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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1974-10-22 - Orange Coast Pilot0 e oc
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El Toro Girl~ 13~ Form.er Newport
Falls at S~hool~ Cha1nber Chief
Dies Dour Later:
• . ·
TUESDAY AFTERNOON, OCTOBER 22 , 1974
YOL. l 1, NO. 1tJ, J S&CTtONS, n l'AGJ!S
Some Goblin
"1.fack" a 14·.month-<Jld English bulldog is all ready !or Halloween,
even though be doesn 't really n~ed a_ mask to look s.cary_... His own~r. ~a J ohnson or Salinas, leaves the 150:poun0 dog 1n lUs car while
shopping. Needless to say, Johnson never bothers to lock his auto.
El Toro Girl, 13 , Dies
·After Falling at School
Bv JAN \\'()RTH
Of 0ttlt o.nr l"Hot St1H
Uke the other SC\'enth graders at
Los Alisos intermediate School in El
Toro, carrie Lee Cottingham was just
beginning to get used to tbe big new
school.
1tfonday she ftll on a sidewalk at the
9Chool.. Less than an hour later, she
died at Saddleback Co!nmunity H06p\lal
-and officia1s still don 't know exal'tly
why.
She is the daughter of Richard and
Phyllis Cottingham of 15212 Arcadian
Ave., in the Aegean Hills section of
· ~li~ion Viejo. Carrie was less than
a month shy of her 13th birthday.
She was under medication for a thyroid
disorder, but her purenls say It tlid
not limit her activities.
Spokesmen for the Orange Co u n t y
Coroner's office sald today the cause
of death is still undc~ lnvestlgalion." ...
A deputy coroner salit 1t JS believed
death \Yas due to natural causes, not to a head Injury sustained in lhe fall ..
:rhe accident occurred at about 7:40 a.m. l\tonday, 10 minutes before school
otarted . Sc,hool orliciala said the girl
apparently was l'Wlning acro&.!I a planter
when she tripped aod fell.
Finding her unconscious. school staff
members appUed mouth ·to· mouth
resuscite.Uon unfif pa a medics took over.
DIES AFTER FALL
Carrie L" Cottingham
'I-la ppy' Recove1·.ht.g
•
The glrl't-mother rushed to lhe acene
and went ~hospital with b e r
daughter. But Carrie apparently never regained con9Ciousness. • NEW YORK (UPl) -~!argaretta
· Ro.1&ry for Carrtc -111 be recited at "ltappy" Rocketencr, recovering from
7:30 p.m. \\'edne!!day at.Sa d d J e back bre@st cancer surgery, spent another
~ I 220 E "aln Tustin comfortable night, a t ,Sloan·Kctterinrt ~ape , .M ' • o ~uncral man will be at 10 a.nl . Thurs· ~lemorial Hospital, her p hy s I c I a TI a
day at SI. Kilian's Cicthollc Church In reported ·today. A late morning medleal
AUsslon Viejo. . bulletin said the 48-yeat'<lld wife or vice
Besides her parents, Carrie is survived pr es Id c n t ·designate Nelson A. DY two tlrotlK!rr.-Wade')l5;-and Robert,--Rod:efeller !t i" ~p..e..r. i e 11 c:-lag only
18. minimum dlscontfort"
;, ,.
. .
She's 77, He's 29
Miner to Marry
Happy's Aunt? -.
LLAY, Wales (AP ) -A \Velsh coa l
miner's young ~n who says he is engag·
ed to Happy Rockefeller 1 s aged
millionaire aunt Rachel Filler expressed
fear today that the publicity about their
?>.Iay-and-Decen1ber romance \\' o u Id
"blow the v•hole thing.''
"When she sees the way the story
has blown up here, anything could hap-
pen," said 29-year-old Michael \Vilson
after London papers gave splash play
to his announcement ~ionday that he
and l\tiss Fit!er \\'Ould be married around
Chrislmas.
\Vil son told ne\\·smen they met last
January while he was working as a
butler at the Breakers Hotel in Palm
Beach. Fla. He said they got engllr.cd
in Ma y and his parents visited Miss
Filler in the United States.
"It's been made to look like some
sort of fairy tale -a fanlasy -and
It's not a bit ilke that," he said. "1'1'1
a realist and so is Mi ss Fitler.
"We have a genuine deep afreclion
for each other. but the papers have
made me look like a golddigger. She's
a very nice private person. but how
do you think she 'll feel seeing me all
over the front pages?
"She could easily get the \vrong im-
pression from what she secs in the
papers. How do you explain something
like that? She n1ight call it on now.
I don't know."
~fiss fitler lives in Philadelphia, and
sources there said she is 77.
She "'as not in1mediately a\'ailahle
for comment, but a spokesman for her
niece's husband. Vice P resident ·
designate Nelson A. Rockefeller. said:
'·I heard that such a [•'.ory was comin~
from Wales. I don 't kllOYl anything about
it. I think it may be correct. bul 1
just don't know."
,.1iss Filler was quoted in a British
ne\vspaper as saying. "AH hough I've
never been married, I've had plent.v
of offers. Nov; that I'm settled I feel
like givi ng It a try."
On the age gap, she saili "Michael
doesn't seem lo think it will affect
our relationship."
Wilson said he didn't \\'ant to talk
about the difference in their ages.
"I don 't think the gap in our ages
is at all in1por1ant . especially \Yhen
you really like a person," he said.
lie reported •;a little opposition" from
?>.I i~ Filler's legal and financial advisers.
"They probab!y thought I was after
her money." he said. "T must say it
crossed my mind once in a while. bul
that isn't why I am marrying her."
He added that t.li~ Fit ter gave him
the money to buy her engagement ring.
"It \Vas only a small dian1ond . and
the ring only cost about 50 po u n ti s
{$1151." he sai d.
r.-liss Filler. who lives in an exclusive
suburban area, refused lo mecl \\'ilh
(See AUNT, Page AZI
Handler Dies
Rattler Bites Cult Me 11iber
EAST LYNN, W. Va. (U PI) -A 28·year·old reli gious cult snake
handler died In this \Vayne Co unty commun ity of an untreated
snakebite -the same way his father-in·law died two 1nonths ago.
Lonnie Richardson, 28, died at his home fllonday, without med·
ical attention, less than 24· hours a(tcr fie. 'vas bitten on thR up~er
:right arm by a rattlesnake during a· Sunaay ni ~ious service
attended by about 50 persons. ·
Richard and his father-in-law Tallmade Adk ins, were nlentbers
of a cult meeting at the Jesus Church . The group bases its snake
handling practice on a ver5e in the 16th chapter of fltark:
"And these signs shaH follow them that believe: in l'lty n:unc
shnll they cast out devils, they shall speak with new tongues, th ey
shall take up serpenlSi" and If they drink any deadly thing. it shall
not-hurt them.!' . '
Auth orities planned to rile no charges since the state has no
law against the snakchandJing praclicc. /
DlllV l'lfo:tl Stiff 1'111111
DIES AT HOAG HOSPITAL
Newport'' Jack Barnett
Ja ck Barnett,
'ftf r. 1Ve1vport,'
Succ u11ibs at 65
Jack Barn~ll. known as "~1r. Newport
Beach" during his 19-year management
of the NC\\'port Harbor Cha1nher of Com-
merc~. died ~tonday niHht at Ho a g
Hospital of congesti'ie heart failu re and
complica ting illnesses.
~Ir. Barnett. 65. was firsl admitted
to Hoag llospital Aug. 15 follo).Vini;l a
h('arl atlack. I-le \VllS released Aug.
31 but returned to lloa~ Sept , 22, \1-'herc
he rcn1a incd until his death ~lonclay.
According to fri('nd~. ~Ir. Burnell in·
tended lo r('tire \Yhen he lllOVed 10
Nc\1'port in 1955. but was talked inlo
ma naging the almosl·dcfuncl Chamber
of Con11ncrcc.
Under his management, the chamber
gr<'ll' to 1.400 members and initialed
lll'I\ aciivites such as the Characlcr
no:it Parade, a pct project of ~1 r .
Baml.'ll's.
·' . .._,
Yic tirns lcl cl!,tif icil
S1\\J OIF:GO ~AP \ -A l'Oung boy,
his father and anQther 1nan frorn the
Lon~ Ueaf'h ::irt•n \\'Cr<,.idC'nt1fh'<I ~IOllday
as the deild Jn the crash of their plru1c
in fog Sriturd:iy night. The coroner's
oflic~ said they \\'ere Carl Nussbnun1.
30: his son Carl . 3. both of S.1n PC'<lro.
and llacold \Vcudlnndt, -t3~ (lf~iltn·
lngton.
l11flation
12.4% Over
Last Year
By The Associated Press
Consumer prices climbed 1.4 percent
In Los An geles and Orange cou nties
In Septembe r. the U.S. Bureau o( Labor
Statistics reported today.
Inflation has push('(\ prices up 10 per-
cent in the first nine months of this
yea r. Th('y are 12.4 percent abo~·e the
level of September 1973.
Suzanna Sadowsky. regional chief or
the bureau's Los Angeles ofncc . said
housing accounted for more than half
the over-all rise in September. These
increased 2.4 perccnl to 13.6 percenl
above a .rear earlier.
~tost of the rise v.•as accounted for
by n1ortgage interest rates, maintenance
and repairs.
Renters paid an avcra&.ic of 1.3 percent
1nore between July and Sep4 e1nbcr.
Residential telephone bills \\'ere up
an average of I. 7 percent. and household
furnishings rose 2.7 percent.
Fro:! prices increased 1.5 percent and
,\·ere 12.2 percent mo['{' than in Sc~
!ember 1973. Leading the increase \\'aS
a five percent boost in such items as
eggs. margarine, salad oil. sugar and
coffee.-
1\leats. poultry and fish went up 2.6
percent but still v.:ere 6.8 percent belo\v
;1 yea r earlier. The price or fruits and
\'egetables \\'SS 2.3 percent lo\.\·cr. dO\\'n
for the third strnight n1onth but 21
!Set PRI CES, Page A21
• Or~g:ci~oast
Weathe r
Kight and n1oming 1011· clouds
becon1ing 1nostly sunny in lhc
afll'rnoon \Vcdncsday. Slighlly
\\·armer "'ith highs in the upper
60s at the beaches to the nHd·iOs
inland. Ul\\·s tonight 57-62.
l~S IU E 1'011•\ V
Tlie Undersetrclory of thi• 111·
rerior says /1/s 1l<t'(lrll11c 11L c.r·
p~ct.s some--mnjor ~.~Jfills tchrtt
dr1/linf1 bf'!/i'fl8 Offsllurl' iu the
near" fulltre. Ser story µagtt 1\4.
Erm1' Bombed IJ
lM l ord Ar
C1llloolla AJ [11,,lhell , •••
Com•<I l l Crei lWflrd IJ
Del!ll Ntlkn AH ldllttlll l'l{'t •• !"llttr111~m1111 "u
"111111(.. ... •••
My Cll'ClllW Al "'"'C°" IU
1111~rmlttl.,,.. ,..,
A1111 L111ffr1 II
M1vlu All
Mutu11 'wnd• At
NAllll"lll Nt"" A• Ol'llMI C1u111y At•
1r1v11 l'llt'l~t '' 5P91'h All•U . 51flc;l M1rk1l1 M·I
Tt11vl11t11 AU
Tllt1!n, AU
Wttltltr IU
• s
ge Robbery Probed
~liit::ago Thieves Get Nea rl)' $4 Million
ClllCAOO (UPI) -Polite pa raded
emplo)l'.ll through lie dc-!~tor tests loduy
to try to !!Olve a weekend burglary
at thl' Arroorcd Expm~ Corp. whJch
may h.n ve netted the thieves nearly
$4 millioa, the biggt1st cash haul ln
thr. nati(lf1 '!! .history.
Authori11cs snid five persons, the ··ooes
\vlth the greatest access to the \'<!ult,"
· ..Busi11ess as Usual
'
were tcstl'<l li1onday, uno ther 20 wt'rc
undergoii1g te!ils tod ay ;ind C h i c a g u
police Sgt. John Castans said, "It llJl·
pears it could be un inside job."
Onl' inves tiga tor sai~ Lhl.' loss to tull•d
$3.8 million from the L'Orporalion's l~·hy-20 foot v:iul t. Company ofli cluls n:fusl'<l
10 speculate.
"\Ve don't know how large it is,''
'
•
·nrig·ht's In Coritrol,
Mum on Conflict Issue
8\• JOllN VAi.TERZA
001 tr.. El•llY Pllol S11"
(' Although chnrges continue to fly about
•· asserted conflict of interest on the Sooth 0 Coast Regional Zone Conservation Conl·
. 111ission, the panel's me1nbers r a n ~ through a day's business as usual ~1on
_'<ia~.
· ~ . It Started
~-:Witli a K~
'ft • PORTLAND, Ore. {UPI) -A
' ·-;Salem,. Ore. insurance man is be-
ing !hJed over a kiss and its al-.r,.. Jeged aftermath.
"' Linda K. Pennoyer, Las Cruces.
N.Ptr., ftled suit in U.S. District
Coort here against Raymond C.
Largeh l, Salem, a partner in an
ii\surance finn .
p
~
b,
o. The
0
compl
3
ainLat chargek~ !~;t ond
~ Aug. I , 197 rgenl 1::.:!!t."' an
embr8(,'ed her in his office "against .<, ,, her will" and when she "1vithdrcw"
.:.. frotJl .hl$ anns she fell and hit he
000
r
\r head. Miss Pennoyer seeks $100,
g; and medical expenses. ·
;: Frat Brotliers
: b Think It's Joke
t As 1'fe1nber Slain •
"'-OAKVALE. W. Va. (UPI) -When ~the gun fired and Michael Bishop f~ll.
r . his Bluefield Stale College fraternity ~uddies thought it \\.'as a gag. W.,. Frank Hallis was one of them.
,,. "'\Ylicn I heard the shot I stood,"
.Jo.1lallis said. "Then L was hit , loo, and
'JfJ started running."
As Rallis ran. Bishop. 24, started lo
get up and another shot rang out. He
• fell dead.
, ,:.._ 1,"At Ji'rst,:; sai d an o l her fraternity
member. "we thought it was a joke."
• Ecl M-.;n C. "Ned" Taylor Jr., a former
member of the fraternity. was charged
t· "'ith one count of murder and one of
.. ntalkioos '''Ouflding in the bizarre Sun·
.. : ·day incident at Pigeon Creek near here.
·lte v.·as·frecd on $10.000 bail.
·· An autopsy sho"·cd that Bishop. of
' Llnd side, W. Va., died from a bullet
.... lhrougp the brain fired at close ra~ge:
llal11s. of Bluefield, was hosp1tahzed ~.-'4'iLh a .neck WOWld. ~~ .. Police said the two \\'ere amqng 15
fraterni ty members out for a weekend
.. scavl'ngt•r hunt and ''informal initiation
! ceremonies."
• Late in the afternoon. the youths loung-1~ cd around an old cabin \Vhen a .22..coliber
pistol was pointed at Bishop's head and
I he \1·as killed.
Police said T:iylor. v.•hose family O~'ns
, the cabin. had joined the group at noon
: ar1n<.'CI \.\ i!h a pistol. , • : • • • i
! • I • • '
l • • l
}
I
).. • !
• l I
ORANGE COAST '
DAILY PILOT
Tiie o...,.. eo..i 0.lly Pl lOI, wUl'lwfli<" ., • ..,..
btne<I , ... IM~·"'"'l. 11 puDlli.r.cl Dy tt>e CW"'OO
Cbl\I P\lbli51>1"' Cot"1)•nv S.O..i.eoilioni••
p.il;>loYotd. Mor>d•• !~•OU9FI l'roClly, IOr COIY ....., ... , Ntw""'I ~ .. ,., "unonqi..., .... .,,,,_.
1•11'1 11•11••• I••'"'• ~CICl l•llol<-V•li.y eM ~ S. .. !'I So>I!" <'.N•I ... ~ ._...
...,11> .... 1, ~l,.,..CI S••u•G•v• -~·· Tilt """''N I pul;>l1S11otw;i pl•M I• •1 XIO WU! !Wy
$Uf(!1 , Col. .. IN. .... C•••IO•n+e '<'UL
Robe rt N. WE-«i
P1 ''">rn! •M Putllu,,..,
Jack R. Curley
Vlcf f'r •"•nl •nO V.nt'ft • ~,.,.~
Thomas Keev1t
Thomas A. Murphin"
-... Q•ftQ [Git"'
Charles H. Loos Ric hard P. Nall
"''""'"I ""-,..Q•r>q EO.IOl'i
Off ices
Co\•• M••• l>O W,,, lt..ovSl•ttt ~WPO•I fie .... llU N•wp)l"l fk>w"•~f'd Ull,,... a. ..... llMG ...... J1'1' 51,...,
~""''nol011 ee .. ft 111" Be«~ OINl•·~·d s.GlllMIM.-V•llf~ JUOl U ... i llotd fl $oln Olt9o ,-,.,.,..,.
Tetephon. (7 14 1642-4321
Ct.a11lt lltd Advertising M2·S671
$fdd'•'*' v.n,, ,..e-"IO!litt ,.. • 5&1 -6310
F,111'\S...Cit',..'*
495-0630
And Chairman Donald Bright, :::i ccnlr<1l
figure in the conflict allegatlon>. mau1-
1ained his finn grip on the chairn1anship
and offered no comment on the issue.
Bright conceded last week tha1 he
had gathered more than a dozen
representatives of major developers
along the coastal strip and soughl dona·
lions and malling lists in a fund raiser
for Democratic gubemalorial candidate
Edmund G. Brov.'ll Ji-.
But since his denial of ;iny conflict
and his demands for ;:in A t l o r n e y
General's probe, Bright has re1nained
mum aboul the. nO\\-t:<:ncelcd reception.
It ~·as to have laken pl:1ce Thursday
near Costa Mesa .
He had made a tentative agreement
to discuss the issue to some degree
befo re television nev.•s cameras during
~1ooday~s lunch break of lhc commission
meeting in Long Beach.
But before the com1nission adjourned.
he left the room and later appeared
once more to quic kly reconvene the
session.
Television newsrnen h;id to settle for
the only member of !he c:on1mission
\l'iliing to be intervic1ved on the 1natter.
Orange -County Supervisor H a I p h
Diedrich said that no movement has
come about on the co111mission to strip
JJright or his chairmanship.
Diedrich, one of several Orange Coun·
ly Democrats listed as officia l host s of
the controversial reception. said that he
had expected that the event v."OU!d have
lured Brov.11 supporters from th e
academic world. .
"Dr. Bright's credibil ity is \'cry strong
in the area of academia." said Diedrich .
Diedrich conceded Iha! the entire fund-
raisnig incident probably cast a pall
on lhe integrity or the commission, but
he emphasized that he believes Bright
is still capable of functiooing as a good
chairman of the powerful commission.
"I happen lo know !hat the
chairmanship of the con1rnission is not
for sale," he said.
I n th e arena 11·herc the two
gubernatorial candidates arc squaring
off, the debate continues about connict
and the coast.al commission.
Soon after it was knov.·n that Bright
sought funds for Brown. the candidate
\vho v.·ould have benefitted denied any
knowledge of the project and in a
scathing statement demandt'd that Bright
resign.
Then. during a debate this p a s t
v.·eekend in Stockton with Republican
candidate Houston Flournoy, Bro w n
charged that North Coast Regional Corn·
mis.s ion Olairman John Mayfield was
raising money for the Republican effort
and getting it from timber companies
doing business 'vilh the commission.
Later, Brown :.idmilt ed that solid proof
was lacking.
Flournoy then seized the of f e n s i v c
l\fooday at a rally in Auburn and lHt
hard at Brown.
"This was a clumsv 1nancuvcr on
!he part of Brov.·n 10· dra\\' attention
away from the luncheon in Orange Coun-
ty put on br Dr. Bright." sctid Flourno~··
lie descnbcd the wet'kl1nri accusati ons
by Bro\\TI as "1nore of his naili ng,
;inn wav in g , dclil>er<.1 lc n1isrepresen-
tations."
N ucJ ear Station
Back i11 Business
The San Onofre Nurlear c:ener:ll ing
Statkin v.·as cr<inked up to lull po\\cr
earlier today after a minor defect 111
:.i rl'lay fllonday caused n shutdov.·n as
th e reactor \\'as being ~tarted up at
!he end of a federal inSJl\'Ction .
Onofre Plant Supcrintcndenl ll;ins OJ.
toson said the relay mn!functioncd and
1.:aused an :u11oma11c shutdO\\'n of the
re~c1or.
The nnw developed as crev.'s began
11> sturl the reactor llll nfter lhrcc days
of nor10P,erntlon 1\·hich allowed lllSf>L'Clors
from tl1e U.S. Atonllc Energy Com·
mission to \\'ind up u routine inspc:::o11
of IM facility.
"Evf:ryt hlng iii \\.orkin.s; just fnlC: now,
and we had the r~lay fixed in n fc1v
hours," &ll0$0n said.
G11n111an Thrcalcns
Coast l\1a n in Lag1u1a
A Newport Beach m:in exiling n public
rest room In n l.:::iguna &a.:h park todny
was 11ccosted. by a mnn who jumped • • • •
from the bushc~. v.11vcd n revol vt.r 1:11 coo .. ,.,.,, ,.1,, O••• '"\' r>J11titt1F1111 hi m and accused him of being a horn~ ~~ ,_ ...-W'I "OI''" 11111\t•t!I-.
"1w 111 -n.• e• •dw•tiw ...... 11. ""''1" ,.,., sex:unl. .t.:'\...!f.i;r..~ •. •·1"',.. •Pfl;l<ll PH,,,.u...., ot Aft~r thr atening "I'm .11onnn kilt you."
s..t'_, ~••u "°"•" p1,,0 ., ""'' Miw, the prolagonl!l a1Joowed the Newport mnn
c.11tH1111. $u(>Kr1f'•O!'t av t•"ltr u,oo to nee. Thtl._lncldcnt took place. at .1bou t ::~~:im~.:O '"°"'"*-"--"'"'_«_•-~-2;30 P..1n. al )lcsslcr J>ark, ~.ROIJ~
reported . , •
said Russell Hord!, n senior vlet presJ.
dent of the Armored Midwest dispaWh
center on the city's near North Side.
"We have started auditing and ,we have
to go back and ltllce it ali out," he
said of weekend cash pickups.
ll ardt said auditors v;ere expected to
comple!c their count later today .
Should they confi rm the $3.8 million
report, the robbery w<:1uld rank. among
the biggest in the \\'Orld, surpassing
the ~J.5 mil lion holdup or a postal truck
in Plymouth, J\1ass. in 1962, and the
SI 2 million taken from a Brinks armored
truc k in Boston in 1950.
England's "Great Train Robbery" of
1963 \1hen an estimated S7 million was
taken is still the largest all-time caper.
The FB I and Illinois Bureau of
Investiga tion jOined more than 15
l1ticago investigators into C)e cash rob-
bery whe're plastic bags filled with ga»
line and hooked lo th~ fu_ses '!\-'ere dis-
covered.
Castans discounted e.arlier reports rob-
bers se t off two explosions in the area
10 divert police from the heist.
Authorities said the robbery might
have gone unnoticed had not lack of
alr in the vault snuffed the fire.
The firebombs went oJC Monday morn-
ing, but the fire burned itself out because
of the lack of air in the vauld said Lt.
Edward Neville of the police bomb and
arson squad .
"Only 1wo of the 13 bags ignited ,"
Neville said.
"They just couldn't bum without alr,"
said another investigator, "If they bad.
the robbery might not have been
discovered. )Jq•estigaton would think the
money waS d~troyed in the fire."
The loss \\.'as discovered after a
smoke detector alarm sounded a n d
firemen arrived at the scene. They found
the \'ault filled with smoke.
Several left--0ver bogs con I a in in g
money were scorched, but no money
\.\'as destroyed, police said.
Annored Express is a division of
Purolator Security Inc.
Fron& Page Al
i\UNT ...
newsmen or talk about the situation
by telephone today.
The fitter family has roots i n
Philadelphia that are publicly recorded
for almost a century. Rachel Filer's
grandfater, Eclwin H. Fitler, was mayor
of Philadelphia from 1887 to 1891.
The finn of Eclv.•in H. Filler & Co.,
l<iter knov.·n aS the Philadelphia Cordage
\Vork s, manufa ctured rope. It was in·
strumental in building the lam i I y 's
fortune.
When 'Villiam \Vonderly Fitler, the
son of the fonner mayor, died March
31, 1931, he left his wife, his son. and
his daughter, Rachel, and an estate
later inventoried at $8, 113.222.
\Yhen Rachel 's nephcW, W i 11 i am
\\;onderly Filler III, was married in
1954, the best man 1vas Dr. James
S. l'vlurphy. I-lis "'ife, Happy, y,·ho was
a bridesmaid that day, later niarried
vice-presidential designate Nelson
Hockefeller.
/\ neighbor who lives ac~oss fro111
the stately Filler home SJ.id she sa1v
\Vilson over the summer.
"lie v.•as here every day," she said.
''IIe would lake her out for a ride."
The Filler home is set back from th~ road on a large lract. A circular
dnve11·ay meets at the front of the
v.·hit c--co!umned, gray-stone dwelling.
Pally l'lklt Sl1ll l'fllll
ltlis1notcli Mishap
Paramedics aid Joseph B. Green of Costa Mesa fol·
lowing collision Monday afternoon in Irvine be-
tween his motorcycle and car driven by Vernon F.
Lunch of Ontario. Green. 317-C Universi ty Drive,
was treated at Tustin Community Hospital and re-.
leased. Accident took place about 3:25 p.m. near
corner of MacArthur Boulevard and Michel son
Drive.
Dean Clai1ns Haldeman
T1·ied to Shut Him Up
WASliJNGTON (UPI) -John W. Dean
111 testified today that H.R. Haldeman
tried to stop h.im from going to federal
pro~ in the wanlng days. of the
\Vatergate cover·up by saying that
"once the toothpaste is out of the tube,
it 's going to be very hard to get it
back In."
Dean, fonnerly President N i x o n ' s
counsel and now the Watergate pro-
secution's star witness. testified during
his fifth day on the stand about events
in the White House in late tilarch and
Aprtl, 1973, when the cover·up began
to unravel.
Chief trial prosecutor James f. Neal
was expected to complete his direct
questioning of Dean tod ay, opening the
way for Haldcman's lawyer, Jbhn J.
Wilson, to cross-examine.
Haldeman , Nixon's fonne r chief of
staff, and four former Nixon associates
are on trial in the cover-up.
William S. Frates. lawyer for former
White House aide John D. Ehrlichman,
told U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica
which an aide told Dean that he should
meet with Ehrlichman and Haldeman
once their flight set down in Washington.
Dean said he evaded the quest ions
of Haldeman and Ehrlichman about his
meeting with the prosecutors. He said
Ehrlichman told him he could explain
the handling of hush money by describing
it as a ''defen se fun d of
humanitarianism."
"John, I couldn't look a jury tn the
eye and tell them that," Dean recalled
he told Ehrlichman.
But he said' Ehrichman replied, "I
think it v.vuld sell."
Dean said he received a telephone
call March 23 from Nlzon, who said,
"Well, John, you are right In your predic-
tion that someone was going lo .break
rank" -meaning that someone was
going to destroy the cover-up.
Junior League
l,ectures ·Open
that Dean's credibility "is the crucial The Newport Harbor Jun io r
thing in this case, as fa r as my client League's "Community '7 4 , '' a
is concerned." , special five.week series of lcelures
~luch of Dean's testimony was word open to the public as well as
for word what he gave at the nationally league members, begins tonight at
televised Senate Watergate hearings in UC Irvine.
June, 1973. The initial projilram in the series
Dean recalled. that he talked to deals with lhe history ol Orange
Jlaldeman in California on April 8, 1973, County. It starts at 7:30 p.m. in
shortly before he met with the Walergate UCl's Science Lecture II a 11 .
prO!ICCUtors. Admission is free.
f'rom Page Al
PRICES ...
percent higher than In September 1973.
Transportation costs increased 0.6 per·
cent and were 8.7 percent higher than
a year ago.
On the national level, rising prices
for food , clothing and mortgage rates
pushed the cost of living up apother
1.2 percent in September, maki ng the
last 12 months the worst inflationary
surge in mote thari 25 years, the govern-·
ment reported today.
Prices in St:ptember nationally were
reported l2.l percent higher than a year
ea rlier. This was the worst 12-month
increase since 1947.
However, the purchasing power of the
average worker nationally increased
slightly for the first time in t b r e e
months. Real spendable earnings -that
is weekly pay adjusted for inflation
and taxes -rose one-tenth of a percent
in September but was still at the lowest
level sinc:e December 1970.
Price increases nationally were spread
across ahoost the entire eainomy last
month. Food led the way, posting its
biggest rise since February.
. The Ford administration has predicted
that consumer prices will continue in-
creasing at the rate of about I percent
a month through the end of the year,
and that there would be no significant
easing of inflation until some time next
year.
Comume r prices have already risen
9.7 percent na tionally this· year. In
1973, prices rose 8.8 percent, the worst
in any year since the end of World
War fJ.
The Labor Department said I a s t
month's l.2 percent increase, following·
a rise of l.3 percent in August, pushed
the government's con~mer price index
to 151.9. That meant it cost $151.90
to buy a variety of goods and services
that cost $100 in the 1967 base period . "John." Dean quoted HaJd eman as The series, designed to bring
C telling him, "I think you ought to think Orange Countians up to date on
'l uov Klti•garoo about lhat before you do it because issu" affecting them. is scheduled 1.. . T "''Oc. .. r " once lhe toothpaste is out of the tube. for five successive Tuesdays at \Jssinger i·ip Set
L
it's going to be very hard to get it UCL The Oct. 29 program will St;zz at L r back in " deal with consumer affairs. \YASHINGTON (UPI) -Secretary of " U ge He SB.id his nve.hour conference with The series js sponsored by the State Henry A, Kissinger leaves tonight
the prosecutors was interrupted by an Junior League as a public service. for Moscow, where he wtll talk with
CHICAGQ (UPI) -Officers patrolled inflight ca ll fro m Air Force One in Soviet leader Leonid L Brezhnev.
the city's North\vest Side again in hopes ~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~:;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;:,;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;.
of capturing a fugitive kangaroo which
l1as eluded them for fiv e d&ys.
"He was '19Plling along l\1ango Ave-.. 1' nue. patro man Edward Brcnsbcrger
said of his Sunday night glimpse of the
mysterious marsupial. "He was headed
south." The animal has not been sighted
since.
There 1~·ere reports th at it had been
foraging through garbage.
\\'hilc police , did not issue ·:i "all
poi.nts b~lletin " for the stray kangaroo,
office rs m the Jefferson Park District "·ere placed on alert .
Vo lcano E1·uptiug
GUATEMALA CITY, Guatemala (AP)
-The Fuego volcano spewed tons ol
lnva, burni11g rocks, hot ash and cinders
01'cr a \\irle area of western Guatemal11
today for the lOlh straight day.
Southland Hit
By Mild Quake
I~GLEWOOD (UPI ) -A mild
carthqua kt)olled a sm311 part
Soolhem California today, a.waken
•
NOW, HEAR TIDS .
-
According to the Presidenrs Council on
Environmental Quality. it is becoming increasingly
difficult for anyone to escape noise.
40.000 .000 Americans risk hearing impairment
and other physical and mental effects. 44 .000.000
other Americans have the utility of their dwellings
adversely affected by noise from aircraft or traffic.
21 ,000 .000 Americans are affected by
construction-related noise.
Now what does this have to do with carpet?
Carpeting will drastically improve acoustics in any
room by quieting your home environment, making
radios. televi sion. and the family sound better.
Remember. a·t Aldens, even ,our LOUD carpeting
is qui ete r. I
ing many re!ldents and promp:tlng•'-11-1
telephone calls to police but ap-
parently causiJlg oo damage.
--ALDEN'~._·
• CARPETS • DRAPE
The sf'i~ologlcal laboratory at
C.iltcch in Pasadena ~ld the t~
mor RI 5:13 s.1n. h&d a preliminary
In tensity of 2.8 on the open end
Hi rhter seale.
A laboratory spokesman s.ald the
quake appeared lo be centcrtd In
the lnglcwOOd aree. It was also
fell in s:in~ ~fonica . < ---
•
1663 Placentia A Ye.
COSTA MESA
646°4838
HOURS: Moo ....... Tilln., 9 lo l :JO'-l'lll, 9 lo 9-SAT. '1JO lo 5
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-'~""""~~·-°'-'-"'~'-''~·-"-'-'~~~''--~~O~M~L~Y_P_IL~O_T_'~A..,,.3
County RTD ·cost: TWice as Much
* * * First Link
In Transit
'B y 1985'
The first major link or a proposed
mass rapid transit corridor system for
Orange County could be completed by
1985 if voters approve a one-cent sales·
tu: "increase fiov. 5.
Martin Bouman, chief of the Orange
Count.y Transit D~rict M11ulling team,
Monday outlined refinements to t he
district's master plan showing con-
struction schedules and some technology,.
But, he said, all of the $4 .5 billion
system depends on voter approval of
the sales tax measure. ·which could raise
almost half of the total c06t over the
next 15 year11. 'SERVING LOCAL NEEDS'
ROP Leider N1varretft
,. •
• ,' .
D1illt ~llfl 51111 J'Mln
'NOW, THIS IS HOW WE'LL GIVE A PAT IENT A SPONGE BATH'
Gloria Bryant, Capo &.•ch, Pr•ctice1 on Dia n• Witt, D•n• High
•
Inflated Prices
Spark Increase
By \\'IWA!'tf SCHREIBER
Ci 1M Dall~ J'lltt Iliff
It will ~t at least '4.52 billion
twice the original estimate -to build
and run the. mass rapid transit system
envisioned by Orange Cowity Tr<lll!i!t
officials. .
That figure. \\·as wiveiled P.tonday at
an OCTD directors meeting as part
to the disttict 's master plan .
r.\fartin Bouman. a top official ol the
consulting tean1 of Alan l\f. Voorhees
VTN Associates, said the latest cost
figures more realistically reflect the
changing economy.
"When we \\'ere Y..'Orking on phase
one of this report last year, \\'e v•ere
using uninflated llJ'/3 dollars on a com-
parison basis," Bouman said . The figure
used witll Monday was between $2 billion
and $2.5 billion bel\\·een now and 1990.
Bouman and Fielding seoffed a t
ne1•:spaper reports that tbe..d ls tr i ct
should be OOW'lling OD only about 30
percent federal help.
Bouman also gave the first indication
that the district may bave to double
it.s fares to 50 cents per Tide once
the first rai:i'd rail line goes inle> sen.i ce
• in 1985. He said the district ll'OUld e1-
perience a net 70 percent gain i n
re1•enues from that SJQurce.
The district v.wld also oontlnue to
collect Pf'OP'rty tax money based· oo
its rate of 4.5 cents per $100 of assessed
value.
Altogether, Bolman said, the district
can collect $4.74 billion owr the nert
JS years. leaving a balance of $219
million for contingencies -assuming
passage of the Nov. 5 proposition.
If voters fail to approve the tax hike,
Bouman said the entire plan as It now
stand! v.oold be either destroyed or ,
at best, pushed back many yean.
Bouman said the district would begin
by steadily increasing its fixed route
and Dial-a-Ride bus fleets to a total
ol 1,500 by 1983 - a full , saturation
level of buses to feed into the corridor
system.
Work on the 116-mile network of mass
transit corridors -half rapid rail lines
and half express busv,.ays -could begin
In 1983, Bouman said.
Facing the R~al .World 'The figure you have before you more
realistically show• the cost based on
1974 dollars lnnated at a rate of 8.5
percent per year for the next 15 years,"
he added.
In its place, the eount}' would get
a slov.• but steady inc~in M service
and no rapid rail lines in the immediate
future.
If a slmHar measure bJ Let Angeles
fails to pass v.•hile 1·oters here go for
the tai:, Fielding said more emphasis
will be placed on an express bus on
freeway system initially, lea\'1nc the
lnter~unt}' rail lines until later.
The first rapid rail link to be built
v;oold start at a proposed d i s t r i c t
main~nance yard somewhere in t b e
Irvine El Toro area.
Regional Occupatio1t Pro g rain Tenclie.s Job Skills .. District General Mana1er G.J. "Pete"
Fielding explained afttr the meeting
that no inflation figures were used in-
itially because the money figure was
only meant to serve as a basis for
comparison.
It v.•oold be extended into Santa Ana,
run a few mlles under Fourth Street
and link up to the old Pacific-Electric
line running to Los Angeles.
During the same 193.'l-85 period, \vork
would commence on the first ID-mile
arm of the central l!ne -a link running
through the central county, ending in
the Orange area.
Bourftflll said a rapid-rail line down
Beach Boulevard would be next in line
for completion in 1987.
The last rapid rail link. running from
the El Toro terminal southward along
the Santa Ana Freeway to San Clemente,
v.·ouid be completed by 1989.
1t1eanwhile, work will have begun on
the but-on rreeway system in the count y.
Bownan said the first priority has
been given to a high-ridership I i n e
starting at the end of the as-yet unbuilt
Corona del Mar Freeway and !Inking
up with the Orange Freeway into Los
Jetgeles County. That will be built in
1983.
By 1985, the bu.sway. along the
Rlvenide-Artesia Freeway will be com-
plete.
Two other pcrtcntial rail or busway
lines have not been scheduled for the
first surge of construction.
One or these runs from the Orange
Freeway busway down Imperial High1vny
to the county line. The other runs aloni;i:
the San Diego Freeway from the Beach
Boulevard tine to the county line.
By JACKIE HYMAN
Of TM Pally J'I ... Slftt
Some South Coast students arc pursu-
ing their studies in department stores,
under foreign cars and on top o r
buildings. ,.,.
They're enrolled in courses In the
Capistrano-Laguna Regiona l Oc-
cupational Program (ROP), which
serves about 590 -high school students
and adults from ball a dozen South
€oast communities.
Some are students looking ahead. olh·
ers are high school dropouts wt.o found
it wasn't easy to eam a living. Some
have come back for retraining after
raising a family. Others returned after
being laid off and some came to impro\'e
their skills at a current job.
"Reality is incorporated into the
classes," said Gail O'Heam, who teaches
courses for nursing assistants a n d
emergency medical technicians.
1t1rs. O'Heam, a registered nurse v.·hc)
worked for seven ye.ars at South Coast
Community Hospital in South Laguna,
said her students are taught a b o u t
salaries ($550 a month for a nursing
assistant). working hours and the type
of \\'Ork involved.
Some ROP students have made
valuable discoveries about their pros-
pective careers.
Hector Navarrette. ROP director, cited
the case of a would-be physician who
fainted at the sight of blood and decided
to study pharmacology instead.
There was also a future architect
who found out he didn 't like sitting
at a drafling table all day and becanie
a construction contractor instead, Navar·
retie said.
ROP students learn about what jobs
have the b e s t employment potential,
especially locally.
"We try to serve local need!," Navar·
retie said. -~
He said the best fields 1\ow are in
service areas such as repair 3.nd clerical
work, sales and the medical field.
"I can place anyone that wants a
· job," Mrs. O'Hearn said of her nursing
assistant students. whom she places at
San Clemente, Saddleback and SoUth
Coast hospitals.
About. 22 ROP classes are taught this
trimester In such skills as motorcycle
maintenance and repair, landscaping and
legal secretarial work. ·
Classes meet for betv.·een six· .v.·eeks
and six months, either ~I ROP head·
quaners in five portable buildings in
San Juan Capistrano or at local high
11Chools.
After the initial classroom period,
students intern in their jobs, returning
every week or two to attend a seminar.
"We find that the interaction ,between
students Is very good," Navarrette said.
He said intern supe rvisors often ask
the students to apply for jobs after
they finish their internship.
Other classes go as a group to see
their chosen profession first-hand. For
example, a class in fashion merchan-
dising recently went to a major depart·
ment store where employes explained
about inventories.
Teachers for the HOP program must
have experience in their field because
the ROP concept is different from con-
ventional classroom teaching, Navarrette
said.
Another part of ROP teachers' jobs
is to go to the three. high schools served
by the pr~gram (San Clemente, Dana
J1ills and Laguna Beach) to talk to
students and counselors.
The 15 ROP teachers are paid on
a lower salary sca!e than re g u I a r
teachers. ROP top full-Ume salary is
$11,200 a year, Navarrette said.
1ioP is an extension of the high school
curriculum. he explained. Junior and
senior students, and some sophomores,
are allowed to substitute an ROP class
tor two regular classes.
ROP classes meet two or three days
a week for a total of nine or, JO hours.
Navarrette said he was surprised to
find so many adults In classes -they
torm 30 percent ol the enrollment-but
believes their partlcipaUoo is beneficial.
"Perhaps the adult-high school kid
mixture made the kid more aware of
the need to have the skill,'' be said.
The ROP program, which began locally
about five years ago, is or.e of four ·
such programs in Orange County.
It ls funded by the Capistrano and
Laguna Beach unified school districts
and by state runds based on average
daily attendance.
Approximately 70 percent of t h e
"We had several possible pl8.115 and
each had a money estimate attached
in Wlinflated 1973 dollars lo r com·
parison," he said. "Now that we've refin.
ed It down to a slngle plan, we have
also revised our cost figures."
Acoording to Bouman, the sa::ie in-
flationary factors \\'Ut ·applied to the
revenues the district is bopifli to collect
by 1990.
Assuming voters approve a one-cent
sales tax increase for transit on Nov.
5, the district can eJ;peCt to r a i s e
upwards or II.II billion from that SJUrct:
alone over the next 15 years.
Bouman said the district Is cowitin~
on getting hall of Its $2.3 billion In
capital C06t in the form of federal
grants.
"We CXIUld get a maximum of llO
percent but we felt Yre had to be con-
servative in our estimate because of
the competition that is coming up for
tho.st funds," Bouman told directors.
Scot Says Tlieft
Plot Justified
students come from Capistrano, which LONOON (AP) - A Scot today told a
Bouman urged the boerd ·1o remain
flexlbl< In it! phuutlng.
"The board lhould be ptepered to
move f~ter or slower ~ng Upcn
how things v.'Ork ·001," he said. "You
have a good plan that bu been studied
in guat detail."
Board members spoke in tum, each
voicing solidarity behind the plan and
sc:offtng al agencies such is Sou~
California Association of G;9vemments
that have --criticized OCTD" planning.
"This board i1 unique in lhat they
have oome up with a plan like this
in less than three yean," said Direct.or
Al Holllnden. "SCAG is frightened to
death that something could be done
this rast. They may soon be out fi
a )ob in planning."
Director Richard Lynn cf Newport
Beach favored the plan but queotlooed
the figure of 50 perctnt funding ol
capital costs by the re.deral government.
Bouman said the fill" ls an educatat
guess and was kept conse r vative
"because we don't want to count on
being tbe1' with oor hand out expectinc
to get all we ask for."
In terms of on-going QOfrta, Bouman
!laid the most will be speot between
1985 and 19i0, when more than l7f.G
mUllon will be expended on ' ..ns ot
the system. During the 1ame period.
more than $1 billion In reveriuea could
be colleeted. he said.
pays a corresponding percentage of London maglstra~'s court be felt moral-N Off• • I N d
ROP's $309,000 budget this year. ly j\lslUied In tryi-g to remove from ew ICIB S ame
Funds to purchase the new portable Westminster Abbey the coronation stone
buildings, which cost $14.700, come from of ancient Scottish kings. The court or-To Bo ys' Club Posts
a permlssive tax of between tv.·o and dered him to pay for damage and CO'Jrt
Bouman said the basic corridor system
plus the extensive feeder bus system
can probabl y relieve obout eight percent
of the estimated 10 million dail y person-
trip.s that will be generated in 1990.
Bouman said the 750,000 daily ridership
is a purposely low estimate and the
system he has planned could carry up
lo 25 percent or all person-trip s
generated.
"The figun is low because it is an
average for the whole county," he said .
"Some lines will 5ave a lot and others
a few riders.
Young Patient to Depart
Plastic Hospital Room
thret cents levied in the two dlstriru. costs but gave him a conditional dis-Sii new directors and three new ad-
Costs are cut by using donated equip-charge. V\sory board member1 hive been ap-
ment and also industrial equipment dur· The sentence is similar to probation in pointed to the Boys' Club of the South
ing nonv;orklng hours, Navarrette said. the United States. It means that David Coast Area.
"The idea of ROP is to try to use Robert Lockwood Cannichael..Stewart. 24, Joining the board of dirtd.:J~ :rt Ceal,
equipment that sits idle by involving v.ill not be prosecuted further unless he Homan, Or. Wade F. I.m-·er, Ocat\io J.
industry. I don 't believe a school could rommits another offense In the nert Luna, Jtme MaM, Dr. Ptfonis F. Skinner
ever keep up with industry," he said. three years. and Richard R. Smith, Jr.
Among equipment which has b e e n "I am sorry for any damage I might New advisory board members are
donated to the 3Chool. are dentists' chairs have caused," CannichJ,el..Stewart. told Richard L. Arons, Louis Ponclnv and
"The future is not as clear as we ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) -Bobbie Archer,
could hope for as regards auto use a 9-ycar-old who calls her doctor "Sport.."
disincentives such as higher gas taxes. takes leave \Vedne9day of the special,
pollution problems and vehicle costs," plastic-enclosed hospital room where she
he said. • has spent the past five months.
"U the county grows faster than we Since AJay 19, she has eaten, slept
predict (2.5 million by 1990) so much and played in a room at the Albany
the better for this system." Medical Center barely large enough to ~~~~~-=-~~~~~~~
Te lli1ag A -Tale
Riina Kumar, 7, and her sister Seema, 6. ,list.en to actress r.tag~i
Swope who with actor and ·tcticher f\t ike 0 Neil will teU c:hlldren s
stories al 4 p.m. Thorsday al tlf\1 Laguna Beach Library 363 Gl•nn-
cyre Sl. lo celebrate United Nations Day. Powdered milk and other
staples ~ill be. collected to~ tbe....Central A1uccican survivor! al Jlur·
• ricane FiJI.
' • f
•
walk around in.
"It's a little jail,
Hilaire Meuwissen.
and Alpha Beta checkout stands. Ptfagistrate Eric Russell . George Whi~.
a cell,'' sc:iys Dr. i1:;::;;;;;;;;~:::::::;~::::;;;;;;;;::::~;;;;;;:;:;::::::;::;:~-;::;::=::::;;;;;;;;:=,_~,:::::~:::;:l
The air ·nows in only one direction ,
whisking a\\1ay any bac~ria. The walls
are washred dov.'ll daily. Her toys -any
Objects she touches -are sterilized.
All her food must be cooked and her
milk boiled. Everyone who enters her
cubicle must don a surgical m< sk, cap
and gown, even her mo~r. l\tl"!. John
Archer of Englishtown, N.J.
Bobbie suffered from aplastic anemia,
a rare-. disease affecting the bone mar-
row, where the human body produces
blood. She was easily susceptible to in-
fect.ion ; she bled at the slightest bump:
and she needed frequent blood tr::;:;fu-
sions because her blood lloo.ldn'l clot.
But a transplant of bone marrow last
summer from her 7-year-old sister,
Karen, appears to have been su::: . .!st:'•JI,
her doctors say. Bobbie's blood coont is
back to norn1al and she can ·leave her
cubicle.
She might have left earlier had she
not come down with chicken pox from
a virus her doctors belie\·e she brought
Into the i:oo111 five months ago.
Bobbie .rnade clear in talking with
newsmen Monday her feelings about her
long isolation.
"I read a lot. Books. Yeah, got a
whole bunch of jWlk in here." slle sakl.
'
-
~ •
• • ,, , • • • ,.
Beautiful Bedrooms Begin with
ADJUST-A-BED
"I just don't like it in here. All that
medicine I ho-. to take which l don'I Read and watch TV in the world 's finest all electric adjustable ~1~,t;.v~~ .:~~-? ----. ___,_,,_bed. -It-is-elegant and iits your head,bo rd . All sizes; Twin to King
"Yeah. ""' sport hllck ttiere." ~.. ar:id any riafti'ess firmness . from '-feather soft to su)jer firm . You
... ;~, ::Ofht~ \~:~h~:eu=~"11omc." and your bedroom deserve Adjust-A-Bed ... so see and try it at
s11e said, reternng 10 • mouse w111c11 our Corona del Mar Showroom. today! soinehow slipped lnto br:r room one (l&y.
"Whcnev<!r I go, he's going v.•ith me."
But Bobbie won't be gotng home to
Englishtown to her p:irenla and her l\\'O
sisters ~nd a brother -not yet any-
\\'11)'. lier doctors still ' fe ar Infection
Cron1 young children. . .
Instead. Bobble. wUr go tB "convaleJo
cent parcnts'•1n Delmar, near Albniiy .
' .
HEWl'ORT HACH
CORONA DEL MAR
3131' E. COAST HWY
(.AJet 56. ol F1shion Island)
·11141673-5655
-I
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A DJUST-A -BE D
llY SLEEP'E'R LOUNGE CO .. INC .
I '
CITY OP ORAHCH
411 SOUTH MAIN ST.
(Jutt Nor,:tn ol F11n1on Sci.I
l7loil) 839 .. 14%
..
": It's Politics
~· . , ..
:~:As usual .•.
I
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Tueiday. Octobet 22. 1914 .
Offshore. Oil Spills 'Exp~cted'
WASHINGTON (AP) --·-Doputmeat 1111 II cannot spell out the full Im-Cll oll apllla 11'at It ,..iieta wUJ -when oil
companies devek>p the 10 m1llba otfabore 1cre1 UM department waats to ... lease.· ,
But Interior Undenecrelary Jobn C. Wllltaktr ••YI the d<pulmto· •
t 's drafte nvironmenlll impaet statement la onl)' do1na: It.I Job In polntln&
out unanswered quesUons.
THE DEPAllTllllENT SAID IT could not yet supoly Individual Im·
pact s tatement.s for speclnc coaital area.1 oif which di1Wna epu)d.qccur.
These would have to await separate environmental impact studies still to
be prepared for the areas.
The· department issued a t ,300-P,ate stu<ly MOnday admltUng its
proposKI would lead, inevitably, to major and minor oil spilk~ '
But the study team could not assess Lbe full Impact ot such spills, or
the other environmental and social lmpact1 espected from such massive
~-· ' Since 19S4, a department spokesman said, the federal go\fernment
has leased some 12 miUk>noCfshore acres._
the sale or another 10 million acres in 1975 as ordered by former
President Richard M. Nixon would almost double lheleased acrU.ge in a
sing[eyear. , _
Offering a tcnlaUve schedule for 1!r7S, lhe impact statement sue·
gested som e·J 'tnilllon acres in the Gulf of M9xlco off South-Texas might
be leased first, followed by 2or 3 mil lion acres in the central Gulf, 1.S mil-
lion atres off southern California, and 2.S million acres in Alaska's COok
Inlet.
THi\T ALREADY MAKES tOR 10 million acres, all In area:; whertf
some petroleum activity already has taken pl~ce.
But the proposal also cal.ls for lln undetermined ~mount or le0tsing
ln two "frontier" area.\ -the Gulr of Alaska and the Middle Atlantic
coast -which could be substituted for some of the other offcrln~s.
,. The statement said the department mi&ht have to ofrer up to 20 mil-
lion acres , in order to sell leases on 10 million.
The resulting exploration and development might send an ad-
ditional 500 to 1,000 drilling platrorms offshore, servCd by thousands of
miles of pipelines. onshore terminals and possibly refineries.
petrochemical plants ind industrial complexes.
''It ls our conclusion based on past performance that sooner or later·
a maJQr.spilt will occur wherever there is significant development of off-
shore exploration and produeUon In potential areas," the statemept said. ' '
"WE ARE CERTAIN THAT thousands of minor spills will occur.··
·rne statement noted a tew or the obvious impacts that could result.
Such as the death of oil-soaked sea birds and the temporary analysis.
"Sure there are unanswered qUestions in a programmatic
11t1tement and that's the purpose or it -lo nush out those unanswered
.questions," Whitaker'said in an interview Monday.
49Killed
'
In African
Race Clash
LOURENCO MARQUES, Mozam.
bique (AP) -Al least49persons were
reported kill~d Monday i11 raci•I
violence rolloWing a clash between
demobilized Portuguese! troops and
black soldiers of the new government.
Authorities at the central hospital
confirmed the death toll Tuesday and
put the number of injured at about
160.
The dead included 33 white1, JS
Africans and one other person whose
(
race could not be deter.mined, accor·
ding to hospital officials. Additional
casualties were e"peeted to be ' • • ,
RICK'' TIC·K'' POUTlX: You may
h<1ve noted in the news that a couple or
c•nvironm£'nla hst orJi;anitations have
<.innou nl'ed pl ans to Jay a lawsuit on
Stall' Scn:.i tor Ocnnis Carpenter, the
Hep ublu.'an from Newport Be8ch.
"'The g_lSt of this legal maneuvering
TS' hat lh'c t::nv1ronmc.nlal Coalition or tfran g~unt y and tile so-call'@
1)1.:ople'sJ.ohhy allege that Carpenter
didn't report corrcclly on how he used
some of his monL'Y• Carpenter vows
he did report correctly.
~--. D•~=-'!Jll"::=:::::~""'"""'===--'iichool Bumb-en-..:b:::'0:::":=':::"'::':::•.::••:::•:.:•:::•:::•::•i:::'':'.:''::'•:•:..· _____ ,,_~~1 'l'aeo · Ip omacy c a .. 1r0 T alk
In Con' t1·nu1·n g NE\V YORK (UPI) -Cuban .
I • •
So thl'rc you havt; it. A difference of
OJ)llllOll
l\o\v, you normally might be
suspi ciou s of the motives of the
Coalition environmentalists and the
Lobb y'~ pe ople because the
threatened la\\'SUit comes so close to
eleetion,timc .
Ford Enjoys 'Southern Comfort'
Premier Fidel Castro says he would
be wiHing tO begin talks on resum'ing
Textbook 'War'· u.s .. cubandiplomatic retations ifthe
United States first agrees lo lift the
'
• .___)"Ollft SUSPICIONS might be fut·
4':'11,,tlilftinced by lhc ract lhat Cat·
IW pent~"s-opponcnt , I-Tank Barbaro,
• itfy1CYP1ed the very same allegation
• ij!linM fhe aforementioned incum·
• bent Cur~nte r . • ~bs TOO might tend to believe that
'I' this la'1'.£~jt is a politically motivated 8; onl': ~enlatcd to grab some ink in
: lhc regional press and discredit the
incumbent
• You· reall y shouldn 't have these
: suspicions. sin ce the Coalition 's en·
v1ro nmcnlalist .... <H'C honorable, the
• Lobby's peopl e arc honorable and Mr .
•· 8:1rbaro is honorable. ! They arc all honorable people. They
Just h appen to have lousy legal
timing. JI
'"' 'rJlt;\' llAVE COME' on y,·ith a
• la...,·SUit .. Just before an election and
• lo ,.l'i'{n'•Y" political observers know
• damii''\v~ll that most lawsWts riled
J&. "]tr.St before election aren·t worth the .a ' paper they we re typed on.
,. ' It's an old. old 1>0litical ploy. Your
• 1 candidate 1s running behind. Your
• ~ Lime is running oul. So you think up all
• the vicious, malicious. s piteful and
• outra~eous charges you can against
your opponent.
Then-you \Yr1te all these down in a a la\vs u1faf'ld hil\'l' it filed in court. Ar-
• lcr advant'e press conferences. or • course. a Si nt'<" all I he vit'ious. malicious.
II! nefa rious and outrageous charges in
'Pat. There :S someone
at the door!~
Judge Blocking
Ni xon Attempt
To Ge t Tapes
WASHINGTON <APJ A federal
judge has at least te mporarily
blocked the White flouse from car-
ryingout an agreement to give former
President Ri chard M. Nixon custody
1>fhis White House papers and tapes.
At the same tiriie U.S. District
Judge Charles R. Richey indicated he
will tackle the centuries-old question
of just who owns presidential papers
-the President or lhc government.
MAGDALENA .DE KJNO, Mexico
(UPI) -If Mexicans ·voted
Republican, President Ford 's
political worries would be oyer.
Venturing south ,of the border &fon-
day for a five-hour exercise in "taco
diplomacf. '' Ford received a
welcome ·that verged on pan-
demonium rrom the residents of two
northern Mexican towns.
It contrasted sharply with the luke-
warm reception that has dogged Ford
( N.EWSAN.4 LYSIS )
in recent weeks as he criss·crossed
the country drumming up votes ror
cmbatUcd Republican candidates in
the Nov. Select ion :
IN LINCOLN, NEB., ;and Louisvil·
le, Ky., last week. the crowds stayed
away in droves.
In Nogales and Magdalena De Kino.
howe\•er. the whole towns turned out
with a reckless enthusiasm that
clearly en·chaoted the Yankee visitor .
Young !\fexican girls waved
America n flags under a brilliant
desert sun and threw Oower petals in
Ford's p"th. The square face of the
man from Grand Rapids, Mich ..
stared from thousands of posters hung
across the narrow streets.
th a moment o{ glee. Ford strode
down a cobblestone street in shirt-
sleeves, waving a pink c.arilation and
grinning from ear to ear as a sea or
Latin faces s~rained to get close.
WIJEN IN MEXICO ...
Ford Dons Sombrero
or the l'ront1cr and tnen Ln-the United
States, but a wind-up news conference
at the small Arizona resort of Tubae
showed that little of substance was ac·
complished in the talks.
The public reception was a different
storv . Schools were let out and
businesses closed in the tY.'O Sonora
towns. insuring a maximum citizen
turnout along the parade route.
Ford and Echeverria took adv.an·
t age of the crowds. walking ror more
than a mile, al times virtually inun·
rtatert b:v the soectators.
CHARLESTON , W.Va. (AP) -A
KanaWha County school was bombed
early this morning, less than a day 3r.
ter the While ~louse said il voas
seeking a ··constructive com ·
promise" to prevent more 11iolence in
the county's school book protest.
A stick or dynamite was thrown
through a window at !\tidway Elemen·
tary on Campbel ls Creek. southeast ol
Charleston. police said. Damage was
"very light," confined mostly to fur·
niture and windows in one classroom,
and classes were to be held as usual
today. a spokesman for the sheriff'f
department said.
The same school y,•as one of two
damaJ?cd by bombings earlier this
month. Vire bomb thro"'" throu~h a
windo"'ll~t Midway caused minor
damage Oct. 9 and an explosive wai:
placed against the door of Wes t
Branch Elementary in the Cabin
·Creek area
All or the bombing attacks occurred
during the night and early mornin~
bCrore the schools \Vere occupied.
There was some light picketin~
early today at county school bu~
J?arages. deputies said.
!\tonday. a group of the ministers
and parents carried their protest over
school textbook selection to Washing-
ton and the White ilouse. Roger
Se m e rad, s peci a l assistant ta
President Ford for education and
labor, said he told them the White
l·fouse would do "whatever we can to
help forestall additional violence in
Charleston."
eeonOmic embarJ?O.
In an interview taped with CBS
tele vision to be broadcast tonight
to p.m. IPDTl. Castro declared :'
''{ would sa y that number one is the
lifting or the economic blockade.
\Vhen the economic blockade is en-
ded. u·e shall be in a condition to
speak under conditions or equality :
the United States a ndoorselves."
llotHb T hrf'al
PORTLAND. Ore. lUPIJ -The
Bonneville Power AdministraUon has
asked Oregon · state police to ride
aboard BPA helicopters keeping 1ur·
\'eillance over an area threatened
with more transmissi® tower born·
biogs in an extortion plot.
An extortionist signiog his name J .
•lawker has · claimed responsibility
for ti damaged or downed towers
since Oct. 4 and has threatened to
knock out electrical power lo Por-
tland unless the $1 million is paid by
the federal agency. ·
Rf'aga11 R1u111 l11g?
WASHINGTON (UPI) -California
Gov. Ronald Reagan says he might
run as a third party presidential can-
didate in 1976 if the two major parties
rail (o represent "the will or the
American people."
Reagan also said President Ford
could be challenged for the 1976'
Republican presid~ntial nomination
"if things have grown worse instead
of better" for his administration.
your laY.'!-i Uit arc now part of an or-
........... ti!ourt rcl'ord. there is a certain
r ' lmmunity ~ainccl for quoting these
t ou trages out in public -without get-
Riche)' said that although he y,•as
orderinJ? the White floose to hold onto
the tapes and documents of Nixon's
presidency, the former president can
have access to them "for the sole pur·
pose of preparing to testify in the
\Vatergate criminal trial."
"IF ONLY THEY could register 1---------------,----------------------------
Grand Opening, Phase II.
' •
' ' \
I • •
' r
I
•
' t
:
' I
1
•
'
" •
' :
1
I
•
ting sl;1µp (•d ~o ur self \Vilh a libel or
);landt•r -.;u 1t
so ,\FT I·: ft ,.()U'\'F. filed ·this
hnvs uil , 1vhi ch may be made up or al-
le~at iuns a:-phon ~' a s a SJ bill. you can
l(O aratffid <1uotin,e. th(' charges just
like> I hey v.·e rc fa cts .
It d ocsn"'t rt•a \l v cost too much to file
or\c ...,of !'tic:.c Polilically-motivatcd
l aY.:.u~s ''ou have to pay a lawyer Lo
\\rill' \.t up and some Sl'cretarial fees
;1n1t eotr h 1'1ltnJ! ch;1rgcs.
Lalt•f 'Vt{hl'n 1t ~els to the expcnsi \'C
M1 abQut ,l!oi ng to court , you can just l1 u1c~y tJ,i'uv the "·hole thing
1r: !!t-'lling close to election lime
no"· : rid thcrr arc ·a nu1nber of can-
didate ~·ho fea r they are running
lx-h1n1L So ~nu may sec lots of these
la"stut 1n 1h,. d:1\S just ahead.
TOO l\1\ll TllAT 1he t-~n\·1ronmcn ·
L:.il CoJhtion and People's L-0bby got'
•tilt m ixed un :ind filed their lawsuit
righl at this time of ye;1r.
·rht• liin1nl.!, n1akt•s it look like they
<1 r1· 01 !cagur "Ith !\1r. I\arb::iro in a
l'Uhln·a l l;:1wsu1t And you know they
y,·oulcln 't do :i th1ni::: like that..
1·'111· th1·v :1rt• all honorable men.
If Nixon·s health prohibits him from
coming to Washington lo study the
tapes and documents. Richey said in
Monday's order. copies may be made
and sent to him in California .
Nixon's lawyers have asked tnat all
or the materials be sent to a federal
repository at Laguna Niluel under
Nixon's custody as called for in ·an
agreement revealed by President
Ford the same day he announced he
was pardoninJt Nixon.
In the meantime Nixon's lawyers.
in papers filed Thur~av. had asked
for a temporary restraining order
banning the \Vhite House from
releasing any more or the Nixon
materials except for those already un -
der subpoena or which might be sub-
poenaed for criminal prosecutions
already under way.
This would have banned the \Vhite
I-louse from giving Nixon materials to
any of the fede ral grand juries still in-
11estigating Watergate matters, and
one of the special prosecutqrs sug-·
gested in court Monday that the Nixon
motions might be a ploy in lbe olfing
to frustrate prosecutions.
GOP, '.'Ford must have thought.
Ostensibly, the trip was a gel-
aquainted session between Ford and
Luis Echeverria, the popular aitd in-
creasingly independent Mexican
president.
The two leaders met twice behind
closed doors, fi rst on the Mexican side
Considine's Son
Faces Drug Rap
NEW VOR.K-lUPU -Bar;ry Con·
sidine. son of newspaper columnist
Bob Considine, \Vas charged Monday
with conspi{ing with two others in the
distribution and sale of cocaine.
Considine. 32, of New York, was ad-
ded lo an indictment fi led last July
against Kerry Aren Kollmar. the son
of the late Dorothy Kilgallen and
Richard Kollm ar. a nd Jonathan
Cohen, 21, also from Manhattan.
Kollmar and Cohen were released
in penonal bonds of $10,000 each al
their arraignment last August. No
date has been set for Considine's ar·
raignment.
Snow Warning in Rockies
Teniperatures Dip lnto20s AlongEastemSeaboard
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' -
-
'The Law'
Explored
Polygraph 'Slowdown' Geotek f'ra11d Case •
•
• Test Helps s~:=c~~, J111-y Selection Ordered.ii
'
·Tonight
(TV REVIEW)
Younger
Heads Off
'Attack'
SACRAMENTO !APl
Atty. Gen. Evelle Younger
is acting in advanc;~ to head
off what may be an up-
coming attack from his op-
TIIE OVER·ALL. impres· ponent in a matte r in·
sion you might gel from this volving Pepperdine Univer-
show is that it has but two sity and ils president.
staff idealists -the public Younger's move came
defender and one member Monday ~n the form or a
of the opposition, a young two-paragraph saying his
deputy district attorney of£ice is investigating com-
. 1,)layed by John Beck. plaints about the private
The others are neither ab-school, which has campuses
'SOiute saints nor sinners. in U:>s Angeles and Malibu,
They work both sides of the and President William
fence, drifting with the Banowsky, who is a
winds or expediency. Republican national com-
At the heart or the shoW is mitteeman.
Free Man
THE POLYGRAPH ex-
pert testified his tests.
showed Richardson, his
wife and an a partment
house m manager were tel·
ling the truth when they in-
sisted three Los Angeles
County 1herlff'1 narcotics
officers improperly gained
entrance to their Long
Beach apartment.
The three deputies
testified they had knocked
rll'St but Richardson and his
two defense witnesaes con·
tended the deputies burst
through the door after
~king.
1be judge overruled ob-iect.ions by the prosecution
in granting defense motions
to allow both the tests and
the polygraph expert's
testimony as evidence.
'nfE KEY argument the
defense used e~ploited what
was term e d a legal
loophole .
"After hours of research,
we found there's not a case
in California anywhere that
says the polygraph ls not
admWible," Wood stated.
The catch, Wood ex·
plained, is that despite co'm·
mon belier, modern li e
detector tests haven't ror-
mally been ruled out by a
Callromia court.
Newspaper
Picketed
By Gays
SAN FRANCISCO !APl
-A federal judge Monday
brushed •~Ide claim• of
projudtctal poblldly and or·
dered ·Jury selection to
besln Tuesday ln the trial of
promoter John P. Burke on
ctwges 1temmln1 from the
alleged '30 million Geolek
oil dtllllng fraud.
"I have deep feelin1 that
publicity of the last week
has seriously jeopardized
the abiUty of Mr. Burke to
receive 1 fair lrlal In this
eommunlty," said James
Maclnni,, attorney for
'Burke, 41. of La ·Mesa, who
was indicted JUne 21-
llUllKE IS charged wllh
conspiracy and with fraud
in the offertn1 and 11le of
-seeurilies, making untrue
statements and omittlnil
necessary facts in 1elUn1
securities.
Macinnis asked that the
trial be postponed unttl 30
days after the Nov. 5 elec·
Uon, which he said would
spark "considerable com·
ment." about the case.
Wiiiiam 'Norris,
Democratic candidate ror
attorney general, bas
LOS ANGELES !APl-A
group of homosexuala,spent
the night in sleeping b11s
outside the Los Angeles
Times building to protest
the newspaper's ane1ec1 in· n:g Gr.ame sufficient coverage of 1ay "
community evenu. K "ll T l'lllice Sgl. E . Williams f, raps
said the Times
management planned to So ff •
seek the arrest of any pieket ap e ir
still blocking entrances to
the newspaper's downtown SAN FRANCISCO (AP)
building in the morning. -Soap heir George Gam·
Wiiiiams said about 40 ble was fined $10.500 on a
persons were camped out-conviction for transporting
side the building Monday illegally killed big game,
night, and several carried and wu Ordered to devote
placards protesting the one day a week to wildlife
Times' alleged policy. comervation for a year.
· U.S. District Court Judge A SPOKESMAN for the Robert Peckham placed
protesters said 20 volun· Gamble on three years·
leers had agreed lo be at· probation on condition he
restedifnecessary.Hesaid not hunt big game
the group pJanned to occupy anywhere in the world
the building unless Times during that period .
executives agreed to meet Gamble, 38, operator of a them by 10 a.m. 15 00). Williams said the .. roup , acre ranch in Napa • County and the great-gran-
charged Republican incurn· Otis Chandler, and other in·
bent E\'elle Younger v.•lth cU\'idual1 .
falllna to act when a fellow The civil case is slated for
tnveetor complained about trial in U.S. District Court
Burke's operatio n s . hereFeb.Z3.
Younger, who was Los The Judge also denied a
Angeles district attorney at request by lwo coderendan·
the lime, also invested in ts, attorneys Arthur Lem·
Geotek and has denied Nor· pert, 42, San Mateo, and
ris'allegations. Robert Rose, 44, San
Rafael, for a separate trial.
' owne"hlpol•~n, ....
The htarlna ·.~ out
that !he gov~! j>l•ns
to call at lealt 231) Witnff·
ses. They ln<hide l:baadler.
who has den"~~any
fraudulent CGll\lll<l ,!!!' his
part ln· the el•ll case;
Pre!ton A. Parkinson, of.
Laa Vegu, lbe l1reest in ..
vestar wllh $1 ZIO.~ ac·
lreu Nalalle Wood, wlio la·
veoled $12,328, and Noncy
Sinatra and htr da.,._t.er,
Nancy Sinatra SarMla, who
each invested $30,814.
Macinnis said Norris, by 1bey were indicted for con·
speeches, ne"A'S releases spiracy only, allegedly for
and television appearances, concealing material facts in
has suggested that Burke helping prepare a document ~.gaged in illegal ac· ror the SEC about Burke'.s
U.S. District Court Judge r:::::::::.:cs~Ai'LliE=s~P>iE~Ri'«:s::io"iiN~S===::; William Sweigert denied ·
the motion for continuance
withoot prejudice. He also
ordered a jury panel sum-
tnoned and asked attorneys
to prov ide him any
quesUons."""thcy wqnt asked_
d prospective jurors.
MaclNNlS CITED the
ortgtnal publicity attending
the filing of a civil .suit in
May, 1973, by the Securities
and Exchlltlge Commission
alleging violation or
securities laws . Besides
Burke, the SEC named as
derendants Geotek Resour·
ces Fund. which he formed ;
13 r elated firms; Los
Angeles Times Publisher
MEN WOMEN
The nat beaotlfUI ahop in this country wi1 °"" IDOft in'
the lllbulous South C:O.t Ptlll Sl'IOJlping eem.t. 11 YoU
w:JiUld._Jike'"let' work-in these eleglnt ~ Me ot
1)811-time. will\ liberal e~ discounts. opportunity
tor advancement etc., Dhone Ernest Sanda tot llOPC. -
540-8741 .
(;R·f9.noon~hop
( lOl lll I IO~
1¥./ 1¥ 01 £1/l l ilW l I tU IW
•ANTIQlJE AfJCTION*
Atfet1tlon: Dealers * Dtcoraton • PriYafe Collet.rs
WED •• OCTOBER 23, 7 P.M.
. HIGHLIGHTSOfflHIAMEllCANOAIW.....-
• Roll Top Desks •Round & Square Teblet
•Glass Fron! China Cabinels •Hall Trees
•Press-Back Chairs & Rockers •Sideboards
•Drop Fron! Secrelarys •Piano&Organ Stools
• Bedroom Sels • Dining Room Sets
PLUS MANY MORI (j)UALITT OAK ITEMS
ALSO FEATURED IH THIS SAU:
• LARGE VARIETY OF COLLECTIBLES
Pitcher· & Bowl Sets • Brass • Copper • Cut Glassware • TrunkS •
China • Tiffany Ty~ Lamp Shades • Advertising Mirrors • Limps •
Fine Selection of Beveled Mirrors • Paintings & Lots More
Bric-a-Brae.
lldt:za•M.h:
•A Fine Selection of Clocks Will Be Available As Well As Many Meri
Outstanding Antiques & Collectibles. .
P.W.S.S.IHTllPllSU
Hirsch's attempt lo defend Younger, Republican in-
a young, heroin-wasted cumbmt whose Democratic
rock musician brilliantly opponent is Los Angeles al-
played by Gary Busey -tomey William A. Norris,
who's charged with three didn't describe the com·
other men in a Manson ptaints. But Banowsky, con·
family kind or murder cue.· tacted by telephone, said a
1be ooly precedent, he
added, was 1950 appeals
court decision barring a
systolic blood pressure test
and other decisions since
cited this and two later
identical decisions.
set up picket lines outside dsop of the cofounder of
the building early Monday f>rOcter & Gamble. was con· aft~:kesman for the victed by a (ederal jury on
Times said, "We'rejusllet· s.r:io,000 fine was im· HARRIS AUCTION GALLERY
ling !hem do their lhlng." posed for transporting lhe 4953 STATE STREET former student, Trent
THEY'RE ACCtJSED of Devanney, had complained
hackingtodealhaprofoot· that he, Banowsky,
ball quarterback who, "refused to direct the
although publicly sainUY, is school on a <'OUrse that
subsequently revealed as suited his (Devanney's)
referring to the fact that the head of 8 Big Horn sheep
group was allowed to camp killed 1 n Yellowstone lllTWllMCIHTIA&.& MONllYllYAI
out during lhe night without National Park and a $500 Ontario, Calif. 17141628·05 I 6 interference. ----------fine for transporting the ...,_.._., ...... 1,...111n.1tJJJIW•llfll
CHVRCH HA!j rhe~ad~of~a=n~ei~k~. ~;:::~~~~~~~~~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! privately kinky and into political Ideology." JUD G E K ELLY ,
such things as cocaine, however, accepted Wood's
bisexuality, masochism and Bi\NOWSKY ADDED contention that modern
death cults. that Devanney "felt that polygraph t esting uses HOT IDEA.
The public defender, tor when I c a m e i n a s more sophisticated devices
whom the case becomes an r,resident, I was departing and it ·should thus be con-
obsession, tries to get the rom the traditional and sidered on its own merits -
kid off, contending his client conservative direction that without reference to the
was totally wasted on drugs the institution had always 19SO appellate court ruling.
al the time of the killing and had. We had made some Kelly also accepted the
took no part in it. younger faculty appoint-defense argument that the
But it 's a head line· menta and were trying to polygraph has found
making case and Into it upgrade the quality of the a.noral acceptance in the
SANDGATE, England
(UPI) -Now that cold
weather has set in, the
congregation of St. Paul 's
Church will be offered hot
water bottles when they at-
tend religious services.
-~-1." ·---comes the sort or famous i:t\;llUU scientific community.
"We Simply cannot afford
the furnace heating rosts, ''
the Rev. Alan Gibson said.
trial lawyer -played withr--:;::o----------------------0::::::--
"' nir~. oily lli r by San:
Wanamaker -who take!
such cases with no othet
financial consideration than
the book and movie rights.
IT'S PROBABLY a sign
or the limes that he finds
that the three other deren·
dants won't s ign foreign
book a nd TV rights, in ad·
dilion to those for the United
.·Slates.
WEIJl(UDAY
FROM4 P.M.
at portl~lpalin9 DeJTaca'
all over the $oulhlaitd
-IJOeS
think
ht
11 ls not o simple task for o polienf lo reach and molnfoin ''lean
weight" for life. First the pottent musf hoVe on hones! desire to cure his prob·
lem ... then occeptpiofessionoJ guidance kom !rained Medical oOctors.
