dollars for more
811111. l.IOQ • J 1Jlo'J-\lo OIM!dlnll l 6 •s 2~+ 1141 Hick Inc .12 ' • 1111 . .. fN!r 05 '·"° 6 19 21 _ .,, PS EGpl '·"° .. 1210 :it • 3 posed t o increased&1oc:~HR .<i0• 3110 ... Ol6mSll 1.40 s •121,,. ....... ..,,~".?~1,• ",,",:'.!:~ 1M .... r0s .'1 6 116""•""~EGJits.ll5 •. 1100 •1 ~·,,
gt h r . Blllll&tll .IQ S "1•'6-111 oi.5rimpf2 .. 12"-"' ,,_,_ "' •• .. ""'-'' 01 >•• , .... ~.-rlO SI ..,1 veaways. guc as ore1gn BclbDIOI Br•• . . 1 ,,.,. • •• Oldrlcll 1.l'O .. • ""'• "' .... .., H 1.12 • 6 l5•-v. M 8 ..-x"l. 1 ,,,...: 1; PSEGOi ,;;o : : uoo ., • 1 aidand'··elfare" blrloc .to 1 2t011"• v. Dldl:Jtie .s1 s s 10 .......... cut1 4 1 2..,-v. MCA inc:.1a 5 • ,, _14 ""~111,_., 6 ,, u\\ .. ~ • '" llOL11'Cn .ill l 117 11 .,. OICloJplwi .llO 1 111 9fll+llla Htllltlnt ... 11 14 291'1 + n W.CorCI .'6 4 2 •:W.• "" --0 0--He said s ale-hunting eona 1fldul •. 11 •11o +"" OllOold . .q 1 'HYo• -Ht1~Pr .60 •. es 11'1 • ... w.erov 120 30 s~. 111 C),i6t0f!.ao e ,,, HV.• 141 'Boa1Mo1 1'1 • 1 In' •• , DIGlorgo .66 5 3J 4tli ··· Htl ,,.2411 2.0 '3'°'+l°"' W.Orrr"1 1:20jj 4o1o3 11,.,. .. 1111 0...•0.ll)I J .. l U _,,.. reduced energy u se and BorOtn 1,J> 1 " 11,._ 11o DloltM e11111 •• ,., tol'l•3 Hitm "·11e1 •• u ,,,.,_,,.. M10m1e1 ep 131.,, 3'tii• l""' Ou1•s01 ... u 10 11~.-....
t. I' d' Biro w 1.ss • •l """-"' Ollllni!I ,., ' 21 sn .•. "'mi1ts.•12 :KM ,.. + Vt NcOonD ·'° 1 88 •"'-1<o _. 11_ ra 1ona 11pen 1ng cuts are '°""""" 1" 1s " 1,,.. • .. 1>1•1ot1 '~ 11 = 21 • -. "'""-v .JO • • 10 -"" w.G<Ec1 in , ,9 is"" .. \• 11:41\1on .80 1s H 31'1/o , ,_.,,
alreadyeVidenCeOfSClt·im• ~11 1:;;: n:-.~ lr.r:.W '.~1't )~ i~~ =n~: ~~ ;;~-·~ W.Gr Hl .)(I , •s •'-l'o 111-.U 4 >2• S --.
posed .ntl.lnflat·10n e/forts ~ !Cid•,,, , + * 011111s.1 .1014 1 :n +..., HtwlttP .20U 193 10 .. 3111 MGHtot 1.20 .,. , 1>.\jo .. ,. A1nco'"·" • u 1111o•1...,
'I' · BnvJS ~-11 '' ::.l'I+ -Ol""'$llCI 11! 4 It. lfll ••• H!ol!Yoll E" 9 1 4\jo-1,1o NIC"l"IV,. M $11131171\11 + lilol A1plO Am t 5 U i ·-• '"' taxes.
Hugh C. ltoffman, dii-ec·
tor or Opinion Research
Corporation, said in an in·
tervlew studies show the
public is already heeding
President. Ford 's call to cul
But he said most wage ear~ Btn-, 1.n·1s 312 4lt11+ -.. o.~.w: 1.Std 1 .. 3 -"" Hin.,..,, •60 • , 1Jl't+ "'" lll!CKMA .ao s 1 u -...., A•vMto ,..,, • r 11.,., .. • h h I lie< ···-···· 11 JQ ... Dtl'lfclclt.30U .OS.+"' HH..,..,Hll l 6 1110~-n W.lffl'I ,12 5 1) 21..._ .... it.)'dln11 .29 s ,. ""_,,.. n.rs .Ve no C 0 Ce au •• '"''" ~r ... •~ -..~ ., 0 W I.Ou'" $11 e 51 U.,_ l't Al)'tPIOfl .80 • lOt l3V, • \lo 8r11Ptl All!L 2 1,., t ...... ....,........, · IJ 110 UYt+ "° HMW lfldul • U 1"' ··· Nc,,._,1 .IO 4 10 11'1-11o RCA Co<l>l , tt1 11 ... t ..
'.
back spending and to curb .,..,,.,.t1o~-~-t
wasteful consumption. .;:1.1 But Watcrgattl and con··
•tinued federal fumbling
with the cco1fomy.have kept
Americans suspicious of
pc:>UllClhni; liRd tii g'"tiusiness.
pointing to l'I neQd for new
leadership lo t'on vince t:i.c
publit" t6 m n kc serious
sacrifices. "The public is yearning
for politlClans wit~ guts,"
J,ha rescal'chtr rtrom Prin·
ceton. N.J .. said .. ··voters
'JU1t looking/•
\vrttt ttle.irelt}ftrf~ss to
sptn.d money, back away
from commitments and
tough decisions just to be
Politic,.ally so.re. ·
of Pay Ch.ck. that '"" less BnK• GI .ra s 1J u w. + "" Do111.u1J .10 . . • '~ . . . "'*''' c .n 1 11 131'1-u ...., ....... IO 4 ,, 1,,,. .. "' 11~ t• 111 ,.. ,, ., t "' W'V BtunGl 1.n ·• 11 14 + \I, Dalwll'lly .~ 11 UM It*+ \Ii ~ .0 • 3, '"' -,.._ 2 '\ •• 'h w.ek lltowriQilll 3 22 11.,._I\ OlrkCp ,20, 36 11 +lll NG11£1Kln1' l 4 ~·(\Me l!I J.IO .• •Sl'> ••Cl '°flll ...,,. 1 •• • -· ,-> 10 >7--.. ...__ ""1-1 ' ' ••• h "''' 3> ''"' •• '1.40 S 11 1'"-t '.It <1~"'9 Ip! .• 3 1 .... ,.,
"People-arehungr,ytofol· am,;;,,:;o J 1 ,;;-... a-· "':lo s ,, ,,~:~No,.!!!,"",",,·•,,•,,•,•,"•!.":,·~ ::J~: 1 J l!:.·" 1!",,,1\1~·10 ~: 11~:;2:-:
lo .. , ln·spl'red 1·.a·d 1'$h"p" .,,.m,.20' ,, '"""""" 1.:io • 21 .. ~· .... ... ~ • 1 2 i .... ··' "'°"'"·O)G .. 7s 111. ., .,. e · 1 , ..,,.,.,. .st , 121 ..... -1.20 it 100 6Sl'I+ ~ l:lol'I,,,... t.411 • m 2t\<o • u1o l\Ollf"C"Slr ,IQ 9 ,, ,,Vt-..., flHoi:f ·''' 1 ,. ,0...,_ .,,.
heaald "l think in Novcm 1M11w .411 J " fill ··• 0111 " t11CO .. 3 '~ ·11 Hoowtf 1.21 1 u" ··· ~-. 1,«11• ,. 1.111o .. 4 "'"' too1 n ·~ 1•""• .. • . ' ITMt 1,lCld 1 tJ ' +"'I Ct-1.60 J 19 .1f -11'11 Hol"ll'Otl C.' 10 l lilo ••• Mtlwdlltl .10 4 o t~• llo Rt•"1t 1,IO t 1 11 -111 ber voters wlll demand that 1J;1cJt111 l • 16 2» ':t• '" ~ 1.40 it •s.1 so •"" "°"'"'"" '1 ~ 10 '"" • "' Men11L., ,,. , •s11 •t1.. '"' 11t1u.,1c1 • .o l 130 ""• "' th In . II h't I BWi:ICo.IO J 21 ... a '·'°··,. 511'11•1 Hlltp!IC0 .1'J., '"•"" IN1.l ..... OS 6' 1n 10h+ Vt lle•Store .60 4 ' ,,.._,,., e n at1on g start n l!ludol •1111 51 • s • -t.t p1 2 •• 10 ., •, HOR 1rii• .• • i • 191.• .., MeMlbl .910 1 ,. 1..,. "' "'' e1tc .IO s 33 ,,.,.,_ ..,
Congr ••• and at 811 govern &.I"" lJO 6 U l•\11-"' 1.'4 ,, 9 """• \II "°"'""'·IQ 4 t Illa-It MGM , ... 3 ' ,,,,.,_ ~ Ael Gr;r ."60 • 11 t'4 ... ' ~~ '1 1 19 J"-•1• ,60 6 7 4\<o-lei HIW\l<O .OSd I U 61'1-"' • I I S 0 I~ OW!i Pw IA 7 101 1, .... \j, HOllMFIM 1 U 1st 13\o+ ~ ~ .SQ S ""' J"" ... RtlG l.60 •· 1 16 .. \,II menlJvea. ';· 1 u l\li+·~ Ot.illtot'LJ0 .. 1110 '° ., NOUMO'ft1' .• n JO\li•\\ MG1c1 ... 10su·10 '"'"'flo.>(llk'i:s '~ '"' ••• ••Any candidate who a...1.,1.., •• 1J im=:=: C>.l!epiLio .. m 11 •11\ _,,gi2111 .. 11 tJ\li +-. ~,..!bcw,: .i ~-::: :::~,,::.s,~f ;1 ; ...
r.r.s.nt.hlm.·•1asakni·ght "".,'" •• ·~ •' , .. ,, "•• • CMi.p1 7""···1100 " ··• l'IWt'-,,,. '•u 1sv.-i14 Mkto:M ,111. "101;..,"' Ati*S~11 .to0 1 1" 2•1t• :w. ~ .,.. 10 .., M11>11t ..... 1.o • .,..,..,~Gtto•1 n 11-..""M1c:-t<s ,.-. •.. -...-.011 .1e 1»'"'-" n shining armor coriiing to ~-:l: ·• : 11"' ::: ~"' C::: 't; 'r'~?: Cl,~~·• 16: ·~~~~ ~ 1,l)ol 1 i1 11111o-" "',.u.11ci,.•u1: ~I is .. -•"
'w •• p government Cl.an of ..,_ ,)(I t.1 411 IO ..... ~ 40 t 14S 10~"'•Slll ..,,_,,..," 1 S 1 lf""-... Mld'>llU 1.1' t 211 I --.. ""° · ' • _,., "'""" j ,,. • MIGMl l,(lllct, II ' '"~ ........ C&I ) 11 71''" Ill It bl d h ho --C (.-•Ill'' -"'°"d l . .0 I 1) IJ""• .... Mill~I 80 l ,, 10"'-~ llw•IOll l ,l'OI) J\ ''"'• "' s uners a sgotas tatCttiLti n.11oa s -¥i °"""'pl J\,OJ,, ,.,...,_.,.MU1J,.1..o.5 11 11v.-"'M!..,,1.111.rt• 101•-"''"'h""·"',. J1o1o-11o an incumbent." CtAIGI tii ta ' 10 u:w. • " ~lj/1 n • m ••14-"" MllOhftH ·'° ' f ., ... • \t M1110t1ar .:i. • 19 1"'. Yi At""l'd , m s i• u"" . ~-.WdJ) J .... -lt CM:il.M J .. tJS0201't•VIHi.QhttT,SO lt 1USI .11,i. /.IN.&Ml UttlOll~l<i+l"'""-'""''···· tft.\li -\lo Hottman added ·that rriost 1 "'Miit I • !""-"'-OllllLDt •75 .. tS1oo 2116 • "" ""-11111. l • •11o • • • MIN'>PL , " , 14 ,.,,. • "" Al1 •!Id 2.• , .,, .. • .,. bod d Pl/IL i~ ti .. +1'Dt'l"IOl",411' S l+li'lll4Ulll O .t•l491U.,.,t1V1 .,'Y'OAl ,'lll •l1 +Wllot'y!"Olt'il. •. lt '6 lll•I\ n an property ta x le\'Y ""'·~ ~ "•· -·~ ,_, j::4,•1, I~· "' ~T~:: ,\ '; ,~~: ~ MiW>lo " ' ' • .,_ 1oo "''"' Mt1 1 a a 11" ..•
elections scheduled across ~li:i':to0 ii 111 !'~•" htcoca;i, 6 "' •.• 14\'0rOfflt .to • • •"'• 1, :r:~~.;,'i .~ ~ :;~: ~ ::~::~:·e ,~ •:.,.,-:.\,. the. nation thi ~ fall art also c.n,. s1.1110 • • -"' t'*<JI "'" .. '" • "' _... 1-MoPtic. 1.eo s .i 1•i,o,.,.--R1t11r c.• • ll '' ... CM! ... ( .Ult J '° Ulli+ "' (lt~!I ,XIII ' 1n 1 "'. "' ICN Pfl••m • J\ 1'°1' "' Mo l'tl$ '"" • ' ..... \lo "!~hltw-r ·"" 10 ' 19 ...
Fillance Briefs'.
Dodge Recall
DETROIT (A P ) -Chry~ler Corp.
said axles on some school buses and
trucks are defe<'t1vr:·<ind thf> firm is
ootifyi nJ?; t he owner~ of the vehicles
that they could lose a rear \\'heel.
The ve hicles involvf'd nrc 197!1·
model D-600 Dod ge medium trucks
and S·600 school bus chassis *!quipped
wi th the possibly defective 1,100.
Pound, two.spccd real axles.
Alaska Accord
SAN FRA NCISCO IUPIJ -The
Standard Oil Co. of Calirornia has an-
oount'cd the signing of a third e11-
ploration agreement \'.•ith Koniau. In·
c., Regional Native Corp. to eo~·er oil
and gfls evaluation or Konlag landsjn
Alaska.
Under the 1971 Aln sl<a Native
Claims Settlen1crlt Act , Kon1aR ts en·
tilled to select ::about a m1lllon acres of
Kodiak Island a nd the i\la!>~an rienin.·
sula.
~-~JI~ ~WI no owr~t l<it of
:m>ckUng undeT oy Piibli c
l·o(f.lc-i~ts-ln rcc{?nl years.
'"The public also foels It Is
being asked to sac(lflcc !or
s1veral s peciial lntertst&l
Citii~ni have no Interest in
maklqg saclirices to help
sofve buslifeiS'S'lfl'ofl(
prohlcm s. They also :ire orr
doomed. Ht s1 id surveys e,111,10 t ' • •. .-bstun• 11"t • • 10'-t "' .. ""''·• ''" 1'" ... M1t111H,•011 . 1t 2,. ... ~""""' .• s .,., 12 • \;, h J b I. It .ao 11 100 1•'-••• 1.-Ke 1.16 10 '-" 1•1'••1'1 IONl8'151< 1 • 11 141'1 • •. M)bl10I 310 l •11 • • " Rlddlr P ·"° I ! 11n, "' s ow pcop e e 1cve they '1.•M 1 11 4 -1111 hln(.p '·'° s Jf ,., .. _ "' ~!.l~ •I • o 11"'-"' M,JM(e 1.20 5 11 1i -'"'. 111.-.T• 1.10 a . 11"'--.
ilre--atready paying-enoogh '9!~~~-ll ~~~ =~ 10....-I~.._ ~ U:?!:~-:'"'ffl n •. .!. ~ ~1~ t ~ ,;: • °" ::= 'r."'.:.:~ ,; ~:-~
Standard Is eonduC'tin.: '°geolo~ica.l
and ~enphysica l surveys to as.sist
Koniai:; in the selection or their lands.
In n:turrr;-it will"hov€'"n"l'JID1mr0lta:i.ii----_,,
for g()"·crnmenl. &iii:·•, "u ....... E.O!t18t"t.n i "~,. "'· 111011e1)tfl .. 1J )).,. ... ~'f<JJ1 1'· , vi:.•'111 1t111A11 .1f"• 21 _,111 "' t:as lf&ses on portio~ o ~<' lund~.
) I l ' t
•
,
A 10 DAILY PILOT ' ~onday. Oclobet 21, 19'74
i-donie 16,000-seat Billie Jean
' UCI Plans
Collapses;
Big Payoff
SA'.'! Dll~t:(l -l'ro tennis st;ir Jlil ·
l ie .Jean Kin i,:, 31. Y.a:-t.akcn to l\ll~rcy
Jfo:.pltu l ron1pla1111nJ'.( nl rhc:-.t anti
• :-.huul<ll'r puin' Sunday altl·r she to\·
lalJ:-Cil u11 :l 11,uU 1·uur:.t•, off1e1uli. :-.ay. •
Aft er :in t•S .1rn1nal 11)11 111 ! ht• ho!-.p1ta l
f'nll·rgcnl':V /'uutll , :-ht.' ""'a"i advl.~l·d lo
· Telurn hornt; lo l.0111-: Uc.ich tu l'l'5I
By CRAIG SllEn ·
C)I '"" p.ill1 PllOI !i.1•!1
UC Irvine today luunchcd an um·
bilious $100.WO fund ·rais1ng drive
whirh it hopes will le ad to major
university uthh:tic stutus in the im·
n1cd1ule future.
lnl'llldl.!d in UC l's 1>lans. as outlined
by <issistant ;ithlclic dirCt'lor Rod
Sherm<1n today, is a'lfi.OOO·Se<Jt 1null i·
purpose 1n1ni don1 e. \1lhich could be
Je:-.s thun lt ve years 1.1"·uy.
1'hc fund rai:-.1n.: drive '4'ill encum·
\ia:.s a six -v.t:ek period '4'ilh Shermi.ln
optimistic that VCI wi ll have $100,000
by Dec. 3.
Tf<le rormer USC and pro footba ll
standout outlined the ·Anteaters' im·
mediate goals ror this year at a pres!)
ronrerence today.
··111 t he first.yei.lr we hope to go rrom
a very mcdiun1 Division 11 school. as
rur as .scholarships are concerned, to
u tOJJ grade level.
Across the board, the added Funds
will double ou·r seholarshi1:is, upgrade
our scheduling aftd travel. initiatC' a
tOJ) TCl'ruiting crfort a~ uµgrade O~r
over::i ll intcrcolJeg1anLe athlet1e
~rogra m ." sisys Sherman, whose
chier Cunctlon at \JCI is to ralsc funds.
"We "'ant to bfeo1ne a very strong
Dlvi.ston 11 school and our in1mediate
goal is to seek major division status.
1"he Fu nd·raising e£fort:i should im:
medhllely be felt in reC'ruiting efforts
und in scheduling major teams. ·
Sherman adds that the multi·PUJ'o
pose mini·do me has been discussed
by the UCI hicrarehy and eould be
built ,within ri ve years, if the fund·
rai5ing d ri ve is suc~ssful and UCI
eci n St>t'ure gra nts from other sources.
''The mini-do me woultt N"r~" '™"
--entire campus, not jU!hthletiC'S. \Ye
could have concerts, spee<'hes and
other thing~ or this nature, aloog with
athletic events,'' says Shern1an.
The UCl athletic stare is also discus•
sing the possibility of a ugumenting an
intercollegiate volleyball program
\\<\thin the next couple or ye111rs-and
may eve n have a football program in
the not too dista nt f(ll ure.
"Football is not. a number o( ycurs
a"·ay." say:; Sherman, "it':s a ntunbe r
of dollars a way." '
Sher,;iln h<IS di\'lded thf' fund·
raising ¥tup into tv."O"-teamtr--0nC'
made up or th~ Big I booster bou1·d1a
group or 40) and the other oompos.cd
or a cha llenge team (about ~ 1i:i·
di\'idqalsl. The theme of the dnv~.1s
·· .excellance demands invl'stment.
.. I've had people come to me ~nd
$3\' the)· would like lo see something
haPpen at UCJ, and man)" of these
people are not UCI alumni. So thl!
t'Qmnlunit\' is 1·eallv behind this and
that has t.nco uragCd me. I'm con-·
fident we can get the s100.ooo:·
King ..... J\ i11 llil' i:allary '4<1ll'h1ni.:
l hl· Lad1t.•s !'Iii\ i,!ulf tuurn.imcnl \\ 1lh
hi.Ir hu:.l1<ind , J..11T1', \.\'hi:n she l'ullap-
sell. 'fh1·rc \.\a :-n11 1ntl1l·at1un of heart
or che!)l 1r o uhlc, a hos p11 a l
SpOkCSllli.1/1 ::>.JHJ artcr ~IJe \\.;JS
rclca::.cd.
Ara(Js Ripped
M1wre•5 tf1f• Wi1111.-r?
'flJt:ANA -A bettor pickt!d fi V!!
winners in the Agua Calic11lc race
lr:1ck 5· 10 11001 to win $101,UOO Sunday
and then f<Jilctl to show u11 to claim the
money durinj,! the cvcning.
It w:is the fifth rnajor payoff in the
5·10 1>ool sin~·c the truck rl'OJ>ened
~1 iJV 4t h fol\uwini.: a fire in 1971. . . 1'he :i nonyn1ous bettor picked Prin·
t'css Sun, $8.Ro. in th<.' fifth ; 'Dc:ino ·s
Ito.ken, $15.80. in the sixth; 1-lintad. S4
jn the eighth : Evie's Port, S26.00 in
the ninlh :ind J\l iss Spotted 'fhong.
.$8 .80 in lhe tenth.
'l'he wage rer mi .... scd· on Hea l
hJoncy, $51.411, in the Sl·\·cnth.
-"!l's not th;1t unusual for them not
to elaim the v.•innings right away,''
said track publici~l J ohn Grecnsmilh.
••t-'or one thing we sell ti ckets in En·
senada and ftlex1ca l1 and the winner
m ay not hear the results until after
the track closes."
Nnsfy Wi11s
• BARCELON 1\, Spain -t lic
Nast::i se of llomoinia bcal J\lanocl
Orantes of Spain 8·6, 9·1, 6·3 for the
men's singles tillc in the Spanish
Open tennis tournamenlSunday.
Nastase reli ed on strong drives and
a po"·erful service throughout the
match :igainst the tenacious lcflhan·
der.
[\10 ffptirf•111f•11t
ATLA N'l"A -Sl ug~cr llcnry Aaron
says he i!' now "99 pcrrcnt sure" he
will be trying to add to his home run
ret·ord of 733 next year, but he still
v.oon 'l say where.
Aaron made his romments in an in-
terview Sunday on CBS television.
Published reports have predicted
Aaron 1.4•111 sign with the !'dil'41aukee
Brewers of tht 1\meri can League as a
desi~naled hitte r, bccon1ing general
manaj!er in 1976.
But Aaron soiid he has not decided
•;i,:hC'rc he v.·i\I play next season, and he
..:allcd th!! ~ltlwaukcc rcporls pure
~peculat ion.
J\'lfVt"fftllht• f(41lls
SYD NE\'. ,\u:-;tr<1 lia -.John
Nt'wcombe '.'.on his sceond straight
Australian indonr lenn\s champion·
ship Sunda~. dl•ft«d1nl! Cliff Richey,
who lcl his 1c1n pl·r /.!l'l lhc hest of hi m .
Newcombe 1·0\lcl'tL·d SJJ.610 for his
6·4, (;·3, n .. 1 lriunlph "'hile Richey
p iekcrt up S7.00IJ
Ri<"hL'v thrL'~lll'lll'd to \valk off the
court in !ht· e1 gh1 h ~;1 mc of the second
:sel when. tr;i 1l111g :i La foot faull was
called nn h1n1 tnr .1 third lime by the
.-;ame lint-snia n llov.·evcr. the Texan
rompletcd lht• 2' ~·hour duel arter t he
llncsm:.i n "':J S rt placed.
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Texas hi!ltnn:11rl' nu<;:-> Perot. a
jlradu3ll' of th1• 11.1\';d at·.1dt.•my, Jost
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jn n rootb:i ll i·IJ~h . ll L' 1""' mnnl'Y·
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Williams Keys
Lakers Defeat
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UPIT....,._
BILL DRAKE STOPS WILBUR JACKSON OF THE 49ERS AFTER A SHORT GAIN SUNDAY.
Bears, Pack
Mix It Up
In TV Duel
CtllCAGO (A P ) -T he llllh
renewal of the National Footba ll
League's longest running rivalry will
pit the Green Ba y Puckers against the
Chicago Bears tonight in a nationally
televised game.
A sellout crowd of 55,753 will pack
Soldier F"icld with the Rears trying to
even their record and lie the Packer5
o .. 'r\I 'ro11igll1
('l1ffllllf'' 7 "' ,.
for serond pl ace in the Central
Di vi:::. ion of the National Conference.
Th£> Packers boosted their record to
3·2 \Vith a 11·f'i ups{'! of th e Los Angeles
Ranis last Sunday \\'hilc lhc Bears
slipJK'd to 2·3 with a 13·10 defeat at
,\!l:inta.
1'he Rears \\1ill rely (In the passini;: or
(iary !luff and :t youn,e hul lough
dl•fensive line anchnrf'1l h}' \Vally
ChambC'rs \\1ho is even playin~ harder
tha n he did las! year \\'hen he won top
defrnsivC' rookie honors. .
Jl uf r·s nlain targels have been
("h~1rll'\' \\'arle and Bo Hather. hoth
arriuirl'd from th(' J\i1iami llolphins.
\\'ad(' has J:,rahbrd 19 1>asses for 382
\'ards ;.ind Rathe r 13 for 196 including i \\II tourhdnv.·ns.
Green Ba ., .. s d('frns<' :ipparently jcJ.·
lC'd a.l!:ain<>t th<' R<1m s ttst '4'ef'k with
the rt·turn to forn1 or 1'0rQ.frback Wil·
lie Buchanon :i nrl the heroics of
lint•hat•ker Trd llf'ndril'ks
ll\11·h:inon appc:irs to IK' roun1lini:
i11!(1 torn1 aftC'r sufl\·rini:: ;i hrokcn lcJ.!
l;1~1 S(';1 .. on. Hi-. h1\er<"t'pliun It'd to a
('ht·sll·r l\1arf'til field ~nal aAa in5I the
n an1 s. ll1·11dricks picked off thrC'(~
Hams pa:-st•s.
Thf• Parkers. hov.·f'vrr. h3\'C h;td
frouhlf' \\'ith thei r ol'fen:;f'. Qu:1rtcr·
bark .Jerri· Tt1J?f:!C riln~s 121h in t he
Na11onal ('onfcTence wilh ... "iG com-
rlt•tions in 114 nltcm1)t'i.
J ohn Rro<"k ington. v.ho j?ni11cd 1,000
:v:1 r1l s 111 e:ich of hi s firs\ three
srnson ~of off to a slow start. and not .
unt\I hi~ 9A-yard pcrfnrmanrc of last
Sundn~· had he s hO\.\'O top forn\I.
t\t• shn\.\O \OJ> form.
The lk'.'lrs nlso hn,·t' h:id trouhll'
m11\·1ni: the ha ll nn the Rround. \Vith
.hm ll11rr1~on injurt.>d, Ca rl Garrett
and rnokiC' Kt•n Grand!)C'rry ha\'c had
to carry the load. Grandberry has 183
\·ard~ in SI ru!:hr~ for a 3 6 averai::c
but G:irrctt has hcen helri ln 152 In Sot
:iltf'n'IVIS fnr :1 2.8 .1vcraJ,1t'.
49ers Manhandlcad
Rams Find a Passer
As Harris Sets Pace
· LOS ANGELES (AP ) - James was that he executed the things that
Jlarris didn't mind at all that the Los we wanted done. Obviously, there
Angeles coaching · staff , with help were a couple of running plays that we
from John lladl, called all the plays putintoour offense totake advantage
for the quarter back's first start for ofhisabili ty." •
the Ra ms. · Coach Dick Nolan of the 49ers. now '
''Right now, I have no objection to 2·4 compared with 4-2 for Los Angeles,
their doing it," said the 27·)(,_ear-old has quarterback problems he can't
lla rris, who became one of twCt black immediately answer . ,1
starting quarterbacks in the NFL Morrison was hurt in the second
Sunday along ~,ith Pittsburgh's Joe quarter. J oe Jteed replaced him and ·
Gilliam . was ineffective. Rookie Tom Owen
lie used the order s to engineer a ?T· fin ished up and passed for two touch-
14 victory over S(\n Francisco's 49crs. downs in the second half.
throwi ng three touc h/Jown passes and By halftime. the Rams had scored
r unning four yards for another TD. more points with their 27 than they
After the Rams lost to GrC€n Bay had in anyoftheirpreviousSgames. •
17·6 a v.•eck ago, coach Chuck Knox .I
decided to replace the veteran Had!•
with l-la rris. who played three seasons !Jl!lr:l~Wi~Jlll''fl~
with Buffalo before joining the R~ms
last year. '
But where H adl did his own play
calling. 1-ta rris had his come in from
the sidelines.
"lt took an a wfu l lot or pressure of£
me," the quarterback from Gra m·
bling said but added that after a few
i::ames, he might like to do. his own
Play calling.
Jlar ri s hit 12 of 15 passes for J76
yards with touchdown plays covering
50 and 13 yards to Lawrence McCut-
ehcon and 44 to l-l a rold J ackson. Dave
Elmendorf started Los Angeles off
\\lith a 52·yard scoring dash \\ith an in ·
tercepted Dennis l\1 orrison pass.
"'The difference for us was thal we
J:!Ol the big plays," said Knox " ..•
somcthinf,! we had not done in our
previous fi ve gam es. That 1>ass inter·
ccption marked the fi rst time our
defense has scored for us all year.
"l-l arris did a big job for us. I-Fe
eau~ht the 49c~s in a blit7. and hit Mc·
t utehcon for a touchdown . 'l'hcthin g [
liked best about J-larris' performance -,._, • • I• I)
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Olympic Chief
Broadside . .
Fires
VIENNr\ CAP) -Internationa l
Olympic Committee President Lord
Killanin skirted the issue of two U.S.
Oids for upcoming Olympic Games
this morning al the opening or the IOC
meeting a nd tqok the opportunit y to
denounce politica l interference in
sports.
Bul IOC m embers already have
said private ly they must gua rd
a gainst a repetition ot the Denver
s ituation.
"Impossible," said Los Angeles
Councilm an Donald O. Lorenzen, one
of the city's presentation team. ··The
s tate )il\.\'S or California are differenl
fro m those or Colorado. Unde r
California lpw, no contract that has
been signed can be invalidated by a
Ki!la nin, without mentioning any
countries by na m e, fired an apparent
broadside a t the Ar ab-countries as the
15t h JOC session openOO.
Killanin referred to recent cases or
a thle t es be ing preve nted fro m
competing for political reasons. ~is
obvious r efere nce was to the Asian
Games at Tehra n . at which the Arab
nations boycotted events in \\'hich
Isralles were competing.
referendum. ·
"Anyway, public opinion polls have
. shown that 71 percent or the citizens of
Los Angeles want the city to host the
Olympics," said Lorenzen.
Lake Placid"s John Shea, a double
gold medalist in speed skating wht;n
the Winter Oly mpics were last held 1n
Lake Placid in 1932, a lso said: ''Im·
·possible."
The tOC m eeting, scheduled to 13st
thro ug h Thurs day, Will choose
between Moscow a nd Los Angeles as
a site for the 1980 Summer Oly mpi cs
and will cons ide r a solo bid by Lake.
Placid. N . Y .• to host the Winter
Ga mes. Chan ges in the rules
gov e rning a thle tes' Oly mpic
eligibility we re on the agenda for
later today. ,
A1 e mbe r s o f the two U. S.
delegations are expected to try to
hammer home a simple message here
this week -··Denver won't· happen
again." .
Both American delegations know ~hey have Lo li ve down the memories
or Denver, which was awarded the
1976 Winter Games and pulled out two
years later after a state relerendum.
That did the U.S. image no good in the
eyesoCthe IOC.
But at the formal opening of the
session in Vie nna's imposing 19th
century neo-gothic city hall , Killanin
put most or the emphllsis in his speech
on polilical inte rference in sport. .
In an obvious r eCerence to the Asian
Games, Killanin said, "Recently
there have been cases or the use of
athletes for political purposes when,
they h.a ve been pre vented from
competing against another athlete,
especially in contact sports, beca~se
their adminis trators do not agree with
lhe national or political attitude or the
government or lhe country from
which their opponents emanate.
"This is not sport." When th!! Arabs
refused to compete against Israelis at
Tehran they w e re bac k ed by
mainland Ct:lin a, which is not a
member or the Olympic movement
but has bee n e dgi n g t Owards
recognitio n by the IOC.
KiUanin's speech could also be seen
a s a warning to China of the stand ards
it will have to conform l8 if admit ted
to th .. Olvmoics.
U.S. Olympic .offi cials representini?
i.os Angeles a nd Lake Pl acid are not
expected to go before the meeting
until Tuesday with a decision on the
sites not expect ed before Wednesday.
"We h3ve all our facilities rl!ady
and need to do nothing that would
affect the e nvironment a nd cause
controver sy-. And we have full
financial backtrfg-from both the
federal and state government."
President Ford has written a letter
lo Lord Killanin emphasizing that
what happened in Denver could not
be repeated if Los AngeWs a nd Lake
Placid are awarded the 1980 Games.
Killan!n" r efe rred bri~'£ly lo the
problems of choosing s ites foi:: 1980
a nd the proP.Osed changes in the
eligiblity rules. But he came back
to political interference and said all
other matte rs ''are relegated to
unimportance com pared with this
recent danger ous and destructive
element. '
No Panic
As Blaze
Hits Engine
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP! -"No
one panicked, but I didn 't hear any
laughter or joking either .'' said coach,
Tom Harp arte r the plane carrying
the India na State University football
team made a forced landing due to a
fire in one engine,.
"Everyone gol a little uptight, par·
ticu\arly when the stewardess s tarted
expla ining emergency crash·land ing
procedures," h~ said. "I ·ve never
seen the team listen with such inlen·
sity."
The 48 m embers or the ISU team
a nd coaching s taff returned safely lo
Terre Haute Sunday after making the
la ndin g a t Lexington. Ky., and
changing planes. They we re returning
from Cullowhce, N.C., after Sa lur·
day's 18·3 loss to Western Carolinh.
"I'm a private pilot myself," Ha rp
said. "and since it was a cha rtered
flight. I went into the pilot's cabin ."
"Suddenly, I heard the warning bell
and saw a n engine t rouble light come
on, so t j ust tried to ret urn to my seat
noncha lanty."
1-larp said som e of the players heard
the bell and looked out the window at
the right engine on the twin-engine,
propellor·driven North Central
Airlines Convair 580. It v.•as on fire
and had been s hut orr.
"E ven footb a ll player !'! know
they're in trouble when the propellers
don't go around,'' Jf arp said.
The pilot extingui shed the fire in the
air and new with one engine to the
nearest airport -Lexi ngton·s Blue
Grass Field . The plane landed sa£ely
a bo ut 7 p. m. Saturday.
Golf Results
SAN ANTONIO, T••· (API -~'""' ,cor1c
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~('rif'!'i . 1.a);t '!'c:Hu)n thl'y dC'fral<':d the
P:iekcr!'i 31 ·11 In G rcen Da y but lost :it
!home 2l·O in the !leason linalc.
PA!o\!NG • $1111 F•M!(\\(0, Ow-11>1"1, 113 ,110t;
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Saddlehaek Today's Final
EDITION N.Y. Stocks
VOL 67, NO. 294, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1974 TEN CENTS
• 'Innocent' .Prisoner Will Have Day Ill Court
By ARTllUR R. VINSEL
Of Ill• D.ilr Piiot Sl.1tl
James Ray Russell will be taken to
a Los Angeles Counly courtroom TueS-
day but the ordeal is oot over fGl'
the former Lagwia Hills man at'CUsed
ol a murder he may not have committed.
He hu been he'ld tn Los Angeles
County Central Jail for 743 days as
of today.
He has been held since Oct, 8, 1972,
without bail, without arraignment and
ew
without any definitive results of more
than a dozen bearings of various kinds
involvipg extradltlon to Oklahoma, to
face trial for a killing that occurred
on a Saturday night when evidence in-
dicates he was in California.
He has been . cleared of implication
once already by Orange County Superior
Court Judge William 1'1urray, who is
aghast at wb.Bt has happened in the
mcire than t'A'<> years since.
"1 never done any killing ... ," Russell
•
aid in a jail interview Friday.
Russel l, 27, is an ex-convict who did
four year! at Ate..\lester. Okla.. for a
burglary committed at the age of 19
and now the state of Oklahoma wanls
him back.
The California Supreme Court h a s
recently ruled that be should temain
behind bars without bail, pending resolu-
tion of a v.'eb or technical legal en-
tanglements involving superior and ap-
pellate courts in Los Angeles and Orange
I X OD u
counties.
Juslices said he did not have a lull
and complete hearing in Los Angeles
County Superior Court following his re-
arrest there, despite being arrested and
cleared earlier in Orange Coonty.
One basis of that·cl~nce by Judge
~turray was the result of a polygraph
test indicating Russell told the truth
aOOul being at the Long Beach Nu-Pike
amusement park \vi.th his u'ife Karen
and friends the night of the n1urder
l,000 miles :i11a1·.
\Vilnt·sSl!s 111li be called and affidavits
presenltod Tuesday to that effect but
Oklahoma autho rities \\'ho filed l he
teletypcd fui,:ilil'e 11a rrant say thev are
having troublC' rouuding uµ proseCution
witnesses.
One is anti cipnll'd tu be Russell's ex-
v.ife, a Fort Sn1i!h. Ark .. hnirdre!W!r
11•ho signed an af11tla1·it that she saw·
her former husband that fateful night
and talked "!th him. Altomey Rogl'r
o enas
Two Laguna ltaclde11ts
•
El Toro Artist
Held • Ill
El Toro silk screen artist Steven J.
\Villett is being held by Laguna Beach
police today en charges cf assault with
intent to commit rape after he allegedly
attacked a woman and then a 15-year'illd
girl in. the Art Colony.
Laguna police said the mother of the
El ToroHome
Blast Points
To Gas .Leak
' ,f,.. powerful exptcnion and result ing
fire that ripped through an El Toro
home Friday ni ght was caused by a
gas leak, fire Investigators reported t<r
day. .
ResuJts d. the probe by Orange County
Fire Department Capt. Ron Dywater
pinpointed the cause e leakage in the
home's natural gas system.
The blast in the home of :P.fr. and ?ttrs. Robert Power, 24131 Eaglemont
Ave. blew out walls and started a lire
that caused an estimated $ 5 6 , 0 0 0
damage.
The couple '9<1 . ..: watching television
when the 9:52 p.m. blast rocked the
home. 'Ibe Powers escaped uninjured.
Firemen listed $35,000 damage to lhe
house and garage, $11,000 to a n\otor
home parked In front of the house and
$10,000 to the contents of the residence.
Investigat(on continued to d a y to
determine what ignited the 1 e a k i n g
natural gas.
Chicago Seizes
.Haul of HeroiJ{
CHICAGO (UPI) -More than 20
pounds of pure Mexican heroin, valued
at more than · $20 million, was seized
and four persons were arrested SWlday
in • what police called the I a r g e s t
oarcotlcs seizure in Oticago history.
"Twenty pounds, five ounces -that
ii tbe honest jo God truth/' a police
spokesman said.
'lbe heroin was found in a false gas
tank on an auto carrying s e v e r a I
suspect& Police ·stopped the car and
another auto containing the o th er
suspects after a three-mile chase on
the city's West Side. ·
PIGSKIN PICKERS
VIE FOR TV SET
• The sixth woet ol Pipkin Pickeroo '7• competition for prizes lnclud.ini a
Color television set begin! today.
Each wetk, Daily Piiot readen arc
Invited to predict the ootcomea ol 30
weekend football gamea.
W~en are awarded 1.enith televiskm
and radio producta worth lt30 fol!Dwing
each week'• Judging. Further, flnt place
wetkly wlnner1 are eligible to compete
for the color telev1slon grand prize.
Pigskin Pickeroo iJ a regt4ar feature
0: ~ Dally ellD! •Portll Jlkes. ABC
Color Televt1lon of lluntington Beach
and Zenllb Inc. are C04p0lll0ring the
contest.
\ j
Assaults
teeMger actually led them lo Willett
v.·hen she ran into him by chance while
shopping.
The mother claimed he p u I I e d
alongside her car, sakl "wow" and then
drove off, according to detective Gene
Brooks.
. Willett. 22, or 24902 Brandl Ave., El
Toro. described himself as a s e I f -
employed silk screen artist. He was
arrested Saturday and is held oo $10,000
bail.
The teenaged girl was b e I n g in·
terviewed about her Friday ordeal. Her
mother left the station to do some
shopping when she was spotted by a
leering man in another car.
She wrote down his license p I a t e
number. Police allege it matched the
licenses of a car involved in previous
cases and they traced the auto to the
Suspect.
. Det. Brooks said the first assault oc-
curred Friday night as the 15-year'illd
girl was walking along Coast Hi ghway.
He said she told him the attacker
drove past her, stopped his car, gol
out and began following her. He began
talking with her and she ,became nervous
when the questions turned to personal
subjects.
The young girl lrantically began look·
ing for an open store, or restaurant,
and when tmable to see one turned
up Myrtle Street, a residential street.
When the man asked her where she
lived, she pointed to a lighted house
and began running toward it.
The man then grabbed the young girl
as she tried to flee. Her screams ale rted
nearby residents who burst from their
doors and came to her aid. One man
chased the attacker, but lost him.
A half hour later,' a 31)..year old woman
was assau1ted as she walked to her
central Laguna apartment.
The woman told officers she w a s
followed by the attacker who d r o v e
behind her in his car. He asked her
If she wanted a ride, and when em-
phatically told "no," .left the vehicle
and began trailing her.
As she neared a resklence, the man
barred her path and grabbed her. He
fled after she began screaming.
Det. Brooks said that as he interviewed
the woman Saturday in his . office, the
15-year-old's mother was present, and
heard the description or the attacker.