Llndoro's unique 10-weel< lreotment and lroinlng program will
teach poflenfs how to reach and molnloln thelr"leon weigh!" for life. A safe
and pioctlcol pion, with HCG lreotments, pioper nutrltlonol diet. and con·
ttnuol emotional support. New audio and sub·limlnol visual olds ore used
to mottvote the patient. The entire program Is undjll the strict aipervlslon
of Medical Doctors. speclolisfs In Beliotric Medicine.
Llndofo Olnles are owned ond odmlnllleted bi,<
MldlCOI Ooclorl that retfrici their practice to 8eriolries.
ML Olnlo P9fl()(lf'll!ll ore licensed by the State of Calllomlo.
CCIII !or lntonnatlOrl Monday lhru frklay 8 A.M. to 6 P. M.
Undorq4f:. MEDICAL CLINIC
•
Open Sundays
from noo~ to 5:00 p.m.
SANTAANA
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
•
0 nly at Bullock'L
Th<' big top dress. 1bc
hig look now. Wirh zip
front. Dropped shouldm.
No-scam waist sashed with
• 1ic. And handy pockcu.
By j.S.E. In wrinkle-shy
polyc:srcr. Vanilla or
black. W.rh itS own print
sarf.Siu:s IO.IH,S20
OrJcr by mail o< o<clor
hy phone •
Califor11ie.".nne Dn:ssts
Bull!!Pc't ~ta Ana I Fash)on,Squarc,~28.QQ_~._Maio_Su.cct, Sanca-Ana,Jclephonci ' 7-7211 • • Bullock's South Coast .Plaza, San Dici;o Freeway at Bristo l, Costa Mesa, Telephone : 556-0611
! f , I
• Al
r
·--
DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE '
· Best-Q-ualified· Choice
By.every reasonable assessmeritot qualifications
-breadth ol poUUcal experience, education, per· ~nal attributes -. Houston Tioumoy is by con·
s1derable meaouro the best qualified candidate for
governor ol Callfomln.
Delore being elected stat.. controller in 1006
Hugh Flourndy had served three terms as an assem:
blyman. And in 7 lh years as controlJer he has earned
praise rr~m D,emocrats and Republicans alike for the manner 1n which he has handled the top fiscal office. ;
~Is outstanding record and unquestioned in-
tegnty as an. ortlce·holder was recognized by the
voters Jn 1970 when he was reelected to his second
term as controller by the a-realest ma rgin of victory ·
ever g.iven any canJ)idate in a major state election.
. Hrs private career and training like wise con·
tribut<: strongly to his qunlilications. Holder ol three
degrees 1n government -including a Ph. O. from
Princeton -he has taught governmerlt at the
0&11!mont Co11eges as well as practiced it.·
Edmund G. BJ!lwn.Jr.;_Qn_theother hand,js a puz-~and sometimes lngbtenmg canafilale.
Those closest to J erry Brown, friends and
enemies alike, often bring up one disturbing word in
trying to ~ssess Brown: arrogant. This quality plus
hls too easy lapses into demagoguery have made it
hard even for fellow Democrats to know and feel at
ease with tilm.
Beyond any personal characteristics, however,
Brown's ~ost troubtt;ng aspect is his relative lack of
experience and maturity. He rode into office in 1970 as
Secretary of Stale, largely on his father's name. His
sole political office before that was a partial term as a
lnlstee ol the Los Angeles community f<>lleges .
1 problems whereas Brown, a liberal, loo olten oilers
the Old, discredited ''government will provide the '"n-
swers" approach.
Calilornia needs the experience alljl the maturity
of Houston Flournoy as governor. • • •
Major candidates for the office or lieutenant
governor are Democrat Mervyn Dymally. a state
senator with a long record as an arch liberal, and
Republican John Harmer, a state senator with a long
record as an arch ~rvative .
Inasmuch as it makes no sense to have a governor
and lieutenant governor from different parties, the
Daily Pilot recommends Harmer.
Essential 'Life Line'
To the poor and elderly, and others trying lo
stretch low, fixed incomes to meet the inflated cost of
living, a threatened 21 percent hike in eled.ric rates 'is
cause.for real alarm.
~wfw.EK,fheOi'ange nty Board of Super-
visors, in a s mall but creditable gesture of help, adOp·
ted a resolution urging electric co.mpanies lo Create
special "life line" rates for minimum users-.
It is a fact of modem life .that electricity, like
food, warmth and shelter. has 'become a basfc, in·
dispensable need.
Some lime ago, the leleP,ltone companies, recog-
nizing the plight ol the sick and elderly, established
. low "li(e line" rates for persons who need a phone, but
who make onJy ·a few calls a month.
On some general issues such as-strengthening
education, the two candidates sound somewhat alike. But.~urnoy, a ~oderate, pushes for a government,
business and citizen partnership to solve other
The supervisors' resolution urges.si.milar help for
persons who' use-only enough elect.nc1ty to provide
them with minimum safety ana· comfort.
. The "life line" proposal, and {he pleas of those
whO simply cannot afford to pay more for electricity,
w"rrant sincere consi<leration.
~ .. T~ S'TRIPll> ONE IS fOR. Rlt>INe t>ll~1NG 'THI: SUS ~IOTS, AN!>
THI$ GREEN ONE IS FOR CR.OSSll'«:i THE iE.ACHERS' PKKfT LINE .. ~ .. . .
Marshmallow
Moderates
Moving In. . . .
( .VON .HOFFMAN )
WASHINGTON -The P"""'YSms
d ennui with Y(hlch the public has
responded to this year's elections
have stirred both politicians. and
political writers to lament anew the
decomposition or the l\\"O·party
syste m . ·The atomization of our
politics, which tends to make: e\'ery
candidate hi..s or her own poJitic~ par·
ly, depresses men like David S.
Broder, lhe country's most widely
f'ell>ecl.ed Political analyst.
In a rec:ent c·o1umn Brode r
remarked that when you have no·
pe,rty discipline the way is open for
candidates with personal political
oraanizations to repeat what the
Nixon people did wllh CREEP. He
then went on to regret that recent
legislative efforts to strengthen party
structure have failed, essentially
because only a rapidJy diminishing
few give a damn about whether there
is or isn't a Republican or Democratic
• party. Indeed the question is no longer
whether most people are becoming in·
dependents but whether they will vote
at .all ... Why should 1 go down to the
polling place and help them weave a
rope for my own noose?" asks a
Califomia vote r, and she's not alone.
ln the face of this. no formalisti c ef·
Cort to legislate strength back lnlo the
l"'O·party system Is ,soing to work.
The parties weren't formed as the
result of the passage of laws in the
firat place. They were formed by men
who banded together out or a common
hrterest and belief. They had substan·
live content, a nd it was one that was
reoogni ied, however crudely, by.the
entire electorate. But today who
would seriously assert that the
Republicans are the party of the rich
and the De moc r ats that of the
workingman?
THE ONLY important division
"·e're left with is btt"·cen .. oonset·
,·atives" and "liberals." and that too
has lost almost wll meaning. ThoSt!
* .
Dear
Gloomy
Gus
PUBLIUS IV exalts government
s..upport o L t.he dominant
economic interests (Gus, Ck!t.
16). There are no more per-
sistenL a nd s uccessrut ap·
plicants for pubUc assistance
from the ''"'·e lrace state" than
the haughty giants Of the priYate
enterprise system.
W.R.N.
labels reflect l ittle more than a
cultural stance.
\VH.al's H conse r"ettive~ A chap "'ilh
a grufr \'Oice and an American fl ag
bUtlon on one lapel and a WlN button
on the other. He h as a public l \'ersion
to dirty books and homosexuality and ,
wliile he may detest what he calls
welfare progra m s, he loves ar-
mament progra ms.
What's a liberal? He's ·a chap who
used to be for busing and who puts
p~tein dressing on his slightly longer
hair to puff il up a nd give him!iielf the
dry look . He didn't like the war i'n
Vietnam, but you might just sell him
one in the Middle East.
If that is the spectrum of electoral
politics, it follows that parties are
"'ithout meaning and candidates are
mostly vacuous m arshmallo)"s. On
the other hand, we've brought much or this on ourselves by accepting the
id ea that the summum boaum or
political personality is someone w.rho
is r ega(ded as a "responsible.
reasonable. middle ·of.the·road
moderate." Any passion or deeply
fixed convictions are taken to be signs
o( an unstable Canalicism.
The m ost irra tional fa na ticism
derives from denying the existence of
one's own ideology . It makes it impos·
slble for people l.o distinguish between
subjective a nd objecti\·e truth, or to
recognize our present state, which an
outsider can onl y describe as middle·
or·the ·road ext r e mism . Having
derined all dissent as psychopathic,
and with the wa"r m bodies of consen·
sus politics and non·ldeologlcal
rationalism surrounding us, there's
no one and no thing to tell us that the
mar shmallow moderates are in·
\"Ol\'ing us in the most horrendous
kinds or folly.
·Bringing.
Aesop Up
To Date
( ART HOPPE ]
Once upon a time there was an ant
and a•grasshopper. .
IJ'he ant was a very sober. seriovs,
cautious, contemplatl\'e ant. He
believed in Hard Work, Thrin and
Decency. As these were· virtues
widely admired in
the community,
the ant was highly
res,Pected by one
andall.
Th'e g rasshop·
per, on the other
h<i nd, was a loose-
living, good·for·
nothing playboy.
He believed in
H-aving to~un . As th ese were
detriments widely condemned in the
community, be was vigorously ex·
coriated by lemPer ance societies, the
League ror Decency and savings &
loan institutions .
The ant toiled from sunrise to sun·
set. He neve r went to the movies. He
Dever: went to ball games. He never
even went on picnics, which shows
what a dedicated ant he was.
The grasshopper lolled around all
day. He strummed .. Llfe is Just a
Bowl of Che rries'' on his banjo. He fell
in love with every passing ladybug.
He swilled nectar from all the lady.
slippers. And when he mo\·ed, which
was frequently, everybody said ,
"Tsk, tsk, there goes the neighbor·
hood."
THE ANT, by scrupulously doing
without, saved every pt?nny he pos.
sibly could. He bought gill·edged
securities. He paid olf the mortgage
on . his a nt's nest. I-le scrimped to
make the monthly payments on his
cherished annuity that would proride
ror him in his old age.
While So.,iets Sail On
U.S. Navy • m Trouble?
WA.SHINGTON -Among the major
events taking place in the world
pow e r s tru gg le is the rise
of the So\•iel Navy .• This is widely
recognized he re a nd abroad. Ruling
the seas is proclai med Ru ssian policy
and ils application ·
is constantly ob-
served in the
Mediterranea n,
the Indian Ocean
and the Northern
PaciOc.
Admirals warn
that the Uni ted
Stales will no t
much lonJ?er 6e the
unchallengea hie protector of the sea
lanes of world commerce. Not many or them warn, however, that the
A·m erica n Navy's internal
organization a nd the condition of its
neet.s has fallen upon evu days as
Soviet !"la val power rises.
SOMETIMES it is hard to know
"'hat lo make · of Admiral H.G.
Rickover, USN . He is beyond doubt
the navy's severest critic. Whal he is
now saying after rising to the position or run admiral would have called for a
sensational court martial in other
days or other countries.
For. what Admiral Rickove r is
saying is that the Navy's top com·
mand is no good, and, worse, he is
shooting it publicly so loudly that a
fonner Navy lieutenant commander
cannot rail lo hear. This rormet.naval
officer in World War II is now oo m-
mander·in·chi er. to~ormer Lieutenant
Commande r l''ord is thus equipped to
have some personal understanding or
what Admiral Rickover is ta_lking
about, and i.f he is failing to listen be
( RICH.ARD
WILSON )
has turned a deaf ear to what seems lo
bea ve'ry important problem.
.. What is the condition of the ships
in our fleet ? ln nfy opinion there has
been no period in the past 50 years
where the n eet has been in as poor
condition as it is today," said Admiral
Rickover. "It appears to me that the
prime reason for the inability of the
officers of the fl eet to supervise their
equipment is their lack of training."
TllE ''ARISTOCRATS" of the
Navy, the line officers, do not under·
stand their own ships and are thus
technicall y incompetent to handle
them, according to RJckover. He ex·
eludes nuclear ships from his 16-.€un
salvo. The nuclear line officers, he
claims, have been rorced to master
the engineering details and "are not.
afraid lo get their hands dirty."
As for other commanding officers,
Rickover claims to have talked to ad·
mirals responsible for the care of
troublesome bo ilers who have never
even seen them.
This is an old controversy, of cour·
&e, Social distinction and glamor is
reserved for the line officers while the
engineering officers sit below the salt.
But as Ri ckover sees it , the
a ri stocrats h ave t a ke n over
everything" in a technological age far
beyond their capabilities.
IF THIS criticism ot the line "of·
ricers seem s rough •. what about the
lop command? Even worse. The lop
command -has been so victimized by
systems management and analysis
that the purpose or the Navy has
become lost in its organizational com·
plexity. If Col umbus had worked the
same way Am erica would never have
been discovered and we would all be
Indians, says Ricko\·er.
Where does a ll this decay start? At
the Naval Academy at Annapolis and
then compounded by higher training
in the Nava l War College .
.. l\1 anagement is taught at Annapolis.
' This has done serious harm to its
young gradu ates." snorts Rickover.
.. It ""·ill take some or these men years
to jlnlearn the Annapolis social
science propaga nda."
He sees little hope ror a midship·
man who will be spending his senior
year studying "the effects ol low
frequency electromagnetic fields on
the circadian biorhythms of' common
mice," and no· bright ruture for Na,·al
Reserve ofricers trained as a n·
thropologists, foresters, sociologi sts
and landscape architects. ·
SUMMING it all up, Ricko\·er says
the Navy i5 raising a generation of or-.
ricers who believe that technical
training is not esse-ntial and that they
can rely on management techniques
to make decisions.
All Ricko\·er "·ants ts a Navy that
can fight. What is wrong is that
the Navy belie ves that merely by
manipulating its organization It can'
continue to realize its purpose or ser-
ving as the national shield in peace as
·well as war.
Ir the Navy is as bad as Ricko,·er
says it is, mayb~ there is something to
the Soviet claim th al its ships will rule
the seas.
Legislators Live It Up
More Pay, More Staff,-More Benefits
euphemism for tax pai~ campaign .
workers.
Sign of Mediocrity
The grasshopper, by scrupulously
doing with. threw away every penny
that came his way o n nectar,
ladybugs and sheet music Cor his ban·
jo. He was a disgrace lo the com-
munity and an awful example to the
kids.
;·fOUjours gai, toujours gai , I sing,"
sang the grasshopper. ··woo cares
what tomorrow will bring? You toll
from dawn to setting sun. But l
believe in Having Fun!"
Ever since the State Legislature
adopted the pasition that the duties
are full lime its members have been
getting themselves deeper and deeper
into a mire or hard to justify expen·
dituus of public funds ror their own
personal benefit. '
This transilion
from cltiie n -
legislators to self·
s tyled ''profes·
sional legislators"
has been acc:om-
p an i e d by a
disortanized and
h a p h a z a r d
( EARL WATERS ]
making in serving the public they also
granted themselves an unwarranted
early retire me nt "pension" which
public pressure has since compelled
them lo abolish. Instead of waking up
to the realization that their free·
wheeling with the tax dollars for their
own personal enrichment has gone
beyond the pale of public acceptance,
the lawm akers have reacted a ngrily
towards the members of the press.
most or who work much harder for far
J ess money tllan they do, for lhelr part
in Informing the public of lhese over-.
draws of public funds.
The legislators would not permit
any other agency or state gove rnment
to operate in such fashion. They Insist
upon scrutiny or all other s~le spen·
ding in detail.
11Mnlghts•tLarg:e:
Originalit y ts the one thing a
mf!d iocre mind cannot stand : and the
surest sign of mediocrity is that it
feels comfortable only with the
familiar -indeed. confuses the
ramilia r •dth the eternally right.
The only way to be just is to judge your
own .actions by the bestpnrtof you, and
to judge th_e actions of others by the
worstpartofyou.
If b). nature you do not have a critical
mind. you will not learn much : but lfby
nature you ha\'e a crtticel mind. and let
itdom Ina te you. a II you learn will ht tur·
nedlodeslructlvcpu11JOSC3.
The Oi1th~l!t'1 contempt for fulth lies
in his failure lo di&tfn1't1ish Hmong the
dif(errnt kinds, and to lu01p them ull
together as supt'rstition: but. ti$ Curd·
jit(11u1idlon~ugo : ''Consclou ra lth is
fl"fotMm ; •motional r~1ith is ''"''fry:
merh;1ni ral raith is ronllshness.··
An,· nbJc.>rt "'Ith ii hii;?h «nter of
it"f'a\'it>· is t'nsil,-loppled by out.side
rorcel\: lh(' ullimnte object or a ,i:OOd
education nu1thi to be lo lo\l.·t·r the per·
ton's C't'nlt'r or emotlonul gru\·ity 50 ,
(.SYDNEY HARRIS)
that he remains receptive to outside
forces a nd c.111 n incorporate them
\l'lthout being o\'erwhelmcd by them.
Hours Or sleep are not as lmPortant
as the mode or s teep; the q~llty of
three hours can be better than the
quantitJ Of nine.
!\I any aptitudes th11l can be learned
cannot be taught -und wriUns ls
amonM the first or these ; nothing iJ a
crueler academic hoax than a courae
In ··tre01ti\·f'" •'riling.
• lt is natural ro~-uS l~ fear forro: U ls'
heroic ror us to r e11ist it ; it Is under·
stand11ble for us to surcumb to It : It la
desple:able only when we begin to ad··
mlrt tt forltselr a lone.
The ant wollld shake his head, wipe
hi& spectacles and eye the grasshop·
per disdainfully. "Well just don 't
come around to me in your old age
begging for a handoul,'' he would say.
SOTllE \'EARS passed. At lastlhe stack Ing of
ant reached the mandatory benefits upon benefil3 not envisioned
retirement age for which he had been when the people or CaliJornia, in
working and sweating and dreaming questionable wisdom, voted to raise
his whole life through. "At lasl1" he the salaries from $500 a month to
said ... I will enjoy the fruill or Hard $16,000 and year with permission for
Work, Thrln a nd Decency." But, ·or the lawmakers to malte salary in·
course, his gilt-edged securities creases ror themselvestherearter.
weren't worth a nickel. The: five-pet· . Tbete emolumenb have not s~
cenl mortgage he had paid off would ped with lht per diem living •llowan·
nowcostblm 12pcrttntandtwopaln· ces of $30 a day, which have been
ts. And t'he annuity, for .whidl he had •IM.lsed by permitting the roembers to
scrimped and saved for years. retur· draw expenses seven days a week
ntd $98 a monlh -whlell woukl be even thouf h they are only on the .}ob,
adequate lr they were prc·l939 dol· usually \" best, four de1ys a week.
tars. So the ant wrote a note saying, "I They have Included an expaMion of
am destitute?" And he swallowed a starr beyond uny reasonable
bottle of ant poison. A1. for the 1ras· leitslaUve purpose, the cfflabUshment
shopper. be didn't starve to death at ol "field ofrices" for each member
all. lnAtead. rich in yean and Joy, he and lb(! provl!Oon of-. rree car alonA
The cnthu,.;a5t I~ wmnl( in 1~in1t: h"appll)' succurpbcd to cinhosls or the wiUt unllmll~ ttu:tollnc und telephone
for t.lhe lruth. ·· bcrulL~ il r;innot be liYer. credit cardfl. Ull well as 1ecncrou! free .
round : the t'V nit' Is wornat In m1i1ilingpr1,,llc1tcs. lmu~lnln1t th11t bectu . ..w th!! ln1th can· MORAi.: £ut, drink and be merry M!-be round. th('rcro~ i,L. doeK~0!_ rn.r toMorrow ·y.9u ~·t bC! uble to a,i..-a.&RIED AWAY by lhelr own·
<':<LSI· ford lo. . Ideas !JI the 1t:reat sucrifi~!'I they wcrt 1 ~ ..
Nervous about pasaible criticisms the~ continue to keer, from the pUbUc
the full details or egislallve costs.
Particularly they refuse to disclose
expenditures for gasoline and other
tosts incurred Individua lly by ' lhe
members. ·
rlN DEFENSE they pul forth the
Salm that their methods nt accoun·
ting are or •·ion« standing". Even jf
true thwt Is no dtfcn~ ul all. But the
f»ct. Is the&l it ia not "°· Wh1i1t most
''prorcA11ionul lef(TAlatnf'l\1' don't
reall7.c Is that It hus nnly been wllhln
the last 20 ycurll that the members
h:ave enjoyed us much u~-havln1t their
nwn olflccl'I and seem.uric:. ol lhe
Stute Copltol, let alnne field office~
and .. rlckl Atarf" which, In loo many
cases, Ii 'nothing more than 11
•
IT HAS BEEN· suggested that a
commission be created to study and set, or at least recommend , ~e proper
salaries and other benefits to be paid
the lawinaker:s.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
Robm N. Wo<d,Pul>!Ulltr 111o .... 1e • ..a. ,._
Borboro Ktfibic:h ,
~ditoriol P0gt tdU.or
TM editortal page ot Ute Dally
PUol seeks to Inform and SUmulat.e
~aden by present1n1 on Ulla Piie
!Jl'-'fne 4.'0mmenlary on losi'a of In·
teral by syndicated cohunnlsb and
cartoonist!!, by provldina 1 rontm
for readers' views and bf Prettntinc
Uab newspaper\• opinions and ideas
on current ~oplcs. The editorial
o9'nions of the »ally p;lot aJ>ptar
only in lhe editorlal columft al the
lOp Of the p11e. Opinions expl'ftied
by the columnist1 and cartoonlat.t
and letter writers art lhelr own and
no endorM.mtnt or their vl•ws by the
Dally Pilot should be inferred.
Tuesday, Oclober22, Jll14 _,
'
I
t
,t
t
t
t
t
t
f
l
t
r
I
t
II
Maggot s,
Rat Hair
In Tuna
'L ML Boyd
MOUNT VERNON , N.Y ..
(UPI) -Rodent ·ha irs,
moth wings and parts or in-
sects and maggots were
found in samples or.canned
tuna fish from 13 or 16 major
distributors or canners
tested, atcordlng to the
Consumers Union.
' .
The union, a nonpartisan
;consumer organizatiQn and
publK:}\er of Consum ers •
Reports. tested 52 brands of
canned tuna for color, con·
dition, aroma. flavor and
texture and, as it usually
does when testing food, for
filth and bacteria.
THE RESULTS of the
tests, publis hed in the
magazine's November is-
sue,.round that while rich in
protein, tuna samples also
contained "a disturbing
number of rodent hairs,.
other animal hairs, rrag.
ments or reathers, moth
scales a nd insect and mag-
got parts. "
"Of the 16 distributors or
tuna whose brands we
t ested,·' Co n s um e r s
Reports said, ''13 were
represented by at least one
filthy sample out or those
examined £or filth . The pal·
tern of pe rmitting un -
wholesome adulterants ap-
pears industry wide.''
Th e article added,
''Althoug h th e filth we
found is more likely to ruin
your appetite tha n your
health. we think the tuna in·
dustry b adly n ee ds a
clean-up."
NOTING THAT th e
federal Food and Drug Ad·
ministration's "usual ex-
cuse for its lax standards on
Jilth in food is that filth
originated in nature and
couldn.'t b e relJdily
removed," the article s-aid
"rats don 't Ii ye in or around
tuna fish in the ocean. nor
do birds and maggots,
moths or other insects.
"lt is therefore safe to
conclude that the filth we
found in canned tuna y,·as
introduced afte r catching."
Acccrding to the article,
two tuna fish samples con-
\ained rat hairs three-finhs or an inch long ..
''HAIRS THAT long
surely didn't come from
ground-up spices," the ar-
ticle said.
Consumers Union said
tuna from three packers or
dis tributors was clean.
They are Grand Union
Stores, Nozakl Associates
Inc., which distributes the
Geisha brand. and SSC In·
ternational, which has the
Empress brand.
THE OTHER distributors
or packers tested include :
Bumble Bee Sea roods
division, Castle & Cooke,
Inc.; Ralston Purina Co ..
distributors or Chicken of
~-the Sea and Van .Camp's
brands; Topco Associates,
Jn r., which has the Food
Club label; A & P Stores:
First National Stor es,
dis tributors o r Finest
brand ; Kroger Stores,
which also distributes
North Bay brand.
Al s o t es ted were
Westgate-California Foods,
Inc., distributor s or Car-
nation a nd Breast o'
Chicken brands; Starkist
Foods, Inc .• which also
distributes Eal Well : S & W
Fine Foo<\,s. Inc.; Safeway
Stores, wh ic h has Sea
Trader and Tern pest bran·
ds; De l Mont e Corp.:
Camerica n Inte rnational
whose brand• naQ'l e is Deep
Blue, and the Mit·subishi In·
ternational Corp., whose
brand name is Three
Diamonds.
Lash LaRue
In Trouble
MOUNTAIN VIEW, Ga.
<AP)-. A charge or public
i:lrunkenness against for -
mer actor Lush La Rue was .
dropped. but he was bound
over to a grpnd jury on a
narcotics charge.
The charges stemmed
from an incident last month
in this town south of Allan·
ta:
LaRue,. who thrilled a
generation of malineegoers
with h is s kill with a
buJlwhip. lives In J ackson·
ville, Fla.
kl I l•H'lnl
Elephants Walk
Fast-Can't Run
It's not enough to sllYitn elephant can't ju1np. I Must a1$0 r eport an elePh~nt can.'t
.. run. What, yo·u want to debate
·that? No, sir, an elephant can walk
maybe faster tha n a man can run.
But walk is what it does, not run.
~ GARDENIAS give or! a rancy
fragrance. And so do orange blos-
soms. Put them together, though,
and their fragrances cancel each
other out.
Q. ••11ow MANY hairs a re in
eyebrow?''
Ii.. About 550, typically.
SLAP.PING
l\.1aybe it's not newS·to report that one out or every
five grownup Americans approves or the, slapping or a
spouse,\ gi ven ca:use. But it's noteworthy, I think, that
well·heeled highly-ed11catcd citizens are moreilikely to
apprOve of-said--slapping than are-the poorer--dropout
folk. At least, surveys indiclJte such.
REMEMBER, young lady, in cans, beef with
gravy is at least half beef, but gravy with beef is only a
little bette r than a third beer.
WOULDN'T DO to d't\'ell overmuch here on mam-
mary gla nds, don't suppose, but it is a medical fact
that approximately one Out of every 200 women has
~ore than the customary number of same.
' YOU KNEW the Irish claim to have inve nted
whiskey. But did you know they also claim to have in-
vented soda water ? An Irishman na med Augustine T h-
wates Jr., the son of a Dublin chemist, is so credited.
Theyearwas l777.
UNFAITl:IFUL
A researcher interviewed more than 1,000 wives in
Italy. And 30 percent of them admitted they'd been un -
faithful to their husbands. Another 40 percent sa·
they probably would have been unfaithfui. if the oppor-
tunity had come up. That 70 percent expressed the con-
sensus that Italian husbands are boring. Name of the
researcher: Lie ta Harrison. Whereabouts or the
research: Rome.
-CABBAGES get hernias.
SOME PEOPLE who like cream in their coffee
~ay the.cream cools the cupful sufficiently to take a sip
1mmed1ately. Some others ~ay it insulates the surface
of the coffee with a thin layer or butterfat so to keep the
cupful hotter longer. Who's right? Both.
rr THE HARDFACTS
Now comes the report that the Sahara Desert is
expandlng south) by about half a mile every year ...
WflY IS IT bana nas stored in a refrigerator in a brown
paper bag won't turn brown? ... IT WAS DIANA
MEYERS who descri bed gi nger ale as "a drink that
tastes like bees sound" ... THOSE SLED DOGS or the
Polar Eskimos are fed only every day when working,
only once a week during the winter downtime ... WHY
TIIE DIVORCE RATE along the Pacific Coast is four
time higher than along the Atl antic Coast likewise
remains a mystery.
IT Wi\S on Labor ·Day or 1890 that a railway
station porter tied a piece of red cloth to his cap so he
could be seen most readily in the crowdS. ·And hen-·
ceforth such porters were knowri' as redcaps.
AOllt'Hs,...il .0 ~M ....... P.o: ... 11176, l"WI W-. T•1. 1611!.
'9p"l!M 1•1' L.M .......
•
J
.. ...
TUISday. Oclober 22. 197<1 • CAIL Y PILOT at • 'Rape SlayinJ!'
Woman 8eceives
-At Least 5 Years
Shooc>'s Otler-
MONTEH.F:Y (UPl l
1\.116. Inez Garcia, 30, has
been sentenced to rive years
to life in prison ror shooti ng
to death Lhe companion of a
man who raped her.
Mrs. Gurcia was convic·
l ed earlier of shooting
t.11gucl Jimenez March 19 al
nearby Soledad.
WHEN SUPERIOR Court .
Judge Stanley Lawson pas-
sed sentence, loud hissing
was heard among about 90
The illness of actress persons crowded into the
·Bette Davis h as caused courtroom Monday · As the co urtroom emp·
the . permanent closing tied, 'shouts or "Free Inez"
of the mus ical· play went up rrom about 100
''Miss Moffat.'' The moresupportersoutside thc
s h ow clo s ed in coutt.
Philadelphia after two A n'umber or women's
weeks, a nd nine-monlh or~anizationss have joined
road tour has--beerr-can· -in.the '.'lne~.G arcia Qcfense . celed Committee and scheduled
' ralli es in several cities to
protest he r conviction .
SllE FOUNI> thl' alleged
rapist. Lui s Castillo. with
Jiminez. and fir('d one shot.
killing Jimin('z.
On th e witn('Ss s tand
during her tri al, f\trs. Gar·
cia shouted, "I killed the
son-01-a·bitch and I wish I
had killed the othl'r."
Judge Lawson said that
he 1,1,•ant ed "to tc>l l the
thousands of ladies "'ho sig ·
ned petitions" .supporting
~1rs. Garcia that lhis nation
has "a gO\'crnment by la1,1,·
and not a go\'Crn ment by ·
men.'' I-le said one man can-
not executt! another and
that f\lrs. Garcia's victim
had no opportunity to a
trial.
The prpsccution :.illcg('d
ljlat t~ shooting oec:urr('d
in a dispute over drug traJ-
fi C', a nd .Jud ge Lawson
repeatedly decla red that it
was ··a murde r trial, not a
rape tria l."
Goodies'
Slayer
Sentenced
SENTENCING WA S
delayed ror severa l hours
while a ltorney Charles r----------~I
WEURZBURG , Germany
CUPI) -A criminal court
has sentenced a dentist's
assistant to 14 years im·
prisonment for murdering
her father a nd he r fi ance 's
father with poisoned bon-
bons.
Garry argued ror a reduc-
tion in the charge rrom
second degree murder lo
manslaughter and disputed
a probation report on P..lrs.
Garcia's prior record.
The de(e nse contended
that ~1rs . G'arcia was defen-
ding he r virtue wa s
under great e mo tional
strain when the shooting oc-
curred. . The judge said, however ,
Not Like
Out Navy
SAN DIEGO !AP> -
The USO says a 1950s·
style da nce drew 321
sailors and girls, three
times as many as turned
out ror a noth er
program. billed as "Sex
in the 70s."
that the trial evidence ';==========~!
;ffflr. lbristian's
1~ur Ji11in,i,: '"'J J.111rir1.~ 011111111.cs i 1111' r1·lil's of fi111· 11IJ
•1ili",I! shi11s.
L 1111clu·o11 SJ1t'c.ii1f
BUSINESSPERSON'S BUFFET SJ.50
L un rlt••1J11 At 11'1. -l'ri. ,fror11 I I: J 0 11.111. ., ·
Di11111·r ·"'"''"' N~~·l11lrfro111 5:00 1i.111.
S11111/,1y c:li.1111~''.~111• ~r101rli SJ. 75 Jf0,11 l~~q 'f<f"·
-1;1111·11.11111111•111-, 1,N
Ii.if.I!.•'' H .t)'i'S "/i1rl. -Tl111rs. E1•rrii1t,V,S •• ,
D,i1t ri r1.c 1:,;, -S101. N~o,:.h1s .•n1
1-·isltrs, A1rurs, 01•.,r1·r B.1r, f\'u1rJ IJ 'in,·s, A Its ,,,.J Spirits
f)[{r. (!l~ri.atian'£i ,~ ·.
151 E. Coast H1'cf1u•,11• ~'T f/'0. • • Nc11•11or1 Br11rl1 _ ;1 · ,
Rt•srr11utio11s(114) 615-JlZO .,,_, . ,.J...\'
How does
1 Christian Science heal?
Couldn't we Bit use heali ng in some Phd'i o
our lives? lsn'I the community and thti'"Wbrld'
crying out for a practical healing method to· cure .
its ills?
COME AND HEAR
THE HEALING METHOD Of
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE "'" ··~·-
" .
The court convicted, 26·
year-0ld Ingrid Ulbrich of
murde ring he? father in
1971 and her rather-in'iaw·
to-be in 1973 with bonbons
contaminated with an insec-
disclosed that l\.1rs. Garcia,
after the alleged rape, had
taken the time to clean up
her apartment, make two
telephone calls, load her
gun and then "le£t on the
prowl as a huntress."
'"l' "'• Ooilr Piiot I•• ,. • .,., ..
!•owl .1 •• "'4 ....... I•••• ..-.1 ~ . ... , ,... . ~
~ .. ,_ ...
ticide. ·
The woinan told the court
that her ra ther assaulted
her for several years. She
also told the·court she-gave
poisoned candy to her fian-
ce's rathe r beca us e he
behaved and looked like her
father and she reared "the
same might happen to me
again."
The court a lso Ordered
that the woman be admitted
toa mental home.
~~·""O ... "'"' T-Sl-11.,.,..._ .... °"""' 641·175]
HOW TO DO THEM STEP BY STEP
Anyone can care for a Brusn & Blower hair style. or our
other curl coaxing. fuss-free. full functional SCISSOR
STYLES which are as easV to do as just shampoo! Our lamp
wts. linger tumble cu ts. curling iron cuts, wash towel dry.
brush 'n llufl cuts or simple wash and wear cuts are SCIS-
SORED. alt take-care-of yourself stytes. Good tor any age.
any hair. No teasing, no rollers, no pins. no POLLUTING
HAIR SPRAVS. ALSO:
NO 5(1' '8MA.NEMT WAYlS, TOU'MAT MEVIEI WAtfT
TO SIT TOUR HAtl: ACiAtM.
JOSEPH'S SOSSOR STYLING Huntington Aea<h Fullerton
•SM It 11101 A••· JOS H. HcwW ll•d.
968-3535 879-3863
I .4.M. le 10 P.M. ·Set. & S-.' te S P.M.
ly J-5,.-cn', C.S.I •.
MONDAY. OCTOBER 28~:00 P.M. # •, ~ ,
FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST
llOJ Yl.4 LIDO, MEWPOlT IUCH ··
Talk is lree and care lor small children 1s provided \
On price alone ...
r I •
Still the best newspapo!r buy oft~ . ,., ""
r.,.,~1••
the Orange Coast
The Oaily Pilot .. "
delivered 7 days a week , . ..
Dial direct or call collect 642 • 4321 11r,,::.1
. } ,,,1 ,, . '( '
'.J '"'l<i
' ' 'I
' '1·1
" ' If there's an easier way· '" JI-I
.. to get you there, •
''
···-· I'll be die first to tell you~:~~-;
•(,, . . .• . ~
'"
..
-' ....
" ' San J~. ~Francisco. .
akland. Sacramento. Ontario. Palm Springs~ ·
. San Diego. Orange County.
Going places? Call Air California. Our new Easy Information service
will tell you the easy way to go ... anywhere in the state. Air California's frequent 737 Sunjets
are the easy way out to eight major regional airports
And, If our schedule doesn't quite match your schedule. w1!ll still help you
on you r way. Rental cars ae::ls. The nation's only famillfdiscount plan. Econom ical group rates
• and ml 1 res. They're all part of Air California's easy way .. and we can have V tickets walling at a nearby travel agent. So call Easy Information fir st
· Wherever Y,ou're headed. you'll find Air California's seivice easy to tak e.
AIR CALIFC)RN IA 737s ·-
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We're easy to take .
·111' ..
~11 Easy Information In Oninge Cbunty, (71415404550: Downey, (2131924-:\.,113, l..lqun,1 {7141494 7595; Loe; An:i.e~. (213~ 627 54011 "~ 1
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' I
'
,
,
L
~\ J\8. Do\ILY P<LOT Tundty, October 22, 1974
( R-nk of America, Others
rop Prime Lending Rate
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi 10% Hike
hi Air
Fares OK
Over The Counter
HA$0 Ustiftgs . .
"""' ...... '*' Dllv• ("' 1'"' 10\"o """-'' ,.,. IJ ,, "''" ,,,. •""''' :=.~.::C1:.i ~ =: ?.: ,... , ::~t h~ I:~ :::: :: ~~ Ltt: $Kvril"'1 0..,t..l, Oielull Cll ltl MC:O.I f 1'9 t AoOl'I DI' II 11~ .,.. li!dt ...... efltf5 Dell Cmp '"" tlolo M<Ot.111 11.o t lilolllM 8 lJ It 4110i1H Dr -f·tM-DK!llel J\lo. p,. ._ "._ lj,_ ~ Cit l~ 2'-o
'-*' .... , IO ~Gt11 4YI ~Vt Mt«"' 11111 "'~' Pfl 4 '"' _,_ otflet ., ., U\o't '""' MIOlm Jj"' ui... Aloil S*M ,•,~ ,•,•
NEW YORK. (UPI) -
Mor~ banks ucross the
country have rono~·ed the
le:1d o! M'Vl'r<i l maJor New
York b:lnks und cut their
prime lending rnte.
Sornc banks made a cs,;tn/
n hair point, others a Quar-
ter point. With the reduc·
lions, the g~ncrit l level or
the prime now st:.nds at
l I 1(i peret>nl.
On fo'ri day, two major
~ew York banks , fo'irsl
Dean Witter & Co .
Cordially Invites You
To Attend A
Co mmodity Seminar
This is ·an opportunity for yeu to learn the basic
fundamentals and techniques ol trading in ·
-commodities. explained-in an interesUng, 5'ms»e
to understand manner by Bob Nelson,
Convnodity Accou nt Executive in the Laguna
Beach OJfice. He will specifically discuss our
nf!tl{ G,_iided Account program wil:ti risk-control
smct·mqney-management strategy, with particular
emphasis o n how to dovetail your buying
program wit h a pre-determined selling policy.
He will also discuss:
• Buying and Selhng Commodity Futures
contracts
• Trading Techn io ues -Fundamental and
10chnical Analysis
• Current Situation and Outlook
<: Guided Commodity Program
DATE: Thursday. October 2 4. 1974
TIME: 7:30 P.M.
Pl.ACE: Laguna Beach Dean Witter Office
298 Broadway, Laguna .Beach
For reservations. phone toll free 494-0711.
549-3085 or 496-1278 or complete and mail the •
CX>UPon beklw. Please register without delay as
seating capacity is limited. ------------------
,OSSn WitJer & Co. 1ncorpora1ed 2'Je: Broadway, Laguna Beach, CA 92652 ·
t) I 'MJUld appreciate -. -reservaiions IOr )'Our lecture on
Odober 24.
D Sorry, I cannot at1end. Aee98 send me yoor' boo!Uel
"enlitled HGu1ded Commocllly Program -A Practical Approach
tof,oMmod1ty Trading.··
.... DEAi WITTER: ..
National City and Chemicul
Bunk, cut the r1.1te to top
business borrowers a quar-
ter Point to 11 1/4 percent
from 11'1.i percent. Morg:1n
Gua rant,y und Darik of
America followed with 1.1
half point cut lo 11 v...
Others followed J\1ond<ty.
Amon g those dropping their
rite to 11 ~~ were Irving
Trust Co. of New York .
Bank of New Y~k and the
Cleveland Trust Co. Jolrst
National Boink o hi cago
cut its rate to the sa e level
in a qua rter point reduction.
Several other banks, wit h
a rate of 11~~ percent, mudc
quarter points cuts to 11 Yi.
They included Cha se
~1anh attan, 1'~irst National
Ba n k o ! Bos ton and &::"":'~~~·:;·=~'-::;;•~•~•<~w..w::::.::-::.;·==::-;.-"!' ... .., .. __ .;,J National-Bank of Detroit. _ _._ ------
The s preadin g or the ''Comingdownmaybea lotharderthanwethink."
reductions in the prime
coime with new indications
the Federal Reserve Board
is casing its hold on the
credit re ins. On Friday the
rate on federal funds -the
I.serves that banks lend one
another-fell to 91h pcrt-ent
from 10 percent without any
action by the FED lo of(set
the decline. The FED uses
. the federal funds rate as a
guideline on whether to in ·
ject or absorb reserves in
the industry, absorbing
· funds on dips in the rate and
injecting them o n in-
creases.
VfN Cites
Sales Loss
Japan Asked to End
' .
Scottish-type Names
GLASCOW, Scotland
fAP) -Scottish textile
manufacturers say they are
rlattered but that their
Japanese counterparts
really must s top giving
their products such names
as "Bonnie Dundee."
A. B. Crawford, secretary
of the National Association
of Sco ttis h Woo l.en
Manufacturers, said ·his
g roup h as protested to
Japan's Wool Industry Con·
rerence.
was prompied by Japanese
companies' use on their
product s of names like
"Bonnie Dundee," "Black
Watch 42nd'' and
"Gleneagle."
Mesa Firm
Tells Offer
For Stock VTN Corporation has "We are happy to think
reported a loss for !he first that Scottish c loth is so Standard-Pacific Corp. ol
fiscal quarter ended Aug. highly regarded that others. Costa Mesa has offered lly
30, 1974. in J apan would like to share means or its. prospect.us to
doM t&.UtfPI ell 0t I S"" Nltrt!Vll I 0 "' ~-· .. 11"",I TIM ltl*f-MM It~ It .. W l"l'Jfl 11\lo ltl4 l'IOI\ In t. 10
WASl!INGTON (AP ) -...... dill 11111 IMh* r. 08 6'A Mii lliltl'ff Ft lttlo lfh I 11111 1,~ l ... "4<111 ,..,... ... .,...,. ~ 111\ 11 Mlfl•• C S'IO ..... "'~O "" "'
The Civil A .ronautlcs ~ or tO"Yl\1 ... 0.W.ln O 11-. Ni Miller H$# IVJ tl.llkti!f H 14 1J '*': 6lloll 00 no1 1:..,.111 Sci ·~ t MllllflO' Sl 11 SM n rl4 ·~ '"° Board has appro\led an ,... .. :L •<11111 Q11mt '' u 11Mstf9 11. t• z• 1~ w""' 411o ·~
overagelOpercentlncrease ~TT\1a1.1 11:~ Vi"' l~\l =.Ft: 1~ 1l~s.-:WU9 l~ .. lf
l·n air rarea over the North -...o \IT11.1r11s El ia.io 111o ..... .IM!t• 111 1 10 ~ i• •• Mof'lf1y 19 NIOClt S\'I • NIOOr't S.. 161'1 llVlo Sllorlw ~ Slot
and Mid·AU1ntic routefl bet-°'...., niui.:1:" IE~'-"" c t= l::=::'.,.1t ,!11o ,t""~ :X: 1!t
ween the United States and 1it1NW11 ,...., 11 EQUI °' 11 .. u11o ~ c.. '"' '"" .,. '°'' tt11o J01ro A~• ft l\lo 11'1' ' ........... ,, l \lo IO Gtl W\ ij ~-Europe. ;:r'Mk,. i-. •111 1::... A 101111 11 ""°'°" c1 '"" .... So O-Gt 1 1'~
. The Increases, whlob AOwit CP u u ..c.ii .,. t-.. 1 "'" Sftlltri '"'° '•le ~ i \l uri• .t.1t1 Al• u 14\o'i •.er.. It 20 MSt O..~ '" I :trf ' •
I I r S 6 Alf• ... 2'111 ~ Fol• •l(o 4\l W. 18\ft ""4 "I \o'I ._. r~e rom a ow 0 -per-Alic. lllC ., '"" ,. ...... El 11\'i llVI Hit OWSI .. I eNO\' I 11~ 1 \'I cent to 19 ""rcent, are e!fee-.Allft e.w .., 11'1 F.,111 er ' ,.,.j N11 L1111w 1-. 1111o SI~ Rffl• 11 11• .,.. ........ P!'lt ID .... 11\lo l' .. m Cit lfl'i lll'I HI MolO ~ i\'> SC ... ~ 'll\'I I ..,
tive Nov 1 AlltiCI 8t'lt 1• 20 .-..1c1 Uo ,.., ""' 1¥11 s. ''"' ""' Fott."' ..,.. •" ~~ ' • • AlllH ·Ttl &lo't •'41 AfWM 2\oa 11'1 !'ft P.llnl lh lh ~N lllf"• 1 '"° AT THE SAME time. the ,,,,,. -'P~' ,.., t\lo F11-~111 1t11o 11 MCHB ~ 16" 1111o nt. M s 1 ,.,.,
ho d k I Aff'1CE1pr 11\lo t t:W. 111 c.o;u 21111 fl'l'I HHdllm .,J•l'o S'-lr1111 T~ tloll ''°' ar too act on which Alll>F1nc1 ,.., 1:i.1st-M1~1oc ,..'.11 •1 -u eo •'-sv.s1r'#ll Cto 1•11t t•v. also will substantially boost ""' Fle'\11 1,,,., 1011. 1u TJFln 10,,., 11"' NJ "'' G 11 11,,., ~· E• .._, •~ · Nn Furn Jfo •l(o 111 Uflln< lO :JO\io Hlcolel ln 6\4 J\lo SV<wr CQ ' •Vt the cost Of Chai'ter flights to Am Gtft n~ U\11 FOOd T\I U~ 1'\lo Nl•lten It t \\o t\i lt11Y 0-p I"' •21J. Amini Gr •"' :ttl!o F~ OI ·~ ·~ l"t.lwi 8 •I• 9" TtmPI• '°"" SllJ.o Europe. A Mtl'Oiy ,,,.. s-"'" E1 1111 1i. ~t• n v. "" T1r10t w ·~ """ AM Tt .. ¥ 1~• ...... Ft•lor Mg IV. 1\lo Hoflh KQ ~ UV, l•rv>tnl 2' 11 Tbe new hike& mean that Nn ·1t111io • 1• Frlftlf 1c 11 """ Hw' MU 1v. 1t11 T!tr..,, '"" '"'
the cost of 'a round trip = ~;"' f!llo ~:r-Fll~ '~ ~ ,.,.u ~ l::i. lra r:.i. &f tt· ~1 ..
economy. 111· •ht between APS 1ncp ,,.., ,~ o." LrJ s11o •v. E• tl'I 10"" T•tnte• '"" ,., • "'*' Myf ltf ,.,. GM-Tr J" 1\lo ill Liii IOW. tl\11 T't' Octl'I 11"° ll\4 New York and London.,_ Aw 11111 1111. Gt•c• CIJ )+. '""' ..., ,,., 1111. 11 ™" 011 )II(, t1"" ~\,!ring_ the so~calle4 :="Co1.t :~ ;::Gii AIMI,., •1:.,, :11111 ~ c:i ',~ 1~~Lnf,_ ~v. ~t
ShouliJer season wlll JWnP :II 't~1 ,;w-;:~ G#I" en:-.:,._~1~ 0r"""'1-----,-m ::=;ce: ,~~~
from $604 to $626 That in-AIMI 0c1 121'1 1t\.l. c; l!~r 111~ 11'-, Br ;~...., ;!"' Un T enc u 1}i;, • • a.ln:I Alo 2-.. , Glon Rtln l(C.. UnAr1 T~ '"' '"' crease 1s the lowest ap· ... ,., wr Jl't •11. uJ u1 ht u.m 11vi. 11111 us Suell• <llYI 4S•t. ~-l!f' Br 2>.lo J\lo I 51>.it I'll. tllo "-t Lum IS\lo 11\l U$ Tr~ l l!Rro 11V. proved by the board. The a.•..-~ ~ n"" GHblt't • H\.'i uv, P..-• .. o nl'I 2• Univ Fok .nv. n.,.
h Id • th t &.lldwn l 1'111 tYo Gold SFll I) 11 Pt11I RtY 11 \/:1 1?\to ll•gM HO 2'111 l s ou er season IS a a..ur Mn u u Orhm,,. 1,.. , Py1$' c.~ ,\/:I 10111 111nc1 Sn t:ia 1:w.
period between lhe .... ak Bllllfl RU 1l 12\lt Ortjlh Sc ,., 6 .. P•Y N SY 11~ 12'111 11 ... DyM U4 16""' ,...~ &.1mr1 Fl 11\lo 11 Gr• Toi , '"' Fii Enltp 13"'° 16\.'o 11.., Sl>l:k , 4.,, season of summer monlha 11e1wn F u 114 °""I uv •1to 1o-1oo Peni 0t1 $w s 1.i. 111c1or1 s1 ..,.. 1ou
andthewinterseason. tl~c. J~'t""~·~ 1~,l~~l.;1!H 1~\<.J~111-~ f:: !~
One or the highest in· 8"11..,,1~ ~ Ullo Ullo """" EW 6\o J\1:1 ~'t:&d l~~ n~ Wfl Ellk I\\ l'la ...., 21'4 11 Htmil 11r u 16loli '-""'" W~ NG t:W. 10\<o creases came In the popular B1111t eo 1111 "" ...., s.R1 1 1-.. Pklfttf w ''-6"° w..mn 1 •11. •~ Bio ...,.115 lrl to Hlrptr R ,.,.. ,14 Pin Hu• 26 24'+ -•Iii s 22 to.tS day excursion fares. 111rd ~ ""' ,...., Hto..t.,.. "" 1"' Preu Mt 1 •• w.1o1 wi '"' '""
Those rates will 1·ump 17.6 !'~~ -.,,..., n !41WI~ F1 st1 S'-,.,.~·-l~ : w.1rng ""' 1,,.,, 1111 -"! 1'111 ,.. 1111 F IJloli IJ'fJ PS"' C-Wiotnl P1 1:11. J""' percent !or peak season !'~r-'llo 6'1'1 ac11 c 111o ' Pinn°'' 11·1• !l(o Wi. 11,G• n:io n"" --...,.. Ill. tllo HIOC-Co 11~. n~ Qutkt Cf'I 1l 16 W•tm• O JI!\ ll'lo fiigbls and 18.9 percent for 9ob EYns ''""'~Iii .. • EL 2s..., 11\/:1 °""" c. '"" iv..,..,,, Fo n n ....
Shoulder rl'.ghts. The new ~.-., 11\li it11o Hoowe• 10"" ·~ ~,,,, c, s s'11o wiu .... 1 1 1'¥o 1~ _,... 11 1611o ..... I (.p ,, ll 'fJ ~rem ....,lill H J '"" SYI
peak Season 22 to 's day ex 8rtnco I tS'h "l'i lillnl Mlll 1\/:1 lllo 201 212 ....,Nl. Sir llli l \lo " Brinks In 11 11..., Hyllt C: 3'4 ~ ~ymd 11\'t 12l'I Wini PlT 1'111 I cursion fares now will be ~-. ,.! '""' '"" .. ~ .. c 1011o 10"" RnM P•i t \'I '"'WIK Pl..1 1s-.. 11
$509 -Up rrom the Cur-nt ... --_ ~ u 11 IMS t11tnl 4~ • .Siio RttOQ Eq l V. Jl'o -ll~ 1J u~· .... -,.,. sv. 1nu w.i 11 1111> Reft' Eltt ""' 11~ war1<1 S• 6111 ,..._
U'l'J lllKkt. 3"" •'lo 111111 Ni.ti 6\'o ''°' Re U111¥ IV. t \4 W•IQm W 1\'> 1h
........ kk•r '"" '" lnlDft• f't'I J Rtl'Ub T• ,, 2•V. ¥ello F•I 2} 1~.\io
Bwftp SI 4 4\lt ln1lr l..ab S"" • Rt• Pin I I~ Z-UUI 11\'> ll l'i
THE BOA.RD. aleo ap·
proved a new advance pur·
chase excursion !are which
will allow air travelers over
the Atlantic to· tr8vel bet-
ween 22 and 45 days ror
about the same fare as the
old excursion rates.
However, that fare has
numerous restrictions. It
·requires passe ngers to
make their reservations
and pay the fare in full two
months before their depar·
ture.
t:i: JY: Y~ ::, '(= '!"" 1!~ OTC 10 Moat ,..ctive CMI l•on 1n1m1 G\ 12 u""' St«~ v.1...... &111.,...,. °'I· 110 1n 1111 Al""" s s:ii. ~nt.Or!fMI 1so,ooo 1~. 2"' -" <-n T~ 20\lo 21 In lllW A J ... I ..._..E•ll"HS llS,llOO 21\lo 21 .. o 1-.. C-MI IQ\lt11 .lfllt'1.ll ?~ 314 00,_,,...,8. 101,..00 l\lo 7 .. -..
(.I'""" J 111111111"'1 Cp llo 6'11o '°'nrOflGls IO:l,IOO S\4 51·16 • 1·1• CnMtg RI 11 11.\ilo I• So utH 19~• :IO'-ElllC (p tt,000 II n o I;,
Clln VIPS ttli 1014 ,_,.,&Co '"-•tlo M.ltP•IOt~ 11,SOO I '> ll'o o 1 Ctntrn 0 U U W. .... ..0 II 11\') 11!.etlk>M~ 6),\00 ]6\., :IS\.o -Vf
CFS Cnll tl'I 10 Em ,... '" Y•U• Ftghl 5ts Sl,200 2S H>tlo + 2
Qmp Pl 2'111 J\lo JDhM EF n II"" " Gtn 1111 >'l,:IQQ 16\.'i 21 • "' Ol&nl Co l't J.\lo .,IOI.I"' M 11 U'IO ll•lle¥1WIBll.titl •.100 u•.-ll'-. ""'
Olem (.p II'> t \lo ~lw• St 23\lo 1µ. Chi Br •• M 6S\'J llJll••• c 1"-, .. NASD Voh•mt Tod-if •,•n.ioo
Qwil• !it1: Umtn C 9~ 1011. A0¥an(t' OS 11\lo 1021'11(1.,.,. Tk J.\lo 4 Otcll'" JU O\ubb Co l0\.'11 JO'lll 1<911y S.. I\~ t vntPllnOtd 1111 QI FrOllt ~ Mio «.mp,ir u :w. lJl'I lOltl 15't
OU ~ 111o 1 11911 Cofln u' 3'" G · d L 01""' \JI ~ t•'ll. 11,un E•• llHO 11.,.. 0 1ner1 a11 o•en OU \JIA f\\li :n... 0. 1 GAIHf.111$
a-Mf n n ~:+sJ: ltl'I '~ ~ =m .. ,Ew~ l~: J14 ti: ;\:: $!!~·~''' ,..... '"'° ... r ' O > l• ,', J UM F 5YI Inc \o • -., Up H.O ..--.. n ltatsl Ill I.,. 'h '-Pulp ,JOt 16\'i o 4\lo; ,,,"' > a.w ere 1 I !(MS tllll '"" •l'I s "'"''*"" Jh. "' 1;.o =-..uo ,;:, :0\4 l(Mpl V't lO't. 11\.'o • Gl"Ot1fln~I .II ,..... b VP u::
Revenues v:ere SG.83.1.270 its reputation, but we purchase a maximum of
rompared to SS.31 1.847 for dislike intensely the idea SJ0,000 shares or its com-
the period ended Aug. 31. that the public could be mon stock in exchange for
1973. The company reported misled to the belief that cash and a new 10 percent
an after tax loss of S126,029 they a re buying genuine subordinated sinking fund ·
or 10 cents per share com-Scottish cloth," Crawford • debenture du e l989. D • •d d
paredtoearnings ofSlOI.502 said. The terms of the ex· l V l e n
Cac.C: t.e l \'o I = ~ t~ :~ 1 PtyleU Clo .20 I .... • 111, Up 1S.2 QNit h 1\lo • ..._ 1\~ 11. I ~1Enrv, CP 1tl1 ..... ::Up u .• c.omm a 13\/o u \lltm El ,.,, 1,.., I C:.rnwn C.rp 1 • "' it.J
Cmt 5'lf'9 1• 11 ll<llf 51 2J\o ''""' 10 Rtwete~ F.,.1 J , ~ H.J
Cwl MIGt 1) .... It I.Ant.-! S S'°' g ~I 't~:.\ l\•1 ' ~ Up U.• or 8 cents per share for the "In the interests or our · change offer provide that ·
fi rst rlscal quarter in 1973. customers as Well as our· for each sha re of common· A B k
i974 .figures are based on selves, weshalltakeall pos-stock accepted, the com-' t ec man
1,211 ,900 's ha res outstan-sible steps to end such prac-. pany will pay 67 cents in
ding; there v.·ere l.209.tll2 tices. invoking the full foret! · cash and issue $3.33 in prtn-
shares outstanding· during of law where necessary." cipal amount of its new 10
~"llo 11~ ~\lo; l.llnce 1' ""' ll Am lnU Grp fol 11~;16: r.11, 'tt tl.6 .Q>t~t ~1111 !1 :=::.. ~ ~r: ~l\lo ,, U S SlirQlc•I '"° + \~ UP l~:;
COiin Fd 1~ 11 t.ery ~ SI'> •V• lS Wtlt hlWtl .20lO••N4;-t .... Up 11.t ~i ~~ jf11o~$f, i:: :~ ; ~=~':G~·i: 51•= ' .... g: ~1
the same period in 1973. Crawford said the protest percent debentures. jjiijiijiiijii Shares will have to be ten-
dered in 30·share incremen-
ts. The inden ture under
"•hich the debenture will be
issued .provides that the
company may not redeem
the debentures until Oct. 1.
1979, and also pro\'ides for a
mandatory sinking fund
beginning Oct. .J , 1984 suf-
ficient to retire 75 percent of
Director s of Fullerton·
ba s·e d Beckman In -
struments Inc. declared a
dividend of 12 1..'.t cents per
share, payable Nov. 25 to
shareholders of record Nov.
4.
C«Oli c, ,.. $I tJ:'d811,: ~~ ;~ l Hn·ulwTr 11111 1...,-\0 Oii ll.l
C.0..MM '"" !Ill> ~1.. 16\lo II 'Ac.MAT C.Orp !Yo-I'> Off :n.o CroM Co tt>ill ll i..N .. , '"'° l :W. S Hmllvlt 1.1111 ''"°--., Off 11.1 " ' • jYo a I S.0.-.. \/on'f(I t -.., Oft 1'.I c::r'r.ott 11""' II i..., Fbll1 111 : ~111.~d ~"'=-~ g: l!1 g:ii tnll L-C.O 2•\lo; U\lo 9 tnlorm """'-f<,.--., Off U.l I Dr!I s,•. ', MOtrml 6\lo 1\lo tO O.lryOwtn St J'<o -V. Oii ll J o.t1 100 Mid C..t nv. u-. 11 Ent<gy eonv~ 211-'"' Oii 11·s = ~ 1::: 2t "'-I Riiy lh t l't. 12 PACCAR IO 2J -J °'' n .s OI IN lk U 1' :I.I"' 1J Burnup !Mm• • -..., Ott n .1 klb -'111 l6 JS INrl .. C It 11\'o 1( Al-.!Ocn !WI J .. -""' Ott tO O ~Beck m a n manufactures Dtthl 11111 t'l'I ' IN•U Fr1 1:w. 1111 u K•tto1o inc ,..__ "" on 1o:o
analytical instrumentation, I
electro·products a nd con· 'MUT. U I sumable chemical products ' AL F UND S
for medical. industrial. en-
vironmental and scientific ••----------------------'-! applications. Hotw Y0tt -Fol· Do09C. 11.•f 11.•l JP~~ r.11 {'1 11ow•g 1.10 1.11
The Orange County Civic center
cut energy usage by over 24~
the principal amount of the
debentures issued prior to
The company h as 3.i mil· =t7..i• .:i.~·1pr'r. g;~•Ft5ir.-1·"1=t!11 itn ls:1 :::;: ~ !:~ ::::
lion common s hares out· ~s := q...:!~111:~ ~~ ~: l~ ;J ~"' ~:i~f~1'. ti:o f.~ !:~ ~~ standm" g. . ""NASO Inc. Dry! l¥ 10.M 11.J Grwfll •.• s. !ICUOO•lll FDS: Drl'f LA ID.01 ••. $1~t 6.lO •• ln\r Inv 10.0I 10.06
• , .. _ ............................... i;;;"'i;ii;;;,,.-.............. '1~~M1'-~ tu 6.12 K ST~.U Mql Rt\ 10.011D.01, ___ _ II ~ AM E&E M11 2 SO 2.SO C...t Bl 16.ll 11. ~~J:-f:J! Adnl Gw l .t1 1.1' t.4't Gr S.IO 6.U Cust IM •.*1 1. S.-el 11 • .SO II.SO
maturity.
Cavett Career """"' Inc t .tl l.1' EAl'OM t Cusl Ill S.ll 6.11Sbcl Y• J.11 t.2• Adm l•\I 1.U I.a NOWA•D: Cusl 111 l.tll 4.1 Sf.CU llllTT 'DS:
When it comes to saving energy,
you can't beat city hall.
-· h. ,. , T l' lkl:ird of Su~rv 1~rs of Orange County
felt jt ,..,:i.., nnportJnt tn provide leadership in
cner~y cun'-l'!'VJI 111n Ju ring the energy shortage.
.So they cncourngcd Jo:.l·ph J. Smisek, Director
of J1uildi n~ l.\l.'rviccs, to prepare and implement
:i pr~r:lrn to ri.:ducc cncr~y usage throughout
t !TC Civic C:<.'ll lt"r
T!1c Ci vu.: (1.:11rcr consist ~ nf se vcr:ll niajor
);t1V1..-r11mcnt hu1ld1ngs tota ling approximately
1.7 n1illu)n ~u:ir~ feet. They 3JJ receive utility
:.<.'rvi1;cs frorn the ou nty Cl'n trnl Plant.
As a result of these mea sures and a few others,
the Civic Center reduced its gas consumption
by 24.7% during the first four month s o( 1974 as
compared to the s:11nc period in 1973.
By redt1c:in g li ght ing levels, elimin ating
unnecessary li ght-ing, and shutting off major
cltctrical eq uipment such as air handlers and
pump~ when 11<>t nccdctl , electric consumption
,,., also red,.ced by over 24%.
In rccoRn ition of this accomplishment, the
Southern Californi a c,, Company Ii.i s presen ted
the facility wit h a Commercial CONCERN
aw:trd. ~
Piquing Paar?
Q: Is tbere a feud slmmert8g between 01ellme
friends Paar and CaveU became Dick ls working: and
Jack lsn't?-G. McN., Mlnneaplls ..
A: Jack makes his feelings perfectly clear in a
letter to Time, pe1ged on the m agazine's review of
''Cavett" by Dick Porterfield. Parries Paar: "1'he
book contains a selective bias that is either midly
vindictive, editorially incestuous, or else just faulty
~search ... The review mentions that Dick used lo
hang around .backstage at Broadway theaters.
Actually, I met him in the mens' room at NBC where
he told me he wanted lo get into television and would I
help him ... He told me then l:ic was with Time.
"Your reviewer," Jack continues, "tried putting a
AllwlMr i.r, ).10 a.In Fd '·" J.M CUst SI 11.•t IS. E'l\O•I/ 2.t-1 2.tt Aelfle Fd S. j S.U ~Pl F •.11 l,4.1 0.SI 52 6.'2 1. 111,,., •.n S.Jt
Ael ... In 11.00 12.01 lncme 4.11 S. c;u,.1 S3 S.08 S.SI Utlr• F •.11 .S.t•
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""' Ow1 •.» 1.'2 FillrOd '·" 1.4• LD E61e 11.>t 11.1 IN•llEMLD 'c;.11.-· · NII Eqtr l .U 3.11 Fm Bun 1.ll 6.l ll:X GADU.-: Comil 2.. . AM IX•••st ""RAS S.Sl ... Co Ullr IO.IS11.'8 Enl•pr 4 11 PUNOS: PIOELITY Grwll'I •.SI • Fl•I Fd ill ~ •.U }.OI GltOU.-: RtviPI I0.>611.:12 He•br 64.1 '"°"' .... I.SO Biid oeb 1.11 I. Ult Int¥ .... S.11 ~· l. i oo '"°"'"' 1.01 •. 11.1 c.tpt1I •. n 1.•1 l!OK t.19 •.SI 6 tl P•ct Fcl iOl 5PKI •.M $.01 Conl•e 1,41 ... LOOMIS SMl.AllSON i<os("
Slotk S.2• S.7:1 Cw S5'tt S.IJ ... Sol.Ylf.S: Apptc i..n U.s.t M Grlll J. .. t .00 Dir In< I.Oii • • • (.&p 0¥ 1.1• 1.26 1-., 14.•I U.7$ Am ln•ln J.61 l .IO DI•!-S.111 ... Mulll.ll IO.ct 10.• •-•I 1.)6 1 06 ""' I""" ).JS a.JS E•V• '·" ' .. LO .. D •••: 5" Dian II . II ... M Miii l.J.l 1.1• E-\t 1.69 I. Alli111 S.t1 1.11 Sloe Fd ...... 1'0to
AmNt Gf" '·'' 1.n F-11.U 12.IJ Nn SU\ 1.•S I .IS MOMA ,uMos ·· ==~ t;;:::: F ~fi l~' ,'/::',~,,',,'·•"••': C:.1> Slir .U• i.11 . • • "'" · Inv 1:11 I ... Orwtll S,lS S,lS Tttnd \S,}S I•. 8r"lll Fd J·" l.M Tr•! 620 1 11 Ille-S.13 1-11 l'IMAWCIAL 8"0 Inc .I I l.M lltntur .:,, s:•l
A.W<v 11.J1 11,lO P•OG•AMl : Bro US t.9110.13 Smit~ 8 I st J S6
5PKtr ),to J . .SI Fin Oyn 2.tt,1.tSM.AUCO: 58 l&Gr 1'11 1'11 Fno 111¥ S.t 4 '·" Fln Ind 2.t1 1.tl FrMm S.tt 6. So C..nF t'6S t'06 W• Mall l.OI I.ts Fin Inc .... •. lllllp f S.15 6. !;w1t 111¥ s'J1 s·,.
......,.. F 4 .• 1 $.2' 'hnl 1.11 l .11 MIJI F 1..0 9.n 5., In• G J'n i01 AXE hlFd II• I.I.I t.lil SS PNCL: Sow ... 1'•1 t'n
MOUGftTDlll : l'lllt5T MIT I.II 1.9 r.r1•• i'os l 'os Fund A l.9' 1.U IMVESTOlllS: MIG I 1' I. p fnD iM iw F-8 , ... •.ll OIK. FO J.U ), MID 10,111,4.I TAT l IND.Giii;,. Sloe• 4,11 ,.:n Grlft FO S.1t S.. MFD I.SO t Com fd l 16 l (J ,._ 5'1 3.S. J.tJ tll(om 6.+o I MC.O 10.0111.01 Dl""lif 3'•s 1·tt
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Beyroi: 4.1• '·" F!m lltr 1.n •.• Mkl Am >.tt 10 SI Fr Inc: 1·01 1'01 a..,ra" >.• 4.t• FOlltUM G•ou•: .w .. , M 1.00 1, i•~t Sir 30'11>1'11
1:------------------------11 """"NI ,.Ml 6 ... 100 Fllll •.:Jt ... MDII• Fd l.l S I. f f.ADMAN ' pt)5. e.-,SJ l.}l IOI Fllll ,,)S •.. MSB Fii 10.0ll 10, ,.,,, U1d l 10 2 2it
ltrli.11• t.U 1.11 Colurn •.JI ... Mtl 8ftG '·" 1.1 "',_,, Fii ·,l '93 'Glad You Asked That•
by Morilp aod Hy G..-
feather in my back by writing that while Paar put on
Zsa Zs~ Gabor and Buddy Hackett, Cavelt presented
Kathanne Hepburn, Laurence Olivier, Orson Wells
and Lester Maddox. Your research and-or bias could
just have honestly stated that while Cavett presented
Tiny Tim, George J essel and Totie Fields, Paar put
on John a nd Robert Kennedy, Fidel Castro, Dr. Albert
Schweitzer, George S. Kaufman, Dorothy Parker,
Oscar Levant, Noel Coward. Malcolm Mug11eridge, Mary Martin, Judy Garland, etc. It all depends on
whose ox is beln1i aoosed.
"In a ny event," conclude! Paar who writes much
as he speaks. "I hope the book Is as suctessful 11 his
TV career . Who would have thought that lh•t pushy
little guy In the NBC men's room would one day
become so popular that, acrordlng to his press 11ent,
'Dick Cavett can no longer go to the theater because
he's mobbed.' My goodness, I've never t>Hn mobbed,
neither has Johnny Carson or Merv Griffin . l 11ther
the way tb get yo urselr mobbed ls to hire a press
aRent. ''
llllloctst• 1.t 1 J.,, HF-•.19 ... M!F fO t .n 1.11 lftllftl 1'02 1'02 eio.1 Fdn 1.J1 T.ts Fdrl Gr i. ... J. MIF Gro 1.M i. 0.:e•n Sts ,·,,
8r0Wfl J.20 1.fl l'OUNDf.R5 MU0m?;: l .•t •.01 STallol 1101! .il"DS: ~~N l'U1it':s!·tt G~:: l.ll 4,J ~~ 1~:l~ it~~ &elMlt IJ.'.Q 1t'.'1
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P,;irt tif the pro,g rnm involved using outside
:i1r wJ1encvcr po!'lsil>lc to reduce the need for
ll'-':ltcd c1r chi ll ed air. Hcati11g and cooling was
-provi<lc<l only duri ""'rc~ul:tr working hours
when 1h<.· temperatu re \vou ld utherwise fall
It is thl!"Cos Company's way of giving Orange
-County government ...,
Chuck Connors ls OH of my~;;,orite mowieTV
he-men. Is It true that he does netdlepolnl? -Blnlle
Thomas.Jamalct, N. Y.
. t.Y t,M lf'lt • ,u I Plf'll St l .OI •· VS ~ s'et 1 • WLT" lnw 111 .Ot J; JI!" 'tr• 10 111 ~' .;n ·,.
!ri¥ ll'OIC 1,1'9 .,, Ll'IOHll• PD: \/ndi~I 141 1'•1 -' & 8 .n .ti ow .IM I.It I. Plan Fd I ... •.r \/<Ml lOllO •'.t. ' ( 1,10 I.JO ltlvtlT fllorw II , .. I. 'l.-,lfo I j•J ....
bclow(,5° or rise aboVl' 78~
• ._ .. ____ _
A: Yes . Asa matterorractatonctimeheenrolltd
in a gi rl's needlepoint class. Chuckles Chuck. without
dropping a stitch. "I rind it very relaxing. I ma)I even
try knitting next.••
' Send pour quc.dion11 lo lly Cordner, "C.lod You: A"'1ed
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t
r
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r
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Air h•ndl<r; and ex hau't fa ns were used only
while buil<lin~' or .11cos were regularl y occ upied
:tnll nc>t l<l :icco1nnltXl:it<.· 1nd 1v1du:1 ls or smnll
J!JOUI"' th•• used <hem~ tegulnr-work·
i.Qg!Jours.
officials a vote of
thanks. And a wny
of saying we hop<>
others will elect 10
foll ow their lender·
ship._ • .,............-00.«-
Thot ,'" carf' o/ lhi.r nev1.~r. PO &Jr 1560 , Colla Mt.a
92t126. Morilyn and lty -(.ardnt r uiill onnuer 4• man11
4Uf'lllkm~a1lht,I/ conrinihfircolMmnr bsl l#M IOIWmeO/-maff
makt' ptrr11onal rtplie• iffQ:lOultlll. 1
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II 11 , Cortuc.1)Qll.f.0:irni>.111Y~Ufrbthtfne~~l0 Saft~ln ~All3uil•di~ -
·--. ,
•
Monday's
Closing P rices
, October . 1974 OAILVPU.OT A9
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE '
ear'• Hi@l·Lowo Ae Salurclay
S.:.. 1111 S.:... ftll W. lir! ~ llirl ~I ~ ,_. !t•l CkW (ha.· ,~ (,_} (boll a.. '-l ~ QoM (jljl P.t ... 1 0oM 0. P.t \h;tlol ON Chg
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THE 280 SEDAN (BOTTOM)AND COUPE ARE MID;RANGE LINE FOR 1975
Mercedes·Be nz Models Powered ~y Double Overhead Cam Six-cylinder Engine
A<Nl$ua2f 4 U ~ .. 2'1. 011 E Ill .SO 1 4 11 "<-... FtdPtO 1.10 l 14 111/o-\lo 1-UGl.4' I t 12~+ 1111 NM lrdu .20 l ;a,i (1111• 'lo SY()f>Or .1!ocl l 11 J\, ... TWCF• .llod I ,. S~-\I
AMA:X ,,I~ • .. :It • "' Oil Mllw Ceo 2 "' 1'1'o+ u Fd~•.10 '. I " •. ' ·-Pl.. I." • .. 1$\'J-"" N.11 ICll B .... •• J 11 • .... s. ...... 1Nlu5 l ,:woo JIO. '. Trcu ..._., I " l'lo •.. AMA)l;pt)\lo .. 6 'IO + 'A Oll~Cp fll .. J IO'ro+ ft FM .JO l t t -'Jo low1P$ 1.U I ( \Sf't+ VO HllMF 1.0Sll 11 IJ 2'h• \.'I SCA $otfwkt 4 20 tllo., \o Trle< Cp .-0 4 1 U .•• """"* .SO • 11 JV.-~ Oi Pnl'Um 2 • 116 %2 • "-Ftd 1.16 t 101 2•+• • I,,.. lpco HD~ll • 11 l~-\'6 NPrn 1.10. • 2 ll'"'-"'-~CO I 20 1'h, l'o --U U-NT>COtd .t•' l j J\'o -\ti Oil Roc•lsl .. 11 •h• Ve Fttl'OO:lr• I ' "' ., .......... ITE lmo.M s 211 uv.-1~. NU Sfmkon 1 lftl tit+ 1/o 5<fletll\e.llll U us Ul<• "-u ... Llllt .3111 s 1-0 lt'.~ .. '• NNrl< 1.10 J l 1.S\11 . . . Olcxll F ll 10 I l 'f• .• , F~O .'II t 2S I) ••• 11911 (Drprt11 .. 2' .... . .. N>M S,,.v .IJ S 21 1\lo-\Oa 5ch!IU 8 .ll 10 US 701"-\It UAI.. pllo .olll . . l ll'n + I~ NMffll2,MI •• 1n 29 .. ""Oirlt Vtft .• I l\'o .•• Fidel Mtge ... n~ ... IU lflll .IS . SI 101.l.+ \, HIStn .IO. t I) ... S<lllimb.JJn "6Sl011<.-.. Ull"CO 1.10 ' .. 16(~ .... ....... Ho$.:IOcl l Sta II" , .• 0<roma .JO 4 20 9\.1 ... FidUlk 2.<IO S t lSl'l t 11.o -J J-NtSIM<r•.lt 12 10 :ltW.+ 'Ii S(M. (o ,50 J 11 10"°+ .... UGI QI 1,J:I t I ll:it .. \• A .... pl J~'; . • II """. :i:. °"°"''pf s . . 1 S1 -\lo AtldMI 1.40 ' l 11.... . .. Jemn F ·" ' J av •• " Mel~ 21'> s 29t ,.. ..... ti. $0),\\M ·'° s II s ... I.IMC I-' • ,, 10 • \1 """"1•FI ;.U S 63 6~ + \'I OW"y5lr 1.40 I 1111 I~-\lo Fllb'Oiep AO ' 42 l('o + 4 JMlan .111 • J 10~<-''° Nell TN Co •• ll )'Ii+ Vt kC11 l...ad .SI 4 20 t'il-\It VMET l\<od J ti t + '°' Am Alrll1115 11 :zts '* .. ~ OW'plet WI . • •I 2\11 .• ' f'llltl F9d 51 l 20 .... ~ ... JapFe l.'1d .. ., •lo-.... ,.._ lg s m •1~•2"'-kot\Fetu I ' 41 tlo-\\ IJNr<.O .50 ' 10 \I lit-,,
Am Bt• .20 '. 1 •v. . . . c I MlOI' .6111 ,, Jiii-v. Fir,tr. 1.10 6 \l) 1• ..... -"" Jett Piiot .to 11 JS 1S ... NCR Cp .n s llCll ·~· "" $C.Oltfol" ... ' I I'!;,-\~ UfllH\I l.2td ' 2 21·~-\• Aar-.c12u 6 SI» .. "' Cl Riil Ull 9 •••••.• ~Cllf" SI 7 m • + ~ JC...Polt.:W. .. IUIG 11 • 'h Ntlilur:-.olO 1 ' ~-'A kotlhjl .... 'j 11'• •.. U..llnc....,, ' 2' l\loo • ~ Am ... C$1 :IO s XII 1$0,:, .. * Cln lie t ·1 .... 'i lS 11\loo . . • Fsl Olk ·'° 9 ,, Jt"lt. 2 ... -CP1..pl I •. 1JG 60 ..• -Pw 1.40 • 11 lf!Oo-"' So:ollJS I .10 7 I ll'o ..• UC... 1 . .0 • •s )O\~ • ~-""' 81d9 .Jl t t S • . • Clll GM I.ti 7 l1 lj -l'o Fltl!'<llntl 1 11 39 l-t""'-\Oa Je ... I C t.20 J 6 JOfo-~ NEl'IGEI 1.1. I 219 U + ... S(owlll~ \ ' IOI 104--l"o ~ 2.10 t Jo6t '3\'o-I~ NnC..,2.JOS 11' 26\lt + ~ Ct11G1Epl• .• 1:k0 41 -1 1'5l<Wg .tlh .. 1"6 11'1-°" Jewekol'ln2 S l"-•"'NEG6£1.t• • 19 HM + ... $.<.O'lllprfu •• I 21Vt-Yi \Jl\CAlml.lJ • I to.:.-~, Mercedes' New Line . .