(See INCIDENTS, Page A:I
OaitJ l'llel l'llett lw J111 Wonll
POPPING WHEELIES, BICYCLE MOTOCROSS RACERS BATTLE FOR THE LEAD
For Some Saddleback Valley Families, Sunday Morning Means Motoc ross Instead of TV Football
Supreme Court
To Hear Countv .I
l\'larines' Plea
From Wire Services
\VASHlNGTON -A challenge by eight
Afarines stationed at the Marine Corps
Air Station, Santa Ana, against the lack
of defense counsel at summary ~urts
martial will be heard by the U . S .
Supreme Court.
The court today agreed to review
a decision of the U.S. Circuit Court
in San Francisco that defense counsel
must be made ·available in such pro-
ceedi ngs in complex cases.
Government attorneys turned to the
U.S. Supreme Court after the San Fran-
cisco decision arguing that there is no
constitutional right to the assistance of
counsel in summary courts n1artial.
Summary courts are used to t r y
military persormel charged with minor
Of defense counsel "·ould overturn the
confinement, reduction in grade o r
forfeiture or pay.
"Since there is no prosecutor in sum-
mary courts martial, the presence there
of defense counsel v.·ould overturn th
balanced p-ocedure that "'Ould unduly
(See COURT, Page A1)
Kids Motoring
Trnbuco 2-wheelers Get Tropliies
Ry JA'.'l \VORTII
Ot Ill• Ceilt 'llOt Sl•lf
!...~ ~~:: ~~::'i~·.•.r ~~ the noise and dust
of the v:eekend motocross events at
Escape' Country near Trabuoo Canyon.
there's another event laking place lhat
is just as furious, dusty, and competitive.
But most of the participants doo 't
even have their second teeth in yet.
They're aficionados of the bi c y £'I e
motocross , sponsored each Sunday morn·
ing by Escape Country and run hy
a group of enthusiastic parents from
the Saddleback Valley.
About 80 youngsters, most between
five and 12, are regular riders in the
two hours of events.
Their course has a steep downhill
start, a dirt ramp for wheelies, and
a oouple of hairpin tums.
The winners get m.graved trophies
and gifts from Saddleback V a l 1 e y
merchants.
"I'll tell you something. \Ve had a
bunch of v.ild kids on our block until
they started this motocross,·· one Laguna
Hills parent•.said. "TheY" used to ride
tJ1eir bikes through peopte·s yards and
cause a lot of trouble. Nov.· they don 't
do it anymore."
The parents have organized into safely,
organizational, and first aid comnlittees.
''The parents are hooked on it." said
Kathy Coffin berry of Laguna H i 11 s.
··\ve·ve developed a Jot of safety precau·
lions and I knov.· the kids aren't getting
hurt. rm in charge of first aid."
All youngsters are requi red lo \\'ear
hehnets. which can be r(n!cd from ~
of the pa rents. Thlds and moms are
Clhvays around the starling line, checking
nir pressure in the I.ires, adding drops
of oil and giving advice .
'"The "'orst injuries v.·e ha\'e around
here are hurt feelings," said Bruce
Turbeville. an Orange County fircrnan
\\'ho has been taking his kids to the
motocross event for mooths.
"The first time we came out here,
my boys v.•ere the only ooes "'ho planned
to ride.'' Turbeville said.
Between them. Turberille and hi s
fiancee have five Kids betv.·C'en J() and
5 who pile into Turbeville's tn1ck each
Sunday "'ith their bikes for lhC' C\'ent.
Moulto1a Ra11ch Plata
"t\1y <laughter Tracy took one look
at lhe course and said 'J'nl goini:? fo
ride.' " Turbeville recalls with :i win
"She's been riding ever since, and she's
v.·on ~C'l'cral trophies." . Greenbelt May Be ln·tact So far. there are only about JO girls
who p;1rti cipate in the races. Siner that's
not 1•not1gh for a full-fledged l:>O"der
puff event, the girls con11JCte \\'ith lhe
bol'S.
A new plan for the 9,700.acre Moulton
Ranch may rtSu1t ln 100 p e r c e n t
preservation of t h e much<'ontested
Laguna Greenbelt portion of thl!I ranch.
Officials from the Orange County Plan-
ning Department, the private plAMlng
nrm or Chapman, Phillips, Brandt and
Reddick, and of the Laguna Greenbelt
orga niutk>P met today on the acreage.
Purpose of the meeting, according to
Jim Tso, a county senior planner, was
to detertp.tne just what the boundarl~s
of the Laguna Greenbelt on tile ranch are.
If the grttnbelt is left untouched In
open space or conservation r.one, about
t,100 rtsldenllal units ,now shown near
Wood C8.nyon probably would be moved .
to a plain along El TQro Road, Too
said.
o F a --~.
Last map shown for the massive ranch
called for 80 ,percent preservation or
the greenbelt.
But r e pre sent a ti v es of Laguna
Greenbelt, Inc.. a non-profit lobbying
organization striving to girdle Laguna
Beach with open space were n o t
oatlsllcd.
The Laguna Grl'ellbelt. about 10.000
acres total, wRs design1ued in the Orange
County open space element last year
a! one or five top priority greenbelt
areas to be preserved if pru.sible.
About a third of the f0,000 undeveloped
acres lie in lhe Pt1oulton Ranch, which
ls being plarwed _now for. up to ..50 000
residents. Many of the population ~uts
proposed since county hearings bega n
on th~ ranch plans we'.fe iJL the ~a
Grccnbeli. •
I
-
Low and Jow-mediu1n density develop-
ment had ·been propesed along El Toro
Road. Originally, a high .schOOI site also
was proposed.
The property where tbe adjustments
are being made Is owned by Ivar llanson
-the L.E. Atoullon Trust. It i~ lhe
largest parcel of the 1!ilx ownerships
lncludln( 5.500 acres.
Couo.ty .olficlalt ~ e.g a. n reevaluating
~belt uea at the request of 100
county planning commission. At the last
meeting on the Atoulton Ranch, rom-
m;ssioners asked county plnnners t o
~!tie ap wllh an alternative thowing
100 p,rcent presermtlon of th~ grcenbtlt.
A '.he.ring on tha new proposal1 Is
schcdull_d for 7:i¥/ p.m. Ocl 30 at
Mljo1on Vio!jo Hilb School.
The parents arc al"·oys ah .. •rt for fXXi$i ·
t;lc Injuries and emotion.RI support .
\Vh4'n ;i kid takes a spill. he is soon
!l.urroundrd. by a hntf-dozen parents \\"ho
du.st htn1 'off. make surr hc"s oka~·
gi\'c hin1 a prtt on !he renr. and plop
him btll'k on lht bike.
All the kids \\'ho fall off their blltes
;i;r<' urg<'d lo finish the raet'. They usually
do, rc:K<h1ng !he finish hlli! 10 lhc lune
of Ct:nthusi3stic Rppl:iuse from the spcc-
lators. ··~·1n1sh that course. Ltv.is. you ran
stlll m;t k(' ii'." on(' p.1rent v.·ill Y<'il
"Pump Iha\ thing~"
An E§ca~ Couolry s Dokes man
rr~h!('(! th!!-J'aTC?nt voluutcf!rs for kff!>"
\ng lhc C\'Cnl from g£'11ing loo "Uttle:
Lenguish. so th:it thC parenta take the
fun a1\'llY from lhe k.ids." ~
C!ltt MOTOCR S. l'o~e A!I
------
Agajanian. 11·ho became familiar 11ith
the case ol Russell as a law clerk in
the Orange County Public De.lender's
Office 21::. years ago, claims s~ is a
factor.
He .said the former ~1rs. Russell wrote
a letter apologizing after her e.x-huslwld
11·as jailed. claiming she \\'BS coerced
into signing the allegedl y untrue state-
ment by Oklahoma au1horities who
threatened to prosecute her as n11 at'-
(Set ACCUSED, P1ge AZ)
o om·
Gra11cl -Jury
Will Seek
File Data
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -The special
\\'atergate prosecutor·s office disclosed
today that a grand jury soon v.·ill issue
new subpoenas for materials from 1he
\Vhi te House files of former President
r\'ixon .
Attorney Peter Krein<ller of the pn>
secutor's office made 'the disclosure dur4
ing a hearing on Nixon's request for
a court order enabling him to mol'e
those tapes and documents out of the
\Vhitc House to Laguna Niguel .
The suit also seeks to give Nixon
the right to review any materials sought
in future subpoenas. But it does noc.
seek lo in terfere with materials already
under subpoena er needed in the currenl
Watergate oover4 up trial.
Nixon's attorney. llerbert J. 1'1iller,
.1rgued that moving the 1naterials to
the West Coast v.·ould not interfe re with
the cause of justice. ·
But Kreindler said that Aliller had not
taken into account ''on· go i n g in4
vcstigations" when he listed the material
that Nixon wants to move to the coast,
issued,'' Kreindler said
"'He has not included grand jury sub-
poenas that he was informed ap-
proximately 10 days ago would b c
is.sued," Kriendler said.
~loments later. t\liller was on his feet.
protesting that the terms or his legal
effort to. move lhe prcsidentiaJ materials
were not intended to block any criminal
investigation .
"I'm .,.:illing to amend (the request
to move the materials) to exclude the
grand jury subpoenas so none can say
this action was filed for impeding any
lype of grand jury investigation o r
\Vatergate trial." Miller said. "It was
filed in good faith ."
Krtindler told newsmen after the hear-
ing that the impending subpoenas and
the grand jury invei;tigalion c o n c e r n
matters in the jurisdiction of the special
\Vatergate prosecutor. I-le refused to
elaborate.
U.S. District Judge Charles Richey
announced he v;-ould rule later in the
day or early Tuesday on the narrow
question of whether to issue ~ temporary
restraining order on use of the presiden-
tial material.
~1iller said Nixon has a right to refuse
to comply with sorve subpoenas on
grounds o{ privacy or exec u t i v e
privilege. He said the ailing Nixon also
(Stt /'\IXON, Page A%)
Orange Coast
Weather
Consirler:ible lo1v cloudiness
through 'I'ues<lny rnornlng wi~h
some sunshine in the aflernoon
'I'ucsday, Slightly war1ner wit!'!
beach highs at 60 rising to i3 ln-
lttnd. Lov.·s tonight 57 to 62 .
INSIDE TODAY
Prcsideut ford and ~fc.rico·.~
prc.~ident F.cliet•o1·ria llo11c sci;t'r·
al tlltnas 111 111111d as f11ey n1c1•t
today. F'ord is rntrrrslcd in the
11tw 011 finds ill So ufl1tr1L flttX·
1co. Erl1el1errit1 1s 111l.cr1•.~red u1
rc11c1viun the hroccro WCJrk pro-
gro11i i1L lltul('d · States. Srt:
.story, Page t\.,.
1~11'" .. '"' LI ..... ,.. " L, M, llYtl " M""" M c.1 ...... ,, .. Nellt'll•I .. , .. , " Cl•u1llfl! •.. , °'"'"" C1unty .,, ,_ .. ...... 11.1 c ..... ..., .. " ...... .. ,0.11
0.1111 Nellc-S "' Steck Mlt~411 " Ctlll9'11! l'•tl .. Ttlt~''°'" " •nltrl1l111n1nt .. Tll1111n .. "'"•11<.• .. Wt•lt>f• ..
H-K-" Wtrtcl N,t1"t ••
• I ·-••
Policeman
Shot Dead
In Office
I.OS ANCEL.ES (AP) -A s l :i. t e
policeman died at County-USC ~1edical
Center after be ing .shot In the l1l'a<I
early ulday as he wu.s working alone
in a State Police annex office in the
downtown s1~1te Office 8 u i l d i n g •
authorities said.
?be olflccr, David A. Jal·k, 23, of
Rlvers.ide, was shot In the left side
()( tbe head, apparently at 1.Josc ran g:e,
iU1horl liet said.
Authorities cordoned off the a r c o
around the Los AngcleJ Ch1c Center
after Jack's body was found ln the
iround·Ooor annex shoni)' •her I a.m.
• A search ol the area ft.Ile<! to reveal
any clues to the g\ll\\llBn, authorHles
said. Investigators were unable to ex·
plain a motive !or the shooti ng.
Auilxirities said Jack's body was found
by an Qffice worker returning to the
building 'ilfter tak.lng a break.
Jack, who was responsible for checking
atate employes entering the building.
wu~ the ClCl}y person on duty in the
lobby at the lime of lhe shooting, police
said.
Because the building is in use around
the clock, the doors always remain
wilocked. they added.
A police spo kesma n sa id Jack
reponedly was shot at close rang~ with
a large-caliber ~·eapon. More than one
shot \\·as ..believed to have been tired
at the officer because traces of chipped
marble from a wall near the oUice
"·ere found near the victim, t h e
spokesman added.
l1npounded Boats
To Cost O·wners
M ucli More Soo1i
Boat owners who tie up illegally to
someone else's mooring in Orange Coun-
ty harbors and have their vessels im-
poWKled mo.y 900n be paying four Urnes
as much to get them out or bock.
Orange County supervisors \\'ill be
asked 1ruesday to make revisions in
county moortqg fee pollcle!, aimed maii:i-
ly at transient boaters who get their
boats impounded on pw'J)Ol!le to en)oy
\ow~t storage at a county guest moor-
ing.
Sud\ boet.ef'I must now 9ay only a
dollar for each day the boat v.·as in
impound.
"This low dally fee provides no in-
.cenUve to the <lwner of such a vessel
.to remove It from the lmpowxl, fre-
quent.Jy r~ltlng In long·term storage
at a rate muCh less than the boat
owner would pay ·al a commercial
marina," said Harbor Department DI rec·
tor Kenneth Sam~n.
The Harbors, Beaches and Parks Com·
mission suggested the county charge
the same dally rate tor Impound boats
3-1 !or guest slips in county harbors
-$4 in Newport ltarbor and $3 in
Dana Harbor.
Q.lrrently, only Nev.'J)Ort Harbor has
moorings but some are pl&Med for Dana
Harbor v.·ben the east baaln opens up.
Sampson said he is confident the large
in.crease in impound fees will be in-
centive to get boat owners to reclaim
tbelr property.
At the same meeting, supervisors will
be asked in Increase the guest mooring
lee from II to 12.
Sampson said since the current C06t
of a guest sli p is $4 per day in Newport
Harbor, increasing the guest mooring
fee lo SO percent of !hat .is "an ap-
propriate price differenUol."
Supervisors will also be asked by
Sampson to clamp the same flvt.'-day
l{UCSl limit now used <ln slips to the
transient vesi;el moorings.
ORANGE COAST is.
DAILY PILOT
TN OriO'I .. (NII 0.lty '°'IOI, .., ... •"'t" It l-bll't~ !IO!I "lt WS·l'l'Ht, It ()UDl"ftl'll by l~P °'"~911 c .... ,, Pi..Dl•r,lll"ll c-.... ,. Sl!'o.o••!('
tGollO"!\ t" PU!llo!ltf'd ""°"""' 1""°""31' Fr•.,llv,
"" (Ml• M•YI, Nt wt>Or! 8t«ll, li1mlo"Olon
floKlllFO°"'!lli" Y•ll•v. l.1-8 S.M;ll,
l'""''""°°"l•CJM• •NI '5.61'1 Clf.,..fllr/Mn J\06'1
C.ptt1•-• lo'lqlf ••o•<;>n•I tG•hO'I h ()UDll"'~~ \~t\l•<!,y\ &1'!11 Sutl<Wf\. TM P"lnf;IP•I
pu111 .. 11.no pl M>I "I I JDO ~,, e., 'I.Uhl, Cm.I• Mt-••, C..lo!orn•• •ltlt
Robert N. Weed
Pt•llt11n! •NI P\11111<1'&~
Jack R Curley
lf'i<• P'l't\ldot'll •n0 c;.,.. •• , ,.,,. ... Qltf'
Thomas Keevil
Th0m8!i A. Mu rohlne
Mt"llll"' E.Ol\OI'
Charles H. Loos Richard?. Nall
.hi.t,1 ... 1 Mt,,.1111111Eo.1or'
Of llt eS Go\!•,_.,. Jl4 W.\! ... , SI""' "'-•"'1 lk•d• ll1J Nt•Pl!l1 llcllllf,..rtl ~·o~~-II••(~ '"lf•G"'"""''P ~I "'''unoi.,.., ... c~· u11t a.A(~_.. .. ., ~ Clt ..... nM; JOS No.r•~ [I C'.M?\•N llt•I
Sin Cltmo"t' All OtPirtmtnl': Teltphont 492-4420
0111r '1111 1111t '"'" Lifesaver
James 'Tito' Olivares of San
Juan Capistrano was awarded
$50 and plaque by the city for
saving at least two lives when
he put out early morning fire
while on duty as a street·
sweeper. He noticed s1noke
froni second-story apartment.
da,shed upstairs and pu t out
blaze in a mattress where two
people were sleeping.
Col. Simmonds
Of Laglma H;ills
Succumbs at 82
C.01. Edward P. Simmonds (US~1C.
rel.). a veteran of t"·o \\·orld wars
and a resident " Laguna Hills Leisure
World for St,) years , dled Sunday at
Saddleback Conununity Hospital follow-
ing a heart attack.
Col. Simtnonds, father of Irvine World
NeY.'S Editor Jeanne S. Keevil, bad
~lebrated his 82nd birthday one day
before his death .
Funeral services are pending at La
Jolla Mortuary Chapel.
Col. Simmonds received a fieJd com-
mission in tbe Marine Corps a f t e r
enlisting as a private ln \Vorld War
I. Discharged Crom active duty as a
first lieutenant, he rose to the rank
of major in the Marine Reserve and
'vas recalled to adive service tn 1944.
Bef<lre retiring in 1S52. his assignments
had included duty as executive officer
of Camp Elliott near San Diego.
Survivors. In addition to Mrs. Keevtl.
include another daughter, Mn:. Cynthia
Lucas of La Canada, and s e v e n
grandchildren, among them Katherine
and Constance Keevll of Jo.11sslon Viejo.
Three Boats Hit
By Burglars in
Dana Point Area
Boat burglars kept Orange C o u n l y
Sheriff's officers busy at Dana Point
Harbor during the weekend with two
boat O\\'llers reporting the theft of equip-
ment from three moored vessels.
Deputies said intr:uders who pried open
!he main compartment door took fishing
poles and a portable television set from
a boat owned by Edv.·in Howard KoeMer.
48. of Temple City. The loss was valued
" $250. Boat owner ?.1ichael Earle Deaner,
27. of 339~1 Mariana St., Dana Point:
has two boats moored at lhe !OUth
county dock and both were broken Into
during the "·eekend .
Burglars took camera equipment and
fishing poles val ued at $450 from a
.small boat owned by the real estate
dealer and fishing poles and radio equip-
ment valued at $450 from his neHrby
cabin cruiser,
Frona rage Al
l\'I OTOCROSS • • •
Jack and Jan ~lurray or ~Ussion Viejo
are lhe moi;t activt: organizers. !\lurray
is the nagman and ont or the n1ost
enthusia.,lic suppar1c~ or lhe evtnt. Ills
wife is a rC('(lrd k~per.
"l-h~lf of thc5e n1en hR \'e elven up
football ror th1· bike motocross." s,'IJd
r.tr:s. Coffinbcrr,Y. "It's replly a famll)1
activity."
"Sure bents sitting In front of the
boob tube all day,'' one paren t echot.-d.
Armed Bandits
Hold Up Market
Two armed bandit! wearing ski musks
escaped 'l\'it h $35 In ca sh early Sunday
Crom a Huntington Beath market.
Police reported the pair, both deACrlb-
rd M.S in !heir early t~·entie1 and about
five feet 10 inches tsll , ente red the
:\top N Go m11rkt:l, &441 Edinger Ave.,
at 2:12 a.m.
Officers said they ordered the clerk,
eoo,...gi.r. 1•11. o •• ~" c:o..1 11111111w.._ l>onald Gen~ Lon&fellow or Garden
(atllp•"r NII 111w~ "°'"'· ttlll\lrfl+.,.t. G h h · I t(!•lqfl•r "'•!!••a• •-·•~'"" ,,. .. i,, ..... .rove , to open I e en' reg11 tr at
to!'. '1'Pfbd1K•f .,,llOvt '*' .. 111rfftlu""' "' , nunpolnl, then rorced him to lie on ((lllyrollf!t owntf. '-" the noor.
s.tfl)tl1' r1111 00'1tOJ °"'" ~• Colli Mtw, Th bo h -' 11 llbe C•t.1011111, \uo.<rlU1!11t1 ov t M•lf• uoo \.'men. l ca •• ,.ng sma CD r
,...,...,,.,. a, ""'11 s.t.llO "'°"I"'•· m1111"'"' rcvnlver5, then left In what was dcscrlb-t-'"-'-""-'-""'-'-"-"-"-""-''-"-=====!.....:':d as a balterc-d silver·bluc car.
•
Trial Set
F 01· Tuesday
OnGeoTek
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Uu!lnegs
promoter John "Jack" P. Burke, ptln-
cipnl figure in an alleged $30 m\Ulon
GeoTek oil drllllng swindle, is to go <ln
trial in federal court for fraud Tuesday.
The 48-year-old Burke's atto rn ey,
James fl.1acln nis. said be will ask U.S.
I>i.strict Judge William T. S"·eigert (or
a postponement because or alleged pre-
judicial publicity, much of It awirllng
around Atly. Gen. Evelle J. Younger's
investment In a. Burke oil venture and
a loan to Younger from the promoter.
Younger, steklng re-election, clai~
his opponent fa behind lbe controversial
publicity and denies allegations that he,
as Los Angeles dlatrtct attorney fi ve
years ago1 Ignored rtquests t o in-
vestigate Burke's operaUons.
~tacirmis also cttea ·news stories
about Los Angeies-Trriies publi~her Otis
Chandler's involvement in GooTek, form·
ed by Burke to sell oil drilling imited
partnerships.
Chandler is a defendant in a federal
civil suit brought by the Secunties and
Exchange Commission in May, 197 3,
alleging that Burke, Chandler and others
violated securities laws aod defrauded
2,200 investors who put $30 million Into
the various <>ii drilling programs.
Chandler. who testified be for~ the
federal grand jury \\'hich indicted Burke
J une 17, has denied any fraudulent con·
duct.
He said he invested and lost $248,00lr
in Burke ventures aod that be returned
$373,000 ln free stock and $109,000 In
finder's fees he received for introducing
potential Investors to Burke.
A court source said that act res a
Natalie Wood• Nancy.Sinatra Sr. and hef
dauRhter Nancy Sinatra have been
subpoenaed to testify at Burke's trial
about their Investments In <lit drilling
programs.
Th e souce said the government is
expected to call about 30 witnesses and
Burke about 12. The ;rial is estimated
to take from 2~ to .seven weeks.
Burke Is charged with unlawfully of-
fering and selling securities -
specifically investment contracts in the
form of co-ownership Interests In the
1968 J . B. Oil Erploration program and
pre-formation subscrlpUons to a GeoTek
Resources Fund limited partnership.
He also is accused of making untrue
statements and omitUng necessary facts
In selling secwities, and al50 with con-
spiracy.
Two attorneys, Arthur J. Lempert,
42, San Mateo, and Robert S. Rose,
44, San Rafael, were indicted on con-
spiracy charges in lhe cax. Th e y
allegedly conspired to conceal material
facts in helping prepare for the SEC
an affidavit purporting to fully renect
Burke's ownership in various f l·r ms.
Their attorneys are expected to request
a separate trial.
Assistant U.S. AtJy. F. Ste e I e
Langford, who will prosecute the case,
has all eged that Burke d i v er I e d In-
vestors' money from various J. B. Oil
programs. combining led it w:i.h his mm
funds and then U.9ed it to a c q u i r e
numerous oU prospects of his own.
The indictment said $3.6 million
obtained from 177 investors in the 1968
J. B. Oil program and alx>ut $6.7 million
from 466 investo rs in the G e o T e k
partnership.
The SEC civil suit \\·as fi~_J.tay
17, 1973. against GeoTek Resources Fund,
Inc.; 13 related firms; Burke; b Is
brother, Robert; Cbandler; Lempert,
Arth ur Young and Co., acoountants, and
others. That trial is set for Feb. 3.
Among other things the SEC s u I t
alleges various schemes were used to
obtain money fraudulently, that untrue
statements were made and that proceeds
from the sale of securities were "misus-
ed, converted and misappropriated."
It also claims that materiall y false
and misleading reports and reg istration
statements were filed with the SEC.
Youngcr's involvement became pro-
minent with a claim by William Norris,
the Democratic attorney general can-
didate, that the Republican incumbent
failed lo tell the SEC !hat when he
"·as Los Angeles district attorney he
w11s called by an investor and ask ed
lo Investigate Burke's operation. The
\\1 all Street Journal carrled a story alx>ut
the all eged complaint two years ago.
•
Sniffi11g" s .Ooi
.M o·oushi1ie Conviction Scotclied
• WASHINGTON (UPI) -The U.S. Supreme Co urt today let
stand a lower court ruling that a warrant is needed to search a truck
that smells of whiskey.
The standard for a warranUess search is whether the lncrlmlnat·
lng evJdence ls ln 11plain view" of a law officer. The 4th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals ruled that the odor of whiskey does not make the
liquor itseli in plain view and that a warrant was needed to search
the truck.
'!'he 3ppeals court overturned the conviction of \ViUlam G.
Bradshaw, who was charged with making moonshine in the Dirty
Ankle section of Cleveland County, N.C.
The arresting agents smelled liquor around the truck and
searched it without a warrant. They found 144 gallon jugs of moon·
shine.
Services Set £01· Oregon
Blind Student P1·esident
ASHLAND, Ore. (UPI) -f.femorial
service9 will be held on campus Wednes·
day for Gary Manlove, the blind student
body president at Southern 0 r ego n
College.
~lanlove, 40, who died or a heart
From l'age Al
NIXON .••
must prepare himself for f u tu r e
testimony at the Watergate cover--up
trial and cannot do IO while ha materials
are In W ashlngton.
Earlier in the day, arguing the questloit
of when the materials can be destroyed
under an agreement between Nixon and
the General S e r v I c e s AdministraUon,
Miller said that cannot happen within
the next five yean.
"I would like to lay lhis at rest
right now,'' he added. "This ls absolutely
false."
Miller said that under the agreement,
the tapes and some documents would
be destroyed on Sept. t, 1984, or earlier
lf Nixon dies. But he said the death
provision would not come into play until
after five years passed.
The Reporters Committee for Freedom
of. the Pres&, representing newsmen,
hlstoriar11 and columnist Jack Anderson,
intervened in a suit Nixon flied to have
the tapes and documents rtmoved to
the West Coast tmder the agreement.
From l'age Al
ACCUSED ...
cessory to murder.
Russell Is aoo..ised of killing and rol>
bing a 9'l-year-old male invalid confmed
to a wheelchair.
"To this day, I don't know what led
tilem to suspect me ... '' he as.id Friday.
"I used to live one town away from
Stigler, but I never even knew the
<lid man."
Agajan.iao said today that 0 r a n g e
County's polygraph technician Dean Hen-
dricks, who administered the so-called
!ie detector test to Rusaell in 1972,
is supplying the charts and graphs to
his counterpart in Los Angeles County,
Kenneth Scarce.
Would Nixon
Take His Life?
NEW YORK (UPI) -Evangelist
Billy Graham was quoted as saying
cne possible cau~ of President
Ford's pardon of fonner President
Nixon was a fear Nixon might
conunil suicide.
Graham was quoted by the Na-
tional Enquirer as saying: "I have
heard whispers about the posslbill·
ty \bat the former president might
commit suicide." lie refused to
dlacl<lle hls source for this in-
formation.
Graham, who has been close to
!Orne ol the nation's lop govern-
ment leaders, is considered a friend ot Nl1on.
attack last Wednesday at S 0 C's
Stevenson Unlon,· was the oldest student
ever to serve as student body president
at the scOOol. Manlove, who made 'hl.s
way around campus with h1a Gennan
shepherd guide dog Grandy , was to have
been in his senior year this semester.
"I had looked forward to this year
and to being able to cooperate with
Gary in fulfilling his aspirations for
Southern Oregon Ccllege," said D r .
James K. Soun, SOC president.
"In tenns or sheer humanity a n d
courage, Gary was an e.zample for us
all. Our tribute to him should be to
make this the very finest year in the
history of the college, a year of courtesy
and love."
l\lanlove, who was born in Los Angeles,
was student body president at his junior
· high school and president ()f his high
scOOol'a student council In Southern
Callfomla. He attended East l.<l!I Angeles
Junior College, Orange Coast College,
and California Polytechnic C o 11 e g e .
~fore moving to Oregon, he was ln
the swinuning pool and building main-
tenance work in Southern Cali!omla.
Manlove lost his eyesight eight years
ago when be contracted d I a b e t I c
retinitis.
He was divorced and ls survived by
two teen-age daughters who Uve with
their mother 1n Newport Beach.
From l'age Al
COURT •..
favor . the defendant," government at-
torney, contended.
The case began when Daniel Edward
Henry and seven other Marines stationed
in Santa Ana were brought before a
summary court martial for minor of.
grotllda they had a co..tltutlonal rlghl
to have a lawyer paid for by the :;:w·
emmenl
A dl91rict coort Judge rejected their
contention but the 9th CJrcuit Caurt re-
ver&ed It. The appeals oourt dld not grant
an abtolute right to a lawyer but said
one waa neceMAry lf the complexity
of the clrcumsta~ warranted.
In a summary court martial, a com-
mJasklned officer serves as an inde-
pendent fact finder and Judie. He
can render any sentences Mort o1 death.
dismissal, dishonorable or bad conduct
discharge, confinement for more than
a mociU!, or hard labor without con-
ftnemenl for more than 45 day1. He
can also order forft1lture ot up to lwo-
thirds of one month's pay.
•
From Page Al
INCIDE~TS . ••
Brooks allO worked with an "Jdentlklt"
which ls used to crtate .1t1 •rtlst-llke
sketch of suapectl.
WIUett waa amsted after an all points
bulletin w11 broadcast to the Laguna
Beach Patrol force after the mother's
license plate tnformatloa and deterlptlon
"-lhe auto allegedly matched up.
Aboriion Huling Upheld
High Court Backs Sta11,d Against Restrictions
From Wire Servlce1 on demand ewn ~hOUgh there may be abortions cnly during the latt trtmc~ttir
\\'AS•tING1'0N -The-U,S, Supreme other hospitals and clinics in the general of pregnancy and even then they are
Courl ltit stand today a rullng that vicinity which are agreeable to perform-pennJISlble under certain circumstances.
municipal ho8phnls may not r e a r r I c t lni abortloM." The 8th Circuit 111ld the Vtratnta Clty
abortions to those required to s.ave the They said the 1973 decision ot the crd!Dance "dtmonstralts oo oompelllng Ufe of the mother. The court, with Justlrt Byron R. \\'hlte Supreme Court strlkln& down atate anti· ctrcum.atancta w)\lcb would mandate thls
dissenting, declined to re.vtew the abort1111 laws doet not l'fQUl.re th Is holpttaI'a abortion rettrlctlng Nlet.0
decl•lon• of !he U.S. Clrcull Court In mull. . It .. Id two doeton wbo chlllen1ed
St. IA)lis l'!(Julrlng public ho!pltals lo They also contended the clr<ull courl the law had a right 10 prattlco lnedlc!ne permit quaUf\td staff members .t 0 lgnortd a Pi1lnne90tl law e 1 e m P t I n g hoop;1atx ,from liabWly fJ< .refusing to at the publicly 8Upporled bolpllal ba!ed
HIGH COURT WON'T REVllW
OBSCENITY APPEALS, P191 A4
Pf'rlorm abortions.
Tbc case aroee from a challm1e by
l\\'O physlcl(lflS, Dr. Charles J. 1.!ock
and Dr. Charlu A. Tie tz, to a nile
of the Virginia. ~UM. Municipal Hoepltel
prohlbltlnc nontherapeuUc abortlONJ.
Appeallilg the' dl!clill>n Of lhe cln:ult
court. otnclal1 of !he hoopllal sold It
\li'OUld mean that ·~ev.:ery small mu.nJc\pal
hospital musl oPCn lta doors (o abortions-
permit abortions. · on !heir profeu!OIJA! belle! Iha! ebortlons
'"M>o atatute mOlt clearly-4JMS...unt-are an 1cctptablt plan for lMlr P.Uen11.
qul....Uy ·-the pllWc policy Tbe appeals court pointed oul that
of the state . . . Iha! no ho!plta! Of tb!J wu no1 a -of lorclllfl ony
•111 kind 1n the state may be coerced Individual doctor or other medical pro-
·Into bocomJn& an abortion mill," tbe lclllonal to perform aborllona against
hoopital officials told tho court. hl1 will. The clecilk>n allO did no! requlf<
n.e Suprtme Court ruled In 1117! thll private or chut'Ob<Alpported hoopltafs to
the deelalon on ...-hetber to bave;_,:an:'j....~~.:~lt 1bortJon ope.rtUona.
-aborUon Is up to lh~ -aM s • •tnate.ad, we deal wtth UMC!Cedlt'Y
patlMU. throuah the first a11 months restrictive nilea lmpo11ed by a ttate
of prtgnancy. faeillty upon a con11Utut1onally protecttd
Govunmenta may I'!'!' l•!'!~"rlnl .~Ice,". the lower ~ aild.,
Tape Tells
Nixon Role -. -
With Dean
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pre;ldent
Nixon advised his counsel, John W. Dean
lU, on ~-!arch 21 , 1973, to make a
"ratb.er ceneral" statement c 1 ear In g
each White House aide of any complicity
ln Watugatt, according to a tape played
ln court today. ~
The tape of t1le discussion on the
afternoon of Mar:b 21 was pla yed in
U. S. District Court as Dean, th e
governmtnl's first witness in the
Watergate cover-up trial, appeared to
be nearing the end of four dJys of
direct queJUonlng by tl1e prosecutors.
Nixon told Dean In tile tape-recorded
conversation that he should prepa.i:e a
written report •twhlch is a very general,
understand. Understand, (laughs) l don't
want to gel all that go dd a mnie d
specific .•.
"But if you make it rather general
in terms of my -your -investigation
indicates that this man did not do it,
this man dld not do It, this man did
do that," Nixon· said, emphasizing the
"did'' and "that" the last Ume he used
those l''ords.
Dean, who v.·as said at the time to
be heading Nixon's investigation of
Watergate, then repeated for Nixon an
earlier suggestion to allow witnesses,
Including White HOU3e aides, to go before
tl1e l!fBlld jury under the protecliw\
of immunity from prosecution !IO that
they might give fu1I testimony. '
John D. Ehrlichman, then No. 2 White
House aide who was sitting in on the
meeting, resisted Dean's suggestion and
said "you end up with people in and
out of the White House indicted foi
various, for various offenses."
Ehrllchman, one of five former Nixon
associates on ltial for the cover-up,
proposed instead thal Nixon Issue two
or three papers summarizing the Whi te
House review of the case for the Senate
Watergate ,committee -which al that
time had just been establlshed.
Dean also proposed that a special
panel made up of the deputy attorney
general. the bead of the J u s t l c e
Department's criminal dlvlsion a n d
others conduct an lnvesUgatlon a n d
report at the President's request.
But White House chief Of stair H.
R. Ha1deman, also a defendant and also
present at the March 21 meeting, ob-
jected that such an idea would prompt
cries of a "super cover-up."
Dean replied : "All right, ls that, Is
that better? Or ls It better to have,
you know, just, just keep going to have
the thing build up and all of a sudden
coUapse, and. then people get indicted,
and people, uh, get tarnished?"
Nixon added : "After we've stonewalled
it?" the transcript supplied to the jury
put a question mark alter Nixon's state-
ment, but on the tape it !IOunded lllle
a nat statement.
Crou-enminatlon of Dean by t he
defendants' lawyers was expected to
consume the re&t of the week. Today 's
session was preceded by an unexplained
half·bour private conference of the
lawyers at Judge John J. Slrlca'a bench.
* * * Nixon Termed
Loser in State
Race for Senate
SAN FRANCISCO (AP ) -Fonnec
President Nixon's political following Is
at such lo w ebb that If he ran for
U.S. Senate only one in four Republicans
in his native state would choose him,
the California Poll said today.
Pollster Mervin Field aald that In
a survey pairing Nixon a g a l n s t in-
cumbent Democrat John Twlney for the
1976 'Senate race, TuMey led Nixon
by a 08-point margin,· 70 to 12. He
said that among Republlcana, TUnney
outpolled Nlxon 43 to 26.
Field said the poll was taken because
of sperulatlon that Nixon might decide
to aeek elected public offtce 11aln.
The poll al!IO showed Gov. Ronald
Reagan trailing Tunney In a possible
race for U.S. Senate by 13 pertentage
points:, although the Governor has a
relatively high standing in public opinion
ratlnga as be closes hla second term.
"All things considered, this Is nol
an W1USt.WIY larle vote de[J clt at thl1
stage," Field safd. "Voter support for
nearly all Republican candldatea la lower
now thlU\ l.n previous years."
He said that before Gerald F'o rd
becM>e preoldent 11 had boon though!
lltagon might ... k that poot ln 1176,
but that "most political obs,rvers now
le<l that II "1U be dllllcult If not Im·
possible to dtn,y Ford the nomlnatlon
In 1978 II. be wanta it."
Burglars Loot Home
For· Big $4,000 Haul ·
Furniture and appliances valued al
more !ban tt,000 were &lolen durln&
the ..... end by burJllan wbo ro...a
OjJeJl a alldtng door to 1aln '"'I)' lo'
,. El Tom bome, 0rtn1e County Sherif· ra ofnom aatd.
DeouUOI sald.-<be brt<kln occurred
at the home of Luis Emestlna Fl1ueron ,
38, of 2l19t Miles St .. El Toro while
the tani.ily was absent , from t h •
prtmllOI.
I ---=;:;::;;:::..=:=-.;;,.--=-r
7
\
I
I/
I
7
) •
Irvine Today's Final
EDITION N.Y. Stocks
VOL 67, NO. 294, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS
'Innocent' Prisoner 'Will Have Day • Ill Court
By ARntUR R. VINSEL
Of tlll Dally "'"' '""
James Ray Russell will be taken to
a Los Angele! County courtroom 1\Jes·
day but the ordeal is not over for
the former Laguna Hills man accused
of a murder he may not have comm1tted.
He has been held iri I..os AngeleS
Cowity Cen(ral Jail for 743 days as
or today.
He has been held since Oct, 8, 1972,
without bail, v.ilhout arraignment and
)
wilhout any definitive results of more
than a dozen hearings of various kinds
involving ex'kadilion to Oklahoma, to
face trial for a killing that occurred
on a Saturday night when evidence in-
dicates he was in California.
He bas been cleared of implicatio n
once already by Orange County Superior
Court Judge William Murray, who is
aghast at what has happened in the
more than two Years since.
;'I never done any killing ... ," Russell
rvine's
Couneilt11an Critical
Irvine Complex
Air Quality Hit
' Irvine Company reports about how
the proposed Irvine Industrial Complex·
East will affect the environment have
found a new opponent in Irvine Coun·
cilman Robert West.
In a letter to Irvine Planning Director
William Livin13:stooe, West said the air
quality part of the report is "not ade-
quate" and the housing portion "does
not make sense."
The company !las asked the city coon-
cil to change the zoning for the area
to allow industrial development. The
council must accept the environmental
reporu before changing the woe.
UCI Launches
Fund Raiser
UC Irvine launched an ambitiowi
$100.000 fund-railing drive loday
which it hopes will lead to major
university athletic status in the lm·
mediate future.
Included in UCl's plans. as out·
lined by assistant athletic direc-
tor Rod Shenna.n tcxlay, is a 16,000.
seat mu1Upurpose mini -dome.
whkh could be less than five years
away.
The fund-raising drive will en-
compass a six-week period with
Sherman ontimistic that ucr will
have $100,000 by Dec. 3. See Sports
Section today, Page A9.
Nelv Subpoenas
.i\ wait Nixon
File Material
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Th< special
Watergate prosecutor's office disclosed
today that a grand jury 900ll will Issue
new subpoenas for materials from the
White House files ol fonner President
Nixon. Attorney P~ter Kreindler of the pro.
secutor's o£fice made the disclosure dur·
ing a bearing on Nixon's reQuest for
a court order enabl ing him to move
those tapes and documents out of the
White House to Laguna Niguel.
The suit abo seeks to give Nixon
the right to review any materials sought
in fu ture subpoenas. But it does not
seek to interfere with materials already
under subpoena or needed in the current
\Vatergate cover-up trial.
Nlxon's attorney, Herbert J. Miller,
argued that moving the material1 to
the West Coast would not interfere with
the cause of jusUce.
But Ktt.indle:r aakt that Miller had not
taken into aceount ' ' o n • go I n g in-
vestigations" when he listed tbe·material
that Nixon wants to move to the coast,.
Issued," Kreindler said
''He baa not included grand jury 1ul>-
poenas that he was I n Io r m e d aJ>'
proximately 10 days ago would b e
Issued,•• KrlendJer sa.ld.
Moments later, MUltr was on his feet,
!See NIXON, Page All
Bank Reduces Rate
CHICAGO (UPI) -Tbe FCrst Nation.ti
Bank ol ChlcagQ today announced ll
will lower Its · pi1me lt:nding rate to
J1'4 percent from 11~ percent, effective
Tuesday. _
Complaints aboot the proposed 2,()58.
acre industrial deveJopment where 54,000
workers eventually would be employed
have poured in from a number of state
and coun ty agencies as well as en-
vironmentalist groups over the p a s t
month.
The environmental impact report says
that three percent of the moderate-in-
rome families with mem.bers working
in the industrial area will choose to
Jive in Irvine.
The city definela moderite income as
family earnings between-$8,000 a n d
$l5Jl(IO a year. Recent city studies have
indicated that families earning below
Sl5,000 a year cannot buy homes in
Irvine.
Based on its projections, the Irvine
Company has promised the council that
more than adeq uate housing will be
available for all families earning more
than $10,000 a yea r.
The company said 4,237 households
with incomes ranging from $10,000 to
$15,000 will want to live in Irvine. 'llle
total supply of homes and apartments
for that group is to be 7,864, according
to company projections.
West, however, said, "The housing
demand proje'.cUon in the (report) does
not make sense. If less than three per·
cent of the moderate income people
who would have family members work·
ing in the Irvine Industrial Complex-East
wish to live in Irvine, then there must
be a drastic problem with the housing
being built in Irvine and the desirability
or living in Irvine.
"It does not make sense that peopl<'
would prefer to drive 15 or 20 miles
to work if attractive living conditions
were provided within five miles.
"I suspect that the real problem is
that the analyst making the projection
is reflecting existing supply rather than
existing demand.
"Since there is no supply. the analyst
concludes that there is no demand. This
is not logical," West said.
The air quality discussion in the report,
he said, is "grossly inadequate."
Because of that, he said, the report-a
prereqUisite for the zone change sought
by the Irvine Company-should be re-
jected.
In its environmental report, the com-
pany points to the high cost of adequately
studying the effect of the complex on
air quality and contends that the question
is regional, not local.
\Vest contends that a "far superior"
discussion or air quality in such a report
ror the proposed Jrvine Center indicates
that the job can be done.
Further studies should be made, West
said, and the Irvine Company, not the
city, should pay for the studies.
PIGSKIN PICKERS
VIE FOR TV SET
The sixth week of Pigskin Pickcroo
'74 competition for prizes including a
color television set begins today.
Each week , Daily Pilot readers are
invited to predict the outcomes of 30
weekend footbaD games.
Winners are awarded. 1.enith televls1on
and radio products worth $130 following
each week's judging. Further, first pince
weekly winners are eligible to compete
for !he color televi&Son grand prize.
Pigskin Pk:keroo ls: a regular feature
or the Dally Pilot sports pages. ABC
Color Televts1on of Huntington Beach
and Zenith Inc. are c»sponsorlng the
contest.
• said in a jail intervie\Y Fri~ay. . Russe.II, 27, is an ex-convict who did
four years at ~1cAlester. Ok.Ja., for a
burglary committed at Lhe age of 19
and now the state or Ok1ahoma wants
him back.
The California Supreme tourt has
recently ruled that he should remain
behind bars without bail, pending resolu·
lion of a v.:eb of technical Jcgnl en-
tanglements involving superior and a~
pellate·rourts in Los Angeles and Orange-
counties.
Justjces said he did nol have a full
and romplcte hearing in I:.os Angeles
County Superior Court following his r~
arrest lhere. despite being arrested and
cleared earlier in Orange County.
One basis of that clearance by Judge
Murray was the result or a polygraph
test . indicating RU$SelJ told the truth
aboul being at the l...()ng Beach Nu-Pike
amusement park with his wife Karen
and friends the night of the RU1r~r
1.000 miles <1\\'Ry.
\Vitnesscs WJ!t bl' cull~d and affida vits
presented TuesClay to that elfe('t but
Oklahoma authorities 11h'l filed the
teletyped fugitive v.·arrant say they -0re
haying trouble roundi1!g up prosecution
\.\.'itnesses.
One is antici pated 10 t>C' Hussel!'s ex-
\\•ife , a Fort Smith. Ark .. ha irdresser
\vh~ signed an aff1da\'it that she saw
her former husband thut fatcrut night
w1d talked-with hinl. Altonwy Roger
Agajanian. who became familiar with
the case of llussell as a Jaw clerk 1n
the Orange County Public Dtfender·s
Office 21'.! yea rs ago, claims s~~ is a
factor.
lie said the former llrs. Russell· wrote
a letter apologizing afte r he1· ex-husband
\1•as jailed, claiming she \\·as coerced ,
int o signing" the a!IC'gedly untrue state· )
n1cnt. by Oklahoma authorities 'II h ~ •
threatened to prosecute her as an ~
{$« ACCUSED, Page A:) --
wn • o ice oon?
Help for Bo111ltit•as
Students at El Camino Real School in Irvine filled
more than 200 "comfort kits" during the past two
weeks to help in the Red Cross relief effort for Hon·
durans hit by severe flooding in the wake of 1-Iurri-
cane Fifi. The kit s, containing persona.I hy giene
items and small toys, were sent on their way by
((om left) Rick Samuelson. student council presi-
dent, Rick Richter. secretary, Shauna Olson treas-
urer \Villiam 1'1each, chairman of the youth commit-
tee of the Orange County Red Cross chapter, and
Jim Roche, student council vice presi dent.
Irvine Cou11cil to View
Proposed Sl1opping Cente1'
Irvine city council members will take
a fi rst look at the Irvine Company's
proposOO Irvine Center regional shopping
center Tuesday night.
The company intends to request a
zone change for the 480-acre plot of
land at Tuesday's 6:30 p.m. meeting
at city hall , 4201 campus Drive.
The mixed home. office and shopping
development is to be within the triangle
formed by the Santa Ana , San Diego
and Laguna freeways.
O>mpany plans call for a shopping
area with at least eight ntajor depart·
ment. stores and 200 shops. A recreation
area to be called the .. City H.00111'' is
to be part of the devcloptnent and will
include a theater. ice ska ting rink. and
areas for concer\s and performances.
Also includ ed in the center will
be areas of office buildings and apart-
ment buildings.
Tbe company's current plans call for
construction of half lhe shopping mall
and low rise office nnd apartments by
1977.
Birthday Death
Bo y Accidentally Slain by Father
Cl:UCAGO (AP\ -Thomas 0 o s s
wanted to go to the mo\1ies on his
14th birthday and wcnl •to his father's
gas station to earn sorne mooey. The
father accidentally shot lht> boy lo death
during an attempted holdup by a teen-
age girl.
It was the first tin1c Thomas had
worked at the station . The holdup tit·
tempt came hours bcrore a planned
birthday celebration that ~·as to include
Tflomas' favorit e chocolat.:! cake.
"t usually make his favotite cake
on his bh1hdRy and theo he wanted
to telebrate b)' going downtoWI\ wnh
the. kids he's g;ro·wn ur wlth1" sa.ld
the boy's 1nothtr. Davie Doaa. ' 1 di.dh'l
have any money to give hlm so he
called his father to ask to ea m some."
Thq,maa wu killed as lit w.,.µcd
with a 1&-ycar-old girl •ho entered the
service sta.tloo SWlday mom in& di'eued
as a man and 1uu10wtctd a holdup.
She carMed a pistol, authorities said. -
Thomas grabbed hl'r and his fa1hcr.
Henry, 47. picked up a revolver kt'Jll
in the slalion 3nd fired , homicide in·
vestigalor Patrick Conley said. 0 n c
bullet struck tbe girl in the ha n d :
another entered the boy's chest and
killed hi m.
"This is one caSl' "'here havi ng a
handgun for protection didn 't do any
good at all." s:iid Conley.
0 The service st:it1on rash rcgi~ter had
only a small amounr or ntoney, he
Raid .
The girl w:1s hospitalized and named
tn , a delinquency pct Ilion cbstrglhg ber
,with murder and urmcd robbery.
Doss. who is .separated from his wile,
told her of the shobtini:t later Sunday.
Thomas has three brothers nnd sisters
'\\'ho also live wllh lhelr molhcr.
.i'l'boy just •cttn't brlievt it .~· ;\.lri;.
Doll anld. "AD his friends ca mt over
yesterday and llley don l rtally believe
he'! dead alther."
County Marines
To Get Hearing
By lliglt Court
Fron1 \\'ire Se rvices
\VASllINGTO N -A chn llenge by eight
~·larines stationed at !he ~1arine Corps
Air Station. Santa Ana. against the lack
of defeni.e rounsel at su mmary courls
n1artial will be heard by the U . S.
Supreme Court.
The court today agreed to review
a decision of the U.S. Circuit Court
in San Francisco that defense counsel
must be made available in such pro-
ceedings in complex cases.
Government attomeys turned to lhe
U.S. Supreme Court after the San Fran·
cisco decision arguing that there is no
constitutional right to the assistance of
couns<'l in summary courts ntarti11l.
Sumrnary cou11s are used to t r y
milita ry personnel charged y,·ith 111ir1or
of defenSt' counsel y,·ou!O overturn the
('Qnfinement. reduction in grade o r
1ot1Citure of pay.
.. S1nCl' there 1s no prosecutor in sum·
mory courts martial, the prcsenrr !here
of rlt>fc>nsc counsel v.'ould overturn ·lh
bala11ccd procedur e that would unduly
!See COURT, Pag' A2 1
I>ia110 Movers
lfit h'' Buro'lars " 0
Jrvlnc school teacher Tim Terry nnd
his two friends had their hands too
full Sunday to deal with burglars \\'ho
d11irted into hls garage.
Terry. Qf 14671 Fir St.. SI c v e
HRbrmeh.'.11 and Randy ~1isemcr were
in the midst of moving a piano upstairs
when It bappcoed.
Tht> f'ducator 's pov.·(!r IA~'fl mower <'Ind
power edger \tllUed at 11 total of $400
vanished lrom the 1enrai:e in that !)('rlorl.
Irvine Polict Officc'r Petr. Linton
snld nothing else was taken.
New P11hlic
'
Safety Head
Cites Plans
By DOUGLAS FRITZSCHE
0t 1fl• Dellr Pllet Sl•ff
Irvine's police force rould shift from
contract to city control sooner than
the Sept. I, 1975 date originaliy expeeted.
After the first rew days of getting
his bearings, Irv ine's newly hired Direc-
tor of Public Safely Leo E. Peart said
he intends lo draw up a series or
alternative police department structures
for consideration by the city council.
At least one of the alternatives, he
said, will call for speeded transition
from the city•s current eontract with
Costa Mesa lo developmWt of the city's
own forre. ·
City l\1anager \Villiam \\1oollett Jr.
said this morning that a schedule will
be drawn up by Nov. I describing when
the information will go to the council.
Peart sa id speeding release of the
details of the transition could help allay
<.'Oncerns of officers assigned to Irvine,
who must decide whether to transfer
or stay with Costa Mesa.
That's the biggest roncem we have."
\Vooll ett said. ''Costa ~1esa wants the
best officers. of course, and so do we."
Al an introductory meeting with poller.
and firemen serving Irvine Friday, Peart
said, many of the questions asked con·
ctmed specifics of pay and working
conditions which have yet to be resolved.
"I can understand their concerns;•
Peart said, "but l told them if they
want to stick the city for an extra
$10 a month for shootin g pay and so
forth . they can stay wit h Costa Mesa.
"Lf they want to take part in something
different and exciting, they can come
over wiUi us."
City C(luncil discussions during the
s~mer showed interest in establishing
a higher than usual pay scale for Irvine
as a way lo attract and hold the best
personnel a.va ilable.
Other areas being ~xplored by the
new director are the st ru cture of the
department-whether to ha\'e a tradi·
tional military form or a less structured
form-and how to deploy officers n1ost effectively.
•·rr ·s a big area," said Peart after
three days on the job. "I'll have to
look into it furth<>r before I can tell
the bC'st ~·ay to cover It."
Orange Coast
Weacher
Considerable IO\\' cloudiness
through Tuesday n1orn.ing Y<'ilh
some sunshine in lhe afternoon
Tuesday . Sllghtty warmer "'ith
beach highs at 60 rising to 73 in-
land. Lows tonighl 57 to 62.
INSIDE 1'0DA V
Pres1de11t ford and flle:r ictfs
µresidr11l Ecl1e t'flrria l1avc ~ever·
ol lli.i11gs in 111 i11d a.~ they nic~t
!od.ay. E'or<I is hiterested 111 Ilic
new 0 1/ find~ ·111 So1'tller11 J\fc.t·
iro. frl1cvt'rria 1s i1!1e res1ed 111
rcnt!ll'n1g tl1e IJ rnrero u:ork pro·
11ram in U111ted Stale,,. ee:
storu. Paae A4.
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-· --
A 2 DAIL y PJLOf
Policeman
Shot Dead
In Office
1.0S ANGELES 1Ar1 -A :slat('
Policeman dle<I ::it County-USC ~tcdlcal
Center Miter being .shot 111 the head
early lOday as he \\aS y,•orklng alone
in a St:Uc Polict annrx Qffic~ in the
downtown State Office I) u 1 Id 1 n g,
auUw:.rUlea; said_
The offlc..>er. Da\•1d /I.. Jack, 23, of
Riverside', was shot in the lefl side
of Ute h«?1ld , .apparently at t.IOM! r.:~3(',
a,\thorilies said.
'Althoritie.s cordooed ort the a r c a
around the Los Angeh:s Ci\1C Center
alter Jack's body was round In the
~und-noor annex shortly after 1 a.m.
A ~arch of the area frilcd to re\•etil
anr c:lues to. the gurun~n. authorities
said. lnv.esUptors werr unable to ex.
plain• motive_ for the shoot ipg.
~utborllles said Jack 's body was found
by an offieti v.•orkcr ret\Jrning lo the
buildln( after tak ing a brcnk .
Jack, 'Who was responsible for checking
st!'le emgloyes entering the building.
wa11 the only person on duty in lhe
lobby at the time of the shooting, police
said.
Because !he building is in use around
the clock, the doors al\\"ays re n1 a in
wtlocked, they added.
A police spoke s man said Jack
reportedly was shot at close range with
a large-calibe r "·eapon. !\fore than one
shot was believed to have been fired
at the officer because tra ces of chipped
marble from a v.·all near the office
were found near. the vi ctim, l h e
spokesman added.
l11tpo1tnded Bo<1ls
To Cost 01vners
Mucli More Soon
Boat owners who tie up illegally to
someone cl!e's moortrrg in Orange Coun-
ty harbors and have their vessels im·
pounded may soon be paying four ti1nes
as much to get them out of hock.
Qrange County Supervisors v.il\ be
asked Tuesday to make revisions . in
county mooring fee policies. aimed main-
ly at transient boaters who get their
" boat.s impounded on purpose to enjoy
low-co&t storage at a county guest moor·
ing.
-
Such boaters must now pay only a
dollar for each day the boat \\'SS in
impound. .
''This Jov1 d4ily fee provides no in-
centive to the owner of such a vessel
lo remove it from the impound, fre·
quently resulUng in Jong-term storage
at a rate much less than the OOat
'owner would pay at a commercial
marina.'' said Harbor Department Direc-
tor Kenneth Sampson.
The Harbors. Beaches and Park.s C.om·
mission suggested the county charge
the san1e daily rate for impound boats
as for guest sli ps in county harbors
-$4 in Newport Harbor and $3 in
Dana ~larbor.
OJtrently, only Newport Harbor has
moorings but some are planned for Dana
Harbor when the east basin opens up.
Sampson said he is confident tbe lar~e
.increase in impound fees will be m·
eutti\'e to get boat 0"°11ers to reclaim
tbeir property.
At the same meeting, supervisors will
be asked in increase the guest. mooring
fee from $1 to ,1.
Sampson sa.ld since the current C05t
of a guest slip is ~ pe r day in Nev.'J)Ort
Harbor, increasing the guest mooring
fee to 50 percent of that is "an ap-
propriate price differential.''
Supervisors \\'ill also be asked by
Sampson to cla1np the same fiv e-doy
i::ucst Jirnit nOI'.' used on slips lo !he
.transient "'essel 1noorings.
ORANGE COAST is
DAILY PILOT
""' 0•1'"9" C111~t O.•!Y Pile'! .... 111 •l'll!ll It
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t<l•I•""' At' pub!•\ft~d. """"°'' IJ'W'Ouljll F.;OfY. IOt (&<II ,,.,.lo! NftWl>(lrl kKll. Hunll"V'""
tfot.,;1'1 ~II""'"'" llall~Y U QUN 9".o<ll, Ir~'"' ~O<lle!Mt• •"II !.Ml Ot,,.,.nkts..ft JWft
(1'Dl\tt-I> \oftQi. tfQ-•I H •llon !\
llub'"Mn ~•tu•<I·'"' tnd ~....a.tn. Tlif or1r.:ID•I out>l•'"'"'l ''...,t •· .01 llOO w.,1 e.v Strtfl. (<111• Mo»•, (..tlo•a•n•• 'l'Hl6.
Robert N. WHd p,,.,.,.,., ...... ~"'''"
Jack. R, Curley
Vo(t Pr•.,O.nl t ncl V.....-t< ~"-?t'
Thomas Keevil
Tho mas A. Mu rohino
IM.-.;•nt EO<'°'
Cha rles H. Loos Richa rd P. Na ll
°"t~ 11 •nl ..... N'l!""1 Edi Ion.
Offices
OKI• Mtfl . UO W••I B•r Srrttt
""-' Se~fl llll ,,.. .. p0r1 ae.-••• ., LI~""' B,...:n !1 !1t ~ ...... ,,,SI
.. Ulllf~on 11t11~ 11171 hl<:n "°"'""'MO
S,,.. (If.,,.,... * Hcl~fl I.I C.ft\IN 11111
Ttltphone 17 1•1642-4321
Cl•ssllied Ad¥1rt111ng ,,2.u1 r
S.n Clemente All Departmtnltt
TtlephO!M 492-44?0
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~---
Monday, Ot!Aber 21, 1974
Lifesaver
James ',Tito' Olivares of San
Juan Capistrano was awarded
$50 and plaque by the city for
saving at least two lives when
he put out early-morning fire
while on duty as a street·
sweeper. lie nolited sn1oke
from second-story apartment,
dashed upstairs and put out
blaze in a mattress where two
people were sleeping.
Col. Simmo11d s
Of Laguna Hills
Succumbs at 82
Col. F..dward P . Simmonds (USft1C-
ret.), a veteran of tv.·o world wars
and a resident of Laguna Hill s Leisure
World for 51r2 years, died Sunday at
Saddleback Community Hospital follow-
ing a heart attack.
Col. Simmonds, father of Irvine World
News Editor Jeanne S. KeeVil, had
celebrated his 82nd birthday one day
before his death .
Funeral services arc pending al La
Jolla Mortuary Chapel.
Col. Simmonds received a field com·
mission in the ?\-1arine Corps a f t e r
enlisting as a private in \Vorld War
l . Discharged from active duty as a
first lieutenant. he rose to the rank
of major in lhe fttarine Reserve and
"''as recalled to active service in 1944.
Before retiring in 1952, his assignments
had included duty as executive officer
o! Camp Elliott near San Di.ego.
Survivors, In addition lo Mrs. Keevil,
include another daughter, f\.1"rs. Cynthia
Lucas of La Canada, and s e v e n
grandchildren , among them Katherine
and Constance Keevll of ft·tission Viejo.
From Page Al
1\CCUSED ...
cessory to murder.
Russe ll is accused of killing and rob-
bing a 92-year-o\d male invali d confined
to a \\'hCflchair.
"To this day, l don't know v.•hat It'd
them to suspect me ... " he said Friday.
"I used to li\'e one lo\\'Tl av.•ay from
Stigler, bul I never even knew the
old man."
Agajanian sa id today that 0 rang c
County's polygraph technician Dean l~en
dricks. \\'ho administered lhe so-called
lie detector lest to Russell in 1972,
is supplying the charts and graphs to
his counterpart in Los Angele s County,
Kenneth Scarce.
Police HoJcl 1'rio
In Drug Death
ST. LOUIS (UPI ) -Two young men
and a woman today face neg Ii gent
manslaughter charj.\es for allegedly fail-
ing to get help for a .suburban Los
Angeles man dy ing of a drug overdose,
police said.
Poliee said they seited half a million
amphetamine tablets, so.id to be valued
at $100,000, at a Sl. Loui s C.-0unty house
\\·here Jerry Guerra , 28. of Rosemead,
died Sunday.
Thomas Kelly. 23, Rosemead, and the
occupants of thr hon11', Jack \Vlshnuff,
26, and Sharon Recd . 25. \1•cre all chars·
~ with negligenl mans!auJlhtcr. John
Petrik. 26. Woodson Terrace, ~10., \\'35
charged with unlawful po8.'iession of a
controlled subtance.
Drug Official
Will Give Tnlk
l~crb Brayer, t'OOrdlnator of t h c
Orange O:iunty Drug Prevcnllon
Proi:lram. will tJ'! fealurtd pane\l:tt at
a PTA metting at f.1Arco Forster Junior
1ngh School in San Juan Capistrano
at 7:30 p.m. 'T\Je:lday.
Drayer and reprtstnlative3 1 r om
Orange county law enforcemen1 and
ment•I health organiiAlions will talk
about "Communication In the f'amlly"
ond "Orange County Services Available
10 the Family."
The mL-eUng will be In the school
cafctori11m. PTA. membership costs •1
fl':I' pe.rson.
J
Police Hold
"To1·0 Artist
•
In Assaults
~~ Toro sllk screen artist Steven J.
Willett is being held by Laguna Beach
police today on charges of assault with
intent to commit rape after he all~gedJy
attacked a woman and then a IS.year-old
girl in the Ari Colony.
Laguna pollce said the mother or the
teenager aclually led them to Willett
"·hen she ran Into him by chance while
shopping.
The mother claimed he p u l I e d
alongside her car. said "wow" and t.hen
drove off, according to detective Gene
Brooks.
\Villett, 22, of 24902 B~ch Ave., El
Toro, described himself as a 1 e If·
en1 ployed silk screen artist. He was
nrrcsted SaturOay and is held on $10,000
ball.
The tecnaged girl was b e i n g in·
terviewcd about her Friday ordeal, Her
1nother left the station to do some
shopping when She was spotted by a
leering man in another car.
She wrote down his license p I a t e
number. Police allege It matched the
llcenses of a car involved in previous
cases and they traced the auto to the
suspect.
Del. Brooks said the first assault oc-
curred Friday night as the l~year-old
girl v.·a,,s walking along Coast Highwa y.
He said she told him the attacker
drove past her, stopped his car, got
out and began following her. He began
talking with her and she became nervous
when the questions turned to personal
SlJbjects.
The young girl frantically began look·
ing for an open store, or restaurant,
and when unable lo see one turned
up T<.1yrtle Street, a residential street.
When the man asked her where she
lived, she polnted to a lighted house
and began running toward it.
The man then grabbed the young girl
as she tried to flee. Her screams alerted
nearby residents who burst from their
doors and came to her aid. One man
chased the attacker, but lost him.
A half hour later, a 30-year old woman
was assaulted as she walked to her
central Laguna apartment.
The woman told officers she w a s
followed by the attacker who d r o v e
behind her in his car. He asked her
if she wanted a ride, aM when em-
phatically told "no," left the vehicle
and began trailing her.
A:;, she neared a residence, the man
barred her path and grabbed her. He
fled after she began screaming.
Det. Brooks said that as he interviewed
the woman Saturday in bis office, the
15-year~ld's mother was present, and
heard the description of the attacker.
Brooks also worked with an "ldentikit"
which is used lo create I\;! artist-like
sketch of suspects.
Willett was arrested after an all points
bulletin was broadcast to the Laguna
Beach Patrol force after the mother's
license plate information and description
of the auto allegedly matched up.
Three Boats Hit
B)' B11rglars in
Dana Point Area
Boat burglars kept Orange Count y
Sheriff's officers busy at Dana Point
Jf arbor during the 1,veekend with l\\'O
boat owners reporti ng the theft of equip-
n1ent from three moored vessels.
Deputies said intruders who pried open
the main compartment door took fishing
poles and a portable televis ion set from
a boat owned by Edwin Howard Koester,
48, of Temple City. The loss "·as valued
at $250.
Boat owner Michael Earle Deaner,
27, of 33951 A1arisna St., Dana Point,
has two boats moored at the south
county dock and OOth v.·ere broken into
during the weekend.
Burglars took camera equipment and
fishing pales valued at $450 from a
small boat owned by the real estate
dealer and fishing poles and ra dio equip..
ment valued at $4.SO from his nearby
C'abi n cruiser.
'
Sniffing~s Out
Moonsliine Convictio1t Scotclied
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The U.S. Supreme CourL today let
stand a lower court ruling that a warranl is needed to search a truck
that smells of whiskey.
The standard for a warranUess search is whelher the lncrtminat·
ing evidence Is in "plain view"·of a law officer. The 4th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals ruled that the odor 0£ whiskey does not make the
liquor itself In plain view and that a warrant wa s needed to search
the trl1ck.
'l'he appeals court overturned the conviction of William G.
Bradshnw, who· was charged with making moonshine Jn the Dirty
Ankle section of_Cleveland County, N.C.
The arrest1ng agents smelled liquor around the truck and
searched it without a warrant. They found 144 gal1on jugs of moon-
sh1nc.
Services Set f 01· 01·egon
Blind Student P1·esident
ASHLAND, Ore. (UPI) -Memorial
services 11ill be held OIJ campus Wednes· day for Gary Manlove, the blind student
From Page Al
NIXON ...
protesting tha t the terms o( his legal
etfort lo move 1he presidential materials
v.·ere not intended to block any criminal
investigation.
''I'm willing to amend (the request
lo move the materials) to exclude the
grand jury .subpoenas so none can say
this at't.ion was filed for impeding any
type of grand jury investigation or
Watergate trial," Miller said. "It was
filed in good faith. ..
Kreindler told newsmen after the hear·
ing that the impending subpoenas and
the grand jury investigation con c e r n
matters in the jurisdiction of the special
Watergate prosecutor. He refused to
elaborate.
U.S. District Judge Charles Richey
announced he would rule later in the
day or early Tuesday on the narrow
question of whether to issue a temporary
restraining order on use of the presiden-
tial material.
Miller said Nixon has a right to refuse
to comply with some subpoenas o n
grounds of privacy or e x e c u t i v e
privilege. He said the ailing Nixon also
n1ust prepare himself for f u t u re
testimony at the Watergate cover-up
trial and cannot do so while his materials
are in Washington.
Earlier in the day, arguing the question
of when the materials can be destroyed
under en agreement between Nixon and
the General-Ser v I c e s Administration,
Miller said that cannot happen within
the next five years. ·
"I would like to lay this at rest
right now," he added. "This is absolutely
false."
t.liller said that under the agreement.
the tapes and some documents would
be destroyed on Sept. l, 1984, or earlier
if Nixon dies. But he said the death
provision would not come into play until
after five years pa~d.
The Reporters Committee for Freedom
of the Press, representing newsmen,
historians and columnist Jack Anderson,
intervened In a suit Nixon filed to have
the tapes and documents removed to
the West Coast under the agreement.
Would Nixo1i
1 al.·c His Life?
NEW YORK (UPI ) -Evangelist .
Billy Graham was quoted as saying
one possible cause of President
Ford's pardon of fonner President
Nixon was a fear Nixon might
commit suicide.
Graham was quoted by the Na-
tional Enquirer as saying: "I have
heard whispers about the possibili·
ty that the former president might
commit suicide." He refused to
disclose bis source for this in·
formation. ·
Graham, who has been close to
some ol the nation's top gov~
ment le&derS; is considered a friend
of Nixon.
body president at Southern 0 r e g o n
College. •
fl.1anlove, 40, who died or a heart
attack last \Vednesday at S 0 C's
Stevenson Union, was the olde st student
ever to serve as student body president
at the school. Manlove, who made his
way around campus with his Gennan
shepherd guide dog Grandy, was to have
been in his senior year this semester.
"I had looked forward to this year
and to being able to coope rate with
Gary in fulfilling his aspirations for
Southern Oregon College," sakl D r •
James K. Sours, SOC president.
"ln tenns of sheer humanity and
courage, Gary wa s an cxan1ple for us
;!.II. Our tribute to him should be to
make this the very flnest year in the
history of the college, a year ol courtesy
and love."
Manlove, who was born in Los Angeles,
was student body president at his junior
high school and president of his high
school 's student council in Sout hern
California . He attended Eas t Los Angeles
Junior College; Orange Coast College,
and California Polytechnic Co 11 e g e .
Bef()re moving to Oregon, he was in
the swimming pool and building main·
tenance work in Southern California.
1'.1anlove lost his eyesight eight years
ago when he contracted d i a b e t i c
retinitis.
He was divorced and is survived by
t\l.·o teen-age daughters who live with
their mother in Ne,wport Beach.
$30 Million
GeoTek Trial
Set Tuesday
SAN FRANCISC'O (AP) -Busi'ness
promoter John "Jack" P. Burke, prin·
cipal figure in an alleged $30 million
GeoTek oil drilling swindle , is to go on
trial in federa l court for fraud Tuesday.
The 48-year-old Burke's atto rn ey,
James Msclnnis, said he will ask U.S.
District Judge William T. Sweigert for
a postponement because of alleged pr~
judicial publicity, much of it swirling
around Atty. Gen. EveUe J. Younger's
investment in a Burke oil venture and
a loan io Younger from the promoter.
Younger, see.king re-election. claims
bis opponent is behind the controversial
publicity and denies allegations that he,
as Los Angeles district attorney five
years ago, ignored requests t o in-
vestigate Burke's operations.
l\.1aclnnis also cited news stories
about Los Angeles Times publisher Otis
Chandler's involvement in GeoTek, form-
ed by Burke to sell oil drilling lmited
partnerships.
Chandler is a defendant in a federat
civil suit brought b.y the Secunties and
Exchange Commiss1on in May, I 9 7 3 ,
alleging that Burke, Chandler and others
violated securilies laws and defrauded
2,200 investors who put $30 million into
the various oil drilling programs.
Chandler, who testified be for~ the
federal grand jury which Indicted Burke
June 17, bas·denled any fraudulent con-
duct.
He said he invested and lost $248,000
in Burke ventures and that he returned
$373,000 in free stock and $109,000 In
finder's fees he received for lnlroducing
Potential invegtors to Burke.
Abortion Ruling Upheld
Higlt Cour~ Backs Stan<l .cfgni1ist Restrictions
From Wire Servk:e1
\VASHINGTO~ -The U.S. Supreme
C'.-Ourt let stand today 1 ruling that
municipal hospilAls may not r c 11 [ r i e t
nbortion.'1 to tho!!e required to SDvt the
llfc of the mother.
The court, with Justice Byron R. \Vhite
dlsstntlng, declined lo review t h e
decisions of the U.S. Circuit Court In
St. Louis requiring public hospitals lo
pc.""i t qualified staff members to
HIGH COURT WON'T REVIEW
OBlCENITY APPEALS, Pago A4
perfonn abortions.
The cate arosf! from a challenge by
lv.·o physicians, Or. Charles J, lfock
and Dr .. Oulrles A. TH!ta, to a ruJe
of the Vlrglnl1. MiM. Afunlcipal r1ospiU1I
prohibiting nontherapeutic 11borUons.
Appeal\J\g ui. d<!dsion (I( the clrcull
cour1, offic111ls or the hospital sa.Jd ll
\l.'Oltld merui ~hat "every small municipal
~hospital must open Us doort to abortJord
on demand cvtm '.hough there may be
other hospltaJ~and clinics In the general
vicinity wflich are agreeable lo pcrfonn-
in~ abo rtklnl."
They said the 1173 d<!dslon o! the
Supreme Court striking down state anti-
abortion laws does not require th i s
result.
They also contended the circuit court
Ignored a l'ltlnnet0ta Jaw exempt Ing
hospitals from liability :Jr ttfll!lng to
permit abortlom.
"The statute most clearly and uat-
qulvocal!y exprtaet the public Policy
of the slate . . . that no hospitaJ or
any kind tn the 11lllte may be l'Oel't'Cd
Into becoming an abortion mill," the
hoopllal omc:tals told the <OOrt.
The Supreme Q>urt ruled In 1973 that
the decision on whether to h~ve an
abortion 11 up to lhe doctor and his
patient through the first si~ months
o( pregmi,ncy.
_ Govemm~ta may PMS laws barring
·-
•
abortions only during the la:.t trimester
of pre1J18.nCY and even then U>ey are
pcnnlsstble under certain ctrcrumstances.
The 8th Circuit said the Virginia City
ordinance "demonstratl'I no compelling
clrcunutances which would mandate this
hospital's ebortlon rcatrh::tina rules."
It said two doctor1 who challenged
the law had a right to pracUce medlctne
al the publicly aupport<d hospital b<sed
on their pro!eu.lonal belief that abortions
are an acceptable plan for their p&Uen.11.
The appeals C<>l•rl polnled out that
this wu not a ca1e of forclna tiny
individual doctor or atber medical pro-
fessional to perform abonlons •cainst
his will. The declsloll allO did not require
private or church.JUppoNd tmpltals to
permit abortion operatlcns.
"lnstead1 we dtnl wllh unnecessary
restrictive rules im.posied by a •tale
laollly •l'Oll • con1Uh1Uonally protect«!
Chof<'e," the lowtr court "'1id.
Tape Tells
Nixo11 Role
With Dean
WASHINGTON !UPJJ -Preoldent
Nixon advised his counsel, John \V. Pean
Jll, on t.1arch 21, 1!173, to make a
"rathe~ gene ral" statement c I ear In g
each Whit e House aide or any compllclly
in Watergate, acwrding to a ta pe played
in rourt today.
1'he tape of the discussion on the
afternoon of fl,farch 21 was played In
U. S. District Court as Dean, t he
government's first witness in t h e
\\ratergate cover-up trial, oippearid to
be nearing the end. of four days of
dlrect questioning by the prosecutors.
Nixon !old Dean in the tape-recorded .
conversation that he should prepare a
written repo rt "which is a very general.
undersTand:-UOOerstand, (laughs) I don 't
want to get all that g oddamned
specific ...
.. But if you make it rather general
in te r:ms or my -your -investigation
indicates that this maq did oot do it,
this man did not do it, this man did
do that," Nixon saJd, en1phasizing the
"did" and "that" the last time he used
those words.
Dean, who \1'as said at the lime to
be· heading Nixon's investigation of
\\'atergate. then repeated for Nixon an
earlier suggestion to allow v.·itnesses,
including White House aides, to go before
the ·grand jury under the protection
of immunity from prosecution so that
they might give fuU testimony.
John D. Ebrlichman, Lhen No. 2 White
House aide who was sitting In on the
meeting, resisted Dean's suggestion and
said "you end up with people in and
out of the \Vh1te House indicted !or
various, for various offenses."
Ehrllchman, one of fi ve former Nixon
associates on trial 'for the cover-up,
proposed instead that Nixon issue two
or three papers summarizing the White
liouse review of the case for the Senate
\Vatergate committee -which at that
• time had just been established.
Dean also proposed. that a special
panel made up of the deputy attorney
general, the head or the J u s t i c e
Department's criminal division a n d
others conduct an investigaticn a n d
report at the President's request.
But White House chief of 1taff JI.
R. Haldeman, also a defendant and also
present at the l!.farc.h 21 meeting, ob-
jected that such an Idea would prompt
cries of a "super cover-up."
Dean replied : "All right, ts that, is
that better? Or is it better to have,
you know, just, just keep going to have
the thing build up and an of a sudden
collapse, and, then people get indicted,
and people. uh. get tarnished ?"
Nixon added : "After we've stonewalled
it?" the transcript supplied to the jury
put a question mark after Nixon's state-
ment, but on the tape it sowlded like
a nat statement.
CrosHxamination of Dean by t h e
defendants' lawyers was expected to
consume the rest of the week. Today 's
l!iession was preceded by an unexplained
half-hour pri9ate conference of t h e
lawyers at Judge John J. Sirica's bench.
* * * Nixon Termed
Loser in State
Race for Senate
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Former
President Nixon's political following is
at such low ebb that if be ran for
U.S. Senate only one in four Republicans
in hi:i native state woo.Id choose him,
the California Pol.I said today.
Pollster Mervin Field said that in
a survey pairing Nixon a g a I n s t in-
cumbent Democrat John Tunney for the
1976 Senate race, Tunney led Nixon
by a 58-point margin, 70 to 12. He
said that among Republicam, Tunney
outpolled Nixon 43 to 26.
Field said the poll was taken because
or speeulation that Nixon might decide
lo seek elected public office aga.in.
The poll also showed Gov. Ronald
Reagan trailing Tunney in a Possible
race for U.S. Senate by 13 percentage
points, alt.hough the (iovemor has a
relatively hlgh standitlg In public opinion
raLings as he closes his second tenn.
"All things C()nsidered, this is not
an unusually lar~e vote deficit at th.it
stage," Field stud. "Voter suppcrt for
nearly all Republican candidates ts lower
now thM In prl!:vlous ye an."
He said that befofe Gerald Fo rd
bc<ame pnsldcnt II had been tho•ght
Reagan miatJt seek that post In 1978,
but that "most pollUcal observers now
feel thal II will be dlfllc:ulJ U not Im·
posslble to deny Ford Jbe nomlnallon
In 1978 if be wants it"
Trudeau in Paris
PARIS (UPll -Canulian Prime
Minister Plrne Elllou Tllldeau arrived
here today for talkJ with Franch Prt•l·
dent Valery OiscRrd D'Eslalng aimed
at end.ina seven years of !rict.lon between.
their countries, French officials &aid the
leaders hoped to close ou( a troubled
era begun with the late F'rencb Prtsldent
Charles de Gaulle's controvenlal 1967
vbtll Jo Qu bee.
7
7
. .
Hunting~n Beaeh
Fountain ·Valle-y
VOL 67, NO. 294, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES 'ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 21 , 1974
• 1cer
$3.2 Millio1a
'
Hnntin-gton -Eyes
Meadowlark Buy
By KATHY CLANCY
OI lfle o.llf Piiot 5111!
A $3.2 (Jl.illion purehasc agreement
for t.1eadowlark Golf Course will be
considered by the Huntington Beach City
C.Ouncil at a 7 o'clock meeting tonight.
Bud Belsito, executive assistant to the
city administrator, said the proposed
Jaycees Drop
Red Ball Fire
.S<1fety Project
Fountain Valley Jaycees have decided
to drop lheir Red Bali fire safety pro-
gram -at least for the time being.
Jaycee President Bernie Harvey said
the members voted ta abandon the pro-
gram since il doesn't have the full
support of the city fire department.
Under "Operation Red Ball," J aycee
volunteers were to c a a v a s s city
neighborhoods passing out red stickers
to be put on the windows or rooms
where children, the handicapped and the elderly sleep.
But fire department officials said tbey
have a pre-established set or procedures
for such emergencies, and they
wouldn 't waste time looking for stickers
that may not be there.
In addition, some offi cials expressed
concern the stickers might be used by
vandals or burglars in planning a crime.
Harvey sald today the program never
was "designed to suggest changes in
fire procedures."
Instead, he explained, the stick e r s
could show a passer-by or neighbor a
room where someone needing help might
be before firemen arrived.
"But we don't want to get into a
fll'e safety program that doesn't have
the support or the fire department,"
be added.
Harvey said the Red Ball program
has been used by Jayt'ee c h a p t e r s
throughout the country. He said the
Fountain Valley chapters will contact
others and gather statistics about . its
success.
Then, he said the Jaycees may =-·~:nit
that information to the fire department
and go from there.
Armed Bandits
Hold Up Market
Two armed bandits wearing ski masks
escaped with $35 in cash early Sunday
from a Huntington Beach market
Police reported the pair, both describ-
ed as in their early t\venties and about
five feet IO inches tall, entered the
Stop N Go market, 6441 F.dinger Ave.,
at 2:12 a.m.
agreement marks the end or more tha n
a year of negotiation bet\.\·een cily. of·
ficials and Meadowlark owners.
The agreement would keep the 96.5-
acre golf course from being sold for
a housing development and would ensure
its use as a public golf course.
Belsito explained the city has set aside
5700,000 in federal revenue sharing funds
for the purchase, and the county has
agreed to provide '6()0,000 from revenue
sharing.
The current Meadowlark owners would
finance the remainder of the purchase
at seven percent interest a year. The
city would make $12,500 a m 0 n r h
payments from rent it would re<:(!ive
from Golf of Southern C&lifomia, the
firm which plans to operate the faci lity.
In related action, the council will con·
sider an agreement with the county
for the $600.000 in revenue sharing funds ,
and a 34-year lease with Golf to operate
the course. pro shop, restaurant and
clubhouse.
Belsito said the city takeover or the
course still might not take place until
early next year.
Before county superv isors tum over
$600,000, he said, they want an appraisal
of the land. In addition, the property
owners are seeking an Internal Revenue
Servi~ ruling exempting them from in--
come tax on tbe interest. they receive
by fmancing the sale.
In the purchase ag reement,
~1eadlowlark owners still will maintain
mineral rights 500 feet beJow ground.
And, the city would all<>w drilling for
oil in the area of the golf course main-
tanence yard.
The owners said earlier that a study
conducted some years ago i n d i c a t e d
there was oil under the property. but
at the time it wasn't worth drilling
for.
The higher price for petroleum now
makes it worthwhile. they contended.
The proposed lease also stipulates lhat
the oil drilling area be landscaped so
as not to detract from the golf course's
appearruwe.
Can't Pay Back
lnvestors-Fir111
MIAMI (AP) -Officials of a Florida
firm are claiming they don't have the
money to repay $4.5 million allegedly
swindled from more than 300 investors.
some or them former prisoners of war
in Vietnam.
An attorney for the officials and a
court-appointed receiver made the claim
about money following an order by a
federal judge on a suit brought by
the Securities and Exchange Commission
again officers of R. J. Allen and Asso-
ciates and a former saJesman far the
!inn.
U.S. District Judge <llarles Fulton
Ned-Friday that the defendants must
repay tile money .
Steady Job
Sibieda Sheidayeva has been
awarded the Red" Banner of
Labor in Russia for 100 years
of employment at the Kuba
Rug Factory in Azerbaidzhan.
Said to be 114 years old. she
was cited .for her productivity.
Board Slates
Progress Talk
Bv Teachers
•
Teachers will report their progress in
rev ising a proposed personnel evalualion
program at the meeting of the Hun-
tington Beach Union High School board
of trustees.
The board will meet Tuesday at 7:30
p.m. at Fountain Valley 1-ligh School.
Al a meeting earlie r this mo n I h
teachers asked the board to hold off
implementing the program. They said
the exist ing procedure unfairly could
produce some negatiVe eval uat ions on
teacher records withcrJt adequate defini-
tion or the tenns involved in l h e
evaluator's comments.
The board, in tum, asked district ad.
ministrators to look into the ram irica· ..
lions or delaying implementation of the
eval uation process.
Tbe agenda of the high 'Sl't!r#f .. +.n-.t
;ilso reflects the problems of overcrO\\'d·
ing in the district. The trustees will act on
a list of gtridlines for "the housing of
students."
The guidelines are intended to "provide
the necessary framework within which
principals a nd district admin istrators
can 'plan for housing stud ents under
the overcrowded conditions which we
anticipate facing ," according to the
agenda.
l\1ost of the alternatives listed in the
guidelines -like increasing class size
by utilizing more teacher aides - already
are in effect in most district schools,
a spokesman ~id.
The board also is expected to in-
augurate lhe "naming" procedure for
the high school whose construction is
(Set TEACHERS, P11ge A!I
ot
Youth Held
In Shootirig
Of Frien,d
A 1-l·yea r-old \Vestminster boy has
been charged by police in the shooting
of his playmates.