AC.., Ill I"" •• U JO\(, •• • C111GEot•'llo .• tSll SCI -1 '1.Nllos 1.M • 4 J7\<o + -. JlmW.11 IO S ts ltl't-\I; NE9T T 2.36 10 24 2W. + 'Ill Sc:......,O \I . . 10 4\o\+ h \inion Corp IS n l~o-~ ·~~~.,"·,"' ... ·,· .. , ,,'1! •• ~.· o,,-, ,",•, •" ... ~ •, ,•, Ill'• . •• ;:.1NS 8nt z 6 1l JI.... • •• JlmW1ltpf I •. 1210 10 • -II .36 I 11 1111 . .• $(llO pl .toe '. l 1 ........ \JI\ Ele< 1.n • jl tl"'. ,...,,. .,. :lt\lo+ Vt Fsf'itCI> 1..U $ U J 1' +Vt JlmWptl.MI 12 11'1!.t Y, N'MN1t 1.60 3 .. 1~+ .. Sf:ld0.,.2,to ( tlJ H + \~ \Jl\EIK pt 4 •• 110 :Mo
""'°'""'Ill ,,,11 n +Ill (ITc'tPl'Sh .. t 11 Vt+IV. F$PMl l.OO 4 ll SY. ... JHn lSl.Ud . , It ... NVSEG1.10. XI U'IO ... S..WAl,SIB It]~ ... UnEl r/1 6.-0 .. 1.060 .. •1,, ...... Ol5111 .SO 1, I t lft. ,.•, Clll«lrP .111111 1661 ~ +2 FstUAJE .'6 II 4 14 ... J H.,.11.lld •• •14 19 + \lo N't'1Epl 1.81) •• 1'0 It +1 S.-w .Ull • J , .. , tJn F" .... llV 11 llJ l .. •
ADlslTotl,JJ II 20 u ....... OIStv 2 • .:IQ ' 11• 431'1-"" fsl.Vflli. .Od • n •\:I-Ill ~ 1.20 5 60 ltV.-Ill NSitf 2.11 •• 2 lib'>• +'o ~.It s 11 '"" ... UnOCAI '·" • 1"1 ]S\Oa• '• "1n0u.ll V.t.. I J\.\ • . • 0UMl(l .9'ld l 10 JIHI-l'o F1W11C •• 16 n 11 IS .... Jol'ln&Jn .IO lJ Mt 91\'lo .. 3\; NI 1.11 • 116 t'Ho-\.'I *"GO ... IZ "° U !o-fO UnQl(pl ,.... •• tt t) • Hlo
1975 Model280SEconomy Luxury Ca
ACM flf ...... • . 1• 11\0 t \lo Clll SO l .60d I Jt } -Yo FIK....,,_ .'Iii 1 21 21V,-I Jollll Svc .IO I II 1'-+ I'll •.15 •• 1150 "°"" . , . S...1 1,61Mi 11 SSI to:i:. • Vt U.. P~ l .llO II 112 61111 t1••
The 280S. w h ich is on sale A.rne:ltPw 1 • 2'1 U\'I • . • Oty lnw ... 3 .. 6.\4o . .. Fl-F .tD • ll ·~ •.. JoM S• (If I '. J JO + 14 ~ 1.JOd •• • Ullo-\lo St•tr•lll LI!'< •. '°' , ......... u P• pl .•I . . l I!~ •• , .. Af•MllJ.14. It s •.. Oly lnwwu .• '111-1·1• Fi-SC .10 9 2 S\o •. -~.-l 56 ~-\lo NL I-I s 12' 14 ...... IO SEOCO .101) llJ ~•tVi ~.IO. 1:Z ....... By CA RL CA RSTENSEN According t o U.S. govcr ·
01..,o.11rl"l1°'si.1t ·nme nt tes ts of 1975 model
The n e\v ?i.fercedes-Ben z cars , th e 2805 can get 19.5
280S , l at est a ddition to the miles per gallon when being
North~merican product dri\"en on the EPA's high-
line of h e world's old est
automo ile manufacturer.~ ~
might be d escribed as an IN HIGH GEAR
economical luxury car. _
now costs $14 ,548 at E:tst A ,.,,s-,, .e u u •V•-"" a1y ,,,. r: 2 .. 20 11,,,,. v. F-Ent .1• s1 1•2 1:i. .•. ~ t 1 • .0 ' » 211\ • l'o HLt v 11 . .o s 40 1114. 111 s.rvl(•C .1o , s 411, ... u..;,.,.,11 .111 s u1 ,, •. ~ + ',• AFll\pfl ...... rJOO U\ro -h (ltf'llE .611$ llK 2•V.+14 f1emi11g '°' l '""-10 Jor91tn1t .O• 1S 2' ... tl Noriol-llnS S:IOt St +Hlo Ser-.604 t• Jfl .,. \Jl\l,.pll .. 1110, -I• and Gulf Coast ports or en-"-Glldl.l)cl .. 2• 11v. ... ci1r~o;1.t0 2 1• '"'•"" F ... 111v .. ·~ s u ,,,._I'll Mte"'' t0, u 11\lo ... NortnQlo 111. 3 , u •,,.. s.t.lwl.D •21 s 10 sw ... UldAi•c" 2 s 111 :n ,•"' t~. w ith W est Coast prices AGllScl.tld •. J 1sv.+ ~• a.<:Am.20 3 11 '""+""' F11.c-1111.16 s 10 12\i;I +""' JovM1!11<r 11 2'1 :wi,... "'°Norri' 1.12, 10 1~-""-SlltPMf ,10 a 1 714 ~"" Uld.r.l<t ptll .. HOO''"'•+'~
•J A Gti l"l .loO 4 JU 9'-.. , OotvOU t.40 t 1 ''"-. . • Alntlo: pl 2V. l 11\'lo-'It JusMQ .J.40 1 11 t:W.-\0 MA COio1 .IO I 11 2'1'>• l'Ho $rwll0112AO 1 SS (!IHI-'!lo Uld llfM!ds 2 tl l '1,.. ':• being Slig htly h;g h e r A Gtl {If l.*I .. 11 11'°"-l'o Clew El J.tO ' di 1l\io-Vi Fl• GA .IO l lS t'AI ... --«. Ill -NA All 1.21d S lot ~ • 'I;. h!!T 1.1*1 2 2 "'-'' ... Uft&r fll 1.20 , . 19 l <lo-,.
. "1nHll••I .... s " 1m -v. QOev&Pll B .. ltO ,.,, . '' Flal"w• 1.t~ 1 S71 lS~+ 'h ~lw• Ahl I l II ""'. v. ~ 1.20 ' ' 1..i~. q Shelie<G .56 ' 12 .S"9-1'lo Uf\Corp .n d • . lO ~ •• ~. The decision to produce NnHom .111 1s '°' :1o1i..+ v. 0otoK<:o .s1 •Jn '"' F11Pwt.. 1.•' SJ1 16~-~ l(A151p1 •>.:... 1 .,,., .. 1.., NCMI• .IOcl , .. Jh-v. Shel1otrG1.., •• 1 s:;.:, ... Uld"F .. u1 .20 • J1 •1'< , •
80Sr k AHomeptl .. 2t1S1 t 4!oi ClutttP.W1 6 SI ll<r ... Fl.oSMellllt l S11~+V. l(A.1'6pt 4 ..... 1 '' ... HoCn!Jrt M •. JS l\lo•l'o =l:r:l.40 .. I 11~+\loUGl!IP\..Xlcl S 611 sv, ..• the 2 or the U .S. Mar -, "1nHOSP .JD 11 121 Jtv. • l'h CM1 1nw c11 -J At 1i·, • ~• Fi.a ai .10 1' 221 ~ • 1 ic.;,.ra .Mr • JO s1:. ... NOHt\11 1.112 s m &Vt-°"' "w t • 20 lOV.-.v. Ufli1111u 1.ll • · 11 11~ \'
The 2805 o ffer s the samr
features of the 450 series.
plus increased economy dur
to its 2.8 lite r 1168 cubic in·
ch) six-cylinder engin e .
Piekled
way cycl~. Since the car h as
a . 25.4 -g'allon tank, this ·
would mean a range of 495'
miles .•
Priees
et, according to ~f ercedes· .,,,,"wst .10 • . • Jh • v, °'"f"' .ni. .. "' s + n Fi.D ·r 1 . . 1 10 -~ Ka..,...''°" . . 1 11'11,o-v. H<>lllGl 1.ft • 3t ''"' .. "' Sier•-'"' .w • n I'-"-I\ Llld inns .io 1 1 J • .,,, A ,,-.dkl .12 4 21 Jio • .• CHA pt 1. 10 .. S! '""' • '!lo FMC .t'l i $1 13\/t+ VJ KaiwMll .U 2 U IO'J;-V. NI!~ 1.tO •• 4 1t-1't + '-S91!(0 Alla 2 1\1!! 11\lo t 'h UfUlv8 l,'4 • U 19'·~-\'e
Benz or Nort h A m erica A Mlodi<Orp s 11 Tllo CNAlnc:l.111 . 11 10~.""' FMC ''" .. 1 21 +1 KaCPl..tJ.20. n Itta."" Nol"PS.1.a.' JS """•~ $19C""1 2.M •• J ~ .. l'o """"" 1.40 l lO "'("• r-
d AmMot .JOot • toll ·~· . • . CNA Uwlf\ . . • l:\la . • . Food ... 20 ' 11 SY. . •• KCSoln .50d • 10 11"'. "" H!IN!Gs J.10 • .. .. • '" Si9'0dtCP ' • • 31 Jib-... VI< Nudtt' . . 1111 1 ;. ••• Preside nt Kartrrie d Nor -AmHGi J.s• • i• )1 ~:.-\~ CN4.Lp11.10 . . • •~· ""' FaoW<:e .eo ' .se 1><. • ..., KCSOtNIOf 1 .. 1100 ,_,., '"' NoNGCll '·"° .. 160 1J • . . SUnPrc .10d s , i ... \/Id PllC Mn . • J 2 •• -Am "'r ... 1' I) ' -"' Coe" SI Gs 1 101 Slit . . • FordNcl 3.10 I "60 lJ""-1\loo Kan GE l.56 I 1• I] -v. NoStPor l.M I Ill 11\.'i-"" 51-trnQI .. ' I IJ\:I + ""' ~I'll! .• J u ... ~ .. ~ mann, cam e in r espon se to AmSmt 1v. J t0 t1'11o•"' estSGf111.1• .. • 11 11, ..• For M:K .a' ti 10Vt • v. KfMM1.no • , 1•1Ao+ "'HoSPpl J.60 •• l.lO 31 _, ~ .» 10 ,., 10 ... USFidllf1.•, w U'>ll• •,,
the continu.ing concern ""'s111C1.1G • 101 •Ve• " cs1SGfll 1.1J .. 1, 16 .•. frMp1 1.10 .. u 20 -'h ~"f>t.11.si 1 1• is~ ... NoSPpt ,,1, .. 110 •2Vt•l!N 51..,c 1,.., , m 1• •.. USFoS 2.t00 .. n ",,.-tt AmStdDI 4\1. .. 4 'JV.• \'\! c.otiJC.ol t.U 16 :W.S 591'>+ lh FtOOn 1.U1d . 1 I:»!!-\Oa ~ty lndtusl 4 l J~ ... NoSPpl 1.14 .. d20 1• --6\lo ~ )\'J , • 11 Jl'lo + '-" US GYP 1..0 • JO :Ov. + U.
a bou t f u e I e eon om Y Z::~1tz: ! ~~ 1!~ .1 ~i:..8;~:.= : 22l ;~--~ =.i-~ 1: ~ ~!:+ ·~ ~!J~':~ :: 1~ 1 ~1,1o . ·~ =:, ;~!: J ~ ,;\~ ~ 'i,; s;n;o1~ : 1t J ;?• * ~~1:. 'i 1ri s~ -...
spawned by las t winle r's oil AmTa. t 1.<10 • 110 " • v. eo1«a1~ .06 .. •s 2""-v. Fo-.. .60 n 1' zs.i. + v. ~""llCI' 1•1. . . • 101~ ... NW51Alrt .is , •1J 11 • '" 51111 eorp.. J} 1 t 11 ... us ,,,., .Slot J s.u w + ...-
.mba r go and
'
'n cre•sed AmT .. Tpt • .. 101 i.tl'i + ~ ColQttt ...... 1 .. 21"'°-"' F•-M .<1010 1t1 u 1'o+ ._ ic. ..... c11t .•o s 1 10~•-'" -"'° 1 n• 11 +" S11v11n0i .2•'2S 1n 111'1-11o usu-·"• JO",:'!-~ .. A TT pt A J.M .. l6 n • 1 Qllf&Alll .56 s 2• s . . • f .. M 1.10 s 172 20'h+ 1lo ICl'(SetA .60 s l t!N -... NW,,! In 1.lO l I» nr •• lh Smilll.AO ·" • "' t i.lo. \lo us Rlty .IOd • ,, ••• "" gasoline prices. ATTptBJ." .. •1 42 • 11> '°'""' FOlld • 1 l w. + "' FruetM '·'° s 131 lll'll • w. ~ep .10 s 6t J'lll• '"' ~ 111C1 ..s .. n 11 .. -11o Stn11111nt .z• " .. ,,~ .. ft us lll'IDll ·" s " 1"'t~ NflT&Twl .. 1206 !\loo ... Co1Pem .J01G20710 •2¥1 Fuqualndu ,.l,.,2S s •'"'Kotllerl".50 ' I t.:i;. .,.Hwi.tlnfllS ., lf61\ltt4\'t StN!Ndirlot21' 3'•~+1-USSINl-t.•-s -JO<Q\oO 1,, "Our six-cylinder twin-Amw.ir .ti 1 s 6lli-"' t.olonSt 1.10 s ' ,, --...... ..---1eot11oOQ • .o u 1os ""' ..... Nw..11111 •.10 • . • Slv •• 1""' s.n;11111 T .u , 4 10....-"' us Tab .111 • 1• 1•, • • A Wit pf 1,43 .. 1130 14'1• Coll I~ I J HJ ll'llo • 1 GfDlot lnmt 4 I ·~ Vo Kotlwood .IO ' 2 9'--.... Nw\tl"llfC 5 •. 10 61 • '\!. 5mucMJ .1G t S 10V.-\Oa \llllTl'I I.• I UJ I + \loi cam. a s one of the world's Amt•a11 ·"° • 11 10 • . . Co111" p1 •11• . . 11 te111. 1"" GAC Corp 2 .s1 1•.:i • .. 1Cfrm11 '·"° s l' n ... -.w.1 1.llll • 11 1111 •• '"' So1t1 8llS .60 , 10 1v.-" U!llttt wo •• n 1i.16+ 1.,M>
d • · ,,,,.,51 .tOd • ) JV> t Ve C04 Gf'l I." ' Sii 2011\-'Ill GAF Cp .Sl • 6t Ill•-vt l(efKon J.llO • 163 ll,,.~ 1"'--Pict .-• 11 nv.-\Alo Sany Qorpln 9 11t •\loo-Vi unlTot.r. 1\11 •• J2 I• • i•
Inflated Buck Stops Here most mo e rn engin es, 1n -•k .1111 , n 11\'lo .. • Co1G1 a1 sVi .• " s1"", :i.r. GAF fll 1.JO .. a 1• • ft K, \/Iii 1.1• 1 tt ""'-.,. '"611 '·-, 1 ,, . . . Soo u1 •.Old s ,, lt ... -"' un11"""' CD 4 1 ,~ .. ""
combination w ith our highly AMF 111 1.1• ' Hl nv.-'" Col Pi<1urt1.. " 1v. · · · '*"SI< '·"° • 10 ~ .. ' ICerr M<G 1 u t11 ''""'• l'lli rwtn c.o 1.60 • t tni. . . . sos Ctl$ .:io J n ·~-11o U111•1t . M 2 u 1~ + ""' ~~ Amlk .IO J 11 1114+,,. ColSa.1.'6 I IS IS .. , °"""'*' .tot IS 19 1~ ft "''llanot 1 3 10 111'1+ \lo~ .30D ) ''° tllt + '4 SC.WEI 1 .• t l W 1J •IHI uni"5LU\'1 S l 2S -Uo a d van ced 4:K.IS E c h assis, I.MP ln< .3311 I.Oil 2•~. 214 ColwM 1.21 .. 2 II '"'. Vt G¥ctOell .16 IS 31 ,, '.. Kldclot w .60 l 11 t \lo. ~ Nr!Sl p4 1,60 •.. u U\!o .. . 5CIJ I"" 1.)t 1 2 11'4-'lo uni.OU .to s Ill 14V.. ~· A~gp .<Ill ' S9 9'1> • 1\'o Com0 E I.Ill 1 11 JO + ~-Gwtlnkl .'6 S l ,,,.._ V. KIMOCI I ..... • I'll 251(, • VI Hu<.Or(o .:M l I It -\'o ~ 3 JI I -Uo llO-lolln .M 16 ffS O"°+ 2
makes the 280$ il \'Cry Up· ""°"• QI l 41 J\1 • Yo CorrlSlv I.JO 10 U J.t'llo-'• Gwlock M S S U -\lo Klfl9'DS .-0 ' IS~ 4U • io NV F Co Si J 35 ltlot _.. Sdwn pl I.ID t 11 -\la USl...IFE .2' 4 16' 10\'o • )'I
DETROIT tU Pl l -Un·
cOlnSack open e d a bill rrom
the company that sells hini
gla s s ja r lj ds, saw the price
h ad jumpe d rrom $31.50 per
thousand to $40 .16 -a nd got
m ad.
"1 said ·to hell with it,' ••
Sack said .
So h e wrote all hi s
c ustome r s. a nnouncing he
would not go a h ead with a
previously a nnounced price
incre ase of 10 percent on the
pic kled b erring h is com ·
pany manufactures.
-d b 'I f h ""'"pCotp 3 2· llo ... CrnwE02.lO I 111 1211• Uo GMS...: 1.12 1 1 10 +'to Klt5thC 'IO ' I 11,,.-l'o --OC>--SDHIBll.IG t )t 111\i ... USLFllK .94 .• lJ ~ •.• "1'1'1 JUST A Jitt.le cog in lo ate· a ulomo I e or t e Alnlltr 1.10 • 1• 32111 .. • .. ewE"' 1.1.. • .... 1 Gltew•Y 1n , 2 2:v. + v;, .: L M Air•.. 2 1•"' ... OM\ IM .40 l 11 1'1>1.-t~ SoHIPS 1.• .s 11 "' •.• USM Corp 1 J " 1~ _,. American luxury car.t.st.,pt1.u .. 1 ·•s~.111 eom£0.,,1. 1s201~+UGem1NCat>. 1 '""'-""K"1Qn1'4 .:tz• •1•\.!o •V.OccidPetr131•i 1~.,,.sc.iEd1.t1•1•2 11v.-lli USMfllll'lo .• iSOu •.. the \vheel," h e said. "But I ,.,,.., "'..... 1 1t1 . . . ewe11p11.•1 . ) 1si. 0 .... 1 .. 11"' 1 1 11 "" w.oetw9 ..... s 12 s~. . .. oa.idP!. pt • . • 10 '°"'. "' SClillll(.o 1.c • 1013 iw.-v. uw ""i.10 ,. 1 11111; .. "'
f'·gured I ,vould try to stop m a rket ," Nordmann said. NM1otd1.111 s • :1o1•:.-·~ c-"' '·'° .. 11 1t •• GAm• i.2t11 .. u 'I~ ... .:_, 1.io s u tW.• "'o:.,PUit l.60 .. ,.. ~·•in SalnGE i.:11:1 • J J•'\llo• ~ UW1 111 .-11 m •S\)+'v.
I h h 80S "'"'-•11ti .20S 13 l~-~•c.omw OilSl22'1 7\\ •.• GftM)il .Qll 5640¥•-V•l\'.oj)per pl• .. 1lCl '4'llo-IV.OccP1a1J.16 •. JllV.•V.SaMAHl.'51 Ull -'-'VltlllPLl..»1 nuv. ••• som e thing. This was i'u st a "W e ree t at l e 2 p e r· MKon .100 ' 111 u • 1o cw0itp1 1.n .. 2• 1•~·-"" GtnAT• 1.lb • :io a1-v. K•thca 1.n 10 u ll~-..., .IO , n 14"". "" SNETl'I '-'"' 1 20 2,,. • "" uv 1-" 1 J » ••14-"'
f ti 'f 'll lh bet Allc.M+tl.1111 s •J U'J.o •I'""' c.ommSttl . 111 17\\ .. 1\lo GM.T~ll'J .. 1100 11 + t'o Krngoe .nM 9'S ''""-"' E 1 ... 1 .. 1•'-"• '4 SoP.012.2' I 56 ,.,,._Vo -··-first step in c ombating all ec Y 1 s e g a p ween ......,.,,a • ., 1 s 10 n v.~ i~ C.O...M• Sci u 12 ,..., .. ~ Genant• .ID 1 1 10~ + v. K•aoe• 1.lli 6 "'° 1•11o• v. °" e .C11 1t0 •• tSO· «1v.-1"" Sa Rt11 t.11 1 is 4!::~ + 2 v ... i.. .10 • » '"'" .... th e Sm a lle r 280 and the
-
Utt .11 t I S~-l'6 Cool .r,gr1 I".. t 3\'o -"'-r-'"~ .ti .S n •~•• .. <>-I~ .ICI ( 11 1•~ .. ...._ E. 4.olO •. t!OCI 4'111-.... Sl:tA•il• JO .• S :i--\lo "-11.11o • 111 31'1!.-... thesepri ce ·incre~ses." AMu1 ea •1 • is20'h•'h r-M11.20 • tH1t1o•'lt~c.;""1.20• J11\.lo -11o ----l.L-'" 0:E C11• . .u .. uo ,1Vt SoR+11fll1 •. s •2v ... 1 .... ~..011 l 64 ...
Sack's company, Sea 450SE ,'' he added. A!*r.C.so s 1e !Dlo-.,, CAlf\nMI 1.111 • 11t 1Jv.-~ GlnClnl ..... s 1 •~ .. L.a<Gci• 1.56 , 3 1t\lo-"" a.e"" •.St :. 11t ,, SoUnGs 1.60 1 11 21 ..... v. Wt11<e1n .20 J 1 l'4-~
T 197 US . Apta OU •I .. IS 111!•• ~·. CAlfl•KC ·'° 6 2• 12~-'It Gn Oo!wlGCI l ' l~ •.• u.,._,,,s.. lg J • , •• "' 01<11GE l.'6 ' ,, 11:i.;,-~~ Sdutl'lld ,«IQ • ' 1sv.-"" """-l.Otd •• l'O n~-.... Fare Foods Jnc., sells as o · ·m eet 5 · · e m 1s-""""° c.otp .. u •~• . •• eo.. Ed .Ud • 111 • • ..., Gin 0yi...,.. • 11 1s\lo-'h y,.er., .n • u 1ov. .. ,,.. GEfll .1111 •• tJOD , .. _ ,. SOMIFf :Ill 1 Js s'h-v. v.ica Dlhll u 1• H\9-'' • l d d s thc280S4P l..Cotp• :w '"· ... Coo\5EOpl6 .. 1tl ··GnEIKl • .011 111ll •l'h UtMI0 .... 1 ll 1h-\IO (llo.l~l.t01 •II +\OaSWf'ot"fllll'r,. 91' +'h VF(Drp ,7'' 1014 •.• many as. l .8 million jars or s ton s a n a r • AD1111tc1 Ma56 1 1~• ... CoMeo '' s . ' lsv. • v. c;n,,_ 1.-a 12• •t\I.+ "' ~.n , 56 •t~ ... 1)111 ep, 1.10 5 1 .. 1• .n_. s.:-s.PS .u , ,, . f'i.-1t vi.r-int 1 11 J\io-"-.ngl·ne ;s f1'tted .... ,,h a '""O ARA Sv 1."6 11 l6 60'1<. 1 1~ Coo\E pl A.6S 1100 l1 -1 . GerlGt 1.0&0 I• 10 Uh. "' J\11 • . ' 19h + \lo Olll>llrett I 4 UI l.S'lo. " ~ .n. ., 1 s .. ~ \lo VklatCC .50 • ' 6VI-,_ pickled h e rring and rolm-., • ""'"•N .M s 10 6•• eoi.,,, 1.1s s 211 13v. ... Gen ll'IM• 1i , 22 '"'• "" tMw.y .60Q , , 1•··~-1_ °""'•'".so, 6 1\io •.. ScienYl+ul 1 5 11 •v.-1t Vt Elf< 1.11 , 501 •141• h
·ops -herring wrapped -ch am b e .r m o no Ii th i c "'~•t p1 c 2 .. • 10 ·--ConFOPt '""' .. 1 •3 .. v. aer.1nsi rif 1 .. 1 t• . .. Ltotdt&N .so • 1 t\io ••• o..ldtt. ·'' ' 1 11" + v. SOotr..,Hol l .. 1 21 -v. v1E11< 111 s .. ino • + 3 I · t I t l d Arcr.rO.JS' AO 11\0+ \1 CollFrQl .10 6 11 ll'lt• \>'o Gen-.14 • 11 6*+ It~ .50 t 29 l'lio+"' ~.12 • 11 ,,,.._.,.,Sp~.,.' ')Q 21~ .. 'h \l•fl pl).U .. 1m ti ..• around a pickle -e \•ery P at1num ca a ys moun e Arclk. e"'". 1 24' ... ean~c.1.10 1 .. '1"'-\lo GenNi•I 1,10 u 56 ~. "' Lthl 111c .10 ' 21 10 -"' 0r Add 1.JO • se 1v.-v. seteoat e1 2 " 111o+ v. VtE• ptt ..... it0.11 , .•• th e h a St ·f Id for ArltlM" .n ' 39 s.._. 111 Consm Pw2 1 111 1 'Ii -\.\ OnMot 2.SScl 11»6 lS -"' l.th V•I 1N1 • J 'ft-1·16 0.11 f l 1.JO t " 27VI• ,,.. ~ .1s , , 1~ ••• Vornedo lk l 'f •)-lo .•• year in J\olichig an , the lo.1id-on e x u m ani 0 ,,..., PS 1.ll • " 1:w. .. '"' °"' P p1 tV. .. 110 31 + vo ~pt s .. ' il + "' uhm 1.1tc1 .. 1• t'lll .•• OutbdMl.M ' 1J u \4-111 Sciu«O 1.io 10 ns 1•11-• "' vs1 eo..co .60 • ' '° • 1>1o --·est and the East Coast. control or h ydrocarOOn a nd ""''"' . .u 2' J J\o • . • ConP"' '·'s .. u10 S6 ~ 1 °"" 11or1 .eo 11 is s'llo • . . ..._, c,p , 2• l'Wo+ 111 0tut11teo .10 1 , ,,,._ "'"' ~ .... ,. 1" 31 .. h WltftM 1.60 s 11 ~ .. ~' .. b • d . Arlltl.a(; I.lo ' 11 19>;, ..... (.onP p4 1.11 .. J]ICIO 60 • Vt G""""' 1.61 s •110 11\loo .. • U!roo• In ·'° i II 13'h ... OWfSllrlh .10 ' 1 lOA-"' St.tlity I.ti! • n :n . . . ---w-The loss to Sack a nd h,•5 car o n monoxt e em1s· Niii\ A11ov . . 1s 1~ l'o ConP p11.16 ., uoo 60 + 1 Gen Aefr1oe1 s .t6 sVJ •• • u v Fc1 c..co . • • s~-~ OtowT•n .1111 ' s 11~+ v. St """ 1.a u ,. •Vii. "" W1oeh co .16 ' 16 u-. .. "-
• N l Cal'f ~ CIJ ' TS tto • · · CDnPwr p1 • • • ' S2 -It GnSkNll .J6 • lt 23<41-ft Ult! Sin.• t * 16!•• It -I'-Sld&rpt l.50 .• 1110 t.S'h • " Wt(RI I.JOI! 3 IS •'llo-~·. partner: Sam •Cohen, was s1ons. O separa e 1 or-Arm<OS 1 . .0 s '' 11 co..11.r.1r1.1110 st Sit• l'o GtiSC9'1 •M ' •l 2t1o• ~ Ltv1u F""' s 111 2'1io .•• ,..,. ""'"'' •. •JJ 1 .,, su1PM1111 .n Jl JS ,. .. 211o w.1.,_ 1 s 21 n \\+ v.
es timated at b e tween nia mode l will be re quired "'""'"' 2.10 •• ',, •.. c.nc.." 1.ao • "22\lo ••• ore· 1.eo 1 38t 111'1• v. LOF 1.JGio • ,.. 11'llo-¥o Ptn11tM1t1 6 u 2sw-..., swoi1et12 4 421 2s11o+ !.-w.1tH1.o10a\O ss •v. ••• Nrnurf/1'¥1 .. HO <16 •11'1 (.nll(Ow.I02 ll '*"' 111 GTl~1.10Q' SI 1317 + \lo lOF pt•\oio .. 2 )1,_+ 'II. PapercrfM.t 11 1\IJ .•• 5'0CNtid3.t0 I JSI tO\lo-\~ W.UMut.60 l S 1"-•. ,. <J.5 000 dS2o 000 as th e federal version also """"°" .92 1 2• , • .,... "" c.o..11c112 . .a 1 1eo JO +'"' GeowKo in< • 11 ·~· v. Ubbr Mt.NI • 11 • ... Pero11 .M , ... ' '"'-v. St010i 1.» u 143 SJ +21• w.1M1rt.1012 1 tl\io ••• ... ' 'an ' .. t th t t ' . .d ""'1$1.R 1.60 s 2• 13'1'1-"" c.nnc.;. pll'I> •• 1 ll • 2\lo Glnulr!P .JI, 11 61 2S + 'Ao Utlorty(p .tD • 11 • -""' l'jorli.Hn 1.Cll s IS U\io . \lo 5"'°""' ~ .. uo SS ..• 'Ntr>I L .Dtd 10 ,. 11 ...... ~ Sackssaidjarsarenolth e mees a s ate s r1g1 Atoeor111"'' .s s 1B~-11o c eoo111t\'t •. 10 l1..,+1 Gt~.IOo t Hs :io ., ... u r.L.a11 .10h .• 12 >*• ~ "-n.,P.50; s 10 u +v. sw1>oort.'1 .• •1s 1iv,+'lt -dFoac11 .• ,, "<+i-.
e miss ion st a ndards AMn•M .sJ 11 '' '"' .. ,,. c11111Qi2.t0 6 '° ~· + :ir. G+Pwpl 1.n .. 1100 " • .. UDL pt .6Jh . . '• 1 • 11> ,.._ Irie; 1 a 11,.,. .. 5111 PrSti . .o , ,. , ... w..-nac1 .to , ,1 • _ ~• H • ' only thing going up so shar-• ASA .Lid 1 . • 100 1s11o + 2 onnP 1.t'td 1 n •~-v. Gtrtl6f Pl! 1 ' 31 t4" • ._ LIQoa My 2v, 1 J1 n • ~· PtvMu .JD s a H'•• "" SIG Prvd ... 1 1 1~. • .. Wll"nCl'll • .o J • 1v ... "' Ypnotlst S h The 280S has more than 1\5"1 011 1.-0 ' " 11 -11o ouuA 1.:ioo 2 • • -v. Getty 1.X1c1 11 1i 1n .,,,, L!fiMv pi 1 .. i3IJ I0'4 -1~ Pw•t>G1.1Bt 1 si tB•• v. ~ •. st • 11 , ... w.o.t 111. .. 1 11 ••• ply a nd quickly in cost t at ~ 1.-0 s-163 11 -11o Coll! •~w11 • . lt ll·)l• 1.u GettrPI 1.11 • . J 1111o • . •• u 11, EU 1 11 11i 61Vt• 1'111 Pe"" c.tntr . . ss 1v. . . . ~ ·" s '' u •h + ...,, w ..... reo-.so s -r ,.,._ v.
'
't m akes hi'm espec1·ally a dequa te acceleration (0·60 A&Sor9 '·"° s 1 11v.+ v. Coo\Mti ·""' ' uo '""-v. GF &rs .» • 1 s\i-11o L.111tN11 1.60 , no 2n•• \lo Pe ..... ., 1.ttu :11<1 ov.-.... StMrril 1 • 1 16 + .._ Wttum...,1> m 1s11.+ * ""11«11 ,olQ l JS IV.+ Vo Co!IHO 11.IO t OJ )t\lo + 'Ill Gltril.PCm I S 2 10 -\lo UncNlt COi ) • • 10 43V. + 'h f'eMOI• .U ' 11 S + \0 SIMllv 1.loOO t t ... + \'o W.mrS 1.20 4 1S 14 -''' mad. 1n 15.7 secs.) and cruising Aiko 1.JSoO J 19 •:ii.-"'-eo..1 Oil ptt •. 1 s2 -. ,., Glbl'"1'1.c S1-• 1s ·9111-..... l.lnl'tFd 1.1• •• 1 11\(o._"" r:i.m Fru11 ... ...JI 21• ·~· ~ .. M ..., .~ ... .,.. w.s11Gs 1.•, 11 ,, + '·• F' • J' ---~~~------------,,. d~m .. I · · -~ ·-Mt0v£1"1v. ' h 1Jv.-,,.. c.on111111111 1 13 11:\0 ••• Cldd Lewli s ~ J'li. .. uane1 Corp s 10 1\li+ v. PennPL1.to • S6 1'\\-' v. SltoMef" 2.20 1 19 ,,.,. .. 'h w..,.Hu .ao J 1 •111o+"" ---·1·n·a·n·em I~ pee· ' X mU m S.,-.:;""' IS AllCElpl ~ . . I S6 .. • Colltrl 0.11 I :wt 13\'I+ \la Giff Hiii .JJ ' ' ll»'o +,. Ullanln 2Vtl . . " 4'--... PfPIL pr I .. 1120 1) + 1 S.dll .ti S I SV. , .. W•N1 Ol 2V. .. I 13\lo-\'.o
'IE SAID l 'E Ord ered a we ll over 100 mph). .r.URIChf 11'1 1) ,.. .. ~ .. ll'o Corl-1 1 2 21~+ '"' GIUtllf 1.50 • 1l lS~•. '-'• Litln (\o"' 2 . . IS 1lh ..• p PL pf •.SO .. UtO '' • 3 !olet!Oro ,1(1 lt &J 21\'o. I Wall Sii It 4 3 IHI ••• ARal pl :t\r. •. 1t0 •11'o ••• CoakUn .26ot ' 2t 2\\-\(0 Gill05 lllC:OI" S IS l 'it• I• LO<-.c1 J iJ ' -\lo PllMWJ l,U I Mt II • \>\ Slotn'ldrtl .IJ 6 11 I~+ '/o Wf511WI .• I S 11\lo ••• f kl.ft t k · ced al $650 Al.lk pt 1.111 •• "1 )l'I> • "" Coop'" i.04 6 9 21\!o • v. Glttll\ ·"" 11 20 Ju-~ ~ 1.20 1 1•1 1•:w. • 1'\lo Pe....,p1 ;II) . 2 11•-. + \:. ~ 1.20 , 201 11 • 111 wa• MnGI 1 150 ,,,_ • ''" or I rue pr1 • AHAl:h prl j .. 1 1'91'> ... Cooper Ut>.. .. 6 -v. Giotlel Mfr ' 113 IOW • .,, lMNSFI :. tit t6.l •t:o Pnwl "'1.MI .. 3 11'4 t "" ~ 1.92 • II 18\lt . vt WllUJ .1Scl I " 11~~-"-
By the ti me it a rrived. it AllB Corp 20 2• 1~ • . . '-Tire·'° s 1 1 GlolieU.. .IO • 13 1u:. • ~ ...-0 u:.a s 1• "~· ~ t.M1ou 11 s •11 "" .. . s.Jl'V l.10 s '' u .. ""' w..,. G .i.o • 1 •• .•• • View A ired ATO Ill< .20 l JO •'Ai-\lo '-"tld .Ml 6 S ,~ ..... GoklWSI Fcl t H ,.__ l'o ~ .-J • S'i>-Vo """""'Or .2 6 l •Y> ... 51.-0. .JO l I IOV.-\lo Wet ll'le·r .40 l 11 •'Ill -\\< cost $850. Sugar that cost Slh.i l F• ""'o..1 .20c11t • .,_.... .. CoC1R11'hll 2 IOllll)+t Ga0dt1c1.12 • uw :xw.+ .,., 1.are s lnd1, l-M •h•:W.P!op(;sl.»• 3t 2t>111+1; se.:w..Wt11010 2s,. .•• WtllbOt'ICil • 11 J +1•. S" h d d 'gh r 1rm -ll'llb 2 ll l•J;-l'o '-kl I.Ml • lO 214'1+ h GCIOdtOI I.IS 1!<0 ·~ +l'h ..... SOI •Vt •. I 50\IJ ••. PllpSl(.o 1.-011 IS( """"•I ~ 1 ' 1 111\o ... WtllMcL .loO 2 31 •Yo ... • GiLBoy n e,_h)'.pno.tisL and.... _ .u..50 pei:... un r.e _\\'.fl . l _ • A..::o _c:.orp 10 21 3''> • v. Cotdurt c,p .. n ,.,._ 11o GaoO.-flir 1 "6 9U '"", "" t.onestG 1.,, 1 " iot1o+ 1 Ptrtd11EI .1i 11 ss 101" + \i ~ ero 1 " l u~ .. "' WellMkt .u 1 • 1m+ ~ ..
director Of a School Of hl•n. one year ago now oosts h im A""° QI wis • • 11 11·1• • • . c.ot"G 1.12. 11 1•1 "'"' • "' GllrdanJ .11 • J ,,,, • '" L<>n!llLI 1 ... • IO 11v.-"' Ptt 1-. 1.-0 ' 10 1t>i1i+ '4 Slridt1tlt .u s 1 ~ .... ...., Welb Fo ... s 101 n 1,1, •.•
I" Aw:pl 1.t0h .• :M l:W.+'Mo Cr-IEq.40• ,, l \lo .•. Gat.+ldl11l,IO s s 11\'o ... ULOIE•.Js •. uoo» .... -1111 Ptl l1K l'll •• 1111'>-V• StudeWl.J:l l 11 ,, .. ~WFMQ1.JOclt ll ~-.... notism, "'iii appear at $.19. J J t A..,,..,Pr .:io 11 UlOl'l-,,..Couslnl.OllJ St l i-o+\la(laukJpll.lS .• ~1s -v,1..an9Dr11 ... 20 n•1\0+1VJ PtterP1t.2012 '110 -1ioStudlrWpt S .. 1" ~1t.we111AG .61t s11"4 , .• . h d 'Ir 1 · t II n r "Ine AlliilllCA)286-v.-\IO CowlH ,ISd9 IS ....... GfacofWl.60SIOol2J'A .•. lof" .. (:.orp 1 •t:w. F'l!t .. Slr .IO ll l:MVo-V.Stu't'fpll...O . 1 19\l>•'t.Wft<oF .tl),ltl•tl'll +~ P syn etics R esearc a n • n act Just go a ca T A-i1"' .JO 1 » 6 -,,.. Co• 11<11 .JS s u 1011o. 11o Grn u .902' .. ·~·· u 1.1L¥1111.01 , 216 2,,.. ::: i-.1ro1,,. .11 • , 1o'lt-Vo s..-s-:. , ii.. 11o Wst T• 1.20 • s u~• ..•
Educ atl·on Foundati'o n , 1212 from the s u ga r co-pany ,._Pr 1A 11 192 1•111-Yt CPC 1"112 1 3, ""' •·· °'..,"' i.10 l n 1•""• 'II YP•lk .1s • "'' •11o-\~ Peu• pt 1.11 .. 1 20\~-..,. SUlbf>raO .• s 1 1'"'• "" WPIPpf '"' .. 140 • -1 ~" Atlt<" Oill.G U 11 1•.V. + "'° Cr•r. C 1.40 ' 111 ll\.'l t 'lio GttntW .JOh 4J 56 JV.+ '.'I LouG.M I.It t 5 lll'tt+ "io i-.tr1C 1,..0 . , ' ti~+ \.Ii SuuHIC .111 . . ' J'h • V. WslPt ~ t 110 21 V. • "" E. Ll'ncoln Ave., Anahe1'm say;n g it is a ddi n g S3 to the The Shirl Factory, Inc., --ea-c..011 Fl . .u 1 17 •llo ··· ~..,0ro .<10 , 11 , ..... v. ~n 1 J '1 11v.+ ,,.. Pfla• •"·"" su 2t•1>-v. ~°"" ·"° J , 1111o . '" Wit""'". s to11 •"i•"" Bllb&Wll .1111 • 11• 16\0a+l'llo Cl'o<Ketl.M. lJ 11 ...... Gl.r.Mt1.t1d . J4 21'1-Vo l..TV Carp l to '"•" Pl'lllcoDJ.lO s n 291') .. 'h 51.1<• Oii ,., .s S4 ~ .. 1 W'i&tMl. s llt 1tll6• ... Thurs day at 8 p .m . to give a cost immediately." Sack . H o nolulu·based m a nurac· e.o. .10h 93 21 1"' ... er"""" K .to' • • + v. Gt ~&P .•s.s • 31 •~· v. llb>Ol~1 11 ,, • • 1v. Pn111e1 1.ti , 11s ,,...,_ v. s..oilpl 2•,ji .. 1s Jt • 'It ""'""'4"'A n 111 '"' +1~
new Slant On f l·n anci'al s ue-sa1'd ."Thatmakes o't$42per turerof "CrazySh1'rts,"has a....·1"·10 1 " IVi+"" CtoweH .JO' • 14'°'+"" GtUtooi.to .. 1 n •.-; ··· luc:krS •. • n '"'•"' PT111£1p1 1:i:. •• r:tto 12.,,.-•,, So#lllefrn 1 s u uv. ... .._ '"'11.tc1n111 s n ''"' ... e..rt>il .ll 11 ... 31 .•. Crowot Car-I l 1t1"'-... GIN'*~ l.llO ' 11 3'~•-'-' UdOw 1. t l tl'o + Vo PTIEt r. IAO •• r130 U + "'1 Sonlmd .al $ 21 lt\l + .\4o WeilP'ull.16 t 10 tiv.-V.. -ss. hundi·edwei'ght." take n occupa n c\:, • or a new Bald OH . .o J • •v.-v. <:rwn z11 . .0 s U• tl'-• "" GCW.Flfl ... • st1 11>111 + u. u..n St• 1 ' n 19"' ~ .... P1111E"' 1:i.r. •• 1to0 •1 . . . Soni rot 3~·· . . 1 "'~. "" W\H\Jan 1.41'.1 s u 1ov. • •• "~ l!llllCarp .60 S ' tV>-V. CTS (:p .JO 3 2' 1\0a-V. Gt Wti1 Un 2 116 U~-'lo l I' o Corp 13 JSS '"" •. , Pl'IEI pt t .>O .• tlO JI.~"> .. VJ ~IW .ta 10 .., t'lio-V. Wnlh El .t1 I 2'1J t4'-\lo In di.r eel contrast to views Sack conte nds that many 14.000 square f oot racilily at flftltc>.s 1." • 121 1s11> ... curno... ·* • u 61·• ... Gt'Ntlf s.11c •. 11 U'lt-'" Ll'MS• .uo l Jtt n "'• .. Vo PriE1 pt'·'° •• r100 11\o\-1'h s..po;1 1...0 1s to 11S .1 Wst••< 1.«1 s " 1.s ... v. lailCel 1.3'1 I I ll'llo+ \lo Cumfns ... 6 ,. 21'111-lfoo Gtfl Git 1.111 t t 16\lo-"" Lyke> p1 Z\tt .• " 2111t.,. \lo PrlEI of •.61 •• tl'O ll'I> • .. ~ .10 S 21 ,,,.._ II. W.'!'otntl 1,28 t 1 "\'•-'llo ofsocial scientists,he m ain · of his s uppli ers raised 17321'l cGawAve.in irv ine ~ 111c21 2so 111.t-'llr c:im"J.SOpl •• uo a -·· Gryhd1.0&+ • 101 ,,.,._.,., LY"'CllS•.tD ~·'wo '"'• 1~P111•Sub1.l0s 1 1, .. ~~ 3 •1 u .,. • .,.,,...,_·'°" J" u -~
· • f f 't I d 1 · I c I 8lhOOr' "" .• •1 211o ..• c....r1nc;.tM •. 1s 1~ ..• Grot'tllnd wt .. 21 ,..,,_"' --MM-111111111Mo .to1• 110 0 11.+1"' s... v• .t0 s ,, u .\io. "'° WNF•r ·'° 1 11 '°"'• '"' tains tha t su cces s 1n any price s or pro 1 reason s n us n a omp ex. 9lfliil"flfC 2 •. 2 12.v. •.. a.rt1li .Xld 1 16 iv.+ "' Gralltr ·"" .. •1 1i,-•,. MMA~f 611 , 4 1v. Plim1K1n .10u 1• lv.-~ suiroM .tl.h , , , -~· w..1PS .lSd 2 20 1n:.-.v.
• t ·11 1h 'l e h 's own pr>'ce 1·n The S hirt Factory s 1·1ka..ltv1.20s114 111Ho+l'teuru1swA2 .. 111 ..• Gru,,....,1.o •111n:i,,-,._,A· 21 a i\lo "·""'111nc1r,1 .. ·10 Jl'o ... Swanll "' ,2 ·-~W111N1S1pt6 .. 1100»-1 area, anu m os espec1a Y \ ' I 1 • e..i. Vt .. ' • 10 •. . CUti.tH 1.60 s • 1211,-""' Guo1r11 1 .10d 6 11 tfo-1. :=:k;""" 30 , 1 3~ • · · PhltPet ·'° , 206 •sl't + v. Swt>rM ".n 1 221 1sv.-,,.. ..,,,,,..1s1 OI s .• i •Mr " .. 2
fina ncial s u ccess, is the . c r eases 'were based on the screen s d esign s on T ·sh irts IW*TIVSI i s "" ~ .. Vi cyc1ops1.40 l 30 1tl'o+ "" GuM102.»c1' " l:it-"' Mt«nill ·u 1 ns , ... Pl'lllvH _. .s i '"'"-v. S¥t>mp1 '·'° .. 1 11 ·• " 'Nll r1oao1 .1111 9 :ws U\•+ ,,
d d, d SlreOll .a)d . • l6 22 + "" ("1Jl"US l.tO ) lD J6V.-'I> Gul!Llle .SO ' St '"" . .. M:.llA pl I ·10 1 12'11'-· v; Pk-wlnt a J 61 1\1.-~ S.,strc•• ()ml It 1 l'• .. Whit Con .1111 l 7t t ft-'' direct result or one's s ub· n e e d lo s la y c v e n a n , accor 1ng to Presi e nt a..o<:A .20 1• 10 1J""• "" --o o-Gu11MG .11.i J 20 l ..... ,,_., 1·10 ., 22 """ • "' "'"'"G 1.11 s 1• 1 -,,. _,,_ WlltMot .JOd • 13 ""' •••
d • II v s B 'd th 81o"~1MIOI 60 ,_,,.Df_COllSf t\.+"'-GullOTll.M1••Jllll<o-V1-fd4Sd SS'~ .... ,11"'1111111 3V.+l/oT;rft8ulMI S n13\0 -V.~11HrCp10Stl tV.•·~ conscious at ti tu cs. economic a Y. an • 1r • e company e.ic 1,. .40 1 2 '~ v. E»nA.1vr • .o ' 11 •v.-,,.. °"'' A+&OI l " •v.-.,. _ s..u¥ot · · 2 • _ • .;.; Pi Hr.torr 1.to 1 1110 3JV. . . T.t1eo1i ,... . • 3 31~ ~ v. w;c:~ c:,. 1 , n 1oon-\~
After h is lecture, Boyne The last S e a Fare in-\vi ii s upply a n e t"·ork oC BMMw .JO • 1 ,, + 111 o.n.cp 1.11> • tt u -'Ito GttApe 1.:io .. • 1• ... INiitOI .n ·; 21 , PionNG5 ... 1 ., o~•· 1~. T11iey '" .60 , 20 s•:.-i.., WtebO!dt .a s • l "1 •••
&etll ltld .-0 l H 6V.-'It 0&rt I" .t(tg S d lt'lll• \lo GultStU 1.IJ 7 •l 11 • \.Ii ,,,_,~ .1Sh JS t5 '"'° : : : _.lrley 8 .611 ., Ut 11"" + "lo Tfl ..... r I . . 9 Ill ... 'MlllM'li .611 II ~2 6t +II• ,,·i ll pres e nt a demon ·. crease cam e i n F e bruary-s pecialty s hops and depa rt· 8fut(llL Ml 12 4tJ U.¥.+1v. o...t111C1p1 ' .• 1 12 -" Gutt&w1.t0 • •s ~ .. "' ""41.rrc.o 1 s u 13.,..+.,.. PitFMo .IOO 1 1 """'• fo r.,.;p.. ·"" , St 1or.. "" wmCoswt1 .. 21t "' +2~
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•,
Dod2e Recall
DE'l'ROIT IAPI -Chrysle r Corp.
said axles on som e s chool bus e s and
truc ks are d e fect.i\'e a nd the f irm is
notirying the oY:ners or t he vehicles
tha l they could lose a rear wheel.
'fhe veh icles involved a r e 197•·
m odel 0 ·600 l)odge medium truc ks
and S·600 school bus chassis equi ppcd
·"'ilh the 'l posi;ibly defective 1 .700~
pound, two·s pced real axle s
Ala ska Accord
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI I -The
Standard Oil Co. of Culifornla has a n -
nounced tht~lgning nf-a third ex
ploralion airee m e nt with Konlag. Jn~
c., Regional Native Corp. to eoveroll
and gas evaluation o f Koniag lands in.
Alaska. •
U nder the 1971 Ala ska Nall,,c
Claims Settlu m e nt Act, Koniag l.s Cn ·
ti tied to sele ct about a million acres of
Kodiak Is land and the Ala:>kan pcnin ..
..
sula . ..,
Standard is conducting geolocical
and-geoph:n~-surveys-to-ass.Ut
Konlag in the selection o f their lands.
In-return, it will ha\'C a right to oll a n4
gas leases onportions or U.Os e 1ands.
•
lfl80All.YPft.OT '
"Venneil
~orried . ·
About Cal
LOS ANGELES IAPJ -'Che
-Calirornla Golden Bean have won
four straight games and are 2·0 In the
Pacific·8 ConCerence, but are they as'
s:ood as their record v..·oold indicate?
Coach Di ck Vermelt of UCLA, who
takes his Bruins lo Berkeley Satur·
day, is eonvinced that quality football
is back :.al Cal.
"They're not just some sleeper
team that beat 1 lot or patsies," Ver·
meil told the Southern California
Football Writers' Association Mon·
day. "They're playing awfully good
football. espectally on offense.
"They have as skilled athletes in.
the right positioqs as anybody. Chuck
Muncie might be as good a running
back . as there i's in the country. Pro
lcouts will .tell you that. And Steve
Bartkowski L! throwing lhe balLex: _
tremely well. The widt receivers are
catching It." ·
Thal Cal has talented runners,
throwert and catchers isn't new . Cal
scored points last season, bu\ couldn't
slop_ other teams from scoring more in
aJ-9year.
In 1974, Cal is S.1 and, Vermeil said,
"The'Cle(ense Is so murh better than It
has been in the past. They bend a lot
but they don't break."
Cal has beaten San Jose Slate, Ar·
my, Illinois, Oregon and Oregon
St.ate, art.er losing to Florida.
UCLA, now l ·O·l ln lhe Pae-8 and 3·
1·2 overall, didn't even bend late In
Saturday night's 11·13 victory over
Washin1ton State, stopping the
Couaara four times one yard, or less,
from 11 touchdown. •
UPIT...,_.. Th1t go1l·line stand, Vermeil said,
inspired the team, ind "I re11Jy
believe we're going lo grow froJll that
experience. I hope so, because we're
going to have to play our best game
yettobeatCal.''
GREEN BAY'S TED HENDRICKS BLOCKS A PUNT BY CHICAGO'S BOB PARSONS.
The Bears are coached by Mike .
\Vhite, like V.ermeil a former stanford -
auiatant, and Vermell calla him "the
cl(>Sesl friend I have in lheworld. ''
Vennell said the UCLA of(ense
must a:aln consistency, whlle the
defense "has played well enough for
us to win."
Unebacker Fulton Kuykendall suf·
rered a sprained ankle and is "very
doubtful" atalnst Cal, said Vermeil.
"Now we're perfect four-for.four,"
he said ruefully of Injuries that have
stricken the four most out.standing
players on derense -Kuykendall, in·
side linebacker Frank l\.1anumaleuna
and linemen Cllrf Frailer and ex·
Costa l\.Iesa lli&h and Orange Coast
Colleee sta r Pat SweeUand.
l\.fanumaleuna was iidelincd for the
i;eason by a pinched nerve in his neck,·
but Vermell said he is hopeful
Sweetland and Frazier will be well
enouah to play against Cal.
.. It's like taking Merlin Olsen, Fk'ed
Dryer, Jack Reynolds and Isiah
Robertson out of your lineup," said
Vermeil, former Los Angeles Rams
asslst1nl coach. "Jt makes a heckuva
difference."
Vermeil said Saturday night's goal·
line stand late in the game will always
amaze him.
"It's the first t ime I've ever seen a
team have onl y s ix inches lo go on
rirst down and not make it. I'm on the
bench, as a realist , talking to the of·
fense, trying to rlgure hov.• to get a
touchdown in the quickest way po s·
;sible,''Vermeilsaid.
Bran dt Wins
Picker oo
Donald Brandt of Irvine did some
fancy selecting to win the weekly
Daily Pilot Pigskin Pickeroo football
guei;sing contest.
Brandt missed only three games on
the card-one college and tv.·o high
school. Ni rt y as that v.'as, it was only
good enough to tie with five other con··
tesl•nts. · •
l·lov.·ever, li ving up to championship
rorm. Brandl cam e through in the lie·
breake r to come within four points of
the exact tota l points scored by all the
teams in the pickeroo contest.
That ga\'e him ri rst prize-a por.
toible black a nd v.·hite telel·ision set
r rom co-s po nsoring ADC Color
Televis ion s to r es or llunlington
Beach.
And as one or the "'cekl y ¥.'inners it
makes him eli gib le for the end or
season runoff ror a Zenith color TV.
Each weekly winner 1A·ill compete ror
the grand prize.
Second place in the current contest
we nt lo Louis Rossi, Jr. or S an
Clemente while Santa Ana 's ~l arlos
RyalS was t~d . They each win radios
for their efforts.
B~k Tops B a llo tin~
Dodgers' Garvey Gains
~~!:f~.~:p All-stars
the Los Angeles Dodge,rs rir s l
baseman, has been named to the As·
sociated Press' 1974 major league All·
i;tar baseba ll team , announced l\.fon·
day.
Garvey was a landslide ,·ictor over
Dick Allen or the Chicago White Sox,
213·76. Garvev batted .312. smashin.:
21 homers and driving in 111 runs.
Lou Brock, the St. Louis t:ardinals '
bas e -stealing king, was al so a
runaway choice along with Cin cin·
nati's Johnny Bench and Minnesota's
Rod Carew.
Brock, who broke Maury Wills' all ·
time record with 118 ste als this
season. headed a group of outfielders
that included Reggie Jackson of the
World Champion Oakland A's and
Jeff Burroughs of the Texas k angers.
Jackson had 218 votes and Burroughs
accumulated 194 .
Bench, the Reds' rine catcher whn
slugged 33 home runs and knocked in
129 runs in 1974, was the biggest vole·
getter with 384 . I-le left his nearest
competitors in the dust. Pittsburgh's
~fanny Sanguillen was second wilh
merely 10 votes.
Carew, li1innesota's star second
basema n who had a major league.
leading batt ing average of .3&1. had
the second hi ghest vote total with 306.
Jlis clcisest competitor in voting by
s ports write rs and broad ca sters
·around the nation w(Js Joe Morga n or
Cincinnati v.·ith 63.
The rest of the team includes short·
stop Dave Concepcion of Cint'innati
and third basem an 1\likc Sehmidl of
the Philadelphia t>hillics. 1\likc Cucl·
lat of the Ame rica n Leugue East
champion Baltimore · Orioles was
selected as the lf!n .handed pit cher
and fo'er guson J e nk ins or Texas w:i s
named as the rlght·hunder on the
prestigious team .
Cuellar was a n easy victor in his
category "'il h 255 votes lo the distant
46 of Detroit's J ohn !filler. J enkins
had a tougher battle, though. with J im
winner. Jenkins polled 159 votes to
J~unter 's 117. Nol an Rya n, the Caltror·
nia An gels' strikeout ace, had 53 voles
to finish third a mong right-handed
pitchers.
chcrs.
Brock's outsta nding sea5on also in ·
eluded a .306 batting average, 194 hits
and 105 runs scored.
The \'Oters, who m ade their selec·
lions be fore the playoffs and World
Series, chose J ackson und Bu rrou~hs
among a field of outstand ing out·
fielde r' that included Ralph Garr, th e
National Le ague 's batting champion.
A third baseman in his firs t fi ve
years or professiona l bas<'ball. Gar·
l·ey \\·as sv.·itchcd to first base in 1973.
lie s howed remarkable ability at
rirst, particularly "'hen it cu me to dig·
ging ba ll s out of the di rt as many
World Series ra ns observed recentl y.
Garvey began t he 1973 season as a
pinch hiller . Instead of loo king at it as
punishm ent. hL· made the most of the
opporlunity, collecting 10 hits in hi s
first 24 plute appearances.
Grid Rankings
In~ A><O<i31•(1l>•r••101> 20<0!1"" 1001""11 te•m\. "'''n
ll••H>I•< .. •Ott>·~ '""''n1,,._.i... •• w .... n •KOf(I ... o 10!•1
pglnl•.
I. oi.1os1. &·0·11 1,1•~ fl -ffi•slech
1. O'I• 11! ~ o Q 1.ov 11. Fh)•!<f•
l Mlcll 111 ~0-0 t)J I). Te••••
•. AIW •II &-G-0 181 I' Arl,.,..•SI.
S. Aubufn !II •!HI •" I! ~·~lltn<f
•· V5C •.1.0 •11 lf>, At•IO<lJ 1. t-lolrfO,,..,. l·l-0 11• 11 N CMO 51.
I. l••••Al.M S.t•O \0/ II. Tul•M
t NU>f•l'• •·1-0 31S tt. Mlfft\•, 0 .
110 """"S!llt . S•1 -~ JU l'O, C.hlor111~
•·1·1 OM
s.1.0 ·~ •·J·O "' •. 1.0 "' •·1-0 ..
s.1.0 .. ..... , " ,.. ~
S·O I " S·ljl -" OllW<\ ttUl•lnq ~otr,, Htltd ~l(llllt>o1lic1lh . 81yl0f.
1111.-.olt. l(•nt••, M1~ml !Fl1.l. IY.o~l"POI ~"11f. NO•I~
C.<ol•M, ~l•llOmt !tl-1f. Pin. Pl.H'dW. 5¥1 0.f90 Sl ... I.
I l•mcHe IJCLA. Wol(Mltlll
-, .... -1,7' Uniii:-o P-;,,, lnler...i,.....1 bolro Ill <M<l>rl
IOI> JO mt lor (Oii-tootl>llt r•1'"9' '"'"'-·kn! fKOtOl
-hr~I pl1<e •Olei~••nthr'l•U.
l-Ollii>lfi""1UJ-l•O) -HO 11 f<O<•dl \S•ll
1 Mkll•Oltfl (6<(11 1't U ~ry!tnd (t .21
l Al&"""'" !•·Of He> ll. Ml.,..; (flit.) (1.1) ~-"""'"'" <6~1 IJ6 14 """'-tS•ll ), ll•tl use 11·1! IU lS. ,, ••• Te<'I !t·l·lf
!Tifl NoO•-t)•l•l ... I•. M1tm1 ISO.I I
I, Tr ••t 11.&M l)•ll \ti 17, """'-SI, C~·I! I ~nn Sl~lr g !l .. II. (Tiel <»:!lhom•"SI~
• ~b•••l e 1•,1) ll IT!e!MIU•HllHllSI.
IG. T~••t ((·11 )1 !H,)SlnDi.llOSI.
' Nolt 8 1 "''"~m~111 ..-nn •M Amtf•<•n-foo•i..11
<N<N!l, tr•fn\ M P<Ob.oh MI toy !IW NClt.A ~·~ l11tll910!~
t0< 10!> 20 '""" n1!•01111 tlltmpll)l'IVl!p t(lf>\•'1f:• i!l<lf\ by 11\e
UPI txl••O ot (O•Clle• Tiiow It~'"' (\jt<tn!ly ""
ptOIMhon e•~ 011,lal>Gma. SMU, (•••loml•. c.,1 Sl.C•
llonQ lle•clll •n<f Soutll-5tt•n l.Olll1!1111.
Surprise Gain
Helps Bears
Top Packers
CHICAGO (AP ) -"It was strictl!'
designed to be a short.yardage play,"
sa id Ca rl Garre tt, "but Randy
J ackson a nd Perry Williams threw
super blocks and I could have gone all
the v.·ay if 1 hadn't tripped."
The play -one of many key plays
in the Chicago Bears' stirring 10·9
National Footba ll League victory
O\'('r the Green Bay Packers -came
in the clos ing minutes when the Bear.;
v.•ere ha ngin g on to their threadbare
advantage ~l onday night.
Garrett not only got the two yards
for a clutch firs t down but rambled 18
yards to get the Bears out or a serious
hole. Bob Parsons then punted out on
the Green Ba y rour·yard line and still
the Dc11rs didn't clinch the triumph
until Garry Lyle intercepted a Jerry
·raggc pass in the closing seconds.
Another key play -the game was
fu ll o"f them -ca me In the fourth
quarter with the Bears leading 10-6.
Tagge spotted Barry Smith alone in
the end zone and fired. Craig
Cleamons a ppeared to come out of
nowhere at the last second to bat the
ball out or Smith's hands.
"Cleamons made it look tough
because of national television ... 5aid
coach Abe Gibron. "lte should have
been there a ll the time.''
Cleamons c redited S1nilh wilh
making "a good m ove. I got thert al
the last second. Sure. we used six
backs on defe nse a t t imes but
rcmeml.il:!r, "'e \\'ere quick enough to
come back a nd support on the run."
·rtie stra tegy of using six defensive
backs wa s pu zz ling since it forces a
learn to r un r ather than throw and
Green lla y is known more for its run·
ninll than its passing.
"You can th ink whatever you wan·
t," said Gibron. "'fhe she defensive
backs forced them to run. We fi gured
y,·c could stop their running. They had
never seen sill: defensive backs before
and it 's tough to throw against them."
5C011 £ IY QU.lllll.1115 c;r,.., e.,
'"""' Oil FG R-11
• • • 10 0 0 ·-. ..... O!t--U ~" Ir""' Hult !~t kl<kl G8-f'G ,,...,<ol lt
G8-f'G ~t<OI JJ
C.8-f'G ...... rtol :No
A-Ml,161
Flfll cloMIS
Ruthtt·JlfOH
f'WUll'>tl J"Cl!o
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INOIVIOVAL LIA01!115
RU5HING-Gftln e.,. Bfocklntlon l\·l l. '""'' •·'11, Goollm.n .. 11. Chic., o.r...it Jl-101, W!Hllim
11).tl. •
R6CEIVING-Gr1rn lllJ. McGeo<te l ·SS, 51"911frt
S·tS, 8•DC-kl1'9IOl'I •• ,., (Ill( .. w.w 2.w.. W!!lltms
"' P ASSING-Green Rly, TIOl)t ••·n ·l, 140 ,.ros.
Clll<.t{IO. Hiit! 1·16•J, Ii.
USC to Throw More Against Beavers
LOS ANGE l.,ES IAP) -Coach John
1i1cKay of the Un1\•crsily or Southern
California vows his Trojans will throw
"the footba ll more a111i nst•Oregon
SlateS1turday.
However, the coJrh, noting Pal
Jladen's passing produced only 11
yanh against Oregon Saturday, ttd·
died : "I don 't know if we'll pass bet·
ler."
The l3c:k of a pussing attack "is the
blegest my11tery of my li fe." 111cKay
1ald. ''I know we 5hould be 11 good pa~·
alng team, but we·re ju.st noL"
I
Although ~l a den, who broke srhoo l
passing rC'cords IJl,iJ ycnr as a j~lor,
said the jamme! rfng Anger s
pu ssing hand Isn 't to bl ame, fl1e uy
said. "I think it is. The ball sailed on
him at Oregon."
Haden has rom pleted only 20 or 54
pas!'t S-37 pe rcent -in rive fil&mes.
"lfe's j ust pres~ln g." t.teKsy !laid.
"ltc's aiming the ball ll kc .u baseball
pitcher, r·,·c told him to throw It --the
heck \\'Ith aim ing ii. I know u·h~l a
greul passer Pat is. And he docs
everything cJ5e well ror us.
-Q
·'ll aden's bc~n unlucky In some
rt!~pcct s. t could ha\'C built up hi~
st11tlstics-.... •hcn we got v.'a)r ahcud ot
Iowa and Wa:<hinJtton St ute by
keeping him in there and letting him
pas!!. but 1 won't fkl that
""Hut I kno w what he can do. I ~uw
him stand in thcr<· against a fi erce
Ohio Stole rush in the hist n ose Bowl
1ou. romplt'll!' 21 of 39. And ht• had
severa l drnppC'rf •
"'I h11,·c ,;real onflllCntl' 1n Pat
ll:idcn."
Before ~le.'.! f!!ll.,S me, }·Jc o
said Jl ;idcn's passlng wo.utd dominate
the offense. llowever, Haden,...haa
ave raged only abOul 10 passes a
game.
lf:i.dcn has a problem, but Anthony
Ou,•is has returnf!d lo the form of his
sensational sophomore season.
"If e's running 1wfully good now -
re31.Strong. ·· fl.ft Kay said of his senior
loill back who has rushed for 583 yards.
car rying the: ball \n rc~ent games with
the (rcqueocy reminiscent. or 0 . J .
Simpson's Career al USC. · ....
,
50-50 Chance
Of LA Getting
'80 Olyinpics?
VIENNA CAP> -"We me.y be the
underdogs, but I reckon we have a 50-
50 chance of landine the Ol)'mpics,"
said Tom Bradley, the strapping
m~yor or Los Angeles.
their clothing in certain lnltbtts.
•provided the payment goes to their
national assoclatioas. .
Lord Killanin. president~ thit 10<?,
in opening the sessk>n, clB.1~ lhts
will help give all countries an equal
The lanky, 6-root..f mayor, a former ·chance .to prepare their atbJetes for 1 quarter-miler and basketball player competition.
at UCLA , was In Vienna to lead his "All countries do not have equal op·
city's ·bid against Moscow for the portunitles:" Klllanin said. "It is
' right to host the sports extravag1nza easier for ~ome countries, ""'1ethe.-
Jnl9lKl...... -----'!-through-gover-nment Oll--private-aour·
"We like to think we are the best ces to finance development of sport.
equipJ>ed sports city In the world," "This enables their competitor.; to
Bradley said prior to today's presen· receive high competition experience
talion to the International Olympic a11d training. But there are other
Committee. Moscow was to ronow coun tries which for social and
with its presentation. economic reasons do not have these
Lake Placid, N .Y ., lheonly.city bid· ficilities. ''
dlng for the 1980 Winter Olympics, M~anwbile financin1the'80Winter
also was sched~led to ap~ar before Olympics co~ld be more or a chal·
the IOC. Decisions on sites for both lenge for Lake Placid than trying to
the Summer and Winter Games were land them.
el!ipccted from the JOC Wednesday. When this resort village in the
"We have not made any personal Adirondack Mountains of New York
approaches to membe~ or _the IOC. State staged the Olympic Games in
We have done everything m accor· 1932 the year Sonja Henle gained
dance with IOC regulations, and J figu~ skating fame, It cost $2 million
know we shall get a (air hearing,", to build the facilities. If Lake Placid is
said 'bradley. "l haYe no idea e\'en successful In its bid lo be host in 1980,
whether the Pan-American vote on it plans to seek more than m million
the IOC will go in our f1vor." from the federal and state govern·
Douglas Roby, an Amerie1n mem-ment .
ber or the IOC, said: ''I fear the odds The request comes at a time when
are against Los Anceles. I will do the economy is faltering and
everythingJcantobelpthemtowin." President Ford "is calling on
Roby i& the only United Slates Americans to curb spending.
member of the IOC al present. Juli•n Lake Placid will seek up to $10 mil·
K. Roosevelt, treasurer of the U.S. lkln in state fu nds l.o improve slate
Olympic Committee, was elected t0; facilities and $18.2 million ln federal
membership Monday but will not be funds
able to vote until next year. The,se Figures, Lake Plac-id officials
While the potential hosls pollahed caution in a booklet outlining their
their presentations M0D4ay, the toe plana, "'do not purport to reflect pas-
unanlmously adopted a revlaed a nd sible escalation or costs between now simplifie~ rule governing athletes' and 1980."
e,\lgibil~ty for th.e Olympics. . The funds woUld help build such T~e· 1nternat1onal federations will things as a 90-meter ski jump,
be g1ve1:1 a free hand to decide whether refri"geratlon or a 400.meter speed-
thelr own athletes are amateurs or skating track, an 8,000.seat hockey
not. But there 1,s n~ relaxation in the and figure-skating fleldhouse, an
old rules forb1d_d1ng an athlete to Olympic Village to house and feed
make any flnanc18:I gain from sports, 1,600 athletes and officials and press,
or to compete as an amateur ln one administration and communication
sport il he is a professional in a~ther. (acilities.
Athletes are n? longer restricted in The area already has Alpine and
the. a.moun~ of .time .they may spend Nordic skiing facilities, a 4CJO.meter
tra1n1ng, with ~1nan.c1al compensation speedskatine: track, a 2,000.seat lee
forlossofearn1ngs. arena and the only botis.led run · ..
They also may carry a_dvf'.rtlslng on North America. in
Sports in Brief
Laver to Face Connors;
Cerritos Coach Dies
NEW YORK -The much-heralded
tennis match between Jimmy Con·
nors and Rod Laver has been set for
next January, it was reported today.
The match will be SI00.000 winner-
take-all with site and other details ex·
pected to be announced at a Wed·
nesday news conference.
Connors, 22, won the Wimbledon,
Australian and United States titles
this year. Afterwards. he asked that a
match be arranged with the 36-year·
old Laver, the only player in history to
have twice won the Grand Slam of
tennis -sweeping the three UUe1 won
bv Connors as well as the French ctown.
Both Connors and Laver are left·
handers and have never played each
other.
Harrb Dles ,
ARCADIA -Wayne ''Tank" Har·
ris, an assistant football coach at cer.
rilos College for the past nine years,
died from an apparent heart attack
Sunday in Arcadia at~ home of his
parents.
l~arr is, 41 , v.·as a n a tive or.
Love land, Colo. The Falcons line
coach v.·as a bachelor and ·belore
moving to Cerritos, had coached at El
Rancho and Be llflower hi gh schools
and Baylor Uni versity.
l ohn•on Win" LOS ANGELES -Marques John-
son, the promising sophomore expec·
led to start at forward for the UCLA
bas ketball tea m , has been
ho11pitallicd with an undertermlned il-
lness, a UCLA s poktlsman aald Aton·
d3y,
Loa Angeles lo his winter home in
rural Darrtown, Ohio.
Onlv four mana2ers have won more
pennanls than Alston, who won his
Seventh this year before his Dodgers
lost the World Series to Oakland.
And only two men. Connie Mack
and John McGraw, have managed the
same team ror a longer period than
Alston. Mack piloted the PhiladelPhla
Athletics for 50 years and McGraw led
the New York Giants for 31 . ·
l rbltan TV
NEW YOllK -ABC·TV announe<d
Monday the Notre Dame-Miami, Fla.,
game would be one of three college
football games to be reglonally
televised Sat~rda.v.
The game at SOuth Bend, Ind., will
be seen in 36 states, including the
West Co1St, the Mldwe5t, the East
and Florida.
The network will televise the
Tulane·Georgia Tech game to
Louisiana, Alabama, Mississippi and
Georgia . The Bril'ham
Young -Arizona game Wiil be
available for viewing in the Rocky
l\tountaln area,
King Rntf•9
LOS ANGELES -Tennis star Billie
Jean Kine. stricken with chest pains
while watching a golf tournament in'
San Dieco Sunday, has been lold by
doctors that she probably has a Louch
oflheOu.