Police arrested the yout h Fr:day on
a charge of assault With a deadly weapon
three days after he allegedly fired a
.22 caliber pistol at Robert Patri c k
O'Donnell, 14. striking him in the
stomach.
O'Donnell, of 5242 Yale ·St., \\'estmin-
ster, is in satisfactory condition at West·
minster Com munity Hospital after under·
going reparatory surgery.
Police. woo at first said the :;hooting
was believed accidental, said the two
boys were in possession of two pistols, ,
lhe .22 ca liber and a .38 caliber.
The youth accused or the a s s a u 1 t
allegedly aimed the .22 caliber weapon
at a tree near Westminster Ave nue and
the San Diego Freeway but the gun
failed to fire.
Poli ce said he then pointed the gun
al O'Donnell and fired, striking the youth
in the stomach.
Police found both weapons later in
the day, searching with metal detectors.
The youth's case will be filed in
juvenile court.
Police declined lo reveal the owner
of the t WO guna.
Thailand 1-Iolcl s
Three .1-\.rnerica11s
For l-Iasl1i sh Oil
BANG KOK. Thailand fAP ) -Thai
police say they are holding th r e e
Americans on cha rges of distilling mari·
juana into hashish oil, a black sticky
liquid t\\'O dozen times more pG\.\'erful
than the \.\'eed.
The police said they arrested Frederick
C. Para, 31, of \Vinfield , Ill.: his brother
Craig A. Para, Zl. of Baileys Harbor,
Wis., and Steve Anderson, 32, of Long
Beach, Calif., in a raid on a rented
house Saturday night.
The police said they also found in
lhe house equipment for the production
of, the potent narcotic and about 171h:
-pounds of the oil in plastic packages.
IiOJV MOVES UP
IN LATE TRADI NG
NEW YORK (UPI \ -Prices tumed
higher in slow trading today on the
New York Stock Exchange. (Tables. Page
A9 \
The Dow Jones industrial average.
off nearly four points during the morn-
ing gained 14.94 points to 669.32.
Prices also were higher in moderate
trading on the American Stock Ex-
change.
Investors in the past several sessions
have been encouraged by a reduction
in int~rest rates the past few \reeks.
OUicers said they ordered the clerk,
Donald Gene Longfellow of G a r d e n
Grove, to open the cash register at
gunpoint, then forced him to lie on
the floor.
Ahortio11 Ruling Upheld
The men, both can-ying small caliber
revolvers, then left in what was describ-
ed as a battered sllver·blue car.
.
PIGSKIN PICKERS
VIE FOR TV SET
The si:rth week ol Pigsltln Pickeroo
'74 competition for prize.& lnchlding a
color televlslon aet begins today.
Each week, Dally Pilot l'tll<lers are
invited to predict the oolcomta of 30
weekend football games.
Winders are awarded Zenith television
and radk1 products worth $130 following
each week's judging. i'urtber, fint place
weekly wlnntrl are ellgiblc to compete
for the color t.tlevlllon grand prl~
Pia:skjn Plckeroo Is a regular reaturo
or the Daily Pilot •oorts pogeo." ABC
Color Television of lluntlngton Beach
and 1.enith Inc. are ee>-spoDJOrfl\g the
contest.
, •
lliglt Court Backs Stancl 11gainst Restrictions
From Wire Services
WASHINGTON -The U.S. Supreme
Court let stand todoy a rullng that
.. municipal hospitals may not r e s t r I c t
abortiO{l.' to those required lo save the urc ol the mother.
The cow-t, with Justice Byron R. White
dissenting, declined to review l h e
decisioos of the U.S. Circuit Court In
St. .Louis requiring public hospitals to
permit qualilie.d staff members to
HIGH COURT WON'T 'REVIEW
OBSCENITY APPEALS, Pago A4
perform abortiOn.s.
Tbe case arote trom a challenge by
.l"-o physicians, Or. Owlet J. "Moc.k
and Dr. OtaQes A: Tietz, lo a rule
of the VirglnJa, inn, h-tunlclpal Hospital
prohibiting nontherapcutlc abortions.
Appealing lhe decision of the cil'C\llt
coiirt, otfielals of th~ hospllal said It
\vould me.an that "every small municipal
-hoopilal must open II• doors to abortion•
on demand even :hough there may be
other hospitals and clinics in the general
vicinity which are. agreeable to perfonn-
ing abortions."
They said the 1973 decision o( the
Supreme Court striking down state anti·
abortion laws docs not require th i s
result.
They also contended the circuit court
Ignored a r.1.innesota law e x e m p I i n g
hospitals from liability :.>r refusing to
permit abortions.
"The ltatutc mom Cl('arly and une-
quivocally expressri the public policy
of the state .. , that no hospital Of
•ny kind in the state may be coerced
Into bttomlng an abortion mill,'' the
hospital officials told the court.
The Supr~me Court ruled In 1973 that
the decision on whelher to have an
abortion is up to the doctor and his
· pt1tlent through the first six months
or pregruincy.
Gove~enta may pass laws barring
-----·--
I
abortions only during the la.:.t tri1ncster
of pregnnncy and even then they are
pennJsslble under certain circumstances.
The 8th Circuit said the Virgini3 City
ordinance "demonstrates no compelling
circumstances \\'hich "·ould mandate this
hospl1al 't abortion restricting rules."
It said two doctors who challenged
the law had a right to practice medicine
at the publ icly SlJpported hospital based
on their professional belief that abortions
arc an accept.able plan for !heir patients.
The llppeals oourt pointed out that
this wu not a ca!C of forcing any
individunJ doc\Or or other medical pn>-
fes11ional to perform abortions against
his will . The decision also did not require
·private or chu rch-Sll pported hospitals to
pe.rmlt abortion operations.
"Instead. we deal \\i th unnt«'Ssnry
res trictive rules lmpo.~ by a state
fadlityi upon a oonslitutionally protected
cbolcc1" &he tower court said.
I
to
IMPRESSED BY TALKS
R&d•v•lopm•nt Chi•f M®rhOuse
II u11 tington
Do1,v11 tO'Wn
Plans A irecl
By PATTY BURNETI
GI Ill• l>•lly P'llllf SIMI
~lain Street property owners and the
city of Huntington Beach have a
''posili \'e dialogue" going on downtow·n
redevelopment. Vince A1oorhouse, the
city's redevelopment coordinator say!.
Last week t\oloorhouse 11nd· represcn·
tatives of Voorheis. Trindle and Nelson
rVTN ). the Irvine engineering finn doing
the tentative planning for the project,
met with ov1ncrs of prope rty . in Jithe
first t\l:o blocks of Main S!rC'el.
Tonight. Tuesday and \Vednesclay, they
will gather input from the businessmen-
tenants of fhose blocks.
\\'hat the people have lo say in these
first-stage meetings \\'ill be assimilated
into VTN's reco1nn1endations for 1edevel-
opment of a 350-acre dO\.\'YllO\.\'Yl area.
l\1oorhouse is enthusiastic abou t the
reaction of property owners so far. He
believes the ci ty may see first evidence
of the redevelopment plan in 15 to
18 months.
He is impressed . the p r oject
coordinator emphasizes. with the recom-
mendations coming fruu1 tile rccieve1op-
ment meetings. One property owner,
for instance pointed out the practicality
and advisability of consolidating pro--
perties. "\Ve know that." ~toorhouse
said , "but this was coming front the
people ... "
The only significant problem the city
has encountered in the special n1eelings.
Aloorhouse said1 is the tendency of in-
dividuals lo look al thei r property alone ,
rather at the project "in totalit y."
Considered in the formulation of a
redevelopment pl an for II u n t i n g t o n
Beach will be a downtO\\'Yl ma ll, hot els,
convention center, specialty shops and
a "theme" amusement park.
Senior Sc liool
F a11 s Get Cu.ts
Senior citizens <1p.e G2 and oldt•r \\ill
be admitted to all C\t'nls at Golrtcn
-"\\'est College at student r;itc.~. :1ccord1ng
J to a recent vote by the student cc.111.r:il
This includes admission lo nthlt'lic
events at ~o charge, lo rollege filn1s
at 50 cents and to concerts, lectures.
plays {Ind musical events at reduced
rates.
To obtain student prices. all the senior
needs to do Is show a driver·~ ticrn.sf!
or other identification verifying 3iJC.
Realt ors Ge t 81,000
For United C1·usadc
The Jl untington Be11:ch--F'oontain Vellf'y
"Board or ReaU.01"$ ~ntly t'Ollected a
Sl.000 don..i tlon fo r Um Orang e Co1.1n1 y
United Crusade lhrough an old·f11:;:hiont.-d
auction.
Items. donated. by afrillate!I or the
organiuition, "'ere auctioned at a recent
brtakfas\ !t"eellng. Frank Reed of thr.
Anaheim 'jklard of Realto rs Dctcd as
auction~
I I
••
Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
TEN c~s
eat
Autl1orities
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A stale
policeman died at County-USC Medical
Center after being shot in the head
early today as he \.\'as working alone
in a State Police annex office in the
dO\.\'ntown State Office Bu i Id in g ,
authorities said.
The officer. David A, Jack. 13, of
Riverside, \.\'as shot in the JefJ side
of the head, apparently at tlosc ra:ige,
au thorities said.
Authorities cordoned of! the a re a
aroun d the Los Angeles Civic Center
after Jack's body wes found in the
ground-floor annex shortly a!ter I a.m.
A search of the area fcilcd to reveal
any clues to the gunman, authorities
said. Investigators were una ble to ex:·
plain a motive for the shooting.
Aulhorities said Jack's body was found
by an office \.\'Orker returning lo the
building after taking a break.
Jack, \.\'ho was responsible for c~ecking
sta te employes entering lhe building.
was the only person on duty in the ·
lobby at t~e" tinle Of tbe shoaling, police
said.
Because the building is in use around
the clock, the doors always remain
unlocked. they added.
A police s pok esm an said Jack
reportedJy was shot at close range with
a large-calibe r weapon. 1'-Jore than on&
shot \\'as believed to have been fired
at the officer because traces of chipped
marble from a wall near the office
'\'ere found near the ~;ctim, the
spokeSman added.
Authorities said Jaci.'s Se r v Ic e
revolver \.\'as still in its holster.
Tennis Courses
Set for Sign ups
The ...-Huntington Beach Parks and
Recreation Department is now taking
registration for fall tennis.classes.
Classes are being offered fOr beginning
through advanced interniediale players
and for high school students through
:itl111t
Day classes \.\'iii be 9 a.m. lo 5 p.m.
:\·londay through Friday al Edison Com·
munit y Center, 21377 ~lagnolia St .. and
evening classes arc from S:30 to JO
J'.'.111 . l\.fonday through Thursday at Hun·
tington Beach High Schoo!.
The registration fee is ~9 plus a ne\~
can or tennis blllls. Questions may be
Cirected to Scotl Vlanagan, c I ass
coordinator, at 536-9381.
Sc hool Board i\Tcets
Trusttts of the ~an View School
Dstrict \\'ill meet tonight al 7:30 pm.
in the board room of the district office
building .
Orange Coast
Wealher
Considerable IO\Y cloudiness
1hrough Tuesday morning \\'ilh
some sunshine in lbe aflcn1oon
Tuesday. Slightly warmer \.\'ith
beach highs at 60 rising lo 73 In-
land . Lo\1 s tonight 57 to 62.
11\SJDE TODAY
Prc!l1de11t Ford a11rl i\ffTtCo·s
prl'.~i<lc11t f.c!ie uurria lurvc srL·er-
al tl1111g~ in mind ti~ they t11t'tt
10<lay. F'nrrl is hlfttestcd n1 tJie
11eu· oil f1u<is i11 Sot1thtrt1 J\tex·
iro. Ccl1el"t'rr1n is 111U!rc3'lfd 1n
reue1r111f1 Ilic bracero work pro-
fll'l'l 11'l 11l l'111 red Swies. See
story, ~oae A.J
'""'"' .. L. /IA, 1111'111 Af
C1l1lort1t• 6J (t•~J•l!ff ••. ,
C-<l II CN\•.,.t• II
0.~I~ Ntlltl-t AU
IE•llor!I/ P'6tt A•
.,,,trl~!ftllltllf Al .,,,.."'" ..
H-KOPI I t
--
f
A""' Llt!dillO 11
~Wiff Al
N'1IOll.i NPi A•
Orlftft (Hft!' A11
...... 1, 91.,
SHr" A1•11 Slfltk M•rlt.tlt At
Tllt~l"t~ At T~"ltrt ....
Wt•IM• M w.,n. N•'fjl M
,
I
A-"'! DAILY Pl.LOT H/F Monday, Cklo~r 21, 1974
New Subpoenas Loo·m
.
rc1n .d J lJry Seeks Nlx_on WhiteJlou,se Fiws
\VASHINGTON (UPI1 -The special
\Vaterg:ue p~ecutor 's office disclosl'<l
today !hat a gr~nd jury soon \.\'ill issue
new subpoenas for matcnals front 1he
\\'hitc lioust files of former Presidenl
Nixon.
AttOrney P<'ler Kreiodll'r of the pr~
st!Culor's offi ce tnade the disclosure dur·
Jug a hearing on Nixon':1 rl'<JU(':.t for • . ...
Nixon Ter11i e<l
Loser in Sta te
Race for Senate
a court order enabling blm to move
those tapes and documents out of the
White House IG Laguna Niguel.
The tiuit 31so seeks to give Nixon
the right lO review any materials sought
in future subpoena s. But ii does not
seek to interfere with materials already
under subpoena or net"<lcd in lhe current
\Va!l'rgate CTlVl'r-up trial .
W oulcl Nixon
Tl11.·e His Life?
NE\V )'ORK (UP I) -Evangelist
Rilly Graham was quoted as sayJng
one Possible cause or President
Ford's pardon of former President
Nix.on was a fear Nixon might
Ct'lmmit suicide.
SAN FRANCI SCO ( AJl\ -Fonner
Presidl'.!n\ Nixon's ~itical follo,,.,·ing is
at such lo\.v ebb t t if he ran fo r
---U.S. Senate-only-oo · four-Republicans..__
In his native state 10uld choose him.
the Ca'Jifomia Poll said today .
Graham was quoted by the Na-
tionat-Enquirer-as ·saying: .. (-have
heard whispers -about the possibili·
ty that' the former president might
commit suicide." He refused to
disclose his source for this in·
lonnation.
· Pollster ,.1ervin Field said that in
a• survey pairing Nixon a g a i n s t in-
cumbent Democrat John Tunney for the
1976 Senate race. Tunney led Nixon
by a S&poinl margin . 70 to 12. He
said that among Republicans, Tu1U1ey
outes>lled NL'<On 43 to 26.
Field ':!hdd lfk• poll was taken because
of speculatfon that Nixon 1night decide
to ,:;eek elected public office again. The poll atso shoy.·ed Gov. Ronald
Reagan tra iling Tunney in a possible
race for U.S. Senate hy 13 percentage poiild,. ,al~gh the Governor has a
relatively high standing in public opinion
-ratings as he closes his second tenn.
"Al) things considered, this is not
an unwually tar~e vote deficit al this
St.age," Field said. "Voter support for
nearly all Republican candidates is lower
noy.· than in previous years."
~ He said tha t before Gerald Fo r d
}>c<:ame president it had been thought
Reagan might seek that post in 1976,
but that "mo.st politi cal observers now
fee.I that U. will be dlfticult if not im-
possible to deny Ford the nomination
ill 1976 i! he wants it."
Distaff Staffers
·At U.N. Drop
UNlTED NATIONS (UPI) -The
United Nations, which has proclaimed
197S International Women's Year in a
.drive to promote sexual equality, is
under fi re from its employcs for not
Facticing what it preaches.
. .._ According 'to the latest report on
employment of women in t b e pre>-
fessional , policy-making ranks at U.N.
-headquarters. the percentage of female
staff in the past yeer has actually fallen
...-·from 19.87 percent in 1973 to 19.56
,percent at the end or September.
With the addition of all 20 agencies
related to the United Nations, the percen·
tage is even Smaller. Women account
for 15.94 percent or l,8'l3 cf the IJ,439
professionals employed by the organiza-
tions Spfead around the world.
From Page Al
TEACHERS .•.
proposed lo end overcrowding in the
high school district.
The schoM...-.would be built with funds
from a proposed override tax \vhich
, goes before voters Nov. S.
..
Volcanoes Hit Crops
GUATE~tALA CITY (UPI) -
Agriculture aut horities today said there
was heavy damage 10 cot ton, sugar
cane and sesnmC' seed crops from thfee
\'Oltanocs thCtl spe\\·ed sand and ash
O\'C'r 1nuch or Guatemala·s Pacific coast.
ORANGE COAST "' DAILY PILOT
Tn• 0•~""" (Od•I Dd•lv P.101, ..,!n ...,.It!\ le co"'b"!fd ,,,... ,...,.,.p,.,~. "1: .. m..-,,...11 C• "'~
O.•n<IO c.o~,, P1101,~n1no Co~~"• ~P&r•l"'
<IG•l•O<I\ ••t o~b'>!-lltd ""°""av l!Vown "",,.•· IV• (O\ia M•,~. N'"'"°rt f!.,.{!\, H~n!•nqtOI\ 111•,n fou<i!d•n va11~.. L.><iufla a...ocn,
t•vl~ !>addl~bM~ •AO S..n Cltmenlf ~n Jwn
tAl'>"''~no 4 •in<1le •t~•Ol'l•I ed•l•,,., '' ovb•·\nM .,..,.,,cuvi """ Su"'1~•s n ... '""~~.11.11 l!U~'""''no o<•nl" •1 lOO ~;Ill•¥ S,•fft. C.0''• Mew, C...•o!Otl\i" 9:U2t. '
Graham. who has been close to
some of the nation's top govern-
ment leaders, is considered a friend
of Nixon.
$30 Million
GeoTek T1ial
Set Tuesday
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Business
promoter John "Jack" P. Burke, p;in-
cipa l figure in an alleged $30 million
GeoTek oil drilling swindle. is to go on
trial in federal court for fraud Tpesday.
The 48-year-<>ld Burke's attorney .
James f\;Jaclnnis. said be will ask U.S.
District Judge William T. Sweigert for
a postponement because of alleged pre-
judicial publicity, much of it swirling
around Atty. Gen . Eve!Ie J. Younger's
investment in a Burke oil venture and
a loan to Younger from the promoter.
Younger. seeking re-election, claims
his opponent is behind the controversial
, publicity and denies allegations that he,
as Los Angeles district attorney five
years ago. ignored requests t o in-
vestigate Burke 's operations.
~1aclnnis a\SG cited ne~·s stories
about Los Angeles Times publisher Otis
Chandler's Involvement in Ge<ITek, form·
ed by Burke to sell oil drilling imited
. partnerships.
Chandler is a defendant in a federal
civil suit brought by the Securit ies and
Exchange Commission in May, 1 9 7 3 ,
alleging lhat Burke, Chandler and others
violated securities laws and defrauded
2,200 investors who put $30 million into
the various. oil drilling programs.
Chandler. \'.'ho te~tified befor~ the
federal grand jury which indicted Burke
June 17, has denied any fraudulent con·
duct.
lie said he invested and lost $248,000
in Burke ventures and that he r:eturned
$373,000 in free stock and $109,000 in
finder's fees he received for introducing
potential investors to Burke.
A court source said that a c I r e s s
Natalie Wood, Naney Sinatra Sr. and her
daughter Nancy Sinatra hav~ been
subpoenaed to testify al Burke's trial
about their investments in oil drilling
programs.
"l'he souce said the government i::;
expected to call about 30 y.•itnesses and
Burke about 12. Tbe .rial is estimated
to take from 21h lo seven weeks.
Burke is charged with unJawfully of·
feri ng and selling s e c uritie s -
specifically investment contracts in the
form of co-o...,·nership interests in the
1968 J. B. Oil Exploration program and
pre-for mation subscriptions to a CeoTek
Resources Fund lim ited partnership.
He also is accused of making untrue
statements and omitting necessary fact s
in selling securities, and also with con·
spiracy.
Two attorneys, Arthur J. Le.mpert,
42. San Matoo, and Robert S. Rose,
44 . San Hafael. \\'ere indicted on con-
spiracy charges in the case. Th c y
allegedly conspired to conceal materia l
facts in he lping prepare for the SEC
an affidavit purporting to fully refl eet
Burke·s ownership in various firms.
Their altorneys are cx1JCCted to request
a separate trial. ·
Nixon's attomey, Ht1rbtrt J. Afiller,
argued that moving the materials to
the West Coast would not interfere with
the cause or juslice.
Uut Kreindler said that ,.tHler had not
taken Into account • ·on.g o i ng in·
v~stigations" wh~n he listed the 1nater ial
!hat Nixon wants to move to the coast,
issued," Kreindler said
''He has not included grand jury sulr
poenas that he was i n f o r m e d ap-
proximately 10 days ago would b c
issued," Kriendler said.
1.1omen~ later, Miller'wa s on his feet,
protesting that the terms of his legal
etf0;rt to move the presidential materials
v:ere not intended to block any criminal
investigation.
"I'm willing to amend" (the request
to move the materials) to exclude the
grand jury subpoenas so none can say
thi~ actiIDJ w~s fijj& 12.r i!].pediog fil\Y
type of grand jury investigation o r
Wa tergate trial." Miller said. "It was
filed in good faith."
Kreindler told newsmen after the bear:
ing that the impending subpoenas and
the grand jury investigation concern
1natters in the jurisdiction of the special
Watergate prosecutor. He refused Io
elaborate.
U.S. District Judge Charles· Richey
announced he would rule later in the
day , or early Tuesday on the narroW
question of whether to issue a temporary
restraining ()rder on use of the presiden-
tial material. .
Miller said Nixon has a right to refuse
to "'comply with some subpoenas o n
grounds of privacy or e x e c u l i v e
privilege. He said the ailing Nixon also
must prepare himself for f u t u r e
testimooy at the Watergate cover·up
trial and cannot do so whlle his materials
are in Washington.
Earlier in the day, arguing the question
of when the materials can be destroyed
under an agreement between Nixon and
the General S e r v i c e s Administration,
Miller said that cannot happen within
the next five years.
"I would like to lay this at rest
right now," he added. "This is absolu!clY
false."
Miller said that under the agreement,
the tapes and some documents would
be destroyed on Sept. I, 1984, or earlier
if Nixon dies. But he said the death
provision would not come into play until
after five years passed.
The Reporters Committee for Freedom
of the Press, representing newsmen,
historians and columnist Jack Anderson,
intervened in a suit Nixon flied to have
the tapes and documents removed lo
the West Coast ur'lder the agreement.
Police Hold 1'rio
In Drug Death
ST. LOUIS (UPI) -Two young men
and a woman tc>day face neg l igent
manslaughter charges for allegedly fail·
ing to get help for a suburban Los
Angeles man dying of a drug overdose,
police said.
Police said they seized half a million
amphetamine tablets, said to be valued
at $100,000, at a St. Louis County house
where Jerry Guerra, 28, of Rosemead ,
died Sunday.
Thomas Kelly, 23, ft()semead, and the
occupants of the home, Jack Wishnu!f,
26, and Sharon Reed , 25, were all charg·
ed '~ith negligent manslaughter. John
Petrik, 26, Woodson Terrace, Mo., was
charged with unlawful p0ssession of a
controlled subtancc.
Drug Official
Will Give Talk
Herb Brayer, coordinator of t h e
Orange County Drug Prevention
Program, Y.ill be featured panelist at
a PTA meeling at Marco Forster Junior
High School in San Juan Gapistrano
at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday.
Brayer and representatives f r om
Orange County law enforcement and
mental health organizations will taJk
about "Communication in the Family"
and "Orange County Services Available
to the Family.''
The meeting will be in the school
cafetorium. PTA membership costs $1
per person.
Jac k R. Cu rley V•tf p,,,,oenl •r><I Q<1,..1•I ,,,..1\11~
Thomas Keevil
Thomas A. Murphine _,...,,,.,0E<111or
Services Set £01· Orego11
Blind Stude11t P1·esident
•
Charles H. Loos Richard P. Nall
•u1111111 M.J,..o•....i E<li1or~
Terry Coville
......... Ot•ll~ C~nh E<l<IOO-
H un lfnqton Beach Of flcr i'mJ 8•«n &eulf•~•ll
M.IUll'IQ "'"°'''" ,. 0 . &• 1'(1, ., ....
Ttltphont (714) 642-4321 C'41J.~ltled AdvtrtisinQ 642·S671
FrOf'!I Norin Of'•llQ'I' Co~,,,~ (nm"""!lllle\
• 540·1220
Cncl'l'!Qfff, -t•tt. O•<t<t.. c;..t..t Putlil1f!I,,. tom11·~· NO M... ••o•l... •tlvs1• .. IO"\.
HftO''"' rolottlt• or 1<1.,.rt1""""~" ""'••n """'
Ill flll!'O(l!lttd wtlJ'IO"' 100'<•.tl Ii"'"'"'''°"' Of
(Olly•1411l -lltf'
SKO...O ct111 Pnl-ot Pi•ll 11 Gel.I• MI M, (.IH!orn1~ Wb1(,-1ptiorl OT ("'tltr I.) 00
-111111 bf 1'11~71 JI 00 l'n!'.1'111111: lft•lllfl"f ~ lltM U.00-!Pll f
"
ASHLAND, Ore. (UPI) -Memorial
srrvu::es \\1-11 be held on campus Wednci;.'
rllly for GAry !\,anlove, the blind student
bcldy president at Southern 0 r e g o n
College .
~1nnlove, 40, who di{'(! of a heart
11!111rk l11sl Wednesday at S 0 C • s
Ste venson Union. wns 1hc oldest slud\)nl
t1vtr 10 Jerve as 9tudent body presklent
~I the 1Chool. Manlove, who made his
~·11y nround campus with his Gennan
shrpherd guide d<>g Grand y, \Y8s to have
been in his senior ye J1r this sc i-nesler.
"f had IOQ.ked forwa rd to this year
11nd to being able to cooperate with
Gary in fulfllllng his 11splrations for
Southern OrtgGn CoHege," sakl 0 r ,
~James K. Sours, SOC pre-Sidcnt ,
"In.. tc.rml of Weer hilmanity a..n..d
cou r3ge, Gary was an example for us . -.
all. Our tribute lo him should be tn
mJke this the very finest year In the
history of the t'Ollcgc, a year of courtesy
and love."
Manlove, who was born in Los Angeles,
was student body president at his junklr
high school and president of his high
school's student council In Southern
California. He attended East Los Angeles
Junior College, Orange Coast College,
and Califomla Polytechnic C o 11 e g e ,
Bt:fore moving to Orr:gon, he was in
the swimming pool ond building main·
tenancc wor)( In -SOUthem CaUtom\a,
Manlove los:t his eyesight eight yean
ago when he contracted d i a b e t I c
rCtlnitis.
lie was divorce<f and is sutvtved by
lwo ,teen-1ge. daughtetl-who -llve:-whh
~heir n11)tber in Newport Beach.
I
'
A Real Sparkler
It was a ~parkler of a day along ~range Coast when photographer
focused his camera recently on this scene of pleasure craft at their
moorings. Silhouetted scene would be hard to capture now that coastal
low clouds have turned everything gr~y.
Tape Tells Nixon Advice
To Dean on 'Complicity'
WASHJNGroN (UPI) -President
Nixon ad vised his counsel, John W. Dean
Ill, on f\larch 21, 1973, to make a
"rather general" statement c I earing
ea~h White House aide of any complicity
in \Vntergate, according to a ta~ played
in court today.
The tape of the discussion on the
afternoon or March 21 was played in
U. S. District Court as Dean , the
government's first witness in t h e
\Vatergate ci>ver.up trial, appeared to
be nearing the end or four days of
direct question ing by the prosecutors.
Nixon told Dean in the tape-recorded
conversation that he sh<>uld prepare a
\vrilten report "which is a very general,
understand. Understand, (laughs ) I don't
\\1ant to ge t all that go ddamned
specific. . . .;1
··But if you make it rather general
in tenns of my -your -investigation
indicates that this man di'd not do it,
this man did not do it, this man did
do that," Nixon sa id, emphasizing the
"did" and "that" the last time he used
those word s.
Dean, who was said at the tlme to .
be heading Nixon's investiga tion o t
Watergate, then repeated for Njxon an
earlier suggestion to allow witnesses,
including Whlte House aides, to go before
the grand jury under the protection
of immunity from prosecution so that
they might give full testimony.
John D. Ehrlichman, then No. 2 White
ijouse aide who was sitting in on the
meeting, resisted Dean's suggestion and
said "you end up with people in and
out of the Wh~te House indicted for
various, for various offenses."
Ehrlichman, one of five fonner Nixon
associates on trial for the cover·up,
proposed instead that Nixon issue two
or three papers summarizing the White
House review of the ease for the Senate
Watergate committee -which at that
time had just been established.
Dean also proposed that a special
panel made up of the deputy attorney
general, the head of tbe J u s t i c e
Department's criminal division and
others conduct an investigation a n d
rt!port at the President's request.
But White House chief of staff Ii.
R. Haldeman, also a defendant and also
present at the March 21 meeting, ob-
jected that such an idea would prompt
cries of a "super cover·up."
Sniffing~s Out
.illoonsliine Conviction Scotclied
WASfllNGTON (UPI) -The U.S. Supleme Court today let
stand a lower court ruling that a warrant is needed to search a truck
that smells or whiskey~
The standard for a warrantless search is whether tbe incriminat·
ing evidence is in ''plain view" of a law officer. The 4th U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals ruled that the odor of whiskey does not make the
liquor itself in plain view and that a warrant was needed to search
the truck.
'!'he appeals court overturned the conviction of William G.
Bradshaw, who was charged with making rqoonshine in the Dirty
Ankle section of Cleveland County, N.C.
The arresting agents smelled liquor around the truck and
searched it without a warrant. They found 144 gallon jugs of moon·
shine.
""' """""' ~ ---.,..,..,,..,~.
'
Reflect io11s 011 t.lae Bay
Birthday
Party Off;
-'-------
Boy Killed
CIUCAGO (AP) -Thon-.as Doss
wanted to go to the n1ovies on his
14th birthday and went to his fathu's
gas_ station to earn so111e money. the
father accident.ally shot the boy to death
during an altanpted holdup by a t~·
age girl.
It was the first tlme Thomas had
worked al the sta.tlon. The hoklup al·
tempt came hours before a planned
birthday celebration that was to include
Thomas ' favorite chocolak! cake.
"I usua lly make his favorite cake
on hls birthday and then he wanted
to celebrate by going downtown ,with
the kids ·he's grown up wttfi," said
the boy 's mother, Dovie Doss. ''J .cfidn't
have-any mooey -to give --him so he
called his father to ask to earn some."
ThomaS was killed as he wrestled
with a JS.year-old girl who entered the
service station Sunday morning dressed
as a man and announced a holdup.
She carried a pistol, authorities said.
Thomas grabbed her and his father,
Henry, 47, picked up a revolve r kept
in the station and fired, homicide in-
vestigator Patrick Conley said. O n e
bullet struck the girl in the ha n d ;
another es:itercd the boy's chest and
killed him.
"Thls is one ca~ where having a
handgun for protection didn't do any
good at all," said Conley.
The service station cash register bad
only a small amount of nl()ney, he
said .
The girl was hospitalized and named
in a delinquency petition charging her
with murder and armed robbery.
Doss, who is separated from his wife,
told her of the shooting later Sunday.
Thomas has three brothers and sisters
who also live with their mo ther.
"They just can't believe it," Mrs.
Doss said. "All his friends came over
yeste rday and they don't really believe
he's dead either."
Supreme Court
E1ids Nonpublic
School Credits
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Tho U.S .
Supreme Court today struck down as
unconstitutional a California law giving
lax credits lO parents of nonpublic school
children .
The court acted in a brief order af-
firming the deciion of a three-judge
court. The lower court said in granling
a summary judgment without trial that
the law, on its face , impermlssibly fun-
nels state funds to foster religious in-
sti tutions.
Three Justices wanted to hear 'the
case in oral arguments, but it takes
four votes to bring a case to the court
for full review. Justices Byron R. White
a'nd William H. Rehnquist , Plus Chief
Justice Warren E. Burger, contended
that the law should be upheld.
The Supreme Court has knocked down
state Jaws giving direct or indirect finan-
cial aid to sectarian schools unless there
are stringent guarantees that the money
will be used for nonreligious purposes
such as bus tran sp ortati o n or
nonreligious textbooks.
Last term, the court struck down
a New York law similar to California's
but which also granted tax money to
parochial schools di rectly. The court
said there was no way to assure that
the grants were not used for religious
purposes without establishing a large
inspection system that would deeply in-
volve the government in relig101,1s in·
stilutions.
Nary a ripple cllslurbs wale.rs of Newport Jlartmr's "below Promontory Point Dy Irvine Company. It lies
Promontory Bay as construction continues on wllat bttwe~n Balboa Island and Beacon Bay. Undevel·
'
m•y be one-of thelast bom ... that wilLbe.built...wllh~o.11.c wJ.ter!rolllb<!Q!;.a~tcnt
frontage on lhe harbor. Ala nn1adc inlet was carved in Newport ar r. ~"'-=--
' . ' .
•
-
MOlldlY, Octob« 21 , iq74 H DAILY ,PllOf M
Nader Hits All Bases at Chapman:·
STILL ON THE ATTACK
Consumer Advoc•t• N•d•r
Mooring Fee
l1npoundme11t
~I ay Escalate
Boat owners who tie up illegally to
someone else's mooring in Orange Coun-
ty harbors aod have their ve!Sels im-
pounded may soon be paying four tilnes
as much to get tbem qul Of hock.
Orange County Supervisors will be
asked Tuesday to make revisions in
county.mooring fee policies, aimed main-
ly at transient boaters who get their
boats impounded on purpose to enjoy
low-cost storage at a county guest moor-
ing.
Such boaters must now pay only a
dollar for each day the boat was in
1mpound. '
"This low ·daily fee provides no in-
centive to the owner of such a vessel
to remove it from the impound, fre-
quently ttSulting In Jong·tenn storage
at a rate much les! than the boat
owner would pay at a commercial
marina," said Harbor Department Oirec·
tor Kenneth Sampson.
The Harbors. Beaches and Parks Com-
mission suggested the oounty charge
the same daily rate for impound boats
as for guest slips in county harbors
-$4 in Newport Harbor and $3 in
Dana Harbor.
currently, only Newport Harbor has
moorings but some are planned ror Dana
Harlxlr when the east basin opens up.
Sampson said he is confident the larje
increase in impotind fees will be in-
centive to get boat owners to reclaim
their p~rty.
At the same meeting, supervisors will
be asked in Increase lhe guest mooring
fee from $1 to $2.
Sampson said since the current cost
of a guest slip is $4 per day in Newport
Harbor, Increasing the guest mooring
fee to 50 pereent of tbat is "an ap-
propriate price differential."
Supervisors will also be asked by
Sampr;on to clamp the same five-day
guest limit now used on slips to the
transient vessel moorings.
Col. Simlnonds
· Of Laguna Hills
Succumbs at 82
Col. Edward P.' Simmonds (USMC.
ret.), a veteran of two Wtlrld wars
and a resident of Laguna Hills Leisure
Wor ld for S'h: years, died Sunday at
Saddleback Community Hospital follow-
ing a heart attack. 1
Col . Simm~~ father of Irvine World
News Editor Jeanne S. Keevil, h a d
celebrated his 82nd birthday ooe day
before his death.
Funeral services are pending at La
Jolla Mortuary Chapel.
Col. Simmonds receiVed a field com-
mission In the Marine Corpi a f t e r
enlisting as a private in World War
I. Discharged from active duty as a
first lieutenant, he rose to the rank
or major in the Marine Reserve and
was recalled to active service in 1944.
Before retiring In 1952, hi& assignments
had included duty as executive officer
of.Camp Elliott near San Diego.
. Survivors.,_ in addition to Mr_!._ Kee\'.il.
..,. inClude another daUghter, Mrs, cyfitlila
Lucas or La Canada, and s e v e n
grandchildren, among them Katherine
and Constanqe KeevU of Mission Viejo.
Singer Attacker
Killed Herself
MEMPlllS, Tenn. (AP) -A me<Ucal
examiner says 111 autopsy confirms that
a spurned woman died or a seJ(·inflkted
gunshot wound · aner she acaldl.'d \pop •"'-er Al G....Owilh hot gri!S.
Big Firms
Get Blame
For Costs
By T0~1 PAUtER
Of tM O•llJ' 1"1161 Sl•ff
Ralph Nader addressed a full house
at Chapman College's l\temorial Hall
Sunday night, .ticking off two hours of
consumer abuses and sending his au·
dience of 1,000 scrambing for pencil
and paper as he advjsed them where
to write ror remedial action.
He placed the primary responsibility
for double-digit inflation on Jarge cor-
porations, saying labor had be e n
restrained in its wage demands since
about 1970. "Big busines,, can't exist
as it does now without big governme nt,"
he charged. Despite what businesses
claim to want, he said, they built and
sustain a large federal bureaucracy.
Nader, in his deep monotone and
characteristically slumped over t h e
podium, spoke in favor ci the consumer
advocacy bill he said has been sup-
pressed four times in the last year
in Congress.
'It would cost taxpayers $15 billion
a year," he said, "but those Southern
senators call it a drain on the federal
budget. 'Ille Pentagon spends $9.6 million
per hour all year long and they don 'i
complain."
Nader also said the recent abolition
by Congress of the interlock system
requirement for cars was unfortunate.
"l would have preferred the air bag
(passive restraint system) two years
ago,"-he said.
"The interlock (which requi~s buckl-
ing of seatbelts before the car will
start) was a minor inconvenience to
many, but a great convenience to people
who survived (accidents)."
Nader called the Los Angeles basin
a gas chamber, saying the Air Resources
Board has lost effectiveness and political
action is needed to overhaul it.
Lambasting the priorities of l h e
present American system, Nader said,
"We spend more . on alcohol than on
the environment. He contrasted the en-
tire federal court system, which he said
is nm on $150 million a year, with
one nuclear submar:lne, the Tr i d e n l •
which now bas cost more than '1.2
billion.
Nader opposed the construct.ion o f
nuclear power plants. saying they are
tools of self-destruction and charging
that if "the 40 percent energy waste"
were eliminated from the s y st e m ,
nuclear power would oot be needed.
"The nuclear boondoggle is o u r
technological Vietnam." Nader said. ''We
can't live '1oith it but we can live without
it."
He added that the cleanest, most plen-
tiful source ol energy, solar power, is
oot being developed "because Exxon
doesn't have title to the sun."
His other criticism was directed at
consumers who know nothing about food
value and nutrition, meat i n d ttS t r y
"triclts" th.at fool the consumer, the
$2-billion-a-year pet food industry, ad
vertising techruques "that teach children
to nag parents, and the "impotent con-
sumer," who buys strictly on brand
name.
Sounding a little like an evangelist.
Nader promised his audience that getting
involved in improving society "does
something to you. Alienation , boredom
go. You become fuller, happier peo;le."
Nader continues to claim he is not
interested in elected office, saying he
is more effective In working for an
informed electorate, to which politicians
can be responsible.
Gas Leak Cited
In Big El Toro
Horne Explosion
A powerful explosion and resulting
fire that ripped through an El Toro
home Fri.day night was caused by a
gas leak, fire investigators reported to-
day.
Results of the probC by Orange County
Fire Department. Capt. Iton DY.water
pinpointed the cause as leakage In the
home's natural gas system. .
The blast In the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Power, 24131 Eaglemont
Ave.\ blew out walls and started a fire
that caused an estimated $ 5 6 , O o O
damage.
The couple was watching tolevlslon
when the 9:52 p.m. blast rocked the
home. 1be Power1 escaped uninjured.
Firemen listed $35,000 damage to the
house and garage, $11.000 to a motor
home parked in front or the house and
$10,000 to the eontents or the resklence.
Investigation continued t o d a y to
determine what ignited the I e: a k I n g
natural gas. Green wu reported ln good condition
et a hospital Sunday but a spoktsman
10< blm saJd he wa1 "In a grea1 amount 3 Inmates Stabberl
of pain."
Green sulfcred le<Olld<lollffil bums SAN QUENTIN (UPl ) -Tht<e !!al>
on his back and arm when M a r y blng1 took place et San Quentin Prl50n
Woodson, 29, Of titadiaon, N.J., threw durlrf'g the weekend, btlnglng to 01 the
hol grits - a cereal -on him as number of su~ atla;cks this yoar ,at
he .took a bath Friday, aetording to lhe prison on t:he shores of San Francisco
----lhcrll£1 oU!ce"" -.-.-...1>ay,..olflc!al1 rci>oncd. IOOlly,
' \
' . ,
Co11rt Deari·ng Tuesday ·
• Two-year-ol<l ~1urder Ordeal Not Over for Man (:ited lll
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of Ille 0•11¥ ~HM St•H
Ja~s Ray Russell will be tak,en to
a Los Angeles County courtroom Tues·
day but the ordeal is not over for
the former Laguna Hills man accused
of a murder he may bot have committed.
He has been held ·in Los Angeles
County ·Central Jail for 743 days as
of today.
He has been held since Oct. 8. 1972,
without bail, withot.lt arraignment and
without any definitive results of more
than a dozen hearings of various kinds
involving extradition to Oklahoma, to
face trial-for-a-killing that occurred
on a Saturday night when evidence in·
dlcates he was in California.
He has been cleared of Implication
once already by Orange County Superior
CotD't Judge William fi.lurray, who is
aghast at what has happened in the
Artist Charged
In Laguna Beacl1
Rape Attempts
El Toro silk screen artist Steven J.
Willett is being held by Laguna Beach
police today on charges of assault with
intent to commit rape after he allegedly
attacked a woman and then a IS-Year-old
girl in the Art Colony.
Laguna police said the mother of the
teenager actually led them to Willett
when she ran into him by chance while
shopping.
The mother claimed he p u 11 e d
alongside her car, said "wow" and then
drove off, according to detective Gene
Brooks.
Willett, 22, of 24902 Branch Ave., El
Toro, described himself as a s e I f -
employed sil k screen artist. He was
arrested Saturday and is beld on $10,000
bail.
The teenaged girl was b e i n g in-
terviewed about her Friday ordeal. Her
mother left the station to do some
shopping when she was spotted by a
leering man in another car.
She wrote down his license p I a l e
number. Police allege it matched the
licenses of a car involved in previous
cases and they traced the auto to the
suspect.
Del. Brooks said the first assault oc-
curred Friday night as the IS-year-old
girl was walking along Coast Highway.