3Nadadores
All-Am erica Dr. Gerald Flnerman, the team or·
thopedic surceon, 1ald Johnson had a
mild elevation ol liver eniymes, in-Shirley Babashorr, Peggy TOsdal
.dicative of hepatitis, and Valerie Lee of the Mission Viejo
However one test of for hepatitis Nadadores swimming teami were
given Sunday proved negaUve, and named to lhe All-American team at
Johnson s1id he thought hi5 ailment the AAU aquatic awards ban4,uet In
was a react ion to a nu vaccinitlon W1shlngton O.C.overtheweekend.
•
,
r
L given the team last wetk. Johnson Coach Mark Schubert was on hand
said he was sick for two days aller the lo accept the-award, along wtth the 'i
team was vaccinated rorthe nu 1 year team trophy ror winning the national 11>
ago -----~,,. AAU Iona-course women's lfwimmlng I -''-"-. • -----championship at Concord errtlii'tfils -
lflston Sl9na year .
LOS ANGELES -Walter Alston, Babas hoff was named to the All·
the man who turned a geemlng tack of American team In the 200 and 500-
outward forcerutneu into one or his fi11rd freestyle : the 200 Ind 400-meter
l reatest 11set1, has sl•ned his 22nd reestyle; and the 400 and 800-yard • and freestyle re lay teams.
one.year contract to manage the 'J'osdal gained recognition In lhe ~eef:ixt .,er1 innounced u ... 1l1nlnc 100.yard butterfly and the 400.)'ard. • .,,.. medley relay. ,,
Monday 11 Alston, 62, a one·tlme fat· Lee was named In the 200·.)'lrd and
mer and schooltea~her, drove from ~meter bulterOy evtllLI•
•
'
•
i • 1 II
•
.. ,
NISSEN
<IJ'f tif111 •t~i ;\'f
' .
O.lly ........... ..,. f'&Wkl0'0.-11
2-Sport Mata
SC's Dofilingues:
Small, But Tough
<Ill
ByROG£RCARLSON ''Gymnastics r eally
CM1t1eD•1tr l't1•1"'tt helped me," says fd az:totta.
If you were to scnn the "I wasn't nearly as coor·
rost er of San Clemente di1:u1~ed until I got into gym·
Jligb's football team chan-nasties.
ces are you'd think there "Football might tend to
was a typographical error hurt a gymnast because or
when you get to dercnsive the increasing size. But
tackle and offensive guard gymnastics can't hurt you
David Domingues. in rootball.
Dcfensive •tackles simply "I v.•as in gymnaslics for
don't come in t 35-pound four years al El Rancho and
sizes. But they do at San I can't think of a better
C I e m e n t e , w h e r e gymnastics coach lhan Tom
Domingues noL only keeps Eads."
up \llith the competition, Eads t e-rms Domingues
he's been voted hitter of the as one or the hardest
game for two s t raight working athletes he's ever
outings in varsityaction. run into. · ·
But it docs n 't just end "D~vid concentrates on
-there. Dominguc~a the stde horse a nd parallel
straight A student an · . e-= bars, but I 'm thin!ing.about
spring he turns to m· liiin""Wrlour events Uiis
nasties, under coach spring-adding the vault
1 Eads, who coached rootba and free exercise," saYs
at San Clemente for four Eads: years. ''David is very s mall, but
Domingues, who packs .he's SQ quick. He has a lot of
his weight on a S-6 frame bod y strength for his size.
has exceptional balanc~ Gymnastics teaches a lot of
and both coaches.agree that body .coordination and I
his ability in gymnastics beUeve balance is probably
enhance s his football the big thing that hel115 in
status. terms or football .
When Schaff talks about ''Having this good
T~. October 22. 197( OAILYP1L~~ I I
PRIZES WORTH
't5DD00
WIN~""-TV
SAN CLEMENTE HIGH GYMNASTICS WHIZ DAVID DOMINGUES.
his mighty. mite his first balance in football is a
reaction is, "He's qui ck, really'big ~sset. It's hard to
-tough and smart. Weighl's knock David off his feet and
no problem. most football coaches stress
~lift ~ Pk:kw '74 wlniws will M ..,...
... -loy AIC ~ .J ..... dlon el Huni ... -...,._ Pint -.a.c. wl,.,...,.. will receive • $91 II l.nilh 12-inch, tfktgono! INOMIN, Wadi 9ftd<wtilte
_.... ...... ..., Mt. s.cond ,._. -'"...,. pt •
S1t.tS Zanith toble model ntdio arwl thNd ..._ ,n-.. Zenith "billfoW" t ....... '
-........... All ,..:: .:,:::~~ .
•
HE PLAYS FOOTBALL, TOO.
CIF Grid Ratings
. .. ....
..... klltM ltl(ffd
1. Mollrovl• U-Ol
T. C.oHion IS~I
l . 5911 Mlrlno ls.<U
'· &rrOlfV"I tS-Ol
..
,..._ kl'lool 1ttt1rd
I. El Oof&o» CS.OJ
2. Rio ~u IS-01
J. R-l.-id 14· IJ ' Mlul"" v1,10 u.n
~ AnltlO(lt VOllf1 , .. II
6 .t.rll"91on U·OI l'llllltJ 1. Bol'llt• li.fl
l'O' I G.11'r H· ll 1• •. Ufll ... "ih !•-11
161 ID. N«to t•·O
1Tl. OIMn.1 L&wfldolt t•·ll '·
BY THE POOL.
SPORTSWEAR '75
YOU are cordially Invited to attend tile
excltlng first public showing Of new
Head Spartswear tor women .•. and
new McGregor Sportswear tor men.
EnJoy 1975 fashions, models and music
by tile Promont9rv Point pool. savor
continental refreshments In the
VIiia dilmlcl. If you like, we11 be happy
to cbnduct ypur personal tour Of the
new "'°omontorv Point Apartments.
wltlt"tnelr-own special style-Interiors
bY the Southland's foremost deslgne11.
t , , It starts verv promptly at 1:30 p.m.
J sundav, october 27, In beautiful
II-'".-..,.· ~•--NewpoliBe~ch. RSVP, adults onlVJ
714) 675·8000.
• 'nt
'
'200 Promontorv Drive WMt
Just nortn Of Jamboroe Road on P•Cffk: coast Hlllhwav NeWPOrt Beacll. tallfOmla . -
"
'
"I wouldn't trade him ror agility and quickness.
a lotof210·pounders." "Regardless or size, if
Errors Hurt St. Paul
-5-0 Mark Doesn't
Domingues has recovered you have that you can make
a rumble in every game and up ror a _lot.'.'
.sacked the opposing quar-And it's obvious David
terback at least twice in Domingues hasit.
every game.
"He's a very good one-on·
one tackler," says Schaff.
SANTA FE SP RINGS stop Pat McKeon's runnirlg "People thinkthat size fora
-St. Paul Hi._g-h's Sword· a.nd. Jim Wigmore's pas· tackle is ridiculous. But.we sm~n are rolling along at sing. If we can't do that we run a slanting tackle and his th~1r usual pace for this . h quickness is instrumental.
ti I h m1g t as well go home." me o t e ye<ir-rive wins We have him slanting, gel· . Defensive standouts for 1n as many outings -with S ting to a spot a nd then M D l. Paul, which has blanked ater ei looming Thur· three foes . include mid· r eadinglhe play. sday at the Santa Ana Bowl "He's not actually butt;,..g · I die guard Tony Pt1itre (&-0, ~ ... in Ange us League football 205), tackle Brad Slinkard heads against 200-pounders, play. (6 3 20 1. or at least that's our plan."
Prep Polo
Results
But some are questioning · ' 51 • inebacker Phil Eads had a similar
the relative strength or the Knight and Paul Blumberg situation when at El Rancho .1u"10• v.t.•s•Tv
S d in the secondary. . Scor. b'I' -1"": wor smen. Twice in that High. He had a gymnast H""'1•"91on EMKri 1 • 1 ~1 span th · . St. Paul got past St. An-h 1 d 1 b e.ssett 0 0 1 o-i , e oppos1t1on has thony, 7.0 , a nd Ancich w o Paye oot all and the HUflUnqton Be.ell "0,11111: ttiotn.s scored two touchdOY.'RS, a . . lad ended up being named s. Bos 3. G11111Mtma11 1. R1a10, ... -. r h poi nts out his team suffered , w --rarity ort eSwordsmen. All-CIF and played in the · ooten 2. w.11 .... wort11y.
St. Paul coach Man·i·on three 15-yard penalties in· Shrine Game. F•OSM·SO'""
A · h h" $ide the SL Anthony IO and Scoro by Qllit'I.,,: nc1c says i_s team's big-· d Today he's coaching War· Hwitinvton .e. .. 11 3 J a 1-u
'9Hu....tu&fure('. Wft"tecl moll prices. ·r· ,--....
.... ~ ... ~eel ...... u ThYnda_y .....,.,,._
d tt. AIC c.&..-fe'9¥Mn '""°"i" rtcUtM •74 ,
I t :u1rtW1 er et Daily PUot off'tc.t in Huntl~ -....; .............. c.to Mela, ........... apiich, ..a..-... .
w.ldy wiflMft wlll M notW.t by tr10i1 o'M ni.y ,w.-.~priaet at
AICCNTolewdlon
1fCM6 .... hunt St. ............. -. '
' ..
get d b k h mtsse two relatively easy_ &nw11 • 1 1 1 l-6. s raw ac as been field goals. r en High's Bears-Frank M1H111,..i-Bo•<" M••lf09: ""'°
mistakes-rum bl es an"dr ___________ ,,M,_,,a:::''°""tt"a".~------'-· _"""::::.':.M_':.::"'::-=.· •::""= .. ::..;•'--l.
penalties.
RULES . ....................... ........ ....
''We 've had probably
more penalties than any IO
other teams in Southern
California," laments the SL
Paul tut.er.
"Defensively we have
been getting a little better
each week," adds Ancich.
"As (or Mater Dci's
losing to Pius X last week J
think they· must have beCn
looking past Pius to us. You
just don't score 35 points on
Mater Dei.
"It does appea r that
Mater Dei has had some
problems in t he secon-
dary," admits Ancich. "If
the opportunity is there
fWe'll surely try to take ad·
vantage. But we'd like most
to establish our running
game against Mater Dei.
"And I don't know if we
can do that.· Mater Dci is
very physical up Cront and I
don 't know if we can run the
ball against them.
"Defensively we have to
C.Ollege Soccer
~y
FROM 4 P.M.
'
Anywhere you.go,
Only V.O. is V.O.
:,s;;?;:~ 1 -,;;.::;.-
S r n g rn m·s
~®11
CANADIAN WH IS
A OLP.Sn
QI ~,..1 u"'''" w~lfll·ll "''~<to "6rO.ILl .. oto ~ .. o !QIHIO '°" i...o°"''°°" OI •~f ,_..,,. ~°""
lt1JS WHl51!.T 15 !IJX Tf"'i otl
•u .. oto-o .0111.fo•• olOst, .. l SlAC.ftAM l. SOIOS v• -...... --(-.. ~"'"' ..-
Seagr.un's V.O. The First Canadian . Firs1 in smoo1hness.
Firs1 m hgh1ness. Firs1 in populari1y throughout 1he world.
$7.lS
4/19'-""' Ta
....................... , IM.-....... __ .. ~ ........................................ ... .................. n..~ .............. ..
a J ..... ' ! JI I .~.
1 '::' 1':.: ::.sr:... ~..:·· s,.t. D F .,_,., ,.0.
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......,., _, "flclltlwl _ .............. •1 7 ....................................... -.: ... :., .. -
................ ,...__, ......... tMil ~ .......
_,. .. ...__. N tM Dlilly ~ .ffl.. i.., • P.M, n.-. ... ..
s. ...... 1'114 ---.............. ., ....... ~ N..
sl(jlk1•w .... ..._.i:1w1 II re"-lle. _ _. ...... ,. -· 6. ftl ...._ MAM MUSI II N.UD II OI 8ftWf ti \IOID.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • • ! ENTRY BlANK < ! • • • • • • . -. . •--------------. • • : "'>-----------Zip.____ : . ,,. ... .
: -·--------.. ) " : . -....._ . .. .. . : ~ ....,.. yw. thiM will . win tht1 WMll'& '°"* : • • • • ! Rams at New York Jeh •' : · !
! Den•er at CleYeland :
: New England at Minnesota :
: WashillCJlon at St. Louis !
: TCU at Alabama !
: Florida State at Aubum : • • : UCLA at CaHfomia :
: Colorado at Missouri !
: Ha"arcl at Dortmouth :
: Duke at Florida ! ! Miami !Fla.I at Notre Dame ! i MlllMSOta at Michigan !
: Plttsbu1"9h at Navy :
! Oklah-State ot Nebraska :
: No. Carolina State at Maryland :
: · OrecJ!lll State at USC l
: Penn Stcite at West Vinjinia !
! OrlllllJe Coast at Mt. San Antonio -:. ! Golden West at Santa Monica :
: GroslnlOllt ot Saddleback :
: Estancia at El Modena :
: St. Paul at Mater Del !
: Edison at Los Alamitos : i Corona de! Mar at Costa Mesf i
! Newport Harbor at Marina • :
: San Clemente at El Toro r i
! HuntlllCJlon Beach at Katella :
! Fountain Valley at Westminster i
-:•--1-aguna leach at Dana Hllli :
j Mission Viejo. of Univenlty ~
: 1'l Mu.di -My 9"'"' on th4t total numMr !
: " ,..... and In oil 30 ta"* t1 ----: • • • • , PhpWft PfckoNo Is a ""J'llor ft....,.. of 9't !
at participating Del lpcos ,, i Mr Net tp0rtt Mttfo«i eoch MOftidty, T11~ : llliialmlom'm•m'm'hmemSmomulmhmlam"mdlll'~l;.iiii;;;;;;ii'i:;o;o;;:iffii;;;<;;;;'1Eiiii;JH'ii:'itt';;i!iil"Si""iE:iitti;l1;-:i!?'"""""",--,,"""""-=""""""~·~:_::..tW .... MMy. ' !
Seagram's V.O. The First Canadian.
IMl~J-fttll'Hf«Uettt'll'>rr -"!;f•~. 1 "'"'"' , ~-:.,,!!.!!!••••••••••••••••}u••••••t · •••' : -' - ----~ -....:.;..o•"'""'""""'''''.!•• .. ,__, ' .
• '
'
' Al2 OAILYPtLOT rveiday, O'lober 22. t974
Must Halt Ching,
_Says Los Al Boss_
,) I
THE FAMILY CIRCUS By Bil Keuie
Los Ala mitos lliRh foot·
ball CO<'lt'h Jim Rnd~rt e
races a similar dil emma at
\Vcstcrn lligh \\'he n hi.;
CrifHns meet Edison lligh's
Chargers, n. third slra1 i:;hl
Thursday nH:hl t itanic in
Sunset ka.;ut• action,
Thursday losses to \I/est·
minster a11d N°l'\\'p<1rl fl11r·
bor ha\•c dimmed the Gr1f·
fins' chanct~s for thl· title,
and {lnothcr sclback vir·
tuall y t·ommi t s Lo s
Alamitos prollabl v bett er
than any in the ·1·1\. Empire
League'} to Sunset Ll';,iguc
oblivion.
m:ln squ<id play.. ,
"We try to rest some of
our key -people ,·· says
Rudurte ... We g1:tve that
some thought, but the rums
disprove it. \V1."rc making
errurs ... thini.:s we felt
"'ould be ironed out <it this
point.
"\\~ have m oved off<>n·
s1vcly, but we feel we 've
stop1rcd ourselves. And the
dt•ft·ns(' h:.i s giv en up too
rn :.iny 1ong runs .
"\Ve play good dcrcnse
f<1r ;,i while. then all or a sud·
den let up ."
Hoda rte vi t!w s Edison
with the sam<' rc<.iction as in ,,, .. , ... ..,_ _ .. ..._.,.., .....
thl' ,1>ast. "Edison; as far as "If
Wt! rl' concc rn1.·d , is the
same Edison "'c'vc seen in
you get loi.t, Daddy, you know Y..our name,
dresi. ond phone number, don't ypu?"
od-
PUllLIC NOTICE
"'"' P\ltlllstoOd Or~ Co1st O.tilv Piiot. O<;•-?2.. ·H,' ¥4 f"OllllimMf S. . n. lf/4 Jitt'l'I
Jtoctartc says hi s team
nccd!i to stop Edison quar.
tcr ~a c k N 11th a r1 Chin g
receivers Slt.'VI! I-lines . Ju:n
Balch, Don \Vhan and J in1
Bogart. ,
.. Ching has really come
the 1Ja11t. 'f hc°y 'IJ beat you -------=----:--:---'>-------------1--~P~VBIJ~~C'._..:'.N~OT:l~CE~-wtlh the run or the pass, and
\\li~h Vin ce Asar2...bindling ____ .. R n e
the de fense-again they are »•-~_e r, B r; -alon·w wc:t r:.--EOiTh-n will
)X)wer you, power you. then
just when yoU 'rc ready to
stop that Ching kccpS it.
He seems to !:iCore standing
up an awrul lot."
tougher than ever.
· "I'd say Edison·'s defense
is quicker th<in it 's ever
heen. It 's a lwilys around the
ball."
Hypnosis Proves
Los Alamifos. led West-
minster and Nev.·port Har.
OOr. only to fall to rallies.
llut Roda rte says it's not
i case or his Griffins run ·
ning out or gas, despite the
fact' only about 20 of his 43·
Edi:>on struggled to a 3·0
"''in l<ist year over Los AJ
and Rodarte admits his
ll'arn ha s the ability to get
itself mentally ready for the
Cha rgers.
Suspect Innocent
Wild Ea gles Offense
VALE. Ore. (AP) -Hyp-
nosis has cleared Jegse M.
Flores, a poorly educated
Mexican·Am e rican who
s peaks o nly halting
English, of rape and mur-
der charges . his lawyer
says.
Co ncerns Oppon ent
The attorney said the cir·
e ums tantial e vidence
against 22-year·old Flores,
who was charged in the
death or 11.year·old Mar·
garita Haro, appeared over·.
whelming. EJ Modena lli gh 's
VanRUards have won three
straight to take over un-
disputed possession of first
pl?tce iil the Century League
football flag chase a nd
roach·Bob-Le-ste.r wou1d just as soon stop it now.
.. I'm ready to stop it all
r ight now and go into
basketpall," Lester says on
the eve or a Thursday night
game with the up.and-down
Estancia Eagles.
"Estancia is coming orf a
blg u,p and I imagine tbat's
'!here they are going to
slay," he says follow in g the
Ea gles' 27-14 "'in OVl'I'
Corona del ~1ar.
Arter losinG a pair of non'-
Jeague e n.co unte rs , the
Vanguards have won all
tttree Jealiue games but
Lester doesn't feel his team
has turned things around.
"We've won a few ball
games t>ut Estancia v.r ill
give us a test with all their
wild offense this v.'eek.
wi ll kill us. The ir quarter·
back, Larry 1-fal~. is really a
poised young fellow. He
runs the whole show and TJIE BODY OF the high
does an awfully good job of Sc hoo! girl. wa s found in a it." roadside di tch outside this
Lester i's pleased With tlie'e-astenrOr-egon t a ncli to"."fl .
performance of his defen· An autopsy showed she died
sivc unit. The Vanguards of.~skull rracture .
hav(' given up 13 pointS in I~ wa~ a defens~. atl~r
the three Jeagueoutings and ney s nightm are, said
last week shut out Tttstin Douglas Com bs , Flores,
Zl·9 ' lawyer . "It's a case where
,Ji·m Christop he ~. 6•0 and the cli.ent may be innoce_nt
175 pounds, will return to but w~lh. an exc~.llent ctr·
the.starting lineup after an cumslant1al case. .
injury kept him sidelined The slate all~ged ~f1ss
for the past two games. But Haro, an acquaintance or
he will move' to rullbaek in· Flores, r~n from her house
stead or tailback where he to. F1o~es car and drove off
st:irtcd the season. w!th l'um a£ter an argument
Jtoger Rees has taken with her mother. Her body
O\'er al the tailback s pot and was round three days later.
has had two games where FLORES CLAIMED he
he has gained over 100 ya r· d.d 't k.11 th . 1 b ds. 1 n .1 eg1r . ulmuch
"1-le 's hard to find," of ~ 1 s ram b Ii n g.
Lester says or hi s 5.6 135. emot1onally charged ac-
pound tailbaCk . ··l 'hat's eountmade ~o se nse ...
"'hat he weighed the last Combs ~nllsted a chn~ca l
li me 1 saw him , a nyway," psych.ol.og1st an~ a m~tca l
lhc coach says in describing techn1c1an &n<I 1nterv1ewed
his small ball carrier .
2A.M.
Flores in his jail cell un·
der hypnosis, recording the
whole thing on videotape. PUBLIC NO'l'ICE "At the conclusion. we
had the miss ing details we 1 ---,-,cCTc,=,-,.-,-,c,=,-,-,.=,=,.~=~
needed to reconstruct what MAME 5TATPlllNT
happened," said Combs. "It Tiie 1o11ow1no per$0M· -da1"0 ..... -•. "•' .-,.,,,,, . ,,. <"•'-came out there was no com· ..,.. "''"" llalbN lsl1nd. CaWfotlll1 t?Mt mission or a crime.'' M••c Htll F...,11.., "'""'· 1u co.ir""• Combs s ·how ed t he ••tt111ah1...o:i.ca111«•""2 · F · G. RoMN YOllflll, 1m s. &ttte videotape lo rank coi'-11...i .. A~'"·C•·"""
Yrn guen, Malheur County TN• IMtSI""' 11·c0fldll(;..,. bV • atntral .......... tNp.
district attorney. "'••t"" A. H1n TruJ!H, MARC MALL
l'LL ADMIT it 's
unus ual." Combs said.
"You usually don't give
statements or a derendant to
the O.A."
-vragu"'in Viewed the tape
FM\lL Y TltUST Tiiis $111-nl WH 111.,j wllh IM
c-1v c1m o1 O•MtOe c-h' °" (kloD« l. 191• .'.mn Publl"'td Ota""' Cont DlllJ Plkll,
(kloD« •• 15, 22, ,,, 1'71 :s1U.14
PUBUC NOTICE
and Ordered a polygraph iU~~~·.~ T~~::o~o~~ •.
test which backed up the iTATe OF CAl..l"OIMIA "0• stateme nts Flores made un· TM• couNt T o" OltAMGE M• ...... ,,, der hypnos is. E1ltle ot MART RUTH MORKEt..
Yrague n asked Judge ~~~ IS NEAEIV Gl\tEN '" '"' Jerf Dorroh lO dismiSS the crtdl!or1 Cl lllt ""W na ...... dee-I cha rges against Floces. 11111 •II "".om ..... 1no c1a1-... 1.,.. 1i. wl<I dtt:e"""I lrt rttl\tlr..t lo fli. Dorroh did and Flores was 11>eM, w;111 111e ,_,,,.rv VflUChtn. i..
r '"' ottlce OI 111e d •11t ol '"'" •-reed. Yraguen said no· ..,1111eo '°"''·or 10 l!l'Htl'lf ........,, ,.;111
othe r c ha r ges would be '"'" nectn•rv vOllf(""~· 10 '"' u ... -olg,,.., ti !he Olllct Of f>tr l"orN"I', filed. MICHAEL J. CHAl$TIANWN, 4 l G
As Combs tells it, the girl ,.,.._, Center Or1vt. SUllt sso, Ne~t l tacll, C1Ulornl1 ~UO, whlcll Is tllt reJI Or jumped from f'lores' plotee ol buslnllH ot IM .... fllOMd
car. He slopped , round she ~ ·:~10m•~:,r1~~ 't..;."'..:::i!:
was u n c o n s e i o us but ··~~,.:.,"'o!;r!:e'~U::~:;r ot ™' "°''"-
breathing a nd put her back ·.1-uNE E. METZGER
in the car, intending to take E•«ul•I• 01 ""wm at l1lt 1eoave M<Md de(td'!nt her back to her home. But, MICNAfil, '· CHltlSTIA"SOM
th h l . ed he An.,,., •I Uw . :in e way e no 1c s ,10 t1.tw111n ctflftl" D•I••
"'as bleeding. lie stopped ~~::.C~'l'l .. w.. <•II'-'•""' .he car and removed some Tlll1 111•1 ..... , ..
of h I lh. g t k. f ""or..' !er ••1ao1r111 • er c o in oo 1ng or Publl"'""' Ot•llll• c°''' •D•ltv Pl~. l n i.n jury . Then he OctJ11• z:z, 2', Nov•mblr s, u. '"'
panicked, dumped the body 1----------'''=' .. ~'o'
and ran. PUBlJC NO'nCE
"ICTITIOUS 9USll4,li:SS
NA""IE t TATIEMEMT The lollowl1>9 per$Oll i1 OOlftO bv'lllHS
"We 're going lo have lo
keep the ball away rrom
them or we'll be in trouble.
1'hey run about 70 plays a
game and they keep moving
up and down the field <1 11
night long."
Will he make any changes
in 'his de£ensi ve <iii g nment'!
Women's
Athletics Standard Time
'". IJF ENTERPll:lSE5, 27 Hiil Moon
&•V Dt.. CQO'-Otl MM. Ctllfornl•
t'16Haorts J. Frrit1tic. 21 Hiit ""'-'
&•Y onwe, cor-dd !Mr. C1Utotlll•
'2625 Tlllt b!nlM» 11 cOlldlltled bY 11'1
llldlvlC111tl. "We better make sonlc
changes. If \\'C don't, thl'Y
SA Valley
Tops Poll
Santa An a \'a l l e y's
Fal con .... have r('turnet.l to
the officia l {)ranj:!(' County
top 10 foolb:d[· r:itings in
style. taking ovl'r the No. 1
spot whi ch \\•as \'Ucatcd ()y
f.Jat cr fJ ei follov.'in g the lat·
!er'<: 35·2-I loss t o 1\ngclus
Ll'al_!uc fol' Pius X
Edison w:1s thl' nnl v other
!l'arn to makl' a ret urn.
m il\ in t.: 1n ~txth a CI C'r
sn'la~h1ng: Lo;1r:1 \\\·st nun
stc·r ft•ll frort1 the r :111lo n~s
aft fr 11 ~ ;. i ! 11· \\1th 1\1 arina,
Top all raft 1on :-. tl11s \\'t'l'k
!nt'IUd (• ri l atcr fl<1i ;ind S t
Paul nt Su n! :1 1\na J ~y.·I :11'111
Edison a nd Lo-. Alan1itos :i(
\Ves tt•rn 'l'hu r :-.d.1\, an d
\\1es11n in!'>11·r ;ind F011nl :11n
Valley :.ii tJr:nl).'t' l'nast Col
lf'Ae f'rid a~
PM. ,..~ ..... ·~1 0•<1
I !oA~I• A~,, V•I"' '' ! 11
1 ""'V'" U U I'
'"°'"'' ,
" "
G1<1• YoUev.,.n
Y•r•i1y
CD<Ot1J0r1 M.u n .1s, Jy'''" I·~. Junior V•r~lty
""°"'"°"'Mot IS 1S, r u,!1nJ.S.
Wn-n'< 8a<k.ib•tl
,,.f.1'111trl"" Cl1f UUG<l!-Wotsf , t9 II pl'
C111(!' Cool>!'• 8 !i
Mlrl K•IP< ~ I ~
l(~m• No(ft<>'~ • 1
Bonn•~ Tf\om~~ u 1
JI'<" Walt'r> 1 (/
LI'<" l«>Cl .. Y 0 0
Toi~!> Ii 1J
><~•nun• full••l~fl J/·19.
wo-n'• 8•1~eti..11
'
' "
OCC {'ti (tO! LA M~tbo><"
...
" • " )
' ' •
14 II pf lp
Anql~
"'·~•ll<Kft ,,,. " '°"-" 001\JIQ.on
M>•W('ll
'-"'"'' Toi~•\
!Miii in>~· LA
' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ) ' , ' ' " '" " Hd <IJOt, •1•11.
G"ll ''""I'
8ol,. G••-ln¥il•l1-I
51 .. 9lt\ FIMa"
' ' • • ' " • • ~
fro'' Will• !Foothilll Cle!. JU!'9 Mollyen
<E•lilOK•a, .i.
OCIWblH Fi11•l1
AIWI MO"'''""'"• S.un6oo•s 1Foolll111 j ""'· J"""' .lof>n'°"'MllO~ A••n& ltlldflC•al 1-S.
Ski Class
Hours Set l . s..vi, '"II " I!
'· P1<.ih<~ I\ "I \ "f'WJl(jr! flM!>r')• "II
A. £11•1<>n n I''
~ lla llioa Ski t:lub's annual
I , f-oolh1ll U Q
-.... nll<IQO rt II
t ,, Ollo•(I~ 1\·-
U). Ml~""" V•flO "!I
1; dr~ hind ski school will he
:~ h\·ld ~aturd:.i y and Sl1nday,
,~ fk·L 21;.21 :J t ~!il l' Square
~ l'.irl.. in I·'1H1n!a1n Valley
'i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii f1 on1 l·:i 11.n1 l~al'h day.
Tht• purpt1:-c nf l ht:' sc·hoo\
i~ tn prornntl' :;:ifl·t ~· by in·
f11r min.L: sktl'rs of the lalt•:sl
111 hJsi~ lt•r hniqurs, f'flllill•
rnc-n l adJustn1t•n1 und niain·
!l'nancc and ronditioning
lEASE A '74 DATSUN
710 2 dr. 189" mo. · r .. h _ ou.
COSTA MESA OA.TSUl'I
l845 HARIOR IL.VO., C.M.
S40·6~10
'
t•XCl'Ci.'!CS.
Begins Sunday
I .
WASHINGTON CAP) -
Te n straight months or
Daylight Saving Time wilf
end Sunday when the nntion
goes on Standard Time ror
lhc rour winter months.
The nation will set ba ck
its clocks one hour at 2 a.m.
S unday , the r es ult or
congressiona l action that
t.>nded the n ation's ex-
periment with ycar·round
Dayli ght Time.
UN DER TllF. NF.W
legislation. the nation will
silly on Standard 1'ime until
2 a.m.Sunday, Feb.23.
The year round ex ·
periment was designed to
save ruel cf'uring the coun·
try 's energy shortage. "fhe
Senate Comm erce Commit·
tee reported the experiment
resulted in abou t l00,000
barrel:!. of oil per day being
saved during the first four
months of 1974.
llowever, that committee
s:iid such savings ··must be
b a l a n ce d aga ins t a
majority o f the public's
di staste for the observa nce
of daylight s~1ving time"
1luring the winter.
Tllf; Df:l1ART~1ENT af
Transportalion agreed th:_it
some ruel was saved during
the wi nter month~ but said
longer daylight hours may
ha\·e increased gasoline
con~umption in M:1rch and
Apri l by up to I perccnl.
Dayli ght Time was OP·
J>OSed by some parents who
v.·crc :irr:1id thut stndlnl!
their children to school in
the dark would Increase
chanct"s or belna hit hy n
c~1r. It ulso w<t s opposed by
the construt'tiun industry,
whirh claim&<! addltion:il
sa(t'ty ha zard:> t>xisl during
earl)' mol'ning hours.
TllF. CllA NGE will noL
afrc rt e.a$lcrn Indiana,
Jlawaii. Puerto ltico. the --..
Vir g in I s l a nd s and
American Samoa, all or
which r emained on Stan·
dard TirQc durin g the ex·
periment.'
It also will not affect 66
counties in Kentucky. Those
were s witc hed from the
Eastern Time zo ne to the
Central Time zone when
Daylight Time went into ef·
feet. They "'ill be switched
back to the Eastern Time'
zone when the nation goes
back to Standard Time -
an action that will mean no
change for clocks in those
counties.
Aging Post
SACRAMENTO cAeJ
Doone llo binson of Red
Bluff has been a ppointed
executive setretary of the
Cali (ornia Co mmission on
Ag ing. Robinson most
l'Ctently served as director
of R.S.V.P., IRetiredSenior
Volunteer Prog r am) or
Superior Cali(ornia Senior
Services.
. •
11orls J , FrtnkOYk: •
Thi• 11a1t"""1 .,.., llltd wllll lht County Cit'>• of Orionoe Counry . on
Ot:totier 11, lt7•. ....
Pvbliil'ltd o.-.. Coast D1111,. Pilot,
Ocl-r 22. :lt. tnd NOVll!lbet 5. 12. ,,,, ~14
PUBLIC NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE
FICTITIOUS IUSUIESS
MAME 5TATIEMEMT
The lcl!Owln~ "'"""' .ire d • I fl a
Ou~l'ICSS as: SILVER TORTOISE. 'SlrJ Mt! ....
l lQUN NlfJlle\, C.tHIDrni1 on.tr ll:lcllarCI Fro<1-Ot~. 2 SI 11
Adel1111l1;1, LitgUM ~ , C&tllotllt, .,.,. . .
Giii A"" ~s~tn!, '1">112 AdOllJl!to, t.aqma Ni9Je!. CalllQr'nll 91611
Tiiis bll1'Mlo\ is Cor.d\KIU DY I gtll•
~al parlft!rslllp.
Rlchll<'d '" Oe51\anr Thia llllfmenl WH l!lfld .,,;111 thft
Coun!y Cltrk Of 0r¥et Covnlr on
OcloOtf' IL lt1'-IFJlltr
PlllltiflfW<t 0rl'l'l!lt Cc•ll o,,tly PllOI, Ocloll« :n, 2'1, n Nll'letnbllr s. u,
191' JIU·l4
PUBLIC NOTICE
'""' Publllohed O•ll'llll' C-1 Oalh' Piiot, Ock>bff u. n. 2'. ~ ~ s 1'74 .,..,,
PUBLIC NOTICE
Loc al want ads ~ ...... "' ... ,.,, ·~,.
E
r. •
• ••
•
•
t I
' ._ •
,
TONIGHT'S
TV HIGHLIGHTS
ABC ,17> 8:00 -"Trapped Beneath the Sea.:.-T~rror 1n a ~tsa~led submarine is the subject of
this TV ,mov1e with Lee J. Cobb, Martin Bal sa m,
Joshua Bryant and Michael Potts.
NB_C (4) 8 :3lT -"The Law ." The inner
workings of~ lar~e city's criminal courts system a~e exposed 1n this drama centering on a murder tnal. ·
~BS (2) 10:00 -Castro. Cuba and the USA. In
this C~S Ne~s special, correspondent Dan
Rather 1nterv1ew$ Cuban Premier Fidel Castro ~ explo~ Cuban attitudes on possible changes in
diplo!"_allc policy toward the U.S. under the Ford Adnunistration.
--JV--DAl·tt-LOG
Tuesday
Evening
OCTOBER 22
''"' u u CIJ a m mm -~001ac1>1..., e oo-.. a n.r • ., u.e7
• hrtllllp , .. ilJ'
... Sq~
• 9niut ~ Sllow
9Starlrtl m Bidik eo..,.
E!l SfNd lttaf
6:30 0 ...,..... llflT Sllow m AM, 5ritlit11
Em lMm! (ff (f)) Duleis Cllekt
!llTN_, m Utlle Raclll
'"' llJ(tJOfJ~tiJ@EDOl -8 •••11111 I• Dolll11
@ Mid SqNd
({) Trlltl "Clc:z4u1w
QtllowlwJ
QI TN Al l!llrn-.-•-a.,,...,
• O!Jw•ldlln
tllll CIJI ...... ......
l!lllno-
7:• B ..,,,..... tt.t
@ ..... ,,.
a a..11100 •-,._ ....... -·--•(l)@l])T• Tll .. Trd
~-$ .... (C) .(Zk) 1 _.. hrt I (dr1) ·~
OOqtllr, Lill,_. OIMtr, Jin Sim· -·-I c ....... ""' C.ltrtllCI ,_ ... _. ....
Llltle Ruals * 4,00PTomonowon ABC Aller School Speclall
THE BRIDGE OF
ADAM.RUSH
Wednesday
di~td 11 T11pptf Jollq wt1e11 lie
refuses to h1wt • mtdlul cMckllP
becavst lie ~ lie ha 1n eU·
ment tt. OOt.sn't·wenl r1NUlld.
Q llJlllll§muc ""'" MME" (C) (2Jh!W) .,.. Ln" (dll)
'74-Judcl Hinch, Jolla s.c._ 8oMMI
f11nklin. Barbl11 Boley, Sam Wint·
make1, Allin Arbus, G11y 811M)', Mi·
tNel Bell. A $eftUlional Mllfdef
trill sparks blr1alnln1 1nd llllMll·
vtrin1 b)' deltns. 1ttorneys Ill •
.d(llTll abollt ltl• inner workifll.S Ill
I flrp dl)''a trimlnal courts spt1m .
Cl) Mlb Deupi1 si...
m "'" '""'• Show f.D AlcRoliUI A••rt111S1 W..k
'"Emj>IO)'tt Assisllntt Proiram" A
p1oa11m dts111ned lo aid empio,eri
1n settin1 ~P 1uist11M:1 profllml
for worlitrs with a drlnkin1 prob· •••
9:00 fJ @{l! (I} Hl•lli fiw.O "Wt
H1n1 Our Own" McG1uett altps ill
when he is thrust lnlo 1 eo11ltonl1·
tion wltll 1 Bil l$land utllt baron
who makes his own laws to '"'nee
1111 be1tin1 death ot his -. ltslie
Nie!un. Perry llin1 1Utst. Rn. ~·
Yid K.11pu, pas1or ol Hilo"s hillOfie
miuionll')' H1ilt Churdl, port11)'1 I
mini31ei.
El> Lta IO!Mdtl Aloi lkl I.a
t:JO D,.._
Q) lmri .. Adwitlft
El) Atlc:leuda Ml """
fDAlwl!
111-
3:1D II Motlt: "llfllll bin.,.. (drt)
'48 -Robert llJ'tll, .. .,,. Oberon,
Ptlll lukls.
KOCE CHANNEL SO
•
Tue$day,.Oet0bet 22. 1974
~o""an' Held Ouer
LA$T CMA..CI
TO Sii ••••••
PAUL .. WMAM
IOlllT UDfOID
''THE STING"
'Go~pell,'· 'Godot' Open
17 ''••••w ~.-...u
JAMI$ C.UH
"SUTHER" IP•I.
''ZORRO" ...............
"'Girts In Lo¥e0
IATIO llt
Moh. Wtd., S.t .. S-.
MON. ras. ONN .,,,P.a. ...... • ....... . °"" ,, ........ SMOW" Af ••S utma 1.2.!..UI_
ltMl1-fonol021
At PocHk's Hi.tiw.., lt
"TAKING Of HI.MAM 123"
-
Two college drama
departments raise their
first curtains or the season
this week as Orange coast
College stages the rock·
religion mus ic111l "God-
spell" and Golden West Col·
lege revives the absurdist
tragicomedy "Waiting for
Godot."
The college productions
join two professional aUrac·
lions, a held -over com·
munily theater comedy and
a children's show to give
coastal theatergoers a well·
balanced stage menu.
The professional of.
ferings are ''The Real In·
spector 1-lound" at South
'Coast Repertory and
"Mame'' at Sebastian's
West Dinne r Plilyhouse.
.Packed houses have forced
the extension of "Norman,
Is That You ?'' £or the Irvine
Coniiiiuhity 1'he3.ler, whil e
a children's group, the
Fountain Valley Com·
munity Theater, is on the
boards· with "The Ghoul
Friend."
ON ntE HEELS of an
ultra·success(ul South
Coast Repertory production
of ''Godspell, •• Orange
Coast College mounts its
own version this week, an
intimate staging with per·
formers mingling with the
~udience on the QCC stage
and seating limited to 200
spectators.
William Purkiss is direc·
ting the gospel:rock rewe.
which. features a company
of 13 college students. Diane
King is musical diredor,
•
'"THI .. OOYI TUlr
"wtml DOU fT HUITr Ill • -..1AO MOMMA" Ill ........, ..................
°""' MOo1. """ m 1:30 ""' 8'1./Sun.MoL 12:30
Mon.llwun...n. to.1--'1.H
I.A. FRWY (MANCHllYIR IXJ
G.O. FRWY ICI , IX.
'KASH .otDOM"lll . ·--"CAIAllT"
*40 CAIATS" INI
.... IAD MOMMA" Ill
... IUST OUT'" Ill
'1GIO COMPANY" INI
,,...SHOT'"
SAN DIEGO FRWY •t
BOLSA EX. ltM1141
"'THI Dowr ''°' "STlllLt :CUCKOO"'
"CAIAllT"
"'COLD TVl.ICIY'" INJ
"DIATH WISH"
"SBPICO" Ill
GOlOIC"AWN
IW. llOl.BROOK . ·-.<; ·kli~" 1ac.C.1R1.r tg ~~ . Im p(J~ f., 1'1,lEJ<'ll'K"H, •
I
' 1.1\'llll~l.\Ni\l
THE ABDICi\TION
0
'
Intermission
Tom Titus
rFrlday, perrormunces at
'J.:30. Saturdays and Sun·
days at 2o'clock .
Sharon Kennedy and Sue
.Peck head the la rge cast of
young people a t th e"
playhouse. 18280 Ml Ba ldy
Circle, Fountain Valley.
Re 5ervations 962·2551 .
Jerrrey R obi n son is
choreographer and Jeff
Koppe has designed lhe
OCCset.
Only four performances
will be, given, Wednesday
through Saturday. al 8
o'clock, in the Orange Coast
auditorium. There is no ad·
mission charge.
"WAITING FOR Godot"
will take on a new look in
the Golden West College
staging, as director Robin
Huber is using women for
the rir ~t t ime fri the
traditionally all·male cast.
One or these, Julie J ar·
maine, shares top billing
with Hal Ralston Jn the
Samuel Beckett
tragicomedy .
Others in the Golden West
cast are Dan Baerg, Bob
Myers and Lizbeth Sam·
pair, aU of whom have ap·
peared in GWC productions.
"Godot" will be presen·
led .. for two weekends -
Fridays and Saturdays al 8
o'clock and Sunday
matinees at S o'clock -on
the stage or the Community
Theater, orr the Gothard
Street parking lot on the
Huntington Beach campus.
Ticket.s will be available at
the door.
ALSO ON THE Golden
West campus this weekend,
with two J:ioldover perfor·
mances of a show originally
scheduled to elose last
\\'eekend, will be the Irvine
. Communi ty Theater and its
popular comedy "Norman.
I s That You?'' Bernie
Simon, Michael Carnahan
and Bramwell Young head
the JCT cast.
The two extra stagings
will be given Saturday al
8:30 and Sunday at 7:30 in
• "MIXED COMPANY"
INI
AU STAR LAUGH
RIOT
SM0WM DAILY AT!
.... ,,.. ntUU. 1•
.-.auJ.71 lttJe
WM.M<JM,N
the Actor's P,laybox
Theater. adjacent to th e
GWC Co mmunity Theater.
on the Huntington Beach
campus. Since sealing is
limited, reservations, <i t
557·7297, arc required.
SOUTH COAST Reper-
tory continues to offer the
West Coast Pr.e miere of
''The Real Inspector l~ound ''
al its Third Step Thea·
ter. 1827 Ne.wport Blvd.,
Costa Me sa. John-David
Keller is dil'"ecting the Tom
Stoppard comedy. which is
paired with another short
• CALLBOA RD-Gold·
en Wes t Coll ege has
called auditions Wedriesday
at 7:30 in the GWC Com·
munity .Theater for "A
Salute to Vaudeville." to be
staged by the ·Huntington
Beach college in January
... written by student Bob
Soares, the s how will trace
the history of Am erican
stage entertainment from
1850 to the present •..
musicians, sinigers,.dancers
and specialty acts are
neoded ..•
Atw119er
Leslie Nie lsen guests
as a cattl e baron out to
avenge his son's death
t onight on ''l-lawa ii
Five·O, ~· al 9 o 'clock
on CBS, Channel 2 .
play. ''After Magritte.'' r==========Ji=i:;;jnrii;::;r;;;jjniiii Don Tuche, Michael
Keenan, Leslie Jones, Rick
Doyle and Hal Landon Jr.
head the SCR cast. pcrfor·
ming Tuesdays through
Sundays at 8 o'clock. Reser-
vations 646-1363.
Trivia?
It~ o rea1on
to read th•
Doily Pllot'1
· entertainment
page every
Saturday
m MANN
THEATRES
'"THE DOVE" IPGI • • "OH AMY SUHD~Y ....
-rHl LOMG-EST YARD ..
witll IRI
IUU llYHOLDS
.. 1001 SPACE ODYSSEY"·
. -CHAllOT Of THE GODS"
"GIMME SHELTU" IPGI
"IUSru & 11w1· IRI ...
"'LAST $UMMll"
"'HA.ltl:Y & TOKTO" IPGJ
""HAR.RY IH Y~Ul POCKET"'"
"MllEO COMP.A.HY" • · "'IAMK SHOT" IPG<I
GENERAL CINEMA COAPOAATIOlll
"BIG MOMMA"
Ill
l:IM:l~f:GS
. ;,,.
m.. '°'' 'UDY StHGS
THI IL.UIS ..
l:lM:OS
...
"111ADLY TUCKERS'"
l:IM.<;~tO:OO
"HAS TNl SA.Ml f;INO Of
POWER AS "WALJ;ING TAU.1'
-l'W 0. l..__. ""': ........
BUSTER
and
BILLIE
-f'\11~-
'BOOTLEGGERS"
x
I
-
•
A 14 i"'l" PILOT Tuesday. Oc1obe1 22, 1974
For The Record Ba ker
Blasted
, CALLAM•lll
..... H. c .. ~. rtWOIM DI Cot-••
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frl-POrl 8tat ll •n O St , ,i.njl••••
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Ml...,,.I P••~ P•t•ht V141,. MDtl-y, °'"'u.,i.. , COLLINS
Ao.. V Collin~ O•lt or de•111 Ck.lotlll• Ii,
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• illUCKU & SON
. wtSTCLIFF MORYUAIY
427 f. 17th 51., Co~o Me10
646-4888 -·-1.u:rz-IERGEIOH
FUHEIAL HOME
Corona del Mor
Ca110~10 -·-
673-9450
646-2424
llLL llOADWA Y
MottTUilY
I I 0 8roodw0y. (0\10 Me\O
b42-!jl~ -·-DILDAY llOTHEU
MOIYUAl.Y
17911~h81.d.
Huntll'1g1on Seixh 842-7771
244 Redondo Ave
LongSeoch f2 1J)438-114S -·-McCOIMtCK LAGUNA
IEACH MOllTUilY
179S L091100 ConVon Rd.
494-941.S -·-. McCoaMICK
MISSION lilOltTUARY
'26832 Comono Copo1rra110
So11 Juof\ Cop1\1tono
495-1776 ° -·-PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
.... TH!:HY
.Ufllo" M M•OIOllJ , I•~"" o.I a.,ibQa
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NlrwO.•tn ol Ml . -'"'''. e,,,.1 J'l•hottr ol Mol , rnou,.r, M••.,ell L•..,~NI ol $.61\1•
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llf•<ft '"">• t"o' •, a11~t•on
De aths
ORANGE COUNTY
H urricane
Aid Urged
By Cou n ty
El sew here
LOS ANGELES !AP>
Joseph f'rederick Wagner,
74. founder of the Boston
Ci vic Symphony. has died .
llis most famous work '''as
the Ballad or Brotherhood,
recorded by the Mormon
Tabernacle Choir. \Vagncr
died Oct. 12 but his death
was not announ ced until
l\londay.
SANTA ANA -Orange
County Sup•!rvisors have
ordered th e county ad·
minls trative officer tO
solicit help from military
and volunt,.cy agencies.Jn g distributing relief supplies A for victims of the recent
hurricu ne that brought
disaster to •Ionduras.
ST. PAUL, l\linn. CAPI -
The !Hosl Rev. Leo C. Byr·
ne, 66, second-ranking of·
ricia l in the Roman Catholic
Archd iocese of St. J;aul and
~linneapolis, died l\1onday.
I Bankrupt
Bids Filed
T1>e 10 110 .. i ng 11••10n \ "•vt l•l•d
~i1oon\ 101 Oln-r"plt y on Sin!• A.n•
F.oe111 C-rl:
MAATINEZ i:uowrll, 11(111 ll"<llC•""""'·
ltYlne Ca••I co .. nl•y CIYO e<>d l61U s.io...,, L•ne. M"''°" Y•eio. Llfb•!nte•
TllE BOARD action was
prompted by a letlcr rrom
Governor Ronald Reagan
explaining thal liltle has
been done to handle sup·
plies already offered or
donated.
"The U.S. State Depart·
ment has recently advised
me of the tre m e ndous
backlog of food , medicine,
clothing and other supplies
that have been collected for
victims or th e rece nt
disaster," Reagan said.
"'Whil e additional ·sup·
plies are no longer needed,
the tremendous task or col·
lccting. sorting, packaging
a nd s hipping-s up pli es
remains," he said.
Board Chairman Ralph
Clark said the governor al so
asked the county to set up
some kind of central eollcc·
tion point for supplies in
cooperation with the state
Offi ce of Emergency Ser·
.
By Rival
SANTA AN A -Super·
visorial candidate Larry
Schmil has uecused incum·
bent Oa\'C:-Baker or cam-
paign "dirty tricks." 11e
OJlso challenged Orange
(;aunty's Second Di strict
super11i sor to join him In
disclosi ng a ll persona l
finances at a recent press
conferP.nce .
A sPokesman for Baker
discounted the charges of
dirty tricks as smear tac··
ZEPPELIN HISTORIAN
UC Irvine's Meyer
tics and he pointed out that ---------~
records or the supervisor's
finances are on file with the
county clerk.
Schmit ba ses his charge
of "dirty tricks" on the
finan cing of a pro-Baker let·
ter sent to voters.
According to county
record:) . .,..1.he~C.Dmmittee to
Re-elect Dave Baker gave
SS.ISO to the Orange Cou nty
Committee for Good Gover·
nment.
The Good Government
Committee used the funds
to send out the pro-Baker
statem ent under its let·
terhead.
Though he conce des
nothing illegal hus tran-
spired, Schmit equates this
process \vith "dirty tricks."
He calls the Good Govern·
ment Committee a ''front .''
"If Dave wanted to send
out a mailer, he should send ·
it out ," Schmit said. "not
send up a smokescreen" un·
dcr the name Good Govern·
ment Commitlec.
Both the Good Govern·
mcnt Committee and the re·
election committee rcpor·
ted the expe nditures, as ·
required by J11 w.
THEY REALLY
AR E HAZARD
Mesa Man
Faces Trial
In A·ss·aul·t
SANTA ANA -A Costa
ltlesan accused on arrest by
Newport Beach police or
raping a 38.year-old divor-
cee who gave him a lift as
s he l eft a Newport
restaurant hus been or·
dercd to race arraignment
Oct. 29 in Orange County
Superior Court.
Judge Everett W. Dickey
set the court date on which
John l\lichael Stoops, 25, or
284 Santa I sabel St., will
plead to charges or rape,
kidnap and sex perversion.
1 It is alleged that Stoops
raped his victim at
knifepoint Sept. 13 after she
agreed to g ive him a lift
1:1long Pacific Coast High·
way.
vices. :.~~'.&21, ~•>el• st1,a21 , "••••ee ~le• El-'!'OK YO (A pl _ Smoking
The woman told police
that Stoops produced the
knife, took the wheel or the
car 1:1nd drove· her to a
remote area wher e she was
raped and forced to par·
ticipate in acts or sexual
perversion.
•
Dirigible Reeall~
'f.JCI Prof Tells A irs h ip History
A co I 1 e c l i o n o r the Queen l\1ary and could
P.hOtographs, letters and cross the Atlantic twice as
documents on aisplay al the rastas the fastest liner."
UC Irvine library this In 1929 the German
month.marks the 50t.h un supremacy or airship con·
niversary or the transatlan· struction and handling was
tic crossing or the dirigible established as a zeppelin.
"LosAngeles." touching down only (our
The exhitiit; gathered times. circled the globe in
from the work Of Dr. Henry 16days"
tim or anti-Nazi sabotage
may be disproved us a
result or ~teyer's researeh.
By combining eyewitness
accounts or the disaster and
close inspection or zeppelin
operation proced11re, h1eyer
believes the airship was
mishandled during the Ian·
ding attempt.
Cord Meyer, UCI professor "The success of the icp·
of history. outlines •the pelins was a great psy· • • T W 0 M A J 0 R
development of the airship chological boost to the operations for airship han·
industry in America, Ger· Germans urter their toss or dling were either neglected
many and Great Britain pride and self-esteem at the or purposely disregarded
rrom1919to1939. endor\VOrldWarl,"~leyer by the German crew,"
The German-built zep· said. . Meyer said. "tinder the
pelin ZR·3, or USS Los lN AME RICA airships pressure or a flight schedule
Angeles as she was later played a Jess obvious yet the Hindenburg commaft·
named, began its ttan· equally significant role in der knowingly Oew into an
satlantic . voyage Ocl. 12, building prestige. Political area or violent eled:ticar
1924 . and a r rl ved ·at struggles over government1 storms and thus placed the
Lakehurst, N.J ., threedays subsidies to en.courage the airship in jeopardy or
later. The airship Was then . airship industry raged sparks from static elec·
assigned lo the Navy and th r o u g h th e t 9 3 Os tricity. 'Secondly, the. air-
used as a training vessel for stimulating the · develop· ship did not make a second
the larg~r airships USS mentofscaplanesaridmore pass around the airfieldlas
Akron and Macon. efficient land·based air· requ.ired to disperse he
.__ _ . craft=---flammab le hydrogen "SIGN~F C-~NCE oT t~is-The hydrogen-filled air· rete·ased'th·thelltmosp~re.
~r.pe ol flight, Me.yer said. ship, once a positi~e psy· "In view of the extensive 1s ~atthezeppebn.s werc chological sy mbol, political manipUlation o(
crossing the Atlantic car· bccameinaninstantasym-the airship industi:y the ~ing as many as 28 peo~le bol of (lery •death wl'leri the Germans would readily ac-1~ Pull~an .comror\ whi_lc HindenbUrg eX ploded\tJ,t cept sabo tage i n ex-~1:x~d-~1ng aircraft was st1l!-Lakehurst, N.J ., in-1937 and 'planation for the toss or the
in its 1nr.ancy. These _events killed 35 ior the 102 pas-' Hinctenburg, but mishan·
wer_e_ always . h1~h l y sengersaboard. '<I.Jing of the .s hip? Un-pu~hc1zed to_ bu,1,ld 1.nler-. The popular theory that ihinkable ," l\1eyer obscr·
nation~) prestige. the Hindenburg was a vie·. ved.
In his forthcoming -book. · ·
''Politics, Propaganda:and
Airships," l\teyer draws a
close parallel between the
political manipulation of
the dirigible in the 1920s and
1930s and current iriter·
national competilioll' 'in
space travel and supel'50nic
transportation. -
"The study or an era that
is technologically closed
can contribute a great deal
or insight lo the present in·
ternationaJ comp~tition for
technical development and
prestige," Meyer said.
''AIRS HIPS WER E a
great attenlion-getting
device," M~yCr !aid. "The
larger Graf zeppelins , most
notably the 'Hindenburg,•
nearly equaled the length or·
SEE HANDMADE
ORIENTAL R·UGS
at .
ASIAN ENTERPRISE
in
Design Plaza • 250 Bldg., 2nd Floor
Donald F. McDermott Jr .. owner
TELEPHONE 644.S88 I
ISLAND • HEWPORT
Ceme!ery
Chapel
3500 Pix1l1' View Drove
Newport Beoch, Col.ta1n.o
644-2700
MARTINEZ Mll•9'l•rt Je•n. '-'"'cf. has been prohibited bn the
•llalNfdel••l•••H>ave. ''I A'I OF Tll'-' ' . I r d SALAS Hen•• C•""•· ••ie""5n. ™' 1• "" opi nion pat orms an concourses -------~---------------~ Ri~'""" 0.1-.e, Co•'• Me~. L•fl>i•110•• thal this co unty possesses of 16 Japanese commuter
~.~:_9. •n•1• it.ls'. Re•••H ""· 1t. sufficient resources th at railway sta tions in Tokyo
saLAs Mo1"''" s..e, 1t1cr.er. 111 01t>t< \\'Ould enable us to par· during ru sh hour because of
• •
' • •
I •
• •
•
'
•
• • '
' -·-PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
0.1•11• .. •bO-.e. ticipatc ,·n such ·· program com I · t r I 11011N1Et1t ow.qr.c H., ''"'k 0,,..,.. .. P a1n s rom peop e
1uo111 •• 11-··"'''"""v~10.L•-"1'"'' \\ith a \'Cry minimal ex-heing burned by cigarettes
Sl0.Js1, .... H•M". Re•e•tt E111cm. pe_ nsc to th e taxpayers . .., in the crowds.
780 I Boho Ave., Weum11111et
893-3525
LEOOVJI. J•m.,. Jo•~"' 1»>mllll!<. •,;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::::;;;::::;:;===::::========== n11 ~·tel' B••d., CO'il• Me>A, ~Jdlli1<1 ... 1.
\11.lO, .t\>el\ ""·°'°°· ~le< tt EUilll!
-·-
SMITHS' MOllTUil1'
IUIC.E~ k~tla•. cetlm•<i ~"-'Jil l\ M•tKOftfO~ SI., l e9..,,. k +ll\.
L..oilillK• S1•,lll, •S>et\ Sl.!iW, Reteree
Elho!I .
IUIGES l~I. •~e<ul;lrit -•elltY, •II
"'""'""'•il•••ill6-.e.
---··
621 Moon S1.
Hun1111g1on Beoc.h
S~SJ9
TlllYEZ, lnc.,oevol~r\ol c~-r•w
....... <OlnllUIOf' •,Stems. lllO Rea Hl!IS
.lV9., CO'il• Mew. Li•t>il•tln ..-0 ••W"h
f>OI. rel ~!ttm1~. Re'-•tt Et hon .
Our
Philosophy
• IS:
]l's a changing world ... for we have
only to look around us to see a variety
of new and different interests
born of tod ay's lifestyles.
And just as people's interests
and desires change. so mu st we at Pacific
Vie\v vary our melhods of providing
memorial and interment services to
accommodate these changes .
For exa mple, we receiv e many
requests to provide cemetery services
only. From others the request is solely
for the use of our mortuary. Or just
graveside rites. Or the use of our chapel.
Or cremation and burial at sea. Aild just
as often the request is for a complete
memorial service \vh ich if\volves the
far.ilitics of our mortuary. chapel and
cemetery.
Whatever the r.ase. the service
provided is exactly as requested by
either the deceased before death or
by the person responsible (or final
arrilngements.
• • • W• ...... & ... .._Al Typu Of A .. ,~ t,.._ S.0.._
ANTHONY'S SHOE SERVICE
.•Wll1'CLU.J f'LAZA •LIDO •.FASHION ISLAND •COIOfU. OIL MAI:
FJ.SHIOH SQUAIE ISANTA AMAi souTH COAST YILUCil
... <
And in all casf's it is the right
service. ber.ause \Ve al Pacific Vie\v
~lemorial Park ond Morluary c11n provide
any or a ll of lhc services desi red.
-. To fin d out more about Pacific
Vie\v and the savings th al result fr om
prc·nr.rd arrange ments, call Mr. Ward
at 6·14 ·Z700. I lc'll arra nge for professional
c:ounsrlin,i;i in your O\VO home and
supply you \vlth n valuohlc estate
pianning p.1ckrt :1llsolutely fr ee.
""-..
PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK £i MORTUARY
3500 Pacific View Drive. Newport Dcach, Ca!Uotnia"o2663 !1\rco 71 4) 644~2700
\ . '
\
FULLY GUARANTEED*
AU SIZES LISTED
E71-14 F71-14 $
G71-14 H71·14
G71-15 H78·15
Free Mountin9
Free Coffee While
You Wait
. · '.£.T. tr.. 2.ll t. J.lt ,..... tin, •p1•••1 • W
....
Th
"SUGHT .t,PPliRAHCE VARIA TIOH THAT IN HO WA 1' EFHCTS WEAR OR l'SIFORMAMCE Urton~ol•!"io ... -reoa.F.Goooric"-·""'-.-e....-1or1111on-tocAl ___ or1a1....a...._.....,..11.,.. • ll'llolollolliCl_ IO ___ ...... _ lhe ___ ..,.IO!lle--m -.M-lotl-hNafl!w-""'1111111""9 TN__. .... ._
- -,.. -ol °"""" ,,_ 111(111> ""' ....... -llllild 11'1' -...... --,..__,,. -..,....,.,..... -"' ,,. iw .. " ... hN ... ..u. to C.-.1 ........... .... .,N,.,..,,..,.. IN -:rft of._,"'-·":".,.,....• .. ,. en.roe.,,,.. -·e....,· .. ....,.,.._•"CW!'°' 111e -*'°"-r'llQllor.O........, d ·tc1•ior1.
MAG WHEEL
aEARANCE
U.S. IMDY
Pric .. , .... ..
s22
IJal .
Wlftct To stoctl O. .._,
RETREADS
8 f ~n OOllV911100flal N l:Ml"98f
-n lull on _.a. 1a<11orr --...i In lloo;lln. ,...., • .,... I -1\ -
lctt.ae "°' -OOXMI -.
12
E7flr14/7.35-14
F78-1417.75-14
G78-14/8.ZS-1 '4
HTil'-14/8,55-14
F78-15/7.75-15
G78-15/8.25-15
H7&-15/8.55-15
' l7B-15
•49' ,..,_ EIQM tu""'......-.."........_ 1\ltMlewlll 11,to ....... . .
FRONT END
ALIGNMENT
Tr1l~•ll &fG lrrle~ .. l~itl will ....... .,.,.,.,,... --10 .... 11>10 1111n.,1ac•u<Mr 1
•1>t~ot1c11ion1. ~ml lotl>P--$6~~ ---~-..... _... . ....
4 ways to ctlarge/Revolving Ctiarge, Master Charge. BankAmericard, American Express
B. F. Goodrich S.tore
2049 HARBOR BLVD. lat bayl COSTA MESA 646-4421 °'-"'·-540-4)4)
ALSO AT::---·---------t
CYPRESS
6 182 LINCOLN
826·40 IO
ANAHEIM
524 W. LINCOLN
774-7578
----·-----
SANTA ANA
2 00 SO. MAIM ST.
547-7 155
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A r-e--Women a Wasted Resource ?u
STOlllES BV LAURIE KASPER • OfU.Dlllrf"lllllSlftl
.. StaaOalJon," a word currcnUy
used to d~><Jl~o..lhll troubled st•te
d the economy, 11 ''not ~n infh1tion
t.owhleh women ar~nol1nvited." .
On the contrary. exphtined Sen.
Mervyn Dymally, chairman of the
• • slate legisluture's Joint Committee
~n Legal Equality, they are the vie·
. timsOllt. ·
While opening u legislative con·
· rerence on employment problems
facing women coll~e graduates,
he uid, "Women are the lasl hired
and the first fired; unles~. of cour·
&e, you can tyPe."
D_vmall,v. who is black" said
"Ctln you' 'type?" Is a code ror
women like the word 0 boy" when
Ul>(.>d in rererenee to a. member of u
minority group.
"ll I were u womun In college,"
he continu,XS. "I would m11.ke lt a
priority never to learn lo type, jusl
us I never developed u rondness ror
ethnic jokes." -
He told the audience, aboot 70
people most or whom were women,
that they should warn women now
in college what to expect.
He estimated that 19 pen::ent or
the women who receive welfareun··
der lhe Aid ror Dependent Q)iJdten
Progr:im in the st:ite have uttendL'd .. T"·enty pe.-cent of the women y.·omt•n. The situalion of \.\'Omt>n 1n
oraruduatl'd from COllCJ!:4..'. college graduates bl-come factory. the stull.''5 <'Olleges und unl\'t'r·
The issue or "''Omen's uncm· ~·orkers. retail clerks. st"Crctarie:s"\:_ !dli4..•s l:s sil"!liliur and y.·cll d0t:uml'n·
p1oyment or undepemployme11t-+<---.Jf•,,O'""th1rds--ot-tht'"'\\'Onretn\'ho --1«1. she said.
usuully considered "frivolous." he 'h11ve h11d one to thr4..'<.' ytars ot col· In contrast 43 percent of the
said. But s ince a wom1tn 's ltgcaetthesamek'tndsofjobs. curr('nl college studcnls y.·orking
leduc<:ition Is "ut least equal as that -In 1970. "'omen \vith rour-yee1r for a bachelors degree und 37 ll<'I'·
lsame education in a man," the college degrees were earning <in cent or those v.•orking on udvun4..'t.-'d
senator asserted. she has <.1n cquul 1:1veragc in('ome br $300 more than dearees arc won1 c n.
cluim to the reward. 1 ·th ,. h h d ma es w1 an t.:1& t gra e Dr:' \Vil son. ;,i prorcssor at
Yet the morping's keynote education. California Sta l e Uni\'crsitr.
speaker, Or. J o<in •loff\Vilson, who -In 197-t , these \vomen arc ear· Sacramento, C'harged. "We :.1rL'
is author , oJ "The Decline of nlng the same as the eighth grade educ;.iting more and more "·oml'n
Women as a Force in American t..'liucated male. for le:ss and less meaningful jobs in
llistory, '' cited additionul facts to -In 1971. le~s th;.in one pen::enl of this society.''
demonstrate that this has not been the 12,000 loll 1>ositions in Calif or·
happening. nia corporations "'ere held ~Y
•
REASONS
The reason for discrimination in'
hiring and promotional practices.
she ~xplained. is r because y.·omen
<ire considered a reserve labor
force i~ this society."
Despite the ract that thev com·
. P.ri se 40 percent of the laboi-force.
lht' !ruining· or "'om·('rt a1
homt>makers.
l~ater rf'for ms. \\'hir h ln\'Pl\'ld
th<' beginning of <'Ol'dt.K'utinnul <'OI ·
lt•gt>S, "·ere made ror l'fOnonilC'
reasons and to pro\'ld~ the mah~
.studen1 s "·ith polt>ntiul \\'i\'CS.
In the Jasl half 'or lht-19th cen·
tury. she said women Where onl;)
enrour<.igl'd ber<1u se of the need ror
''e ht>u p '' t'l en1 c ntury school
ll'arhers.
PATRICIA'S PRINCIPl.E
As u result , rather than lhl'
Peter's PrinC'1ple 1,,·hirh says a
person rises to hi s highest le\'el of
incom1u•tenrr I. "Patrici0ii'ia Prin·
riple." a phrase coi ned ~· t"Qlum -
rtist Art lloppl'. applies to,,·omen •
1'hi ~ prinC'ip l(-. Dr. Y.'il.son t'X·
plained. says that bright ~·omen
rear success hc.•cause the~· don't
,,·ant to be labeled unfeminine or
aggressi\'t•.
'Women are the last hired
and tirst7ired, unless,
of course, you can type
she continued . they arc in demand
only during wars and the most
likely to be eli minatl'd in time of.
depression or recession .
Another rea so n rc;>r
disc rimina tion is the type of
toducation women r eceive.
1-lislorica ll y, Dr. \Vilson s:..iid ,
education reforms for "'omen have
meant "two steps forward and one
step backward.''
During colonial times, she ex ·
plained, stereotypes didn't exist
because there was a high value on
labor. whether it was from a male
or a female .
Since it is perpeluated at all
levels of education. she s aid.
\~·omen Ja ck a sense of self-esteem
and do not come ou~ of the schools
equipped to get jobs for \\'hit'h they
shou ld bequaliried.
Unless thi s is <'hanged through
the encourage ment o( cbttnselors
:.ind teachers. she said, \1:omen "'ill
continue to ha\·e a iO'A' ll?\·el or self·
esteem. ""
And the tragedy, Dr. \Vil.son c6n·
rluded. is not or the indi,·idual t$ut
all societv.
LegislatiOn Recommended But in 1763, the first female
seminari es and colleges were
opened. Although these did in-
crease the number or subjects a
v.·oman could study. she said, they
also taught women the "virtues of
self.pity, self ·sacririce, piety and
dom esticity" and concentralt'd on
1r the Cducation or womm"..-:ere
equal to that or men. Srfe su'g·
gested. some or the world's m~Jor
medical and scientific problems
might have been sol\'ed by no"··
And , al a lime when l?~le are
\VOrrying about running out or tilne
and resources, she charged. half
the country 's resource$ are being
"·asted.
Money was rererred to often
during a conference called by the
state legislature's Joint Committee
on Legal Equality to obtain·
testimony and recommendations
for legislation relating to the
problems of college educated
women.
Income figures were cited to
prove the problems. ,
And more money, £rom the state
government, was a part ot just
about every recommendation
aimed at eUminatirig the problems
reflected in the figures.
Authorities from.throughout the
state were called to lhe meeting in
Inglewood to participate on panels
dealing with realistic counseling,
training and retraining.prog_.ams;
manpgement-level jobs; self-em·
Ployment possibilities; flexible job
patterns, and legal remedies to sex
discrimination in e mploy"ment.
Although it was organized as a
conference, rather than the usual
public hearing, Sen. Mervyn
Dymally, chairman and the only
committee member presen(,
said there have been too many con·
ference~ on women already. . .
"We are not here lo ten women
how to get jobs." he explained.
"We are here to make recommen·
dations lo the legislature and the
next governor of Cali(ornia. ''
He promised the ·comm.iltee
would submit a report lo·the new.
administration immediately after
_.,, tbeNovemberele<!tion .. ~ •
More money and supPort ror the
Fair EmplQyl)'lent Practices Com·
mi&sion, the stafe''s office which in·
\ vest.igates discrimination charges,
~as a need cited thn:xmhout· lhe
, oay.
Chikl care, which "''OUld enable
women with child rcn to get needed
training and then be able to work,
was another repeated recommen-
dation. ,
But there were others, some or
which aren't always directly
rC.lated to women's employment
Austra -lia's
ANeWWorld
By ALLISON DEERR OfTlleO.lty l'flllKlff
Sally Hayton's apartment in
Corona del Mar is haW a world
away Crom Yamba, her house in
Australia.
Yamba I which means "red ear-"
th" in aborigine), located in
r.toorool Bark, is 25 miles rrom ·
Melbourne. The house had cemenl
floors .. a claw-fooled tub, wodd-
in repertory acting, modeling and
. radio, ,She taught first in a country
~f and later in a suburban
fehool.
She taught English. hi story, dan.·
ce, drama and rilm-making and
lectured on creative com·
munic3ij.on.
. stove and an outhouse.
''My raison d'etre is lo bring the
magic back. I trie d with my
students lo spark imagination,
open· them up lo new worlds. One
assignment was lo create a whole It also had a horse. goats, dogs,
several ac'res and assortment of
fauna which would bewilder the
a'."'erage suburbanite.
"We had a resident Iguana under
th~oulhouse and a family ot scor·
pions in the house. Every mornin'i
the rieighbors' rour cows would
Poke their heads in our window."
., v..·orld, inhabited with new people
with their own morals and Jaws."
The children in the suburban
school were from blue collar
families. mischievous and rowdy.
One day when s he couldn't
moti.vatc them, she r aged and
cried ror an hour.
Ms. llayton had ju~ married and
graauated fro~ UC Irvine when
1 the coople left ror Australia and
her husband's graduate work al a
university there.
"The next d ay the girls presen·
led me a huge bouquet of rlowers
and a box or\ $Cented soap with a
note saying I was the best teacher
in the world. But, to remind me to
keep on my toes. there was another
box. containing a ~ivespldcr."
, ,
"I suffered rrom cult\aral verti·
go, not cultural shock'. Things are
much slower: th~ :;tandard of OOMESTIC MAG•C
Jiving Is not as high, and life is a bit Sally Is concerned about the
harOOr. · domestic variety of magic. "like
"That's probably why three th e smell of pancakes in the mor·
' quarters or Americans who go to ning, and Christmas, and li:astcr.
AustraUa return to theStatet alter Dul not 'Johnny got five presE:nLs
two)'eoir11. We lclt the very political butt got six.'
atmosphere of the U.S. and anived ''This kind ol magic is missinJ?
in a \lery apoliticel country. rrom too many lives and I lff:I that
-\-i·~n-;;-.--·--is,J{j re are so many family
l.'ULTUHA '"Tnlv prnblem'-'
·:Ex~~pt for the stud nt.s at ~he ~ler rour )'ears In Australia.
un1vcr11t.y. Who were protesting whle:h ended early thisycar, would
American lmpcriall~m. there wcis seem magical enough for most or
little talk or poJltl~s." us.
Taking with her a partial \Vlth repertory experltin..:c In
teaching credential and experience S<'vcral Or;.inge Coast troupes and
•
I
problems.
These included:
-Subsidization . or "peer coun·
seling" programs. other programs
which have been established as
models for counseling efforts and
in-service training for faculty tO
. reduce the "fracking" or stud ents
. tow3rd traditional occupational
.areas.
. -Legislation \\'hi ch \\'Ould allow
\\'Omen to w9rk while they recei\'c
whatever schooling necessary.
. -Change the laws and guidelines
which do nol require affirmative
action for women in apppren·
ticeship fields .
-Subsidization or programs
with employers and unions to
create management training inter·
nships for women who have the
potential but not all the necessary
training or experience.
-Interns hip programs for
women in government.
-Establishment of~ monitoring
'
orr Broadway, she performOO in
"Cat on a lfol Tin Roo£" in
Melbourne . "It was fantastit'. Th e
Aussies weren't ra miliar·wilh Ten·
nessee Williams.''
She did an Australian ri\m, ''And
the Big l\1en Fly." and worked as
owner·manager·buycr for an an·
lique shop.
After her son Blake, now thr~.
was born, she wrote a children·~
fantasy novel a nd now is com-
pleting the se<1uel. ,.,
"I hope t o d o ,., series or
magatine column~ on the da)'-to·
day livlng of the Au ssie! ...
Back in the United Stales, shC!
found thnt teaching jobs wer(' !>Cat-
te. Sht' taug ht fo~rcnch in lhe mOr-
ning ond y.·orkcd us n cdckta ll
!'iysten1 to assure that women
working for the state are being
promoted when and where they
should be .
-Involvement by the state with
the private sector in establishing
"flexible time" prog rams 'A·hich
\\'OUld open more part.time job op-
portunities.
-Reorgani zation.of the Office or
l\linority Business Enterpnse .
-Reclassification of women as
rµinorili es so they can qualify for
some state loans:
-Addition of "womanpower
state funds" to the already existing
manpower fund s.
-Legis lation making em-
ployment breaks due to maternity
equal to those taken for the
military.
·-Ex,ension or unemployment
benefits to women who rile
dise rimination complaints and quit
their jobs because or the resulting
har3ssment.
e
BEA ANDER SON, Editor
T1>etdlf, Or.1-.,U, "''
•• ,. &·1
Sally Hayton. actress, model._ teacher, writer, at home in CdM
w::iilrc!iis eight hours mo1'('.
Currently she's \vorking as a
copywriter for architt'Ctural firms
a nd for r.1C1x1can -American
murali~t Sergio ()'Cadiz or Costa
l\.lesa.
WRITING R ESEA RCll
Research on t'A·o hooks. on
Chicano muralistc; and a family
history. is in progress. "All I need
is an :1ngel to back a trip to Ireland
·to finish my rcsca r<'h · · :o1hc 1;:1ift.
Also in the \York s Is a projct'ted
r.roi;tram 1or children's tefcvlsion.
·11·~1 the re is a need for a tantnsy
show that combines the vi sual ·
stimulation and contemporary
quality or Sesame Street with in ·
trigui ng f:inla!'iiy.
''Children enjoy prog rams "''here
they can believe 'yes. ii cou ld hap·
pen to me'. A child 's outlook 1s very
simple. Adults trying to rrach
children often try loo sophislicated
an approach. The kids don't l>uy
It."
She reels \\,•(''Ve C'lll OUl'St•lves nrf
from natural communica tion.
''Th C! aborlGin e~ are ve r y
primitive. very spiritually a"arl.'.
They seem lo opc>rate on a psychi c
level thdt y.·e havt> cul orr."
The aborginc ce1 n "'alk forrt.000
miles slruiAht to "'hcrc,·e r he',;:
needed. she said.
A bit of a nornud h rself , Sally
ll:1yton 'l-l apartment i!ii llllcd with
paintings, plants , book s and little
else.
"I like to b~ nblc tn know thnl I
''
('Ould p:1ck Hnd hl' gone in l\\'O
hours. If therl..' isn't much rumiture
111 ;1 room there's more room £or
Pl'O[ll e.
'1'.\l y pl:1ce ts "'·here you cun fetl
t'O m(ortahl(' enough to spill a plate
ofspa!l hett1 on the. fl oor ...
1'omorro\~. "ho knO\l.'S. she mav
b(' hEud t'CI in still anothcrd1rcct1on.
Sht>W ntC's :
"1'heatrc has t au1o:ht me \'lgi1:1nl
di seiphnc: film has taught me un·
r1in ch1n i;: sclr·appraisal: tcnclilng
thl' Vlllllt' or commun1cat1on ;'
\'Olunte r scrvit·e . my limitation~:
t'r('<il1\'e writini;t, the> beauty and
))Owcr or ... JanJZ U<1 ge; livin~ has
tau itht me I ha ve only bc~un to
learn," --_ ..
' -
"
•
Benefit
Beckons
A Nile .With Mame is
!be theme or the fall
benefit dinner dance to
be presented by Irvine
Terrace Philharmonic
, Associates at 6 p.m. Sunday, Oct.-27, in the
N'ewporter Inn . Mrs .
R)!ymond W. Beyer
<left) is ch'!irman. A
committee member is
Jllrs. Ted M. Walsh.
DAii. Y PILOT 112 .
Bar Tends to M·ix-ups -
r
DEAR ANN LANDERS: We are 1t a 1tJ1ndstill on humor.
M.)>..husband.is-a bartender. 'thil iuue and It Js creating We live in a eourt)'ard ,.._:::::::::::;, _______ ..,...
I am not t'razy about Jerry. a lot of trouble. Every time apartment on the ground
holding this kind of a Job, I bring up tbe 1ubjeet noor. My bedroom ii ln I.he
but he enjoys It and makes (usually when he comes back and there's a very nit'e
good money. He works home late and I lblnk he has &errat'e a nd Illy Pond with
every day and two nights a driven a lady customer shrubs and bu1he1. This
week. Our childre n are home) we get Into a ftght. nutly kid has been comin&
grown and on their own, so Tell me, Ann Landers, am to my bedroorit window at
the two nights he works I'm I wrona when I say he night, sometime• rather
at home alone. should behave llke a 4S. late, and makinc Uke he ls
It see ms that J erry, Jtl.\t year-old married man and trying to get In.
because he is employed at not be dancing irllh women I've told him to cut the
this place, thinks he is .who han.c: around ban and· comedy before my parent,,
obliged to help a ll the driving them home? He catch him, but he thinks it
customers have a good said, "Write to Annie. She's is very funny. Last nJP,t I
time. It t'ame back. to me got good seMe and will set locked my window, pulled
through a friend that he or-you straight." So will you down the shade and drew
ten dances with the women p I e a s e b e t h e the draperies. He kept
who come in and on several judge?~RAZY OR NOT! hanging around, tapping on
ot'casions he has driven DEAi. NOT CRAZY: I the window for almost half
them home. bow of M cocktatl loaq:e an hour.
Wh e n I asked J erry wHre lite ••r&e•denare Pleasetellmewhat"todo
about this he admitted it. I expected to d11ce with to make him stop the
• then demanded to know catomen ••dfanllll&km foolishness. If he is cauahtl
whx he didn't tell me him·· wttll trauportatlo•. '!'Ida la know my folks will give me
self. He said, "I knew you 1trlctly Jerry'• Idea of orders never to see him
wouldn 't like it and 1 didn't "1peclal•01pltaUt1... again-SHAKEY SHELLY. wantt.o~mak,e_yQ.\Lmad " __ .Sln.ce__be" kaow.1....tbls la-DEA& SHELL: -Doeu!t
I then said, "If you knew creaUng a problem la )'OUr tU& clow:a reaUui be fOU14
it would m ake me mad, why marriage he 1boald knock tt be arre1ted a1 a PeesM1
did you do it?'' He an· orf. And you can tell him Tomoreveaml1takenfora
swered, ''Because it's my Annie said so. prowler and shot? For
job to keep the customers DEAR ANN LANDERS: 1 bea .. en'1 aake, tell ldm &o
Ann Landers
is rotns with a woman. 39.
7.elda has never been mar-
ried and has a few hanaups.
For example, she has never
had a complete physical
examination. When I tell
her she really should tet a
C!het'kup she says, "Why
should I? I feel fine and J'm
neversit'k.''
ders'1 booltlet, 1 1D1tln1
Do's and Don'U," will belp
you be m'ore polffd and
sure of younelf on elites.
Send Sl.Centa In coin along
with a long, atamped, sell·
addressed envelope and
your request to AM Lan·
ders. P.O. Box HOO, Elgin,
111.,60120.
I know Zelda reads your
column every day. Will you
please say something? She --::;;;;;~~;~:--~ mlRht llst•"'-!• you.-Z's . _;. "1"-. FRIEND. ·"tP
DEAR FRIEND: " .. RANCTO ; year-old ~woraaa wllo Ital F ~
aever ••d a romplele : '
phylle1l mut •••e oalmeal q, QRR f> •~ lier bralaa lie ..... I \a qJ
-lier (aod otllen .... FIN& STAT!ONEllY
are la &be 11me le11k1 bo•&) &'
&o slop preulac U.etr lwek · "-*;.I' .... ,,... 'I' 1
aad make aa appola&mnt 1---_.A:ti:tl 111,..,~
a&oece. tfZekla'••••PPil wbat I thlllk U la, pie-bl·
form hr tllat tllere are
maay fema&e UBe~
lale Has a
happy.'' am a 16-year-old girl who is 'c1acel tile alley cat ad
scared to death. I don't go before he flad1 hlmaelf
steady, but there's this one lawillla• all the wu to tlle
boy I like better than all lhe dlltrict attorney's orrke.
F ·1 s h Y. F ·1 n a I e . others. He is really nea• but DEAR ANN LANDERS: I he has a warped sense of am a baclielor. age 44, who
Discover how to be date·
bait wlthoul lalUng -· line and. sinker. Ann Lan-
lflJl.&M.11-Af , 1"-n c-. ............ , ....
Bf ERJllA BOMBECK
The newest ci.ddlllon to
our ramlly Is a small gold·
fish that my son won by
throwing a Ping.Pong ball
lnto a custard cup at the
State P'.alr.
He named him Herbie. I
fi&ured Herbie was my kind
of a pet He didn't lick your
reet, s hed under the bed,
Horoscope:
Taurus
Moves
To Top
WEDNESDAY
OCTOBER 23
By SYDNEY OM ARR
ARIES <M arch 2l·April
19): Accent now is on wish
· fulfillment, friend ships and
romance.
TAURUS !April 20-May
20 ): There is room for yo u
-and the room is at the top.
You find out where you
want to go and the best way
to arrive al destination.
GEMINI (!\1a y 21-J un e
20); Good Moon aspect coi n-
cides no w with study,
la ng u age, t ravel and
s timulation of learning
process.
CANCER (June 21 ·July
22): Deta il s tend lo
multiply. Take one step at a
time -and be thorough.
Some around you may ad-
vocate otherwise.
LEO (.July 23-Aug. 22):
A cce nt is on p ubli c
relalions, reactions. Also,
you find out wh o meanii.
most to you -and why. If
single, there is ta lk or mar-
riage.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl.
22l: Low key now should be
your ll:eynote. Don't rush,
force or cajole. !\faintain
steady pace and keep the
peace at home front.
LIBRA (Sept. 23·0ct. 22):
Favorable lunar aspect in -
dicates better relationship
with your person. Also, your
ideas. concepts become
more vigorous.
SCORPIO !Oct. 23-Nov.
21 I: Be practical enough to
J:tl appraisals, to ask for
and receive guar antees.
Structures must be solid.
SAG ITTARIUS !Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Accent is on short
lrips, ideas which nash and
rl•quire dcve lo pm('nl
money. llclativc v.•ho t:ilks
::i gn.•at ~Htme 1nay not know
the rules.
CAPRICORN <Dec. 22·
.Jan 191 : Spotllght Is on col-
lections. p::i yments. new
starts and a chance to prove
a major point. You make
discovery, locate lost object
and gel proverbial second
cha~.
AQUARIUS !Jan. 20-Feb.
l8l: Cyt'le Is high nnd this
means you will encounfer
new. invigorating Ideas, ex·
pcr1ences. Tru$l youri own
judi;:m<'n t. hunch
PISCES !Feb. 19-March
20): Vnu find humor in
unugual s itu1.1tion. One you
th<>ught t1 "'sourpus:;:· turns
®'to be generous.
'
stay out all night , scratch
under the table, nuule In
embarrassing places, drink
out of the toilet, scare small
children, ha\'e bad breath,
or chew the cork off you r
wedgies.·
lie just swam around in
his custard cup and bobbed .
occasionally for crumbs.
Then one day my son
said , "1-ferbic needs a
home. A real one." .
The r equest seemed·
reasonable and we went to a·
pe t shop. Homes for 1-ferbie
ran from you r :;i mplc glas:;
cottage beginning :it $14.9S
to yo ur tri -le \'e l con-
dominium at $384. \Ye
bought a modest aquarium
for Herbie and the
salesman said, "With this!
.size aquarium we will need ·
a filter system to keep the
water clean.''
"Of course we wi ll," I
said.
AT
WIT'S
END
"And a thermometer to
make sure the water is kept
at the same temperature . .,
"Absolutely," I said
weakly.
·"And vie can't imugirie a
beaut1ru1 aQuar1u m without
a light to illu mina te it, ca n
we?" ··we a re being t'Omical,
aren't we?" I said.
"A nd , or course. the food
ring so that our fish doesn't
have lo run all O\'e r the
lx>wl ."
"So what else does he
have to do ?" I asked.
"Now, about the fur-
nishing s.·· s aid the
salesman. ··wh::it style do
Programs Arranged
we prefer? We could do it in
early Castle? Or the Pirate
motif with the s unken
treasures and the trunk or
Contemporary Reef with
one or two potU!ry s~uba
divers and the carpel in
pink sand."
''Keep it s imple," 1
pleaded. "I m ean for one
lousy little goldfish ... "
··vou don't mean to tell us
that Herbie will occupy the
aquarium alone? Fish does
not live by bread alone." he
said. "He needs fri ends."
($36. 79 worth of them.}
As the family sat around
our li ving room (furnished
in Early Poverty ), our ther-
mostat a nd lights turned
down lo conserve energy,
we w a tched H e rbie
throwing an orgy in his new
pad.
Who has to keep up with
the J oneses? I just want to
live like a goldfish!
Seminars Aid Women
Library Fiiends
Ne\Yspaper colu mnist
Richard Buffum v.•ill
discuss Ma.i:!ic in Literature
for UC Irvin~ Friend s or th e
Library at a dinner m('('tini:
Saturday-, Oct. 26.
Buffum. who Will weave
hi s hobby as a magician
into his talk. has been in the
news writing profession
since the end of World War
II.
The evening \\'ill start
with a 6:30 soc ~~ hour. fol·
lowed by dinner at 7:30 p.m.
Reservations can be made
through the Friends office
at 833·5300.
Christian Women
A green thumb workshop.
a talk by Vi rginia Evans
\\'hose hu sband is known for
his radio mini s t ry and
music by soprano Barbara
Gibbs will be featured at the
n ex t m eeting of the
Christian Wom en's Club of
1-{untington Beach.
!\1 embers will gather al
tl:4S a.m. in the Sheraton
Beach Inn, \Y cdncsday,
Ocl. 23.
HB Ju niors
A Hallov.•een Parade for
children ages 2 to 10 will be
presented by the Hunting-
ton Beach Junior \Vo man's
Club. The parade. in the
Huntington Center ~tall will
begin at 7 p.m. Thur.;day,
Oct. 24 .
tment will sponsor a "Wiri-
nie-t h e · Pooh s pecial ''
Fl'iday, Oct. 25, from 4.5
p.m. in the li brary's new
media center.
A puppet show by the
Puppet Pla yhouse a nd
music from · guitarist Paul
Wehmeyer will be featured.
Tickets are available, free,
at branch libraries.
LB Leag ue
Assistance League or I H1P11n~ lM?aC"h will open Ifs
new chapter house at 547
Catalina St.. Friday, Oct.
2S, from 2 to 6 p.m. The new
facility wi ll a llow for
expansion of club projects.
UC Extension
The House as a Work or
Art-The Development of
Inte rio r a nd Exterior
Design will be traced by a
three weekend series
presented by the UC Exten·
sjon.
Art Historian, Dr. David
Ourshad will open the series
Friday evening and Satur·
day, Oct. 25 a nd 26, 7 to 10
p.m. and 9 a .m. to 4 p.m.
His topic will be Egypt.
Greece and Rome during
~e Gothic Period and the
Re naissance.
Or. Robert Haas, director
of arts and humanities in
continuing cdut'alion al
UCLA Extension. \\'ill speak
Capistrano, S a n Juan
Capistrano.
Literacy
A workshop to familiarize
Laubach Literacy Council
tutors with new teaching
materi als and techniques
has been schedul ed for
Saturday, Oct. 26 , from 9:30
to 11 :30 a.m. in the San
Juan Elementary School
auditori um.
Onalee Carter, director or
tutor training, Dorothy
J ackson, J eanne f-{amilton ,
Flore nc e Callaway, Jean
Ol ney. Beatrice Williams
and George Elskamp will
present the program.
Management
A workshop to help par·
ti c ip a nts d iscover in-
dividual leadership styles Is
planlied for Saturday, Oct.
26, by the Wom e n· in
Management.
Beginning at 8:30 a.m. in
the Los Angeles Civic Cen-
ter the day will offer discus·
sions on ·pe rsonal asses·
s ment , leadership
behavioral styles, a per-
sonal growth inventory and
p l ays and f i lms on
management styles. c::rJ:ttes)
F'l1DBAY on the Baroque, RocOt'o, PTA District Neo-Classlclsm and l!lth in the 11mlijijl[1}i
We're o n the !\love century styles, Friday and r---::::'...!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~I
Toward N<'w Horizons in Saturday,Nov. land2.
Und<'rstanding will theme Sir J ohn Wed gwood.
the Thursd::iy. Oct . 24, mini-direct d c:;ccndanl or the
c-on\'<'ntion of the Qr;J.ngc famous potter. will talk on
County f ourlh District Englis h cou nt ry houses.
Parent -Teacht'r As· Thursday.Nov.7.al7p,m.
soication.
Beginning at 9 a.m. In the Girl Scouts
Garden Grove United More than IOOGirlSrouts
!\1<'thodis t Church, the reprcscnlin~ va r ious
keynote address "'ill be O r a n ge Counly co m-
gl\'<'n by Dr. George 0 . munities will ca mp out ror
Rohf'rt~. asslst arit vice thtt:e days, Ott. 26-28. on
chancellor of academic of. the grounds or Rancho
f:1irs. UC lr,·lne. ·
library
lh1ntington Be:iC"h Publit
Ubror)•'s Chlldrt!n'!! dC!'por-
• DIVORCE •
11·, "°'1of 1.,.. '"'"" oiq'""" lo ·oo IJ 'fOUR\flF
C t.ll~SINIA 01\IORCf
COUM \fl
\latf' Wuioo .,..,.,."
Sll-77'0
fOIMTYOUI
"1'NOIUMS
VICltl'S ORIGINALS
ISHHI
........ t•l.Ot ... ........
Of QtOOM ·~~ .. ~ ., ...
Nill) IW!trl~. SclOrl•-· ~
~ 177 li""'* ., .........
'4MJ1J
..
..,
a Gloria Marshall case history
.
''I tried every
•
way there was .
to lose weight!''
Ruth Adllllls
weight lost: 80 lbs.
inches lost: 75
"Si nce this is the first le1ter of
1his sort 1 have written , I hope
I can express my feelings clearly.
I have tried all kinds of diels and
diet pills without any resulls.
Since I've gone 10 Gloria
Malshall's, I feel so much belier.
1 have lost 80 pounds and 75
inches. Each pound and inch
has made a real dilference in
both my physical and mental
well being. I have almost reached
my goal and will work just as
hard to keep it. Thanks to
Gloria Maish au:·
. L __ ' I I • t ...... " • ' r· • . ,! ' I • ;;., • b,,,, ___ ___,,J. •
•No disrqbini: ,
•Program includes nutritional
guidance
•No slrenuous exercises
•No pills or shols
• BankAmericard, Master
Charge or American Express
Because individual figure
problems differ, your resulls
may be different Iron\ 1hose
31:hieved by someone else.
Affidavit of au1hentici1y ii on
file in lhe home office.
Call today for a demonslration
of what the Gloria Marshall
method can do for you. No
obligalion. Open Daily 9 to 9.
Saturday 9 to 4.
~
llEWPORTIUOI
llOI WUTillfl; DI. •642.-0
SANTA AHA/CDSl'A MBA
3151 8'1STOI. SllOl'l'lllG CJlffa•SSM716
(ACROSS FROM SOUTll COAST Pl.AZA) 0
I
. .
•
MIXED SINGLES
TUMBLEWEEDS
HOLP EVeRVT'HlNG; l'l!RCV ! rM
CAU.11'14; llACK 'll>PAV'S f!Pl'OON !
I FOll60'f 1l> APP A FAN'l'ASTIC
FIU.ER AIJOIJT AARDVARKS!!
\!
....... ~ ...
•
by Wm. F. Brown and Mel Casson
"°'-! Me.AN W11£N wt &OULP
SC WO~~q11J6 A80VT WAil .
f'011 11c.:;, rN rl A [ION . OVell·
1'11PVLA110tl, Poll-Of/ON.,
CRrMe ,AND !>ILJFF ! ..
I
!3055, l'Yf! SOLP Al-!. ~UT ONE
PAl'1'R! YOIYl-1-HAVE 10 RUN TH E
AARPYARK Fil-I-ER IOMORROW ! !
I
by Tom K. Ryan
!JUT WllA1' IF SOMEHIN
5'°15 rr IN THI'! PICllONAIN'l
THf!U! 190ES MVSCOOI'!
by Tom Batiuck
DOOLEY'S WORLD
GORDO
Tuesday. October 22. 1974 DAil Y PILOT 83
by Roqer Bradfield
l. ·l FJtiUREDI
MIUHT AS WEU.
GET IN ON SOME.
l OF11<£~W
. 0•~~
by Gus Arriola
I OON'T KNOW WH'I
I'M AH(AID TO CUN\B
lMAT STUPID ROPE !
400 JUST CLIMB UP MD
111EN 40U CLIMB lXlWN I
WH'/, SURE! n·s lME
EASIEST lMIN& IN lHE
IJJQRIJ) 10 00 I
AllD <JET---ewe TJJINCI
Pt.JZ%U6 ..le ,J.80UT
REIJJCAllA/AilOJJ I
A:IPOf •
GNW THI! FAC'f'
iHAT KE ,All£:
;ALLOWEO ANOTJIElt
60-RDUNO N ,,.,..., """"' ...
RGMENTS
NANCY
_JL
(.:I
001"5--·THERE GOES
MY BIG MOUTHFUL
OF BUBBLE GUM
WH AT'S THE
MATTER.
SON'?
l ,JUST
SNEEZED
AND I
LOST MY···
PEANUTS
by Dale Hale
by ~ie Bushmiller
LOOK, 006, Tl-115 15 A
BRAN D NEW PIANO ...
MOON MULLINS
» ... ,Add
by Charles M. Schulz
TODAY'S CIDSSWDRD PUZZLE
IF THERE'S ONE 'fl.l lN6 IT
DOESN'T NEED, IT'S A LOT
OF CLAW MARKS~
ACROSS
1 ""ligl\11 our"'
5 ""You <1o<i·1
!l<!y'""
~ 9 Un1!1now:
:> WOids
14 Woodwind
15 Agitate
16 Ammoni:i
comp<>untf
17 Rotatn
18 Rllvmestcr
19 Enclosing
SllUClu•e
20 Flowers
22 A1ser111d
te1se1v
24 landlorit
26 Proceeds
rapidly
27" Sororllv
m11mb11•
29 Mat!ne fish
30 Mako lace
33 Recalled •
37 Sailor's cry
38 DCH:!1 a house·
hold chor11
39 Gold mifler'1
\lien~ ta Mo1ke amends
<U Covc1ed .,..,ti\
.,~
42 StKta: 2 wOt"ds
<14 A1tlorcehoro
45 Sho<ten
46 Slloppers"
mecca
47 Wetland 01
Suet ... •
u
•
ll "
" ..
" .. "
•
"
49 Be'Cillme utJ
t1glll
5J Take1 a lentil
from
~7 Fi•ed loo.It
~ Residcncr.
59 Uni1 ol lengtll
61 Russian rsm
62 "H1fs a bo1n
63 No11h
Americ~n
Indian
64 Sle11\111l11s'
garm11n1
6S Wilhin: PrP.!ix
66 Coruequenr.e
67WWUre
sislancl!
group
Ve~t111dav's Punle Solv!Hl:
DOWN 11 Locate 36 Bet•av one's
12 Action: P111fix eomritdll'li
t An en1i1ety 13 Oboe 37 Rega1dful
2 Corrupl 21 Lodgif,gs •O Fnmch city
practice 23 To1illess •2 Svntlletic
3 Mon11eDI amphibian rubb11
and 25 Mutineer: 43 Consume
New Vo1k lnfo,mal 45 TV equiomenl
4 Aging 28 Autl'lo1il:ed it11m
S Rulr.r:Abbr. ·body 47 Frui1wine
6 Sticky JO Noise god 48 Slowly: Music
wbMancc: 31 lop0dro1wei • 50 Accumulautd
lnlo,mal 32 Large B.C. goods
1 Prnvent salmon ')I E~1111ng1•
8 D1scouritging XI C11v of Latvia 52 Oep.esaioM
1nlluence1> 34 •·•• Nt.'$1111111'1· !iJ Spanish <nits!
9 Froodorn Imm ko· 54 B!1tek: Poo1.
danger N.H.L. s1a1 55 Price paid
10 PrognoMica· 35 Mc•ican ho! 56 U.K. native
hons sauce " 60 ···ha.,..
1
" 2 " ,.
• " JO JI
" ..
•
" .. .. .. )Cl SI Sl
"
" .. "
... "
I ..
JUDGE PARKER
HE MIGHT KAVE DECIDED
TO BOOK MEL'S BET, NOT
LET THE ORGANIZATION
KNOW IT!
MISS PEACH
O,:VEi..oP·
'tOUP.
; 'SE~se
Of
~UMoR
YOlo1 WI~
TO
OfVEt.OP
'>C>Mlr Sf~E
OF l<IAMO~?
10~. PLIMt.
10~
.,.. • (!] ""'-'"'-1'"1..J
DICK TRACY
I
ME rt.
6'1VE: ME
MY ·
I.ES~•.
IN OTHER WORDS, HINKLE
MIGHT THINK THAT MEL WAS
MAKING A &AD BET .•. ANO
HE'D ee A8LE TO PICK UP
AN EA5Y $100,000!
,~,~~-~TKAT'S
RIGHT!
TMl!O.Aft
NO lfff""4 !
WAfMA!
1111'! .JolCI ~
OH VIM!!
l ~Al~ TO
.,.,N•E THE
Hi.tMDlr
IN TMJ.f.1!
by Harold Le Doux
BUT WHAT WOULD IT 'M)ULD &E
HAPPEN IF THE EXTREMELY
ORGANIZATION UNHEALTHY FOR
DISCOVERED THAT H!M! AND I CAN'T
HINKLE WAS IMAGINE ARCH
DOING THl5 ? TAKING THAT
CHANCE!
WELL , WE MAKE
NO 61AA,..NTEi7 •
~E Cl#n:»U!~ Are HOPUE75.
NEXT!
by Mell
by Chester Gould
by Ferd Johnson
.AND HURRY ON
YOOR WAY BACK··
I WJINT THE EG"5 M~ .,> To BE AS FRE.Sfl
AS PoSSIBlo.
by Roqer Bollen
. ; , . . , ·,•
.... ·---
"
l
l
I
.. I rccomrncod we rcclccl Mrs. Turner club trca~urer n~ 'o m~ny
limes o~cr 1hc pasl year her figure" and lhc bank'~ figure' were
very ~imilar ."
• •
DENNIS THE MENACE
'UE lllllNT EXACll.'f 8fTi ME ... HE JUST STAll!W f.(TIN '
SQl,IETill~ 8UOf!E I CCUU1 LEf ~ IT ••
-
. .
Tuesday, October 22, 1•74 .,..,,,..,,---="""""'"--,,-,,-:----n l~~~~~;;;;~[;~·~--~·~·•gR~.~E~.;;;;;~1002~~G~•~n:·2··gl~R~.=E~.;-;-;-~21~0iii~~'G§•~n-.~,~·f•~R~-~E~-;;;;~1002~rruG§..,.§~·§·f•~R~.E~.;;;;~1iii~~~o;;;;~~~~··~l~R~.E~.~;::;d'~lllll!'i~G~•~11t~r~·~·~R~.1[·~~~ IB!I DAll V PILOT
a It.I. Genonl R.E. 11iiii
!J INVUTMENTS "VACANT" NEED INCOME UNITS? 1. 3 Blocks Te hclch ' I JOG ON THE
BEACH
$47,500
OWNl!R HILrS
You will fin d just about any kind of income ~~~ti'f:1)!t1 co:n~ OwnW Wll
property in our huge inventory. Several of ~rctt1ve bl.alnlldl= !"~~ Atta"ce I • • •
Linda Iii• Waterfront
Lovely 5 BR., 3 bath custom home. Large
<'Ourtyard. l!ler{sjip. Reduced to $195,000.
lhe duplexes are still under construction & aboYe )'Our bU1lnts1. 0 r· ,From fOUl' lanit living room
may have changes ma.de to suit your require-conw:rt tbe entire bl.llldln& with nreplaL't, relax wt.th · FINANCE • ~ -Custom Spanf1h Home rnents. lnto 11b: rental oft:ICi!• a view of a teduded prden O.W.C. lit T.O. llUT.!00. ..Uo. A bllllt-ln kll-that
Best buy In Newport,Shotta.
3 BR famJl.Y room, eltc.
tire~ -aaraae is eon-,·ertlbte de:n. New • i. • 1 ,
earpott. Minimum u.tilctep 1 • carefree UvlnJ'. yacant,
n'IO\le rirht l.n. Owiler will
help ftnMCe. CflU M&-.2313.
OPt.N ni •• ""S FUN ro IE NICI.I
IN NEWPORT SHORES 6 DR. 5 ba., art •tudlo. Elevator. Pool. 7000
sq. It. Ramp & float. $450,000.
Catch this ! \Vate rfro nt hon1e with a sandy
beach jut:.t i doors from a pool and tennis
co w·1 ! heatl v~ ll J1as 4 bdrms, 2 stories ond
ls vacant a1ld Lido Isle owner wants to 00
SOMETHING! Sale ($79,900), lease ($550/
mo.) or"tease option. New on the market.
70 Linda lilt DrJve
Prime 4~ It. lagoon lot -$150,00Q
For lnlormatlon on AU Homes & Lots Call BAYand BEACH
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR .. 625 .~30 00 ...
,UfllfQUE HOMES, RH1to'1 67S-6000
,.1-... • 1"3 E. Coast Hwy., Coron• del Ma r
'l ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l :~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~i l:,'l-G;;•";•;';•l;;R;.;E;.;;;;;;1;002; G•ner11 R.E. 1002 J• G1ner•I R.E.. 1002Gen1r1I R.E. 1002
ERRORS: Advertiser• LAKE TAHOE rJr Balb B p rt' *
J.\1 lloy-.1d,· 011 v" N t' ()}5 6101
should check their ads Beautiful lt•vcl lot, ready ro!l----"-'C..:.o.:...ca_.;...:ay'-!.....:..:rc:o:.!p:..•:..:..::_'e:.1::_:..:..._
build. Tm's cleaned. A 11 dally &: report error1 offs sit(' in1provements in. LAROE FAMILY NEWPORT DUPLEX
I mm• d I• t • I y. The Pa\•ed s1~ts. 005e to lake This is for you! 6 BR Near everythlng, 3 BR.,
DAILY PILOT a11ume1 & oo .... n1own, 2\, J\.11lea tp I I I 2 ba & garage ach Stnte line. 1\1 J\.file from + am. rm. + O C. or . · , e lltblllty for the first llkl area. 0¥i-ner open to Dad. Bltn. mus ic bar.& un it; one Unit avail-. at
In c 0 r r •ct Insertion ony exchange, cWi or much more ! $150,000. · $350 mo. F u 11 price
onl)'. tr11rlc. Submit all offe r s . 67~7000 $89.500. 642-7491.
General R.E. 1002 .ieneral R.£. 1002
·WESL 1': 'r' N .
·TAYLOR CO.
·REALTORS :;1111·" l !t4U
BIG CANYON C.C. -$169,500
Beaut iful setting for a beautiful home. Pret·
tier than a model. Brick patio . w/cover &
many extras. 4 BR, FR ~ formal dinlng rm . ·1;;;;;;;;:====1 $»'950. f V.A. REPO
1 South of Highway EASTBLUFF Sharl!_ Fountain Valley 2111 San Joaquin Hiiis Road 'l''------'llfll) Duplt''.( with beltt-income tn SUtrerc 1e-a-tr4 BR. home :rBR, 2·na:-nome. $12Nr NEWPORT CENTER, N.B. 644-4910 '! [ ..._ .. .,.. Corona del J\lnr for 11 5 Hu 1te fan1./din. rm. Dn., $775 costs & im-1oo2 1Jr,ce. Lot and a tialf bclo\\'· b • G•n•ral R E 1002 O.n•r1I R.E hl¢l\\'llY "'ith large sv.·im· Newly redec. O wner s pounds, paymts. $347 • · •
niinl:'. pool. $84.500. anxiou s! $70,500. 1no., P .I.T .I. Full price Just Listed
, Gen.,al R.E. 1002 64+7270 640·8484. .$35,250. 556-8800 I • T •r----·---rvrne e"ac•
ARTIST CHALET CB REALTORS m Owner Will Carry
A. T BEACH Local Oil" T Se y An "'" "'"' 3 BR Homo 4 i.ces O rve OU on a la:-ge ll"tx135 ft corner
POOL $35,950 .~;;:;;::::,1~~~~~~~5~~~;;;~~~~5!~/ Jot with \Yarn1 natural 111>0d St•i·hidcd enrry 10 enormous ii 0.neral R.E. 1002 G9neral R.E. 1002 and brick 1exture1, 11elf
stucllo llvlfl& room \vtt h 20 REAL ESTATE cleaning ove11 and n1uch ·----~~ -in~~ &: sun te?Tllce I h a I BACKS TO PARK
"' "'""''' p "" l • l 0 "' h:11·tior. Studio loft & library + IW't bRr. Gourmet kit·
l,l.en, hup ma11er with
OCEAN \7 IE"N. Abund!l.nl
u,ge of .,.,()()(\~ & gl11.st1 adcb
1,~ a r 11 st i c atmosphere.
9$3.-7&81.
f""""ifiij,
'tiiiD1 --·
List
Your
tlome
J-lct'C
Fn-e ol Chall;C
Phone
6734100
Harbor Invet1tmcnt Co.
PreatiP>u1 tri-tevel in prime
location kleally s 11 u a t e d
be.eking 10 park. Impress\\~
r-ntry. Huge llvtng room.
Formal dining, B an q u e r
kitchen. Separate den. 4
huge bedroon1s in c I u de s
mammo!h master s u I I e .
Separt1IC' laundry r o o m .
Secl u ded putio. \\'ell
decot•ated. Like ne \V &
ready tor you. F'u!I price
$8!!,900, Call to sec 842-2!"135.
OPEN TIL 9 • IT'S FUN TO B£ NICE!
SALESPERSONS
Lachenmyer:
Realtor
LAGUNA HILLS
... Neat as a pin & twice as
nice! A real condominlun1
b1cy in one of our fastest
grO\vlng a r e a s . Existing
~tlA loan can be iw:umed.
134.500. BEST BUY lll
Harbor View Homes
Beautiful 3 BR., 2 b a.
"Carmel Model", Profess,
decor. Oflerul at $72,500
CORBIN-MARTIN
Realtor• * 64+7'62 *
FORTIFY
YOUR SELF
For those "rainy days" and
stop worrying, See this
.on a lot" 3 Br _unit_ &:
a l br unit its only 3 doors
h'om the Blue Pacific in
Newport Beach, and ha s
POTENTIAL PLUS!! Ohly
STI.500. AND YOU 0 W N
THE LAND! co: Ts
. WALLACE
REALTORS
2. ii the ulttmate ln euy Uv·
JulJl lilted - A very sharp Lna. Tbrff fam.Qy 11 i :c e
l:)ru.nd new duplex Ln \Vfft bl!iarooma. Comp'\ et e &
Newport close tG the ocean. carefree Ca1Uarnla way of
Very lqe: thret bedroom Ufe. Stroll ta pool Ir tennla
unit and cozy enc bedroom cou.rtt. New ahq· carpet.
unit. $U8,000. Walk through the aurglna J, aur1 and experience I 11 e .
A ch::lracter "dupltx" hi Don't waif. Phone t o d a Y C.0.~1-Two CUIO 11 t l I e 963-'i761. '
houRsie separate _po. t I o 1 , OPEN rr£ • • IT'S roN ro BE NICI/ ~~!ii~;~~7;·~ Rlftllh •·1:.:~~IEW ~* ;
EASTSIDE 5 BR .. 3 batl>" tam. rm.
~THr. nr.111.l
ESTl\TERS I
-------~
. .
\ \IJ.L'
1:1 :\l.I'
" .. , ••• ''· t .... , .. " •.
IRYINE TERRACE
4 Bedrooms or 3 &: makl' •
room, 3 bathJ:. Alove-in
condition. Mnnkured yard
-with ahady-paUo, It wlU he
love at fi1'11t sight when you
see. thls delightful home,
located on one of the better
streets in Irvine Temi.ce.
Going • go~ • gone at
FERGUSON-HESTER
R•1ltor1, Inc.
1401 Dove St., Ste. 220
Newport Beach
13:1-9711
3 BEDROOM-
2 STORY LOW
DOWN PAYMENT
$29,500
Assume payment under $200
per month. Enclosed patio.
Bike to beach. Playground
-2 pools. C l ub h o u se.
Garden like community Jlv.
ing. ()y.•ner will assist In
finance. Won 't last. Call to-
day 96U76'1.
OPEN Tit. I• "'$ FVN TO BE NICE/
. ;;r.;;l · THEREllL l
, q•1l1b·d ', ESTATERS --~~·
MESA DEL MAR
,BARGAIN
Thia popular 4 Bdnn, Z Ba
ls truly a fixer. BUt It'•
priced way below market at
$39,990. The owner hu gone
& needs a quick sale. Call
556-2660
·~ES
DOLLHOUSE w/wet w . 1'•· patio; «> I ft. lot. Vacant. $164.MM>
Hardwood F1oored be au t 'I OWner S73-2'111
sraced by trult trfff on (~16M Evenlrlp) txt.ra spac\ous lot $29,500. --"'"--'=-""~~~
l ... Qup,_~ ~ Balboa ,..nln1ut1 1007 Iii • .._.. • BALBOA ISLAND e
P LI 526 So. Bay Front 1 Gp•rc: .. ' Home on 1% Joi. ''/gar. ,
712001920 . ' apt. &: exclusive use of
MOO ctuAll It Nl'M'OIT 11404 pier &: fioat. Estate aale
Advertisers may place
lhelr ads by telephone
8:001.m. toS:lOp.m .
Monday lhru F tlday
8lOtlOOnSalurday
<Xli'I'AMESAOFFICE
330W. Bay
642-5618
NEWPORT BEA91
3333 NewpOtt Blvd.
&12>S6'18
HlNMNGTON BEACH
17875 Beach Bl'ld.
541>!220
LAGUNA BEACll
1186 Clenney re
4!M-046$
SAN CLEMENTE :m N. El Camino Real ...,...,.
NORnt COUNTY
dial (ree540-1220
CLASlll'IED
DIADUHH
Deadline for copy 4r: kills
11 5:30 p.m. the day
before pubUcatlont._ ex· tt'IJt. ror Sunday • Mon·
d ay Editions when
deadline is Saturday. 12 -· C:USSll'llD
sUbjecl -to c o u r t con-
firmation. Terms, cash as
Is \\'/10 ~{, dcpo!llt. $121,000.
mlnimum. Written bldA arc
invited. Send to; Geon!;e D.
LaMoree, Executor, I 9 3 O
Rlvenidc Dr., Los Angeles,
Ca. 90:>39
PENINSULA-FIXER
This 2 Br, l Ba dollhouft'
need• TLC. 1 blk f r o m
ocean. Xlnt rental arei;a. Fee
land. R-2. Take advantage
"MiITE'if'Ji;:t TY
642-4811
BAYFRONT
Pier A float. 3BR. +guest
apt. Try owner ftnanc.
$55,000 Down
~tarahall Realty 61:HGOO
CUSTOP.! oettntront duplex.
$149,500. Financlna: a v a 11 ,
Coast Properties f73..5410
Corona del Mir 1022
Don't Call Me
A Duplexll
I'm a delightful 2BR and den
owners · ·sil! ... cc with bcau-
titul prJvate ~unds . PLUS
A charming 1F : rental with
private yard .-:unently pro.
duclna: 225/mo.
ALL
on a generous 47xll8 lot in
the be1." IOUth-oJ:·hY,.Y loca·
lion. $89,500 ftrm
Call Mf.7211
associated
BROK EAS-AEAL.lOllS
lOJ"> W Bolb"<' t.11 l6tl
Spacious Irvine --S4Mt41-
tO~n Evenin91)
~=== l iisHfi:A~RfiiPri:MflEflS!jA~ViiEfiRfiiD~E
ftlOl'UTIOMS
ERROHS : Advertisers
lhookl cheek their ads
daily & N?port errors
Immediately. THE·
DAILY PILOT assumes
liablllty t« the first in·
ccrrect insertion only.
macna6 I Irvine
realty
IRVINE TERRACE
:t1bedroo1n ho1ne -$67.500~ ~ Lighl & airy
home \v/k 1tchen br kfst. a rea. P ool size yard
-professionally landscaped. \Valler King
G#-6200. (U>BI
NEWPOR T HEIGHTS
c:usto1n 3 bedroorn hon1e \\'/view of Jtarho r
& park . l~xceptionally priced at $84.500.
llarriet Perry or Barbera Aune 642-8235.
I U5ii)
IR VINE TERRACE -
• ARCHITECTURAL DELIGHT !
Nc\,·ly li sted ! Ocea n view! 4 hed rooms &
family room. Beamed ceili ngs -gourmet
kilclten. $135,000 Dona Chichester 64U235.
'(U3-I) .
DOVER SHORES -60" ON BAYFRONT
2-story. Spanish, Med. cus1on1 home. 4000
sq. rt. -4 lJedrooin s -family rm . -forma l
dinin,ii . -built-in bar. Plumbed for pool.
!27o.00. llarriel Perry f~2-8235. (U35)
IOI OOY9t Ori•• &42·12lS 1644 MKAtlhw &44·1200
Newpor\ lh1eh, C.lilou1Mi t 211l
CJ Coldwell Banke
7'h% ASSUMABLE
LO"AN
You value wise 1hopr>en had
better hurry on this one?.
Clean & pretty with an
assumable FHA laa.n. Aak
about listing No. 11310. Call
MH<ltl
BcauUfut 4 BR. 2 Ba Corner
Pool Home. 4 Years oew
with lovely Atlium, Beamed
Ceiling, large family room
& kitchen. Home centers
on unique decorators pool.
,,,. """" -won·• "'" Walker 11 lee Call for con1pl cte detalls. U-
546-58811 ~==·=·=·::'::'::"::'::"==~ -HERITAGE
.-• REALTORS
ON THE CANAL
1\\'0 1toey, 5 bedrooms.
Plush comfort thruout. Deck
to Water's E'Aie. Sacrifice
-Vacant. S19,500.
CANCELLATIONSo
When kllling an .ad be
sure lo make a rtt0rd of
the KILL NUMBER
given you by your ad
taker as receipt, of your
cancellaiion. This kill
Tl\lmber must be pres en·
ted by the advertiser fn
case of a dispute.
CANCELLATION OR
CORRECT ION OF
NEW AD .BEFORE
RUNNlNG:
Every effort ii made to tiU or t"On"ect. 1 new ad
that has been ordered,
but we cannot guaran·
lee to do IQ unw the ad
~~!_•red In th1
DIME-.(:UNEADS:
I YR WAJIR4NTY
INC LUDfO
Ol'EN DAILY
Spacious 3 bedroom '' O I d
Corona"'' <:banner with a
tamlly room, formal dining
area and a S UPE R
KITCHEN. Try mid 80'a.
319 Poinsettia
• · Call 6T":>-7225 . -' .. . ~' . . .. .
\ \LLE)
HI . \LI'
~ f!f J.lf, tNTI PPAl'if <;I 0
HAUNTED '
By happy memor le 1 k
biendly rtalton! ! Y o u r
choke of 2 lmm:le. 3 bdrm.
Corona Highlands ho m e s .
One ruodernilh, o n e pro-
vincW. ~$12,50'.l ea.)
uo1 .. .,11y Raalty
OOl'.11 E. Cs1. Hwy. 6T:H.510
YOU WIIL LOVE n'! Ne111
'unuaual dupJex. 1 5 BR, These ads are strictly
cuh In advance by mail
or at any one of our of·
flCl!S. NO phone orders.
De1dllne : 3 p .rn .
Fridly, C:O.ta Met• or. nee lr:.)12 noon at all
branch offltes.
3 ba house &: 1·2 BR. 2
ba. \Vood panelina:, stained
glue. Frplc'1. Beach Foot-
bridge 1 blk. 4211 Goldenrod •
0 ,1 n er I Builder. 875--6921
Open 11).S P~I
TllE DAILY Pti.OT
reserve& the right to
classifyJ edit, censor or
refuse Mn)' 1dYer·
Usement, a nd to ch1nge
ks rltea fr re1ul1Uons
wtthout prior notice.
C:USSll'llD
MAUMG~S P.O. &ox·t560,
Costa Men -
SAVE . $8,340.
New Unique Duplex. 4 Br
Ir Den, 3 baths and 2 Br,
2 Ba. Ov.•ner/Buildtt 1ttust
S e ll ! $13 9 ,000. 428 Goldenrod. 675-6921
BEST BUYS
5 Br, 2 &, C.M. $47,950
4 Br, den, N. Ht& $57.000 3--2 Dplx, N.B. 190,CXXI
SPARLING RLTY 83W2Mt
GREAT LOCATION
I Block to heh. 1&2 BR duplex on 40· lot. Tty mid 80'1.
Deni.kin Auoclatn 6'B-7311
SEEK & ,IND• Hanlwoodt
BDRCHIKYPDLITANLAWR
EUEBCLWOODLUNEDGUOM
!NDI HN UWANO MUDN USTU
HTO RI CDR 08EODHR E O UO
C8UC HERRYREYW CYSCY8
EENYBHBIUNEAHB80RYS
CHBRNUO RBGABP l80CRE
GLBROBTT
.,
Tutsdat. Ocl.Obtr 22, 1974 DAILY PflOT "'=:::-:r:ru:~-;;m..,..,,===-:-,.-,,...,==,..,.-----= 1,.---=-,,..--:======~-;;;:;:ii";;::;:::=pp;;:;:; .... ;;;;-, u I• UMt Unfurnl•hod Ho-·c~•::"':=":.•::d::•l;..:Mo=.;r:_....:l.:iffi: 1 Huntington IMch 1040 It.wine 16" L19un. NJtiuel 1052 Newport Buch Income rope •• , VIM rn
Modorn 2 bedrooms, '"'lh FRANCISCAN I ;,;=T:.U_R_T_l_E_R_OC_K...:..:;.;.;I OWNER mUJI .. u. ' BR. ll'Ml Newport Hou .. /Unll• BEACH DUPLEX 1:C::,:•::•::l•~Mo::::10=---.:3.;;12:;4 Huntln1ton INch ~ Newport IN<h
heme on R-2 lot. Doublo FOUNTAIN BROAOMOOR 2 BA din rm, frpic, boo1,1:11 llave Nr"''port t..ot U:l.500. NEWl'ORT 3 Br. Condo, rnoslly IUJ'TI, 2 SUPER SHARP 4 BR, .2 <l.BR.., M ba. dbl ca
&lrtl,yll $66,SOO. MODEL HOME BEAUTY nn. S53,900. ~ En&Uah Vu 6 rms m.ooo -I Br einpty • v.· 11. 1 hr r , Ba, ~Tplc, CrplJ. Dr P s . Ka.rait. elect pr do 0 675-MOO Lalce Forest 1054 SAnta. Barban. 2 ac Plnet $32 37$ ti dbl pool $265 c over Cl d Pll t i o, b ltns, openen \\'t!t bar . S • One Of the models! Central Luxur lou1 livln&. hn· 500 Ac ln..U. IU' lake SM,tnl.
2
, N ... ,,...,. ... zrf8~tei~~~3oos · d la h\\'&.lher. &autUully crptini 4r. dr'P' pool ""taC VI I N air, hl1bl1 uparaded maculAte mtnt condlt1o11 7 ., INTEREST SellJ1mde .. <M'ner MS-8532 C.Or;:coua story " .. .,_.
41
ln n d~cav e d . No !l!e O\'triookina .eoU c ou r •e
• Ctrpelt, drapes, \l.'AU cover-from 4Mke root to 1hag ~.' Sinta Ana 1080 Beach duvlcx! 5CIO ft . to Laguna ltlC'h 31 SJS6./36:i. 1no. AA. for Bev clOlic to achOOl1 & churclMir """lAl.TY inas 4 1peclal eUectll 4 ct111>e:Unzt Owner m U 11 2-STORY &111 and Sandi Just S32.3'rn "''t•RALD BAY or Dalt•, ~561 or afW &. f'uhkln l1lan:J. $ 4 7 '-BR., incl . muter w/atwdy 1nO\"t'. , •• $29 000 buyi; 11 {down) or 1ubmlt r..i "' • & 1t.'knd1, 963-1186 003-1788 Eulbluff arta. C.11 lo
$100,000.CatneoShon!s•ffiih· tfln ., ceramic garden LAKE !~REST '"'· 1,,,ba honlc 11ca r Calhe d r a l cctllnf s, lum1 · 3,,.Bi::._ • klBa, ~i~1 "!ENT \Vhlle -11.i .... •= *<iWN -W!LLSAGRll'JCE + prlvatn sundeck! Form. I& •• a,ual~ COUNTRY SIDE Full~ r~ nt<at, clean on your lcl'llltl, NEW1.tlousc \\'f-ll lur~od or un-SAVE YO U R OOWNPA\'. app1,, 548--3750.
be kl
•·•-n •·· •-r ' " tt = v -"-I •-t le '' ew, a ... -u Ii e. ..,.,... '' ' ''-... ,.. ~ NEIVl'ORT ""'Ot I I I~ la.ndli hon1e w/prlvate ach "'"c UllA "" • " • Bc•uWul 4BR .. ~ full bathJ. "'arner. Lot 75xUD, roof 2 ~..,paces. t.'(!ram"' ~69 a n10. refund 011 purchue. ..,,..,. • 'u fOI' im111"<1 le.le. 4 Br, 2~~ bJt .. tn china closet. HUie ...__~.. , Sh b l I 1 .,,.,. old, ~ui>nllt t1lA or kuchens. 4 car iara.ge. True ~a~ .. ,vnu to own )'OUt own b e a u I lf\11 1r.t1{na-lat(l:t
64, fam nn. Broker1 ~I· lam. nn. W/Open bee.ms ·-• -..:...---• -ot!:::::r~' Guo r ~ ~ iiu" ~ G"i' vo-1i1cl Co. R en 11 or s, deluxe wilt,, d bedroom plwi Newport B.1ch 3169 ~. ibr, 1 ~ bu , hlUns, Be<lroum, ftinlll)' r Qom ,
co1ne! Open howie Sat A + t»1ck trplc. 2 Ralsf<I ,.00 aw.rl',l".1:l,0 , ltACM d , ~--54S-9:W6 2 bedroo1n. Good t c rm • . -r1r schools Stt ~-4 .. j.3 polbhed WflOd lloora. bean
Sun 4626 Cortland Dr. {213\ patios w/open wood cover, Cllitoni rape•. ·-.5" ex· Full prlca just $120,500. See CArtfEO SHORES 4 br, 3 --.--~ ' ;;i. 1-n·lllt1ga, \'cat"' Le a 1 e .
4T2-0686 toi,i.'f!rina lttes, ex I er lo r • TURT.:.EROCK •R pooedw•t~·-y'sg•.""i"t:,•1en "'•~A~ [ to l.(ive! Cull now (714) bu, Fantastic VIEW. hn· Ll:!AStE l~f0i\11E1. for S~-JIU S,:,T5.00 mth.
· lighting. Company transfer Pre1\dent llome. 4 8 , ot "w11 I~ 7:i2-1100. nied. occ'y. Liit!. op 1 , rnon h. u1c uc 1ng a-a1-uetK'r. Cole ol Ne~ Rltr& ::C;:;O•:;f,;;•.:M=H:.:•;.._ __ 1;,;02:.:.;4 I-· =°"::<ly'-'S&;,~500"'-'.i'Bi;la;';. ;:;962-::..:55::U:.. 3 & Oen, A.C, prof. dee, BAR.GAIN at $ 4 4 • 0 0 0 · ..... ...,,.._ Jiii lNVEST~IBNT DM SION , "67~>-~74~08;..,,.....--,,--=I VACANT. CLEAN, Ir NE;\\'. 675-551 I
btuut. ldacpe. On quiet cul• ~ ~nclpals "only. 'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilr·liiiiifrl .1~ LY REPAINTED. Fnnnlys
Nlliar Propo•od Marino 4·PLEX d~,.c. >'ea Laod. 0 o o d NEIV I.AKE>'RONT HOMES • 1~80~~ S:,"" ~~in~'. ~~il".;;;~~.:'J<i r<qu .... I H""A"R"B"b~R°'V"1;;E~W~H;;;.OM'1':~ ~~~h1bea~~~~ 4d~:'t'r~ 1 •3 Sale or !xchange Tet~lL J:9·:'WN~~ From $54.950. l0"1't. or 20'i".. Acireage for ••I• 1200 \Vtr pd. uat .. M2·2'll7 3 BR, 2Bn. $415
bdnn., 2 bllth home with Excell~nt Huntington Beach ASSUM& 11/J"• LOAN :~v~i. 4A~c~~/~u~r!'t~a~ BY 0\VNEJt Dciert I{ o t 1 .::=~=;~~~="'~=1:S:;•::n:..C.::.;l•::;mc,•:;n;;.t,;;• __ .;.3176 Hunt. Harbour 3242 I Sier! awuy trom park' • riimlly rni A ! I r e p I a c ~ . Location, 4 -Two Bedroom, M many more features. 1 -E e m . SchOol. S\Vlmmina
Bullt·LM, dlahwuher. J..uah 1 Bath units with patioa Brand ntW, S BR. 0 s 1 liawlrlm Realtors 800-3425 Springs: 2 ~;. acre pan:c VA ASSUMAll.E 2 OC'e .1 front, fully I urn TOV.'NllOUSE 4 hr, 2\1 ho , Pool & R~. atta. .
low·malnlenance yard 1 . and carports. Ottered !or des 1rab 1 e · In denland & 10 acre parct>I. "51)/&Cl'f'. FOURPLEX deluxe condo1. 2 BA: h & pool &: gar. A\'aU. tor II R. C. TAYLO~ COl\lP"M'Y
$39.000. Call 541>-l'm. $89,000. Call~ ¥s't'OCiorai~ k locaUOn. Ml .. lon VleJo 1067 =: cf~;r:'c~1}i'~riu~o Lo"· intl!n!st & h.i&h apen-f pool, iiar:..,~1~167, utll incl. wks,,.. bcgtn'a;= Oct. ~ .. ~~.~ REALTO~~V£1..0PER$ ' a· OWNER ' d ' dable. Only 4 yean olJ. sm. 1n31 ~"· to ach. S3~. mo . ......-v.., ... ftl!ll!IL. 4 BR, ~ ba Deane hom l' Vall Lake vie: 2-10 acres Sell or exchange. HouM1 Unfurnished a t. 1 LAROE; 2 ~,-, •• [ J
Y $000/acre. Tenru1 or lra e. f 6Pl\i '1•A-• 4 br 3 •,,~o L.oaunolla•ch I041 !.!..":'&~~'." 18 ml"'""' 01
H•m•t. "'" 1£ .• ~ulacal•I l General· 3202l;l;;rv;;l;;n;•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;3;;2'"~I ~·~t~~e~~t! ~~'; ~~ •-into 3 SO BCl'l' Par C ~I 1 · Lg. IHlilkl leads to "llttr'f
$600/acre. Your tenns. Tax edge.· Tenn I 1 &. ~ Newport&,lch 1069 :the\ I el', agrl1·ulturc, or Prop--LIH .ALA l.IHTALS *RENTALS* prlv1Jeue1 u'Jll: !Nie! ~ Harbor Blvd., C.M. • PALATIAL !fmu.ll 1·aoc-he1. 4~1Da> ;ff .. ~920 \"Ulage J, Unlv. Pk. ~ • ._., Green brook PALACE WITH POOL BEACH l-400 OUAllST. NlWllOtl llACM WI M'tC!AUlf IN H.vtel 3 Bit., 2~S ba. " ........ SU'i BEAUT . 3 Br 2 Ba. lrplc;
Ocean vie\\•, jacuzzi too. 3 Ce metery Lott/ C 12 U its ; i Unlver11il1 Perk
1
d i car R:!IPW~
Beautl!ul5bedroom11,3 car fanlge anll bonus .COTTAGES Crypts 1soo' omer n < vC~ MOUSIS 3 BR .. 2!>8 ............. ~ ~~e~~··s pr-ldkrrri:
baths, U~raded throughout, room's new . Spectacular OCEAN VIEW-JilEW O\\'NER has moved fr 0 m Twin 6--:-U. Bldgs--. CIJij :z'~S. 3 BR., 21~c>~c;.:~~$3ll0/$4:.!;, \.'e11c-urr IITT'a. ~. &7.i-1111~
O,r-l e.n I Gardens· ~pelnl"Ol'-i;.i!eAbedrool ~ """•· Dramatic 3BR, den. 3 bo., Stutc & \\•bhes to sell bul'i11 I All 2 BR._ some 1v/be:am NIWPOllT 1 ..,,., c.M. Mt•l:llJ 3 Bil., 2 ba ......... $400/42.'i Newport Helaht1 3270 Boat/trailer access. ,..u groom. ant1.11hc Ii 3 fpl's, gourmet kltch,/load· C D M i;lots 11 & B of lot 656 cell. Mas111\'e slone Cac1ng. • · Greentree Honics ~
675-8600 family enlertalnlng home. ed with wood &: ai'l u 1 s . , , • in Vis1u dcl ti.!01· pl o ! . Lgc. pt1ln1 tl'ees. Be a u t . STUDE.i~TS. bach $100/$l35 2 BR , 1 bn th .. , , , , .$315 2 BR, nice yard, incl. stove,
Pl t.'Olltract of sale. S145,000. T"·o on one lot • Qnc Is Park, CdM. S450. for bo1h. Prime location $184,940. CLh:AN I Br dplx Sl40 118 '1 un .. 2~·~ baths ....... :450 ~·riy. 673-2"6 Vlsl.N t IQuaU ~ Owner will can-y at Bc;ii Puclfic View M c mo r la 1 n1n intained, Moderate rents. Your cholc:e, nll areas. Turtlerock ref .. gll.~ & wal~r. No pelS,
.I• a•:rv Eq:• . $AV'E INTEREST a real doll house the other Call Law OUit-e 01• David \Vesley N. Taylor Co. Slv/ref. C&D, beach <'iOSl'. 4 BR., : baths ......... $•175 1 San Juan ' "="""=" .. '"=·,,=·="'I opertl•• " 2 BR, den, 1 ~2 Ila. Ten'iflc ha& "cha.rcn"?! $65,000. I ..'.P.:.·.oDcLa""'"'""'-""'7:::'"'-''!l='---l "R"E"A"LTO!-"'ru:::S:_-~·,;644~-4"9"101 SEVERAL } 1!1', NB & 3 BR., 2 ba •• '' ••• $47:1'1:/adnr I ' .. IT 3171 •~ 752•1920 view of oce11n. AsG1.t1nable HOUSE AND 2 UNITS Laguna Sl65/$19'j yrly, !urn College Park C1pl1tr1no
MESA VERO& NORTH 1400 CM.!All5f, NlWH>1n'11,1,cH 7% loan. Mldng $51,500. Act PENINSULA Commercial Prpty 1600 L n,g u n a Beach. Sell or N'EX~r-2 Br 4-Plex $!80 Util 4 DR., 2~~ bn ........... USQ NE.-"V 3 br, :.11 i.. uplex,
lltust sell ~I Our Dre~ RE,OSSESSIONS now! W ER WILL exchange. $83,500 tor WI! pd pet OK-avail •) P1trk II Lg. 11vt. yd./dbl1 pr.. ,-11
Houze. Lea ng State. FOR RENT A real Cape Cod cutie . 0 N Rlta J\lyen Real Estate, llIOiiE In 2 Br house Slis 3 DR.,. baths .......... Wi} comm. park, $235. 492-9550. gq ft. 2 Sto'\i 4Br, 3 ba, For Information and location Beaut lBR condo. 2 ha, furn. Has separate utility room, CARRY 8 1/2~. •194-5420; ~1701 Nu crpts, fncd & i&rSif?. Udo Isle • Eve. 492-2137
Huge Fam m. Wa t e r of these fHA Ir: VA ho1ne1, nr ocenn. $350/Mo. STUDIO dlnlng room, fireplace, love. 58' x _ 100' lot on Ne1,·port SINGLES 2 Br house $200 3 BR., 2 ba. • • • • • • • • • • • .1500 ,;:;,:c.,;=:..::"c--~~1
IOftcner, sprinklers. 0 n l Y contact • apt. IW'll. $165/~lo. Inc. ly tree shaded patkl. A Bl\'d., Ne\\•port 8 e ac h . Industrial Prpty. 2100 Chld & l -llo & car. 4 BR ' 2 ba ...... ' ...... $6:1) SPANISH duplex, new 2 Sr, ~'9f!n 8!'1 ~%,~11""g ;;: . KASA II.AN utll's. super little house! $68,500. S.)j,000. JO 'k do\\·n. owner ;,:;_:;.:;o;.;;c...c,c:....:_--:-F'At.tILY~·pl.:-3 Br, 2. Ba CALL 552.7500 2gar8::ie dlgerps. y~t:!'~r!:~
M" •'-•• WE HAVE OTHERS 11ill carry. Cail ff'r in· LEASE I.000. &q. ft. wJoffice PIS/$225, R.pplns & xtras • VISION • s"=~. -196-78T
6
Ms. pymnt. 3323 Nevada, CM. Real E•t•te "'~ Am~rlcan Home Realton NEWPORT SHORES for1nntion, r RE-S T I GE 111J.220V, h.at, hot \\1!'.·· new FRPLC :; Br. 2 Ba S285 ~. ~;;. ~:;;~~:o;=--OI
s:>
7
-7067. • .. ........................ 1 494-7513 or <&M-1001 J!Ot.1ES 66-6&16 bldg., gd. location. &'5-114-1 HB .Stv/ref, kklG & pot ok. r\EW 3 BR, 2 Ba Condo,,,,.;
TWO HOUSES Custom fam1'h. Room .,..,:rnii'aNio. ii"""iiiii'';.iiii"'"r.;·.., 2sR. Eastside eos1a MCl!o, HUGE 4 Br 2 aa honlC REALTY dbl 111lach. 1araae. 0rps, $22,500 EACH
1J A lee I.rid . two be d r o o ni lot 50x.,.'l(JO, C·2 Zone. Near Loh for tel• 2200 S325 F'tplc, 'appln&, bi&: 2 crpts & bltns. m.o. mo +
Ownc>r will carry financing. CAIA.NA. me.1n uni! with la nice one Ralphs, 0 w n e r' $39,500, I ;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 "r U 1' redPk hlleel"',n1~ . S50. cleaning fee. &31.0109
Eullllde c.o.ta Mesa near Plus 4 bedrooms -one mile • • • ~~ .. !. ~~·. 5 u Pe 1· cll33-e:o:"8693""-------11 SEE US FOR YOUR NEEDS n v. ar n er, ... vine Sant• An1 3280 traruportatlon and shopping. from the lurf. Privla~rt!ll-.. ready to BBQ & rela."t ............... ' 2000 Zoned for 7 Units ALA Rent•ls 642-131) RENTALS ---=---
,., IQ II ~ : ~:Ua~l~m~":r ~7001r:~ ~~p l>:i°y ~~~!it; WEST NEWPORT Income Property • • VACANT 2 Br hOuSf', nr. 2 BR., 2 ba., nev.· ....... S,175 3 BDWit & 2 BAnt, lllll:C ua ft. -and only $38,500. T Corner 3 JQIS, 50:.:150 each Newport Fwy $90., rountry 3 BR .. 2 ba., bonus ...... $425 Jot, $300. New crpt & paint, PIGC• :'!~!"t 3~or ba!1:it~\~m!~ 4 ON A LO I~ ~osl a M~11a. R-2 Zone. setting, ki<ls. pets, slngles. 4 BR. 2 hn. lam ....... ,$425 $290. Lots of lrtts, $290. ....._,__..,__ P.6.N(. PL£.aa, F II has brt k frplc On 33rd St. near beach and $72 500 I $36,500. f.1ex1ble. 2 Br ~ Costa 1a1esn, 4 BR' 2'' ,be I $435 Century 21, ~ ,'
r"f"liill :Il"-~~ ' •••• IL& e &di~t":Ccess lo fhe pool: shops. Lots of potential t\\1) ' Qu intard R~alty &12-2991 kids, pet1, singles. 2 Br, 4 BR ., 2\~ ba,, ,am •• $475 Senta Ana tf~ihN 3212
-• 11 '" 842·74'1 1s~., Do"•n & owner will bedroom, large living rooin PRJl\1E Costa 1afesa location. . 2 Ba teahouse Newport ·• ' " am ·•
1400 OUAl~lt Nin~ a "' ! 1 1 and dining room. Lar ge }"our individual pr i va I e TWO LOTS totaJ 104/209. Beach, $19.i Vacant 2 Br 2 BDfu.l house on 1 ael"l',
NEWPORT BACK BAY I ll::llZ=:ill=:!=:im::::;= I help ~th na n c n i · sleeping porch. $59,500. h 0 me1. Attached ga!llgcs. Choice location, Huntington Huntington Beach, alngle1 hor1CS O.K Sl71i. nM>.
Lar&e:. Quality constructed POOL OR Sl
49
. · 675•7225 All have private patios. 2 Bea('h. 7.oned bus Ines s, ok, will give optlon. 2 Br ~lt·-
f am 11 y ho me on ~ _i bedrooms lo each. l?ark..Uke Professional or o ff ic.e a · Balboa $215, 1ingles or F Ltttflb -cul·de-aac. Heavy Ghake BEACH -~Oet/¥H,, ~etting. Qui e t s treet. $21,!nl each. TERl\f S. famllie~. Agt. Fee. 979-8430 HM1 urn/ '"
root, ru•tlc exterior. T-Benuilful • •~-m, h"-REAL liSt'A'fE Shopping & tran•port•lio" writ" KANPAR, 1993 K..,I LANDLORDS! CD M CUTIE bedrooms, two bffths, family ~ .,.,.........., -~ " within 3 blocks. PRIDE OF' Rd.,. Kihei.· Maui, HaWail , • •
room and heated pooL add-0n OlympfC slze pool OWNERSHIP UNITS! Ca.II or Ph. 808-l!79-l5:lll. W.? SpeclallZe in Newpor!:
S57,500. iv~lld~::f. 8~~ire J;.~ 4!»-M~ Glenneyre ~~316 for previe\\'. 17141 752-1700. PROri10NTORY Bay Lot, Beach e Corona del ~far e
One bedroom PLUS -llOl.llh
of hiKhway -new carpets
,-$275. but submit offers.
389 Mira Loma. C.OSta Mesa carp e t in g . up i' raded lriYESTMl-~l!~l finest location, \Vlll sell or Ii Laguna.. Our Rental Ser· Cal~=l~ppt thruout $36,~. MONARCH BAY NBWPOlfT HEIGHTS ! IN~~llij·~~'i!ll l ~df:s.f~~ sml apt ~~~V~wF to Yout Try ~~i::;np~k~
MESA VERDE l!ff££ill!IJlll TEltRACE Ba,y & oceoa view. Complete-, Mounrn, 0.Hrt, NU-VIEW RENTALS Dey• 552-7000 Nl9hh ;wmru llll Magniftcent "'hlte wa t e r ly -~-led & decorated. 5-.,..," ~ .... 324.9
VA-FHA --\'lew lrom the befit location 3 BR~ ba. Firlit time Resort 2400 ,,,._.., or ~ 2 BR Condo .... $%35/mo L&e T\l.·o bedroom, t\\'O bath, Assume 5%% FHA loan 1 <=> JOI In Terrace. 3 BR. 3 BA. NE\\'PORT lleach bach. 2BR CondoA ••.•. S265 1i:S275 large sundeck ~t llrect.
or W\VII, Korean or Viet· 3,000 sq It., aeeluded pool otffltfiJ6:·r>HOME ...._...._8 ,,.0 LUXURIOUS 3br. l'tlnmmoth duplex S:L:i:l., near beach, 3 BR C.ondos ..•.• $263 & S2'm $340. CllAMI' · •
C.D.M. TtNNIS
nam vets buy VA. Even $795. i,i.1th jacuni in lovely walled ~-u nu t.1ountain Chalet Adjacent 1ingJC11 ok. lBR H.Jmes:. $300, 1325, $335 CD M.
It )-'OU bou&hl VA bef01·e. patio. Cathedral celling in 5,016 Beautiful sq. ft. orj sand 'INCOME HOMES to Hfts, u.;,coo, &12-7630 Costa Ml'Sll 1 BR. fenced, J BR HDmea . $360,$375, $395 ' • • • t
$-44,450. Tot•I Cash Vet1 LJ\, ~'el bar. Everything ~ ~· Largest ava1 . lot N-" TRIPLEXES "' = Rool E1toto Exch-2800 util pd., n75., aih,n&le olk. 4 BR Homes .•• $335.$3!1?1 $425
4 BR. 2 BA. new cpls .Ir: to make Jif~ comfortll.ble. •--· r:." -··;wu •-. Huntington Beac ~·pvt RANCH REALTY O••erslze ti~ bedt~om , I£ .• ~IUllClla_ll l paint. Vacant. Close to 180 d egree unobstructed NEWPORT SHORES 8:1ut.~!!1~.Bp1;t~a~·,:re;~ 17 Unil'I, close to \\18.ttt, in home, ~Br, 2 Ba, $26.S. * 561.)JOO * • f1unily room, ~I bit. ki:Utti
Marine Hl. * Also 3 BR. view including Salt Creek 2 BR. + den, single sly. ... Cnrlsbad trade all or pnrl Homef1nders * 642°9900 P.ANCH REALn of high\\'&)'. $47G. or fu.rniah-2 BA hrdwd flrs nr f.t 1 \Val k tobeach.$50,000 2Brapts.26ThEldenA\'e, • . *55&6&KI * cd $52). .1~, 1 P -.&. Golde , Coll ' Beach and Dana o n t . Owner will carry. lncar Mesa Dr.>. Costa of $63.oo:> eqwty for )'IJUI' RANOI STYLE 3 Br, boat TUSTIN REALTY . WATERf_,. I ctp..-.1n ~, nwest., eg1•1• same Owner will finance at at-CONDOMINIUM i\lesa. 542.4905 Udo or Newport ~ r ea acceu. Ref req. AvnU. No\'. ..., .. "Ul * nun I ' 752-1920 terms. 84.-7 4 • eve tract1ve ln tere1t rate. Home, Ask for Harri son l, $385. nlO. 557·3159. • O.>Va
'400 QUAl\51. NIWPOflf llACM 968-1178 9li.3-4002. $189,000. GRUBB & EW S \Vaterfl'ont. 3 BR .. 2 b a. Builder D•tf)9rate Brkr. tl!}...49'l3 Balboa Peninsul• 3207 . IRVINE RENTALS
SUPER DUPLEX c BRASHEAR) Real "'""· llJ>-1llll0. ll/1;~;,,.,~'.' ,!"%ru'i~: Muoi Solll 11 R 1 E W td 2900 2 BR ................... 1325
3 Bedroom owners unit. New · 1.1 Brand new 4-plex near Hun· a• state " ' ___ YEAR Ly RENTAL 2 BR ••.•.•.•••••••••. •. ·S3511
carpet & drapes. 2 bdnn R•AL."17'V . · ePRICE SLASHED• nope . ~n:~fi~ si~~~~r C:~I ~~~ \Y"ANTED: 4 or 5 bedrn1 lBR, 2 BA_ do"·nstalrs unit~ ~~."f-ii·::::::::::::::ffJ
rtntal unit. J ust recently $34$0. V•c•nt details&: an ~p'I . 10 sec. hOUSl' near OCC. \VU! rent, unlurn. 1325. yrly. Avail. Oct. 4 BR FR .. , , ........... $41» painted, new water heaters, TAkE OVER Very Serious S.lltr / The Real Ettate F air lease, buy or trade 3 bedrn1 20th. SIMf>SON·DUNN REALTY
Can be 10ld subject to low Gover nment loons T ~io lal rt. , ===:;::::::::;:::=~""'""'~ "°""'· 25 blo&s south of SAME BLDG: 4BR. 2BA u~ i:=,_,_ 8,, A l WO ISIOl'Y ....... n • v.."i!Dn I . 839 _....... 536-2."'51 H ·~ I ~ ~ aMUmable ro V o an . 3 & 4 BDRM homes In all I Pal llal 4 BR & lam Harbor View "'71,500 .,...,, S. A. ,Civic Center. on1e tum upatalra: . .,...,. mo. yr y. -I p k Call
·-11U vow. • ' • -. INFLATION-TAX I ""122. A all N l •NEW 4 br C.1-e " """" areas. No qua 111 y Ing . 21' BA 30' II I Submit all otferli. Near the Pi. ~ t. v . av. · • ~. •
Welker & Lff nuooo lo ~· 000 Is all nnnn.,wllh··.·---'1"-,1.-••• "ll G .... nbelt. Be au ti I u 11 y PROTECTION WI LL BUY YOUR !Both have Cl'j)IS, 1lrps, glll'b. 2 hll, ~; ~(, A/C,_ $42.SL
Real Eltate yoU n'.eed. F~ ~ in-bltns, dsh~";.. ~ tile ""decorated-"J bdnn ,.,. i t h HOUSE disposl, D/\V:.!Pl.l Call eves. lease. ou.,._,4,
TRULY UNIQUE formation, call BK R . &t indoor-ou.tdoor carpe~. f.amily room. Formal dining 6 unlls. brand ne'v 2 &. 3 0 ... 673-3Ti0 or 61<>2'n4 L1gun• Beach 3241 847 ''°' "•• tin --• --• 1 cul lo ·-~, d I I bit Forecl.osure ..... ·.:?.:;::::.::::.:::;.:__.,::;.,;. ?olesa Venle Pool H ome, "'"'~='--~--~~= .xl06 carpe g lUlU .. -.-om room. mma a ""'"' · br, cpt, rps, rp s, ns, SCOTT REALTY 536-7533
3222
•
$48.500. 3 BR. 3 Ba, Fam-PooL Table stays with 7.4% drapes thNout. Huge pe.tlo, ~~ .... !.. years old. Ca 11 au. gar, patioll, indiv. yds. · Corona del ~r Sl75. NICE 1 BDR apt, bltns, nn' Fonn Din·nn, llv·nn. VA exls•i-Joan -unu take overmzed_J!l!!l. d ou b I e .,.,......,,...., 24~9 Orange, C!\f. Sl7~000. IL pd . & ClllllOrl. ~ iv JW•~ T 644-7111 I ~$-?'JS UT unlQ'ue $710. 1 + Den, view, steps ·~~1!.:S~'b1esC.~ ~':49,::·:,;~:~::! ~i-. 1 REAi.~6Rs [TAL" !"L.) 4 Plex Needs Work ....,. ~ secluded l Bdr., all \\'OOd to ocean Victoria Beach
afl. .(pm vteyl noors, trplc. Agent 640-8672 or 49M2'7l Huntiiig{on Beach ti· iiiijijijiiiiijjiiiiji-,"i;ij,.~l~g~8! h:t'E..'l 2 Ba [rplc, $230. 2 BDR. ocean clly vie"'·
EASTSIDE Tip Top Shape 8!l3=8S? Large 3 BR + 3-2 bedrooms, tf!uses furnliCJ fl~nt house, child/ pe't ok. $.~~ ~L ':8~e·Bdr., frpl 4 Br + famil.)i, rd k>catlon. A-1UST SEU.! EMEltAl.D BAY bltn~. c!OM.'d gar .. s w Im U"iO 4 BDR .. 2 Ba, ftpl, house, nr. Divers Cove.
Remodeled-like new, 2 Ba, This beautifUI pool h ome , Great white water view; 4 600 NPWPOn Center Drive pool. Easy terms available. General 3102 gar, yard, pa\lo. ..