He said she told him the attacker
drove past her, stopped his car, got
out and began following her. He began
talking with her and she became nervous
when the questions turned to persoaal
subjects.
The young girl frantically began look-
ing for an open store, er restaurant,
and when 'tmable to see one turned
up Myrtle Street, a residential street.
When the man asked her wbere she
lived, sbe pointed to a lighted bouse
and began running toward it.
The man then grabbed the young girl
as she tried to nee. Her screams alerted
nearby residents who burst from their
doors and came to her ;;;;~. ~: ::::.::
chased the attacker, but lost him.
A half hour later, ? 30-year old woman
was assaulted as she walked to her
central Laguna apartment.
The woman told officers she w a s
followed by the attacker who d r o v e
behind her in his car. He asked her
i.t she wanted a ride, and when em·
phatically told "no," left the vehicle
and began trailing her.
As she neared a residence. the man
barred her path and grabbed her. He
fled after she began screaming.
Del. Brooks said that as he interviewed
the woman Saturday in his office, the
JS-year-old's mother was present, and
heard the description of the attacker.
Brooks also worked with an 1'ldentikit"
which is used to create J1.&l artist.fil:e
-sketch of suspects.
Willett was arrested after an all points
bulletin was broadcast lo the Laguna
Beach Patrol force after the mother's
license plate infonnation and descripUon
of the auto allegedly matched up.
Piano Movers
Hit by Burglars
Irvine school teacher Tim Terry and
his two friends had their hands too
full Sunday to deal ·'A·ith burglars who
darted into his garage.
• Terry, of 14671 Fir St., SI eve
Habnneha\ and Randy Misemer were
in the midst of moving a piano upstairs
when It happened.
The educator's pc>~·er lawn mower and
power edger valued at a total or So*OO
vanished from the aarage tn that ptriorl.
Irvine Police Officer Pete Linton
said nothing else "''a5 taken.
I •
more than two years since.
"I never done any killing .... " Russell
said in a jail interview Friday.
Russell, 27, Is an ell:-COn¥ict ~·ho did
four years at fi.1cAlester, "Okla., for a
burglary comm.it!ed at the age of 19
and now the state of Oklahoma wants
him back.
The Galifomia Supreme Court ha s
recenlly ruled that he should remain
behind bars ~ithout bail, pending resolu·
tion or a web of technical legal en-
tanglements involving superior and ap-
pellate courts in Los Angeles and Orange
counties.
Justices said he did oot .ha'ie a fyll
and complete hearing in Los Angeles
County Superior Court following his re-
arrest there, despite being arrested and
cleared earlier in Orange County.
One basis of that clearance by Judge
?-.lurray was Ufe result or a polygraph
'Lack of Couse)'
test indlcating Russell told the truth
about being at the Long Beach Nu-Pike
amusement park with hi.ii ~·ife Karen
and friends the night of the 1nurder
1,000 miles away.
Witnesses ~·ill be called and affidavits
presented Tuesday to that effect but
Oklahoma authorities ~·ho filed the
teletyped fugitive warrant say they are
having trouble row>Ciing up prosecution
~itnesses.
One is anticipated to be' Russell's ex·
\\ife, a Fort Smith, Ark., hairdresser
who signed an affidavit that she saw
her fonner husband that fateful night
and talked "'it h him. Attorney Roger
Agajanian, who became familiar with
the case o{ Russell as a Jaw clerk in
the Orange CoWlly Public Defender's
Office 2~l years ago, c;laims s"~ is a
factor.
He said the former 1'-1rs. Russell wrote
Supreme Court .to Rule
On County Marine Case
From Wire Se;rvlees
\VASHINGTON -A challenge by eight
Marines stationed at the Marine Corps
Air Station, Santa Ana, against the Jack
or defense counsel at summary courts
martial will be heard by the U • S .
Supreme C.Owi.
The cOurt today agreed to review
a decision Of the U.S. Circuit Court
in San Francisco that defense counsel
must be made available in such pro-
ceedings in complex cases.
Government attorneys turned to the
U.S. Supreme Court after the San Fran-
cisco decision arguing that there is no
constitutional right to the assistance of
COWlSel in summary courts martial.
Summary courts are used to t r y
military personnel charged with minor
of defense counsel would overturn the
Son of Solon
Faces Drug Rap
FORT COLLINS, Colo, (AP) -A
"'arrant charging possession of mari·
juana and LSD has been issued for
Steve Jarman, 19, tbe son of Rep. John
Jarman (D-Okla.)
Dist. Atty. Stewart Van Meveren said
idenlical warrants for Jarman and a
woman identified as Janet Harmon were
issued after their cabin near Estes Park
was raided Oct. 7.
The senior Jannan said that "steve
will go to Colorado immediate1y to res·
pond in person to whatever charges
there may be." 1i .
Trudeau in Paris
PARIS (UPI) -Can<:dian Prime
Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau arrived
here today for talks with French Presi·
dent Valery Giscard D'Estaing aimed
at ending seven years or friction between
their C'Ollntrles. J<'rench officials said the
leaders hoped to close out a troubled
era begun with the late French President
Charles ~e Gaulle's controversial 1967
visit to Qubec.
'
confinement, reduction in grade o r
forfeiture of pay.
"Since there is no prosecutor in sum-
mary courts martial , the presence there
of defense counsel would overturn th
balanced procedure that would unduly
favo r the deferidant," government at-
torneys contended.
Thrcase began when Daniel Edward
Henry and seven other Marines stationed
in Santa Ana were brought before a
summary court martial for minor of·
grounds they had a constitutional right
to have a lawyer paid for by the ~,".
emment.
A district court judge rejected their
{.'()llfention but the 91.h Circuit Court re-
versed it. The appeals court did not grant
an absolute right to a lawyer but said
one was necessary if the complelity
of the circumstances warranted.
In a summary court martial, a com-
missioned officer serves as an inde-
pendent fact finder and judge. He
can render any sentences short of death.
dismissal, dishonorable or bad conduct
discharge. confinement for more than
a mooth, or hard labor without con-
finement for more than 45 days. He
can also order forfeiture of up to two-
thirds of one month 's pay.
Ki-ssinger Has
Only the Best
WASlllNGTON (UPI! -Seer ..
tary of State Henry A. Kissinger
went to a parly Sunday night with
his Secret Service bodyguards, ooe
of "''horn "·ore a white bandage on
his head.
A guest asked Kissinger if that
was tnc agent grazed when his
automatic \\'eapon sllipped off a
shelf aboard Kissinger's jet plane.
Kissinger nodded ancl said, .. I
am the ooly man in Ure world \\"ho
would have a bodyguard, whQ when
he shoots at himself <1t a distance
of twG feet , misses."
'
a letter apologizing after her ex·husband
1<\'as jailed, claiming she was coerced
into signing the alleged ly untrue slf.le ·
ment bY Oklahoma autborilim w ho
threatened to prosecute her as an ac·
cessory to murder.
Russell is accused of killing and rob-
bing a 92·year--0ld male invalid corifined
to a "'heelchair.
"To thi5 day, I doo't know what ltid
them to suspect me ... " he said Friday.
•·t used to live one town eway from
Stigler, but l never e\'en knew the
old man."
Agajanian said today that 0 range
ColUlLy's polygraph te<:hnician Dean Ren~
dricks. ~'ho administered the so-called
lie detector test lo Rusiell in 1912,
is supplying the cha rts and graphs to
his counterpart in J.m Angeles County,
Kenneth Scarce.
Irvine Complex
Air Quality Hit
By Councilman
Irvine C:Ompany reports about hlnf
the proposed Irvine Industrial Complex-
East will affect the environment have
found a new opponent in lrv_ine Coun-
cilman Robert West.
In a Jetter to Irvine Planning DiredM
William Livingstone , West said the a:f'r
quality part of the report is "not ade-
quate" and the housing portion "does
not make sense."
• The company has asked the city Coun-
cil to change tbe zoning for the area
to allow industrial development ., The
council must accept the eJ1~kon11¥~l
reports before changing the zone.
Complaints about the ,proposed %.058-
acre industrial development wbe~ M,000
workers eventually would be employed
have poured in from a nwnber of state
and county agencies as ~·en as en-
vironmentalist groups over the pa sl
month.
The environmental impact report says
that three percent o! the moderate-in--
oome families with members working
in the industrial area wlll choose to
'live in Irvine.
The city defines moderate income as
family earnings betw~n $8,000 4 n (I
$15,000 a year. Recent city studies have
indicated that families earning below
$15,000 a year cannot buy homes in
lrvine.
Based on its projeCtioos, the Irvine
Company has promised the council tha t
more than adequate bowing will be
available for all families earning more
than $10,000 a year.
The company said 4,237 households
with incomes ranging from $10,000 to
$15,000 will want to live in Irvine. The
total supply ol homes aod apartments
for that group is to be 7 ,864, according
to company projections.
West, however, said, "The housing
demand projection in the (report) does
not make sense. If less than three per·
cent of the moderate incom e people
who "·ould have family members work-
ing in the lrvlne Industrial Complex-East
wish to Jive in Irvine, then there must
be a drastic problem ~·ith the hoUsing
being built in Irvine and the desirability
of Jiving in Irvine.
"It does not make sense that people
would prefer to drive 15 or 20 ntilcs
to work if atlractive living conditions
were provided within five miles.
Tie a
yellow nbbon ••••
Beth and Blake
louncl the ribbon
around !tie tree, .• ,
orooufd those
NIOOY l<lCeS nave
something to d<>
With !tk1ng ttieu
acrylic separates
(le$1gned by
Bern1n1 ol Haly? ... ,
Naltj'swealer; w1rh
carr>el rP<1 and navy
skirt and slack $.
Available At
The R('(I Balloon
-Q '1 ' \ . : ' \ ' "(
-'1 !:'£
THI: •
RED BALLOON LTD.
' •
A " DAil y PILOT
The Bicycles
Are Coming
~nsrs OF MONDAY' ,,,.,. glum
gray Monday mornings are a p u r e
mystery. Start tbe week under these
kind ol skies and you figure everybody
would be in hiding along UU.. best of
all possible roasa.
It ls not so. For some rea..>n, the
mbts seem to turn out our bicycle
rtden in unprecedented numbert1. 1lley
come in all shapes and sites. They
make tbls: old, tired autOmo&lle ct:m-
muter's e>'fl water.
No longer are you worried about the
cop behind the billboard or if the next
traffic signal is going-to cbange jUS:
as you charge toward the Intersection.
You fret instead over where the next
bicyclist is going to pop up.
1Bicyclists themselves seem to be
~iding up 1nto various cult.s and t;rpe!.
ttls getting so you can recognl2e them
M you travel our coastal byways.
Take lhe!e bike types spotted only
loday tllroogh lhe mim ol the monling'
1'Ri IX>#TER' This chap Is usually
along;pac.if1f QM Hlghway, somewhere
beh·~·~n Lagan.a Beech and Corona det
M.u..He is ridiog aoe ol thooe lightweight
bikes with two jugs of scmethlng strap-
ped ID 1he handlebars.
Ne_ Ja wearing one of those blue jog-
i:zis' suits with lhe red pinst:rlpes. He ~rs a yettN helmet.
Coaster gets his name because
be hills and da1es between Laguna
Cbrona de! Mar, he..doesn't pump
the lime. He pwnps like fury up
hills, then puts his head on the
h«wiebars and coasts down. You think
llf. 'sleeping. . . . 1 just resting. don 't you? No, he's
ROIJPJE MASS TRANSIT, This lsnl
.jtlt one biker : It's a bunch. A good
e.ple can be seen In the mornings
n... Dove!r and ·WestcUff in Newport
BtOch. They an headed to high sd>ool.
nl!y are headed there all together. 1'tY come swooping out ol the reslden-
~rea onto Dover Drive In one huge
1!te Grouple ltfas.s Tran!it bunch ap-
paftnlly believe there is strenglh in
numbers. 'nley defy traffic by coming ar. yoo like the Charge of tbe IJght
Bil(ade. ~"' are 52 of lhem. One pant Jtr•
clgRbt in a chain sprocket and the
wMl.e outfit crashes . • • ntE PUMPER: This biker is alma.st
a1Ways alone. Head down, he watches
thfl pedals, concentrating on pedaling.
W~?1 out! lte doesn't see you there .••
SOCIAL SADDLES: This is another
grolip. They are coeds, riding two-by-two.
1lJw are carrying books, magazines and
~Ider bags: The girls in front and
turning around, talking to the girls in bi¥*· Watch out again! They don't see
)'OQ either.
mE WHEEUE-BOPPER: He is about
13'=,iean old and is always riding with
a couple of buddies. He has one ol
thoee little bikes. Big handlebars. Always
rides ft in a wheelie, standing on its
rear wheel. Plays bumper tag with you.
Has a smart mouth if you honk at
him.
I hope your Jong hair gels caught
fn the 5JX1kes, you smart little rotter.
THE DISASTER: This one ls always
in his late 30s and just bought the
l().6peed bike second·bancl. Now he's off
on the side of tbe road. The chain
just came ofr all those sprockets. He
just sits there, looking sad ..•
THE JUNKER: He rides along S\O\.\'IY,
oD. an old one-speed rust bucket. He
is carrying his brown bag lunch. Just
trying to get to work because his old
heap wouldn't start.
I can identify with him In the mists ot the rooming.
' •
••
Ford, Echeverria Eye Oil, Braceros
~(
~ ). ...
.NOGALES. ArlL (AP) -l'10mil1n&
a "new dialoaue" with Latin-Amtrlcan
nations, President Ford met 1'fexlcan
President Lull Ecbevenia al thia bordc!:r
dly 1odsy ID bejin nine bour1 ol hoJ>
-ch diplomacy.
~L ~ EOONO~~~ matlers pr;;-~ ~191'h~ I y ;,. ..
:!!!"'-!"l'l"-.J:WO~..!-!!'!!!!!:. i and for all e o l .!__
everywbere. ii
Ford. In rellW'u prepared !or lhe
ceremonial exchange of greetings at the
border, said the day's summit ~Ions
at locations in Mexlco and Ari:'Xla "sym-
bolize the relationship between our two
Trial Begins
mised to 'domlnate the talks between autta.tlons."
the two presidents. It was Ford's first venture onto foreign
"It la a working pai;tnmhJp or mutual soil a1nce be became president on Aug.
<00p«1tkln which esemp!Uiel 1he spirit 9, and be Aid, "It pro.ides a living
behind the new dialogue into which we demon.ttraUon ol b:>w we are Inextricably
have eottted with the nations of Latin linked .•.. " America," Ford said. The U.S. president voiced hope that
"In our meetings today," he added, the meelings would lead to "a close
0 Jet us give new meaning to the special pel'DlaJ relaUonahlp between us apd
and governments."
FORD CITED e1isting agreements on
a rana:e of issUea and told the '°tedcan
president: "Let us today c o n 1 Ide-r
Wgclher how we can oooperate 1n solving
common problems which will result in
a better life for the people fl our
Obscenity Laws
Review Rejected
i
i
• • Ul'IT ........ l
.
'
By High_ C~onrt
WASHINGTON (AP) - A dlvi4ed
Supreme c;:ourt today refused to interfere
with the coovictions of nine persons
and one corporation in nine separate
cases involving violations or obscenity
Jaws ln New York, Virginia, California
and Florida.
In all nine cases, Justice William O.
Douglas said he 'N(luld have reversed
the convictiOQS because ci his long-stan-
ding view that the ConstituUon prohibits
Police Seek
.3 in Bakery
Shop Murders
NEW BRITAIN, Coon. (UPI) -Stale
police said today a bulletin has been
issued describing tlie suspects in t~
Saturday night shooting death!. of six
persons in a New Britain bakery as
a \\'hite man, a black man and a white
\li'oman.
any federal or state ban on obscenity.
JUSTICES WILLIAM J. Brennan Jr.,
Potier St.wart and Thurgood Marshall
·also dissented from the majority decision
denying the pet.itions for a full Supreme
Court review O{ the cases.
Brennan. Stewart arxi '°tarshall said
·that seven d the convictions should
have been vacated and sent back to
the lower courts "for a detennination
whether petiliooers should be afforded
• a new trial under local community stan-
dards."
In a major obscenity decision last
June, the Supreme Court turned out
ils latest attempt to define what kind
of material may be prohibited as obscene
without violating the First Amendment
guarantee of free speech and press.
That decision was that local com·
munity standards may govern but that
local juries do not have absol.ut. discre-
tion to outlaw movies, books and other
material they consider ob\ectlonable. At
that . time. the '1;0llrt said the movie
"Carnal Knowledg~" could not be banned
as obscene in Georgia. '
BUT IN A COMP ANION c .. ;e, the
court also said last June that Individuals
can be convicted under federal law for
sending "obscene, lewd, lascivious or
filthy" materials in interstate commerce.
Eight former Ohio National Guardsmen went on trial today in 1970
Kent State Univeraity ahootings. On trial at Federal Court in Cleveland
are James E. Pierre (foreground) and Lawrence A. Shafer (rear)
each of whom face life imprisonment if found guilty. At right are
four Kent State victims. From t<>p, William Schroeder, Allison Krause, -
Jeffrey Miller and Sandnr Lee Scheuer.
'The woman was described as about
30 years of age, about 5-feet, &-inches
tall, and wearing an orange pullover
sweater and dungarees. There was no
description of the men. except that tbe
White was wearing a tee shirt.
THE GETAWAY car wm described
as a white 1964 Grand Pm Pootiac
with a cardboard rear license pl.ate
and a dented ten front fender.
In two of the cases today, Brennan,
Stewart and Marshall joined Douglas
in voting to reverse the convictions im-
mediately.
Those involved the convict.ions of [)on.
neh Winslow and Arthur Goldstein of
Norfolk, Va
W'mslow was convicted ol selling and
distributing an allegedly obscene movie
and magar.ines ih violation of a state
law.
Tentative Strike Accord
Ends Airline's Walkout
W ASIUNGTON (UPI) -Striking
machinists today reamed tentative agree-
ment on a new c:mtract w:lth National
Airlines to end a 96-day old v.'8.lkout
that bas idled more than 5,500 employes.
The agm:iment, which ls subject to
membemlip ratiftcation, was reached
at 3 a.m. between ~tatives of
the Miami-based airline and the Interna-
tional Association of Machinists, AFL-
CJO.
The proposed settlement came fol·
lowing a weekend bargaining ....ion
Iha! Jasttd 32 hours.
Ford Visit Opposed
TOKYO {UPI) -Thousands of
demonstrators waving clenched £i.sta in
salule loday roared their oppoolUoo lo
President Ford's planned visit to Japan.
Police said about 25,000 demonstrators,
rar short of the 100,000 the organizeni
hoped for, turned out !at the rally in
cenlral Tokyo.
'M)C negotiations, which re s um e d
Saturday after a U:klay break, were
cooducted by W. J. Usery Jr., special
assistant to the president and national
director of the Federal Mediation and
Conciliation Service.
A spokesman ror Usery said the
negotiators would meet later today "to
work out a back*back understanding
that would end the 98 day strike."
"Details of the agreement will be
announced following a ratification vote
by some 1,600 members of the machinists
union, who have been on strike since
July 15," the spokesman said.
He said the date of the ratification
vote "1'0Uld be announced following com-
pletion of the back to work agreement.
"lt is my sincere hope that tttis ten-
tative agreement will bring an 'end to
a long and difficult dispute lhat has
had so great an impact on the company.
employes and the traveling p u b I i c , ' '
Usery said.
The cootract between National and
the IAM expired Aug. 31, 1973.
So gruesome was the carnage in the
Doona Lee Bakery Saturday night that
the priest who adminisered last rites
termed the perpelralDrs "ba~c
animals," and police likened tbe scene
to "a slaughterhouse."
Detective capt. George Berecsik said
there were indications from the position
of the bodies that the vlctiw were
lying down when they were murdered .
They were aH shot in the bead ;-
one with a shot.gun and the others with
one or more large caliber handguns,
be said.
"It was something t would not want
to see again," said Police Otlef Thomas
P. Ormsby.
KU.LED WERE the owner of the
lloona Lee Bakery, John Salemi. 55, I
a clerk at the store, Helen Giastmtr,-'1
59, of Newington. Conn., and four
customers: Michael Kron, 47, of New
Britain; Thoma& Dowling, 58, and his
wife, Anna, 57, both of New Britain:
and WiUJam Donahue Jr., 22, of West
HarUord.
Police said $300 was taken from the
cash register and the victims' wallets.
But the murderers missed $1,350 in
Salemi's side pants pocket.
Police speculated the bandits may have
panicked and killed one of the victims
when somebody made a move or offered
resistance , then killed the others to
el.imlnate any witnesses.-
•
In a dissent joined by Stewart and
Marshall, Brennan wrote that the con-
viction should be overturned because
the case has not been measured against
the standards set out by the Supreme
Court in Its 1973 and 1974 obscenity
decisions.
THE THREE JUSTICE'> offered 1he
~ argument for reversing the coo-
viCtion of Goldstein, who was charged wilh selling obscene items.
Family Arrested
For Beating {jp
'Rape Suspect'
NIZZA, Sicily (UP I) -Police said
today they have arrested ri ve members
of a peasant family who bound, heat
and robbed a local landowner they ac-
cused of raping their 13-year-old
datJ8ht.r.
Police said landowner G I u s e pp e
Bonarigo, 61. went to see VI n c e n z o
Cascio, 56, to make arrangements for
tthe coming leDlOfl harvest.
'Ibere we.. indlciatioos that Edlevenia
migbt like ID trade oll lor·Wublnglon'a
agreement ID admit migrant Mell<an
farm worktn ....:. a development that
would help eaie Mexico's s er lo u •
Un.mployment problems. -
Ford,wu npected ID st ..... llQril>ol'
the-border ......,, about Ille flow ol
Ulegal lm.mlar.anta from Mexico at a time when UiO United States hsa a
mountln~r unemployment problem ol Ila
own.
'lbe U.S. Presfdnet told reporters Salw'Clay night !hat lmmigratioo, oll,
joint elloru to curb traffic in llllclt
narcotics and seven• ot e1gbt other mat-
ters of mutual concern would be taken
up. 'J1>e:re was no formal agenda for
lhe clUcussioas.
EalEVERRlA WOULD like to con-
vince Ford tjlat Me>ican !arm bsndl
should be allowed to work In the Unlled
States under a program similif to the
bracei:o project that waa abandoned
under presstn'f! from U.S. labor unions.
Fon!, on 1be ~.-"'.1111> tO
halt the Dow of ille&~I immigration into
the urµted States, spurred by mounting
uuemployment arid -population growth in
Mexico.
The U.S. source said Ford ¥1as unllkeJy
to grant any cOncessioos in the migrant
labor area in exchange for Mexican-pn>-
duced oil.
"Over-all, \.\'hat the Mexicans want
is not PoSSible," the source said.
State Power ·
Officials Set
For Extortion
PORThAND, Ore. -Slate, local and
federal authorities have begun prepara-
ttons to counter possible power blackouts
in case an extortiooist carries out his
threat to dynamite more transml6sion
line towers in the Portland area .
Bonneville Power Administration of.
( IN SHORT ... )
ficiaJs, area pollee and the FBI reviewed
emergency plans Sunday after the power
administration .rehfsed. to pay a S 1
million rallllOm demanded in an extortion
letter. '
O!ficials from area mi 11 t a r y in-
stallations and the Oregoo N a t I on a 1
Guard were briefed on the situatioo.
e Whlfl Wishes
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. -The Aiabema
Whig Party has nominated A I a b am a
Gov. George C. Wallace and CalifomJa
Gov. Ronald Reagan to nm for president
and vice president Nov. 5.
There is no presidential e I e ct I on
scheduled this year, but thal will be
changed if Whig party chairman John
Watts has his way .
Watts, who is r1µ1ning for Alabama
lieutenant governor, bas filed a suit
charging "Gerry Fon! is serving Illegally
as president since he was not e1ected
by the .people."
• fta11e11el o .. t
WASHINGTON -The Supreme Court·
today upheld South Caroliaa's five-year
residence requirement for candidates for
governor -thereby denying Charles
D. Ravenel a place on the November
balloL ,
Ravenel won the Democratic primary
but has been kept off the ballot by
an adverse decision of the South Carolina
Supreme Court based on the five-year
provision in the state constitution.
e Ra11 on Trial
MEMPIIlS, Tenn. -James F.arl Ray
was secretly transferred from the state
prison in Nashville to the Shelby County
jail here Sunday night for his evklentlary
hearing Tuesday in U.S. District Court.
Ray, 47, is scheduled to teolilY at
the outset of the hearing starting Tues--
day that could award him a new bial
despile his March 10, 19!19, roe!esslon
that be slew the civil rights leader
wilh a sniper shot the night ol April
4, 19t19.
Cold Weather Chills East
As aoon as he entered the cascio
home, Bonarlgo was assaulted by all
eight members of the family, who a~
cused him of raping Carmela Cascio,
13, during last year's harvest. Carmela
gave birth to a baby about three months
ago.
The Cascl.os tied Bonarigo to a post,
took his rifle, wallet and watch, beat
him with clubs and £orced him to write
out a statement admitting the rape.
e Cflenaleel Bu"' . '
NEW ORLEANS - A stale olfldal
tried to get a oourt injunctiOD today
to stop the Dutch incineration I b i p
Vulcanus lrom burning 4,900 tons of
chemicals 130 miles (l(f the IAUislana
coast. Snow Falls in New York and Pennsvlvania
Temperaiures
Hllfl Low
J\fbiln,
""'"" &'' r rs/lfld .... ~
811H.io
c111<1011e
Cllk•~ cm.:rn•11ll
®!Qijifill
J7 25 " . ... .. " " n " " .. " ....
DELIVERY SERVICE
, llolive<y of lhe Doily Pilol
is guaranteed
lkn:ioyJridoy: " '°" dD AO! hoooot 'lilll cqlll' by !:30 p..M., ml mid "°"'
«pf' ..... bt 11n114N 10 ,oi Cc!lr. in *"IMl7:0D M.
~ Giid ~ H ~ do "Of ~~. i:.•:.r, ~~
ti! bltilq.I IO you. Colt en taMn" ~·~ 100111.
l
'
• • " " .. n " .. " " • .. H .. • ..
" " .. .. ll II
•
ftr:'°llmotld ...... ifi•l'l'ler110 Loul1 S1tl L1k1 Cltv S111 l'rlM.fKO ......
T!Wrmel w11t1rnoton
Mltw.ulllt ff " Ml~ ,, . ·-H " •-v .. t:=-Cltv .. .. • ··-" " == ·-"" • .. • n
,lrttMf!I .. ..
,..,tllffll;I, Ort. .. "
• . -
" " " " .. ~ g .. g
M " .. " .. .. ~ ..
'
U,t T.......,. De's fn (te lJt'
Ll. Gov. Lester G. Maddox, de-
feated in Georgia Democratic
primary runoff lor governor,
says he's about $320,000 in
debt and finding ll dlfllcult t<>
get co nlrlbutfons to pay off
iinpaUonL creditors.
t
While the family was decidlng what
to do nelt, Bonarigo managed to flee
and went to the police, who arrested
C.asdO, hia wile, his sister and two•
ol his ahlk!ren.
Three other children, I n c I u d I n g
carmeJa, were freed on bell. '
The Vulcapus began burning t h e
chemicals Sunday, south: of Cameron
off the extreme 80Uf.hwet1tem Louisiana
coastline. The ship sailed last week
.from Houston, where ·it was loadf4 at
Shell Olemical O>. 's Deer Park woi'b •
Putting It Off
•
Club Plans Trip-So1netime
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) -The president or the Procrutlnat<>rs
Club of America says bis group is o!f t<> Rome todAy or maybe next
week, to take advantage of tickets to the Cln:us Maxlmus.
"We got the tickets for the 10-26-74 per!onnance featuring the
Lions and the Cbristiins," said Les Waas, an advertising executive
who serves as president. "The only thing is we're not quite sure i{ the
date is actually 74 or 1974.
"H it's 74," he said, ''we'll only be 1,900 years late.'' Waas said the ticket engraved in rock In ancient Roman style
and. good for admltlance or SO people was donated by one of the
club's members lq Rome.
Waas has served as president of the Procrastinators since 1956.
ll\Ve still havc9't gotten around to having £19&7 electfon, 11 he
said.
•
'
7
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7
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• •
Today's Final
VOL 67, NO. 294, 2 SECTIONS,. 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA -MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 19H N TEN CENTS
Meter Maids Met With Mixed E;notions
By HILARY KAYE
Of 111• Dallf f'i.ot Sliff
\Vb.en Cheryl Wilcox wheels around
Newport Beach she's liable to h11ve an
orange drink tossed in her direction
or be jeered by a "dissatisfied client ."
Such happenings are not uncommon
as Miss Wilcox carries out her daily
duties ror the city.
' Cheryl Wilcox is a metei' maid.
Irate motorists· who meet 1t1iss Wilcox
are rarely pleased with what s h e ' s
New City
Plans Eyed
In Newport
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of .. DallY PllM Sltff
Newport Beach has taken a "wait
and see" attitude toward the possibility
of a new city rising on the coastal
lands belYleeD Corona del Mar a n d
Laguna Beach.
First mention of the possibility of
Orange County's 27th city being fonned
on the prized 3.>mile stretch came 10
days ago.
Irvine Company president Ray Watson
unveiled preliminary development plaM
covering 10,000 company-OWDed coasta1
acres.
Included in the preliminary plans were
residential development. to house an
estimated 50,000 persons and two coastal
resorts.
Last week, the Ne~'J)Ort Beach City
Council decided to awa it refinement of
the plans and a subsequent cost benefit
study before taking a position on the
proposal. ' However, on nle with the L«al Agency
Formation Commission (LAFC) in Santa
Ana is the city's propoeed .sphere cl.
influence map.
It shows almost the entire 10,000 acres
dlsatssed by \Vataon as a logical ex..
(S.. NEW CITY, Page AZ)
Policeman Slain
Alone in Annex;
Mystery Probed
LOS ANGELES (AP) -A state
policeman died at County-USC ~\edical
Center after being sbot in the head
early today as he was working alone
in a te PoUce annex office ln the
down to n State Office B u i I d i n -g ,
autborit aaid. -
The officer, David A. Jack, 23, or
Riverside, was shot in the left side
of the bead, apparently at (.lose ra:ige.
aulhorities said .
Authorities cordoned off the a re a
around the Los Angeles Civic Center
after Jack's body was (oW)d in lhe
ground-floor annex shortly after 1 a.m.
A search of the area f.::.ilcd to reveal
any clues to the gunman, authorities
said. Investigators were unable to ex-
plain a motive for the shooting.
Authorities said Jack's body was found
by an office worker returning lo the
h\lilding after taking a break.
Jack, who was responsible for checking
state employes entering the building.
was the only 'J>er!IOA on duty in the
lobby at the time of the shooting, police
said.
Because the building is in use around
the clock, the doors always r e m a i n
unlocked, they added. .
A P!)lice spokesman said Jack
reportedly was shot at close range with
a large-caliber weapon. More Uum one
shot was believed to have been fired
at the o!ficer because traces of chipped
marble from a wall near the office
were found near the victim, t h e
spokesman added.
Authorities said Jack's s e r v l c e
revolver was still in its holster.
DOW MOVES UP
IN LA.TE TRADING
NEW YORK (UPI) -Prices !urned
higher fn slo~ tradiJ1g today on the
New York StocJi: E1chanp. {Tables. Pap:e
A91
Tbe Dow Jones industrial· average,
orr Marly four point. during the mom·
Ing gained IU4 polnll to 6119.82.
Prices also \\'ere higher ln moderate
trading on the American Stock Ex-
change.
tnvtstors fn the pf13t !at sessions
have been encouraged by a reduction
In lnttrest rates the past few wee.ks.
•
dishing out :..... parking tickets. And they
let he.r know it.
Four young women employed a s
"parking con trot officers," the official
title given Newport Beach meter maids,
agree enf?rcing parking regulatiOl)S in
Newport has lts ups and downs.
"They scream, they yell ,' U1ey cry
. • . and some tear up lheir tickets
and defiantly walk &way." says the
bloode hfiss Wilcox.
She was talking abouti; some of those
whose paths she crosses as she traVels
around the city from 1:30 a.m. to 4:30
,. p.m. in her three-wheel vehicle.
The orange drink ep!sodt' still stands
out in her mind.
"1 gave cne lG-year~ld girl a ticket
and she threw her drink at me. So,
I called for a police unit and they
tracked her down by her lic:ense num·
ber," · she explatns, Shaking her head
in disbelief. •
"Another time a man threw his keys
at me, but missed." Miss Wilcox says.
Ginger Black. another meter ,mai~.
has been on the .job five years, but
still hasn 't been a target, although she
agrees "people do get pretty emctk>rial."
"Some middle-aged women clutch onto
m'e, 'crying, pleading. telling me they·re
on welfare,'' says ~1rs. Black, whose
husband, Gary. is a city motorcycle
officer.
Violent or emotiona l responses to park-
ing tickets appear to be common in
Newport.
··Oc.'<'asiona\ly so ml'Ol'le accepts a ticket
as a m3llcr of course. Usually, though,
when they find us giving them a ticket,
rea ctions ran!{c from sad storit!S to being
obnoxious." ~liss \\'ilcox says.
Perhaps sonic of the reason fot the
!ea rful reactions is the SIO average price
of parking licke1s in i\cv.·port, a rate
steeper than in many neighboring cities.
Jf unpaid and a warrant ls issued,
the ft.i.e is hikt:d 3n extra ten bucks.
''The reason it's $11) is hrcause of
!he Jack of response by the citizens
of Nev.-port to parking regul ati<ins," ex-
plains Lt. Hill Rlue. i,1•ho is in charge
of parking Control offletrs
"\\'hen it "as only $5. pecple parked
in red zones and didn'i put 1noney in
their meters because they figured it
v.·as cheaper to pay thP five bucks
than ride around trying to find a space,"
recalls Blue
!See i\1~Tt:R. '-IAlDS. Pu~e AZI
Tax Cre·dit Halted
No1ipublic School Aid Held Illegal
Lo1ag a1ad Sho1•t of It
Brad Drew, 7, is.. willing, but officials at the Harbor Area Boys Club
are looking !or some adults they believe will be more able to referee
basketball games this coming season. Volunteer coaches are needed,
too. Boys club basketbaJIJ'rogram gets under way next month. Vol-
unteers for coaching an officiating chores can call 548-9387, or
642·8372 for details.
Beach Sculpto1·s Honored
Before W 01·ks. Drift Awav .,
The saitd castles and sculptures that apropriate portions or the sculptur~ to
were the fun and glory ol Swlday's bring It to life.
13th annual Newport Harbor Chamber The physics students at Corona de!
of Conunerce Sand Casile contest stood Mar High School look top honors in
in their completed form for only a the most'l.111-castle category.
few minutes. Their winning entry was a massive
But that was long ef10Ugh for three race topped off with shaving cream
judges to select 10 winners from among hair and mustache along with eyeglasses
25 teams that entered the lighthearted formed from wire clothes hangers.
compeUtion at Big Corona. Not to be outdone by their cross-to~·n
And tbooe few moments were time rivals, the year book staff at Newport
enough fur the crowd that milled about Harbor High School also came up with
the contest .area two hours to acclaim a winning sandcastle es_itry, the best
and pOOtograph the cblorful sOOrelinc environmen tal castle.
creations. · · · Formed in the $and by the students
A top attenllon gelter was the winner was a huge octopus ,~ .. taring a straw
of the mos\ artistic castle competition, hat topped by artificial nowers.
a non-castle entry by St. Andrews Fountain Valley Girl Scout Troop S37
Presbyterian Church, Newport Beach, 'NOn the most discombooberated castlB
that w!-s sponsored by radJo station prize while the archltectur1l firm or
KOCM. _ Dodd and Welsh captured honors In
The..d!urdl tea!" molded a huge Mfld the most ~temporary ca&Ue category.
replica ol Noah• ark . From a lllnd Winner in the mos( grandoise c.astle · gangplank leading from the ark came s:atqory wu a ele.ya OtJ Itey t,eam
WASHINGTON !UPI J -The U . S .
Supreme Court today struck, down as
unconstitutional a California law giving
tax credits to parents uf nonpctilic school
children.
The court acted in a brief order af-
firming the decilon of a three-judge
court. The lower court said in granting
a summary judgment without trial that
the law, on its face, impermlssibly fun-
nels state funds to foster religious in-
stitutions.
Three justices wanted to hear the
case in oral arguments, but it takes
four votes to bring a case to the court
for full review. Justices Byron R. White
and William H. Rehnquist, plus Chief
Justice Warren E. Burger. contended
.that the law should be upheld.
The Supreme Court has knocked down
state laws giving direct or indirect finan-
cial aid to sectarian schools unless there
are stringent guarantees that the money
will be used for nonreligious purposes
such as bus transportation or
nonreligious textbooks.
~Last-tenn, the court,-~ck dO\Vfl 1' New Yotk 1aW similar tO Cal1£omla's
but which also granted tax money to
parochial schools directly. The court
said there \vas no 'v.•ay lo .assure that
the grants \\'ere not used for religious
purpos~s without establishing a large
inspection system lhat v.·ould deeply In-
volve the government in religious in·
stitutions.
Iii its appeal , California did not defend
2 County Grou11s
Plan to Fil e
Carpenter Suit
The Eoylronmental Coalition of Orange
County and the People's Lobby plan
to file a suit in Orange County Superior
Court Tuesday charging th.at state Sen.
Dennis Carpenter has violated conflict
of interest laws.
Carpenter's income from the Golden
State Improvement eo-.mittee. his
primary political backers. were not pro-
perly reported as income. said Lorrell
Long. a spokesman for the environmental
coalition.
Carpenter's opponent in the senate
race. Frank Barbaro, has charged that
Carpenter used political contributions to
pay for a Sacramento apartment and
a housekeeper. .
Carpenter has denied the charge.
The groups filing the suit contend
that Carpenter's expenses. filed in the
campaign contribution report, did not
jibe with income indicated in a connict
of interest statement.
Carpenter responded to the charge
today , ''tf these are environmentalist
groups, it is kind of hard to stretch
the imagination to see th3t !his is an
environmental issue."
Miss Ulng, however. said that the
senator's i n v o Iv t: men t with land
developers is an environmental issue
and "we are concerned with the relation
between land use and political reform'."
UC / Lllunclies
Fund .Raiser
UC Irvine launched an ambiti<lus
Sl00.000 fund·ra islng drive toc!..1y
which fl hopes will lead lo major
un.i\•ers:ity athletic status in the Im -
mediate Cuture.
teams of animals -lions, turtles and heackd Dy Larry Cha!ten ~bile the
alllgalors -scurrying to dry land . . liarbor lnvestmtnt ComPfl_ny ~Jrom 'f
Newport fifrbor's Jaycees won tre Coron.a del &la.I' took top • In 1o11i
most humorous costle aw1rd by rormlng the bfst hllh nae and castle ':'fjil'.ijfo. ..
a gfnnl tongue surrounded by a set Those wfio u!Cd drtp metbOdi of con·
Included in UCT's plans, as-ool·
lined by assistant athletic direc-
tor Rod Shcnnt1n todny, 1 a 16,000.
seat mulllpurpose min1 • dome.
wtlfth could -be less t~n·five Ytltr"!i
·~•X· 11le fufxl-rals\ng drive '(i1IJ en-«>J"pa"' • 1lx-wetk ptriod with ShOtm•n qpUml!lk: tha( UC: wiJI
he,. $10'),00i) by Cle<. 3. See Sports•
Scdlon today, Page At. of teclh, 'Ol1e of them gold e:rowntd. slructlon headed tht wlnnifll{ t c a m 1
Pink balh beads, While detergent and reprt9Cntirl@ Surf _Co_o.oitruct.lon CompaJJy. 'r
orang• Jello wCl't! sprinkled over ap-(l!_e< SCllLl"l'OllS, l!lge AZJ
_...,.. __
.J
the state law. but said the three-judge
court acted improperly by making its
ruling without a trial. California said
the issues are too complex to be dealt
with in such a summary fashion.
State law provides for tax credits
up to $125 per dependent attending a
non-public school, either religious o r
secular. The pennissible tax c red It
declined as parental income increased.
F'amilies with over $19,000 income
received no tax break.
The suit was brought by four taxpayers
and t~·o non·profit groups dedicated to
maintaining sepa ration of church •and
state -United Americans for Public
Schools and Americans Untted r o r
Sepa.ration of Church and Slate.· •
Birthday Death
Boy Accidentall)' Sl ain by Father
CH1CAGO < AP J -Thorr:as Dos s
i,1·anted to go lo the movies on his
14th birthday and went le his father's
gas station to earn so1 ne m~ney. The
father accidentally shot the boy to dcith
during an attempted holdup by a teen-
age ·girl.
It was the first lime Thoma.a had
worked at the station. The hol1Jup at..
tempt can1e hours before a planned
birthday celebration th:it i,1•as to include
Thomas' favorite chocolat~ cake.
"/ usually m3kc his favorite cake
on his birthday and then he ~·anted.
t<i celebrate by going downtown with
the kids he's grown up with," said
the boy's mother. Dovie Doss. '·I didn 't
have any money to give him so he
called his father to ask lo cam some."
Thomas v.-·as killed as he \\TesUed
with a l~year--0\d girl i,1·ho entered the
service station Swuiay morning dre.!IM!d
as a man and annour.ced a holdup.
She carried a pistol. authorities said.
Thomas grabbed her and his father,
lfenry, 47. picked up a revolver kept
in Ille station and fired. homicide in-
vestigator Patrick Conley said. 0 n e
bullet struck the girl in the ha n d :
another entered the boy's chest and
killed him.
"This is one case where having a
handgun for prot~tion didn't do any
good at all." said Conley.
The service station cash register had
only a small amount of money, he
said.
The girl was hospitalized and named
in a dclins:iuency petition ctmrging her
v.-·ith murder and armed robbery.
Doss, who is separated from his wife,
told her of the shooting later Sunday.
Thomas has three brothers and sisters
v.•ho also live with their mother.
"They just can't beli eve it." J\trs.
Doss said . "All his friends came over
yesterday and they don't really believe
he 's dead either."
Tape Tells Nixo11 Advice
To Dea11 011 'Co1nplicity~
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon advised his counsel, .John \V. Dean
llL on March 21, 1973, to make a
"rather general" state1nent c I ea r; n g ·
each While House aide of any complicity
in \Vatergate, according to a tape played
in court today.
The tape or !he discuss ion on the
afternoon of 11-tarch 21 "'as played in
U. S. Distri ct Court as Dean , the
government's first witness in the
\Yatergale cover-up trial. appeared to
be nearing the end of four days of
direct questioning by the prosecutors.
Nixon told Dean in the tape·recordcd
conversation that he should prepare a
written report "which is a very general.
understand. Unde rstand, (laughs) I don "t
want to get all that go ddantn ed
specific ...
"Bui H you make it rather general
in lerm s of rny -your -in\'csligation
indicates that this man did not do It,
this man did not do it. this m:in f!icl
do that," Nixon said, emp~asizing the
'"did" and "lhat" the last time he used
those words.
Dean, who ~·as said at the time to
be heading Nixon's investigation o £
\\'nler~ate. then repeated for Nixon :l'l
earlier suggcslion to allow \\'llne~S<'S,
inc<luding \\'l1ite llouse aides. to go be£ore
the grand jury under lhe protection
of immunit~· fronl \'lrOS«:ution so that
they might give full tesii111ony.
.John D. Ehr\lchman, th~n No. l \\fhitc
House alde who was si tl,ing in on the
meeting. resisted lkan's suggl'slion and
said •·you end up "'iUl people in and
nut of the White 11ou~e indicted ror
various. for variOU!!i offenses." • ·
Ehrllc:hman. one of f\ve former t\ixon
associAtes on iMal fbr lhe cover-up,
proposed lMtead that Nixon iSS\1C t\\'O
or lhrtc papers summarillng 1he \Vhile
flMe re\l\t.>W of l!H!: case r<ir the Sen:'lt~
\V11terJ{<llC commitlec -\\"hich at that
time had just been established.
Dean also proposed thlll a special
pant\ made up or tht dcpul)I attor1'!ty
---·-
ge neral, the head of lhe J u 5 t ic e
Department's crirninal c!i\'ision and
others conduct an in\•esligation a n d
report at the President's request.
But 'Vhile House chief of staff ll .
R. llaldeman, also a defendant and also
present <lt !he i\1arch 21 n1eeting. ob-
jected !hat such an idea would pron11>t
cries of a "super cover·up."
Dean replied: ''All right. is 1ha1, i~
that heller'! Or is it better to have.
you know. just, just keep going to have
1hc thing build up and all or a suddeii
collapse. and. then people get indicted,
and people, uh. get tarnlshl'd ?"
Orange Coast
Weatlter
Considef<tble IO\\' cloudiness
through Tuesday 1nornlng with
so1ne sunshine in thr afternoon
Tuesday. Sli~htty warmer i,1·ith
ix'ach highs al 60 rising to 73 In-
land. lA>\\'S tonight 57 to 62.
INSUll·: l'ODAY
Ptesitft•11r F11rrl nurl f.fcT1('o"s
pr<·srilC'lt C't"ht:1:u1·ri<1 ltnvc sevcr-
o/ t11i11as 111 111iu<I as thry "'<'"'
lt.Jday. f ord 1s riacrcstcd 111 the.
''C'tl nil /111</s 111 So11tJH'f'll f.ff,1 ..
1co. f.'cl1cuerr111 1.~ ntlt·restctt iii
re11rrcin17 tilt /1~accro 1r,.,rk pro-
urunl 11~ U1t1led Stol6S. Spe
story. Pave A4.
lo11r1tt .. '"" L•-•l " ' '41. h wf " M•vl" .. e1u"''"'' .. l'ltl19"1I New• .. (ltUlfif!I ... 0rtn'9 (Ou•I¥ ... , .. ~ .. .... ... , '" c ......... " ,_,. .1.11·11
DN!ll Ntlk*S "' 5tet• ...,,.,kilt .. l fltwltl , .... .. T~it~•llfl> .. .... , •••• 1 .. ,.. ... , .. Tllttlt!\ .. ,-lftfMt .. Wt•tll<ol .. ·-" Wtfltl Nt"'l ..
---
•
A 2 DAILY PILOT
Stead!J J ob
Sibieda Shcidaveva has been
awarded the Red Banne r of
Labor in Russia for 100 years
of employment at the Kuba
Rue Fa ctory in Aze rbaidzhan .
Said to be 114 years old. she
was cited for her produ clivity.
$30 Million
Ge oTek Tria l
Se·t' Tuesda y
UN FRANCISCO (AP) -Busines~
promoter John "Jack" P. Burke, p;in-
~pal figure in an allcg~ $30 _l!lillion
GeoTek oil drilling swindle. is to go on
tr!al in federal court for fraud Tuesday .
The 4&-y~ld Burke's a t torn e y ,
James Ataclnnls, said he will ask U.S.
District Judge \Villiam T. Sweigert for
a postponement beca use of alleged pre-
judicial publicily, much of it swirling
'around Atty. Gen . EveUe J. Younger's
investment-in a Burke oil venture and
p loan to Younger from the promoter.
Younger, seeking re-election. claims
-his opponent Is behind the controversial
1 ~blidfy and denies al.legations that ~·
a!' LOS Angeles dlslrtcl attorney five
vears ago, ignored requests t o in-~estigate Burke's operations.
~ · ~taclnnis also cited ne~·' stories D.bout Los Angeles Times publi sher Otis
' Chandler's involvement in GeoTelt. form·
ed by Burke to sell oil drilling imlted
• partnerships.
Chandler is a defendant in a federal
· dvil suit broo~ht by the Secunties and
Exchanse Conun ission in f\tay. I 9 7 3 ,
: 'alleging that Burke, Chandler and other.I
Violated securities laws and defrauded
2,200 investors who put $30 million into the various oi.I drilling programs.
. Chandler. who testified befort:! the
jederal. grand jury which indicted Burke
... June 17, has denied any fraudulent con-
'dui;t ..
He said he invested and lost $248,000
.in Burke ventures and that he relurIJed
$.173,000 in free stock and $109,000 in ~er's fees he received for intrOOucing
potential investors to Burke.
, .. Frona Page Al
SCU LPTORS . • •
• A show stopper among the sand crea-
. tions was a sculpture by a 10-year-old
'Anaheim boy, Hobert Sturgeon .
• • Working alone and as a non~ntry,
the younf ster formed a s11bathcr. ising
•a pa ir o sneakers protruding from the
• sand as feet and a seaweed topped
balloon for a head.
Chamber assista nt manager La rr y
Miller av.'arded 1he boy an unofficia l
honorable n1cntion and annou nced that
r.hc ..yould be an honora ry en try next
year.
Judging 1he contest were Newport City
Councllwoman Lucille Kuehn. ar~h.He<:t
Tom !\.loon and l\fiss Ney,·port Beach,
-;Cindy Erger.
ORANGE COAST N
DAILY PILOT
TM' Ot..,.9' Cot~! 0111, Piiot ,.,,,, ,.,,,.,. 1,
ccomDln.td 11W N•..., P••n. " !>UGl•Vlt<I I>• tflf" ()r..,91' CO.SI Pul>U\11•"9 '-n•. 5'!a.l•~tt eOit-• ~• po,jbl•lll•<I Mondo• tft•ouQI\ r•ltl&~.
lot Co\ll ~··· N~.,patl llt'.e<n "'""""'llOl'I 6.KlllFounl1•ll Vl ll•y ~lllln.t Sf" .. n.
lr ¥1M/Si1!.olt~• •nd ~ Cl tn'"nlt l\.tn JtHn
CMI"''-· A •ln9I• •f Q-) M 1l•M I\ p.ibllllle<I S1t .. rd1 wt 1nd ~-\'!. Tne P'tntlp~t
l'Ublli.f>•na ol•nt '' 11 JOO -W>l llej Sl•HI. '°'\~
""'''· C..t·•o•nl<t '17U•.
Robert N. Weed
Prt\l0tnt 1nd Publ•-
Thomas Keevil
EO•lot
Thoma!. A. Muroh1ne
""'M G!llQ iEdl\or
Charles H. Loo<; Richard P. Nall
A1••11t nt ,...<ltlft"'iJ £_,.t(lt'I
Newport Beach Office
U1J N•wtM•1 BeOllt•1r<I ,,,.11.110 •~n P o . &o• 1an , '1tol>l
Ofhtr OfliCM Cllltt,,.,.w· l JOW.tt 114•Slrttt
l .. fll>ot<ll l l!tGlo""f~••!-1
Munl•f'!ll'lon fkt cfl ; 1111 1 lko«n "°"'....,'"' 1-'-.U-"'M~ M l'to•111 t.I c.rr>•""' •1t1
Tefeohont 1114) 641.,.321
Cfassltled Advertiilng 641·5671
C.O,rllftt, 1t/i, 0••~ (OM.I PllbO..,J119 ...,_7 H<t ,,.""" \lorlf'\, 1111n1•.t10r1\, f'tl'llOl'l• fl'I•""' t r '"~••11-"'' ,..,.lft """' "' rt(ll"Ddut:'"' ••lflO ..... ,,.,,. ptl'"'4\tlell "' uef'1glll .-r.
Wtoflf (lt u POM.fQlt p.th'I •I Coll• "'°"~1
OthfO"'I•. ~ropl/Ofl "' t .,<lfor ~ 99 -11111; ay_ m•H \.1.00 mon1n1y; mlhlfff
dtlllll•ll()ll, IJJID"'Olllfllf
Mond"f, Octobtr 21, 1Cl74
I
f'ro• P .. e Al
NEW CITY ...
tenslon ol Newport Beach's sphere of
JnllU<fl«.
'Ibe commisslOn was scheduled t o
deddo-•arll...-ihll"year ~. rn fact, Ole
3.S.mlle slrttch ol precious 1 p h e r e
t'OaSUine is a logJcal extension of the
city's sphere.
llowever, according to L A F C 3d·
minislrative assistant John Bell, a hea r-
ing on the extenlll on was delayed until
the company presented its µfan.
Partlall y in conflict with N e w po r t
Beach's pending sphere maµ is a pro-
pooed sphere of influence map filed
with LAFC by Lagwi a Beach.
11 <>verlaps some of the area clain'lcd
by Newport Beach.
Irvine has not ye1 filed a proposed
sphere map that sho\1' the l'Q3Stal lands
as a logical extension of its boundaries.
But it is tree to either contest the
Newport Beach and Laguna B e a c h
claims or to file a sphere map of
its OY.'tl showing the coast area as a
lo!i!ical extension of its boundaries.
Consequently, the compa.ny is llkely
to have the options of devek>plng the
land under its present COW1ty con lro l,
the lhrtt neighboring cities or the ne w
city th3t Watson suggested.
Newport Beach J\1ayor Donald J\1clnnis
sees 1nention of a new cit y as a "test
balloon" hoisted aloft by the company.
"[ think the . Jrvine Company w a s
merely tes ting the polit ical climate and
expanding its options,'' Mclnnis said.
He urged the cowicH not to lake
a position · until more is known of the
company's development plans.
1~1clnnis was backed by council man
Paul Ryckoff who said a cost benefi t
study should be undertaken before lhc
city decides If the coast area is really
a logical extentlon of its boundaries.
Mcinnis pointed out that the sphere
or i~f\uence map "only shows ~'hat y,·e
consider to be a logical extension of
the city's sphere of influence."
"That's not the same as saying it
is a logicaJ extension of our city boon·
daries," he added.
And, he indicated it y,·01i't be until
a measurement of projected costs o(
services and revenues can be taken
that tbe city can take a "realistic"
position.
Services Set
For Former
Coast Student
ASHLAND, Ore. (UPI ) -Memorial
services will be held on campus Wednes·
day for Gary Manlove. the blind student
body president at Southern O r e g o n
College.
Manlove, 40, who died of a heart
attack last \Vednesday at S O C • s
Slevensan Union. was the oldest student
ever to serve as student body president
at the school. Manlove, wh<> made his
way around campus with his German
shepherd guide dog Grandy, was to have
been in his senior year this semester.
"I had looked forward to this year
and to being able to cooperate with
Gary in fulfilling his aspirations for
Southern· Oreg On College," said D r •
James K. Sours, SOC president.
"Jn terms of sheer humanity a nd
courage, Gary was an example for us
all Our lribute to him should be to
make this the very finest year in the
history of the college, a year of courtesy
and love."
Manlove, who was born in Los Angeles,
v.:as student body president 'at his junio r
high schQOI and pres.ident of his high
school's student council in So u t h e r n
California. He attended East Los Angeles
Junior College, Orange Coast College,
and California Polytechnic C o 11 e g e .
Before moving 10 Oregon. he was in
the swimming pool and building main-
te nance work in Southern Calitomia.
filanlove lost his eyesight eight years
ago when he contracted d i a be t i c
relinitis.
He y,·as di vorced and is survi ved by
tv.·o teen-age daughters who live with
their mother in Newport Beach.
Planners Loive r
Parking Li1nit,s
• .ft Lido Village
J\lotorists are not as lik ely to drive
lo Lido Village for a sli ce or apple
struede l as they are tor a s a 1 a m I
sandw ic h. th e Newport Beach Plan ning
Commission bas decided.
'Arter reaching tha t conclusion, the
con1n1ission lowered the parking space
rcqul ren1cnt on a recently opened bakery
in the village. l
Instead of the ·normally required 19
spaces earn1arked for busine88CS lilting
the bakery's description. the planners
recon1mended that only six be set aside.
Before \'Oting for the parking space
reduction, Commissioner James Parker
said , "People don't get in their cars
nnd drive for a piece of cake as they
do for lunch."
"Therefore ," Parker added , "I don '1
think '"'e should apply normal 'take-out'
standards in th is case."
As a co tn p a r a t i v e measurement.
Parker us('d a village d e I i c a t t ss en
specialiiing in sandwiches ~s ll take-out
es1ablishmen t that generates lrafric.
.\Inn Held in Churcl1
BOSTON IAPl -A California man
11o·as &rmted SWlday tor d Is r up t I n g
SCM'1ces at which Archbishop Fulton J.
Sheen willl spe.11k1ng to celebrate tilt
lOOth anniversary <>f • church. Cre11
1\1, Beeker, 2". of Escondido, w•1 ckarg·
eel v.·ith dislurbinA ,, church AMembly
nnd , held for arraignment In llfunlctp:il
Coo rt on ?w1onday.
•'
•
F ron& Pag~ Al
1\-IETER MAIDS
~
"Now that ll's up tq $10. \Ve fir.d
1Mre people,:l'lllina to pit!< In U>e rl&h• 1--,p'1a<>~~1-mot.n,'"
be says.
NEWPORT BEACH METER MA ID GINGER BLACK TICKETS IL LEGALLY PARKED AUTO
On Streets of Newport, Wri ting Parking Tickets Ca n B! Hazardous Duty
New Subpoenas for Nixon
Wate rgate Grand Jur y See ks White House Fi"les
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The special
\\'atergate proseeutor's office disclosed
toda y tha t a grand jury soon will issue
new subpoenas for materials from the
\Vhite !louse files of former President
Nixon.
Attorney Peter Kreindler of the pro-
secutor 's office made the disclosure dur-
ing a hearing on N'u:on's r:equest for
a court order enabling him to move
those tapes and documents out of the
White House to Laguna Niguel.
The suit also seeks to give Nixon
the right to review any materials sought
in future subpoenas. But it does not
see.k to interfere with materials already
under subpoena or needed in the current
Watergate cover-up trial.
Nixon's attorney, Herbert J. J.tiller,
argued that moving the materials to
lbe West Coast would not interfere with
the cause of justice.
But Kreindler said that Miller had nOt
taken into account • '·o n • g o i n g in-
vestigations" when he listed the material
that Nixon wants to move to tbe coast,
issued," Kreindler said
"ile has not included grand jury sub-
poenas that he was i n f o r m e d ap-
proximately 10 days ago would b e
issued," Kriendler said.
fi1oments later, Miller was on his feet,
protesting that the terms of his legal
effort to move the presidential materials
were not intended to block any criminal
investigation .
"I'm willing to amend (the request
to move the materials) to exclude the
grand jury subpoenas so none can say
this action was filed for impeding any
type of grand jury investigation or
Watergate trial," Miller said. "It was
filed in good faith."
Kreindler told newsmen alter the hear·
Concorde Makes
Mexico-SF Trip
•
In 2 Hours Plus
SAN F'RAN CISCO (AP) -The droop-
Snoot Concorde supersonic transport
whistled into San Francisco International
Airport tOOay after an 1,800-mile flight
from Mexico City in 2 hours, l\j minutes
It was the sixth landing of the Con-
troversial British-French SST in the con-
tinental United Slates. Hundred s of airport employes, visitors
and passengers watched the gleaming
white aircraft taxi up on its spidery
land ing gear.
The l.~mile-per-hour aircraft, which
took off from Mexico Qty at 8 a.m.
(PDT), emerged from a smoggy sky
over San Francisco Bay to touch down
at 10:19 a.m.
Cyril ~tagnin, the city's chief of pro-
tocol v.•ho arrived on the Concorde, sai d
''It was a wonderful flight. Very qui et
and smooth."
f\layor Joseph L. Alioto greeted the
Concorde and then told a news con-
ference that he y,•as a "great consumer"
of airline services, called the SST qu ieter
and "less smoky" than other planes
flying today.
The SST will remain in San Francisco
through Tuesday, leaving Wednesday for
Anchora~e. Alaska.
French and .British technicians and
officials are traveling with the plane.
classified experimental and toling 10
tons of scfentific gear.
Environmentalists who object to SST
fl ights. including representatives of a
group called "Environmentalists Against
Roaring Supersonics (EARS)" w e r c
nrnong the reception party here,
The conservationlst Sierra Club said
in advance of the visit that the British-
Frenth SST is "an excwive waste of
enerl(y."
ing that the Impending subpoenas and
the grand jury investigation c o n c e r n
niatters in the jurisdiction of the special
Watergate prosecutor. He refused to
elaborate.
U.S. District Judge Charles Richey
announced he would rule later in the
day or early Tuesday on the narrow
question of whether to issue a temporary
restraining order on use of lbe presiden-
tial material.
Miller said Nixon has a right to refuse
'to comply with some subpoenas o n
grounds of privacy or exec u tive
priVilege. He said the ailing Nixon also
must prepare himseU for f u t u re
testimony at the Watergate cover-up
trial and cannot do so while his materials
are in Washington.
Earlier in the day, arguing the question
of when the materials can be destroyed
under an agreement between Nixon and
the General Se r v I c e s Administration,
Miller said that cannot happen within
the next five years.
"I \\'ould like to lay this at rest
right now," he added. "This is absolutely
false."
Miller said that under the agreement.
the tapes and some documents would
be destroyed on Sept. 1, 1984, or earlier
if Nixon dies. But he said lbe death
provision would not come into play until
after five years passed.
The Reporters Committee for Freedom
of the Press, representing newsmen,
_historians and columnist Jack Anderson,
intervened in a suit Nixon filed to have
the tapes and documents removed to
the West Coast under the agreement.
Harbor Patrol Men Make
Two Rescues on One Call
Orange County Harbor patrolmen Sun-
day aftemooo extingWsbed a fire at
sea and helped pump out a sinking
cabin cruiser.
T\\1l patrol unit.! regponded to a fire
at sea call received from Eleven Seas
Would Nixon
Take His Life?
NEW YORK (UPI) -Evangelist
Billy Graham was quoted as saying
one pouible cause of President
Ford's pardon of former President
Nixon was a feir Nixon might
commit suicide.
Grahal'tl was quoted by the Na-
tion~! ~quirer as saying : "I have
heard whispers about the possibili-
ty that the former president might
commit suicide." He refused to
disclose his source tor this in-
fo'rmation.
Graham, who has been close to
some of the nati on's top govern-
ment leaders, Is considered a friend
of Nixon.
VI, a 48-foot cabin cruiser owned by
Cost.a Mesa car dealer John Connell,
55, of 1417 Antigua Way, Newport Beach.
Using chemical fire extinguishers, the
patrol officers quickly douSed. the elf(·
trical fire aboard Connel.J's cabin crui~r.
None of the three persons aboard
the craft, Connell, his wife and soo,
were evacuated.
Persons aboard a second cabin cruiser
hailed a Harbor Patrol boat that was
working on the fire and reported their
craft was taking on water.
Two pumps 'were rushed aboard the
36-foot cabin cruiser 'Ampac II .
Later it was discovered t\\'O motor
cooling hoses had bunt, causing sea
water to rush into the' boat as It traveled
just outside the Newport Harbor jetty.
Conn.ell's boat was towed into the
harbor. A quick inspection showed that
the fire was caused by an electrical
short . No estimate of damage wa s
available,
The Ampac was also towed into the
harbor wi th ils six passengers s t i 11
aboard. The broken hoses were repaired
and it continued on to its regular slip.
According to a •!arbor P a t r o I
spokesman, the Coast Guard cutter Point
Divide was close at hand during the
3 p.m. rescue operations near the bell
buo y ou-t s id e Ne wport Harbor.
Reflections on t he Ba9
During holidays, thougf1, it's o pe n
season.
"People park just anywhere, doing
what they wOuldn't do in the Ir
hometowns. They grow tired of looking
and finally leave their car anyplace,"
Blue says.
"I've even seen people leave their
cars in left tum lanes," Mra. Black
adds to Blue's remarks. .
Hedging on parking rules ls apparel'ltly
a ravorite pastime with some Newport
drivers, according to the meter maid!:.
But. they add, cheating usually doesn't
Y.'Ork. ·
"One or the most common games
people play is taking tickets off other
cars, « using their own, old ucy:ets.
and putUng them on their windshleld,"
says Mi!.! Wilcox:.
"They think because we give only
one ticket a da y per car UW. we doo 't
check to' see it's a new Uckel" But,"
she adds, smiling, "we do."
In the timed zones, meter maids mark
tires Willi Whltecbilk lo trll how .k>ng
the car has been' parked. Some people
either rub off the mark ar mo ve lhe
~ires back and forth to frase the chalk,
according to ~UsS \Vilcox. She claims,
thou gh, that this seldom fools the meter
maids.
During the summer the regular quartet
of meter maids is joined by four police
cadets and reserve officers. On peak
days, there may be as many as eight
persons scattered around the city han-
ding out tickets .
Meter maids write an average of 100
tickets per day during the summer,
and about 75 lo 80 during the winter.
Jn August, there were 10,000 tickets
given out. Seven thousand y,·erc v.Titten
in September.
For legitimate reasons, met.er maids
sometimes agree not to give drivers
tickets even after they're already writ·
ten.
"But it's never out Of sympathy,"
emphasiz.es Mrs. Black.
"It happens when the city ,is at fault ,
such as a meter being broken , or a
sign not being posted." she says.
"For example, yesterday I put a ticket
on a car and a boy came running
out ol the high school to stop me.
He asked if it was a two-hour zone.
When I said yes. and looked up to
show him the sign, it wasn't there,"
Mrs. Black explains.
"So. of course. I didn 't give him
the ticket,". she said.
N e-ivport Rotary
To Give $1,000
ToAidAFS
A $1.000 grant to cover expenses in
a student abroad program will be given
to a Newport Beach high school student
by the Rotary Club of Newport-Balboa,
it was announced tQClay.
Juniors at Newport Harbor or Corona
del !\.1ar high schools between the ages
of 15 and I? are eligible for the 1975
grant .
The scholarship is be ing handled In
cooperation with Youth for Understan-
ding, an international teen-age student
exchange program. The student selected
will spend 10 weeks with a foreign
family in a country of his or her choice
in Europe, Asia or SOuth America.
To enter, students must have parental
permission, submit· a statement 0 f
parent's income, have a 2.5 or better
grade point average and write a one-page
biographical essay.
Students will also be evaluated on
school activities, elected offices held,
community service projects, work ex·
perience and language skills.
Further information Is available from
Virginia Marimon at C.Orona del Mar
lligh, Vashke Breeding at Newport
Harbor High, or Pat Krone at Pacific
Telephone Company, 548-4630.
The vh;H is part. of a tour to nine
cities In North, south and C e n t r a I ....
America. w1llcb the British-French com·
bine bulldlng It claims will ''fur ther
demonstrate Concorde's capablllties on
Y.1lrld routes and ib, compaUblllty with ~XisUTIJ[ airport facill t1et and .alt control
procedures."
Thr Concorde flights "wiU allow the
pubUc 10 stt, hear and judge the con-
trover~lal jet tor themselves," t h e
plane's bu lldera said In R st'1tcment.
Nary a ripple disturba waters of Newport liarbor's
Pto.montory Bay as constructi on continues on what
may be one of the last homes that will be built with
fontage on the harbor. 1.fan·made inlet was carved
below Promontory Point by Irvine Compan y, tl lies
between Balboa Island and BeacQn Bay. Undevel·
oped waterfront lots are now almost none.xJslent
tn Newport Harbor. --
\
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• CAIL V PILOT .<t 9
Monday's
Cl j)ling Prieee NEW YORK STOCK EXCH ANGE
·-
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..... Pl .n 1 t t -1-01HN 1.14 I Jt "'6+ "" F.o Mii IM , + 16Vt
THE 280 SEDAN (BOTIOM)ANmtOUPE ARE MID·RANGE LINE"FOR-1915--
Mercedes-Be nz Model s Powered By Double Overhead Cam Six-cylinder Ei'lgfne
Ako. 1..M 1.,.,,. +1111 a.wt•.• s•tta J.S +tloo F#ftlMI ... '*' 1w.+·y; ArnllSUI It ' .. ~t nt Oii E Ill .IO J • 11-.-'°" FM"-t.111 .) I• 11"--\lo .. ill l .11 6 I' 2' + 'It Oil Mllw C. t " 1'-• Ill $1.JO •• I M ••• AM.llilllllfllll .. • .... -... OllMHc.rl/ t ,.._.+ "" .» l •• --1\fo AmllK._.llt .__,._,~ , •• 11'--U_._...,_ 1..M. -t....IOl-:U .. •-0~
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.·Mercedes' New Line
AlnMt• ... I S6l 1114 ... e ,10 • 20 ti's ••• l'lllUlk MO S I 2Slo\+ Vo
A!Mlr"1 .4't I +.I +'Mo• Ioli 1.AO 1117' tf"-Ioli l"~-CD All • •1 1"'+ • MIAW11119'1172'J M.+"'9 OW'Wlwwt ., 41 !\olt ,,. F1nc!Flldll l 20 l1141t'°" !"',,!'!!!,,-!'!-,-,,•.,••,.,, CI Ml9f ,'711 79 ""'-\lo F1ntN 1,M·+ 191 ltrt-\14 ,.. --"' Cl 111111.Mtl ., 9 t\olo ••• Fiii°"" 11 J :m t +""' Am91'UllM S 301 U\fo+ .. O..•l t-* I 11 11\ii ... Fiii Olk .tot 14 t..-+t\olo ...... ~.-..,a •, .. • .. ·~.·:.:: OA0.1.tt 1 ,., ts -.. 1''1Un9na I II .,, ~-.-""
... ~1'111 .. 1) ~ -~ 8:21~~::1: u =~ =~·· ': i::;~ :g:~·s -~ ,t,: =: 9,~1:~1: t sl ;t=.·\.i =.";'.J; ,!J f}\'11 •• ~ ~.·:l!l't1! Alf ,\'I •• ~ c:~~ii•l ~:l\'I ~'Jf.~1:11 'l tr: ::: 1975 Mode l 280S Economy Luxury Ca AOlsCT•I II 20 11'11+ _., ~ l.Alli!t • 116 ..,,..._ \II ........ .A50 t 11 .W.-\Ii. ....,,D1191 Vlt •• 1 IV. • •• OtiMco ,Wil 1 .o 3--\olo l'\\llAIC IJ+ t2 11 U + ""
By CARL CA RSTENSEN
Ol t .. 0.UJ l'fllt Sbff
The new t.1ercedes·Benz
2flOS .• latest addition to the
North American product
line ol the world's oldest
automobile manufacturer,
might be described as an
economical luxury car.
· The 2805 offers tbe sam(
features of the 450 series.
Jl}us increased economy du(
to its 2.8 liter 1168 cubic· in·
ch) six·cyl.indcrcngine.
Pickled
According to U .S. govtr·
nment tests or 1975 model
cars, the 280S can get 19.S
miles per gallon when being
driven on the EPA's hiRb·
~-N HIGH GEAR}
way cycle. Since the car has
a 25.4-gallon tank, t his'
would mean a range or 495·
rniles.
Prices
The 280S, which is on sale
now costs Sl4 ,54S. at Eas ·and Gulf ~st ports ol en·
try, "'·ith West Coast prices
being slighUy higher.
ADul pl .... •• I• 11'•+ Ioli 011 So)Mll t 14 S -\olo l'liltll&M ... 1 21 11\lo-1
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Ml AO J 1Z tOloli-\lo .ctitw&Pll 8 •• 1• 7\'I ... ,,...,._. I.ts 1 S11 t"'-+ \"> The decision to produce .........,. ADH ., :Miii+ v. °""":fi ' '1' 1Yo ••• FWwL 1.Jl6 • w 1+v.--.
lh •~ f th U S ·M rk .r.-..11111 •• Hl» +~ 01Mt P + JI '"' ••• l"'5fllll Ill> _, J 11"-•,. e ""'"' or e . . a -. AmHlttt:l.JOn 1v ttv.+1v. CM1 tllW s .. '"• ..., "'-C:, .10 i. 221 2M11+1
.et, according to Mercedes· •"'-'-',-.",, -,· ,.• "'.,.•.•._ OtAFfl •• tu s • "" l'Mf'[;, .. 2 10 -"" OU.Ill t.'11., JI 7'111+"" l'Mt '.ti S .SI lll'I+ l'I Benz or North America A,,....~ s a 21-... OtAHlclM •• 21 *'• ... FMC 2V. •• 1 '' +I
. . d t K " -d N rd AlftMDI .JOll • 40ll •loo • .. CHA ~II .. • '"" ••• ~'! .. -" •• ,." •••• ..... Prest en arur1e o · ""'"GlUt • 2t .)1'4-"'" CNALl!ft.10.. • "'-•"" ._... ..
• nse to .... _5'\lpMU IJ ' -Ill c.ttJI: GI 1 101 "' ••• ~ 1.10 1 "'U.--14 mann, came 1n rcspo """"""1v. t " 11•+ v. = '·".. • u"' ... FO"•t .. " a..ii tO'h• v. the continuing concern MStnd .IO 4 107 '"'•"' i.a .. '' t• -·· FrMJll '"" •• u JO -"" AlnSecspf~ •. • 0 1'1+ II) 2.1116 :..S JW.+1"" RDa.i.1.o:rd •• 1 lJ~\'11
abouedt fbue1 I1e~o n~mr1 ='\::!: r, ,:~.;--i:: l n: :~--~ :::=.":'J ll 1:::.-;; s pawn y as w1nterso1 MT&.T:uo' ,,. " +"' "·°'·· .u ,_"' ,....... MIJ u .~.""
b d -d MT&T·t.~·· 1Cl1 SOV.+4 AlltaMI~-Fl'inkMAllO 1'1 l•l'l+t<ll em argo an Jncrease ATTllllArn .. • •1 +1 ~: 21 i,,. ... ·~ ,,...M 1.JO s tn 20Vt+""
gasolineprices . . :!.'fa.'r ·:.t·:.1~ ·:~·.~ "-.JOKI 10120 •'"" ="•lif f 'll 1t'h! ~ "Our six·cylinder twin-MW«,..,. 1 s ,,,._,. Olterl5t1.11 s t 11 ... ~ o--
l lh ·'d' Awtr pf IA) .. 11• ltlli ••• Goll 1•• 1 .) m J '111• 1 GllJlt lndlt t 2 ·~ v.
-l d • · Amnst .11ld • S Jl'I+ "" 0..1.tl + SI '°'9-"Ill GAP Qi .st • tt 1\lo...,. v.
Inflated Buck Stops Here
cam,.it._J)De_o , ewDw s A1NN11 .'CI • a110 ... ~nOltv. •• 21 .. ...,.,14 GAC carp 2 sa 1\li ...
mos mo ern engines, 1n ...,,...t..,, ·12 t1v. ••• 0sp1s• •• '' s1v.."' GN<p11.20 •• 1 u +"' combination with our highly AMF 1111.u • '" 11 w.-"" Plct1nt •• ,, 1 ...... o.nS111A1 t 1e '°*• "" • Alrlf• •• l 11 , .... + "" Oii 1 ... 1 ,, 11 -.. G&tNtt ... u " t1""--advanced 450SE chassis, AMP1nc.n11 '°° """•"' c.t.M1.1111 2 11 '"•"' Gtrt1o.n -'• 1s a n ... NN!COP AO 4 ff t \111+11°" ~!I.ID 1 11 Ill + 4 G9i1n1<J ... J l ..,.._Yo makes lhe 2805 a very UP: ~· c.. l 41 avt+ "" OMdlw 1.11110 u ,..__ 1111 o..i. .-s , ,, _.,..
DETROIT . CUP!) -Un-
coin Sack opened a bil1 f rom
the company that sells him
gJa ss jar lids, saw the price
had jumped from $31.50 per
thousand to $.40. 16 -and got
mad.
"'I said 'to hell with il'"
Sack said. · '
So h e wrote all his
rustomers, announcing he
would not go ahead with a
pre \iously announced price
increase of 10 percent on the
pickled herring his com-
pany ~anuractures.
H ypnotist's
Financial
View Aired
Gil Boyne, hypnotist and
director or a school of hyp-
notis m , will appear ot
Psynetics Resea rch and
Education Foundation. 1212
E-Lincoln Ave .• Anaheim
Thursday at 8 p.m . to give a
ne"' slant on finonciaJ sue-
• ttSS.
Jn direct contrast to views
or social scientists, he main·
tnins that success in any
area, and most especially
fin ancial s u cccss. is lhe.
direct r esult of one's sub-
conscious attitudes.
After his lecture. Aoyne
\\'ill pres ent :a demon·.
:;trutlon of hypnosis.
For further Information
~aJI 1'1arga rct ~lerritt at
11'13-231 1-
"l'~l J UST A little cog in ,to-date. automobile tor thl :'rir ~ 11· ri~+·ili g:fH Jf..~ ''! C-!1"' s:.=,1.,1.: ~ ~ ~4 !::
the Y.'heel," he said, "But 1 Am e r1~,an luxury ciadr =::"'1111~:: ~ ·'j~+.~ g:'°~i;'J :: 1~ n:•.~ =11~ :: i 1t~.~
rigu red I would try to stop .'!'arket, Nordmann sa · Z::ln':: t ,; ~.::=t ~ok:i ·i ,!f 11 ... ::: ~1 1;::ii l! ~-·v:
something 'This was i'ust a We feel that the 2MlS per· Mlc.9n .100 • 111 11 + "" c.oi1p11.n •• a. 1+14-"" GwiATr 1.IO , 20 ,.,._ v. . . fectl f"ll lh bet ArcNtcl.111 S •t 1SV.+1111C-WS.I+111 21-t11-GMTP'J'lll ,.rlllD V-+ t'o first step in combating aJI Y t .s e gap .ween ~,1' 10 11""--~sei11 22 '""•"" Glftllncs.IO i 1 10'.lo•,.
thesepri ceincreases.'' . the s~aller 280 anc the =~·z: ~ 20~:;~ ~t~·~ ? t~~ ~11:i: ~,ft:~;
Sack's company, Sea 4.51'.6~, he added. . ..__-.F,·~-'-,", ',"',..-, ~ OMM11.10 • 11• t111o-"" 0enan. ... s 1 , .... . T l 197< u s m "' .. .. °""'"'·"° • J' n'--loo c;n ~OP 3 • J Vt .. . Fare Foods Jnc., sells as o ·mee ~ · · e IS· Aci«o c-a .. 47 1"" ... ~Ed 6ld • ~u 1 • "" Gen ~ , 11 H"'-v.
many as 1.8 million jars or slon stan~ard s, .the 2805 :.:;..r..ic:;:,: ~ t:: ::: (';;;~: =t ·: ; ~Jv.,""' g::~ t: 1; fj! ~,..,:1~
pickled herring and rolm· engine Is fttted with ~ t~ :~~:.'.~1; ~ ~t'.~ ~E~tl! ;i:lr ~~v.-~.: ~..Jr°'jl 1: ~~ 1lit! ~ ops -herring wrapped chamber m o n ol1th1.c .r.ru1~c2 .. '20 ... c:.onF_.,..., .. 1 43 •"" Gon1n111lfJ __ 1 2, •.
I ti t I t led N cNrD .2S t .a 11loo• 1" t;,.l'fgt .10 6 67 11""• .......... Mecl .1• + 11 ~·.., around a pickle _ every Pa num ca e ys J!lOUn .r.rct1c: tntco. 1 2l!i· •.. Olil!ll(Gt.10 1 .. 1, __ ""' r-MIU t.l'O 11 s. :m.+....,
year in ?itichigan, the Mid-on the exhaust manifold for ~ 1] : : 1~! ~ ~'ir-~v~ .~ :~~ ~::w.; (i ~=~:.l~~ .~ '": !l -.; ~
\\o'CSt a nd the East Coast. control of hydro~arixln a.nd Z:~ 1~ 2: ,~ 1~:+~ ~~ ='::::: 3.?: ~ : '.,, &""~1.-:> 111r1~~ ,f~ :::
The loss to Sack and his c_arbon monoxide e'!11s-~~~11~ ·,-',', ,',._• _• __ ""'' d1.1• •. 111111 .., '* 1 Gen Rrf•«t s .. s..., ... N l C If ..,,,_ ..., C...Pwr pit.. 9 SJ -\'t Gf'6iQlwl .16 ' 2• 2l>o.-,._ partner, Sam Cohen, was s~ons. o se~a ra e a~ or· NmcoS1.to s· .. 11 erw.uA1rL.n10 ~ sv.. h GnS1K1 111<1 • •l 2r. ...... nl. mod"! will be reqwred Armflf i.10 ' 2• eneari 1.ao' " n ,,, .... c;' e '·'° 1 38• 2111 . ~ .. estimated at between ,. . 53~:·. ''°" ,.;v; c.nt1c.oiio.eo1 11 '""• ,., c;1 ... 1.1ou • sa u 111 . •,.
$l•ooo and$20000 as t he federal version also AnN ·"' 1 2•.1•v.+""' c.onuep2.60 11ao JO .1"' GtNtc.o•nc , 2s '""• v. "'• ' · l lh I l l • -"d Ii.mW 1.60 I 211 1Jh--~ enuepp11v... 1 Jl •1'4 G@rulnP .Sii 11 61 2s + 1<o Sacks said,. ars are not the mee s a · s a e s r1g1 MICorol" 1 s ' 11.,.-v. c eoo1a 2v. •• 10 ""• 1 c.. Pac .IOQ t 1&s JO .1v. em-155-10n standards ,,,....n•nd .s2 11 •1 11<1• "" aur1CpJ.20 • "° ;10'-• "" C..Pwill 1.12 •• r100 61 •.. only thing going up so shar· · MA Ltd 1 •. 100 1s\io+t' c11111P 1.""' 1 s1 .,._ 11o Ge<oer Pd 1 , 31 ,~ .. ,.
The 280s has m • than A5fll 011 1.«I 4 M II -\lo O llllR l.lOd t 31 ' -111 G1111 l.Xlil 11 11 lli t2'1> ply and quickly in cost that ?r ~ 1.«1 s 1..i 11 -11o c..1 ,ft~JI .• 3'I u .J2+ 1.11 Ge11'f. 1.70 •. J "1~ ...
it makes him especially ~d~u7ate acc,elerdat1on ,<~-60 :,::;: ':: ~ ,i 1:~! ~ ~(m~1·:t ~ :# J~.t? ~~": ~ ~ 1~"= ~ mad. 1n 1 ... secs. an crws1ng Aiko 1,1511 3 1• ~"" Cor11 011p12 .. 1 n •"" Gli.-F1n1 s1 • 1} '""-..,. ed ( · d · AtlCIYEI ll't + 1' 13""'-"'" c.on11n11e11 1 1J 111M •.• Gldcl u .. is s • 31t •.. spe maximum spec is .r.t1ce1p1 '".. 1 st ... c.on1r1 0.1• 1 J.1.1 u ..... v. c;.11 HU• .s1 • • 1°"' •.. well over JOO mph). Atlll:lcM J\'I 13 ,.. "V.•I"" Olmtood J 1 1 2H'lt "" GU'9tlt I.SO I 7J 2S""• "" HE SAID HE ordered a
forklift truck priced al $650.
By the time it arrived, it
cost ~-Sugar that cost
Sl4.50 per hundred weight
one year ago now costs him
$39.
• ARUI pl I'll! •• 1'11 .ct\li •.. C.Un .Ht 4 2• 2\fo-\ll Glros ll'IC.Of S 1S IVo + "'°
.ii« 1111 2.llO . • 167 JIV. + loo (ll(lp '" , ·°" • ' 21\r. • Vo Gttes.rl .llrl ,, 70 1:W.-~ AlllkflprtJ ,, 11""' ••. C-r Le~ .• M '-v. ~ M¥ t 113 10'>\t Vt
''Jn ract I just got a call
from the sugar company
Shirt Firm
In Irvine
saying it is adding S3 to the The Shirt l'"actory, Inc.,
cost immediately.'' Sack . 1-lonolulu-based m anufac·
said. "'That m akes it $42 per turer of "Crazy Shirts," has
hundredweight." t aken occupancy or a new
Sack contends that many 14,000 square fool facility at
of hi s s upplie rs raised 1732 McGaw Avc. in Irvine
prices for profit reasons Industria l Co mplex.
while his own price in-The Shirt Jo~actory silk
creases '''ere based on the screens designs on T·shirts
ne e d t o s t a y e \'e n and, according to President
economically. Va n S. Bird, the company
The last Sea Fare in-will supply a network or
crease came in February -specialty shops and depart·
a n8percent boost Sack said ment s tores lhrou~hout
was forced on him by a 20 Ca lifornia from ils new Ir·
percent Increase in the cost vine Industrial Complex
of herring. location.
.iin Oirtt 20 Z:t 1~ • . . ~Tl,.. .60 I 2 1 ~'-"' .IO • U 1•11o + ;i., ATD Inc .iii 3 Ill ... _ Ill '-Ind .60 • } ,.. . CioldWSll Fd 6 JS ,..__ ....
Ml.0...2'01' • ._._ g:.A.:i 1""4 2 IO 11.,.,+I Gaioclr1cl.l1•10ol l'Oli>• V.