2
$365 LARGE
3
Bdr., 2 Ba ..
cpts, dti>s. Musi see to a~ with hUge family room, 4 bdnns., 4 ballu, den with Hurry Only $59,950 iJ65 LARGE 2 + lo,., trpie, bltns, dbl gar, yd,
prec. S4l.500. PbU SUlltvan. tge bdrms. Asking only , trplc., formal dinlng mi.; EASTSLUFF BEAUTY First P ioneer Re•lty $85/$115. trrIL pd, bach apts Ba, frpl, sep. dining rm. piHlo,
Real.tor. 54&-6761 or 548-2103 $49,950. with low down. aecl uded radiant heated ter· Hiahly UPil'aded 3 Br. 21,1 142-4421 at benc h. Laguna l..::!ll'· )'d $~. trrIL pd, 3 Br, 2 Ba * ASSUME $16,100 FHA 7% SCOTT REALTY ~T"a.13 race. Central loc., nr. tenni1 Ba, Trlna Model w/mlni ----'------1 $l25/$140 UTlL pd ocean· $450 3 BDR, frpl, dbl garage trpl, beanis. vie\\', 60' deck
2 BR townbouJe-Mesa Verde, eta. Sl.55,00Q view o[ bay. Must see to F'OR TRADE front bnchs, Newport. Near Chlna OJve NU-VIEW RENTALS !root unit, pa!lo, pool. TAKE OVER TURNER ASSOC. appredato fine ap-1160 UTIL pd nko I ll<lr .. NU-VIEW RENTALS '73-4lll0 or <94-J248
$29,500. owe 2nd. 833-8974 GOVERNMENT LOAN 1105 N. Coast H'!!)'., Lll.auna polntments in this home. or Sale-Dell.lXe 4-Plex in xlnl paliQ No. end Laglllln 673-403D or 494-3248 ~ .. na 5 BR, 3 ea, walk 3 & 4 . BR homet1 in all 494--1177 Owners anxi<>us, moving out rental <n'Cu of Hunt ington $165 UTIL. pd 2 Bdr., !ii H rbor View H ills So Laguna Niguel 3252 ~ N alifylng For S cf area. Beach. \Viii consider trade blk bch, winter, Newport • . · 1 .:::...::;;:_::~:::;. _ _;:= IO all Schls & Jr. Collea:e. :eo::·info~~~lon call BKR., INCOME UNIT I MILL&R REAL TY for good H.B. or C.JI.·. llome $195 UTIL pd, oceanfront For lease or buy, beautilully 2 BDRi\L Cpts, Dr p s.,
$59,500. WILLS REALTY, 816-331. Your tenants help you buy &t2-481l or Rental. lmch. Beaut. vie\v & loc. landscaped, 3br, 2bu, fun1 sprinklers. Lease $335. mo.
54&-7739 or &15--9733. · this jewel and you start J AD:!: REALT\" 963-780-5 Laguna 1i11, 641-7701 831--2099 or 494-34a2.
BY O\VNER 3 br, l ba, pool NEW CUSTOM HOME countlng. Take odvnntRge of FINAL CLOSEOUT EAST Costa Jl.leu. 4 . p I ex ' $230. 2 Bdr ocean/city view 2 BEDROO~t 3 BR. + DEN, 2 ba, frp\,
nr beach. $38,!.00. S4,000 4 BR, 2 BA, lam nn, wet i~g~he11te~ -~:~i.:SS7a,~~ * MODELS * xlnt locaUon. \Valk to shop-a pt "''fa.rage, Laguna SOUTH 0[_ HIGH\VAY • utH. rn1., cpt/drp. S 3 50,
dwn., bal. at 8~t"'· $299. mo. bar, 3 car gar. Beaut dn. 49"i·l761 Y 1t NEW a~Jl.tES * ping. A solid Investment for NU.V EW RENTALS $250. mo. &lZ..S9:i7 Lse. 4!1;;-4728 eves & "'knd.
PITJ. 642..m9. tn. area. nr Lake PRJ'k. Red C•rpet, Realtors • 8%.H~A' RFiMncingB. OR IE.vWail . beg1nner lnve1toh. o on, t 673-4030 or 494-3248 CHARl'1INt;; 3 br ~IP v_t Mi11ion Viejo 3267 2BR, Ea 1t1 kl e CM, loC 1123 Main St. Open daUy ~ tBOR V "'ail. ~ll now for more $35. 1 BR houo;e, ,util. pa!lo avail Nov .Ia. $42.1.1:.c==-'-='---'-'-'--
SOd'.lO. 021.one. Nr Ralphs. 1-5. 536-40221536--1767 eve. BLUE LAUOON VILLA OMES lnformahon. pd, Costa a.tesa. \Valk to 67:1-2776 or 675-5015. 3 BR Condo, 2bl, pool, patio,
Be11.utifu l 3 bedroom
townhou.Se, privalt!' boat 1Up
-'"cilANifl'"Rttf
CdM'1 moat b~utif u l
baytront iocltlob. Ver,)'
large h•.-o bcdroOln fuml1h-
ed. -$600. -•
LITnE ISLAND
Lu x ury hom~ on East
Bayfront. Com pl e t el~.
furnished. -ta' slip available.I
$850.
BAYSIDE DR. '
'J"v.·o bedroom and dell •
Ne,vport Areii .. ~\1 VnfurnlshM. $095,. ' ~
Call 675-7225 · i
'. ... . .
\ \I.LF\
BE \LI')
h Bl ll(, ft.1TfllPR1 ,l ; '0
4 Bri, 3 Ba, Furn P~n.
3 Bd, 2 Bn, Fun1. Cd.\t
2 Bd, 2 BR, Condo,
fun1/unfurn
675-NOO
1450
$39,500. 833--8693 Owner By Owner-Assume Xl n t Prime location. view, 2BR, H MILLER REAL TY beach, Newpot1, Slll., va-NEW 3 br, 2 Im , bllus, frplc, enclOl!ed attach gar, OUJ.
listbht1ff 1030 loan-no costs. Pvt walk to 2\.ii BA, all appliances, ~~~ ~~· 642-4811 cant. t BR house eoro
1
na gRr, SUPER VJE\V! $48:), tJren S275 1 .. J ., ~
elem school. 4br, 2ba. CUJ. decorntor furnlllled. Serl0\11 Newport Beach 8J3.-07tlO U..\I. Partnenhlp-2 yr old del f\far, singles. coup es. 873-2925 or 675-202-1
3
BR.
2
Ba, Family tm, Condos Furn
CONOO/PLAZA de-aac, prft lam home al 11eller--Flnt time oUered. -30 unit furn apls In San Also l Br unit $110. Hu~ Costa Mei• 3224 Patio, Great vie\\•! 4 Rec.
3 hr, 2 ba, $50,000. own. $37,500. !Wf..0097 CMS. Only $69,500. term•. nED BIG CANYON Clemente. ss:;oo cllSh for tax Hngton Beach . .A.~. F' e e . CC'llt('r.J, $300. 830-2452 PA.l.~1 SPRINGS :? Br, 2
VISleN
RIAi.TY
53J..4M3 1138--9387 4 BR.' 1% ba. Assumable CARPET, RE ALTO R S EXECUTIVE HOME sheltered I n c . t.1M'AGE-979-SU) FA?i.m.Y wan1ed 2 Br, t1cd N I •-h 3269 Ba, pools, ierv:Us, sau el Toro 1032 7% VA loan. $250 mo ,640-ll672 ·c::~=-"or~~"'ic-"i-',-,,,-~; I t.t ENT FREE. ( 714 ) Balboa lslind 3106 yd., $185 .. dpls, nKlve 1odny. ewpor 99ac jacuzzis. \Vee'knd, wkly\ '~ 7 6 s 2 ° CANT u d •~ 2 For Sale or Lease or Lease ~-......::. 119-mo thly 171.lJM7-<llOO Frplc, encl pa....,. VA • we es,..,,..,. I 4B 3 ba I ""'"_,.,...., lqDS & pct ok, :;! Br 3• YEARLY duplex, 3 houses n ' 7% Interest Yukon Dr. H.B. Owner BR., l'ii ba., 2 level CM-oreton.v i· d 'r 00 r 16 UNITS-3 BR .• 2 ba .. bltins. trple. Frpl, move today! fm beach 12 br 11~ ba 831"'4Si0
'
Sto 842-8696. temp. Bltn. kit. wl1nndc v ew. a u e a 79°""000 Xlnt locatMln. EASTSIDE 2 Br kid& pet 12.:J' l-3 b · 2 .:. 'l3T.l · 2 BR, 2 BA. \\'c~l Nine, • ry bar·, •unporch w/ocean vu; $200,000. Reduced to $l · $225 000 1201 """"a--7673. 1-~ s20o ' ' i;i., r., ""' J.. • A ,... t ·""' ""77 or COuntry Side JI.ERE 11 Luxury, Privacy due to emergency 1ituatlon. , 10 1"~ garage. ,....... · both "'/fresh paint & Ille, .... g1111n ,.igue • """"'°
Beautlf'UI 4 BR. 2 full baths. & Prestite Deane Garden Ige. llv. rm · w/beamed cau 6'14--5345 or 64()..()m. CASH FLOW B11bo1 Penin1ul1 3107 Homeflnders * 642·9900 rt·pl . & gar. 979-1521 \\'lmds, ~5"2>-°""t'"'''-------1 Shae carpet&, b I t • l n 11 • model "fth l1Jn.nd. Po o 1 • cell. Needt paint &: minor L E A s E I o PTION, ri.1esn 675-49.10 wkdys.
Dishwasher. Go r geou1 lush atrium. Roma.ii bath r2i~si~NAR~T~2·~q;.-0731 CUSTOM 4·PLEX 16 Garden 1,ypc unlt11. Qu k!t 700 E. OCEANFRONT Verde 3' BR, 2 ea, br11nd FOR lease Lido Nord e Condos Unfum.
cus1orn drapeg. Larae eic· ="'"""''°'"""-'!J08."'--"5:t7.'~;:--,:= THREE l.EFT 2 Bedroom, 2 bath units. o It II trcet li'atlon.T Woori· \VINTER RE1'1T.\L new plush crplg., freshly \\'8tcrfronl. Beaut. 3 Br, 5~~ FUR Lease, rnajc@lic ocea
posed D.ii~ate paUo & BY Owner, 4br, 2ba, trplc, Pri 'd tlaJ burning tire~ aces. erazzo New 3BR, 2BA, 2 car gar, painted, imn111.c, lhru-out. Bu, family or pool room, vii'\\", ne'v Jhr.
2
,
1
ba, lncld!
w8ARGalkw•All"N· !att• J'• 4R0 E0 0A0L_ bltll'll, p~tlo. Cholce NE'N WORLD hlll!ld. 80,mnl~ .•• "'ex't'orio'"r. 81•,'n'"• •· cntriei'i. Enc osed garo.gc11. lovely vie\\'. fpl, co1np. turn, I!uge I.recs & h'fll c.
0
$375. 2 lrplci, Dock tor 00. boat.
1
bl
11
pool adl~
536--3400 38R, 28A 'condo11, A•1ume "'' Sp!U'kling pool. Lnrge 2 wsht/dryr, col TV, D/W, 1no. CenlW')' 21. 51&-9!121. 57,.-5n.n<> alter 4 pm or 337-<' u WJU8('. go ' ' ' ·I ~~~~,..~~!'.!)!~~~~"'!i;:,= I :--:-==:::..:';;c"";;''-:::::: I C.'-•'>• Ull\ e n c I o s e d ga r tt Ke s . bedroom unlt1. Eam11 S3040 d bed rd t ""° 1w:i pt> ts, full erpts &; drp11, 1. ...,,ncp .11o y. 71A 111 l<'HA. __.,wu. S prl nklmd, land!cnplng. nm. 12% spendable. 6.IJC crpts, rps, sp 8' cc, LARGE 4 br. 2 hn, ~ep. 5909 2 car gn r, $3lli n10., Smo1
Fountain Vallty 1034 Irvine 11!1:' Dei'llaon AlllOc.
67
J...T3ll Only SU5,£00. Gros.1. Oood tenni. llWTy ~~~iw~C:iJ0 e~~e~ ITT°J.lm fam. rm ;·. Dor. II orb o~ NE"\VPORT Beach \\'atertn1nt ~.1~,c~; ... ~~I 11-." C I c m t'.! n I e.
-NI 1 1052 Centvry 21 642-1771 -ca ll (714) T:JZ..lTIO. 67~2T.I~ home. S42a .• incl. wl r. Be&ut. 4 br home on CMnt1I, """"v" .. ,
SAVE YOUR l'UIL L19uni gue llNYPTMI. I. ~· l\.~I oroPEN °SAT & SUN 1·4 gardcrM.'r. !>lJ--07oo N~·ly crpt & rminted. Ten· 3 BR 2 b3 CONOO on El Mile Square
2 Bcdroon'l, 2 bath, 6 mos.
okl condo with upt;radcd
carpet, tlle, dta.pe1, PltJo
deck, a•r door opener.~'
1: f'ttl'fatlOn arM. Wolk ro
s(()NI. Owner m\< s e 11 ,
IN.vi.hf o O un I r Y , WW .. ~ ••kll]J< f!rlco ~34,000
2~
Slin/av ...
546."'4
You c~ wtllk to 1hop1 , BEACH. PROPER[Y FOR _ .,...-••••• Pi fl ~Din• Point 3226 nls, 1xx1l11 etc. incld. Steps I\i11:uf'I Go l f Courie, 11chool ittld recttttkm b:on1 ~ JI .. ~/., SALE Newport Beach , BAYrnC.~T . er, oot. to Q{'el\JI, $'100 mo. S.IA-0 14:~ t11~hwa§ht'r. gai·ba.ge dllp.,
this tre5hly painted 4 bdrm. J:-.'°"', f"X'4'V Waterh"ont w/boat _a 11 p , :;;.~:a, 1\'lllter or :yearly NE\\1 OCEANVIE
2
W"IRI 0 '\11~ CONOO 4 hr 3 bu. f11n1. 2 car i;:ar $325. 831-907.{ l!\'t. 2~ ba't4,.hom with family """"
1
'' Super Balboa. O:IV'CI, 3 br, Lell&' option, • ill rn1 11i11 mi' JJOOI sauna K O L.: J BR "~ Ba
room, alr-~conditlOne(I 2 ba. Best buy SUS.000. B1y1hores 3112 Ba.$350.mo.&&0-507~ Ja CU:r:zi, l~~n lll: P ro f 'f·,.Pic,R.'!~ng.,dbi:V,enCi
mA!ter 1uite. Very tb.arp SPECJAUZING IN IJ'ra..95870wner. LUXURY T~IPLliX YSHOR&ll 38R 2 ba Fount1in V1llty 3~ dPCOl'ft l_ed. ~tras._ Clew lo po.tlo. pool. Nr iloag •. =. e..nd priced I I $S8,500. LAGUNA NIGUEL VIEW JlARBOR Vu Montcau 4br, 3 rs Id J"untlngtOlt Och BA . ' ' bch. 645--6728 or ~177 mo. Adulta ·no pets. 6Q..m1
CALL 512--7500 ' PROPER1'IF.;S den. Pt Inc I pa I a only, N~ar ~~. ~'OOd bum trptc: frl>lc, ylU'd. 2 ~· xlnt HUGE 38ft + rumput mi CA~IEO SHORES ~ br, 3 .:::::..:::::::::.....::::.<.:=..::0=:1 • VISION • IEA T·IRRACE $89,900, make olfct, Appl. \\rel bar. dbhwalher, tiea\')' cond. $47l Mr. To\lo11housc_ 3 B.\. 2 car oo Fantallic V1E\V Jn1-1 Townhouse Unfm 2515
PltlVATEGUARDE". AREA onl:·6<14-61~ ~h3kr roof & encl. illl'IRf". 1'!ueller. gar, 011 hints. !\\'Im. pool. mt~ ncc·y Lie Opt -=:;....:o,:.,:;;;'=-''=--.--,-,-i SrllC':r 1t.111 llnance 111 8'11'A. Cor ona del Mar 3122 J<kfg OK. S2RO nio .. ro fee. b'Tr~·KlS · · · 1 SE C UR ITY O>ntrolJCld, 2 RE &LJY OCEAN vu townhomes 2 .ntE BLUFFS. F..vly at't'IL AJ:t. 8'l2--4421 ' Rtory, 2 Bk. 1~2 BA. Adull~.
... 3 Bil, -miii! ) BR. 4 den, 1..... Paul w. Brumfield H I I B h 3240 ll'ALK TO 8"'<11 "' child undOT 16. Tennb, a MJ hill carnpany or * -SG.7,000 &«>-5.'iOO ~nt & A11oc. CORONA DEL ~tAR uni ng on NC 3 BR.: ~SlSj !4ltl.lnrt, JIU.'\IU.i. 6f10thl mile
Univ. Park Center, tnrlne H .lf;NI ~ill """u tbil '--'" 642., • ...,.,. 54&-I081' , 2 Bedroom. Lana~. bli pa!lo, ~ BR. 2 Bit, crpt .. drJM. CllJ"''DOd_P.t'alt)' :>4&-1290 !roru 00.ch. SZIO. mo •
..,...,_ ""Y .,,,._,. SAVE $PAO: \VR E N ~or f \O Ton mndlll(ln. Nf'Mr bri.ch. bllins dl&h\\'Rlher. ~'el\Ced \\'ATERt"'RONT 4 Br. p\'I. SlG-SKl'l
FOR salie b)' Owne r, :i:=: 21BW.~dtn~ me MOVING by •· 1'8 Pp 1 n I FOUit·S unit npl bldJI: undl'r I sm.oo 9 010n1h 1e1t s e. yd .• ·R'a'"· neY:\y d..r., 00 ivminun. bnll:t slip 1nc1. 1 ~D~L~~l~ll~.,_,~,~. ,,3~8=11,~,.-,,-=llt-,ll Un 1 v, rt I I Y P·"" Y11.Je '* dllhel and ..other rtqlle cnnstructlon for •Ille. OOlle Includes p rdcnc:r. .pets. $200. 84T~ll5. S700 \'rl,r. Agt. 67}-7060 F/P ne~ Crpl'I "-d;tl ...... Uthtl tn wQh cloths, towtl1 lo major 11hopflna: ctnlC"r. Cole of Newport RltN -, I Be ' I 11 ~ ' Afodel, ~hr. 2\.ii bl, shaa: BUY lhll outllandlng 4 BR and oUw.r linen .. ym;. ant 111 :yr wtltt-nf Sl 4M. Ca.II 675-5511 4 Br, 2 Ba, clO!le lo 1ehool1. 38~ l<1n1 n11, 2 bll, cov d .~c.h 111c Cl «>I wyk, '( ·
d'PIS. ll'R f)lltJol, l1lh. pond, ~an YU on contnct W/ more gpace In UM! ltlJW(ct SJP.-2570 or se2.5010 S375. vrry clean. fl75-l!l37 puttO, nr pk. '" clc1nt.nt. _,... n11). Alli, Al or H ,__ = h l"---"" xlnt cotJO. fro,00). BY 11.ppl, ~S-14.000 dn. h-fnve In IQmor-Rnd cloeell by aelllna Idle ,.._ 3 B 2 8 or 12131 592-6768 tVl'!I. 11rhl S4M. &14-T12~ Dorothy, ~. un,t ............ c ~ !W-0988, row. -.. .1 OAJl PU 1 2 BR h!C+3 units, E. 1811'1 ClllNA ....,,·(! l'. a .. T S
3
B
2
~;jljOUSE 2 b So
. ltenui ...-1th• iy.ruo St (' rt1 C11"at ln\'ltmt at house. OCfnn \'U. $4ri. mo. 4 Br, b'ph: rl\l'd yd, bltln•. NEY.'l'Ou ho~ -r, . r, nc. . :wn. :zi,a. noar • c b o I> I , *Ntw • SR~ 2 Bl.. Colltgt1 ......... Lii Cl&111Uled Ad. Call 60-M73 ~~·~ -w.lurri ll:t Wini er l'!C s 4 4 • 6 1 31.l ; pntle,..;;;;i. l1 ml to bch. Bt1. ooar ocean, ~t. ltnnta. • Pl~1t. $2!_5. P.Mtr $0,000. Uy •ppolnlmCnl on-Park, die _roor, ~$$3-'-~ EnL~ Th• o_. 1 nowt • ._ TO: Yetia(lt R<!"lt:y ~Tl &ll-~. SJ.j(I, mo.8t2-»U J37'".t. mo. 6'f5..1i00 · ' .~ 1 , """'r, caU 1163-lll!e· 1 Slory. !3Uti14 ~~ll
•
•
•
•
DAILV PILOT T~. Octobtr 2?, 1•?•
r nMnf1 Fum p1rtm11ntt Un um. Apartments Unfurn. I Apartmtnt1 Unturn. Aptt urn/ nfvm ~ 1R'-"'•n;ol;o•c.l•:..;.l•;...;;•h;o•.:;rc.:•:--4:.;300", • ~~'"9':?::......----'<15.:;50'" Lott & Found
&ijb°o, l1land 3706 81lbo1 l1l1nd 3806 Cotta Mfff 3824_ Newport &Nch 3869 CHOtCE WANT£0: A J'a! 01 aae 30, CO.MME RC I A L I Pfl.Cf'· LOSf: Prescription Claaacs, LAKE FRONT lu 11hr. <t br, xrro. lg. duplx. Several 5\ore \oc1rion1 1.n bm f'ramf., So. Coast Plaza/ ·~ron,;RN f hr, 1 b&. ~ GftANO CaNtl 2 BR. Bltra, CHI LOREN OK 1 OCEANFRONT LOCATIONS 1i blk to OCHlJ'I & bay, ~-Avallabhi lrom $230 ra11hion Is.I. 10/19 675-6$50
JOllN'S Clrpel &:: Uphol1tery
Ori Shanipi" (Soll Re-
ta.rdllntJ.) De(.-reUUS le
el! color ~hleneni l! 10
minute bleach lor white
c11rpets. Save your money
by ,.,1,... me extn tripa.
Will cklanllving rm .. dining rm.. & hall $15. Any nn.
S7.50. oooch J10, Chair $5.
lS yrs exp. lil what count11
not method. t do work
1nyaell. Good ref. 53l.01Dl.
ti .-S.'ly. ~. t'all belort' \V/D, t'rplc, $300. ntn. yrlv. ~ -i Br SIT(I: l Br 1 1~ , 2 ... \' 1 VERSAILLES NB. Call: Cat')' or J o<i a~ o. 494-M2~ LOST: $100, HEWARD, Lrg tlP!\1, Gti-90.'VI. No chllrtrenlpe<s. 673--l'l2'i & $HIO. Oupll'x & <&-pie . ..:, 3 liK, w. r y $5.50 ~ Nolan Real Eslate Inc. lriih St-tier ma.le ••Alfie",
illbo• P•nlnsuft 3707 B•lbo• P•nlnsul• 3807 2 pool5, crph1, drp11. SU-wt! :!~41t. 2 ba. Cur'"! $<100 \\"1l.r. ROOMMATE needed to shr BALBOA ISLAND, &iyfront 10/S CJ.f. ~10581642-9611
-:.!eEORooM~BA°itNE\\' 2 Hit. 2 ba, wtntcr. $300 O~ nlE LAKE 3br OOUK, _Newport Beach. Otfice or Store for lc.lS('. LOST: BL K& B\VN, mixed
tJC:l.::ANFRON'T •t RI'. 3 B:1, SUPER DELUXE Cp11, drps, fom-d ulr ht>;11 1 ~AYFRONT At ~ uth Coast Plau.. $l2.11110. 67)..24.)7 ~ ri10. Terrier, fentale. Vic. DoYer
11u1h•t': $·WO. 1Ho, )'l'ly, $Gjl). J BR, :? BA, patio, trplc, SJ85 nJO, Call 1~•kd1t)io: 10:30 3 BR., 2 l>l•., unf, S-175 yrly. Pool -Aco.pulro Aqu:i Bar ~lALE or female, to age 673-4300 Shores. Reward. ~
ino. 1.rg 2 Br, 2 Ua, 11mter: I :"ill i\ \\'est Ba)' A\'e., to 1:30, 134:>~. STEPS TO BEACH & Jacuzzi. SpectD{!Ular 8 :ll, r;hnro hotlSe JIB, m. LACUNA BCH . Sho~f-LOST· BLK & BWN, mixed
S::SOO. n!O, yrly $1:.0. n10, B:1lbon. Days 8.SIHS32; e\•e Ar)ULTS 00 pet• Like new ! 3 nn. 2 ha, v.·inti:r. $175 At:re Lake w/Tov,.crln2 lnclude1 utll . 968-5233. flee& ror 111e. Sl&I. & Sl60. ShOrihalr, all brown, $100
612-8961 or 67~ !)ti~~21 Q u j e i. L !!: ~ ;l B r : I '..: BR, fuiii., Yl"ly SZ15 F'ounCllbli • ~i fl.lllllon Ool\ar IIAVE 2 BR. in 11i~ Ugun.a Prin1e Coa!it JI"'>'• 67·2175 Reward. 548.-6577
lfil Bt:K10 -bny ur bci°i Nt-;\Y >;lr11 IJi:e 3 BR. 2 1~11. Dli1hwuR.her. Jl.l'!JOM11, pa1i0. CORONA DEL MAR Club.louse, Gyn1, Sil1Jl14, hornc. Cple. v.•lchlld O.K. or 49-1-9907 FOUND 2 Ducks, tame,
2 Br. 1\li.lk·111 J'l"-"'1", :.hai: 0t.-..•11nlront i\p( ""/dbl i;;1r. g<t,i'llgc • ..,i2 10. &l-l--08'l8. 4 UH, unr. houi;';•' t-"an1. nn, Toud Sccur"'-•, 497-2011 5 To 7 PM lnduitrial Rental 4500 Milliard, rrtale or fe1n. San
C1llln91 6011
Cf11l, carport. laiubl 1• 111 • SYX>. rno. 1;.12-Zlli4 d n y"': L{RGE t:llllhdde 2 Hi.·. :lNME.Wl>X>POIR"'T"'c lR•••E/opTl. lnir.~iote Occupancy \VANTED mature 31.J'lli"hl Juan Capistrano. 493-&994. >---------... •I Si'l!l. ,,._... 1110. 1116 \\', 1i15-!Ul9 c1·ei;. S' ADULTS '6 ,_,,,.,,.. SQ -r •rL I h " 0•1~ .. '"·II o~ 1,-... : cJ,tll. dr11~. btluH. pool..Sl ti!"1 "nR 2 ba ~ ........ .,~ n1n.le to _share lge. l"lonie ~ · " · space ''' '· 1'~UNO Small Tiger Kitten. ACOUSTIC CEILINGS
, .. , .,....._ ~ ~ '"".:..__ l.ARGF: I !Jr., t b~k. to Ix')' Adults, no pcl~. 675-5800. • "'cOMMER'CiAL &>rry, No Pets 111 H;B. $\50 mo. 962--8668. front ofllce, lge rear doot. ~less Vetde area, C.M.
B YFRONT WINTER or ocean, ut11s. incl. $193. nroki•i·. no fi'f'. Bach•lor, 1, 2 & 3 Br'1. r.tA'fURE mah share with 30 ptmse. alr cond, h.fal. 56-311'94. BY CALCOUSTICS
l BR $1~ Roch1•l(1r $1!!0. n10, fi7:"~"i87!i evl'S. 3 BR. 21 v ba, lr~ J'iv 1"11\ Offl<."C 11\ll.1e N' t. $250 from $175 p9r mo. .same _ New mobile home. U<IO G Logan St., 646-5033 APPLIED. PAINTED
Util 1M.l. !L:r!i~11hou. Ni';\\I 3 Or. :? bn, rrpl. l"pt, & fain 1·n1. Adlts/no 1:octi;. Santa Arie H·t6--8365 after 6 p.m. d!J.Yt, 646--068! eves. riri'~J~EfES 1--~7';-unni;, Uhl. ga r, nr. t)o:can. $:?4:1. 612-0·161. 3700 Plazo Dr. Garag•• for kent 4350 * COSTA MESA* JI•) FREE GLlTI't::R
N .:ACH v\P'I' s:i:i0. 6TJ..-37[1.~ Dan• Poinr 3826 AhllOfllt new M·l. Ptrtonals $.i OFF 'VITll TiilS AD
t nn on Wg Col'onn SliO 1no. I C d 1 M 3822 ;;..;;;.__;_;cc..;_---'--~:::;:::::::;:;::;:::;:;: !:::7:1:~::::::: I SINGLE car Garage nr L'>t.hl-~l~JOO:"'~'·~r~t.!l~!r8S~. ~':'°~·_.liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;i:;;;;; 64.S.9880 .,,.1., ln"L utlls & "111·a,l', oron• • ar ., ... ~, ~,.~ ,.. "' St & Ba1boa Blvd. $25. nxi. .,.... • ....,., 1 ...,..,..,~~~'!""!!!!!!!!!\
Gi3·SOCii ult ti PANORAfl.llC OCEAN VlE\V 6Th-7871i eves. l,IXKI SQ. FT. oUice or Per1011als 5350 i-:: •ACOUSI1Cl\L *
Corona del Mar 3722 £'.\"'TR.A lan:e 3 Br, 2'~ Ba. 11J;0:u1:io~uA~~~~-~I~~{';;~ 0T~HcE~M-O~S~l-----• NEW • SINGLE CAR SPACE,~;. of storage. Plenty of park:lng.1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;. Apr :it"i-repalred-rel)lllnted
Bn1nd 11l'11·~ 1-'rplc, s hai:: EXCITING VIEWS garage. \Vest Newport $2'l5. Newport Shores Area.I~ drywall, wall tex, ~775
:lBR. Iba, nvrr i::;:.ragc, lease, «fPI. fully dr.iprd, 1111 ne"' c'cc,._'-""'1"=l._~~--,--,= IN NEWPORT YOU'LL BE GLAD Peninsula. 673-4506 Call 00.8"~. . MRS. REEDS stli.Jlls only, Ncnr Ille oi.."'(!an. ap.,1lns. ~lo. 10 rno. nr yen.r NU 2 Rr, 11 ,, B& h\•nh~e. C•m•nt/Concrete 6019
-
no '"'fl, 67;-,...3.'")80 I··~ 1ron1 S.100. G7:\-00.W fplc, slul!!. bok\lny. S2L. YOU WAITED! Office Rtnfal 4400 Sto rage 4550 SPIRTUAL ,.. •· 200 Luxury bayf-o.nt apartment r trod cl blleh t CUSTOr-.1 Concert \Vork
s osta M•s• Jn4 DUPLEXES. 2 hr. I ba. f.l9(), nin. -1.q3-64J.1 or 6i3-42 lh•lng. Boal sHps ·at• )'()Ur ~ bd~m ng ap'::w 11·ell \\':~h EAS MEDIUM Pntios, Walka, Drives
'
;!;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 2 br, I bl•, .S'.'10., 3 br, 2 BR, 1 bl\, cptsliln.tpl!s, (kior. Y.'11lk 10 shops, 1-estau-· Rell 1 t I FOR l [ IHI W HOUSE & Sawin<> ._, ba .• .,.,.... All ... ,........... "--.. ,, VI'-". 1~ 0,0 I-· h seeing. nci: Ye a -M • ARE ~-•v1Af on a.II problems, --e. *"~" _,... ...,,,.,. ......_-.:.. ._.. ~ '"-rru1ts, l earre, oc-ean. A fordable e Gn'!.tl BEACH l"\U "" REASONABLE 66-&"12 Ambassador Inn &. l"t' c ,. n I ! Y ,.,,..oc-orat\.'d. uril. 586417H. le"' elegant. i·ery orivnle. envlro1iment • rw'lllshed ~ Private, k>cked lndlvidual Psychic Card Reading, Ad-CEMENT \V-k ol ·all .... ,, 6+l--fi81X} or 644-7326 ="°""""~=---=8"'30 • c.• 2 •·th 'l 1 h .. 0 ICES storage . units. f'rom 57.50 vlt.-e on all problems, Love, .... IU(IU BRANO NEW · · Eastbluft 3 ""ut.·uroom, ·u.-lllli s 11' t and untu111ished . • R••--••blo, 1--"--tcs,
3 "fl 2 BA T ·•-I t --p I • M CAL per mo. Mtini•u•e, Business, Health, ...,,_ ...... ""....,,_
$19.50 & Up ll • 01\'luruuse. spa1· 0\L~ Cl'oaCco, 0 0 ' • $185 t $215 • ALLS CE ~ CaU 63S-33Z s:iu.ciuus & l\iodcrn. So. of e DELUXE e subtcl'n tnt:'fln ?-car parki..ng. 0 PA Trnnsactions of all kinds.
SINGLE STUDIO APT Jf\1·y. $490 fl}(), 549-9191, 3 BR, -~~BA npl !01· ll'fl~. All udult. full ~.ccurify build-646 8453 • RETAIL 96()..1970 Open 12 Noon lo 10 P.M. by c~ntractor 6021
SPECIAL \\'l!~EKt.Y RATES 833-1114 lncld spne. niaster suite, Im:. Ne1v l'!ll'Jlel , clrapes, • !"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~~~!!!!!!!!!!!! appt. only. (TI4l 527-3400 ..;..c...--------1 Tm Harbor ll!vd. I ~=:.::.:c:,, ____ ~-din rm & dbl gnmgc. Auto bull!· In.~. drcoi·. Leases fl-on1 , Prime l-lw1ti.ngtou Be a ch -I~ LINK l!OME Improvements-Addi·
Costa ~1~~a &l;..1iw11 ;! or 3 BDRM. 1 blk. bch., $500 _, "'"· Fountain Valley locations on SPIRITUAL READER lions, Remodel, sunshade frn. or un,, nil or 1-~ ~hare. door opener avnll. Pool & ,~ " B1"00!-:hu~t & Beach Blvd. STORAGE UNITS .,.,.., ·'""" 0, l'"~IOO necre11Uon area. Adults 'Gllellm#ltlJsB Open 19. AM to lOPM patio coven. benchef!, etc.
$30 Wl!Ek & UP
e $6.50 Night & Up.
"',,_..,.,.. ......,, (714) 675-8551 Over 11,000 sq. ft. of ren-A f>'Jl'50nal, !>uslness, rccrea-Advice ori a ll matters. Brick plantel'f!, walks, fire
NlCE corner lBdnn! su n on.Jy,.no (lt"I.~. B T table are11 in c 1. u di n g; 2 tiOMI storage. 1'Tom $8. 312 N. El Can1ino Real ring, etc. Good work, falr
e S1udlo & 1 BR Apt1.
deck to .r;lngle refined lady. • $322 • Nawport ay owe rs ADULT APARTMENTS ~luxl' Profcsswnal -~~ltes Jan1boree &. San Diego 1'"'ree-San Clemente, For oppt. Jirices. Free dcl'llgn & esti·
Refs. Sl90. 6736214. 64!-C "t!I 865 A.niigos \Vay. Niv" 310 Fernando St., N.B. $.550 i\fo. \\'ilh full f.~c1ht1es-w:y. Call 979-0150 Call 492-0034 492-9136 mate. Referenl..'eS. State Llc
d Cl lofanaged by PARK NEWPORT Plus office & retail space R I I W 1-~ .. 1.-No. 1806'l0. Phone me eve. &
2 YEAR 01 iarming 3 lVILLIM-1 \VALTER.S CO 1433 Superior Avenue fro~ 636' -1640 ~·ft. at .<15c en a 1 •n eu _. DIVORCE BR, 3 BA apt. w/patio. APARTMENTS N B h ft. in O<.'W prlme center. NTED r NLY $6! weekends, Ken 642-1770
e 1V & lofakl Service Avail.
• Phone Service -Htd. pool
• Children It Pet S«Uon ms Newport Bl\'d., CM $41). 6/a-572'5. Huntington 8e•ch 38~ Bachelor l or 2 Bl'drooms ewport eac Good exposure to traffic. \VA lo Renl, for 1tc 0 • GER\VI(l{ & Son, Bide Contl'.
Co•f• Men 3824 nnd Townhouses !!!!!!!!!!!!,,;,!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!~I J.~or details lllld preview call mfg. sm~l house or shop Con1pletely reliable Add remod. SI. Uc 81-114321 _ MS-9755 or 64.'"N'967'
I Blt Fw'n 116:1
Lotit or hUim. pool. v•n.lk
10 l'ihopplng, 1 i mi. bench.
931 \\'. J9lh St.
"""'"" El Puerto Mesa
1 & 2 BEDROOMS No Otlldren. No Pets PINECREEK
Pool & Recreation LIVES UP
1959 Maple Ava., C.M. TO ITS NAME
. Over 500 tall trees and \0
LGE 1 l;lr, poor .. ad~. to shop-stre(\nis "' i t h 11·a1erfalls ,pl~. f180, Dt!po_i;it refun· create a I't'laxing setting for
da"ble to mpons1We clean your spacloos new I-or
tenant. No. pets. 1887 A1on-2-l)(l(lroom apa.t1ment. f'ronl
rovh1. ~1 4. S I 9 O. f"'urniture available.
NE\VLY decoratl'd tu 11 y Office open 9:00 to 6:00,
tum., 2 br apt ldl'al fur ZIOO Fairview M.. Costa
2 or 3 working people share. Mesa. Phone: 545-2300.
Linens & cleaning service HAClENDA DE MESA
\\'kiy. Ulil pd. 642--1244.. ltiO W. Wilson. c.M.. * ELM GARDENS API'S BEAUTIFUL GROUNDS
FURN. l & 2 BR apt in Adults -No Pets
adult section. Pool, no pets, 10 minutes to ()Ce!ll1. Large
177 !!:. 2fnd St., c 'M. I & 2 Br. 1 r -$175.,
6,12-3&15. 2 BR $190-with Patio $195.
Lge Fully Furn 2 Br Gas .& \\later lnc .,
Bltns, WI\\'. drps, pool. Draperies, carpets, g ~ s Milts no pets Sl90 &12-$20 heat.. . gas sto.ve, a 1 r ' · · conditioning, s 11· 1 m m i n g
STUNNING 1 br garden npt. pool rec.. room washers .JXJOI. rec rn1., $185. Adult!. & d°ryen. '
·now. 18th St. MEDITERRANEAN
DUPI.£.X I BR, furn. in C.fl.1. VILLAGE Quiet, no dogs, cats or nia.
torcycles. 5't8-2720.
f"URN . large 1 Br, Ideal
for bachelors. $16:>. Adults.
1993 Ch..lreh 548-963.1
BACHELOR $"141.
J,10 ,v. \Vilson
&12-1390
Huntington Be•ch 3740
LOW WEEKLY RATES
Ex•cutive Sult•I
• 127 Y crktown Blvd.
Beach Bh·d. at 'l'orktown
536-0411
STUDIOS & I BR's ,
e F'ull kitchen
• Jleated pool
e Laundry facilities
e F'ree utililies
0 Free llnen;i.
e T.,r. & maid r;crv. avail.
e liar-B-Que
I Bedroon1
I Bedroorn & Oen
2 Bedroonis
2 Bedroom Townhouse
2.JOO Harbor Blvd
$200
$251
$25;)
$320
Costa fl.1esa (7141 557-8020
NEW BREED AP"l'S.
1 BR, frplc. cp'ls, drps, pool,
jacuzzi, encl. gar. All util
paid. No )X'ts. Adults only.
$190. 393 llamHton, 6'15-4111
or 642-1960
CASA VICTORIA APTS
Adults. . :. 3 BR w/palios
From $169.50 No Pets
Pool, ree rm., elevalors
Sec. gale. Gas & 11•ater pd
525 Victoria, CM, 642-8970
APTS UnfU111 ished, 2 Br
5195. Util pd, pool, lndry
Inell. cpt.11, rlrps, d<;h\\'hr,
closed gar. No child/pl'!.
J1acienda Harbor Apls
lm-i476
LUXURY APTS F'r. $224.50 Open ~ Daily SANDPIPER lNN (714) 752_1700. ~ apt. m Costa M e !Sa · 673-5793 G13-6Ml. !">4~217t)
Spa Pools Tennis CORONA DEL ~\R INvt:.::TtwtENT DNJSlON f>.16-S989 · PREGNA,..'T! Electricel 6032
Jus1 being con1pleted, 1, 2, Across lron1 Fashion Island =;;;;;;;ii)\DESPERATELY need s1n8ll Caring, confidential counsel-
& 3~ bedrooms, fireplaces. a t JamboMe on San Joaquin \VALK TO '!'II ~ house, apt. or lrnUl'r for ing & referT81 Abortion ELECl'RJCIAN * o J d
some v.1th P.,'lliOS 0 T IUU!i Rnf1d. FASHION ISLAND ~lderly lo1other wit~ linl~fed adoption & ~ping. AP~ Jobs-New Jobs. Se:rvke
balt.'Ollies. GREAT LOCA-(714) 644-1900 Priv'.l.Cy·Peac:eful·Spa, cious ' ltK.'Onte_ $100-$125. 552-7552 CARE "~4436 TION IN THE BEACH BED""! I vu ca I l 11 Anytime-Anyplace. AR~A. Call 96(}3221 or Vista De~ Mesa LUXURY APT. LIVING 1 . """' · apartment, n cc ATTRACTIVE WomM 5'6" 542-9829. ,,, · 1 & 2 b< .• , ... ,. suites or ----------=--1neig~bors. $1.:l rent. 207 11·ould like to meet a""""' ELECTR!CIAN-U-· oo. 839-6w.> ask !or Allene or ADULT GARDEN HO~W.S ... Bait A1it A H B §""""' '"'"""" Marien. IRVINE AVE, AT l>IESI\ unfum. suite$. $195. to $t50. in!Ore, P -· · f.tormon man, ar 45158. 233108. -'StMall jobs, main! ELDERLY woman w o u Id NB area. No prank calls. &. repairs. S4S-Sal3
2 BEDROOM deln:\'.e Condo. Neer Ne~rt ~allvd, Fn1\'Y 2 Sil'imming pools, 2~ hr. like room & board in )'Ol.l( 842--0481. Commw1ily almost n e \I'. & Irvine lnuustri Comp ex _, pd 1 •1......... ,, • ..._ ....... I=""'-"""'--~~~~~ Gardening 6045
Bl
. 1 BR $!9(1 2 BR $230 sv.>itchb,..,., utils. ., c ev., home 8• ·•vu mo .. vu-...,..J. REAL Estate Tralning. Indiv. ;;;;:.;.:::.;:;.:::_ ___ ..;c..:.;.I
tns, relrig., your own · · · Coff. shop & rm. serv .. elec. nal washer & dryer, OW, pool Rec Bldg 11•/f;:ym, Billiards, 11~~~~~~~~~~'.l Instruction. Perso attn. BARRAGAN & AGUILAR. & clubhouse. 2 Children OK. Color T.V. Pool & J acuzzi. kits., dshwshers., patios or 11; Sales or broker exam 2-3 fl.1exican gardenenr wilh 5
No Pets. $229 mo. Ask for Security Pntrol. Refrlg. inc. balcys. & niuch more !::!~·.~~·. •:,~,;. 0~1 ~11~ ( ~ I{• l wks. Academy 548-ll92. yrs Exp. Our Service In·
Bev or Dale. No fe e. • 545-4855 • rrnancl.. * Palm/Card Reader * eludes Windows. Ca.II
786 Opt. niaid serv., opt. tennis. ll'·piijiiiijiii)iiiii~·j;;jiil 548 2049 from 4 t 8 pm 963-1 , 963-4567. *LA PARISIENNE * l!I Ac''Reiluctlonl0831BeachBI, ..::::o:·=;:.,;:~c.:.,:::0.::2=·~1
WALK TO BEACH 2 Br. unfurn. All electric. }"OR LEASE OR RENT Bu.iness oppor SOOS Stan!Dn . 521-3406 *Gardening Servic•s*
I, 2 & 3 Br, crpt, drps. J."ircpla1..'f'. Heated Pool . \iiii~2~!~01~Eii;. COiiiiA~Sfii;~m~V~Y~.iiii Shut-In hair styling In your Homes & Con1merclals
!)!tins. gar;-t'!l l!ith St. or Adults. $18;!. & up. home PH:Rohcrts Hot e I Sprinklers Free Estlm.
205 15th SL, JJunlington 979-1'..168 MESA 0 FF ICE SP ACE & DEL TACO Lag. Sty Salon 497-1128 531-314·1 5.14-TIB'f
Beh. 847-3957 Acro11; from b'Olf L"Qurse Secretarial Seivices. E.'<-FOR SALE EXP. know ho1v ma Int,
2 BR apt, newly painted, 20432 Sanle. Ana-Ave. GARDEN ~!~n~~d~~f=~~~ For informD.tlon, contact: [ ·~ ......... J~ Cle an u Pa, trim n1iJ1i,
new shag cpt, drps, Jots ON THE BAY, dock, opt., APTS only. Prime Costa Mesa HEWITT-KENNY CORP _._ reno\' a ting, landscaping,
of closets, ga r age . No 3 br .. 2 Ila, sundedt. upper location-deluxe of I Ice s -1'.~~~~9~1'-;18~1~1~~~~1:liiiiiiiiiiiiiii/iii,; call after 4, 96-S-3486 children or pets. 425 A 12th duplex. full din. rm., frpl., 2 &" 3 Bdnns., CfllL'I, drps, LA\\'N SERVICE -
Si.reeL utils. Incl. $450 mo. yrly., utilities paid. BI t 1n 11 . pef'Centage lease. For ad-DEPENDABLE
r .1 6...,, A""" laundry facilities. Re c. ditlona.1 infonne.tion -write DRESS shop-very attractive. Aceountlnn 6001 w "' M ••t • Cl CONDO 3 br, 2 ha. cpts, urn. avaJ · /.,-uuu. l"(lOfl\ w/pool table, gym Associated South Coast Active Huntington Be.ac h1-----"•.:;______ ee.-.v a .. , eanup11
drps. patio, \\'ID. relrig, Open Sat/Sun 11 to 5 room, sauna, pc-•. Adults Broken. P.O. Bo" 1595. Center. Es_tablished seven Mo NTH Ly b:lokkeeping 1-~ree Est. 642-9007
& stove. No fee. $225 n!O. 403 Orion. CONDO near oal ,_ -B · Joi Ne .. ,.,...., Beach, Ca. ~. -ars. Flexible. 96l-312L se...n-•--•. all , __ " __ _. TI1E ll.1oncy Sa\•crs-Complete Ask f Be 0 I _y, no pe ...... ~o•u rill , ~-· .,-......... """" ...,. ...,,... G--' CI ........_ or v or a c Hoog. 2BR. 'l Bi\, Util rm. CcislA ~!CSA WATERFRONT ~1ALL, Ready·t<~\Vear & reports. Gordon W a rren , "'"en enn -u P' ••"C"C 963-1786 963-4567. Pioio (rplc, pool. clean. $295 751_.187 ssm.aki Sho r 1 p G"la-3345 Trimming & 1'1N'1\·ood. Ben.
OOG RUN mo. O..i·ncr 64G-5.J83. t ,...,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,~ NEWPORT BEACH Dre ng P or sa e. .A. · 646-8010 p1·cs nft. 6 l ~ E.>;ecutive offices ~.!2o rt Beae~ Add-A-Room 6002 SPRc. 2 br. apt. All xlras. $3j(J. EXEClfI'rvE APT THE EXCITING 2 Or 3 Room suile -.l'I0'"1.I~ DEPEND,\BLE. lof o w &
i""rom S159. 1h blk. \\'cs!' On the bay. Lge new 1 Br. PALM MESA APTS. View of boats & water GIF'T Shop, Po 1 b "location l.J~ SUb-<."(lntractors Edge or rompl care. Reas. ~fA.!'<K~l oH 0~ta~;~ 17391 Boat ~~~· Opel"02 d11.ily;,,
1
310 ~1INUTES TO NPr. BCJ{. 1 Small olfice $165 Promontory Point. Gross wanted, room additiort.'I. All f~g 0,,::;t. S & S Gardening.
" ... son, O'U"'J""" Ferns. ......... apt ·Set" gr, Bach, 1 & 2 BR. from $157 B ill Grundy Rlfr. $4500 Mo. Broker 552--8666 trades, South Coast Builders .,., -""""'=~====c l
CllEZ ORO AP'I'S 675-7520 or 675-8551 • Adults, No Pets. 675-6l61 Mort, Trust Deeds S03S 963-4688 EtinOPF.AN GARDENER.
8234 Atlanta y EARL y ~1 O DER N 1561 Mett! Dr. B b 'Ill L.'lncl«r.,.,ill!!:-1"'4? 11ervice
1,2& 3 BR. Priv gar, pool. SPACIOUS 2 Br .. blk: from (5 blks from Newport Blvd.) DESK space avanable $50 • ysi ng 6008 rensonable, 6-12-5329, &8>-1•125 ' "'asher. d,....,cr. Close 1 o oc-ao & bay ,,.,,., Nov. ~A""""" mo. \Vill provide furniture LOANS UP TO ICr'/. I ·-;-~-;-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,._ ,, , .., ·"' ......... '10<1\I 1 TD L 11 I :'if):.· •. •,: r.:ir::N/l\'IAINT beuoEh~ 5.'16--0336 1, only $250. 673-1909. 2 Bd, 2 Ba, Fun1., N.B. $500 :!rv'r~ ir:~Janbl~ w e1'1's. "1•5 st • oa ns YTOLCUNGwtllq~C"o~eo"r v.ith So<'. ~rri"l'l<'l"'"· Cleanups,
"IERALD LANE YEARLY 2 Br, 2 Ba, $500 · ....... e """ your Sciil r'1, ~A2 :-:331 64&-490R 1 br, unturn. $155. N., .. ,,.,..,.. Shores. 2 blks 2 B<l, 1 Ba, Unf. N.B. "A15 Beach Blvd., HWJtington 2· J L be.by. NE\VBORN-1 Yf:AR. ............ , 3 Bd, 2 Ba. Unf, Lido ... Beach tl2·4321 nd D ns E I .. -· nds '".00 1'-10\V & edge, home. apts 546-9366 ocean. $200. 518-8912 or 67~600 ' . oa ven ngs "" \\'= e ' ..._ & Ind . Tree Di mming &_
NEAJi new 1 BR. Upper,61' .'CC;.-1600C''""~~~~-~~ 0 FF I C E SP. A C E F 0 R perk t;J u ~l or :11 ~r yartl clean up. Jim &16-56.11
nr Fnvy. $J j(t. nio. NO 3 BR, 2 Ba. blk to Beach VISl9N ' :t~~~~8B~~i~;1¥ru'f~ low•sf rat•• Orang• Co. 6;M,e645-~ase a t -BULK COW MANURE
PEI'S. S47-0070 or 5'15-(}7ll0 & Bay. 1'~rplc, Bl t n s, 111 0 de r n . A I r , ro u sic, Settler Mtg. Co. EARTHWORMS
LAH.GE 'l br, shag cpl., drps, Dsh1vshr, newly redee. $350. REALTY janitorial. Class A. Walker 641-2171 545-0611 BABYSITrING In my home. * 757-1570 *
gar , nr. Sinter/Beach, ~155. yrty. 675-3810 "R~oo-m-1------4000=~ I & Lee Bldg. Call Gene !{ill Serving 1-Jarbor area ~ yn, 1'~eneed .ya.rd & references. General Services 6046
mo. 847-6!!ol3. PARK New!Xlrl Apt, 2d plan, 557-0UG QI'~@:)(). $34,18S.4G lst T.D. on prime Costa Me511. area. 642--0384. 'THINGS" by lofoose. Gcn'I
carpentry, repairs, plum·
bing, elect., 642-5613
Hauling 6051
2 BR. free g-dS & 11·ater. only S.129 1110. tennis, etc COLLEGE Student needs 1501 WESTCLI FF DR. Con1ml site downtown, SJ WILL Babysit, my home, au
Cpts. drps. Child ok, np IH0--8777 n10mings or eves rooin in vicinity or OCC N~WPORT Financial Cenlt!r Capistrano, $3:i0. per mo, ages. Good n>ls. So.O>ast
pets. $170. 842-1652 BAY1'"RONT l Br, 'l Ba on in exchange for rent or Leasing Office Space incl 9% due 21 mo. Strong Plaza area. Kathy, :>19.-9565
2 BDRi\L Cpst.. D r p s., tfl:iln bay. pvt bch. wlpier preferably yard 11"(lrk. Pvt CA.LL ON-SITE MANAGER land ~· l.5'"k discount Cabinet Making 6014
Garage, ,1Md!k to H u n t. m.1935; 644-451 cnlrance/bath deli i r ed· -~,-~,1~411=.'!64~2~-3~lll~"'~'~246~.~-1-~C.~U~-~1Nl~53hcwrn::i0mo-I;~:;';;:-;~~"'-;::;;:;:;
Center. $100. 8~2-!">417. Newport Heights 3870 644--000. l f.fO. FREE RENT 2ND TRUST DEED-.$9000. CAR p EN TRY, cabinets, LOCAL P.loving &: Hauling
Irvine 3844 FRO~! $82.50. Priv rms I: No lease req. Dix. oftices 10% 3 yn. 35% discount. custom 11"00dwork:ing, home by student. Large I ru c k,
apts for seniors. Linens, adj. Aif1)0rter Hotel. A/C. *686-1425 ev~• repain, remodeling. No job re&.!IOnable, Barry 531-1235 fi Phone scr1iN..'
e 1 niile lo 01"r1111
BEAtn' furn. apts $165 &
$1i5 Spanish style building,
pv1. encklstXI gn1·., pool,
sauna, laundry, adlts 17:'.0l
Kecl:ion Lnnc 1 blk \\'es!
of Beach ort Sinter. 842-7848
2 Story 2 Br., 1112 Ba. Single
car garage near park and 2 BR 1 ba \\"HITE \Vll.TER
shopping. No pets submit VIE\\', decks, lrplc, relrlg.
children $175/mQ. 6.).)1~ \\'.1 o'$~,.;~·~'"~"'~494-;:_.;~23397"--==
JS1h. Drive by. !hen call laguna Beach 3848
&14-7?11 Agt. J\lr. Bailey.
NEWPORT HEIGHTS niaid sen', Xlnt security. full se.rvlces. From $145 Alo. too small. Free est. Lou YARD, GAR.AG E cleanups..
N Du I 3 b d ? 114 Del l\1ar: SC. o\92-34.ll 2172 DuPonl, Room 8 I Jal 6Th-Q39, 834-1299 remove dirt, trees, Ivy, cw p ex, r. en, -Lott md FOUlllll drl d" 847 2666 ~2 ba., fl"(ll, 2 car gar. ROOMS $20 wk up, with •833-3223 'Ti! noon * Carpent•r 6015 l'ewys, ~ tng:i. •
116 Palmer, $375 per mo. kitchen: $30, "'k up apt NE\V Plush olfice Bldg .. 2 · CON~RUCTION or Trash
ea., a~t. 833-201'-I or &16-7414 548-11;>5 or 6-45-3967 to fj R~1 suites. Conference REMODEL. Add-on, gar hauling, life demo, I r I' e ~GJG-=~14~1,:< _______ 1 ROOM to man. $70. monthly. Rm. Xerox copier. Near Lost & Found 5300 coovers~n, cust. & new renxivals, etc. reas. 645-8512
2 BR, 1 ba, c-pts, patio, :m Flo"•e1· St, Costa ~1esa. O.C. Airport. 833-3640. const. 2a yrs elp. draw HAULING & Yard Cleanup.
AD\JL T GARDEN APT
l BR furn. $1-15/1'.fO. Pool.
Nr. Lake Park. 1035 12th
Sr. :i:.16-74·17 all 5 & 11'knd~.
:-.t~:N. 11n1all beach hotel.
Rooms S2L30 1vcek. Apts.
s:.1:1.1110. :i:1S-1o;;i;
BEACH Singh'. fu111. (If I sll~I pi.Irk',::. $12!; Jsl & IJJSI.
E1·1•s. ~~-,J-I lii<ll5.'.16--0f1G2
LARGE l Br on \Vest Bay OOEAN VIEW 2 BR I bn
St. Cpts, drps, bltns. Slf'5. apl., lush gardens, this
Incl. ulil. No pets. GT;>-5800. unit 5l'paratc frorn n1al11
Bt-oker, no tee. blrlg. !:295/lno. ·194-1055 or
'194--~!602 eve. 2 BR unfuri1 G<1rdl'11 Ap!s. j ;c,"7i'i'"-'=-==-.-'7= FTplc, D/W. priv patio. 5200. S~1AJ.L APT $123 incl ulil
Nr. Irvine Industrial area. Neur Vic Io I' ia Seuch
f>.')7-284 1 •19-1.Jo.sl/121~~ 472-:'S.17
LARGf<_; 'l bl', J I~ ba. l BR 1 ~ blk lo beacli
\\'eshr/dryr rm. Patio. Al)ULTS $Z!il/n10. 741 S.
drps, (.TJ)1S. Close lo schls CoC1st H11•y, l.ab'Ulltl lkach
_,&,_»ec·_:c,,,,_t ;_P::-''e:":c·.:>16-'°"116&'l=o.· -·I Laguna Niguel 3852
~nr. etc. Adults, no pets, 1 ,,&1~&-:..::.9!36'='--~~~~~ DLXE a/c ample prkg WST; TIGER KITrEN 6 plans free est, &4a-34J9 I mm eel in t e., dependable
$19i 5"8-5300. SllO AP'I' on ocach. 14'x18' ulil pd, ~200'.l', from AS''. mo. ch!lds fa vorite, strayed COMMERCIAL. RESIDEN-serviee, f'('(]li. 548--8683
S.n Cl.m.n'. 3876 rn1. nncl kitchen and bath. 67f>.6900 2855 E Cst Hwy or borrowl'd 1 9 O O Blk TIAL odd J 0 b 8 ·Free Heatt'ng & A 't C nd 6053
C'IM, • · • Temple HlllK Dr. 1 O -I 3 esti1nates Tom Mac Leod r o
----------Nc11'Pffi1 Bench. 673-1241. . 1 RE\VARD 833-6677 day 11 497-3120
REDECORATED 2 Qr, 2bii, Guest Home 4150 01-FlCE SPACE Se v e rii J 497 2:ra3 .::.~::;..,====--GRAHAM BROS. 546-16.\'l quiel neighborhoorl, elosl' to LagwJa locatio~s. ava i'I . -ei•e. . *CARPENTER* Furnaro replacemt, wall
r1·e1·y1hing, 1 child OK. $l!m. LOVF:LY Jnrge private & troin $195 mo. ,19.l-9424 FOUND: .w ~ 1 m a r an e r . Xlnt crafls:manship-low heater1, gutter & dwn
4fl2·0.'IOJ. o\9G-09l1, 492-4795 Sl!mi-prlvnte roonis. Nolun Reul E."!tatr Inc fen1ale.. L11np1ng. Hurt. Flea prices Robert-536--2051 spouts, presea.son furnace
'
I , BR 64" ---· collur. Santa Ana Heights. . cheek. Call G•n·v for $2. N;\V gc ~ · '..' BA . ~""'""''"·· 55c PER SQ FT Very beautiful. Gentle . CUbi'OM Pallo Covent discount -.,
Prrsti:::e ni'C:i. Pool, encl Vacation R•ntals 4250 1617 \\'ESTCLIIT-NB 556-8684. Redwood & Cone. Decks .gar. F;:1n1us1ir \1ie\1. $2.JO. G 54 5032 Free est 646-Ta98 846-9495 Housecleaning 6054
496--0616 Rent My Condol I A T. 1-WST, Male !.:HI, 1 yr,l'c'°u"sro=M~-=~"'-"""',""" 1.:..::::=:::::::::::::;L_...:::::1 SPECl,\L OFffo:BING =-------BANK of Costa Mesa Plaza black 11·lwh.lte '"'W!I. Ans c!11°pentry 0 !!..ll Mesa Cle-ani"" Service
Tlil'u OCI , SPACIOUS '.! BR clQS(' lo • ~...,.e, I BR at>I \\'Ith view .,... t~s cob1netll & qual<ty ·~ ·. :\ls1 : ~rec (('nt ....,,_"' oUice furni s h ed. Nice to Lemont, last seen in Vic: .,,,.. ' Carpets, \Yindowa F1oors
• EL~l GARDEN APTS
\\"JN1'En RENT,\LS U11fu1,,. 2 BR apt in lamny
Newport Beach 3769
Oct. 10 Ji1nc section. Pool no pels. 177
J hr, l'k>:u hfronl apl. $::!75. E. 22nd St., C.f.I. 6-12-36,1.-,.
L'til, pd. 1~1 & l;.tst nm. r-.IESA NORTI I
• l"f'f11nrl11l:rl" ~.'ll'an·~. 1lep. 3 Bedroom. 2 balh. $320.
li">lll \\. ~r,.;horc Dr. Cati mo irn:ludes \\"ater. :.4(;--j881} ~lr. Pftll!.sun for key, ask for Bob.
~:J-'.'h.~ 3 HJ{. 2 &, new htterior.
--r.A"s l:BJ:-;.\S AP'TS Adult t."Ondo lo1·er 161. Olb
;,:,1j f:1\1·1· 1\1c 1~12·2."'66 Jt<'r" 11•lopnr, shops 1 ~ hlk.
i·Jt1\'111nr t,1,h.: on hr:1<·h, 1&2 E-sh\('. &15-2345: :>48-95-l:l
llll 1•1·1 11.•li·.,n11·~. htcl 1)001. SUG EAS'TSIDE 2 Br dplx. ~\·1.tnty. ,\•lull•. CID I h . ~~~-ynrrl, , res p a 1 n I . $.~\\ r: li}'. 1 H•lr., 2 P.1. Responsible 11.dults a pp I y.
& l~ch. ('(l!or TV. n1n\d &16-2612 or &l:t-903IJ.
srrv. pot•!. 1'/lt: tllt:SA, ·115 2 BR. Ea8t!ide. ne11r shop-
N. N••111~1r1 81., N. B. piog. 120<' 1no. 32' Cabrillo. 646-DGiSl. ). apt 8. 5-t8-469l
ON !he bc~11·h, M1·helnr ~SO!'.'.TU~N~N~IN~~G.~0"2B~,-.c,~00-.~1'-t
shu;lt11. fro1n S12~1 Tiff<: nr itnrdcn 11pt. pool. Sl!Xi. SEC.'1~0 ~"!'OR\', 11)3 r.Jc-Adu'.ts. 710 \\f, lflth SI. ~·add1•n. 1li~1-l~l\~1 l::XTRA Lra del••xc 2 Br apt"
'
• .., ... E B(IAT UCCK~ 3 Bl~. '• '""' 1·r1111, drps, bltins, No pets,
fpl, .~undC'rk 1111h v i " 11 , $100. 64trll81
'\'inter or yMy. On I h c ' ..!O:::'-""-'""'--~--ll'alcr. 67:Hi169/771-tl"'I 2 BR upslairir. Cprs, drp!I,
blln!, garage. Nrar QCC, OCEAN1'1l0NT 11pts. sva1I StiS. nlO. 557.Cll.'"iO
"'i nterlytl'rly, plush :2, l A .a Br. 675-14<>1. J br, :2 ba, 2 gar·~.. nr. l"s~.-n'-"c°"le~m=e"n~to"'"-~3~n=6 stores & offices. Ad u 1 1 1 • S. . By Owntr. ~6-8397
1110 of t'\ov. '.: Hdrni condos ~hops. beach. NO PETS. o! mountain11 11.nd ove.r\ook-......... pl --a. ~'. •=39110, o! Royal Palm , Sako•. concrete. 962-1961 Et ~ E 1 557 ~•• -·• ..• ..~,,. Child Perm. $190 49~'i&I. ing pool. Choice PAL ?>1 '""'"' """ ..,.. .....,.,-"" CARPENTRY p INT!NG c. r "''"
11 . -v•""· n:uUC't-u to .,.,..a, ~n DELUXE 2 nn !fi . '--t 546-04.t9 • A EXCELLENT Ol'Cr 11 In ndul1 pk. under Nt..\\' 2 BR. 2 BA. Refrig, DESERT location. Nr small Cor..st Hwy., (;d~l. 4..;_ ~t. WST: YORK!E ~. Cd?\! ~EMODEL &. RE~~}R Houseeleanlng ' 12 sep. hut l'CIUDI t"Omplc:<1. rnngl', dsh11·shr, lndry. Sor-shopping center. \\'eekly or """ r Uvt; $1 11,-l1't0""3079 done. by lady w/expe.r . De-
'l'c-nrHs & t.'lllf membership ry, no pets. 492-1934 n10nthly rales. For In r o Realonomic.s. Bkrs. 6'1.l-6700 area Sun. eve. Male. Blkf-'i' iii;;' ru;:-;:;m;n;-o.;';C,~""[ .,!P"~nd~,~-~~l~ran!"'•~84!7~·363~1c_,[
avail. New lrg .. dlx view San Juon 642-0596 or 556·8868 f.fODERN office for r en t &. Sliver. Reward $ 2 5 · AfINOR HO~IE REPATR Maintenance 6069
3b
.,, "-2 1 1 ~ ~t~o •c; '673'B098 P lu mbing , ca rpentry, r. -2 uu, poo s, cenlra 3878 Pi\Ll\1 SPRINGS/DESERT ,,.,.,.... ""'a .., · ..,.,, mo · cern le ti! 540-5560 nir rond, fpl. za.m. Hillhurst 1 __ C_•~p_is_t_ra_n_o_____ Shndow ri.tountaln Resort & 6-12-2833. LO~: Bick LRb with whlte m e. · HUSBAND & \Vlfc l c a m .
Dr,H)lf Cro11·n Va I I e y ,, BR nd ,~,5 p 1 N R,·1,,..1iet Club. 10 cb;imp. Bus'tn 5 Rental .... r" on Black neck wearing red ALL Types Oean 8c maintain office,
Pk\\';;) '714\ 49j..1760 office. -' co 0 ~ .. · 00 · 0 tcn;1, courts, luxury a<.'COm. • 1 _..,,,. collo.r 11·lth lag, if found **Big & Small•• apt, home or re-r@ntals.
If no l1t1"wrr, ·199-167:> pets. Days: 12131 4SS-~l ) O""ICE OR STORE call 646--178(1 536-lW E1Cp. Rel. 54S-!M03 Evcs/\Vkcnds r714l 968-2680 i-=Cconl"-1-'l n=< '-'"f"<"-'"-1Z"l___ "
Lido Isle 3856 Santa Ana 3880 Rentals to share 4300 500 or 1000 Sq. 1"1. FOUND nppro" 3 nl05, old
LRG 3Br .. '.!ba, bltlns. crpl!I. 1-BR. ll'iplcx. 11r. So. COfl.l'I
drps, 2. t~lr 1.:nr. Adlts, S-100 1']:11.11. Cpts., flrp~.. bltiis.
lease. ti7;,-3fl67 11f! 6. Curu.ge. $13.i. &n-9293
Mes• Verd• 3863 Apts Furn/ Unfurn 3900
e lllli\lE ATlolOSPlll:.1\1'::
1)1._•lu;.:f' '! & :1 Bit HcnlRI
Qf(',3 0\15 ~l ace Ave .
5.l&-10:11.
3869
OCEANFRONT plu!\h,
UnWiUlll. 3 & -I Rr. 111Ull!r
or year!y, 6T~lto4
I BR apl. Rmall, qutcl. 1:
l>fk lo -.-·111cr, girl!, no p<'IS.
SI 8:1. G4H16SO
2 Bit. To~·nhOu!«!, frplc,
fron1 $250. l BR, from Sl95,
Pool, tennis, conU~ntal
bn•11kf11st. Separate famil)'
M'ction. ~ to ~hopping
&: line be11ch. &14-2611
NewRhagcrptg,pavedpark-oran ge kitten at l B-
CAL-Slate U. Lnng Beach Ing, on busy corner. 4 Bl ks dianopolls & Brookhuntt, Q. (iQ "1) £) "'\.. { f) 1:1 ~a_ 9
student employed Jn Laguna from beach, Hunt. Bch. Idea1 11.B. Oct. 11. Call 962--0302. \:)\!;;:> 1.'-QU ~). -'!:J J.j<J• ~
Beach 11'0uld l!k1' IQ share for Insurance, Reill ~stale, Lost Black Kitt•n Thof Intriguing Word Game wilt 0 C'uc'/e
111th someone. who Is nice In Cltt Shp, ,etc. 538-0'll l Ext. Male, 6 n1o's old. Weslcllfl n n 11;
a bcautlrul hon1c In Laguna. 207, 8·4 \\kdays. Dover Shoh!ll areo. Rcwe.rd ('ii.ii ~, Cl.Ai•· 'OUAN------
t;'lense C'll:ll 5'1!1~ ofJcreU. C1.1\I 6'16-()S91. O t•ot<o!\ga leu.,, of 11\t
GUY 23 deshi:~ nxutuu&le Center San Clemente. FOUND male b la ck laur 1C•ot11bl..d wordi ~-
male or female lo share IOOO Sq 1''1 Daehshund CT'OSlo Birch St., !Ow ro form 1®' $1111JJ~ wOfds.
2 Br, 2 Bn Apt. ncnr So. Store or office N.8 . Pink collar-and leash. I R 0 M R A T CMst. Plaza Call Ro it er on El Ci.unioo Real 540-4030 (213) 42!'r7096. 1--.:.:..:;..::_;:...'.;..;..._J
after 5 pm, 5'1~181 Excellcnl ptarking Lo s I B rn I B I k Ta b b y, j j I'. ji . j
1''EM to 5l1r w/il\me, private 492-9764 «-'il13
Fe n1ll I e , Gm collar. Vic ~. =·==·==· ==· =·~"
be.th, bedroom, kllch prlvl, COlrf1'fERCIAL Larger office SiRe.""wa ..... & oA'J a rn er . JIB. lrl ~
11 1orage, 979-8699 llft. l§paee from 24c per sq. ft . ''"'' O'fV"""272&. f..·-~P-'A;_T..;_I~L:;.._-l .:;~.
6/wlsends S n.OOm orrteelcen.tral Joe .. FOUND -Friday amall \1-il\le j j j j •
CJIRISTIAN 1't. Straight. On $240 rno. Dr'J.1. oft!~. So. Poodle, fem wlgrn collar.
$89.50 MONTH :? TIR. ,\tlult~. no prt~. F.;Rlll-3 & ~BR ix'aC'h clnplc.'I:. J.kXI
l 1udc Cos1a ~1•'ill $160. j ye a rl)'. 06\ ld:t0n It.tall)'.
f1?-4~~ =1J 1 J ~ '. ~n:p.,~ ';::'~mo~ ~: J.1&~~~~~ JJarklng I H 0 C E A I i
.t'~~ •\~ Kt'llcy. Nol:nn Rtal Estate 4!M-st24 F'Ot1N9I· clll. male. black j j j' j "It You, don'! Sfy eny1hing, Lovely. eUlclenl'Y s r 1Jfl 1 o G-O-Wr.i" 6 1~7513
u1u... tlllC.'1\S, n1::i\tl ~t·~. ~~~,..,.-~~c=-~,.-. rk'a-fOC'"ludt'd ("II IT\ P 2 BR DPl-X, lldlt.t only, oo l VF.ARLY lovely 2 BR. 2 811, ~i.ni{y. ~ ... 1 Al~. 114 ,\\i I pl't!I. $210 + $75 n.'!Vnd stt. r~rplr:-, 2 blks beach.
drl 1\1nr, sc. 492 1(43() & el~ rll'p, &i&-4389. SliJO. 1no. 6i3·6620
SPAOOOS 2 BR close 111 DELUX!-: 1 Rr apt. kitchen J llR. 2 BA.I blk 10 bC'11ch.
• ~~ h~1tch, VIEW, NO turn. s1 :;,1. mn. Mull , no Yl'nrly. $~. •
PETS 5710 mo. 11 er m . r~rlren or pflfl. 548--113'.l__ 61.1--7o;¥1
49$-176-L ~F:1'.ll-f1.iilN. 1'-. br. $160. UNFUllN 1\Jlt11. 2 Bt .. 2 f\:'l
''Milke Rooni ror Dadd}'.. No ~1t. __ \\'l't1!t·Hff 111'f'n . ~1nnH JX'I
••• clen.n out the garage _ 615'-ti131 OK, cnll 61"!--21:>2; lif'i-9000.
: _.turn th1f junk into (lath Doii'I a. • up lhe ship! 1Betlruorn bjlt. Adiiii(~1iO.
lrith • o;ir:lot Ous}fkd l "IJ(I" II .. ·~'!d, Ship lltl ~11. Neur \\'b.tc>r $18:i
aft, 0.11 11--_ to &bore P.o: 's! &12--5678. n10. lc•v . &12...::110
,VtM<:lllJUl:'l21UU'J n:ti.tALE Roommlllc 20/25 SAN C1. ~ Af EN T E ~11 & v.•hl c, found on Coe.lit . _ _ _ _ you woo 1 be c•llod Df1 to
• --'llY'1 lo share nice 1 ~ <"M loctllt.'d 11tiop on Avenue del ll\\')'., nr eRr \ot Ir Hnflil'Y ::::=~=::=='.....-" ;•.it tC'•l~l11.C.--.iill«I lXCITUIC llt_W COllClPTI hou."S<'. 16.i mo. 6 7 !J-7100 fl.for. t:: x c et. tor any T'lsl:er, N.B. (1) ~2815. I R E p R E F I
MM.Ill WIESIGC UVIK le.av.! mc11sa.gc for Dolli;. bu8'nr81. $200. pClinTI(). LOST: Bolton T tr r I e r .
i '-"'A"""ACCl'TIO WOR.KTNG gal hall Jovel)' l\fJCT'. 114 Avt. dcl Mar, sc. (Bulldog) Lo. Sch ..... vie. I a I I r 0 Cornor•'• ·~· Cl<ill(-le ~"
•Bachelors 3 Br hnn1e to 1he.re. C,M. 492-8430 LA~. Pnst OU. Reward, _ [ _ . _ . by lil11tog '" "'-"",_.n9 IPlrDrd
•I BR , 2 BR 1150. incJ. uills. &i:....oo&2. SJ\lALL OVAL Shop nvall. 495-11.'.6 or 581-«l'J~ "011 d""•lot> frotn "'P No. l bffi...
•'28R&Otn UctShtd<:"l\\.twcdsroon1m111e lol'. In I~ r.1 ·11 •tPOUND: LIUle Dot;. O,r . e r .. 1 1.;U\ti(~(O l{IT!'.SIN
From $l7S. "_.
35
to ~hr Cl>:-.1 opt. Sll2.~ THE FACTORY. $9), mo, Shlhairl'd, has collar, VI ll!l~l !.OIJAttS.
'" call ~l~rk, G7:i..ri2:2.-I 425 l>th. N.B. 673-9606 PIRccntia & l5th S.'"89-tll. I) 1.rNS~PAJol!l£ ••OV( l(IT(t.S j j j M•soV.rde~ost&Adams ii"WARLE Male 11h11n-2 br l'SPACE AVAIL for l!'11.tt11n I.OST lOfUi, BEAGl.E 1nale, 1;>Gfl t1>N~wt1 I I J I
S40 1800 s P 1. St c 11 s tu b ch. Boardv.-alk Shop'a. Cir. ;,it lrl-«rlor nr .Ad Am a A · • RcatonaWi:. 1714) r.l!h'iOOt. llunt. lft,r. Ca.II: 146-1166 Bushard 002 ... cwu Reward SCR~·LET~ Answers In Cl•s1iflc,ation 8*, _
•
SchOOla & !CllOOI. & SehOOla & khOOl a i SCllOOl1 i Help WtntOd. Ml. 7100 •=e.:.:P;,.;.;.==;.:; ••••••••1•oo;s~~ln;1=t~ru=e1~1~on(i:~r1oo;:s~i1~n;i11~r;iiu~c1~10ii"ii;iiii~700~;'pii;1";';1;nicff;;;°";.;;;i7;005;;;s;c;hoo;;1;•;";;;;iiiiiiiii~5ch~oo~l1~1.;;;;;;;;;;; !NURSES Aide '" LVN, ex· •;.1 .. sr~'·w c.nv. "°'•· JUDY'S FREE YOGA YOGA , ... THE ~~;"'pre~wli~ t&no3j~': Hu poslllonr a""'1abl< !or Antiques ~
DEMON• ST'R' A MOR ... 1"'111 ... GI xtnt ~':;,~,";,~.:2'""' ::,',~ f,;;'..,.. '""' -~;n, ~l';~~·A,):f TION ... ; 1-' 1"1111111 1"1111111 • For larae H. e. df"UI:: ftore. SO. COAST PLAZA v.'Ood, china k.oobli· $6.
' P/Um•. """'· pnl'd, CaU SALESCLEJU<, m>t=. f0< but off. 8'1..oi& 847-~ • dn.11 11tott, lull tin1e, Call BE AU T , &. wt us 11& I
b K ,.LID ,.S Offset Press Tr•lnte "99-ZKM h.ILndcarved &ntlq. ~ ~y "' "' FREE '° Hr. ""'· 12.so .. , "' SECRETARY .. ,.... c .. u •7H!!Oll .... R.lt
Al'THI FAMOUS DEMONSTRATION + lnceotlv.,. Apply In >"or job w/lots of varlo<y1App ·:;;;l;:le;;nc;;•;;•;;;;;:;;;;;:;;;;;\ -YOGA CENTER ~r'IOn. Pl!:nl\Ylaver. 15 4 ~ ,~/Bmall grow I ns: elec-1• TOMORROW 1 ewporl. C!'lt ll'Onlcs mtu\uf. w / rood Ntw '74 White, Delu xe ~ CA.l:IFORNIA. MORNING P BX An1woring Service b''"""· M"'t hi>< >lo't WESTINGHOUSE
445E.171h,COSTAMtsA Days or ..... >'llll or pit typing skill<. Ddta Eloe· ·WASHE R I. ODiV~D •r 10 •"' "· 1·1 E0"•••1~2 troni c "ontrol Corp. ":.n.i ~"""'I A A •..,. ""'per pre 1 · "" .....,.. ""' · &46-1?? -' n,101,.•Cfl to llf\iU'tmQ1lt witb DO
TOMORROW PRE SSER ~· hl0ku115!! t year wurant1
40 HM day wk. Steady. *S•c ys, BoottkMper1 &r: u11ed only 2 months. Ex· MIGHT Throw out tension. find peace of mln1 64:t-3•1'r.! Sprts mfg, NB Ui ~eind"nl Agency ~llc.111 c..'OndlOoti:! $'W)() for
AT 8 P.M. v.hlle)'Ou build a more helllhy, beautllul P
0
ROCRESSColVE dedve~r In N:~'ti!'a~·· Su!t~190 ~raft 6~~e~~ Pl<•sc I
Only KALI OAS IOIChes the TWO bo(fy!Theremar1cableeelenceo1Vogaas ranal! unty !!Bites Q DI ., A Job --·sil--_ .... __ .... ___ I
taught at Yoga Center 11 famous for 111 1 e c r e tary tG controller/ • •-$)'Slen.ol yaga. Raja Voga lor lhe mind, ~approach lo a FULFILLE D must bl> able tG take No Ct\arge To You CLO S E-Ot.rl'. Coi~,
Hatha Vooa for the body. Learn mind YOJ. Taught by Bhakli Pril & Sn Dfty1, &horthand, uccurnte lypilt, Established l.965 he11.vy duty Ellre'k.a \'o.C'u\'ifn
a)rM:>t. wtllle YOU build• beautllul body. Mo expert & charmln~Western women. use 10 key adding machine SER'"lCE ~ ..... __ lh •· clca1W'!N. ''&f· $189.50, llOW , Leern the lamous Sn Suralh snort-cut y I • k J ~ r book ~ ~ .3d.ll:""' • 11 l'le 1 oga sJ ms. lones, lms lt'le mind & • now ~Ke o · Ju~ ml\n. Top pey & frinae on I y $114 , attachmentl rNdilation S)'llem. It acoomp s s n satisfies through & lhrough. Learn dffp keeping. J.fua:t ~ a • e 1 I benefits. Exper. man prel'd. $19.95. 9'.l9 W. Baku, C
Wll8ka wtlat lnlY lake months°' years by relaxation. nulrition secrets. medilalion, 11ta.rter. Idea.I work Ing !-"'\Ill or "'pit. Shell, I7lh & M. ~ ,
other rnelhods. Every person alle~lng , •. rowtobfeathe. For ages 2•72. I conds., &r: xln t Ir in a e Irvine N.B. l'REIGHT n""G.E = tt'lll tree demonslratlon wlll learn the • be n e r Its. Salary com· ~ . ~ ~
)()Dabrealh, Which wlll help Yoll t>relthi 1 1nensurate with experience. SHAh-lPbo assl.!ilant to busy New j-lotpoinf'< . deePef~ive longer. Don't miss ii. Meet Equal opportunity employer operalor S days, g ood Wubeni .. Dcyel)y,~l"tll• •
KALIOAS al the Yo ga Center of YOGA CENTER OF CALIFORNIA Contact De:na Hoover, salary+, Newpo11 Rench, wu¥rs, NC\\', Y.'ltf'n1lfy. Caliloml1 betwet§n Tustin and Irvine Pondemsa lfomes, 2 08 2 646-1345 A Credit, Bo!A, 36?3 W
Slreets al «5 E. 17th Street, Cosla Bu~iuess Cenler Dr, ltvine. Shipping Dept. Supv. Warner San.ra Ana, llf'~
...._ 1•1•.646-8<•1 445 E. 17th St. ':::".::!;" Costa Mesa Phone 646-8281 ..,.>:00 • "" NB ""'ur'"'"'"" c.. """"'· '"-""!: . .,, , • Pay commensurate with ex-FRIGIDAIRE ~frigenll?', 7 WEEK CLASSES BEGIN NEXT PROGRAMMER P'"''""'· Xlnt Co pd bene. '"'" •"""· 17'. MUST
Au.to Ma Sat G1mayo .
lad me rrom the unceal to the Real.
tBM System 3, model 10 ROSAN INC, (7J •I) 54S.5633. SELL! l'~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~W~E~D~ •• ~O~C~~T. ~3~0~th AT I 0 A..M!. !'!&!7~P!.!M!.!!!!!!!l!!!I!!!!~~~~~~!!!!!!!!~~~ .,,, •>•tom. ""'' co. or. srU< &rcon rr'""'' ...... ,......,,. fers io;ln't st.1Lrtln1 salary time cves to sta.rt.' Fully r~REJF Pl~'UP.Re.I'• .
P I I /p & benefit... exp in scnen making, set 1\ppl ~&. . .scrap ~eta) • nt nt 1p1rln9 6073 !'f~1nt1d, M&F 7100Help W~nted, M&F 7100 Help Wanted, M&F 7100 Help Wented, M&F 71001'11lp Wanted~&F 7100 ~ES 100°/. FREE up .t. prir11ing. Top pay for Call anytime, 67~ •
CUSTOM PAINTING
Exterior Speclallat. State
licensed. No. 254931. Bond-ed. UabUlty Ina. Free Color
Conllllttnr & Estimates.
Low Competitl\'e Prices.
&li-0005
D II S d 0 I Bureau of right person. All re p 11 e ! GAS DR \"ER & ELECTR~ COOK. full-time, ma I u r c e very-Uft ay ft Y Employment Agency conlidenti8l. Our c1nployees DRYER S50 EACff, XI woman, E.'<per or will train. Costa. Mesa 556-1100 know of this ad. ,Write t.'Ond. 646-5348 ' ' ~Cen~=~d:1 . ~~~vMs.~' OF DAILY PILOT TO CARRIERS. R&. 7708 HarbGr Blvd .. Suite 207 tiasslfied Ad no 314, % THREE avocail 0
COUNTE.R HELP QUIRES THE USE OF A LARGE STA~ Anahm 600 N Euclid 776-8120 Daily Pilot' P 0 Box no. re!rigeraton like new 14 TION WAGON OR VAN. CONTACT MR. Org 2_C1ty Bl Ea.It 6.14-1122 1560, Costa Mesa,CaHJ 92626 ct. $1a.1. 64~--~ Days. ~Tature adlllls 18 or BENTON WILLIAMS 330 WEST BAY T R tu P -•r r o\"er. 11-J & 11·2. St11rt $2 · • REAL F.8TATE ~x e rn '-r • 5 Rent Washers/Dryers
hr. Mon thl"u Ji"ri. ~2314. STREET, CO&TA MESA. TELEPHONE E x p e rienced/Prolessional-P~tunc. For CPA of JI c e . S:t. Wk. Full Na.int.
PROF. paln1er, hones! "'wk, cu s Too I AN. hosp exp 642-4321 FOR APPOINTMENT. ·dBroknders Only. M~~tadln1 In-~~~ 1:i=~:~pltu:'~~ t'~~ ==='*:.:""'"=-1312=::*:.....~-I
Rea1, In l -ext ' frff X-lnt. -y..onrrtn ge benefits, etc. . prefe~. lmmt'd opeiUntJ! eee ent status 111 e 11.~ no 239 C/Cl Daily Pilot REF'RIG. bar she. Beaut. tillmate. Ret.. 548-2759, -for pru1·time 7-3 :30 & 3. An Equal Opportunity Employer offices with c Gm pet en t p -0 &ix l!iEO Cost M ' coppertone. Xlnt coad.-"1.*· 50-3913 Apply in pe to P.artS De pt. Mer, 11:30 San C1en1errte General H I w t-• •••f 7l00 H 1 w i-• M&F 7!00 secretary. Pef'C('nlaie lease. · · · a esa. 646-3882 -:.. · A.,.,_,,..., e P an-· fTl9' e P an-· For additional Wonn.at'-Ca 92626 "•tii·tj~. ~ I t Hospital. C714) .....,............, ext .,.,. FRIGIDAIRE :lli R.B. PalntQ& ex:t, 1.to11 "-'MISSfAu V-IEJ .J iMPOlft 2'24 GEN. MAINTENANCE write Associated SGuth , 'l~·a1or,
hon1es 25c sq. ft.. pain! v.. g FULL TIME ----•----·I C.OUt Broken;, P. o. Box overhead oven. . ~ lncld, also int paJnUng, free """ 11101 Mil twr.fh ,....., • • DELIVERY'fEN,;_~arly AM 3 AM to 11·.-•'M LEGAL SECY l.595. Newport Beach, Ca, Telephone Sales 642--0084 ~ e1t. 673-3658 aft 5 ,.. Times Route, ....,,.ta Mesa ""n.1 PROBATE ""63. KE
Ill 1740 ........ _.1 area. No rollecting. Must Position ldeaJ 1or o ld er R.E. APARTMENT' SALES·, Cost1 Mesa Are1 Xl~Pr~I~~~~ D A J Painting 640-86$ The '" --::.. "-Va,;. ,t,.1700 have depend. car. 546-6427 person but age no barriC'r. Probate expel'. req'd . 1 Girl
Penonallty painters with U.A...,, ,.,.., .... • ......... ' or 541r1780. Resp's., nn.. walls, win-ofc. Good typing & 11 h. young o g gr es 11 v e ofc Work From I-.'',,,__""~-----=< 1 ~71 peraoM1 1ouch. Since ~~~~~~~::::~~':::~~~~~~ DENTAL ASSISI' Orthodon-Jdo~1s rl&algen. mai1n:_~bovt. Q,..,ndat ~· Xln't \l.'Ork:lng speclal.izlni ~~-geln8ves~~!_?t Your HorM ,B_t'-'cy.,_c..;lec:s ____ ..clQ20:.:;;:· ;I • 4 d aru o exp. pre e,,......, u co 11. ............. prop exc,...,, , '"""'s T C 1 1 ,. EXTERIOR PAINTING. Ucchr.side.Approx. ays not nee. We ofier gd. pay, 'SECY/RECEPT. 2 highly motivared R. E. op ommssons
Uc'd, lns'd, Ref's, Terms. Help Wanted, M&F 7100 H•lp W1nted, M&F 7100 "s•-~k.13 Orlbol .14upper, ~·~-ins., pd. vac., security & Accurate -typing. Gen'I ore Salesmen. \Vill n·uin. For Equal*0558-1311E * 1 .... ~ BICYCLES Richard. ~3335. Anytime. -...... , · 0 · '"·· other bene's. A pp I y ln ability. Will train for ad· appt., 556--'TI7. ppor, _nip u,-et Stock from shop thilt •tiu
PAPERHANGING & pain-$ADDITIONAL$ BE OF SERVICE TO ~~.:gAge0~.xsk~0 peraon to Mgr. 3141 Harbor vancement. $500. REAL ESl'ATE moved. 10 speed,, 3 SIIMd.
•·· 21 H bo YOUR COMMUNITY Blvd., CM RECEPTIONIST SALESPEOPLE. Why not S speed & slngle speed bikC.'1 t .. ~. yrs ar r area, Husband & wife can earn DENTAL ASSJSl'ING, exper. G RDS k I t to be sold at dnlen cost reta furn, no 183281. 642-2356 xtra $2(X}-.$300 per m 0 . &r: Get Paid For It Welcom· office manager. B~y Hun-UA Call Director, posting A/P. wor n the ho! est areas, TELLER Volla Cycle $l29.95 now $100. ht CLASS Ext/Int Painting. P/tlme while keeping l n i Newcomers. F1exible . Immed. Need full &: p/ttme Front ore appear. Good op-Huntington Beach/Fountain P W 1 hn. Need car, typewriter tington Beach office. Fringe guards for Orange Qi. area. ponunlty. S47S. Valley? Let us train you. Wanted experienced Teller, an or d $129,95 ~ $00 ~,a;i:~~,! ex:) I :J_~ ~C::!,b·3~1 ~1w5 P~~ &:. happy d I s po s l t l o 11 , be n e f I t I' salary open. Call C2JJ) 435-5325. Sam· NEWPORT ca.II Phil McNamee 963-4567 full time. ?iiany more bikes at .. me ~ 552.-,-. ,,.~,~-~-~·~=====' l -'i962~·~3329;;;·f,;;:i;;~a:;,.:-s pm, J\1on lhrJ Fri. Peraonnol Agency Villap Real Estate Please Apply reduction. Pan. &. Acgra • 107ii DISCOUNT • :r.i• = Dental Chalrsd Asst. uri Real Estate Bank of Amer ic.1 al.so Avail. \Vallpapering 1r Painting ADVERTISING SALES BEAUTY OPERATORS Desirable So. Orange Co. La~vrence Sec: ty. Inc. Newport Beach .. 2-3170 GROWTH Company with 18691Main.St,H.B. 831-1644
l'ree eat. Call S36-M48 Fonner Yellow pege or Full or J'/tJme for newly location, Some eve. hrs , HAffi stylist w/cllentele newly establlshed office re-Contact Ellie Green Buy now for ChrlsCmas Ii.
*W•llJMper Hanger* magazine spece ex Per, ::_ra~8-62~Say~~ ~i~ 66-6631 betwn ll &: lpm. needH1a~r ~~ge~on. quhes salespeople. Finest Or Bill Petenon save. •u'"'
C. REBKO 646-2449 Mature male or fem . e.om. eves. DENTAL ~pt. for busy • 493-2362 aft 7:30 pm * LEGAL SEC'Y k>catlon and a:rnlntmenta. Equal Oppar. Employer 10 SPEED 23'' Cu 1 t o m
.P.:.le:;•;.;l.:.er;.:f_;R.:.IP=•;.;l•;__.:.60;.;n.;. 1 ~...._'inO-w=:locc""'=~nl;./7..._"'!'all~;.;f.:.·"-',_,.ppt. ore. At Jeut 1 yr ex:per. HfCKiiillY FARMS Fl'ee! If you have 2 yn ~fe~'~.3';· 675-8600 ~-:~ 8 A: 4. ... V--~ 1f.saa ' $600 min. Very good Dll exper. w/domesUc c ases · TELLERS P /T IME
PATCH PLASTERING A~ .. A 1D1strlbutor wtoant~ Bookkeeper thru P&L to $850 benefits. Some Sall. H.B. this is for you! Pleasant Real Estate Salee~ Branch ofc seeks 2 bondable Cameras & EM. IOIO
All Typea, Free Estimates ..,_.... · 0 earn up _,.., / eo... l oc84&-~3540~...,,==-,.,.-;:::: I\ surroundings. Good hrs. WANT A CHANGE? & dependable Tcllers t 0 ' . • 11 Call ~ per mo. p/time. We tn.ln. 1-~ C Bkkpr/ truct $850 DENTAL assistant. At least Ve are training P 1t 1 me Also Fee Jobs 85% Conunlsak>n "''Ork Mon & Sat & FuU-• \VAT S 0 N , 3 S m.m
Call for Interview 63$.41123. Programmer RPG2/ 2 yrs chair-side exp. Ex· ~::e°~ ~::i~m;:,: Jason Best Agency $55. Licenii!!J School timl! for vacation n"lie.f. "Dnylight" bulk llU:ti loader.
Plumblnt 6078 Apartment Managers ~~ldi:eeper to I: panded duties w/4 handed 0a.ys only. Please Call At -17400 Brookhunt, F. V11 REALCO, REAL TORS Exper. pref'd. Contact Jiln Hardly used • Like oewl
L.R, OTIS p Lu MB r NG Fully qualified and ex-Le&al Secy/Probate $750 dentistry. Laguna Niguel. Hickory Farms, So. Cou\ ~SU~l~te~21:'.3~~::".::".~~~ 495-1830 or 831-2770 Pal"k, 644-7255. We s tern 646-3612 1
Remodell & Repalra. Water per:lenced pmfl!llslonal res!-Secy/Publ!shlng $650 495-4600 or 831-1321. Plaza, Lawer Mall. RECEPTIONIST $$00 Federal Savings, 2744 E. VIDEO tape m~ ud
h ; r:. e rs' di II po I I 1' dent mngr couple with pro.. Dental l''mt!Bck Ofc IG $650 DISHWASHER WANTED -H 0 U SECLEANER Wanted LIVE-IN Helper for elderly Typ" 55 filing C.oast Hwy, CdM. tquaI Op-camera all xtraa. ~TV tumaces. dshwshn 642-£163 ven abUity in administration Recept/A/Pay1tble to $550 GOOD HOURS. Carmel's Mon, Wed, Fri 9--l. $2.'15 woman. Room in m 0 b 11 e Front 6fc A~arance por. Empl. programs or ~·Yo ur
MIC le: BIA Complete & maintenantt ot large lux· Keypunch Opeiator $450 Dining & Pie Shoppe,628 N. hr. Own ttansp. Refs, home, board&: salary. Non-WESTCLIFF own. 642-9514 Plumblnl Service LI c . ury adult apts/marina com-Ge eral Offi Tr i1ft Coast Hwy, Laguna Beach 675-8248 C t ••1. 212694 plex in LA County. Excellent n ce a · smoker, should have awn Personnel Agency Typist-Receptionist II• ,>1, • .,,1m'tl(
RAYS PLUMBING EERVICE ~po:s=e~ ~~:rn~ta1~ Manual Type ~ wpm $il5 D Ja~~ W S:a~~~~ ~andoet ~u~~i!r,E 3 ~1 ~ ~ fo1 ~;, ~!~~i:f o :t t a~m.. Ph~n~ 1filE~ J,Mnie~~t&°A. ~~ta~~o~~ina ~ ~':..e ~j SIAMESE *'EGISJEREO.
,. .~. -~,,.!.'18tallaUC:.~ ...,.,D No. 264 Daily Pilot, P.O. ~ES~ t11" ShoNBp, .. ~84= W. Coa.oJt w/hosp exp nee. Al!IO pa11-646-8139 542-8836 the niceM locations in N.B. 7 st"'Apk:, JreffB1~;~'tit!i
•u ..,,,...._..., ~ Box: 1560 Costa Mesa, CA Jl.l\l'A... .,.,..,._......_, wy, · ~ "'· time pm hclusekeeper. 84\n LOAN PROCESSOR, RECEPI'IONIST p/tln1e in We need a gtrt with a . · ' ·
Remodel & Rep1lr 6081 , _,_,._,.~-=====-488 E.17th SL (at•lrvlne) CM DISHWASHER A pp I y irl Clemente General HO!ipltaJ FHA-VA exp mandatory. buiy salon. ca 11 548-4179 plea!ant pht>ne manner to Does " '' I040
'· APPT. SECRETARY Suite 224 642-1470 pet90n aft 4, Sid's BI u e <714> 496-112'1 ext 224. Please call for an appt. ask for manaa:er. "'Ork 8: 3 0-5 p . m • 5
ADD·A· RM· p-MODE.l. & .,._,...,.,._..,,•i,..--..i•, ;Bee::;;•;· 1~111~2h:::t;,P>;li;, ,;;iN.,.B:;·.,.-H 0 US EC LE AN ING , Ca11fornla MortgareService. ----~----1 days /wk. Contact Evelyn • PUPPY w· D'D"2 • REPAIR 23 yrs. exp. Uc. Telephone, p/time. fi..9prn , P' "'4 _.... ~-1 :DOCTORS ASSISTANT thorough & industrious. Bal. 835--20'12 Hamilton, 644-5600 EOE ~ •
No. 238-014 !:MITH CONsr· OUr office· CdM. Xln't 1 -~======-Isl waterfront. Own trans.~'-"=------RN's Bull Terrl~r!. __ ";"a tt..
403474 sale.ry to persuasive penion BOOKKEEPER YoWlg lady (18-281 to work 1-2 days per wk. $2.50 hr. LVN * CCU'S Welmaraner, B~ aoP.,SiJ
R-'lng 60l2 ~~~sales exper. ~J:~~Q!~~= ~;~ ~~P~-c~no1;;ru~b~;:.t%1~ 833-3145. ~;1~m':8~srii;eW:'. ~~~1 ~1~ua~~aJ~~jf
ASSEMBLER preJ'd. Pennanent full 1lme. exper. necess. We train you. HOUSEKEEPER RLlve In. 1 3-ll Shift Differential $35 Full p.tlme. J.11 & ll-7 curate .. Call 963-3275, lOam· Cockapoo. 100 M rx ER
REPAIRS, all~-Reas. II 1.1os previoW!I solde~ex-Reply to ClauUled ad ro Apply in person aftn or eve. ~~~adw: ;~·rs 0~rx:,~s:~~ ~:J:1 ~~~'Ji1!1pi: Excellent Benefti. 3pm PUPS Stud SeMce Most
W""'a1· ~ · .. ~.!.°! per. ot small parts. n't 714 c/o Daily Pilot, P. o. 2lli Harbor BI~ .• <:_?'~· 1 494-G468. i...aauna. Bch. Costa Mesa 642-3505 Goodco""sT"'Aing ·e"'s""Altlom TYPIST pt. time, flex . hrs.. tl'tf'dptil~ :a1Turtlesler c.an~ l ~C::"""-"::.:=-'-=v=;-·-~, I benefits Include profit shat-Box 1560, Costa Mesa, Ca. OOT Etcher \,.antcu, or M nice oft . nr. airport. Box · "~
Tiie 6091 Ing & overtime. 92&26. possible p I ant expansion. HSKPR, Comi;anlon. Elderly LVN, conv. hospital. 3-11 Memorial Hospital 4509, Irvine 9~ Eves. 531-5027
CERAMIC TILE Works ltit LAR ~,, EWN;16th1NENEBRING I 'e'"oo~KK=EE=P=E"R._,,St,..•'°'bl"'•-,...,,..., I .::.':o~c.:-<le.11:::3~'"'rvrn=;;----~l!.tO~'e '.~. :,s.~~-for =· Xln't benefits. can 642-2734 EOE WAITRESSES 1s°~~pdoLE~ ~d ... ~. 'di:.~~
' '' Ol;JO • • • • for Med-I~ backgrnd, DR bath, enll'y, shwr. pan ~ Xln't wage, hens. 642-2417. Part time for dance studio JAO< IN THE BOX, immed MACHINIST ------Exper. Neat Appearance pion&hlp ckKround, $Hl5 &: repitlr. Free EllL 494-2135 I ~==-='=.,.~""'---645--0472 openings 9PM • mldnlte. L th Opo I RN 21 Or Over up. 496-5583 aft 4 & wkCJ!(ls
5()-0487 ext. 211 A S ~ I ST A NT ~li,uta1 I le" BOYS I ..;;c..."'iC'.-l -~-.p,.---Al9Cl, 12AM·8AM. 1205 Baker 84. 6" •. ra orX I t Apply SUrf .& Sirloin SHELTIE/L"C'r ~u"'NO -~ 1Ta1nee, counter gu-s, ry or Dry eanlng res&tr s Co M in, mos exper. n 59 "---H NB ~· ~ ,,_, CERAMIC TILE NEW & <.'OOks, evenings, grave yard G Combination. Xlnt wages. 1 ~~··~~"~·~,..""'=---~neflts including pro t It Med·Surg. unit ll·1:30AM 30 W . ....,....t wy., puppies. 8 wks, $5 to aood remodel. Free cttJmates, shift, open tull & part lime. IRLS Modem plant. Permanent JANITORS sharing & overtime. shirt. I/time. Xln't ben@tlts. WAITRESSES home. Sd>l04'., • ,,1 0 Sr• jobs welcome. 536-2426 Apply Jack in the Box 385 Paper Routes Open employment. 4.92·5373 NEEDED: EIGHT GOOD LARK ENGINEERING EOE. Contact Mrs. Jensen, Dinner&: Graveyard. Apply PEP.ffiROKE Welsh Corgi * J47.U78 * E. 17th SL, CM. In Le9una Beach in Electric Carts & QUALITY PERSONNEL 866 \V. 16th, N.B. COll18; Mesa Memo r i I\ I In pel'9Gn. Odie's Re11ta11T puppies. AKC, Champ. line.
Kitch, C:ntryways, Bathrooms A1TENDANT, exper. f 0 r Many Loct tions. For full & part time work ==~..:642-=:::'205=:.~~-Hospital, 301 Vi ctoria, 0.1 anL 1400 Pacific Coast H"'Y· 496-4867
graveyard shlit. Good pay, Call Mr, Limbert Grounds Maintenance at a modem taeUJty In SJC, MGMT trne 21_30 $l50 wk 642-2734 !N~B~.,;_;:;,:.._:.._~-_:~1·=~e~LA~CKXLLABABFPuijp;p,,,:-. -1
Tep Solt 60t2 fringe benefits. Apply Shell 642-4321 Ann45ly· ~n Ovp~ Goof_) v.L::d~an, 8 hn guam st. College prf'd Mr. WAITRESS, Apply in person 6 wks old. AKC.
t t'OP SOIL * COMPOST* _S"t';iat'i'loi;ni,, ;';1000;>;; .. lrv'iiilneii . .,Nu.ciB~. -I ....:Ec:q~u~•;,I ~O~ppo~r.c,E;;;m~pl~o~ye:'.r_ trvi'M: Coast C. Club 2) MaJd.11, 4-5 hni Richards, TI4/84&-5455 ROBINSONS · aft 4, Sids Blue Beet, 107 673-S235 aft. 5
•MULCH* REDWOOD* AUDITOR/NIGHT BOYS & GIRLS 1600 E. Coast Hwy, N.S. 31 Janitors, 4-6 hrs MECHANICAL Engineer or 1 .,;2;c1'::,1 ,cP,:,l,,!N"."B.,__~.-~ l·A_DO_R_A~B~L~E=E~,=.~,~m-o_P_up._1
Call 586-69.10 Experienced: NCR 4200. Th DAILY PIL<Yr •·· eLECTRICIAN Cs.11979-3652 Draftsman, male or female, \VAITRESSES, experienced. pies AKC ShotsM.wormed. Full-time. Apply in person, e :11121 some experience. $600/$800 Feihlon Isl.I nd Apply in person, Carrow's ' 9'79-9607 Schooli & Laguna Hills Hilton, 25205 routes open In COSTA WANTED JANITORS per month to start. Call Restaurant, 620 Pico, SC WlllTE toy ~i.,, AKC, l--'l~•.:.•l;or.;;u.;cct_lo_n ___ 7oOS La Paz Rd, LagUna HUis. =· 'i'~ p~~! Mull have 10me construction P/time eves. Newport Bch Paul Omohundro, 546--6100 PBX, EXPER. WANT TO BE ?i10RE TH~ 6 ..._,eek s .......... SIZ. each.
COLLEGE 1tudent g I v I n g
p I an o lessons. Beginners
and lntenned!ate1. C a 11
Bruce a.t 752-1323 or
546-141'.
DIAMOND A rolored stone
cl.uses, atartlng aoon, by
graduate gemolorist .
>3&-'1548, -INSTRU CT ION S IN
SPANISH For lnformntlon,
call :
MESA. 642--4321 ex:per. Top pay + benefits. are a . AP pl Y 1118 2 Medical Front Ofc 552 1.lultlpJe A SECRETARY? A financ1a1 Females. 830--0871
AVON ~-ual Oppor. Employer To $9 hr depending on ex-Armstrong Ave, S.A. betwn Recent ex Per. in book· organization in F' ash Ion <RISH ·•-10 • ~ IOYS A GIRLS per. 556-3133. 4 &: S:llpm. Phone: keer.lng, appointmenl! & SEAMSTRESS FITTER Island offers immed. op-~tter, miUC "10· '
N ,.._-.1. ... ,_ EXEC. SECRETARY 540-7813• gen 1 ore v.·ork. 644-872'Z. Experienced portWlity, challenge & resp. old, AKC,
C Fo ewwpaper ~••el'I. 11ui•. JANITORIAL \York av a; I, for a mature. stulrp gal call IW6-S268 Neecf ash f aae 10. Udo lale, Balboa 65 w.p.m. to do light book· M E SSE NG ER/SUPPLY who is ....,_,,le oriented, fik~ GREAT DANE .$30 PeninsuJa. Contact Mr. keeping. Must be pleasant a I • o s u b. contract work Clerk. needed for establish-&occellent Bent" Ii IS & tcle~ .. & has good GOOD wm-1 KIDS Christmas? Backstrorr at the DAILY & able to deal w/ttte public. I ~•:,:•:;•'::c'·~15~""""';:..::""'~==~ ed finn in Orange County. Uberal Discounts r 01 1 0 ..... u P & follo\l.·-thl'\l. 548--0297 artl'r tipin
?f You're ambitious A en-PILOT or eall 6!2· 1321 c\ Must have neat appearance. JUNIOR SALESMEN No exp req. Call ~1argarel Apply Personnel Office Typing speed m lower ~ Free To You I04S lhuaiastic, you c.an start leave &Pf"!Jcalio:t. Rt'ply to Ctualfied ad no. 1-4 p.ni., 832-8600 tl-3PM, Mon thru Fri 50 "'"p.m. Sh not essenhaJ .1 --''-:...;..;.: ___ c;,_,I
ea.ming money immediately Equal Oppor. Employer zrr, c/o Dally Pilot, PO. ~10DEl..S . I · \LE/::"E1'ttALE No, 2 Fashion lo;land, NB Gor.>d grooming & patient& AOOR.\Bl.E
a1 an AVON REPRESEN-CAF'ETERIA Help want..,. Box 1560, Costa ltfesa, Ca Age lD-IS. Earn S20-$40 per Casting exlras for feature Equal Oppor. Employer m/f a must . Co. offers a IC!tal SmaJI breed mixtures, 7 wks. TATJVE. Meet people. Have "'"' 92626 week getting new cu~tomers tlo . t benefit po c ka g e including ~= ~"~2 run too. Call for d.1-"·.· kit. &. t"Ollnter. Days. call: ~""'~---~~~ !or the DAILY PILOT after mo n pie ure, no ex P bl ""ll LI 'o'~~O'='=~~~-~~I 615-0647 ..... &U-4394 EXPO Bakery Saleslady ""'booi __ ,.<"-turd"""· You necess, all ages. 673-20ll ROUTE SALES career ensem es . ..-n-,W\BR,DOR R rl ,
W11J.. tutor E 1 em c nt a r y ,"°':::;~7(}1;1.~~ ...... !!!!!!~' I•'""::':::""';;:;;"""" wanted. FuU time, apply ;Ult ~uu00-;a '-r sct;x,1 by THE PRODUCTION CO. \VIII Train, Salary, Comm, da 644-4360, ext 47 1
1d r ct ;ivehom 1
children needing help for CLERK ffifSJ 318 lilarlne Ave. Balboa 3:00 pm and be able to work NEEo· 3 women lmmed. to Bonus Vehicle i''um All WANTED 1n1uTled man 25 mo 0 ein., to ~ e .. •-••ble pey. 642-3844 BAB y SITTER WANTED: Island l 3 d k N d'·tr1~·1e ~"-tm•• p--Exp .. Pd. Estab. b~" & or over' must o"'n truck w/frnced ycf ~qs.. .• --Newborn needl> TLC -4 II a~ east ays per wee , o ~ .... ...111..,, ,..,. I ·1 M·• ' F 'I "'so FAR OUT d II rl II •-d t ~"II IL '1• ' -1 om '1· ._.,_,_ coverlt~e, It he avail. on call. 5-l&-0104 u rn1 u r• ou d:f.sa \veek. Ex c hange eve e1 or co cct111~. ucs. _. .... p ". ucv P "t h R II I 'J~~~~~~ ... .;,:.._1~;:;::;_:::;:::~=:::;;:;;:;;~1 E l •ctronic manufactuttr E z "ONEY Tr rt tlo ld "f "'° "'55 rou · ue. "re a · Call aft Rpn> rt crences 494-401.S a t t e r • r., anspo a n Prov = · ·~=,:.:;::·~~===-· I N s 'k .. u r 1:00 p.m. need s accurate typlit. 60 For yolll' verbal capabllitic11. C' II 968-4812. -NEW FACTORY sJ9-3'1fO. ~1r~~k!r. 7-{p~j WAREHOUSEMAN MATTRESSES .,.
BABYSI'ITER. m:eded im· EiJ;i~ typewriter, fl l lna Earn $100 + per week for Equal Opportunity Employer Branch outlets just C>penlng EquaJ Oppor. Employrr m/f l1'r1 l-5pm daily. Student Bedroom F urnltu,.
med. Part time for my diversified dut1e11• part-tJme, lpm-Spm or 5pm-I---------• in atta needs !he Iollowini: Sales t1cC<'ptablt'. S2.50 p.-r hr. Queen, F\lll & Tw1n Setll ~ob Wanted, Male 7025 kindergarten princess. Vic: • 9 : 3 0 Pm In comfortable KEYPUNCH Mamt Trne $185 wk FACELIFT ~71 PIUCEO 'J'O MOVE NO\V!! of Cll'.!n Yermo Elem Sehl. Call For Appt. ipeck>wi off.ice ecross the Servmen (2) $3' hr WINE MAN EXP E R. ALSO n fomous llnc or btauL
YOUNG man experlenced In can day& 833-8431 Jndustrls.l Relatlomi street from Orange tbunty Salesmen Open JURGENSEN'S King ,t,: Quee.n BR rum. to
Paint In IJ , a Par tment ..:;:;..;:;;BA~B=vs=1=r=1 E"'R~-(714) 494-9401 Airport, For personal 1-n-OPERATOR Pref ovr 25, married, car. WITHOUT SURGERY 3431 Via Oporto, NB he 5ac rlfl<-ed v.·ithln next ~ ::~~\ o ~~ c ~= Pos~~~;~-t-ln. TELONIC = call Mr. KeyiJer, All benefl~~OO poslUollll. COST UNDER BEAUTY SA-Call for Info 673-14'2 da)'::i&-8686 & ~
job, eau·er.r, -INDUSTRIES Food Serv. Attend. P/Umc l-7pm. Monday lhru '--------LON l'ACIAL "1!0 WANTS TO WORK? Job W•nNcl, 'm•le 7050 BAHnBY' Sl'M'ER7 .. 30 AM1~01 { .. '30· olpd;1· 6AM-3PAt, Mon Ull'u t-' r 1. Friday, 1-NURS!NG For ~mon8ln1tlon an · 'or 01oof?"E A~ work COUCJI & LoW' SI. Nr " L a. h r-•-· Ind Cont l Call ~11 (114) ••• -1 ... .,... Information call: -)-'C\IJ' • ..... ., G-n • Gold l lZ!o '{'•-own tr•-, .,. • .._"JM -una U9a C ,-,.u-= US. P ex. 'l..A .,_.uou • "' .w i for U be ""Ur OYo'fl '"'"· '"" "' • hcrot1ry, Pt/~ Time •• _,, ~"' ~ 1-•PP' ·--• ror An Appointmen t SUPERVISOR ORI FLAME INTER'L you"' • ,. 675-H>ll fte 6
10+ typlng,dlctapbone, *BABYSITTER. g r a nd · EQi.ial Oppor. Employer *-G d,...,.,.-u~ ted* CLA·YAL CO. 7141»1~ • ~-5~!.!_ntJ~or ;~~c~p~ * SOF'A ; ~~111 .,.,..)'
&bWty to edll, and/or write mother type modern !leP8-· •r ener& en ICU-CCU 2131392-4566 Neat ..... Oeitn A"peRM\nce. irJ qua! .• tfifm made, nt~r lettm. Front off Ice ap. rtltc apt + board & small OOOK Expert __ .. Guam. Mtomen. Earn 17th It Pla~ntita, Cl\1 ..
pearanca a: pe1'110tl8llty. salary. 2 rtrJ9 3 & 5, Enallsh Part-Tlrne"'""~ now, pay h1.ter. !Ugh 5·~ F.qual Oppor. En1ployrr SALES V11., rel!~. ~ 25 to m u.'led, usually hm, 968--7910
Mi""8077 11.tt 3 11pe"l.klrc must drive. 64()-0.j82 The RI~ 534-n&? 53WJM ESTIMATOR Supplement YoW' lnrome. ~IOVING:<"Ontemponu')' dtn,
LAB TECH Drive a <""-b 6 l\n or mort' 11 BR & brkfst H"I alnlOl!l llClw
FEMALE w/colltltl dcaree BABYSJ'l'TER, adull. for 2 yr 16 Futrlon 1' Md, NB. P/l\me In I·-.....l\ntric TRAINEE d~y Aprly ln t>enll)n, '"''~,,"..,2~253"-'"""""' cc''"°"'-..,..=-' art minor Y.1\1ltl jOb In old, my hl>me, or yours. Ikl\l.'fl 9 • ltam or 3 & 5pm GENERAl -e~ I"-"' DAYS. FUI~L-TIME \rllflw C111J r'o , 1@5 E. 16th i;
Interior dealan or p ho lo . 1:~:00 wkdays, Refs U _Equal <>ppor. Emplo)'fl' LABORERS 3 roup. &u-4G'l~~us~ XLN'T B E NE FIT PRO. tnr l'On1t·•et'g. finn. , Bu~ .. _s"t ;.,· °'O~"''c:-"=:'""'_o· ""'== Gq_LD llen·uJn,, couc;h m n.
M+Bi911 11m Tue,. Sal pl)llible, 673.+&14 aft 6:00 COOKS, men or w 0 men , Im mtd. Asslgnincnt.s. Top LEGAL SECRETARY sX~~\' NEGO. ~lfllh., r. n 11 • 51 , bk51round. \VORK AT TH E litOvti;:s ! ~:~~~. ~r sJ~w;ca PRAcii&L nurse, ap 48, ~'fflTITER. lg;I hskpt\I. Bkfa.st exp. Top wqe.. Ap. $$1. ton" or 11hort ll'nn. P.lln 3 )'l'I exper. In corp, PERSONNEL DEPT. i-"or l'PPt-llnlm('nl call : Now arctptlng t1pplltations , ,
teeks !lay work. I.I on e 11 , Room Ir: boord + waaes. ply In pmian, Ca r f ow ' 1 Cttl' 54°"4450. tax & probl\le. Typing 70 O MOR 1 AL =-,,..1lc-4-·8~35-.:..,.91_6_1 --.,-for ConCf'it~lon & Dom-man f RIGI Oi\lRE $75, Sto\-e S20. tre 11ab1 e, have a car. 831H3i3 11ft 5. ' Rear aul'llnl, PI co turn<>ff NEVER A FEE AT TEMPO w,p,m. 11ccurately. Sh not H AG ME You don't nt't'd " run 10 ~l!lon!l. ~fu~I be u or Blue Dlvnn $.."5. ;\ll \n Xb1t
83Mt08 BARTENDER, expel;-n\irbla. 1 .,oSao;n~Cl'ie"m'===---,~ TEMPO Tempol"llry llclp ncct111. Fa.shlon I s I 1 n d • HOSPITAL "Dr11w r nsl" whC'n YO.li ov<'l', llCl\I 11.ppc:ar/Ulct'. Ap-Condlt lOn Si f1961
CLEAN!NC::. av DAY. Top wagc1, San1s $e-ii1ood COO i<-TAC"", 11art•limc sa.a..9100. 301 Newport Sl"Vd plRt'e an Ad ln the DAILY ply 11fl('r 7 r.~t . nt SOlrrH C181181fled AO! Jtf'll bla tte1n1t,
t:xptrlcnce with rer. No. 2. O:lrona de-1 J\tar, needed fmmcdl1'1e-ly. Stll tdle l•ums with a Daily Don't 11\ICI up the shtpl N_ewport Beach PI LOT \V11111 Ad!ll Call '""'''rnoo;;<',\sr ,!'LAZA TI IE,\'l'ER an\all Items or _a.ii;y '~ -~~-'M>-11181=' ==------===-------lc:=._·;CCa~ll~S<~~:!!!!!!!::==":!Pi!'.!!!loil _!:0:!!'!!"!!'"!!"'~'"~·.!~~~ Yoo'll filld tt In C111t 'ftl!d • 642--WTS. -· ,., '!, r-~ ~unRowrr. (' ~1 Jtl.111 rail &ti.irnl!
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Jo).:t ii2j
Ho~seh;ld Good$8065
\\',\;.. T~ [)~
~tnple or Yru1t11oo<l llutrli.
Rt'01:.. !lfi2·79~
Jewelry 8070 ;..,.;._:__ __ _
WA NTED
TOP CA511 OOU .;\:l PA!fl
t'lllt YJU R Jf:\VELRY.
\\,\TCII F'~<;. ART O'i..11-:C'I'S.
CVLD. SI L\'J::R Sl-.:RVIC'E,
t'L''1 F FURN' & ii''' ,'JQU~.
s~·"2'1UO
LNestock 8-07S
Ballerfly-Bright
,\, '" h1•,,•111 .. t·•nu,•nh
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11: ••''ii' 1~ cv:1.~rs for "J"" 11.,11 .. ,n
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'I l!f" IS IN ,,. and 1hln i~
Lh" ~") >"Oll'll 1ooJ~ In thl~
tlrl';1.1n1111"'1 1»•11•~11\! "'llll 11
1°.111,.r, lo111:<>r )arl"'· (.:h\)()11,.
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t• :<11o· l~ tbu~c ~II J=irk•·t
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S.•11!1 $1 00 for t.ach 1111ttl"rn:
Adfi ~ te11h1 fr1r .-11th P•tlern
hlf 11r~1-c:la~-mall ::ind ~p.tr1al
handl1n11 . Olh('tw1sr lh1rd-
rl.1~~ dl'h\'l"ty .,..,u l;i.kr thrrr
llt'f"li.~or mort. Sf!nd to )l3n;t"
M,,.n111 4~?. th.-01111)' Piiot.
. l'ttUt'l'll llt>pl , 23l V."ttl 18th
N~ ''r .. 'ork. 1"Y 10011.
Pnnl /'. t\ ME, AOORt:SS. ZI I'.
Sl1.t: :ind STYI.£ 'l'U MBER .
tJ:O.. t: f'Rt:t: l'ATIERS or)·our
rl"oo1<'r to $rod (O(' .onr rr~ p:tl·
tt•rn ln,llhi /'.t:W SPR ING ·
~l1 M~IER PATTERN t'\TAl.OG 10.1~tyle.:1ll)!1r1. 26' COL~IBIA l\fK I, full
''"'"' µ.iilltrn roupon !'Wond ;~ I galley, head, hold'!:-lank,
nmo. :.t:w +!\~IT Rook 1nth l/H r1u~ .. ~lp!l. 4, lncludNI
h:i~1ct1~~urpanrrn SI Z5 N1\·pl. moor'g., xlnt cond.
1n~111nt f'11~h1011 Boole . SI 00 J.~.<m. 5.1!1-&-i I ln.~t.int sew1n1 l'look •.. $1.00 I :;:2'~' ~CLA~T~~,~,C~~11~,"""=-,~ .. T,,~1,c-,
;:.1oop. l.urk!r. ~p1nr111k11r,
12131 5~ or 392·2860. _,
Tol ot• 97'5 C•m•ro H17
WE ARE
No. 2
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.Laguna/South Coast •• Today's Flaal --
EDITION
VOL 61 , NO. 295, 2 SECTION$, 2~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESOAY,OCTOBER22, 1974 TEN CENTS
, • r
Carpellter's Ouster Sought by 2 Eco-groups.
By DOUGLAS FRITZSCHE
• Of ,.. 0.ll't' ,Ila! Stitt
The Environmental Coalition ol Orange
County and the People's 1..-0bby have
asked State Sen. D e n n i $ Carpenter's
removal from office in a lawsuit filed
in Oraqge County Superior Court today.
The suit, naming Carpenter and five
unknown persons, alleges that t h e
senator did not report funds received
from a group Of his political backers
Jli pei:sonal income.
Carpenter, the suit claims, did not
comply with the '-foscooe Governmental eooruct of Interest and Governmental
Disclosure Act by falling to report the
income.
Filed t\vo weeks before the general
election in which Carpenter o p po s e s
Democrat Frank. B a r b a r o , Carpenter
temled the action "partisan politics"
on the part of.J.he groups in volved and
predicted that iL_y:ould never be tried.
"\Vb3t_is their interest as groups-th.it
•
a r e purportedly environmental pro-
ponents in concerning themselves with
a partisan election?" Carpenter respond·
ed.
The'alleged railuui to make financial
disclosures, Carpenrer said, was picked
up from his opponent's cam p aign
statements.
The .suit he .said, ·is likely to be
dropped after the election.
Barbaro said h&:.did supply the groups
witb inrormatton on which the suit was .
based but denied he prompted the action .
Dale Secord, of t h e environmental
coalilioo. also denied direct lies with
the Barbaro campaign.
The second group in the complaint,
the People's Lobby, was the author and
proponent of Proposition 9 on the June
ballot. which \\'BS approved by voters
and will go into effect in January.
The proposi tion replaces the l\'1oscone
conflict of interest la\v and strengthens
linancia~disclosure requirements.
er a s
T·win Sessions
For Forster
A1arco Forster Junior Hi g h
School, capistr ano llnified Sc~) 1District's only intermediate school,
will start its double sessions earlier
when daylight saving time ends
Oct. 27.
D is trictt rust ees voled
w1animously Monday to start the
morning sessions at 7 :~ o'clock
and close at 11 :59 o'clock. The
afternoon session will begin a t
12:0!! o'clock and end at 4 : 3 8
o'clock.
The starling time is one half
hour earlier for e a e h . Bus
schedules will be changed to ac-
commodate the earlier s l a r t i n g
limes. The changes are effective
Oct. 28.
Capo District's
Rolls Going Up
With Ranch Plan
Another 1,000 students will be added
to the rOl\s of the Capistrano Unified
School District when San Clemente's
Reeves Ranch is developed.
Developer Bill Lusk told the Board
or TniStees Monday that full construction
of the ranch's 1,000 acres will take
approximately 15 years.
The Reeves Ranch lies on the north
side of San Clemente and stretches from
Ifie ocean to the east side of the San
Diego Freeway and back into the hills.
It is tucked between two other ranches
being master planned for development-
the Forster Ranch to the north and
!~: \'isbeek Ranch to the south.
Total units in the project will be
3.023. Two-thousand units w i 11 be
clustered between the ocean "and the
freeway with anothe r 1,000 in the bills
and valleys east of the freeway.
"Most of our buyers wll\1 be in the
45 to 65 age bracket," said Lusk. "We
will earmark 1,580 units to adults only.
Lusk adde'.d that he has not yet applied
for his Coastal ZQrle permit or completed
the review process through the S a n
Clemente Planning Commission.
He predicted it would be hvo to three
years before he ca.n begin construction.
The new Shoreclifb Juhior High
School will be Included in the Reeves
Ranch project. Th~e architectural ,firm
of Neptune and Thomas was appointed
to design the initial buildings to be
constructed. on lhe site. The district
hopes to go to bid in early spring.
Orange Coast
Weather
D1hy 'llot stilt Pho!•
Splitatered History
Bulldgie_r de_molishes portion of Laguna Be a ch
Lumber Yard acrOss Forest-Avenue Crom city hall.
The yard, founded in 1912, is movin~ to a new loca·
tion in Laguna Ca nyon. A. multi·mill1on dollar shop.
ping complex called "The Lumber Yard" is plan-
ne"d for the old site. "Belching Bart," a 40-foot
smokestack , and the vine-cove red office will be re-
tained.
Consume1· P1·ices Up 1.4%
For Sepie1nher in County
By The Associ ated Press
Consumer prices. climbed J.4 percent
in U>s Angeles and Orange C<>unties
in September, the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics reported toda y.
Infl ation has pushed prices up 10 per-
cent in the first nine months of this
year. They are 12.4 percent above the
level of September 1973.
Sur.anna Sadowsky. r"egi6nal chief or
the bureau's Lo! Angeles offire, said
housing acCounted for more than ""-half
the over-all rise in September. These
increased 2.4 percent to 13.6 percent
above a year ea(lier.
Moot of the tise was accounted for
by mortgage interest rates, maintenance
and repairs.
Reolers paid an average of 1.3 percent
more betweeo July and September.
Re sidential telephone bills were up
an average of 1.7 percent, and household
furnishings rose 2.7 percent.
F'ood prices increased 1.5 percent and
were 12.2 percent more than in Sep.
tember 1973. U!ading the increase was
a five percent boost in such items as
eggs, margarine. salad oil. sugar abd
coffee.
Meats, poultry and fish 11"ent up 2.6
percent but still \Yere 6.8 percent below
a year earlier. The price of fruits and
vegetables was 2.3 perce nt lower. do'A'n
for the third straight month but 21
percent higher than 1n September 1973.
Transportation costs increased 0.6 per-
cent and were 8.7 percent higher than
a year ago.
Ca11ipai9•• Ft11·or
Fire Hits Empty
Home iitJ..A~na;
Damage $3,100
Laguna BeaCh Fire Department of-
ricials today blamed a nleltcd sand-cast
candle for a fire Sunday 1vhich , did
$3.100 da1nage to an unoccupied Laguna
home.
The early morning fire \vas spotted
by a Sunday ne'A'Spaper carrier Y:ho
saw ilames rlickering through a 1vindO\\'
of !he home at 250 San Joaquin Street.
Los Angeles Times carrier S t c,v c n
Tryon and neighbor Ed\\•artl Willete, 265
San Joaquin St., put out the fire before
the arrival or Laguna Beach F' i re
l)(>partment units.
Willette is the owner or lhe burned
house rented to Lorella Trevino, who
tA·as absen t at the time of the fire.
Fire Marshal Jim Presson said sand-
cast candles are notorious for melting
down sending flaming 11•ax spreading
across whatever they arc resting on.
The suit, filed at 9:45 a.m., asks
Carpenter's removal from office, that
carpenter be fined the maxirnwn the
Jaw allows-three times the unreported
iJlcome-.-and pay all attorney a.'ld court
costs.
Carpenter, however. maintair.ed that
he ~as more than compiled 'Aith the
l\loscone act .
In a press release distributed recently,
Carpenter described his financial ar-
ree
Ex-countim1
Released
From Jail
By ARTIIUR R. VINSEL
01 IM OlllJ ,lllrt Slllf
rangements in more detail than required ,
he said.
The suit charges that Carpenter did
not report income from b.is Golden State
Improvement Corrunittee backers. No
specific amount "'a~ n1entioncd.
Carpenter, ho"·e,·er. said . "There is
nothing to be asham,ed of or illegal
here. I am so proud of the way our
finances are handled that I made il ·
the subject of a feature release."
•
om!
LOS ANGELES-The two-year a n d
t1vo-day ordeal of J ames Ray Russell
came to a temporary end in only 10
minutes today as the Los Angeles County
Superior Court judge approved h l s ...__
1 freedom on low bail.
Russell, rl, fonnerly of Laguna Hills,
has been held ror 744 days without
bail, llitbout arraignment and without
trial on a fugitive warrant charging
him with an Oklahoma murder that
occurred on a Saturday night in 1972
'A"hile Russell was allegedly out on a
lark in Long Beach.
"Oh my God.'' blurted his blonde wife
Karen, 23, who insists !!he was with
him that fate ful night at the Long Beach
Nu.Pike Amusement Park.
"[ can have him home today .. .l 'm
going to have him home today ... oh my
God," she cried.
The slender blonde wife who has been
without her man for more than t'\\·o
years cried wtashamed\y in the C<>rr\dor
outside the courtroom. Her tears glit,..
lercd in the ·glare ot television c.amera
lights and mascara ran down he r cheeks
in rivers.
"What are your plans for tonight?"
asked one reporter.
"Oh, I'm going to squeeze everything
I can into one night. I just wish il
all could have happened sooner."
Russell"s grandfather, aged Samuel E.
David. of Haskell County, Ok a .• was
present in the courtroom but coud not
hear deliberations over his grandson·s
fate because of a hearing problem.
He owns property with enough equity
to underwrite the $5.IXKI bail finally set
by Superior Court Judge Raymond l\f.
Choate.
!Set RUSSELL, Page .A%1
G1~nt Provides
New EcjtllJlment
A $100.0CIO grant from the Irvine Foun-
dat.ion to South Coast Co 1n mu n i t y
Hospital has provided the South Laguna
hospital w i th sophisticated ultrasound
diagnostic equipment.
The new equipment uses sound 'A'aves
!t1 paint a sectional vi ew of the body.
It is similar to but considerf'd better
tha n X·ray.
The new machine ll'hich cost $39.000
Y•ill helµ in diagllQstic problems of the
abdomen and brain. Gynecological prcr
blcms '\\'ill be aided as \\'ell.
•
JUDGE ORDERS BAIL
longtime Prisoner RusHll
City's General
Plan Additions
Set for Study
A group of proposed ,'lmendments to
the city's general plan come before
the San Clemente Planning Commission
Wednesday .
~1ost controversial of the proposed
land use element changes is one -.·hich
\\."ould rcdesignate about 75 acres of
the Reeves Ranch from open area and
recreational to R·2 I medium ti,."• i 1"
reside ntial). •
Such a change "·oul!I permit as many
as 750 dwelling units on the property
"'here none 'A'Ould be allo"·ed under
the present designation.
Other changes involving !he Reeves
Ranch include switching the designations
or t"·o areas, one of which is no\v
R-2 and the other genera l industriol.
so that the residential portion 'A'Ould
have !he oce<111 vie\1•.
Another proposed general plan amend-
ment \\"Ould reclassify about 18 acres
adjacent to Via San Gorgonio r r o m
medium low density rcsi~ntial to open
area and recreational. paving the '\\"ay
for the city to acqui re the land for
the proposed San Gorgonio Park.
Other items to be considered by com-
mlssioners include :
-A request for a negative en\'lron·
mental impact declaration on a pro--
posed 22·unit ('{lndominium project at
106 N. Alameda Lane.
-Submission or an environmental im-
pact report on the proposed widening
or Vista Marina. an alley near the
lntcrsecl ion of Esplanade and Pnsoo de
Cristobal, lo permit access to l\\"O Jotli
zoned for si ngle family residences.
Nlgh't and morning low clouds
becoming moslly sunny in the
afternoon Wednesday. Slightly
warmer with highs in the upper
60s at the beaches to the mld-70s
inland. Lows tonight 57-62.
Nuclear Station
Back in Business Bright Stays • Ill Command
-Hequest for a use permit for the
El Camino Broadcasting Com1>any 10
build a 200 foot high radio Io"' e r
southeast of the end ~f Avenida Salvador.
-Possible revocation of use permits
grar.1\ed to Richard Preble for a gas
station. resta urant and dr ive-in dairy
on C.1mino Real bet"·ee.n F.sptanade and
Avcnida Barcelona on grounds of In·
su£ficient progress.
,
• INSfDE TODAY
The Undersecretary of tl1t In·
terior says his deportmene ex-
pects some ma;or oil iplll4 when
driUi11g begtm of/short h1 ihe
near f1'ture . See 1toru peoe .A.4.
•rw11 •Mlledl II
t..M ... ,. "' Clll .. 1'111• AJ ClllUlllM' ... ,
C-ICI I ' c,..,_,. '' 1>o1•1~ '"''"' 1111 ••1i.m1 ,... "' l11ttr11l11Mfl!t AU
"'"~ ,. ... Hy 01r....... Al
ltt~ II
1"~11kfl Al) .... ~ .,
Mo'fr.1 AU
M .. ~tl llllMh Al l'l•lllllltl ,.,., ... Or•-c .. nw Al4 ,,,~1. ,.,,... ,.,
~ Al•lt
llldl Mllrtltft .....
Ttlt'fltltll AU
• TllHllN'I All ~llfllr ...
•
The 8an Onofre Nuclear Generating
Statk>n was cranked up to full power
earlier today after a minor defect in
a relay Monday caused a shutdown as
the reactor was being started up at
the end of a federal inspection.
Onolre Plant Superintendent llans Ot·
toson said the relay malfunctioned and
caused en automatic slrutdo1m of lhe
reactor.
The Daw developed :is crews began
to start lbe reactor up nfter three days
or noooperation 'A'hlch allow~ lnspix:ors
trom the U.S. Atomic Energy Corn·
mission to wind up a routine lnsi::-~!on
al the facility.
"Everything ls working just line MW,
;and we bad tbe re.lay nxed In a few ~urs " Ottoson aaid. "'L.
~
!
By JOHN VAi.TERZA
01 '"" 0111, ,llot 11111
Although charges continue to Oy about
asserted confUct of interest on the South
Coast Regional 7.one Conservation Com·
miMion, the panel's members r a n
through a· day's business 0;s usual 11 .. 100·
day.
And Chairman Donald Oright. a cenlrat
firure Jn tbe conflict aUegatloni. main·
t11lnOO hi1 firm grip on the chainnnnship
and offered no com1ncnt on the isliut.
Bright conceded last ~'eek that he
had gatherOO mo1·c th.1n tl dozen
representat ives of mnjor developers
along the l'rnlstal strip ~ sought dona-
11 n and roallln lists lh a fund raise r ·~ --
for Democralic gubernatorial candidate
Ectn1und G. Brown Jr.
But since his denial or any connict
nnd his demands for arr A t I o r n e v
('reneral's probe, Bright has remained
mum about the non·-<:w1cclcd reception.
Tt \\'<IS lo have taken place TI1ursda y
near Cosln l\1e!MI.
He had madt a tentative agreement
Ill discuss the issue lo sorne degree
berore. telcvi~lon n.ws can1eras during
:\looday's lunch "le: ol,~~01mission
nitttlng In Loog 816!11.
But before the ""liJnb~ill
h<1 left the room
once more to qui
session.
•
•
Television ne11·smen had to settle for
the only member of the rommission
tA•illing to be inlervietA·ed on the matter.
Oran~e County Super\·isor R a Ip h
Diedrich said that no movement has
come about on the 001nn1i iOo to strip
Bright of his chairmanship.
Diedrich, one of several Orange Coo:n·
ty Democrats listed as orficinl hMts of
the oontroverslnl reception. sa1d that Ile
ha.d expected !Mt the C\'ent ll-"OOld h.1\'f!
lured Sro'A-n suppcrters from I ht
11cademic workl
•1or. Bright's credlbillty Is very strong
In tht ~rea or ocade1nln," said Diedrich.
D~rlch conceded that lhe entire furl(!.
(See BRJGJIT, Page Al)
TRASH PICKUP
'ON' MONDAY
Laguna Btnch trash collt'Ctkln
'n"ill he unchanged fron1 its 001mal
schl'dule on ~I on d a 'i . Veteran's
Day.
l{O\l."t!Ver. ~guna Beach C I t y
Ital! "'ill be c\osf>d ror lhe holiday.
-·
.. ,, 2 DAil V PILOT l/SC
Sf!,ddleback
" Outlines
Priorities
ll y t-'HEOERICK SCllOE\IEllL
l'un1pll·l ion of a t'.'.illllMIS road, lrr.pr'O\'-
t-d ix1rk1ns f:i eil1111:s and con:.!n1c·tion 0£
;r n1ult1·n1illlon dollar fine arts building
:ire lhc. 10)1 prtoritit•s of Sadd\cba.ck.
Cornn1un11v Co!ll'i;te rrusicc s.
t.ltr\lng :-.1ootlay nigh\ 111 lhe Jarnes
B. Lit l.1brt1ry. !re first pcrmanen~
s1uctu1·r on 1tc ~hssion \'if'IG campu~.
1rus11·rs l1s!t'll n1aior l'onstrucllon plans
for lh<1 11e1t 10 vcars.
The <"t>'I tlf 1)lael ng 4,000 fN!l of road
:..roond \he can1pus is cst1matt!d a l
~.000 Xo f1gUrl' \Yas pro\·idcd for
c-xpen!>ion of parldnR racil\hf'S
The fine <irt'i building, including a
40!1-sl·at audiloriun\, orj~ina\ly was to
cost $J.3 rnHHon. but b:ds received by
th\.' roll1·sc came in at $5.4 n1i\lion
-79 percent above the architects' c1;ti-
1nal{·. Trustees will meet ~1onday niGhl lo
di scuss ways or financing !he structure
~nld "'111 hold :1 sct'Ontl rnccting Nov.
7 to look <ll "'riys of cutting the cosl or the new building.
Supt. Robert Lornbardi explained that
the state, which has provided money
for com(l'lunity college construcl\on, will
fjnance ;.ibout half or the original _S3.3
million eslim:.te. The rest must be raisl'd
by the d1s1rict.
Lombardi said trustees huvc a choice
or three "'a)'!I to raise the runds -
-a bond measure that requi rl'S t"o-:hird
\'Oler approv al, a tax override that re-
<1oire!i simple majority approval or u.se
of a special state law that permits
community college districts to increase
taxes for construction without seeking
\'oter approval.
Other projects, in the order of their
. priority ranking, include :
-Temporary gymnasium and track
facility.
1 -Permament gymnas ium and
f,hysical educ atio n building.
- Swimming pool.
-Tcchoology bu ilding.
-Acquisition of a site for a second
campus. -Student center.
-Business science building.
-Health science building.
-Phnsc JI of road construction.
-Outdoor physica l e ducation
facilities.
-Administration building.
The priority ranking is the central
· t>arl o! a IO-year master plan that
will be submitted to the board 0 r
·governors of the California Communily
Colleges.
The plan is updated each year as
projects arc completed or changes arc
madl' 1n luture planning.
·:,,fasquerllcle Fete
· Pla1u1.ecl Friday •
_:Jn Capistrano
A11 old-f~shioned {am i I y llal\oween
n1asq ucrade party will be held Friday
in the f:t ;\dobc Restaurant in San
Juan D!pistrano.
Sponsored by the Fiesta Assocl:ition
or San Juan, the fesuv1ties will begin
;1t 7:30 p.m. v.·ith a oo-host "spirits"
hour with hors d' oeuvres served by
costun1L>d ,,·a1ters.
Ch1ldrl'n. 10 a special partitioned area.
\\J\l be trealf'd to ghos~:;tories. hayrides,
mo' iPS and refre.c:hrr\'mts \\'hi!e adults
dance to lhc rnusic of Jess !'l1ougeois"
hand. A mystery guest. "Lady Godiva."
\1111 appear in the courtyard and guests
\\Ill be asked to _guess her identity.
.
Tickl'ts arc ~5 per person 11·ith children
under 16. 11ho must ~ acco1npanied
i.Jy their pnr~nts, free. At.lvance tickets
arc <iv:i1l[t!Jlt' by C'al!ing ~iln Juan Ph;ir-
macy or .\!1:1·43t1 or ~93-3019. Prizes \1·1\1
he> awarded 10 thr bcsl costumes.
ORANGE COAST l 1$C
DAILY PILOT
Ttw' o-~n0t c .... 11 0.11¥ Polo1. l'lltllwlli(l'I 11 corn-
blllM! tnt> No..., p.,,., •I oubl<""'° n., '""°'.->9"
C.0.'1 l'lillll\fl\1'11 (G"'fllf•~ !.t!l*alt ed••1-A<~
P<Jlll•\'""" Mnno•~ tnrouOll ,.,,,.,. !or Co\11
-.... t.~ .. oorL B•Kll, Munhl>Q!on 8P.c""I'-· la•n "•"•¥, I••'""· \1aa•rt1.tck Y•ll•~ •nd
UQ..,,.. &o.o<n Sou!n Celt\! A 1<"91r "'Ion.ff
ftt ·I"''' " """'''"•a S.tu•OI•\ -S..noll¥1 Tl'!C! .... ~ •• D~I D<Jb••1n1no Dl•nl I\ •I XlO .,.,.,, a..,
~lf~l.{,<IS1-i11'#W !;.1!1!~•n11'26l._
Robert N. Weed
P'"''°""l 11><1 Pu!>O-r
Jc1ck. R. Cu rley 'II«• P'"',,.~I 1<><1 (.e,..•11 Mf,..QI'•
Thoma'> Keevll
Thomas A. Mur ph1ne
M.o,..;,nq EG110)o"
Ct'lJrlesH . Loos R1ch.1rdP.Na ll "'''•I 1nl ,,,,_.n>IQl<>Q la.1Df I
La9uni1 Beach Office
11a.~~-, .. s1'"1
M11lo"Q Al$drtn PO &oo M61faU
O!tler Olfic@S
(,o1•1-W UO l"t11Bly5t""'f "lr•-t e,..,.~ lll! N•wll0'1 lloo.l'-•"O
~""'110" .... l<l'I 11•11 AeK~ liolf<fo•ttd
!.1d1:Hfbt<• Y•flt• h11fl Lt Pt1 Ao""
ti ~n 0'f9G f r-rt
Telephone C7141 642·C321
Cl ass11i.ct Advertlslng642·S671
L.i9una Beach All De~rtments :
TeJeohone 4'+4·•466 •o""s.~c•-'"'
4•S·0630
f1>1tf1•Ql'll , "~' 0·•~~ (o.t\! ~111'"''"4 t.011'1-· .. 0 ...... , \tOt~. U1111l•f!>O'I\ '"''tvr'.i ,..,..IT•• o• .a.~;,,"'.._,.""''~..,.~
" ••O·-·~ ... 1nou1 •PK•fl llffll•I-OI
l•-"9111 0-"''
~ t i.n pl)\!fql N ld 11 CAKll --u .
Gtiolo<n•• \..oo ... ••ot "" b~ ,.,.,..,. W 00
"""""'·· b~ ...... ~Olt lflOtltft!y, tl'l1h1 ... , _,,,,...,~ tJ 00 mOfttP\!1
(
T11ts~ OctGbtf 22, 1974
D111111• Noav, Ride Lffter
Soutl1 Area
Bus Service .
Set Friday
The "South County Freeway Flyer,''
a special bus service for tho South
Orange County·to-Santa Ada commuter,
will begin oPeration from San Cle1ncnte
Friday.
The commuter line is Orang~ County
Transit DlstriCt Route 91.
The Freeway Flyer will depart Grant's
Plaza in San Clemente at 6:06 a.m.,
go lo the Laguna Hills Mall, leave
!here at 7:07 a.n;i. and travel nonstop
Downtown Santa Ana arriving at 7:4~
a.m.
The evening retum service will be
by eicisting nonexpre.ss route!!.
DIES AFTER FALL
Cirri• Lu Cottingham
('il y workmen durnp fill dirt for bike trail along
Laguna Canyon Roa d. Crews already have finished
paving stloulder's of El Toro l~oad for connecting
bike trail. Trails on extensions of road shoulders
will be marked for bicycle use only.
Buses for these routes pick up com-
muters from Sixth and Flower ln .Santa
Ana ,hourly atter 4:47 'P.m. The run
to Laguna Kills Mall takes 38 minute·s.
•
Los Alisos
7th Crader · Fron1 Pnge Al
l{USSELL ...
The defendant's brother Robert
Russell, 25, an accountant. his w i f e
Karen . a waitress at Howard Johnson's
restaurant in Dov.·ncy and other relatives
vowed they v1ould scrape togethe r $500
today as security on u bail bond that
\\'Ould free Russell after his n ca r l y
endless months behind bars.
lrvn1e · '·Lun1)Jerjack' Poet
B1·eal{s Ste1·eotype Image
Commuters may then take the 8S
line through· Dana Point to San Clemente
arriving at Grants Plaza at 6:19 p.m.
-if they took the 4:47 p.m. bus
from Santa Ana -or the 91 line through
J\1ission Viejo and San Juan capistrano
arriving at Grant's Plaza in San
Clemente at 6:29 -p.m. ·
Complete schedules are available at
post offices, ma ny banks and at major
retailers along the bus routes.
Dies in Fall
By JAN WORTif
01 Tiit O.lly Pl~ Sllff
Llke the olher se\'enth graders at
Los Alisos intennedi.'.\le . School in El
Toro. Carrie Lee Cottingham was just
beginning to get used to the big new
school.
He has b e e n act:used-absolutely
\1•rongly, accordi ng to "'itncsses and his
attomey-<if the brutal murder of a
92·year-old man in i\1arch, 1972 at the
invalid's home in Leota, Okla. in a
$200 robbery •
f\1rs. Karen Ru~tl and friends claim
they were all together at the Long
Beach amusement center that night but
Oklahoma authorities, citing Russell 's
rt~ord as an er.-concvict who served
rour y£'ars for burglary in his youth,
issued a warrant for his arrest and
he was taken into cuslody in Ora.nge
County durin g the summer or that year .
He was questioned. submitted to a
polygraph examination and subsequently
cleared of any connection with t h e
homicide J.000 miles away and Orange
County' Superior Court Judge William
Murray refused to allow his extradition
10 Oklahoma.
His mistake crunc three "·eeks later
"'hen he went let visit his brother Robert
in suburban Bell Gardens, wh ere
evidence indicates autho rities were hav·
ing him tailed.
"\Ve was just driving down Eastern
Avenue v.·hen \\'C turned into a Taco
Bell to gel a Coke." Robert Russell
rcralled today in an emotional court·
room corridor interview. "The y v.·as
cfefinitely following us. They told us they
"·anted James llussell."
"He said that old warrant was no
good," the younger brother continued ,
"but they said that was 'beside the
point and he would have to go with
them."
Frnm Pn9e Al
BRIGHT ...
raising incident probably cast a pell
cm the integrity of the commission, but
he emphasized that he believes Bright
is still capable of functioning as a good
chairman of the powerful commission.
... "! ~::.;:;:~~ !o know ttiat the
chainnanship of the commission is not
for sale:· he said.
In the arena \\'here the two
gubcrn3toria\ candidates are squaring
off. the debate continues about conflict
and the coastal cornmission.
Soon after it \\l as k'TIOWn that Bright
sought (unds for Bro\\Tr , the candid<ite
11ho 11·ould have bcncfittcd denied any
knowledge of !he project and in a
scathing statement demanded thal Bright
fl'Sit;n.
Then. during <i debate this pas I
weekend in Stockton \\'il h Republican
randid<.1tc Hous ton Flournoy, B r o w n
charged that North Coast Regional Com-
mission Chairman John f\layfield was
rai sing mooey fo r the Republica n,effort
and getting it froin timber companies
doing business \\'ilh the commission.
Lilcr. Bro"1l ad1nitled that solid proof
'~as lacking.
Flournoy then •ized the off ens i v e ~londay at a ra~ly in Aubum and hit
hnrd nt Bro"11.
··This ''as n clu1nsy nu1neuvcr on
. the p<Jrt of Bro11n to dr.1w attention
;iway fmnt th(! lunchron in Orange Coun-
ty pu1 on hy !Jr. Brighi." s::tid I• loun1oy.
Ill' dcscntK-d the \li'l'kt'nd accusa tio11s
Uy Brn11·n ns "rnorc of his flailing .
arm 11' ;iv i n g, dclibt'r;itr misrcprcscn-
l~1lions.··
J\rts and Crafts
Festival Slated
The' Laguna f\1cthodisl Art Group will
sponsor an arts nnd craft~ festivsl from
II <1.m. to 7 p.m. Friday and SR!urdoy
at 1he Uniltd J\1ethodlst Church In South
LaJ:una.
UC lrvi'tie poet Robert Peters
is the latest speak.er in writet 3
lecture series stnrted at Saddle·
bock College this fall . Peters
ioilt speak at 10 a.1n. Wednes-
rln!J in rooni 313 of the J\f atl1.-
Scie11ce Buildiug. The session is
public. Anne Cooper of the
Daily Pilot Staff is a stude-nt of
Peters and has written the fol-
lowing article about him.
By ANNE COOPER
01 ~ Dtlt't Plltt Sl11f
Robert Peters, poet and professor or
English at uC Irvine, looks more like
a lumberjack than a poet.
Folklore has it that male poets are
young, anemic persons, g i v e n to
rhapsodizing over spring and the blush
on a maiden's cheek. Robert Peters
belies the stereotype. He is 50, extremely
hearty, and his poems are bombshells,
not pleasant verse.
The lumberjack physique \\'as
developed on the farm in Eagle River,
Wis., where Peters grew up , and his
farm imagery, his spare style and his
relatively late start as a poet have
led some of his admirers to compare
him lo the New England poet, Robert
Frost.
"Funny how things work out," Peters
says. "I was \Vorkmg as a claims ad-
juster when I was drafted at 18 to
fight in the second world war. Arter
1hc war the GI bill made ii possible
for me to go to university. I got my
bachelor's, master's, and PhD degrees
in six years. I chose to study English
rather than history because I thought
there v.·ould be fewer term papers."
Peters wrote his first poems after
the death of a five-year-old son in 1965.
He put the poems away for over a
-year. but on reading them over later
decided that they expressed well his
personal anguish and might be com·
forfi ng to others who-had suffe red the
loss of a loved one. The poems were
published in 1967 as a book, entitled
"Songs for a Son." Of the book Peters
says, ''The poem s were my screams
of rage and dis pair. but l hoped that
the art involved in creating the poems
would make them meaningful to others."
The death of his son was a turning
point in Peters' life:. "I had always
\\'anted to be either a \\'riter or an
actor," says Peters. "but if I hadn't
been forced to re-evaluate my life in
order to cope with the shock or Richard's
death. I might never have freed myself
to rto creative work."
Since publication of "Songs for a Son ...
Peters has published eight other books
of poetry <I varir/1s subjects. has 1wo
n1orc fo rth&ming and is v.·orking on
several collections of poetry, as \Veil
as a couple of novels.
Asked how he organizes his time,
Peters says. "I don't know that I do
really. I love teaching, and I try to
think ahead to make each class special.
When I have lime, I work on revising
\l'Ork or I write letters. l have a tremen·
dous cor respondence .
"As far as wriling per se. that is
almost a matter of body chemistry.
Sometimes I don't "'rite at all for a
period o{ time. but then when I start
1 ,1·ork intensely and produce a gr_cat
deal." In the summt'r of last year Peters
11·1.1s traveling in New York State.
on his v.•ay to a \Vriting retreat. "'hen
he bccan1c lost near Albany; and saw
a sign saying "Shaker Museum -3
miles." On the spur of the moment
he decided to visit the museum , since
he was curious about the Shakers' com·
munal living and simple lifestyle.
His three-hour ..ut;it was the start of
a year-long fa scination with lhe Shakers,
particularly Y..'ilh !\'!other Ann L e e ,
Resister Senteneed
Paintings and cr11fts by :trtlsts from
throughollt the Soutb Coast nr A v.·111
he for salP. In t3ddition. otl an d
\\'atcrcolor painllngs wlll be auctioned
ut e p.m. each day.