AUICIOTll lnc!S 2 31 21+--1" l.flO' >Cl Jlflt '°" ~I.IS .. IJO t• tJll> Aoco c...ro IU 21 l l't+ \lo GwOur• c... u 1""-"" CO-,rTlr 1 + t lJ u,.. v. A-~ -•. 13 11·16 , .. CornG 1.121 11 191 2'VI t loo Gonb\J .ll • J '"" • \lo Aw; d 2.0 •. Joi l~t ;i., er-E°' . .cl 6 II J ....... Gouldln 1.10 S S la.. ...
.r.....,Pt .ll!I 11 12 JIM-'°" CWllll 1.•Sll l st 3"• "' ~ 1.2.S .. S<1 U -11> A..+J Inc ... S 2t 44-Iii ~ .ISd t I J"" ... GrtUW I.ta J IOol 22"" •••
A-Inc .lO l ll • -"" OI• lrd .n J .,. 10 ..... "' Grlflll u .IO 2t .. ""'• ~ A-.Pr I.• II In 24\lo-\'a CK lntlJ I U 79\lo ... Gr-4 1.20 1 IJ 1.t.+.,..
Aztec Oi16G 1' 11 ""' • "" Cr-C 1.60 ' 11' J11"+ loo Gran!W .20fl Q st J V.+ 1" ___. 8-O'Hll Fl .'2 ' 1' •h • . • mDrt . .a J 11 t :W. + v. 611>1.Wll .JO 6 116 1+'.lt•l'llo O'Mk ... 1.66 6 .)S II + .... 1.4111 I t• ,.__ '°"
ki.t .ICll'I .. 21 )Ioli; ... ~K .I04 I t + .... A6,. .. Sd I .)! I 'll+ .... 8-r In .11 1 St 1loli+ 1111 0-H .JO ' • 1tl'I• .... UDl1.20 .. I 11 11> ...
81QrO!I .JI II ,. 31 • , , Cl'-Cl>l'k I 1 16\111-.... H,,..li 1.IO t lJ ltt.-1" 8114()14 . .a J + 6\lo-111 ~Z:ll ,60 S 216 22'111 • '°" GCWsFlnM 6 SIJ ll"'• \It
IYllCarp .ta J 4 ti+-\lo CT5 Cjio .JCI I 2' 1'°"-Ill °' Wttl IJll I IM IJ'llt-\lo !!~ ,'·~ •, "•' ,1?~.·.:.:. Ollll811'1 .411 1 11 '"' ••• GtWp11.nc .. 11 13'111-"" -·...--""'" ~ Olmll'ls ... + :tt '2loo-'°" Gm GI• 1.• • t u .... -"" 8lndtoQ Inc. 2:1 2SO 21\ft-llill C-."l,JOpl .• 110 • •·· Grwtoll l,14i 6 ·111 11 11>-1-
llftp F'll .. •1 21111 ... Q.rrlnc. .t'id •• JJ I~ ••• Or'll'l'llnd wt.. 11 n .. -"" llfllll'plC: 2 ,. ? 12'141 •.• Oll'tlM .JOll 1 8i 7'111+ \o't Gnl/ltr .1111 •• •1 l l't-loo
M1'1'i'2.!0 S 114 II""+ \.'I CurtluWA2 •• I 17 ,,. ~ 1~ • 111 11'141-
....., "'' .IO ' 9 10 • .. eutlll'H 1.60 J t n.,_ .,.. °""'"' 1 .1w • n t h -v. Bln.Trll"'-3 J t.1 3"141+ loo Cnklrrl 1.40 3 10 1''°'+ "" Gulllll 1.:rM l n 3'--\lo Bart>Oll .IOCI ,, l6 21 + 1ot CWP'IK 1,.0 S 10 26\lo-VI GulfL fol .SO 4 St •Vo •..
8'rll CR .:IO I• 20 U'i'i t 1ot ---0 D-~IMI .lld 3 20 2:it , .. Bio'NI 1.60d 1 611 t -'Ill DI~ C:0 1 1!111 •:i.+ \It I 0111.MI 4 '1:1 ll'lt-\.'t
Bak In Al 1 2 lf't-1" DlnRlwr .Ml J 1J •\lo-"" I Al&.OI 1 n l 'r'J-\lo
::-.:.:; ~ 1:~: ~~ i n ii~;: '"tt~·; .t :~ +\\ 8'ulcllt.. .611 12 "1 1~+1\lo Dlrt!ndpl 2 .• I 22 -It GulltWl.IO~• tS 20"6• '°" &nwL.1121 lt'l 22"'+ 4 DILIGerll'IM H 11t IS-+ II> =•Wtws ,. SO •Vt-\.'I -~Cf .!1,> tt' .·.~-·u,: Qilyco 1.1' • 20 11141-.... pfJ .... I •J'lllo-loo -• .---.. OIYtlnln .~ .. 40 1'111--V. ,_ Sllill , • 1 Jl'llt ... a.t .n ' IM 1-\olo ~AO ' J6 7"°+ "' Gullan ll'llhl ' 11 ,,.._"" Blckml .lO 11 I 2J + V. OIYPLt 1.t+ 6 14 121't• \'a ----M M-lllClanO ..., II * ... 'Ill ~ , .... rUO 61 -JV. HM:k w t.4 , r 2, __ """ 8"Cl\li ,t(lg 5 17 1\111• '°" o.iWtr M It 21 1 • Mo HtM f 8 M I M t\"t .• ,
.., lnduli n t0t 2JVt• 'Ill ~ i·ta 1 uo n +11+ 1-1t111111"1.20t4 7911.u1111+J'lli 8t!a "'4. 51 J 14 !t -1" CltPl.L JO 6 20t "'+ "° 14emrntf'91 4 tl1 Ir.loot loo
U.s~ Wage E(Jrner Seeking lllldlln 1.20 ' 1 1Jl4 ••• Diii Miit I.XI J .U It + ._ "9ndl-Al 1 .. Jiii-loo> 8MdllH .JOa 6 1 6\5-"' Dln&Alr AO t 1+ •tl't+ '°" H..cty l'IM I t 21 1'1-'°"
11111 lfWI M J 8i tlyt ••• Clttkttt At 16 Sl 2'16-\to HinfiCp .Ml 1 I '"' ••• 8'!nls Q I • 11 17 ... o.tlllll C. 1 .. 4\0t-loo l4l#M l.:U U It 2.J"'-.... llwd.11 1,IO I •1 ~.._ ""° Dll'Wllt11 .to ' 22 IJ .. t \'I Htrcrt 1.12 S 1 12 -Vt lllndl• pl 1 •• J 11111-\'I PMt7s ,12 I 21 R+ \lo ~WI .Oolll ., 1• J't-a.,
"" ct \.:IS 4 22, l+4-.. Dll!tiDtw .76 11 " 111'1+ "' "'""'' '·* • 1 tl'llt ••• llefl(:sipl 2\'I •• MO 2•11>+114 0..-Pli .1' 12 •I A+ loo Hln'.nt .22 I IJ 11\11 + 'it llllllCJll4.JO •• 1 ..-+ 'tlo Ddlloln .Ml I 1' + + 111 Mffrlt.Ct.21 5 U lfll>-Yo
Anti-inflation Leadership Bllltt 2.12111 2 + 11-••• DllEdil I.ti + tM ll:M-" "'"'° 1• • )I I°""-'lfo BlflOtl .Ole 4 ISi 1 + Yo DltE pl t.11 •• Jltl 7• •• , Hlt!SMI: •• I IJ Jt.-'°" 81ri1eY .:!(Id 2 1• ,.....__. 14 Of!Ec:f 7.61 •• di to'h •• , Htr'llMk .20 I I l'llo+ \Iii 8"I Prukl 4 n! J4-'Ill Oii~ pl 7A5 ,. UO st -1 ._ftt'S 1.Jllcl .. t ISl'a ... 11et11 Stifel t S a Vilt+ Vt DllE d 1.1' •• dlO Sll'l+ IV. H1 .. E11AI 1 U 11 • , •
8iel31nd .tOll 14 11 ''*-loo 0... l pl WI •• 1 .. .,_ '°' Hl.,.t Ii.Ill I S • 10 -V. ...... 60 All H •1S 11"-'t. a...-OI .llo 1 I 11 ••• .... tu.. t ' J\11 •••
KANSAS ClTY, Mo.
tUPJ) ...:... A noted public
opinion researcher says
Ameri cans are "hungry !or
i nspired l~nd ershi p" to pull
them out or lnrl atlon, but
they refuse to !hell out thei r
inflated dollars ror more
laxes.
Hugh c. 1-torrman, di'rec·
tor or Opinion Research
Corporation, said In an in-
terview studi es show the
public Is already heeding
President Ford's caH to cut
• 81tir Jn •• • t ·~ \t CW An .M 1 l ll't ... HCA Nrilrtlll ' «I t \'t-t'°" lffllL 1.IOll • s 111'1-\lo oi.noo11111 1 • u 3""•1"' likk lnc..tt. • '"" •i_• posed to incre ased 8kK*H".e • v 10 ••. Ol""5ll1.• s ts""'•'" HK1aM1n 21 11 "141'1+ .. -h J I · llhdlltl .IO S 2j l•l'I-\Ii. Ql,e$lwn pl 1 • • I """ ••• l'fell"*' •• S IS ,._,_ 1ot llVeawayS, SUC as Of'\!lgn llalllie 81111 .. ,,,. ... m 'I 'J + 16'111+ "" l'lifl"r HI.II f ' W*-\'I
_aid and welfare." ~ ~ ; ~;f ~:-· .~ ~ .to0 , ~ 1:..,.1~ ::i'::.11'r."~ 1' 1!· 21~; ~
tfe !aid sale·huntlng, :=,:cm·, 't 1;:;•.~ ~~ ~ .,J 1~:·.~ =~.#ii,: ~-!2~
reduced energy use and 8orOlft 1.• 1 .. ,....,_"" 01111.i EQJll '' 1t:1 '°"'•., 1t1rn in ..... 21 ,.,.._""
l -I d' t (ICll'9 w 1.t5 4 ,, Uloo-\lo OIA1191 ·'° t ,, '"' ••• ~lllH .IO It 3CM Joi • "' ra 1ona. spen 1ng cu s are 8oriftlM tn 1s 1+ 21'1 •• , Dlli.i 1.11?111 , .. 11 • "' ~, .111 1 • 10 -._..
alreadyevldence ofselt-lm· =~:; n n:-.~ =r.v ·.~;'t 't '~= ::in ·~~ ;, k~-·-~sed anti·intlatlon "'forts. tt:i!',-·"''"','• '•"• •'··+• !!: otst11St1 .•l4 t n + 111 1tPJOtJ ,., 10 +111o \:l .,..._.. .. .,. Dl'llltlolld In 4 1J lf'I ••• HI VOii in t 1 •'llo-16
Ul hhe $.bid mhOSt1 W~C CAr· t:: =~-'I ~~ 'n ;:""+ .~ ~·~ 1l .:; : ;-: ml'8n lll'Hti't : I~ ::~! ~
ners ave no c o ce .,.,,cause "'',... ,..,,, 2 ,,. +v. ••. ~"" n no qv.+11" HMW 1111111, • 1• '"' •••
cl pay checks that buy less ==:1:~ : 1t ~!•: : DllllW5'1•~ :: ii 10: ,;:. ·iii ;:r..:,.c;~ ~ 11 1:::-.~
e.•hweek ._~, ""~"' ct.io • »1• •l'IHottE~~u a' ..... ' .._ " 1rOt\IP IAO 5 IO 1'11'1-\lo Oli-6 6 tlll + h HD! l"M .22 t 10l0 th ,. , ~ ••Peoplearehungrytofol· ..,.Sf!r'9 ,l0 s , J\o'I ••• ~.10 1 1+ ,.... "'..,11,Sw(lrt , """'•"'
•low Inspired leadership,'' t:;:~ ~ 11! '::: = li:,;1~ :;:: t t='.!.~~~1: SH J:::l_..
back 'spending nnd to furb _.,,~h-sf'-ojt>;,~~
wasteful consumption.
he 1aid "J think In Novem· 1n1111w ..o I 1• "" ••• "" 1nc;p 'f ., 1• ... ~ 1.n 1 u u ... • · ~ 1.!00 72 ' + ~ Or-. lAO 19 :t2 -11'1 Hwllall c,,. J 10 ,.,. ••• ~: r~·.~:.1~,~'i.rr~r::r~ ... ~.:..: 'i Ti ~·= I?.'.'. ii n·:i· !:W:g'~: * l~:: ~--gr ... and at all govern· m,. l.:l'O ' 11 16\lo-14 1•64 •• t , ..... ""' .... u....... ' 1¥>-"" But \Yater gate "nd ron·
•tlnued federal fumbling
With the economy have ke-pt
Americans :i;usplclous or
po11Ur1ans and bl ~buslness.
pointing to a need for new
leadership to convince the-
publlc to make sarloua
1auiflct s.
"The public 11 yen min~
for Politicians w1th guts."
tht re.sea rcher from Prin·
ceton, N.J ., sold .• "Voters
bav'e ~c~n tin awlul lot d
tnuokling under by public
• orfiriols In rertnt yeNr•. •
\.NII llldlfJJ \.+ah I jt lh ... ,61) 6 J t ill-\lo HwiFIJ,QW I U 11'1-"" m'ent levels. 11u1ow1w .10 s " ,.,. ... ,_. 1 111 ""' • ,... ~'Ill(. 1 u n• u .......
"'Any e1ndldaJ.e who t::"l1"°1 ·~ ~ 1flt!tt · ~Ll;!10 ::1::.n !fv. =::::: fi nn1\i: \:
l hi U knl h a.111'1111 I • 111 ,,~ .... ~ ), .. 1100 .. ... ~\.''ii ' "I fl\;;-1 .. presen a mse ••a g t lllwi ,_ 1. • 111 ,,-.. 1111 . ... •• 1 " + "' ~°' t " '~"'. ""
wlth their eaa:er.ne.st to in shti:tlng 1rmo~mlng to :::,"' :n l : ,r ::: • ~ l: ii "r~: =:rt ,,. 't 1,~ i:~ ~~
spend money. back 1wa,y &weep governm clean of ...,... .JO ~ •1s • +•1111 ... • 1q lll-l't•lv. "'"'"' c.1 s , 11-.-"'
from commltmonts a nd llsblundorahas otuhotat · ,._;;;i •,;;-, -• ~::l:: l ll".,::t :::":' .. '.:: l ll ll~:~
touf{h decisions just to be an incumbent" ~ ... ' 11 1~=~: .!11 .~ .:= ~-; ~ =~ .#1: ,J J,..: 1'i:
Ii · II f Holfman 1dded that-t ,.~,' .,__""' '[11 •. .utOJJ"-•"' ~111t 1 • ,.., ... po Ilea ysa e . • '"vn J .... "" 111 .• • f 1 +"" ~ Ol.t•u •t 1•v.•1"'
"Thepubllcalgofttlslt l1 bondandpropertytaxlevy l::-·i.t !t·1.;4,•tt16W,1o1i $::1\ 1; 1i~: '::
bring asked to·sacrlrice for 'elections scheduled •cross 111\•1iff 11; 11o + " •• • , '!\'t ... " '·" • , ,.,., "'
se\·eral special interests. the nation thh1 fall are also ~ '1 ,.: 11-; l! , .,: ., ~ ,.s: : :t..flh•;;;~! '» 11111 • ..,
Otltens have no Interest in doomed. He SJld wn'C)'S I~ •;:,: .: ,:,. :~ E :~,: ... : ... :.~ _,.:.ki : ·:: n: :~
makina sacrifices to help show 1 people bellC\'t they ~·~ I 11 J..,= Vi E!l'lllllM 1:: 11 s: n:: ~ r-~1,r~~~ 2 1J ,!i:7 , .. sol ve bu$lness's pr(')fll are a read)• paying cnoui;:h ""'~r.1 1 '" •.• f<MJt M 10 .,. 11"'-"" , .. 1111.a , 1,1 11, _.,.,
problems. ThC"yulso att op. for RQ\'Crnmtnl. r11" "' it ""'• ~ EiMDt' 1,tt > ,. 10 • 111 111 p1,.,.,.. 1> n-\11. ••
'Jim IOoiringl •
. . '
'
ktllto liol 591 liol Sali!I Mil ~ • ... •
l'·I i~ 0.. 01G. Pol~ Cow 0.0. P-t (IGJ U. (N P.t 1'61 0. C"-t
Ill ,._ J.10 I 101 11tt • .... 111D1wU .10 • 16 I~ ...... Rl.4-,II 1 13 111•-I I 1t•o..tf 1 20 6 M !'1'1-..
OITOOIW ,)Cl 11 • JJ .. -........ 8111 I 4) l\oo ... ~·.tO I ' 10>. ' ,,,,, '"""•I • s S•'lo-••
1,.,.,i.ic. S lU Jllllt '-~-" tit + ft RioOrtW11.IO • • H\ot •o t t ivon 110 ) 1'1 u,•.••ll.o
l""'Clll.111+ Ut ""'•lio ~J.AO 14t:I S""'•I.,. ~.t•l l 111 lOh-1• lt.ol•lll 7\'ll •• II ) -
IH4l11wl.1+ •• 16 14 •\lo MDIII&: 1'-.. 6 »lo-I• VI< Alxf!IGl.149 I 1• U -.., t..itllll l • .cl •• • 'l:r;+ ~ '"'""° .t;o .. 1 ,,.., ... #WI t.Cll • • ,h,• •• ·1.:. -~ , .. ,, •• ,, '"" ..... llliclt.ol ,/g s ... • •• -... •• lndlenC..1 l I llllo t '°" #clnPw I.IQ t S ... Roe•--» J I' ·slli ,., T-11111n16 It lllCIPwll.t2 ,. ,, t""' ___ '..!!·,-,.• 2'0tt•"" Roc;•,..11 1J t 10) '°'-•.,. n1omln ~' 11 l~·\,o.·
illdNill 1,10 • lf IUt •·· _. 6'1o t .... AohmH 1.12 t tt 6S -I 11oQn\D,IW f 1t ,•,-1,.lo(O Oil t 1'0 •to+ loo Moclr#IC M S Qt :t2""•1i... Aollrlnd.tO t t 11 • '\ l llt•l"O ,_, 6 )\, •.•
1119 11n111,n 11 an ''"', 1'° Mw-1" 1..0 u i•i JJl'I l-1"' 11u11o,,,.111 .ts ' ' 1oo;.-1oo T' '°'" 1..-> • vs ,", -, ... ~ lntR pl2.)S ,, U •t -Vi ,,,.,.,,IC .Dd S 1 14'"'•" R...-.1 ... l J S -\\ follrllloW .+o 10 1 .... ...
iM C.....tl.tD 4 IOlt:W.•1 Mrw.-EJPr j 1• 2\li-1<'1 Ro!ittC l.10• J U"'•"'TIQrrlU .olOll 4Jle:1 llllo\oSlll.411 S 41 »'-• ~ M1r$5t1 .Slld II ,....._.!.'I Rot,... A .IO ' 1• 11\(ot V. '""' 111< t 6 4 ,..~-\• 1-1 .tO' Jt 1 ••· .. Tr-"" 8 11 )V,--\1, ll.~lo .4012 JIS 1•t.+l\;, 11,....M .~ • ltt1, ,.1ov.+t..,• 111~1co C.10 J » '""" Mo _,,,.,, .M t lJ II.._\:. Aow .. CC .M 1 1S ' • "" f lft'IO.n 1-. • •--1,..k vof 1111 •. 2 11 + Vo Mk"" ..0 • ' U 14-\It Rol'ID I.lid 2 t S 2•""-.._ 11lNTVI ~ •· I I~ 1;~::: IMilCoot.6'1 • 1 Jll'l t ft ~ .70 '6 111 .. ""tl:W. '-i\'_ii l/111)1 J JJ t h -.,_ I-P..: 4J ,..,_ ~ IMi lftV .+lnt S 1"<1 ,,, NIFwlt.tO I+ ,, ...... ,'°' Rlt:Cll .t+• tt 4 -.... T-SlllPWd •II ,
1n1t9on .:ti ' " J\0-\.'I MtStr.i 1.sa I 11 11-"" AullCwn4 .3' ' " 11,.._-\, ,.,._ Ed 1 1 • 1•,~-,• l!Mrco 1,'6 S 20 221'1-._ ,...,._ ... la t ~ . , . R11t-.... Clll t :U. 11 + Yi T -.c.. -'° I • ,=-; \!
l-to11 Dw 1 • 1\lt-"''.,._lf.AO , t ,•,i!__-.·· R"'tTe'!l .I• S 111 t\io-'M laohRt .4QQ I I ., 1-1611.t 2 ' 16 24\o-"' "-'8 tM i .....-R~, _, ] tt6 S T...CO .ti 11 U IS\lo-.. IBM Co<l tlS 71)5;1'1htl \lo ~l.tO .S t 111-• \:. --I S-lr-..St +II" ) ..... lnlFl•~.ldlolo Jlt .W.•l\o ~·· • l)J 12~ .. ttl.. ~nllllcl 4 t 1r.~ \lo fN&lnt Jti .. I\ Ill\ ... lntl .. w 1""4 s 23' 201.. "' """'"' Oii I s • 1 ......... 14 s.t"" I.IQ I SS ,,,._. n, Tr-Lift +j s • ~·i.; lllttto!d.t/4 .. •J 71A+ "'-MlllOlft I.Ji .. J IS -+-W. StottClirllln lo lt J'MI,. ... flllo:ll'IF .100 4 • .....--
tnlMOI I.JI ' nj »It. ,.. ,..,...,.,. l ... I • '"' •• • St.lo lilllll't 1 • J.tJ 31 + "" T•.,vn •.S• 10 14 lO • "' Intl Mining ' 1J 1"1o-V. -..._ !o!JoLtl' 1.1110 I 10 , .• ,,,...., 1 Cl S ,.. It • 'I
lntMull \.>Ii I t I.,,,_ Yi ,.._LIO 11 .&I Jl'V. + "" Stl.Sto!F f\r ~ II 2•~-\>, fr-W A" ,. 2'l t t ... lnlfrktl..tO.o • M Jtl.\+ .... ~0. .f.J l• lJ 114tt '°" St~ S.t. .• 1+ 11 ,., rw..-t~.O ,, 1 1,~_·;,.. lllllPeolrl I JS+ •lloo• ._~Sc .Ml I 211 • +Ml 1:-ledill.tO 6 3" Jt +Yi TmWR .UO J IJ •• ... lnlRKi.llll • I ,,..,_.,.. ~.UIO S 21 ., MMC.J .. t 1' tloo .. \o ''""'" 1'9 s !It ~•1'4
lfll Tl.T 1..U • DI t+loo+ .. ~ .JO J 1b1 11V.+ tW. oc;. \.20 + 11 11~,.,. ~ lr....ir. 111 1 •• J J•Vt • ..... I TT lllll•Vt.. 1 .,.."1 ... ~ad •• tl flfo-~ SMJll:M: IOI + 2 I .. + loo lRE QI JI IO '" ,,.._ "" ll&TOIJ• .. T lll'I ••• IOWl(lft.SJ' 3t 1'111+"1111 s.no.trAuo .. I) •. 1 .. c..lSld ..... 1,_ .... IT&.TdlCt .• 1'1 MV.-\lo NIO.pll\li •• l t+IOOt" S-llt.10S 1 t>o ,. l roC11 pr J.,. l Tl•"" 'TifM2111 ., IU n • \'lo ~ .ZI ts ~ .)1'-t '-s...J. 1111.IG + n 21'•• ~. l h S<3 t,Jla 2 10 ,..__ "9 tT& plO !i .. J CJ'lltt V. HICitrL .tO • I iw.+ IA SF'el11pl .SO .• 10 I'•+~ Tntt1g111 ,'IV • .)Ol 11""• "'° WllrPK 1.10 • J U1'11-"" Nlo.t/t 1.U • ts .)U•-,... St~lnU .JO 1) 1 .. is1,. , ..... Tno PM: ,«I ~ 1 ,..,._ ....
l11lp\llll Gr I ' .) 111'1l-V. Mtt1 CistW I • 1t U •·· S..-o Wei .H 1 J1 t'-, \1 Tr""l•lfl al • tJ ll -......
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Dodge Rec a II
DETROIT (AP J -Chrysler Co rp .
said axles on some school buses a nd
trucks are defective and the firm is
notifying the O\\'ncrs of the vehicles
thal they could lose a rear wheel.
The vebirlcs involved are 1974·
model D-600 DodAe medium trucks
and S-600 school bus chassis equipped
with the possibly defective J,700·
pound, two-speed rea l axles.
Alaska Accord
SAN FRANCISCO !UPll -The
Standard Oil Co. or California has an.
nounred the sit:nlng or a l.hlrd ex..
ploratinn agreement v.·ith Konlag, ln·
c.,. Regional Nat.i\'c Corp. lo cover oil
and gas evaluafion of Kon1ag lands in
Ala~ka .
Und~r t he 1971 Ala~ka Native
Claims Settlement Act. Koniag Is e n.
titled to selcrt &bout" million acres e r
Kodiak Island aud the Alaskan penin·
suln. ,
Standard i!' conducting geologlra.1
&nd geophy!;iC'a l surveys to assist
Kon lag in the si>lcrtion of thtlr I nds.
In return. it "'ill havl• u r~ to cnl ond ~M ll:~~·· pn Por!ioas,p! ~IJonW..
"
r
I
It 10 DAILY PILOT ' Monday, 0Ctobef21. 1974
Billie Jean
Collapses;
Big Payoff
UCI .Plans 16,000-seat i-doine
SAN DIF.GO -Pro tennis '.'>l1tr Bil·
11e Jea n King, JI, w:.i s Wkcn to il1ercy
J-los1>ital complaining of chest und
•shoulder pains Sunduy after she cul·
Je1pscd on a golr (>Ourse, officials say. ~
After an cxarnin ation in the hospital
emerge ncy room. she was advised to
return home lu Long Beach to rest.
'Kini: '.'-'as 111 the gallary watchini:
lhe Lai.l ies PGA golf tournament with
her husband, Larry, '~1hen she cullaµ·
scd. There was no ind1t;.itioq,t>f heart
er ches t trouble, a h os1>ita l
spokes man ::.aicl ;.ifter ~he was
released.
MJwre's fhf! Wi11114•r?
'flJ UAN A -A bettor picked fi ve
winners in tr'le Agua Caliente race
trJck 5· IU pool to win $10.1,000 Sunday
41nd then f;1ilcd to show up to claim the
~ r
By CRAIG Sll EF~' QI""' 0.11, P'llCll Mllff
tJC Irvine tod."ty laun<:hcd nn am-
bitious $100,000 fund-rais ing drive
which it hopes will lead to mujor
unive rsi1y tlthlctlc status in the iin-
mcdiatl' future.
Included in UC I 's plans, as outlinctl
by a~sisl ant athletic director ltod
Shcrrnan ti>do y, is a lti,OOJ-!'icat multi·
purpose mini-don1c, which could Ix:
lc~s than five ye<J r:::. away.
1'hc fund-ruising drive will encom-
pass a six-~.cc k period wilh Sherman
optimistic thal UC I will huve $100,000
by J>cc: 3 ....
'l'he former USC and pro rootball
standout outlined the An tcuters' im-
mediate goals for lhis year al a prcs!:i
confer('nl'e today.
•"'In the first yt>ar we hope to go rrom
a Vt>ry medium Division II school, as
far as scholarships al'e conccr11cd, t u
a toll grudc level.
Atross the board, the added funds
will double ou'r scholarships, upgrade
our scheduling and travel, initiate a
top recruiting t:rrort and upgrade our
overa ll inlcreollegiante ath lt:tic
J,>rogram ... says Sherman, whose
chic( function al UCl is to raise funds.
"We '>'-'ant to bceome u very strong
Division II school and oor immediate
go:il is lo seek major division status.
The fund-ruis ing efrorts should. im.'
mediately be felt in recruiting efforts
and in scheduling n1ajor teams.
Shern1 an adds that the mulli-pur·
pose n1ini ·domc has been discussed
by the UCI hierarchy and could be
built within rive years. if the !und-
raising drive is sliccessful and UC I
l'an secure i;runts from other sources.
"The mini-dome would 1'er\'P lh"
entire campus, not just athletics. We
could have <!oncerts, speeches and
other things or this nature, alogg with
athlctjc events,'' says Sherman.
The UCI athletic stafr ls also discus·
sing the possibility of augumentiog an
intercollegiate volleyba ll program
within the next couple of years-and
may even have a !ootban program in
the not too distant future.
.. Footba II is not a number or years
a way,'' says Sherman, ''iL's a number
or dollars away."
Sherman has .di\·ided lhe fund·
rais ing setup intO t .... ·o teams-one
made up or the Big' I booster board la
group or 40) .and the other composed
or 3 challeng~ team (about 25 i~
di\·iduals ), The theme ol the drive 1s
•• ,exceU8nce detn ands ln\'('Stment. ''
.. I've had people eome to me and
say they would like lo see something
happen at UCI. and man:-.· or these
people are not UCI alumni. So the
communit~· is r eall)' behind this and
U1at has encouraged me. I'm eon~·
fident we can get the $100,000. ''
Arabs Ripped
Olympic Chief
--money durinR !he evening. ' -~en ·Fires ·Broadside
'
Jt was the fift h major payorr in the
S.IO µool since the trat•k reopened
l\Jav4th followinl( a fire in 1971. .
')'he anon ymous bettor picked Pr1~·
ccss Sun. $8.80, in the fifth : Oeano's
Ru ken, 515,80, in the sixth ; 1-l in lad, $4
in the eighth; i-:vie's Port, $26.00 in
the ninth rind l\liss Spotted 'J'hong,
.$8.80 in the tenth.
The w:igc r cr missed· on Real
l\Joney, $51.'IO, in Lhl! seventh.
''Jt 's not that unusual for them not
t o clajm the winnings riJ.(hl away,"
:;aid track publicist John Greensmith.
"f'or one thing we sell tickets in En·
scnada and !\-1ex1cah <.1nd the winner.
m ay not hear the results until after
Lhc track closl!s."
Na.•t!I Wi11s
• 'BAR C f:L<>:\'A , Spa in -Ilic
Nast<.1sc of lt o1nania beat 7\1anuel
Orantes or S11ain 8·6, 9·7, 6·3 for the
men 's s ingles title in the Spanish
Opt.>n tenni s tournan1entSunday.
Nast<i~c relied on strong drives a'nd
a powerful service throughout the
m atch against the tenacious lefthan·
der.
No Retir4•111,1rt
A'rLANl 'A -Slugger Jlcnry Aaro·n
says he is now .. 99 pe rcent sure'' he
will be trying lo add to his home run
record of 733 next year, but he still
won't say where.
Aaron made his comments in an in·
tervicw Sunday on CBS television.
Published reports ha,·e predicted
Aaron \\'ill siJ?n with the ?.tilwaukee
Brc'>''crs of the American League as ;i •
design a led hitter, bccomiog genecaJ
manager in 1976.
But Aaron said he has not decided
v.·herc he will play next season, and he
c:illed the ~lilw:i ukce reports pui;:c
:>peculation.
.Nc.._r_.,,,,,,,e Ht•ll.~
SYDNE)'. 1\us tralia -J ohn
Newcombe \\'un his st>cond straight
Australian indnor ll'nnis champion-
ship Sunday. dl'fl'aling Cli ff Richey,
who lelhis te m1>er get the bcslof him.
Newcombe C'nllcl·t ,•d S13.GIO for his
fi ·--1, 6·3. ti .. t tr1un1ph \vhilc Richey
picked up S7 .ooo
Riehl'' thrt·atent·cl to walk off the
r:ourt 111 '1 he l'l ~ht h i.:an1c of the second
set whl'n. !ra11l11.: :1 I, ;.i fool fault was
called 1111 hin1 l'11r .1 third time by the
~amc Linl'S n1:111 llowcver, the Texan
romplelt>tl thl· ~1 ··hour duel after the
linesm;in .,..·;1s rl·11\:1cccl.
Cadt't< Ct1ll<•••I
AIR r·onc·i:: ,\C,\OEl\IY. Colo.
Texas billi11na1rc Hos°' PC'rot . ~1
)(raduate of the na\·al ;icademy, lost
more than pr1dt• Saturday \\'hen the
?.lidshipm1'n 1\·C'nl do'>'·n lo Air f'orcc
in a (ont ha II cl :1sh. 1 ll' lo~t 1noncy,
Pt·rot had ;1 11•;i g-c r 1\·i1h the
Colnr;ul•i Ca1ll'Ls th.i i. if "thc i\liddies
J:t1l :-;unk hP'1I p:1y up 11·ith \'acations
fur 4ll ,\jr Fn rel' ~tudcnts ;ind their
dal es.
N:.t1·y lo~! l!l·lli . :1 n<! th(• C::iclet..o:;,
whoSl' 11;1111 l' .... 11 i> re 1·hosl'n from a
harrl•l 1l11ri11i.: i1alf111n1:, are tryi ng Lo
deCi dc 1vhCrl' tn ~o.
l\ut l'l·rnt 's lo~.~ \l::l~ nl so Navy's
Toss -thf' :-<l'\t•r.ll hundrt'<I midship·
men \\•ho t·nlcrctl lhl! \11agcr \Viii have
tocet ha1reu1 '.
Williams Keys
Lakers Defeat
T.<IS Ai\(:F.t.J<:s (/\I') ·-Hcscr\'e'
N:lh' \\'i1lian1 s Sl 11r1«I thl'C'C' baskt>ls in
1hc <.\tt'ly n11n11ll's nf th<.• fourth qu<1r·
ll'r lo h1·lp lht• Kansas ('1ty-Omaha
J\tnJ!~ ~l;,t\'l' tJ rf 1.ns Ani::elcs :in<I post a
JO.i-95 /\':Ilion .ti H.1 s kC'tha\I As·
~oc1at in n v ict11ry O\ l'r the L;1k1'rs Sun ·
day ni}!hl .
l.os An,c~'l1•s h;ttl 11\'('l't'(1m<' a 17.
pnn1l !111rrl q11:11·tC'f clC'fi C'it and tied the
:;:rorr :it 7fi 11; "ilh lhl' (11urlh r1u:irt1•r
only a n1 in11!f' o ld \\hen \Vill ia 1ns
madi> tu-. ~l'\' )!fial~.
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~•flcrt ha l .
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]('(J the l.;1kt•rs low of a ,)'car 3Jltl.
Ourini:: lhC' quartl·r. th<'y made iusl 2
pcttClll O( I hl'I r (1cld J,!Oal attempts.
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' --
UPIT .......
BILL DRAKE STOPS WILBUR JACKSON OF THE 49ERS AFTER A SHORT GAi~ SUNDAY.
Bears, Pack
Mix It Up
In TV Duel
CHICAGO (AP) -The llllh
re newal of the N<.1lional f'ootball
League's longest running rivalry "''iii
pit the Green Bay Packers against the
Chic<.1go Bears tonight in a nationally
televised game.
A sellout crowd of 55,753 wi ll pack
Soldier f'ield with the Hears trying ID
even their record and tie the Packers
011 TV T1u1igl11
Cl1nt111PI 7 at G
for second place in the Central
Division of the National Conference.
The Packers boosted their record to
3-2 with a 17·6 upset of the Los Angeles
Han1s last Sunday "''hilc I.he Bears
slipped to 2·3 \vith a 13·10 dcrcat at
1\tlanta.
'f'he J'.tcars "'ill rely on the passing or
.Gary ll uff and a you n,i: hut tough
defensive line :inchnrl•rl hy \Val ly
Ch:imhers who is C\'Cn playi ng harder
lh<tn he did last year when he "·on to11
defensive rookie honors. i
!l uff's main targets h:ivc hc1•n
Charlcv. \Vadc :ind Hn Rather, hoth
-;icquirC.d from the Pi:liami Dolphin!'.
\\Tade has grabbed 19 passes for 382
yards and It at her 13 !or 196 including
tv.•n tone hdn'>''llS.
Green Ray's dcfen!iC appar£>ntly jt'l·
led against !hf' Rams l:1sl "''C('k with
the return to rorn1 of rorncrhack \\I ii·
lie HuC'ha non :ind the heroics of
linebaC'kf'r Ted !lend ricks.
Bul·hannn a1i1:iears Lo bC' rnun<lini::
into form :ift<'r suffering a broken )cJ!
last :-;eason. Jlif' interception lt•d to a
C'hest cr Pi:ta rC'ol field go:1l a1tainst thl~
Rams. llt"ndricks picked off three
Rams p;,isse!".
Th<· Paf'kt'rs. howrvt•r, have hnd
trnublc \Vith their offense. Quarlcr·
hack .l<'rry Tai::f:!e r 11nks 12th in th!'!
Nn tinnnl C'onfercnt·e \\•ith S6 cnm·
l'IC't ions in 114 attcn1pts.
.lnhn Rrnrkinglon, "'"° ~aincd 1.000
ya rd-; Ill each O( hi s first three
Sl':lson )'.?nl off tu a sll'l"'' st11rt and no! .
uni.ii his 98·yard performance or last
Sunrlay harl he shown top form .
~ :-.ho"·n top form.
1'he 11(>:irl' also have hart trouble
mnv111,e: Lhe ball on the 1?mund. With
.Jim ll11rrison injured. Qirl Garrett
and rookie Ken Grandl)@rr)i have h:lfl
to ctirry the load. Grandberry has 183
ya n'I~ 1n ~I rnshf'~ for n 3.6 average
but Garr('tt has lK>cn held to 152 1n 51
a\l('mpt~ for a ;t,8 avcrai:tc.
49ers Manl1andled
Rams Find a Passer
As Harri,s Sets Pace
· t.OS ANGELES CAP) -J ames was that he executed the things that
Ifarris didn't mind al all that the Lo.~ we wanted done. Obviously, there
Angeles coaChing ·staff, with help \\'ere a couple o! running plays that we
from John J-ladl, called all the plays put into our offense to take advantage
for the quarterback's first start for ofhisability."
the Rums. · Coach Dick Nolan of the 49ers, now
· ''Right nol'', I have no objection to 2·4 compared with 4·2for Los Angeles,
their doing it," said the 27-year-old has quarterback problems he C'an't
J1arris, who became one of two black immediately ans wer .
starting quarterbacks in the NFL Morrison was hurt in the second
Sunday along with Pittsburgh's J oe quarter, Joe Reed replaced him and
Gilliam. was ineffective. Rookie Tom Owen
I-le used the ordeMi to engineer a 37· finished up and passed for two touch·
14 victory over San Francisco's 49crs, downs in the second hair.
throwing three touchdo\vn passes and By halftime. the Rams had scored
running four yards for another TO. more points with their Z1 than they
After the Hams lost to Green Bay hadinanyo(theirpreviousSgames. ·
17·6 a week ago, coach Chuck Knox
decided lo replace Ille veteran Jiadl c9
with llarris, who played three seasons ~~t"l!llll~Jl'!I';;'
"''ith Ruffa lo before joining the Rams
last ye;ir. ·
But "''here Had! did his own play
C'allin~. 11arris had his come in from
the sidelines.
"It took an awful lot of pressure off
me,'' the quarterback from Gram.
bling said but added that after a few
j!a mes. he might like to do.his own
pl<iycalling.
Jl:irris hit 12 of 15 passes for ZTG
yards with touchdown plays covering
so and 13 yards to Lawrence J\1 cCut-
cheon ;,ind 44 lo l~arold J ackson. Dave
r:lmenrlorf started Los Angeles orr
\vi th ;i 52-yard scoring dash '>''ilh an in·
tcrrC"ptcd Dennis Pi:lorrison pass.
"l 'he dif(ercnce for us was that we
~ol the big plays," said Knox " ..•
somethinR we h ad not done in our
pn:.•vious five games. That pass inter·
ccption marked the first lime our
defense has scored for us all year.
"llarris did a big jol> for us. llo
cau.zht the 49cr.s in a blitz ::1nrl hit Mc·
Cut rheon for n touchdown. 1'hc thing l
liked best about J~arris' performance
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VIENNA (AP) -Interna tional
Olympic Comn1ittee President Lord
Kj'llanin skirted the issue of two U.S.
i> ds tor upcoming. Olympic Games
this morning at the opening of the IOC
meeting and took the opportunity to
de nounce political interference in
sports.
Killanin, without mentioning any
countries by name, fired an apparent
broads ide al the Arabcountries as the
75Lh IOC session opened.
Killanin referred to recent cases or
athletes be ing preve nted from
competing for po1itical reasons. His
obvious reference was to the Asian
Games al r ehran. al '>''hich the Arab
nations boycotted e\'enls in which
lsralies were competing.
1·he IOC meeling , scheduled lo liist
through Thurs d ay, Will c hoose
between Moscow and Los Angeles as
a site for the 1980 Summer Olympics
and will consider a solo bid by Lake
Placid, N. Y,. to host the Winter
Games. Cha n ges in the rules
governi n g athletes' Olympic
eligibility we re on the agenda for
later today. ·
Membe rs of the two U. S.
delegations ure expected lo try to
hammer home a simple message here
this week -''Denver v.·on't·happen
again."
Both Ameri can delegations know
~hey have to li ve down the memories
of Denver, which was awarded the
1976 Winter Games and pulled out two
years later after a slate referendum.
Thal did lhe U.S. image no good in the
eyesofthe IOC.
But at the formal opening of the
session~ in Vie nna's imposing 19th
century neo-gothic city hall, Killani11
put most of the emphasis in his speech
on political interference in sport. .
In an obvious reference to the Asian
Games, Killanin s aid, "Recently
there have been cases of lhe use of
alhletes for political purposes when
they have been prevented from·
competing against another athlete,
especially in c9nli:lct sports, beca~se
their administrators do not agree with
the national or politica l attitude of the
government of the country from
which their opponents emanate.
''This is not sport.'' When Lhe Arab~
ntused to compete against Israelis at
Tehran they were hacked by
mainland China, which is not a
member or the Olympic movement
but has bee n edging tOwards
recogniUon by the JOC.
Killanin's speech could also be seen
as a warning to China of the standards
it will have to conform to if admitted
Ult~:;;mpics.
U.S. Olympic ofricials representing
i.os An geles and Lake Placid are not
expected to go before the meeting
until Tuesday with a decision on lhc
sites not expected before Wednesday.
But IOC m embers already have
said privately they must guard
against a repetition or the Denver
situation.
"Impossible,•• said Los Angeles
Councilman Donald D. Lorenzen, one
or the city's presentation team. "The
state laws of California are differenl
from those of Colorado. Under-
California Jaw, no contract that has
been signed can be invalidated by a
'referendum.
"Any\l.'ay, public opinion polls have!
. shown that 71 percent or the citizens of
Los Angeles want the city to bost the
Olympics," said Lorenzen.
Lake Placid's John Shea, a double
gold medalist in speed skating wh~n
the Winter Olympics were last held 1n
Lake Placid in 1932, also said; "Im·
possible.''
"We have all our facilities ready
and need to do nothing that would
affect !:he environment and cause
controversy. And· we have ful l
financial backing from both the
federal and s tate government."
President Ford has written a letter
to Lord Killanin emphasizing that
what happened in Denver eoukt not
be repealed it Los Angeles and Lake
Placid are awarded the 1980 Games.
Killanin referred bri~fly lo the
problems or choosing sites Cor 1980
and the proR()sed changes in tho
eligiblity ruleS: But he came baclc
to political interference and said all
other matters "are r elegated to
unimportance compared with this
recent daoge rous and destructive
element.
No Panic
As Blaze
Hits Engine
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. (AP) -"No
one panicked, but I didn't hear any
laughter or joking either," said coach
Tom Ha rp after the plane carrying
the Indiana State University football
team made a forced landing due to a
fll'e in one engine,
"Everyone got a little uptight, par·
ticularly when the stewardess started
explaining emergency crash-landing
procedures," h~ said. "I've never
seen the team hs ten with such inten~
sity.''
The 48 m embers of the JSU team
and coaching Starr returned safely to
Terre Haute Sunday after making the
landing at Lexington , Ky., and
changing planes. They were returning
from Cullowhee, N.C., after Satur·
day's 18·3 los5 to Western Carolina.
"I'm a private pilot myself," Harp
said, "and since it was a chartered
flight, I went ioto the pilot's cabin."
''Suddenly, I heard the warning bell
and saw an engine trouble light come
on, so I just tried to raturn lo my seat
noncha la nty.''
llarp said some of the pl Syers heard
the bell and looked out the window at
the right engine on the twin-engine,
propellor-driven North Central
Airlines Convair 580. It was on fire
and had been shutoff.
''Even football players know
they're in trouble when the propellers
don't go around,'' Harp said.
The pilot extinguished the fire in the
air and new with one engine lo the
nearest airport -Lexington's Blue
Grass Field. The plane landed safely
about 7 p. m . Saturday.• • r
Golf Results
SAN AHTOH10, Te11:, (AP) -Flfll•I Storti
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Today's
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VOL. 67, NO. 294, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1974 c TEN CENTS
Police Due
Sooner
Third Party Bid?
For Irvine? Reagan Says He _ilfight Lead Effort
By DOUGLAS FRITZSCHE
01 ttlt 01llr ,.111>1 Still
Irvine's police force could shift rrom
contract-to city control -sooner than
the Sept. I, 1975 date originally expected.
After the first few days of getting
his bearings, Irvine's newly hired Direc-
tor of Public Safety Leo E. Peart said
he intends to draw up a series of
alternative police department structures
for consideration by the city council.
At least one of the alternatives, he
said, will call for speed.ed transition
from the city's current ~ntract · with
Costa Mesa to development of the city's
own force.
Cily Manager WU!iam Woollett Jr.
said this morning that a scbedu1e v.111
be drawn up by Nov. 1 describing when
the information will go to the cowicil.
Peart said speeding release of the
details of the transition could help allay
concerns of officers assigned to Irvine.
who must decide whether to transler
or stay with Costa ?i1esa.
That's the biggest concern we have,"
\Voollett said. "Costa Mesa wants the
best officers, of course, and so do we."
.At an introductory meeting with police
and firemen serving Irvine Friday, Peart
. , said, many or the questions asked con-
cerned specifics of pay and working
conditions which have yel to be resolved.
"l can tmderstand their concerns,·•
Peart said. "but I told them if they
want to stick the city for an extra
$10 a month for shooting pay and so
forth , they can stay with Costa Mesa.
"If they want to take part in something
different and exciting, they can come
over with us."
City council discussions during the
summer showed interest in establishing
a higher than usual pay scaJe for Irvine
as a way lo attract and hold the best
peraonnel available.
Other areas being explored by the
new director are the Jtructure of the
department-whether to have a tradi-
tional military form or a less stMJctured
form-and how to deploy officers most
effectively. ·
"It's a big area," said Peart after
three days on the job. "I'll have to
look into it further before I can tell
the best way to cover it."
2 Corinty Groups
Pinn t0 File
D1Jl)I PU.I 1'111119 ff P'llrldl O'Dtnntll
Long and Short of It
Brad Drew, 7, is willing, but officials at the Harbor Area Boys Club
are looking for some adults they believe will be more able to referee
basketball games this coming season. Volunteer coaches are needed,
too. Boys club basketballJ'rogram gets under way next month. Vol-
unteers for coaching an officiating .chores can call 548-9387, or
642-8372 for details.
Tape Tells Nixon Advice
Carpenter Suit
The Environmental C'.oalltion or Orange ~ T 0
Co~ty and the People 's Lobby plan
Dean on 'Complicity~
to file a suit in Orange County Superior
Court Tuesday charging that state Sen.
Dennia Carpenter has violated conHict
of interest laws.
Carpenter's Income from the Golden
State Improvement Co··~ittee, bis
primary political backers, were not pro-
perly reported as inoome, said Lorrell
Long, a spokesman for the environmental
coalition.
Carpenter's opponent in the senate
race, Frank Barbaro, has charged that
Carpenter used political contributions to
pay for a Sacramento aparbnent and
a housekeeper.
Carpenter has denied the charge.
WASffiNGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon advised his counsel, John \V. Dean
III. on March 21, 1973, to make a
"rather general" statemenl c I ear in g
each White House aide or any complicity
in \Vatergate, according to a tape played
in court tOday.
The ·tape of the discussion on the
afternoon of March 21 was played in
U. S. District Court as Dean, the
government's first witness in th e
Watergate cover-up trial. appeared lo
be nearing the &id of rour days of
direct questioning by the prosecutors. '
general, the head of the Justice
Department's criminal division a n d
others conduct an investibation a n d
report at the President's request.
But White House chief of staff •1.
R. lia!deman. also a defendant' and also
present at the March 21 meeting. ob-
jected that such an idea would prompt
cries of a "super cover-up.''
Dean replied: "All right, is that, is
that better? Or is it better to have,
you know, just, just keep golng to have
the thing build up and all of a sudden
collapse, and, then pefiple get indicted,
and peopfe, uh , get larnlshed?"
WASHINGTON (UPI ) -Gov. Ronald
Reagan said today Ile might lead a
conservative third party presidential bid
in 1976 if the two national parties fail
to ''represent_ the will ot th~ American
people."
Reaga,n also said that President Ford
will be challenged ror the 1976 GOP
presidential nomin ation "if there is a
failure (ln his administration), if things
have gro~'ll worse instead or better ..
The California conservative made his
comments in a televised interview with
Paul Duke for broadcast by the Public
Broadcasting Service tonight.
Asked if former Gov. Nelson A .
Rockefeller should be confirmed as vice
president in light of the controversy
swirling about his nomination, Reagan
said he hoped "that he could be con-
firmed . I would hope that they would
find there has been no wrongdoing.
"It is impossible for me to believe
that Nelson would ever intentionally do
anything wrong or dishonest. I don 't
think he has. "
Asked by Duke if he would lead a
third party movement in 1976, Reagan
replied:
"Well, whether t ~·ould lead the move--
ment or whether I would join in support
of such a movement I think would
have to depend on whether it became
evident that both parties had so far
failed , that they no longer c o u I d
represent the Will of the American peo-
S1fbpoenas
Set for Nixon
•
File Material
BULLETIN
WASHINGTON (UPI) - A federal
Judge Lhis afternoon temporarily barred
former PrHldent Nixon Crom transferring
his White House tapes and documents to
California• but granted him sole access to
them -exctpt /or subpoenaed material
-while their future Is determined .. ·---
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The special
Watergate prosecutor's office disclosed
today that a grand jury soon will issue
new subpoenas for materials from the
While •louse files of fonner President
Nixon.
Attorney Peter Kreindler of the pro-
secutor's office 'made the disclosure dur.
ing a hearing 'on Nixon's request for
a court order enabling him lo move
those tapes and documents out of the
\\'hite House to Laguna Niguel.
The suit also seeks to give Nixon
the right to review any materials sought
in future subpoenas. But it does not
seek to interfere with materials already
under subpoena or nl'eded in the current
Watergate cover-up trial.
Nixon's attorney, Herbert J. l\:1iller,
argued that moving the materials to
the West Coast v.·ould not interfere with
the cause of justice.
But Kreindler said that ~1iller had not
taken into account '·o n · going in-
vesligations" when he listed the material
that Nixon .wants to move to the roast.
issued ," Kre indler said
"lie has not included grand jury sub-
poenas that he was i n f o r m e d ai>
proximately 10 days ago ·would be
issued," Kriendler said.
l\:loments later, Miller was on his feet,
protesting that the terms of his legal
(See NIXON, Page All
The groups filing the suit contend
that Carpenter's expenses, filed In the
campa.Jgn contribution report, did not
jibe with income indicated in a conflict
of interest statement.
Carpenter responded to the charge
today, "Ir these are envifonmentaltsl
groups, it is kind ol hard to st~tch •
the imagination to see that this is an ·
covlronmental issue."
Nixon told Dean in the tape:-recorded
conversation that be should prepare a
written report "which is a very general,
understand. Understand, (laughs) J don't
want to get all that goddamned
specific ...
Birthday Death
tiJss Long, however, said that the
senator's i n v o I v c m e n t with land
developers is an environmental issue
and "We are concerned with the t,elation
' betwec:n land use and political refonn."
DOW MOVES UP
IN LA.TE TRADING
NEW YORK (UPI) -Pric:es turned
higher in slow trading today on the
New York Stock Exchanft. (Tables. Page Ai) .,... •
The Dow Jones industrial average,
off nearly roor Points duririg the mom·
lnit gain«! 14.94 Polnta to 669.fl'l.
'Prlcts alto were higher In moderate
trading on the American Stock Ex·
change.
-rnveston In the past weveral •~slons
ha\IC been encouraged by a reduction
in interest ratts the past few weeks.
1
"But if you make it rather general
in terms or my -your -investigation
indicates that this man did not do lt,
this man did not do ii, thls man did
do that," Nixon said, emphasizing the
Bo.r 4ccidentally Slain by Fath er
"did" and "that" the last time he used Cl~ICAGO (AP) -Thow.as q o s s
those words. . wanted to go to Ille mo\'les on his
Dean, who was said at the Ume to 14th birthday and went to his father's
be heading Nixon's investigation o ( gas station to earn some money. The
Watergate, then repeated for Nixon an ··father· acddentally shot the boy to tleath
earlier suggestion to allow witnesses, during an attempted holdup by a teen·
including White House aides, to go before age girl.
the grand jury under the protection
of immunity from prosecution so tbllt It was the first time Thomas had
they mlgbL give f\.lll testimony. worked at tile station. The holdup at-
John D. Ehrlichman, then No. 2 Whitt tempt came hours before a planned
House aide who was silting In on the birthday ctlebrabon I.bat was WI Include
meeting, resisted Dean'a suggestion and -Tfiomas' favorite cbocolat.c cake.
said "you end up with people. ln and "I usually make his favorite cake out of the White H~ Indicted for
various. for various offenses." on hls birthday and then be y,·antcd
Ehrllctiman,• one or five former Nixon to celehratt by going downt;own with
associates on trial for the cover-up, the kids he's grown up with." said
proposed Instead th.it Nixon lnue lwo the boy's mother. Dovie Doss. "I dJdn't
or thrte papen summarizin& the \Vhil e have •nY money to 81 .. ·o-1Um 80 he
Rouse review of the case for the Senate calll'd his father to ad: to carn-.ome!j Watergate committee -which at thet
.,.time had just been established. Thomas was klllM u he ~cd
llcan BllO prol>O'<d that a spcclnl wlth a 16-ycar<>ld girl who entered the
panel mad.u.p__oJ_thc dcpu~ attorney -AeO'ic·c sialioo Ullda)' morning dre55ed
as a man and announced a holdup.
She carried a pistol , authorilies said.
Thomas grabbed her and his father .
Jlenry, 47, picked up a revolver kept
in the staUon and fired. homicide in·
vestlgator Patrick Conley said. 0 n e
bullet struck the girl in the ha n d ;
another entered the boy·s chest and
killed him .
"This Is one: case \Vhere having a
handgun for protection dido 't do any
good at all," said Conley.•
The service station cash register t\.'ld
only a· smell amount or money, he
said.
The girl was hospltallud l\nd Mmed
in a delinquency petition charging her
wt1h murder and armed robbery.
~ Doss. who ts separated from his wife.
told her of the shoOting later SundAy.
Thomas has lhrec broth<'ri and sisters
y;ho al.so ILYC wjth their mother.
"They jusL can 't btlle,.,e' 11.'' ~1rs.
Dols 1aid. "All his friends came over
yesterday and they don't really beli.evc
ho11.dead either," -.,.--------
pie.··
Pressing Reagan for elaboration. Duke
asked, "In olher V.'Ords, you're nOt clos·
ing the door to the possibility?''
''I am saying," Reagan said, "'that
such a possibility v.·ould exist under
those circumstances. I am hoping it
won't be necessary."
Reagan was also asked whether Ford
v.·ould be "vulnerable" to a conservative
challenge if 1he economy v.·orsened over
the n'ex~ tv.·o yea rs. and 1f •so, v.·ou!d
he challenge lhe President rdr I h c
nomination.
"The thi.nk ~hat's a queshon lhctl t:an't
be ansv•ered," Reagan said. •·1r then·
is a failure. if things ha Ve grown \\'orse
ins!ead of better , v.·ell. th~ I'm qu ite
sure that. yes, then there v.·ould be
challenges."
No11p11blic Scfaools
Supreme Court Nixes
Parents' Tax Credits
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The U.S.
Supreme Court today struck down a11
unconstitutional a California law giving
tax credits to parents of nonpc.bHc school
children.
The court acted in a brief order af-
firming the deciion or a three-judge
court. The lower court said in granting
a summary judgment Ylithout trial that
the law, on ils face, impermissi bly fun-
nels slate funds to fost er religious in-
stitutions.
Three justices wanted to hear the
case in oral arguments, but it takes
four votes to bring a case to the court
-for full review. Justices Byron R. White
and William H. Rehnquist, plus Chier
Justice Warren E. Burger, contended
that the law should be upheld.
The Supreme Court has knocked down
state laws giving direct or indirect flJ'lao--
cial aid to sectarian schools unless there
are stringent guarantees that the money
will be used for nonreligious purposes
such as bus transportation or
nonreligious textbooks.
Last tenn, the court struck down
a New York law similar to California 's
but which also granted tax money to
parochial schools directly. The court
said there was no way to assure that
the grants were not used for religious
purposes wilhuut establishing a large
inspection system that would deeply in-
\•olve the governm~nt in religious in·
stitutions.
Policeman Slain
Alone in A1u1ex;
Mystery Probed
LOS ANGELES (AP) - A s I ate
policeman died at County·UOC }ledical
Center after being shot in the head
early today as he was v.·orking alone
in a State Police annex office in the
dov.·ntown Slate Office. B u i I d i n g ,
authorities said.
The officer. David A. Jack, 23, of
Riverside. was shot in the left side
of the head. apparently at Liose r:?.~ge,
authorities said.
Aiithorities cordoned off !he a re a
uround lhe Los Angeles Civic Center
after Jack's body was lound in the
ground·noor annex shortly after I a.m.
A search of tile area f; ilcd t<> reveal
any clues lo the gunman. authorities
said. Investigators "·ere unable to ex·
plain a moti ve for the shooting.
Authorities said Jack's body v.·as found
by an offit'C v.·orker returning lo the
building after taking a break.
Jack. "'ho was responsible for checking
state cmployes entering the building-,
\\'as the only person on duty in the
lobby at the time of the shooting, police
said.
Because lhe building is in use around
the clock, the doors alwa ys rem a i n
unlocked, they added.
A police s poke sn1an said Jack
reportedly was shot at close range with
a large-caliber "·capon. More than one
shot was believed to have l:>efn fired
at the orncer because traces of chipped
marble from a wall near the ofrll.'e
were found near the victim. I he
spokesman added.
Authorities said Jack's 5 er\' I cc
revolver was still in its holster.
l\lesa Council, Starr
l\'lectiug P<ASlponcd
No regular fourth i\J~sda)' CostR l\tesa
City Council and staU meeting v.•t\I be
held lhis v.•e<>k, bec;iuse of B California
Lea.aue of Cities' Con\'cnlion 111 Los
AngCle5.
The s1udy Sl'sslon has bc<'n postponed
until Oct. 29 In tht: fifth floor conference
roo111 ol Cost.e Mesa Ctty Hall, --
•
In its appeal. California did not defend
the ~!ate law, but said the three-judge
court acted improperly by ma king Its
ruling without a trial. California said
the isslles are too complex to be dealt
with in such a summary fashion.
State law provides for tax credits
up to $125 per dependent attending a
non·public school, either religious or
secular. The permissible ta.i. ct e d It
declined as parental income inc reased .
Families Ylilh over $19,000 inc o me
received no tax break.
The suit was brought by four taxpayers
and two non-profit groups dedicated to
maintaining separation of churc:ti and
state -United Americans for Public
Schools and Americans United f o.r
Separation of Church and St.ate.
Firebombing
0£ Costa Mesa
House Probed
Arson investigators today v.·ere probing
a bizarre Mololov cocktail attack on
a Costa Mesa home which caused an
estimated $7 ,500 damage Saturday night.
The st ructure at 3 O 7 0 Yellowstone
Drive was not badly burned itself, in-
\'estigators said. beyond a living room
sofa and the immediate area v.·here
the missile exploded. .
Fire Marshal Ed Lewis said today,
ho"·ever, that the fire Ii t e r a 11 y
superheated the rented home of l\trs.
Dolores Campos, consuming all Ille ox·
ygen inside.
"Plastic items all through the house
v.·ere melted," he said, describing the
situation as almost creating a gigantic oven.
Arson investigators and Costa l\lesa
Police Detective Tom Boylan today were
seeking any possible motives for the
arson attack on the Campos home. ---
Chief Lewis said the tenant and her
children v.•erc gone for the weekend
and returned shortly before noon Sunday
lo discover the charred sora under the
living room v.·indow.
"The liquid ran out and thl! fire burned
itself out," Fire i\Iarslml Lewis explain·
ed.
He said the r esidence in the
northeastern comer of Costa l\lesa i5
o~Tied by io.1ax Hiles, 2212 Continental
A\'e .. Costa io.lesa.
Orange Coast
\\'ea ther
Cons'iderable Jo1v cloud iness
through Tucsduy rnorning \\'llh
S(lme sunshine in the af1en1oon
Tuesday. Slightly w11mcr with
beach highs at fill rising to 73 in·
land. Ulws. tonight 57 to 6~.
Jl\SIDE TODA\'
Pre~1de11t ford 111uL1\lr.t1clt's
pres1d1)11t £cl1e1iorr1a have SCl!tr·
al f/11ngs 111 111111d a.t rhl'y fllt'"t
tod<1y. r orrl is n1tere sh•d iu 1/1e
11ew 01/ fi11d1t i11 Soutl1t>r11 Mt.>I·
1co. E;rl1everr1a 1.t uHeresl.ed ul
rt11t wo1g r/11• brocero !l'Ork pro-
gront i1l U11iled Statei Se1;
story. Page .44.
INl!llll •
L. M ... Yd C.11!"•~·· Ci.lvllN
"'"" C~uwtrd
0.1hl Ntll<tt
W-d119ri•• I'••• lll.ntt•l1ln,,...~
flM1t11•
"trMCIM
.. .. ..
14•t .. ..
'" .. .. .. .,
°"'n L•~dt,., 11 Moot.+~ At
NlhOlllt NtWl .. I
0..•~• C1111tlf .1.11 .._.,, ••-1 '-fl ., ....
Sl9U M1A.tts A•
lt!P•l,.ft •1 , ...... ,.. ,,
W••"-> •t .. , •• flltwt .1.4
'•
" ' OAlloV PlLOl C Mondl1, October 21, lll74 ---·----"'
queen uf Eii1a11cio
Gay Spies is 1974 homecoming
queen at Costa 1'1esa's Estancia
High School. She was crowned
Friday--niJht during-halftime
of Estancia • Corona del Mar
football g,ame. Eagles won the
game •king the queen's
reign a happy one.
/llesa queen
Senior Heidi.h1eisenheimcr, 17,
is Costa ?...t"esa High School's
1974 homecoming queen. She
was tapped Friday night dur-
ing halftime of b1esa.Vi1la Park
football game. t.lustangs gained
a queen, but lost football game.
Concorde Makes
Mexico-SF Trip
In 2 Hours Plus
S1\N FRANCISCO (AP) -The droop-
Sooot Concorde supersonic transport
whistled into San Francisco lnlernational
Airport today after an I.IJOO..mile (light
from Mexico City in 2 hours, 19 minuies.
It v.·as t.he sixth landing of the Con·
troversial British-French SST in the con-
tinental Lnlted Stales. Hundreds of airport emp1oyes. visitors
:lnd passengers ~·aich\."'<i the gleaming
~·hitc aircraft lax1 up on its spidery
landing gear.
The 1..100-rnilc-pcr·hour aircraft. \1'hich
-took off fron1 ttlcxico City at 8 a.m. ~POTf, crnerged fro1n a srnoggy sky
over San Francisco Bay to touch down
ctt 10: 19 a.m. Cyrlt ~lagnin, the cily's chief of pro-
tocol v.·ho arrived on the Concorde. slUd
"'It was a wonderful flight. Very qui~l
and smooth." ,·;:=,.=.;.;;:;;.....~~~~~~
ORANGE COAST CM
DAILY PILOT
no.. Or8"0!' c.,.\1 0,,,1, Ptiet ·..,1,, -cfl •1 ~-OoM<I tM N• .. l ·Prn1. " P<Jl>l•!oh!'d l>y tM .0<.,..9' (O<l•I PUl)il..,,>llQ (0'"°"11' S.p,or ~!c
rctohO"' ••t pUOl1 ... ~G ~""'' lnt"'4t F•l .... ~.
lo< C.0•'• MeW, N•"'flll'I llrol<h H.-..t11>QIM
""..,n Fo~l\I~'" Y•llff l .. <lll'W Bf"'"· ,,,,,..~oa1'1>«~ •"" S.1> 0,....,11~''511" Ju•n C•o••!••no. A \•fl<!'' •'"')OOMI ..o.uon ., 11Ubt•~<l '>•tu•o•n •"d .....,\\f.., TM or<'~•ll''
pu!ll•\llt<'ICI cl•nt "•!JI)) l'H•I Oty ~ttttl, Cal!•
........ C:•l•l<l•ll•• -Jl&26.
Robert N. Weed "''"°'"' •na Plltot•"'°'"
Jack R. Curlcv
Thomas Keevil
EdilOI
Thomas A. Murphinc
Mall•lll"' f.llllCll'
Charles H. l.oos R!(.l\ard P. Nall ,l~i1'11f\I ,..,. ~.IQJl'IQ Edi !or'>
Cost~ M•sa Offite
:nl-\\ ••• ~'"'" l<q1!11>9 Afd'rt": "0 lkto IJ.loO. ~
Other.Ofllces
Nt .. riort .. oKlt JIJ.J o.i,......, ~<I
... ollfttk•t" 11~<;1t-1•t~t
t4\ll'llt"'ll"' ... tolfl 1111~ l!ol«h llov•~vrl!
1.wl CMlfttAll. llOl HOll!I Ii• c.m"'° Re•
"
$30 Million Fratld?
GeoTek Swin·dle
Case Scheduled
SAN FRA/\'CISCO (APJ -Businc:i!!li
promoter John "Jack" P. B11rkc. p,ii1-
c·lpat figure in an ntleged $30 mlll ion
GeoTek oil drilling swindle, 1s to go on
trial in federal court for fraud 1'uescl:t~·
The 48-year-Old Burke's a l tor n r y ,
James ~t:iclnnis, said he "'ill ask U.S.
Dist rict Judge \\'1lli:im T. S•A·ei gerl for
a postponement because of alleged pre.
judicial p1.1blicity, much of it swirling
around Atty. Ctn. Evelle J . You11ger's investment in a Burke oil venture and
a loan to Younger from the promoter.
Younger, seeking re-eleclioo. claims
his opponent is heh.ind the controversial
publicity and denies allegations lhat he,
as Loo Angeles district attorney five
~·ears ago , ignored requests l o ln-
\'estigate Burke's operalions.
tttaclnnis also cited ne"·s stor if'S
about Los Angeles Times publisher Otis
Chandler's involvement in GeoTek, form -
C'd by Burke to sell oil drilling imiled
partnerships.
Se rvices Set
For Foriner
Coast Student
ASHLAND, Ore. (UPI) -Memorial
sC'rvices will be held on campus \Vednts·
day for Gary Manlove, the blind student
body president at Southern 0 r e g o n
College.
?ttanlove. 40. who died of a heart
attack last Wednesda,y at S 0 C ' s
Stevenson Union, was the oldest student
ever to ser\'e as student body president
at the school. Manlove, who made his
v.•ay around campus with his Cennan
shephe rd guide dog Grandy. was to have
been in his senior yea r this semester.
"I' had looked for\vard to this year
and to being able to cooperate with
Gary in fulfilling his aspirations for
Southern Oregon College,'' said Dr .
James K. Sours, SOC president.
"Jn terms oi sheer humanity and
rourage, Gary was an example for us au. Our tribute to him should be lo
make this the very finest year in the
history of the college, a year of courtesy
and love."
?ttanlove, who was born in Los Angeles,
was student body president at his junior
high school and president of his high
school's student coW'ICU in Sou t be r n
california. He attended East Los Angeles
Junior College. Orange Coast College,
a!ld California Polytechnic C o 11 e g e .
Be!ore moving lo Oregon, he was in
the swimming pool and building main-
tenance v.·ork in Southern California.
?tlanlove lost his eyesight eight year$
ago when he contracted d i a b e t i c
retinitis..
He was divorced and is survived by
two teen-age daughters v.'ho live with
their mother in Newport Beach.
Chandler is a defendant in a federal
civil suit brought by the Securtlies and
l!:xchange Con1n1ission in tt-tay, t 9 7 3 ,
alleging that Bw;ke. Chandler and others
violated securities \av.·s and defrnudcd
2,200 investors "'ho put $30 1nillion into
the various oil drilling programs.
Chandler. "·ho testified befor•! the
fl!deral grand jury "'hich indicted Burke
June 17, has denied any fraudulent con·
duct.
lie said he invested and lost $248.000
in Burke ventures and that he returned
$373,000 in free stock and $109,000 in
nnder's fees he received for inLroducing
potential investors to Burke.
A court source said that a c t r e s s
Natalie Wood· Nancy Sinatra Sr. and her
dau.i;:htcr Nancy Sinatra have been
subpoenaed to testify at Burke's trial
about their investments in oil drilling
programs.
'l'he souce said the government is
expected to call about 30 witnesses and
Burke about 12. The .rial is estimated
to lake from 2~ to seven weeks.
Burke is charged u·i!h unlawfully of·
fcring and selling securities -
specifically investment contracts in the
form of co-ownership interests in the
1968 J. B. Oil Exploration program and
pre·formation subscriptions to a GeoTek
Hesources Fund limited partnership.
He also is accused of making untrue
statements and omitting oeC1?5Sary facts ·
in selling securities, and also with con·
spiracy.
Two attom~ys, Arthur J. Lempert,
42, San ~1atoo, and Robert S. Rose, «, San Rafael, were indicted on con-
spiracy charges in the case. T h e y
a!\egedly conspired to con<:i!al material
facts in helpin·g prepare for the SEC
an affidavit purporting to fully renect
Burke's ownership in various fl rm s.
Their attorneys are expected to request
a separate trial.
Assistant U.S. Atty. F. Steele
Langford. who will prosecute the case,
has allegC'd that Burke d i v e r f. e d in-
vestors' money from various J. B. Oil
programs. combining led it w:i.h his ov.'ll
funds and then used it to a c q u ire
numerous oil prospects of bis own.
The indictment said $3.6 million
obtained from 177 investors in the 1968
J. B. Oil program and about $6.7 million
Crom 466 investors in the Geo Te k
partnership.
The SEC civil suil was filed ft.lay
17, 1973,.against GeoTek Resources Fund,
Inc.: 13 related firms; Burke; bis
brother. Rober~: Chandler; Lempert,
Arthur Young and Co., accountants, and
others. That trial is set !or Feb. 3.
Among other things the SEC s u i t
alleges various schemes were used to
obtain money fraudulently, that untrue
statements were made aod that proceeds
from the sale of securities were "misus-
ed. converted and misappropriated."
It also claims that materially fal se
and misleading reports and registration
statements .were filed with the SEC.
High . Court Lets Stand
.
Hospital Abortion· Rule
From 'Vire Sen•lce5
\\'ASHINGTON -The U.S. Supreme
Court let stand today o ruling that
municipal hospitals 1nay not rest r i ct
abortions to those required lo save the
life of the mother.
The court. \\'ith Justice Byron R. \\rhite
dissenting, declined to review the
decisions of the U.S . Circuit Court in
St. Louis req11iring public hospitals to
pennit qualified staff members to -----HIGH COURT WON'T R~VIEW
OBSCENITY APPEALS, P•g• A4
perform aborlions.
The case arose Crom a chaJlengc by
l\\'O physicians, Dr. Charles J. ~Tock
and Or. CMrles A. Tietz. to a rule
of the Virginia. 1'1inn. ~1unicipnl Hos pital
prohibiting nonlherapeutic abortions .
Appealing the decision of !he circuit
court. officials of the hospital sttid it
would m('an thal ''every small municiral
ho~µitRl n1ust open its doors to abortion~
on dl'1nand C\'err 'hough there may be
other hospitals and clinics In the gcnerel
\.1c1nit~' \vhich are agrc<!allle to pcl'forn1·
in~ abortions.''
Thev said the 1973 decision of the
Supreme Court striking down slate nnti·
abortion laws does not require th i s
mult.
They also contended the circuit court
ignored a ?t1innesota law ex em pl in g
hospitals from liability !.>r refusing to
permit abortions.
''The statute most 'clearly end une-
qulvocally expresses the public policy
of the stale . . . that no ho!pltal or
nny kind In the state may be roerced
_,Iesa Artist Lo -c.os
TV 'Set;; lo 1'h ief •
into becoming an abortion mill," the
hospital o!ficlals told the court.
The Supreme Court ruled in 1973 that
the decision on whether to have an
abortion is up to the doctor and his
patient through the first six months
of pregnancy.
Governments may pass Ja\YS barring
abortions only durin¥ the lac.t trimester
of pregnancy and even then they are
permissible under certain circumstances.
The 8th Circuit said the Virginia City
ordinance '·demonstrates no compelling
circumstances'whlch \A-Wld mandate this
hospital 's abortion restricting rules."
It said t\1:0 doctors who challenged
the law had a right to practiei! tnedicine
at the publicly supported hospital based
on their professional belief that abortions
are an acceptable µIan for their patients.
The appeals C"OUrt pointed out that
lhis \\'l'IS not a case of forcing any
i11di~idual doctor or other medical pro-
fessional to perform abortions against
his 11il1. The decision also did not require
private or church·supported hospitals to
pC'rmi! abortion operations.
"Instead, we deal with unnecessary
r('strictive rules imposed by a stnte
fa cility upon a constitutionally protected
choice,'' the Jo.,.,·er courl said.
UC/ Launch.es
Fund Rai.ser
UC rrvtne launched an ambltloM
$100.000 fund-raising drive tOCJy
"hicl? it hopes will lead lo ma}or
univtrsity :tthlt!llC status in th~ im-
mtdt:11e fl!lurt'.
Included. in Utl's plans, as 001·
lined by assistant athletic direl""
tor Rod Sherman today . ! a 16,000-
Sl':a t mullipurpost! mini • dome.
.... ,hlcb could be less than tl\'e years
av.·ay.
The fund·raislng dri,.. "'ill en-
compass a six·v.·eek perk>d wllh
Sherman optimislic that ucr will
have $100,000.by OcC. 3. See Sports
Section today', Page At.
A Reul Sparl~le1•
lt was a sparkler of a day along Orange Coast when photographer
focused his camera recently on this scene of pleasure craft at their
n1oorings. Silhouetted scene would be hard to capture now that coastal
low clouds have turned everything gray.
Harbor Patrol Men Make
Two Rescues on One Call
Orange County Harbor patrolmen Sun-
day afternoon extinguished a fire at
sea and helped pump out a sinking
cabin cruiser.
Two patrol units responded lo a fire
at sea call received from Eleven Seas
VI. a 48-foot cabin cruiser owned by
Costa ?ttesa car dealer John C:Onnell,
55, of 1417 Antigua Way, Newport Beack!_.
Fireman Bikes
For Hurt Son
Fireman Wendell Maberry o C
Costa Mesa completed one 25-mile
circuit in the Orange County Bike-
a-thon Saturday lo raise funds for
the American Cancer Society.
He took the place of his son,
John, 13, after Ille boy broke his
leg in a blcycle accident last week.
"He "''as one tired fireman,
but John was grateful," Mrs .
Sharon Maberry said today.
By making the trip, Fireman
Maberry earned $177.50 pledged in
amotmts varying from a dime to
a dollar a mile from 55 sponsors
son John had signed up.
Using chemical fire extinguishers, the
patrol officers quickly doused the elec-
trical fire aboard Connell's cabin crWser.
None of the three persons aboard
the craft, Connell, his wife and son,
were evacuated.
Persons aboard a second cabin cruiser
hailed a Harbor Patrol boat that was
~rking on the . lire and reported their
craft was taking on water.
Two pumps were rushed aboard the
3fr.foot cabin cruiser Ampac II.
Later it was discovered two motor
cooling hoses had burst, causing sea
water to rush into tbe boat as it traveled
just outside the Newport Harbor jetty.
Connell's boat was towed into the
harbor. A quick inspection showed that
the fire was caused by an electrical
short. No estimate of damage w a s
available.
The Ampac was al!J> towed into the
harbor with its six passengers s ti I I
aboard. The broken hoses were repaired
and it continued m to lts regular slip.
According to a Harbor P a t t o 1
spokesman, tbe Coast Guard cutter Point
Divide was close at hand during the
3 p.m. rescue o_pqp.Uons near the bell
buoy outside Newport Harbor.
~ Maberry senior go t the boy's
card stamped at the various check-
points· in the event. The next step
calls for 1'1rs.. ?t1aberry to drive
John around to collect the money
from the sponsor .
•••• ---ea\end•f -
'--~~-~~~~~~~·
Two Men Nabbed
In Lagm1a Rape,
Kid11ap .t\.ttempt
An al!ege<I attempted kidnap and rape
in Laguna Beach was broken up Saturday
by a Laguna Beach police lieutenant
who arrested. two Los Angeles men .
Charles W. Roberts, 32, and Franklin
R. Maltma'n, 27. were booked £or alleged
attempted kidnap and assault with intent
lo commit· rape. 'They were released
on $25,000 each bail bond.
A ~year-old woman was punched in
the face and a man attempted to pull
her into a vehicle in the incident at
about 1 :SO a.m. Saturday in the 12000
block of South Coast Highway.
U. Neil Purcell reported that he was
driving in a police unit southbouOO. on
the highway when he passed a car
v.·hich slowed down and waited for him
to pass.
Purcell SWW\g a U·tum and ap-
prehended two men a ( t er a\legeding
observing a struggle be l w ce n a
passenger and a v.·oman.
Distaff Staffers
At U.N. Dtop
UNITED NATIONS {lJPI) -Th •
United Nations, which has proclaimed
1975 International Women 's Year ln a
drive to promote ·sexuaJ equality, is
under fire from its employes for not
practicing what 1t preaches.
According to the latest report o n
employment of women in th e pro-
tesg\onal. po\lcy.maklna ranks at U.N.
headquartcq.;the percmtage or female
staff in IM past year has actually fallen
-from ~9.87 pttetnl in 1973 to 19.56
percent 91 the end of September.
\\'Ith the iddlt1on of all 20· agencies
rcl111tOO to the United 'Nehons, the percen-
t~ge ls e.ven smaller. Women account
for 15.94 percent or 1,823 ot the 11,439
profeaslona\s tmploycd by the organlr.a-
llo1)t spread around the world.
TONIGHT
OC'C LECTURE -"Be ~1ode, Vogue
nnd Pretty Too." l\farjorie Swenson lec-
turer, Estancia High Forum, 7:30 p.m.
"RIGHT TO PRIVACY" -A 1 an
Westin, Columbia University professor
of public law , Sc1ence Lecture Hall,
8 p.m.
UCI LECTURES -"Commercial and
Investment Properties." Room 101
Physical Science Bldg. 7 p.m. "The
Occult," Room 178 llwnanitles Hall, 7
p.m.
TUESDAY, OCJ'OBER 2Z
SENlOR CITIZENS CLUB -Com-
munity Recreation Center, Tues., Wed.
and Thurs. 12-3 p.m.
NEWPORT·MESA SCHOO!. BOARD -
Regular meeting, City Council Qiam-
bers, 7:30 p.m.
OCC 1.ECTURE -"Behind the Head·
Jille!," Dr. Giies T. Brown, OCC Forum,
7:30 p.m.
"COMMUNITY '74" -Lecture series
sponsored by Newport Harbor Junior
League. "History of. Orunge County,"
Science Lecture Hall, 7:30 p.m.
"THE REAi. INSPECTOR HOUND"
-South Coast Repertory T h e a t e r ,
ttirough Sttn. 8 p.m.
UCJ LECTURES -"New Directions
for Free-Lance Writers." Room I O l
Physical Science Bk!g., 7 p.m.
"Landmarks of A r t , ' ' Room 178
Humanities Hall, 7 p.m. ' 'Women 's
Forum," Room 140 Social Science Lab,
7 p.m.
Dental Drama
At Mesa School
A drama that theatergoers can really
get their teeth Into will be · presented
Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. by ~trs. K.arh:na
KraCt's third grade cla153 at Whittler
School ln Co8ta M'f'. .. ,,,. Toothache M)'>tery and The Ti'!a!
of the Dental Health Slx,1' will deal
with evil lntrigue by dlstardly, dtntaJ..
dM\Ogillll bact<rla and the !orces that
allow them to nourish.
mrreShmCnta from a burret of proptr
!oods !or good den!aol hoallh will be
served.
The school 111 ut 1800 \Vhittler Aile .,
and the public 11. lnVlted lo attend lbe 11ihow ~nted by the S.ycar-oltt troupe.
f'ro111 Page ;\I
NIXON ...
effort to move the presidential materials
were not intended to block a.ny criminal
investigation.
·• J'm willi.ng to amend (the request
10 move lhO materiafl) 10 udude..th•
grand jury subpoenas IO none. can aay
tbla: action was tiled for impeding any .
type of grand jury investigation or
Watergate trial," ~1iller said. "It was
!lied in_good faith."
Krelndler tcld newsmen alter the hear-
ing that the impending subpoenas and
the grand jury investigation c on c e r n
matters in the jurisdictian of the special
\Vatcrgate prosecutor. Ue refused 1 o
elaborate.
U.S. District Judge Charles Richey
announced he \\'Ould rule later in the
day or early Tuesday on the narrow
question of whether to issue a temporary
restraining order on use of the pre6idell-
tial material.
l.1iller said Nixon bas a right lo refuse
tG comply v.:ith some subpoenas o n
grounds or privacy or e x e e u t i v e
privilege. He said the ailing Nixon also
nlust prepare himself for f u t u r e
testimony at the \Vatergate cover·up
trial and cannot do so while hii materials
are in \Vashington.
Earlier in the day, arguing the question
of when the materials can be destroyed
unde r an agreement belWeen Nixon and
the General Se "'i c es Administration,
Miller said that cannot happen within
the next five years.
"I would like to lay thi s at rest
right now,'' he added. "This is absolutely
false."
~tilter said that under the agreement,
!ht: tapes and some documents would
be destroyed on Sept. 1, 1!184, 'or earlier
if Nixon dies. But he said the death
provision ""'ould not eome into play witil
after five years passed.
* * * Nixon T er1ned
Loser in State
Rnce for Senate
SAN FRANClSCO < APl -Fonner
President Nixon 's political foUowing is
at such low ebb that if he ran for
U.S. Senate only one in four Republicans
in his native state v.'Ould choose him,
the California Poll said today.
Pollster Mervin Field said that in
a survey pairing Nixon a g a i n s t in-
cumbent Democrat John Tunney for the
1976 Senate race, Tunney led NIJ:on
by a 53-point margin, 70 lo 12. He
said that among Republicans, Tunney
outpolled Nixon 43 to 26.
Field said the poll was taken because
of speculation that Nixon might decide
to seek elected public offi<:i! again.
The poll also showed Gov. Ronald
Reagan trailing TUnn~y in a possible
race for U.S. Senate by 13 percentage
points, although the Governor bas a
relatively high standing in public opinion
ratings as he closes his second term.
"All things considered, this is not
an unusually laCJ!:e vote deficit at thl1
st.age," Field srud. "':'oter support tor
nearly all Republican candidates is lower
now than in previous years.''
lle said that before Gerald Ford
became president it had been thought
Reagan might seek that post in 1976,
but that "most political observerS now
feel that it will be difficult if not im-
possible to deny Ford the nominatiOn
in 1976 if he wants it."
Police Hold Trio
In Dritg Death
S'l'. LOUIS (UPI) -Two young men
and a .,.,·oman today face n e g l i g e n t
manslaughter charges for allegedly !ail-
ing to get help for a suburban Los
Angeles man dying of a drug overdose,
polioo said.
Police said they seized half a million
amphetamine tablets. said to be valued
at $100,000. at a St. Louis County house
where Jerry Guerra, 28, of Rosemead,
died Sunday.
Thomas Kelly, 23, Rosemead, and the
occupants of the home, Jack WishnuU,
26, and Sharon Reed, 25, were all charg.
ed. with negligent manslaughter. Jotm
Petrik, 26, Woodson Terrace, Mo., wes
charged with unlawful possession of a
controlled subtance.
Stead11 .rob
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Slbieda ·Sheidayeva has been
awnrded the Red "llanner of
Labor in Russia for 100 years
of employment al the Kuba
Rug Factory in Azerbaldzban.
Said to be 114 years old, she
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