Proceeds will go to the church bulldlng
fund . 'Mic church is located at 21832
\\'rsley Drive, neAr Aliso Elementary
School. ~
SAN DIEGO <UPI) -Simon Brt1fm11n ,
28, 1'.tonday became th<!: Ont d r a f l
resister to be sentenced here since Presl·
dent f·ord 's offt'r to cond1Uonal amnesty
last month for draft deserters a nd
rcsistr:rs. tl.S. District Court Jud g c
William Enright placed Bralrnan on one
yco(s proba.Uon and. ordered .him lo
spend al le&st 10 hours a week working
with . emotionally disturbed children.
•
LIFE DIFFERENT NOW
Former Farmboy Peters
founder of the religious sect. To date
Peters has written 300 poems on the
sub ject, the first hundred to be published
as a book. "The Gift To Be Simple",
soon to be released.
In the Ann Lee poems Peters continues
to use the stunning imagery which tras
characterized his earlier poetry. Peters
says he feels t,nuch of the imagery
comes from the stark childhood on a
Wisconsin farm. The family lived in
a small house his fatber built of logs
and tarpaper. They ate food they raised
themselves and butchered their animals
for meat. For diversion there was the
Jake nearby and the wood. The only
two books in the house were "Robinson
Crusoe" and "Tom Swift." And young
Peters found "Crusoe'' boring.
When biographies are written of the
American poet, Robert Peters. h i s
fonnativc years on the farm provide
the makings for a folk hero. Peters
says, "I romanticize that life now,
but then I knew that there must be
something better oul there in the big
wide world."
There was. And Peters, !hf: critic,
professor and prolific poet, found it.
Lo,ver Costing
Construction
At Saddleback?
Should Saddleback Community College
go to less expensive constr11cUon to
cut the cost of future buildings on
the Mission Viejo campus?
Supt. Robert Lombardi thinks so and
remarks by college trustees M on d a y
night indicate they do, too.
Lombardi sakl the present policy of
the board ts to use Class 1 construction
on new buildings, sucl\ as the library
and &clence-mathematics facilities.
Class I is the highest quality and
most expensive type ol construction.
Class S is the lowe!lt, he said.
"Ttle primary 0Jr1'lderatlon this board
has lo make is are we going to
have a Mercedes Benz or a Chevrolet,"
Lombanli WI.
"Do we have to have Clas,, l? l
know campuses that have Clas,, S and
Class 5 buildings. You don't have lo
spend hundreds of dollars per square
foot for buildings," l.4mbardi said.
"l 'd like \o see WI get away from
these coocrete motllte.ra," commented
Trustee Robert Bartholomew oi Tustin.
He was referring to the $3.1 million
library building in which the board was
meeting.
Trustee Donna Berry of MlsSlon Viejo
said she was concerned I.hat lower grade
construction might not blend. with the
two new buildings already constructed.
"I'd like lo see less concrete," said
Trustee Norrisa Brandt of Irvine.
Laguna to Discuss
Irvine Coast Fete
Plans for development of the coastal
stretch of the lrvioc Ranch between
Corona de! Mar and Laguna Beach will
be discussed in special ioint study se!l-
sion ot the Laguna Beach aty Council
and Planning Commission at 7:30 p.m.
\Vednesday at city hall .
The council and commission w 111
review the proposal for development
of the vast stretch of oceanfront lands
and how de velopment will i n f l u e n c e
Laguna Beach.
Monday she fell on a sidewalk at the
school. Less than an boor later, she
died at Saddleback CotnmunitY Hoopital
-aod officials still don't know e1actly
why.
She is the daughter of Richard and
Phyllis Cottingham of 25212 Arcadian
Ave.. in the Aegean Hills section of
Mission Viejo. Carrie was less than
a month shy of her I31t bir\hday.
She was wxier niedication for a thyroid
disorde r, bot her purents say ii did
not limit her activities.
Spokesmen for the Orange Co u n t y
Coroner's office said today the cause
or death is still under invC!ltigation . ~
A deputy coroner said it is believed
death was diie to natural causes, not
to a head injury sustained in the fall.
The accident occurred at about 7:40
a.m. Monday, 10 minutes before school
started. School officials said the girl
apparently was running across a planter
when she tripped and fell.
Finding ber mconscious, school staff
memben applied mouth -to -mouth
resuscitation until paramedics took over.
The girl's mother rushed to the scene
and went to the -hospital with h e r
daughter. But Carrie apparently ne\ler
regained consciousness. ·
Rosary for carrte will be recited at
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Sa d d I e back
Chapel, 220 E. Main, Tustin.
FwieraJ mass will be at 10 a.m. Th~
day at St. Kilian's Catholic Church in
Mission Viejo.
Besides her parents, Carrie is survived
by two brothers: Wade, 15, and Robert,
18.
Gunman Threatens
Coast Man in Laguna
A Newport Beach man exilillg a public
rest room in a Laguna Bea.:h park today
w;is accosted by a man Yr'tJo jumped
from the bushes, waved a revolver at
him and accused him of bclng a horn~
sexual.
After threatening "I'm gonrui kill you,"
the protagonist allowed the Newport man
lo flee. The incident took place at about
2;30 a.m. al Heisler Park, Laguna police
reported .
NOW, HEAR TIDS
......... .... ,,,,
According to the President's Council on
Enviro nmental Quality, it is becoming increasingly
difficult for anyone to escape noise.
40,000,000 Americans risk hearing impairment
and other physical and mental effects. 44.000,000
other Americans have the utility of their dwellings·
adversely affected by noise from aircraft or traffic.
21.000.000 American s are affected by
construction·related noise .
Now what does this have to do with carpet?
Carpeting will drastically improve acoustics in any
-room by quieting your home environment, making
radios. television, and the famlly __ sound better.
Remember, at Aldens, even our LOUD carpeting
is quieter.
•
AI,DEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646°4838
. HOUlS:Moo ...... TI.s.. , .. ,:10-Nt. , .. , ... u,T. 9tJOto·5 . .
•• . .
I
•
P1u1t, Puss, Kick Winner
Tuesd11y's
Closing Prices
Tueldrly, October 22. 1974 OAILVPILOT ·~1 9
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE 1,
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B)•S\'LVI.\ PORTER
\Vhen we recently asked a
friend how the "1idow of his
lifelong partner was raring.
he rema rked bitterly that
he rarely saw ei ther her or
her children these days.
He had been appointed
executor of his beloved pa r·
tner's estate; he had done
the best job he kn ew ho\11:
despite ttris, they had lost
all faith in him and the
r e l ations hip had
deteriora ted into squab·
blin g. Then he quoted the
fin31 stanza of an Edgar A.
Guest short poem :
Nowwhenl die I 'll never ask
A f liendtocarry such a I ask;
l 'U spare him all such
anguish sore
And leave a hired ttecutor.
It's rotten poetry but an
excellent warning, for if you
pick an executor for your
estate on the basis of friend·
ship and loyalty rather than
ability, you're asking for
trouble. The tin1c to learr
hnw lo selecl the ri ght
Sales Up
AtBertea
executor is now, when
you're healthy a nd can
r each un app r o priate
decision.
Simp ly s lat ed . an
executor is the person you
Money's
Worth
name in your will to handle
the job of settling your
estate. \·our executor may
be your "''ife or husband. a
friend or a professional
executor, such as a lawyer,
a bank or trust company.
You ma y select an in ·
di vidual executor or have
several co·exccut ors to
share the responsibjlities -
one a membe r of your
family or a dear rriend, and
the other a professional to
furn ish business and other
advice
YOU DON'T ll AVE to
shop a round for "barga in·
s." Although legal fees are
generall y 'l eft to ·the
disc retion or the court, in
most states the executor's
commission is fixed by
state law and is based on the
amount or the estate that
passes through his hands.
To file estate tax returns
with both rederal and state
au'thorities tor hire an ac·
co untant to do th isl ;
TO MANAGE THE estate
and safeg~ard assets until it
is time to distribute them
according to lhe provisions
of the will;
To pay Out at1 bec1uests
:.uld distribull' the remain·
der of the estate's assets ac·
cording to th e terms or the
\\"ill:
To get receipts from all
beneficiaries and file them
\\'ith the court .
· And to submit to the court
a fin al accounting of a ll
receipts and di sbursemen·
ls.
Only after all these steps
have been completed is the
executor discharged from
his or her executorshi__p.
Don't make the mistake
of thinking your estate is too
small to warrant writing a
will or naming an executor.
Estates.in the 575.000 ranl?e
are becoming-co mn1on·
place in this nation (\11ith
pensions, life insurance,
h o m e owners hip so
v.·ldespreadl and a typical
mcdium·size U.S. bank is
usually deli ght~d to serve
as executor on this size or
estate, says the American
Bankers i\ssocialion.
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1-lowe\'er, if there are t\vO /\LSO, It' VOU do nol
Bertca Corp. of Irvine 'executors. the commission~· have u \\'ill or if you fail to
achieved a record IC\·el or may double. and if there are name an executor. in your
sales ftnd earnings in the more than l\1·0 , the commis· v.•ill. th e court \viii .ippoint
first lhree quarters or 1974 , sions nlay triple. The fun c: an "admi11istr.ito1"'to han·
Richard nertea, chai rman · tionsofth eexccutorare: dle \'Our est.itc. 1'he duties
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',:'!'!'.!_nc, . .>0. ,>, J! ,',""= ~ Cowlt1 .011 9 I s... . .. ,.__......,, ''' > >> •"--, LID Lon · !Oh ll 3'.~' ''I P¥11t$ .... I 4 ' -W 5"RrtvHul 1 U I -'·• =i:. IV. J ""• • •,; ~,..-. -"'Co• 8'11 .ll 6 S 10lo ~ VI _,. .. -"' ,J t.Jblpl..1121> .. J .... -~. "-l!<n \Qlt S II 1S"" ... ~ryHpl J S 11""• lo · or the board. has ;1nnoun· To submit your v.·ill to the or a·n executor and an ad·
eccl. cou rt fo r probate cproof of mi nistrator arc roughly the
Net income for the nine' validity); same -hut ~·our executor
-m<>nths ended Sept. JO in· To lake title to all may ha\·c n1uch i:rcater
creased to S1.2J0,773, equal ,prope rt y owned lly the latitude ff you gfunt such
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0
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0
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1:1t1 18 is '"".:_ Vt ~=1n'r.J: .~ :0011 !!: : : =~·1~.li • 6: ,~.,..: ~: ~e'-'!:"nt 1:~ ll 1: ;?t!: 1"' WflW M11cJ1 ' l• 1 • '·•
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to 77 cents ~ sha re, com· deceased: flexibility in your \\'ill.
pared 'vith $1,000,398, or 63 To see that a ll assets of Don 't name an executor e..oi t:M t 19 ""' ~ "' CT1 C11 '° ,j •• 111 ••• ~ GtM\IW . .lll )I 61 J -v. unoru" ol4 .. I i~• ... p PL pl t.-'O .• i20 II ... !.ltll.'.>!..S 3.:10 I S11 ti)\;.. "" ~ ... u11 tnc . • 'l J~• •• a...o.g Inc 2l 30 ?t.i.t loll Culll!IO" '.to ,. 10 t\11-\lo Gt-V°'11.t0 J 1' 1Vt+ ~\ t.ac:linH!d l M l~-"' PtoP&l pt I . i:OO IS •1 SIO.IOll 1.:16 11 211 Sll>• I'> ~.~.%1: . .,. .• ' 11'• BlngDI' p,, .. l6 1'111 ... c .... 1 ....... '11~1 . Iii GtAMI 1.6111 I ., 2"-"" LaewCpt10 l ,., , ...... "' PPl.pl '·40 .. r1SO ••• t s.tdPl;for 1.911 . 11211.-1. =:.:;;:;., ,.."":: 1l s ........ a...a.-plC 1 . . I U"lo-... CllnnO•o JO • s ,... °"""'" .•ld I } ,,,._ .... """""s""• .J6 l&t 92 •I'>. '"' p Pl pl • so .. 110 " I !>Ill PfS!I ti) • ,, • ............ -• n ll• •••
cents a share in the cor· the estate are inve nt oried in your will 'A'ithout talking
responding period or 1973. and appraised : it over with him first. If he
There \Vere l.564.196 To coll cet a ll money clue refuses to serve after you
average number of shares the deceased; die, or his own business af.
outstanding this year rom· To pay any debts owro by fairs prevent him from ser·
llared \\'ith a\·erage shares the deceased after allowing ving, the court will appoint
in 1973. adjusted fo r th(' 5 creditors a set . limited time · ;i nothCr 'adm inistrator.
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1~rcenl stock di\'idcncl paid lo file clairns· against the ·
Jun(' 28. t•statl·: Cmp,..,,,,1 •91• Fot11e1 En1~'"",.'· '''"
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Foreign Airlines Attack
'Fly America' Campaign
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BlnC p1 •.JO .. • """-"' C.-Pfl .H 11 J1 1"-•.. ltibln 1.10 II «I 1"41"'-J""' MK4nF . .0 2 I ,.__ \'o Pl'ol ll'ld pf 1 1l I • ~. SilnbN"' t 1 ll 11''-'' :",1,..~, -ll ·. ""> •
8en(WI t<'t .. •10 411 ... Dl$eltal" .loll S t& 6 ... """IP11 ' )) 11"-• ~, MKOcinlcl It 11' IW-"' PllolPwl 1.60 .• .flt •Sl'J ~.IO ~ •l '"' .. L_.._..D• •. -. •> ., .0 ,Ji-. lloo>SIJ.1:111 2 11 1 -~ OlllElfill.+s 11\t 10\'oo Iii .-ndQl.tO i 12 , .. _.._, MKke .XI• 4 )V. •.• Pl>llVH . ..:i. s '.-. ,, Sunslrpll''> ll>+ '• "''"' ..., M'"'1"' !lenQt8 .01• ' JI 1i-.-"' ~E"' t.lJ •. JlD IS~-\It ...... .o 1 10 i·· . .. Mocmlll .?'.! J ut • . .. Pkt•lnl. J 11 1 • "" s...si. .... tll II .. ~ ... '• W!nnO. C/B J •l • I
Bo<-•'Y .~ 1 S6 )Iii •• ~E.pl l .••. 1130.0'h ... yH .801 1S JI ~• , Mo:Mpl l.IO . ] llllo-... Pielll'IG l.ll S I 10 s..po.11«1 11 1t1•1 ,) ~ · ll ''~'
NEW YORK <UPI) can buy jet fu e l in Australia
When t r o u b I c d Pan less expensively than Qan·
American \Vorld Airways las can refuel its planes tn
launched a "Fly America" the United States.
campaign recently and But Qantas's riposte went
complain ed about economic much farther. It said on the
and Political discrimination long te~m o "Fly America"
again:!£l U.S . flag airlines In movement could do Pan Am
foreign la nds, it was asking and TWA and "the whole
ror some stiff replies. .;...-_ -_ ---__ --__ -_ --_ ----
They came promptly' -• • ·h • f ' I
rrom Air Fra nce the Ger· • • • I p Pl
man Lufthansa' line and AttWrfC"R1 tfffJt•Pt11f1'1tt
most recently rrom Qantas, f"fHlld dtt ••• ft# fHttrh
the Australian airline, hortH ff# n11othpr These replies were S<'nt to . .
12,000tra..,elagentsbccnusc 100 pt•rt't>tlf fltt•I
Pan Am in large ad\'er· prftt ri#P. ''
liscments had urged trtlvel ~
a.gents lo r oute t heir . . . customers abQ.ard on U.S. ~1rhne. ind us try as much
flag airliners. harm ~s an_other 100 percent
All\ FRANCE and Lui·
thansa contented them·
selves with denying that
Frttnce and West Cernluny
dlscrimln3ted ln any way
against Pan An1 and Trans
\Vorld Airline~. the other
bl!! U.S. flag carrier on the
North Allanth:.
Qnnl<is 111~0 d.tnled
discrimination In Australia
In fAC:l , Qan1as sui~I P{ln Am
-
' .
fuel pr1c.c rise,"
Said Johri G. Rowe, Qon·
tus re~lonul director in San
f'"ranc1sco : "No airline can.
<1ffotd to h ove blind
natlonali1m replace the
competitiveness and.the co·
operative. l nternallnnah~m
that arc our ir1dus1ry '.!t
greatest ai;5ets."
CIANTAS ALSO denied
thut forcii;in · rl a~ nirlincs
httd an ad\':u1tagc ovt!r Pan
~t ,,,_, S U J4'1 • "' o.tE pl 1.U .. l600 '1 +I .,.,ep .Ml J 1S 10.. • to ,,,.,._, 1.10 i 111 l•\lt · .. Pie'l lmprt i 11 l'> ... Si.cit:rGtl ':10 ' ll J'o-·~ 'No M I l \\ ::;;-"' Am and TWA l·n b e 1· ng able ~.~. ' •• • ••• Ith--o.tE pf l.llo .. tJ60 S1 -l VI -1.ll I] •1 21•.-1111 Miii fCI .tlcl . . » I ... :::::..s:Gs 1 IO ' •SJ 3•1'>. , S<pw:apr' 1 lk 11.. t • WlsE•PI • 'ID • I ...,,.. "" 60!I U'I-~ o.t Epl 5'11> •• 6 oW'h-It <rt l.ll • 6 IJ'•' '• MM! SquoW't •• • 51\-"' -tt I •I U'" + \lo s..,,p-v .. 90 6 !I 11<,-. '• Wlvl"> l,Jl I lj 1}
to borrow rrom the U.S. Ex-~=:~ :: 1~ ~ '!t;:: :Z ~"f: :~ ~ ~l 1i~! ~ :::r0 ;~~ ·• ~ ,~:: •. '.~ :'v"'.i: Jt ;~ :::; ~ ~:~e j: , 't; :!: . ·;,. = .9~ : ~: : =~a~~ ~ •; 1~:~; .'..: port·lmport Bank to buy big BHUL 1.1~ • ,, 11"'-¥. Oi11N1nt1 J • ll 1S'llo• 'Ii Mr•n• .u • • 11 1ot -l'o Mo!f1•vc.a 1 s l ,,,,. • "'"''"" .11111110 .. , ""'°-.,, 5Ybton ·n 1 71• 1s...,, ., wom1u> IO ) .l 1
•. i·iners IL sai·d 0 e or the e1oekHA . • 1st 101t. • \.o 01.m$11 1.• s " 1•v. • .,, 11r11c 1.:10 s 1' 11•• v. -... 10 ' 111.1.. v. "'u• Hiii , 15 uv.-1• ~""'""' 1 .a . 1, 33 ~. 7., ~-·-"• ~ •, ,.•, ,,1~ :.• Ir • n Blutllel!.IO} 1) 1' .... -1" OiaSllPll.10 ,, I• 1, .. ,,, •ri.ca 1Q • 10 11 • "--.nln!l .40 ., )J &\'o• 'IO Pl ... ~\.l'Cll I St 1"'• I• ~ilt'(Wl()onH IJ J•., _,, •v --
prime reasons for the Exim =t.:: ., ril ,:"': ~ ~ ·.~ J 2s; 1~: =: ·~~:: ! !~ :._.: ~: = ,~ : ,M ~::"; ;: =:::;.i~J ~ ,:! ,~·~-.; 1.,,8 .. , -;;-1
1"'191J,. , =:opl•:.~ 1 ! 1!"'· ' Bank's existence is to sup· Baiwc.s .so 3 JOS 11 D11tio111 .t0a 1 • 1•1<o-\I) ..i1•t 1.IOd .. • II<• ... M4PCo .• 11 s2s J•'A . 1, PNSM 1.J110 • ,,. •1~. " '*at' N•' • 3 •• , • wr-'91, 1 . .io. Q 1 •1..,,-..
lh h US . £t Bond lnelu\ ., I ~+ ·~ O!Glor~.~ S )) S •"' aw6Ell.68 1 11 ''\•• ~, ,,_..,._ N< ,, lS '""' l'I ~Gld l1 1I J1)6 11•••""' fiOl'"I" 40 1' ~ ,. 1, ........ lltt(.,,.C.0 ll !,,.::. :: port e ugc .. a1rcra Sar<lrft lJOl1111••""!)ioli1111E:qp11tk1» .. --..,. ~i A1t1 111 110 .. ""-"Oit1.10•11sM"lo•t"'~s •>" 1•• 't t.w~'I'' , , •'•""''' " .., and .ng'·ne 1"ndustr\i ..... ~~.··,•" ••• ", .. ,:! •• • Oinl"911 .•• li SI• ... Nlli... • I )•, .. MwC11tltl( I .... U"o-... ~' .llllQ IQ •• I? • 1 . T-·-I •1 ~'·-, •-o. ,,-, ',,•i;;--, ··-·-.. -· ., 01n1,.P1J •. 11IW-""' CA M.l•U"• )I t \.o o \+ /rllMCa11111'1 .• 21 JIV.-!illlAN1<1n<lj ' ••~•·'•T-Co!pll'IO ISl•-•• ~ --~ QanlaSS3!'d"'-• snag~tfOt.oWt &l ll•\•OillOn l.IOQll •1• ... klnc .lJ t 1• •'•·· -..m . .O•ttJ l l'o-"•11Dr!G£1.S ltSU r-'•r...!nc.o II s tl•IH'K 1°'l 1S lll.o . ' ••"'!::: •• l!Ollfpll.•.,1100/t •I OhNyW ,ltlSJMJ&*-\11 l•Mlnlollloflt<ool ~, -/Ndl.801 IJ1lloi•l1'~i.to;1.&Q• 1t ?•'"•' l...:IW><-26 I• ~1~1..,!NIU\t JS•'••'• airliners have more than 50 80lltn-. 1ric: s u n11o ... DiHtDI .12 J ss i1-> .. ••rr11n ... s • ,., ... -iont. ... 11 20t 11 .... -"• ""'E1P," ~ 11 10.,. '• 1...:nn•<c.1 , 11 •·• ., 1no~•o. "° • • n-.-•• r h . er ... i,.. .IOd s •11 ,.,.,_ .. Di!lol5-~.I01• 1• 13•'o+I"' lfl1H 11l10 lO 31 •II• MlflMI 1.600 IJ 3'V.+ ~. PrrtEIPl''lt il!lO.. l~ll•on• '/011 JI,... lt•r<:ot11 ,. 6 IJ ll'• percent o t e air pa~scngcr &r1.,..s 1 . .0. 11 19 ·~ • '" 01 ... r111d 111 • 21 11, . ie ... cu•• s 1 Jl , • "" ......,..,. .t11 • JO 11-.-v. Prrtt:i p1 '"' 11lo0 •1 '•W«i• is • 1 , • ~. ~ •• ~· .:!:!d, • ~. 1J•,,-lr.rrl·c goi"n• 1·n und oul of 8'11 My 1.n 11 '°' 'i<11o-~ O.vMI '·* 1 J9 i~•-.... •lo<'1M ... 11 ., J&h • Marl!ll .:w s 11 t \, . PPG1n11 1 111 s 1,1 u , , "'""'-3, 1 .. 10., 'i:..,,,.-, ,, ' ,.. , fl BritN<yptl .• \30\l•'lt Orf'Wlpr ,)01t1JJ lfo-\lo •-Pl'llO .• lt/l• 'o Minatt1'fri lll1'1'1-l>lo~p'IO 11 1 -'•fpl~ .... pt· tll•I ,__,.., /,.l}''I many countri es and have at BritPwl "°"' 1 140 • ..., ~ .• ,. ,., •1...,.1 '"''" "11 111 31'• ,,, MlfVIF 1.1. ' 10 ,,,... ~ Pro<&G ,·'° 11 "' 81 • n . '"'~ ,.., 111 ' 11 s ..... , 8"1c•fll .11 S I Ill\ .,, °'""-.ul'J .10 .. I J... rnlWC•11 I 11• Mlr!M l,ZO S '3 11'~• ''i PfooOAn JO , I • 1east55percentofthc1ntcr· St\JllOl,.n • 11 1,,,,_..., 0tww.11y "" 11 :IO\l\o•.,, "''".., 1• •'• """°"' ,,,. s u 11 1,:, ,,,_1n1 ·10 1 io1 11 -1 ' I rr1 . h U "led~Qiml ,,,.,.._ .. Dllt'IC C.'.:IO & •11 ttlln .IOll!U).111•'1 ~o(p .J\1lllt01t ... 1 P~4 '"'"JI ,,, _ _., nat1ona tra c1 nt e n1 &Gt\1111.eo s 19 11 ... DDrT Oii-• s 6 -.,. .,,., '°, , •i..-... ""-"11 .s.t '•M , • .,.,."' PuSCo1 1JO , nt 11•, .• •• Les 8"1~ .10 l " 1·· • e .Ill s ,. J-.... Klon .n s :JO 1t<1 ............. AOll • ll u"'-•• PSE•G '" • 1&t ""' • • .,.,a • Stf'ln'h .111 1 ~] "'-I'> l.'JCI • 11 ~-l'I n 1 • lit U\o . ~· NIQH 1.IN •• JS 1•111o .... PSEGpl I"°.. 1 llVI-14 People in the airline ln·"""5wll .D •.m '"' .. 1.1C111 MI'S •1-1:i. w111P.H1?• 11• ,. .. ,n. 11&1111v1.c:e .. .a""''"' P!o£Gpl t.~ •. 11100Yi • ~. llnl5ll W ,.-:! I 11 th• Vlr Op 'F !ncp , , t 1\11 , • IQPl~ll Ef> ' 2S '''o • W MMllV 1.1'11 6 IS 11 -141 P!oE°"' J.'I , . 1!0 O , IV. duslry generally <ign.'td H eTMo 1.1<111 1 Ml J\t-~ °''"" 1.t11 1 u )•"-i.,; ui..o.tw . .o • 11 11-.. 1~ Mt!S.oE ·"' s " ,,.,._.,.. P5t:°"' ''° • iJO SI • , < A I • · e..:,,~ E 1 11 1'I ,. --Mi 0re-1.&0 u ltt •l"'-1~ non Hll I 6 &6 11 • Vt Mty OS 1 . .0. • 11 10>t-.. M 1..,, J ,. 1 lJ 11i.. ",.·1 y mer ell program &.oi eo .to , u ~ . . . 0rtip1 2.10 .. 11 ••, -1111 Mw .1>111 .. \ • s 1~ • .,.. ~ ·" ! 11 ""-"' PStllO llf J·; .• oo 40 -1
COuid not reolly have much =..,, ~ • 1, •, o..-p1 i .. ,, •s -1 '' c ·" 1 )II u ... • "' ~· .., l '" ... PS HfW 1 . ..i • " u•-.... 10 Orl•t 1,.., •• 9 lt•• \It nt• .60 • ti th-I.I> ta 1,le 1 ) to:i.o-.., l1SHlib 1 JO J ~I 11>1-14 hcne£icla1 impacl on the a.11 "1:10 ·; • ,,...., .... .,..."""' .60 • 1J •¥< ... E~'"" ' • ... Px 1. •1 11 ,...,, ... ~"i..r·~ 1 1• ,.,._,,.,
bl r d 8ICllnv1.IOl'I I 14 )\lo--Ol*Pwl• 6 161 11 .. -1'1 ln111.Jl I IOI I •\II KJl,ltlt.IKI .Jt 20•• \>t l'Wblol ,JO,o t lO ll'I> ..• pro ems o P::&n Am an ar.....w ,19 J ll .-. .,_. a...p1 .:111 •. llO • .,.,. " 1A1.10d •• l u 1,, 1t ""°"''a!!·· n •'-~" ~Ac ,10 10 ......
TWA' "ll's wavlngtheflao ........ ·,·~.·. ", ,', -, •"' Dt.*l!1111a.10 ..• 1:1t 1tv..1¥J n.suor-,,• ,..'' 1' .. -N<c.Orm 1 • .nr11s201•-..-•-P\d!P 1•'i s JO"'•'"' f!' " CMll Pl I.ID ., 1»o Ml ,,. litt I ' mt-\\ Mo:l»lld Ct 23 io. lot -llt ~ 1 IG I tOI .. ...,_,.., and that's about all" said 11111 1.11 s 1" u -v. °'*".,..... .. 1 1111o+•"" 11.40 '11" ,, ' ,... Mo:DDllO .«1 1 n •w. . ....,..~"' ·• , ,. ,.,,, "' , , ' llul1 Ho 1.10 i fl] )Jiii-... Dlln8rld .. 1J ~U ~ 1" ' 1.JI I • 1' Nlo:GrEcl 1~) I d U-"6 ~--I JS t 11 oneorr1C1al. IM Pl .lS .. t ,_.,. ... OMo1.r1 (o 20 11 I-• ~ ,., (O I U J\o .. Mo:Or HI .10 S II l..,t "6 Pl.wit .... 2'1 ." 1'S !\lo-·\,,
lnl.rnall·oniil oirli'ne-m· eur..-.IO ''c'-" "'"-'Ill °""""" te1 10 •s11a1Y1-1 J01t1/lo.11 •1 s 1. ,.., "' MOf4tp11.JO . 1 1J.\lf ... Pllr!Mif• .., 1 so , .... "" ..... OuP!lpio, • S/1,t-\11 loPllCo .11; ,,, , ... Mo:IM~M s1u•" .... •llli -Q 0 -
11.l ill .••. ha", so•"13I and l,.!:1211 .• >0 "•'> ,•,,._···· OU1:J11Lln "• 1•1 U I> 1tlnfl .l6J ~) ~-·~ MtKw4 IO S I u-.-i. o..MOft to I'" U, 111 " " -"' CluQUtl pl 1 .. r10 II o ·~ lllMllM• .'! ', .. , •,,", • "° Mtl.., ,IJ S JJ 11"" • "' ~SOI .. 11 ol 1t>1, ,_. political aspects ·1s \\.'ell as •ftd • " '"'--"' o..o1.p1 l.ia •• di 10 ..• Fb,;; , ,, '" " Mi:l.OllUI .su • .a ""'-i.. ~or ~ 11 )-loo-"'
economic. It ·s ~o seer~'• w:rr'1..":c ; i ~--7 ~ ~ i.n ·· 11;0 '1:: • ~ Ill ,~ 1 ,, u1 1314 ::"&. :l ! !: .:~ • ~ •11,1on IO~s •;;;-JI~ •• l'
h Ii I • QolJl\,l\11))1 'U -u. lft:!!..:•1.-'-_..,, pfJ,_,, 10)1'-• \, MN!lll Jl!O 11 Mt""11......., 11. 1'6 i i••, I i.ll son1c :o1ma er ore1gn c.i•.,.... 114 , n I\• ... ~""'"'·", 11 1•~·.... .g'l~ 1 ,f ,,_.1 1i1tt1uw I 'll ts ""' "-01 .. t:i, 11 •1 ,, rlagc.rriers1i1atfl\'1nan<I c.m1tt111 . '1 '1•-'-" E--c..«1 • 1110.., •• .., .. _.,,,, •• ,')""''•Me t CQr_. s •~ •• ...,.. .... 1, ''° ,., .... • U...RL~IOJl lit »"'•1'-1!!-.0All hl >• .,.. ... ft,•l1r Ml!ISl'lat '6 ,..,,, "',....,pl l I M\o•'""' 1Jt1l of the United St:ilet$ :tre ~' ,,,, .. ,..... .... t!"°'....,.,.._,. ~ .. .,i..l'"' ,. .,. ·• -·•.., • •#OP-,, 1 -ntn:t
h II b 'd' tel•110Jlh ... E.,i\Jlltl~tll°""'-~ nUl06)\I S • -cS11 11t1t•)llio""llt¥U'llol i tl lf..,-"I cav y S U S t •Ze<I and .. ~\IHI SSU!to ... E.KOIM1019111Jloo-1-.. {~l, "°•" .• """""'' 1+11 1'111t). R"'f"dlnlllt t •l , ..... ~. 11 ma. I tobol t ,11 •1 111110 t , ,..,_ 1o Eftr!QI 1.• s ., tl'-,,. lilbu"9 1.,.• •, 'l"· •• ""'"""'"' 111 • • 10 • •• 11..,'"""' '° 1 ... ,, .... ~. ex s 1ny Sl' 1 .. ·r cu~s c•n•'' .~.E<11111rM .•1•it•?G~·~ u11A 1 ~'','''''""'"'1L,,.• .. i10 • ~<:ort11ii1•ii"'-'" country's natlonn.lllritle_ WN111:io1• 1tt ,,.,, 1• r.tu1J--'110 1• 11•-'"' ~1J0 11 .,,11. 1ftl•,o>e1 °'~' J1ol0. "At:.t• .. "'• ,. 4'11' .. "' --
..
lla llcraft llome'
1'1101';\IX 1\t1 i 1.\1', ll°'llct;,ifl .
llOm ('S, Inc . once on(' 11f l hl• 1i.111on ~
largl'st hon\(' bullrl1•r.. 10 .. t S7 .~
n11 lllcln. Or $3.7 I pt;.·r 'h;u·c . 1n t hr fi ~c:d
~·cnrcndcd last April :10
1'hl• Phocnix·hil :\t'd l'nn1pun)".s
Onanc1al situation chungcd markcdlv
early this $1!at. • ·
Dart Profit s
LOS ANfiEl.E!j ~API Rccorft
th\rd·quarlt'r und n1n(' monlh f.ales
nn<1, profits ha \'C! b~cn re1>ortt1d hy [)art
lndu~tri1·~ lne . lurg('ly tK>rt111,;r of
1mprn\"t'd salC's of )llasllcs, ~laiss
cont:11n rs and eonsumrr produC't."· 3.
spoke:\ man for the firnl said.
Tttt;. ~pok~m-nn t't'rw\C:d l'lt
11i\'ersified firm ·s lhir3·<1u1rt r
carnlnj;ls Mmountcd Ill Sl7 ~' m1\lion. or 16 <:c.nti;. a .,hur,.
•
•
•
"
\\ ffj l>A\LV tllLOT
Vermeil
:-worried
About Cal
I.OS ANG J<:LJ::S IAPI -'l'h e
C;i1tforn1 11 <:olden Bea r~ ha\'{' won
fuu1· slr:J iJ;ht i.:anll'S ;ind urc 2·0 in the
l1<1l·1h<'·8 Co nfc rt•nt'1'. but arc they tis
good :1~ thetr rerorll '.l hUld 1ndic<1lc"!
tnath Dick VL·rme1I uf UCL/\, who
takes hi s llrl11n:o. to Berkeley Satur-
day, is eon v 1nl't•d I h;1l <1uality foot bl.I] I
is ba1·kat Cal.
'"l'hey'rL· nol ju ~t some s leeper
tl•um thut bt·at a tut uf patsies," v .... r.
nll'll told !ht: Southt·rn Ca lifornill
t 'oolball \Vr ltcr!-!' ASM>c ialion f\1on·
da)· "They're p l ay1n~ <11,11fully good
foot hall. cspccilll ly on offcn.;;;t•
•
50-50 Chance •
'
Of LA Getting
' '80 Olympics?
VIENNA IA Pl -"We may be the
underdogs, but I reckon v.•e huve a 50-
50 chance or landing the Olympics,"
said Tom Br adlty, the st rappiqg
ma)'or of Los Ange leis.
their clothing in eertain inst.ance!'i.
provided the payment goes to their
national associations.. .
Lord Killanin. pre~1dent o~the 10 <;.
in openi ng the session, claimed th•~
will help give all countries an equal
The lank y , 6-roo t-4 mllyor. a rormer chance to prepart" their athletes for
quarter-miler and basketball play~r competition.
at UCl.A, was in Vienna to lead his ''All countries do not ha ... e t.>qual op·
city's bid again st rtloscow for the portunities, .. Killanin said ... It 1s ~ right to host the .sports e:ictra ... aga nza easier for some countries. ,\lttctht.•r
in 1980. through governml'nl or pd vale sour·
"We like tu th ink we ure the hl:st ces. lo finance dc.,.elopmcntof sport.
"'!'hey ha\'C a~ ~ktlll.!d athletes tn
1hc ri~ht position~ as <iny bod y. Chuck
~l unc1e mi~ht bt_• "'·' 1-:ood a running
back ;is there i~ in llu.• l'oun ll'Y l'rQ
scouts \ ... 111 l<'ll you th11t. And Stt've
U...rtkowski is 'thru1,1·1ng th e hall ex
lrtmcly well. The wide l'l't'ei\t·r~ arc
c:.1tch1ng it."
'l'h al Cal h<is talt·nlcd runners,
fhrowers and catC'hcrs isn't nc"'· Ca l
:.cored paints l;_o;l :-.ca~n . but couldn't
slop othe r tcan1 s fr um Sl·ur1ng more in
a 3.9 ye ar.
equipped sports city in the world," •"This 1£na bles thl'i r com1>c tilors to
__ JlradlCy said prior J oJoda):.'S pre:;en· rtWeive-high~ompetiHon experience
talion to the International Olympic and train ing. But there arc other
In 1974, Cal 1s 5-l 11n<I. Vcrmcll said,
'''!'he defcnst.• is so much bcltt'rthan it
hus hccn in tht• past. '!'hey bend l.I lot
but they don't break."
(;al has hcalcn San J ose Stale, Ar·
n1y. Ill inois,' Oregon and Oregon
~l:.ilc. afler \osin,c: to J-1urid~L
LCLA no"' l ·O·l in the PaC'·8 and 3.
1 ·2 over;1ll . didn't t'\'Cn bend late in
Saturday niJ::ht's 17·13 \'lt1ory over
\Vetshine ton S t a te. ~topp ing the
Couga rs four limes one yard. or less. fmm a touchdown.
1'hat goal·li nc st~1 nd, Vcrmcil said.
inspired the team , l.l nd "I really
hc\icve we're going to grow Crom that
c:icperien<;c. I hope so, because we're
)Coin .: to ha ... c lo play our best game
yet to beat Cal.··
The Bears arc couched by ll't ike
\\.hilc. li ke \'crmeil a rormcr Slllnford
· ;issislant. and Vcrmcil call s hi m "the
closei.t rric nd I hllvc in the world.''
Vermcil said the UCLA offcnsl'
1nust gain consis tenc y, while the
<IM'en sc "has pla yed "'ell enough for
us to win."
Linebacker i;\i lliln Ku_Ykcndall suf·
fered H spra inl'd a nkle and is ""'cry
doubtful " again~! C:.i l. said Vcr meil.
"Now we're pe rfect four-for.fo ur,··
he said ruefully Of injuries that ha\'C'
stricken the four rii ost outstand in g
players on defense -Ku)·kendall , in·
si de lin eba cker Frank Manumaleuna
cind line men Cliff 1')-cizier and ex·
Cos ta rttesa l·ligh and Or<1 nge Coast
College st:i r Pat S"·ectland.
l\lanum <1 lc un a \\•as sidelined for the
~l·a son by u pinched nerve in his neck;
bu\ Vt>r m ei l sai d he 1s hopefu l
~\\cclland and Fr aiicr \\ill be "-'Cll
f"nough to play <1ga 1n~l Ca l
"It·~ like taking i\lerlin Olsl'n. 1-'red
l>ryt·r. Jack ltcrnolds and Isiah
Hobt-rt.son out of \our lin eup," said
Vermc1I , ro.-mcr i.os 1\ngelt•s R<1ms
assistant eoach. "It makes a hccku va
differenrc."
Vermcil ~a id S<.1 tu r<l;iy ni ght's goa\.
Hn<' st;ind latl· in the ga me "•ill :.always
;1n1:.iz e hi tn
"It's !ht· li r~t l1n11• l°\c L'\'t•r seen <1
learn have onl\' ~I'< 1n1·he!i to go on
first dp1vn and ilol 1naJ..l' i1 r 1n on the
bc nt·h ...... :i r(•;d1 ... t , !alk1ni.: to the uf·
ft·nsc. tr~ inµ Hi fi gure ho1\ to gel a
tr11u·hdn1,1·11 111 lhl' t1uickl·~l "'ay pos·
~iblr, ''Vermc1lsaid
Brandt Wins
Pickeroo
ll11n:tld ll randt of lr1·ine di d !lume
f,111~·1· ~f'll'l'tln~ to \\'In tht' "·cekly 1 >:111 .~ Pilot 1'11!:-.k111 l'ickeroo foo tball
).:lll'~~lll)! t'Ollll".~!
Hr.1ndt m1~-"l'd onlv thrl'<' ga mes on
thl' r :11·d Olll' r11llt•Ac ancl t"o high
... 1·h11o l ~!rt,\ ""' l h;Jt \1·as . it \\'al\ only
goo1l 1·111111gh 10 t ic'' 1th f1\'c other con
ll•,1,1111 ~
111111 £'\ l' r, I 11 1ng up to 1·ha rn 1>1onship
fnrn1, Branclt L'<l Oll' throug h in the lll'·
IH't•:ll<..t•f TO rllflll' \\ 1th 111 four points or
!ht• l'li<H'I rota I point~ ~ror<•cl hy all lht·
ll'a111 .. in I hl· PL l'kt•rno Ct fll\l'SI
That ~a\l' h1n1 f1r!'>l prizl'-a por.
t<iUlt• hl ;1('k and \1 111\c l<'IC\'ision set
fron1 co ·spon ... or1ni: ,\UC Co lor
'1'1•11•\ 15111n ~1ort'~ uf llunt 1ngton
lk•at'h
And :is ont' 11f lhl' \\t'l0kly \\lnnl'rs it
n'ak{'"' h1n1 ,,11g1l1lt• rur !he end of
~t·ason ru11off f11r ;1 Zl·nnh l'olor 'J'\'.
i-:arh "Cl'k\y \\ 11\1lt'r "i\\ 1:11111\'J\'\f' fo r
1h1· Rr:1111I pn11·
S('cond pl ;1i 1· 111!ht•1·urn•nl t•nntl'~l
"t>nl 10 l.1111 1" Hit"-"" .Ir <if San
Ch:n11·n1'· 11 hi!(· S:1n!:1 .\n~1 ·:s i\l;1l'l11s
H1·<1l." \1·;1.,!h1!'rl 'l'ht'.I 1·:11·h 11 in rad io~
f11r l h1•1r 1' I furl "
GREEN BAY'S TED HENDRICKS BLOCKS A PUNT BY CHICAGO'S BOB PARSONS.
Broek Tops Balloting Surprise Gain
Dodgers' Garvey Gains ·Helps Bears
Major Loop All-stars
NE\V YORK IAPJ -Steve Gar.,.ey,
the Los Ange le s Dodger s f irsl
baseman. has been named to the As·
sociated Press· 1974 131ajor league All ·
star baseba ll team, announced Mon·
duy.
Gar\'ey "'as a landslide victor o.,.e r
Dick Allen of the Chicago White Sox .
273-76. G<1r\·ev batted .312. smashing
21 homers and driving in 111 runs.
Lou Brock, the St. Louis t:ard1na1s ·
b;1Se·stcal in g king, was al so a
runaway choice along with Cincin-
nati's Johnny Dench and Minnesota's
Rod Carew .
Brock . who broke Maury Wi lls' all·
time rt•cord with 118 stea ls this
season, headed a group of outfielders
that included Reggie Jackson of the
"'orld Cha m pion Oakland A's and
Jeff Bur roughs of the Texas I<a ngers.
Jackson had 218 votes and Burroughs
aceumulated 194 .
&nch. the Reds· (inc Cl.Ile.her who
slugged 33 hom e runs :.i.nd knocked in
129 runs in 1974, was the biggest \'Ole·
getter "'il h 384 . Ile left his nearest
competitors in the dust . Pittsburgh's
l\lanny Sanguillen v.·as second with
merely IO votes.
C<i rCV.', t.t innesota's star second
baseman "'ho had a mci1or league·
lradin~ battin g ave ra.i:e or .3&L had
the second hi ghest vote total "'ith J06.
llis elOscst competitor in ... oling by
~ports \\'riters a nd broad c<is lc rs
.1round the nation was Joe ~torga n or
Cincinnat i 1,1•ith 63 .
'!'he rest of the team includes short·
stop Da\'C Concepcion or Cin cinnati
<i nd third baseman ~·l ike Sehmidt of
the l'hiladelphia Philli es. !\-like Cuel·
l<1r of the American l..c:.i guc E<tSl
champion B<i lti morc Orioles was
selt!l'tcd as thl' left-ha nded pitehcr
und Fl'rguson J enkins or ·re:icas \VitS
ni•m<'d as the right-hander on the
lll'l'Sligious tea1n.
Cue llar was an easy victor in his
t'all·gory \\ 1lh 255 \'Otes to the dist<tnl
·lfi of Delroit's John Jliller. Jenkins
IH1(1 :1 toughe r battle, though. with Jim
"inne r. Jenkins polled 159 voles to
llunter·s 11 7. No lan Hyll n, theCalifor·
nia An gels' strikeout ace, had SJ .,.otes
to finish third among ri ght·handed
pit chers.
l'hers . .
Brork'!> outslanding season nlso in·
t•lud£'d a .300 liallin~ a\'eragc1 194 hils
and 105 run~ scorrd.
·rh<' ,·oters . "'ho made their selec·
ti•Hl~ Ll·fort· the playoffs and \Vorld
.'i1·ri1·~. rho~c Jackson and Burroughs
an,onµ a field of outstandin~ out ·
fii'lder~ that ineludl'(I Halph Garr. lht:
:--·at 1011al r .l'a~11L' 's bat ling cha mpion
A third bas<'mnn in his first ri\C
years of professional baseball, Gar·
Vl'\' \\as s witched to firsl base in 1973.
ile showed remarkable ability al
fi rst, particularly when it came to di g·
ging balls out of the dirt as many
World Series fans observed recently .
Garvey began the 1973 season as a
pinch hitte r. Instead of looking at ii as
punishment, he made the mos! 01 tne
opportunity. collecting IO hits in his
first 24 plate appearances.
Grid Rankings
lht "'·-••flM p,.,, top 10COI~ •0011>111 !~Im•."'''"
l!"l·P'•<• •Ole~ In ~··11enttie\e\, .. 1wn •~o•d •nG 10111
Pooni\.
1 ooloSt. il·0-0 1.1~ TI."Tii"1i""le<ii"·•·l·l •M '· o~i.. Il l s.o.o I.Dill 11. Florid• ~l·O 184
J. Ml<11, !H •·O·O •ll IJ. le•~I\ •·1--0 Ill
•. A!bl. (I I ··~ "' 14 A•llOfll~I. •·•·O ns S Aul>ufn (If 6·0-0 •" 1S. MiofYl•nd •·2.0 ,.
•· use •-1-0 •ti t•. ArtZDM ~-1.0 11
I. NolrtO"'"' ).t.O ~7~ 11 N.C•to.SI, 6•1-0 U
I T1011A&M S·l.0 ~I II, Twl-S·G-0 ..
'· "+ebrtl U 4·1-ll lH It. Miami, 0 . S--0·1 l S
,10 .,...,,St~t• .s.1~. 314 10. c.uto•n•• S-):f! _ 21
OIM•I ••<t lwl,,., w it•. ll•llM aolp,.il>Hl<•llv: lll•lot.
Uhnoi1, IC•-s, Mo•ml CF11.I, MiW•!.li>P SI.flt, Norlll
c...o11 .... , Ott••""..,. St11t. Plrt. Pii,_, Solfl Dit'ill> St.et, •ltmolf. ua..r.. W11con11n. -Tl,. -1,i:i VniW<t-Pftss lnler,.,.11on1t _.,Ill <o.<11ts
IOP10 .... lot lOlltge IOOIW U •11•"'1' ffi1h ..... lol1 re<O•Gl __ 11'11 pl..:1 •Oltt ln~rtnl-\.
~r.mliMil -)SO II. FlorlO.t 1~11
1. Mlt:lll~ IH I ttoi. U. Mtr,11tul 1 ... 71
1 Al.tba..,. (6.(11 n. ll. Ml-! (flfl (l ·ll
4, AUl>Urn 1 ... 0! t:M. 1(, Ari,_ l!--11
s. tl otl use 1•-u 1i.o n. Tt~•s Tt<h t•·l·ll Ill•! No Oa-f)·l'I"' It, Mltml IS·0-0
,_ , •••• A&M IS-11 ,.. "· A .. ,.,,.. S\. u.n
I. Por nn St11t !S·O t<a II. !Tit! OlltllO..,. St,
'· Heb<.tslt l•·H 16 ITitf Ml .. l1~01tiSI.
10. ft•'f !•-1! l1 'fftlSanOit90SI, J
No••. e, •O•ttlfttnt wUn •"" A.....,.I<•" ·roo11>111
""""'· tt•ms on O<Obll•Ofl bY 0111 NCAA '"f l11tllCjil>le IO< loll 10~ ... 1-1 Cllampll)tltllipC°"'iOer~llOfl l>V Ille
UPt -•d of CO•<"•' Tllo~ t•.tms curren11, an P'OballM ••t; 0"11W>m•. SMU. C..ll•orn11, \'..II Sltlt
o .. onQ IM•<ll 1 •nd South wt >t•rn i.ou111M1a,
Top Packers
C~llCAGO (A P ) -"lt ~·as strictl:·
designed to be a short·yardage play,"
s aid Carl G arre tt, "but Randy
J ackson and l)erry Williams threw
super blocks and I could have gone au
the way if I hadn 't tripped."
The play -one of many key pl ays
in the Chicago Be ars' stirring 10-9
Nationa l f'ootbaU League ... ietory
over the Green Bay Packers -came
in the closin g minutes when the Bears
were hangin g on to their threadbare
ad.,.antagc l\1 ond ay nig ht.
Garrett not onl y got the two yards
for a clutch Cirst down but rambled 18
yards to get the Bears out of a serious
hole. Bob P arsons then punted out on
the Green Bay four·yard line and still
the Bears didn't clinch the triumph
until Garry Lyle intercepted a Jerry
Tagge pass in tht:! closing seconds.
Another key play -the game was
full or the m -came in tfie fourth
quarter with the Bears leading 10-6.
Tagge spatted Barry Smith alone in
the e nd zon e and fir ~. C_ra ig
Cleamons a ppear ed lo come out of
nov.·here al the 'last second to bat the
ball out of Smith's hands.
"Cleamons ma de it look tough
because of national television." said
coach Abe Gibron. "He should ha1·c
been there all the time.··
Clea mons cred ited Smith 1r ith
making "a good mo.,.e. I gol there at
the last second. Sure. "''e used six
ha.c ks o n dcfcn i;e <t l tinl!:5 but
remcml.ie r, we "'Cl'c quick eno ugh to
come back Hild suppc.irt on lhc run."
The strutegy of using Si.'< defensive
backs was pu zzling since it force$ a
team· to run rather than 1hrow and
Green Bay is known more fo r its run·
ning th.in its passing.
"You can th ink "·hatever yo u wan·
t." said Gibron . "The six def~nsive
backs force d the m to run. \\'c figured
we could stop their running. '!'hey had
never seen six defensive backs before
and it 's tough to throw against them .''
l COlt[ Il l' OUART!Jll "''"' a., """° crw-FG Roct.r Jl
• • • 10 0 0
,_,
0-10
ON -W•de II !MIU ltOlft Hull !"°""< l 1(l )
(;8-FG INr<ol ~
G8-FG ,_...'COi Jl
C.8-fG Mt'col )6 A-S0.1'1
Fl"! CIOwnS
RW.,..l·Tl<Oi
PIHl""1 J l <lh
"'""" v••lh Pt1v s
Pllnh .
'"'"""'•lO\l .,.Nllit S• ptroh
lTA11STICi '•<•ff11 .. '" 16 IJ
JJ.tl '60-1S2
•• ti
" " U·l2·2 1·16-?
)-lJ S·h ....
1·10 1·40
INOl\flOUAl lUO(ltS
AUSHI NG -G••tn 8ty, 8ro<.klnQlon 11·Jt, LtM
4•H, GOoO.....,. "11. (lllcfflO, G,lrre\J U.tG\, WLlll•m~
10-'1.
RECIEllltNG-G<ten BIT, Ml(;.eorqe, 4·S~. SllQ9ft\
!o-4~, 8•0(~1nqloo •·'19. Cl!ICIQO, W-2, .. , WlllMl"U ,.,,
PASSING Grttfl '''· 11911'1 i.-lt-1, 140 ¥l •Os.
CnltlQO, Hull 1-16-1, IS.
USC to Throw More Against Beavers
[,l)S,\;..'(ifo:l.t:S r.\f'l ('n;n·h.lohn
~l cKav of lhl' l 'n1\t'r:-1l~ of Southrrn
l".1l1foi-n1.1 \ell' .. 111-.. 'l'ro1:1ns w11l thrO"'
1h1• fu11th.dl 1111111· .1g;11nst (lrr~on
!'i!Jll' Sa tu rd ;1 \
llu\1 C\1·1. th1• , 11.11 h. not1n i.: l':ll
JIL1den ·~ pa~.,111).( pru<l1111'd onl} 11
,Jrcf~ J i.:.1111 .. t (lr1·~11n S,1turday, a<l·
ilt•d ··t don t kno\1 1f "l'll pa~s bet
ti•r '
'rht l;n·k uf a pass1n,1.: ;1lt:1r~ "t!-> the
b1 ,L:!~l'"t 111 \·~ttf\ of 1ny l1fl','' ~l f'KU.\
ao;.1d....:. I I.no" 1.1. ~' ... l1Wld h1.• .11 ~L1uu .....
si n~ t(';1rn . h111 "1• re JtJ~t uut ·•
Although Haden. who broke srhool
passing reC'ords lust year us a junio r,
~atd the 1:1m med rin,i;i fin(ler on his
pa:-<~1n~ h:ind i!in 't to blame. l\1cKay
sai<l . "I think It l:io The ball s:uled on
lum al Ort.·~on ··
lladt'n has romplcted onl )' 20 of 54
pa~-..{'" -:l7 p\'rcent -1n five ~ames
.. lfc'!i JUSt prc.'isi ng." rttrKa)' :o1a1d.
"lle's :.um\n~ the ball like a baseball
µ1tchC'r . I'\ e told hi m lo I hrow it -the
ht·ck with :urning it. I kno"' "'hat II
llilLi;ta!:L:lcr 11nt •~-'And he docs
C\'crythlng else well for us.
·-
"lladen's been unlucky in some
respects. I C'O uld have bulll up his
!statistics "'h('n we got v.•ay ahead or
l o\\.•a and Wash ingt on Statr by
kl•cplnt him ln the re and ll!tting him
11as~. but I "'on'I do that.
"Uut I kno"' \\'hat he cnn no. I saw
him stand in thl'rC a.i:alnsl a r1crce
Ohio !)tale r ush in the l a~l ltosc Bow l
anu complete 21 or 39. And he had
SC'.,.eral dropped ..
"I have gre111 confidt.Jncc in Pul
lladC!n ''
Before USC's fi rst game, ~JcK ay ..
~aid 11adcn's passing would dominate
the offe nse. However, Haden has
ave rage d only about 10 p<1.sscs a
game. •
Jladcn has n problem. but Anthony
Davis has returned lo the form or his
54:nsationul sophomore seaso n.
"lle's running a wfully good now -
real strong,·· McKay SH id or his senior
tail h3ck who has rushed ror 583 yards,
carrylna th e ball In recent games with
the. rrcqut!llic..)'_ reminiscent of 0 . J .
Simpson's career at USC.
-
Committee. Moscow was lo follow countries which for social a nd
with its presentation. economic l'easons do not have these
Lake Pl acid , N. Y ., the only city bid-facilities.··
ding for the 1980 Winter Olympics. Meanwhile. financing the ·go \Vinter
also was sched uled to nppcar before OlympiC's could be more of a cha l·
the JOC. Decisions on sites for both lenge for Lake Placid than trying to
the Summer and Winter Games were land them.
expected from the JOC \Vednesday. \Vhcn this resort' 1•illage in 1h(·
"We have not m ade any personal Adirondack A1ountains of New York
approaches to members or the IOC. State staged the Olympie Games in
We have done everything in ac~r-1932. the year Sonja Heniti gained
dance with IOC regul ations, and I fi gure skaling fame , ii cost S2 million
kno\\' we sha ll get a fail' hearing.'·. to build the facilities. If Lake Placid i~
said Bradley. "J have no idea e\•en successful in its bid to be host in 1980,
whethe r the P a n·American vote on it pla ns to seek more than $25 million
the JOC will go in our favor." from the federal a nd state govern·
Douglas Roby, an American mem· ment.
ber of the IOC, said: "J fear the odds The request comes at a time whl'n
are against Los Angeles. I will do the econom y is fa lte ring a nd
everythingl cantohelpthcmtowin." Pres ide nt F or d 'is calling on
Rob)' is the only United States Americans to curb spending.
member of the IOC at present. Julia n Lake Placid will seek up to $10 mil·
K. Roosevelt, treasurer or, the U.S. lion in state funds to improve state
Olympic Committee, was elected to facilities and $16.2 million in federal
membership rt1 onday but will not be funds.
able to vote until ne:ict year. These fi gures, Lake Placid orficials
While the pote ntial hosts polished cautiori in a booklet outlining their
their presenta tions l\1onday, the IOC plans, "do not purport to renect pos·
una nimouSI)' a dopted a revised and slble escalation of costs between now
·simplified rule governing athletes' -and f980-:-.. -· ,
eligibility for the Olympics. The funds would help build such
The inlern1:1tional federations v.•ill things as a 90 -meter ski jump,
be given a free ha nd to decide whether l'efrigeration of a 400-metcr speed·
their own athletes are amateurs or skating track, an 8,000-seat hockey
not. But there is no relaxation in the e1nd figure.skating fieldhouse, an
old rules forbidding an athlete to Olympic Village to house and feed
make any financial ~ain from sports. J,600 athletes and officials and press,·
or to Com pete as a n amateur in one :Jdministr ation and communication
sport if he is a professional in another . facilities.
Athletes are no longer restricted in The area already has Alpine a nd
the amount of time they may spend Nordic skiing facilities. a 40(}.meter
training, with rinancial compensation speedskating track. a 2,0()()..sea t ice
for loss of earnings. arena and the only bobsled run ·in
They also m ay carry advertising on North America.
Sports i11 Brief
Laver to Face Connors;
Cerritos Coach Dies
NEW YORK -The much·heralded
tennis m atch between Jimm)' Con·
nors and Rod Laver has been set for
next J anuary, it ~·as reported today.
The m atch wi ll be SI00,000 winner·
take.a ll with site and other details c:ic·
peC'ted to be a nnounced at a Wed-
nesday nel''S conference.
Connors, 22. won the Wimbledon,
Australi an and United States titles
this year. ,,flerward..o;. he asked that a
match be arranged with the 36-year-
old Laver, the only player in history to
have twi ce won the Grand Slam of
tennis -sweeping the three titles won
by Connors as well as the French crown.
Bo th Connors a nd Laver are left·
handers and h ave never played each
other .
llarri.• IJI<'•
/\RCADIA -W<iyne "Ta nk" llar·
ris. an assistant footOO ll coach at Cc r·
ri tos Coll ege for the past nine years,
died from un apparent heart attaek
Sunday in Areadia at the home of his
parents.
lla r r is . 4 1. w a s 11 nati ve o f.
J..o\'eland . Colo . The ·Falcons line
coach was a bachelor and before
moving to Cerritos , had coached at El
Rancho and Be llf101.,.er high schools
and Baylor Uni,1e rsity.
John•o11 Win•
LOS ANG ELES -11'1arques John·
son, the promising sophomore expec·
ted to start a t forward for the UCLA
basketball team, has been
hospitalized with an undertermined II·
lness. a UCl.A spokesman said l\ton-
day.
Or. Gerald r•'in ermun, the team or-
thopedic s urgeon, s aid J ohnson had a
mild elevation ot liver enzymes, in ·
dicative of hepatitis.
llowever one test of rot hepatitis
gi 1·en Sunda)' proved negati ve, and
Johnson said he thought hi s ailment
was a react ion to a nu vaccination
gl.,.en the teum lust week. Johnson
said he was sick for l~'O da)'s Hft er the
team was vaecinated fo r the nu a year
ago.
Abrfo11 Sign#
LOS ANGELES -Wa lier Alrton,
the man who turned a seeming lack of
outv.·ard forcefulnei;s Into on4!: or his
ereatcst assets, has signed hi s 22nd
one.year contract to manage t~
Dod gers.
The Dodgers announced the signing
Monday as Alston, 62, a one--t\me-far-
mer and schooltearher1 drove from
Los Angeles to his wi nter home 1n
rural Darrtown, Oh io.
Onlv four manal!ers have won more
pennants than Alston, who won hi s
seventh this year before his Dodgers
lost t he World Series to Oak land.
An d only two men, Connie ltfack
and John MeGraw, ha ... e managed the
same team for a longer period ·~han
Alston. Mack piloted the Philadelphin
Athletics for 50 years and 11'1cGra w led
the New York Giants for 31.
lmho11 TV
NEW YORK -ABC-TV announced
Monday the Not re Dame-Miami, F1 a.,
game would be one of three college
foot ba ll g a m e s to be regionall y
televised Saturday.
The game at South Dend, Ind., will
be seen in 36 stales. including the
West Coast, the Midwest, the East
and Florida.
The network will tele \·is c the
Tula ne ·Gcor g ia T e ch game to
Louisiana. Alaba m a, Mississippi and
Geo r ~ia . T h e Brir h a m
Youn g-Arizo n a ga m e will be
a.,.a ilable fo r viewing in the Rocky
l\1ountain area ,
1'1ng Re81in9
LOS ANGELES ~ Tennis star Billie
J ean King, stricken with chest pai ns
while watching a golf tournament in·
San Diego Sunday, has been told by
doctors that she probably has a touch
or the flu .
3 Nadadores
All-America
Shirley Babashorr. Peggy Tosdal
and Va lerie Lee of the Mission Vil'jo
Nadadorcs s wimming team , were
named lo the All·American team ut
the AAU aquat ic awards hunquct In
Washington O.C. over the weekend .
Coach Mar k Schubert was on hand
to accept the award, along with the
tei m trophy for winning the nationa l
A1\U long course women's S\vi mml,ng
championShip at Concord earlier this
year. •
Babashoff wali named to the ""'ll·
American team in th 200 and .500(
yard frl"e!t~·le; the 200 and 4()0.metcr
freestyle: and the 400 and 80().yard
and freestyle reluy teams.
·rosdal gained recognition In the
JOO.yard butterfl y and the 400.yard
medley relay.
l.ee wbf"n:imcCf Tn the~rd and
2?0-meter but.terfly evenL'l,
I
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Sa~dlehaek f' Today's Final
EDIT I ON N.Y. Stocks
• • VOL 67, NO. 295, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY , OCTOBER 22, 1974 TEN CENTS
Saddleback College Sets Con·struction Goals
By FREDERICK SCllOE!\tEllL for tbe next 10 years.
The cost of placing 4,000 feet of road
Completion of a campus road, ilT:?rov-around Ute campus is estimated a t
ed parking facilities and construction of $569,000. No figure was provided for
a multi-million dollar fine arts building expansion of parking facilities.
are the top priorilies of Sadd\cback The rine arts building, including a
Copununity College trustees. • 400-seat auditorium, 'Crigiaally was lo
Mee.ting Monday night in the James cost $3.3 · million, but. b!ds 'received by
B. Utt Ubrary, the first pernament the college came in at ss:4 ntillion
stucture on the l\tiS&ion Viejo campus, -79 percent above the architects' esti·
trusl_ees !sled ma 'or construction plahs _ ~te. _ _ _
er
Campaign
Statement
Mailed Out
Trustees will meet li1onday nighl to
discuss ways of financing lhe slructure
and "i.11 hold a · serond meeling Nov.
7 to look at ways or cutting the cost
of the new building.
Supt. Robert Lombardi explained that
the state, which has provided mollf!y
for community college construction. "'ill
finance about half of the original $3.9
nlillion estimate. The rest must be raised
bj'. the district. ----
Lombardi said trustees have a choice
of three "'ays to raise the funds -
a bond measure that requirl'S t"·o-:hird
voter approval, a tax override that re--
quires simple majorily approval or use
or a special State la"' that permits
community college districts lo increase
taxes for construction without seeking
voter approval.
Other projects, in the order of their
priority ranking, include:
a s
Attempting to clari fy il! position on
the coming election of li1ission Viejo's
first municipal advisory council, the
Mission Viejo Company has mailed a
Jetter to all 32 candidates ·and ,sent
copies lo every home in the community.
1be statement was a response to a
Daily Pilot article Oct. 15.· The story
revealed that five candidates had been
listed in a billing statement to 8 0 0
Mission Viejo residchl! by H a r b () r
Investment!, Jr.c., the ~11.ssion V·i e j o
Company's managing agent for t h e
tracts Involved.
MISSION VIEJO WALL !CIRCLE ) BLOCKS VIEW OF DRIVERS ON LOS ALISOS BOULEVARD
County RCNid Dep1rtment Plains to Move Stop .Line· So Motorists C1n S.• Tr1fflc
Harbor had alJowed one of the 1;1AC
candidates, Richard Lowcock, to use
its mailing list and include his campaign
infonnation in the billing. Lowcock paid
the postage for the malling.
Lowcock said his n1ailing had been
approved by Jerry Ognibene. manager
of planned unlt administ ration for the
Mission Viejo Company.
The @1Tlfil!!!Y. staten1ent &lid~ ~aily
Pilot story "raised a question about
the 1'-1is.sion Viejo Con1pany's position
on the election in general and with
respect to certain c u n d I d a t e s. in
partlcular.
"Several months ago, a ft e r C()n-
siderable discussion , fl!is.sion Viejo Com·
pany decided to refrain lrOm giving
any special support to any canditdate. ''
said tbe statement, signed by James
Toepfer, senior vJce president.
"In spite of our affirmative beliefs
with respcet to the li1AC, it did not
seem appropriate for the cumpany to
make campaign contributions directly
or indirectly, or lo provide forums or
platforms for any one candidate since
it would be nearly in1possible to fqrtll
an Objective basis ror choosing betv.·een
such a large group of intcrestOO people.,.
CMltacted by phone, Toepfer added
that the maillng \\•as Initiated b y
Lowcock. "If we irl any v.•ay implied
an endorsement in that mailing it was
wrong, it was improper,·· Toepfer said.
"What the facts are and "'hat they
appear to be are 1"·0 different things,"
'Toepfer added. "\Ve believe that \c:e
absolutely In no "·ay endorsed anyone.
We say it is not an enC:orsement."
The earlier mailin~ Jistin~ the five
candidates (Lowcock, John Noble, Del
MoitenSon, Jeanne G a g n e b i n , and
Dorothy Hufford) identified them as can·
didates "representing the intere!ls of
homeowners' associations."
Asked why the letter "'as nol signed.
Toepfer added, "\Ve noliced that it ~·as
not signed too." He said that any ques-
tion as to the method used lo distribute
the information shculd be c!irccted lo
Lowcock and his campaign C()mmillee
w~omToepfer sit"idb ear s lh e
responsibility for the mn::ing.
j ,
Mm·cc1· Traded
For Bobby Bonds
NEW YORK (AP) -The New York
Yankees announced today the trade of
outOelder Bobby Murcer to the San
Fran<!lsco Giants for outfielder Bobby ,
Bondi.
Both are 2?, and both were ronsldered
to have off-seasons In 1974.
Bond! and \Ylllle ~lays are lhc only
p{ayen In ba~boll history to steal 30
ba.Ses and hit 30 hon1e runs In the
snmc season.
.A1urctr hit. 140 c:ir~t. homer11 ror ---lbe Yankees. 17111 0t1 the club's all·tlme
list.
•
1
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Safety qi.anges
To Take Effect
. .\.t Intersection
The busy intersection of J e r o n I m o
Road and Los Alisos Boulevard in El
Toro will be made safer.
Changes ordered by the t"Ounty super-
visors. \\ill be seen soon, acoording to
Afurray Storm, head or the county road
dm_a_rt....!m!lL ~
'1'he major change, he said. Will be
relocation of tht stop sign "limit line"
in the southbound lane of Lo.1 Ali90S.
By moving the line deeper into the
intersectiM, motorists on Los Alisos will
gain better \isibillty of traffic o n
Jeronimo. The view is pa r t i a 11 y
obstructed by a stucco and brick litission
Viejo entryway.
Another project "'ill be installalion
of a right turn only Jane for traflic
westbound on Jeronimo, Storm said.
Supervisors directed tbe road depart·
ment fo request the California Highway
Patrol to step up enforcement of the
existing 45 mile per hour speed liinit
along Jeronimo and to n1onitor the in·
tersection to determine U other chonges
are necessary.
The board took !he action at the
request of Filth Dist rict S u p e r v i s o r
Thonias . F. Riley who vis!tl'd the
intersection after hearing about its pro-
blems from leaders of the S e v i 1 I e
Homeowners Association.
Benny 'U p, Aronnd'
LOS ANGELES (AP) r-Comedian
Jack Benny, who became ill Saturday
in Dallas. is "up and around and doing
very well" at Cedars Of Lebanon
Hospital, a spokesman say1. Benny, 80,
is undergoing a thorough physical ex-
amination and is expected to leave the
hospital in t"·o or three days.
Junior League
l,ectures Open
The Ne\\'I)Ort Harbor Ju n I o r
League's "Community '7 4 , ' ' a
special five-week series of Jcetures
open to the p1.1blic as well a9
league members, begins to!_light at
UC lrv)ne.
The lnitial program in I~ series
deals wilh the history of Orange
County. It starts at 7:3tl p.m. In
UCl's Science Lecture II a 11 .
Admission is free .
The series. desijncd to brtng
Orange O:nmtians up to date on
Issues affecting lhcm. Is scheduled
for flve SUCCl!SSive TutSdays tit
UCI. The Oct. 29 program will
deal with consu1ner afrolrs.
The strles Is sponsored by lhc
JUnlbl'Uquc-.......,..Mc strvlet.
'
El T9rp Girl, 13,.f)ies
After Falling at School
lll' J AN WORTlt
01 ·tll• Deity PllDr S111f
Llke the other SC\•enth graders at
Los Alisos intermediate School in El
Toro, Carrie Lee Cottingham \\'Rs just
~ginning to gel ~sed Ji> the big new
school.
Monday she fell on a sidewalk at the
school. Less than an hciur later, she
died at Saddlebaek Con1munity Hospital
-and ()ffic!als still doo't know exactly
v.·hy.
She is the da~htcr of Richard and
Phyllis Coltinghi.1n of 25212 Arcadian
Ave., in the Aegean Hills section _at
Mission \'iejo. Carrie v.·as less than
a month shy ()f her !31t, birthday.
She \\'as under medication fer a thyroid
disorder. but her purtnts say it did
not limit her activities.
Sookesmen fo r the Orange C o u n t y
Coroner's office said today the cause
of death is still under investigation.
A deputy coroner said it is believed
death \YDS due to natural causes. not
to a head injury sustained in the fall.
The accident occurred al about 7:40
a.m. i\londay, JO minutes before school
started . School ()fficials said the girl
apparently "·as running across a planter
\\'hen she tripped and fell.
i'~inding her unconscious. school staff
members applied mouth· to -mouth
resuscitat ion until paran•edics too k over.
The girl 's mother rushed 10 the scene
and went to !he hospital \\'ith her
daughter. But Carrie apparently never
re1:ained consciousness.
Rosary for Carrie \rill be rec ited at
7:30 p.m. \\'edncsday at 5 a dd I e b a c k
Chapel, 220 E. fllain, Tuslin.
Funeral mass will be at Ill a.nl. Thur:-;-
tlay at St. Kilian·s Catholic-Church in
,i\1ission Viejo.
Besides her parents. Carrie is survi\'ed
by t\\·o brothers: Wade, 15, and Hobert,
18.
Co11clucled Nixon
Guilty-Jaworski •
WASHINGTON (UPI)· -Special pro-
secutor Leon Jav;orskJ concluded as
early ai last December that then Presi·
dent Nlton.· was guilty of invol\'ement
DIES AFTER FALL
Carrie Lee Cottingham ---·-------
First Ai(l Class
Sla.tecl in Vie,io
A onc·night first aid class sponc;orcd
by !he l\lission Viejo station of the
Orange County Fire Dcp.1rtn1ent i s
scheduled for 7:30 p.n1. \Ve<lnesda.'y at
the station.
Capt. Tim S.1ppok and another firemnn
fron1 the station will teach the class.
It "·ill cover n1outh·t0-11lOUlh resusi·
talion : treatment of bleeding, and
cn1ergency action In In cnses of poison·
ing.
"Bnsic;tlly, !hi s class is designed to
teach people y.·hat 10 do until the fire
department get5 there:· Sappok snid.
The station is located at 2 $ 8 6 2
r.Jarguerite Parky.·ay.
Bni·n Per111i ts Ended
SACRA~tENTO {AP) -The Slate De-in the Watergate co11er-up, according ptir1menl of Owervatiun ~londay sus·
to an Interview pobllshe<: today. · pended Mil bum.log permits in 16 Norlh-
Jaworski told the Wuhlhgton Star· crn eanrornla cuuntles becaust of hazar·
N!!:ws that his "belier' In Nixon's guilt dotis "'tnd and heat OOl":illlons.
began about two months after ht took The oounliet ore Alameda . Colusa,
the job of 11pecial proaecutor, "'hen he Contra Costa. Del Nori.e. 11umboldt.
first liste:l)td to the 1':tarch 21, 1973 Lake. A1arin. ~lendocino, NApi . S:1n
tape of ?1."iXoinllacuss n ontiC cover~-~P~~-rileo. SalillfClArlf. S8iil11~Jn110,
with aides. Sooom11. 'Idnity and Yolo.
•
.:,
-Temporary gymnasium and track
facilily .
-PC'rmament gym n a s1 u in llnd
physical education building.
-Swimming pool.
-Technology building.
-Acquisition or a site for a seeund
camp~.
-Student center.
-Business science building.
-Jiealth science building.
-Phase II of road construction.
ree
Ex-countia11
Released
Fro1n Jail
I By ARTltuR R. VINSEL
LOS ANGELES-The two-year and
two-day ordeal of James Ray Russell
came to a temporary end in only Ill
minutes today as the Los Angeles County
Superior Court judge approved h i s
freedom on low hail.
Russell, Tl. form erl y of Laguna llills.
has been held for 744 days without
bail. "'ithout arraignment and without
trial on a fugitive warrant charging
him with an OklaOOma murder that
occurred on a Saturday night in 1972
while Russell \vas allegedly out on a
lark in Loog Beach.
"Oh my liod," blurted his bloncle wife
Karen, 23;• who insists she 'was v,.ith
him that fateful night at the Long Beach
N1J-Pike Amusement Park.
"I can have him home today ... rm
going to have him home today ... oh my
God." she cried.
The slender blonde wife who has been
without her man for more than two
years cried unasha1nedly in the rorr idor
outside the courrroom. Her tears gilt·
tered in the glare of television camera
lights and niascara ran do\vn her checks
in ri vers.
"\\1hal are your plans for tonight.?•'
asked one reporter.
"Oh, I'm going lo squeeze everything
T can into one night. l just \\'ish it
all could have happened sooner."
Russell's grandfat her. aged Samuel E.
David. of lfaskell Countv. Oka .. "'as
present in the coortroom ·but roud not
hear deliberations over his grandson's
rate because of a hearing problem .
He O\l'ns property \\'ith enough equity
to underwrite the $5.000 bail finally set
by Superior Court Judge Rayrnond ~I.
Choate.
The defendant•s brother Robert
Russell, 25. an accountant his "' i f e
Karen. a waitress at !101\·ard Johnson's
restaur,int in 'Do11'ney and other relatives
vo"·cd they \1·ould sc rape togC'lher S500
today as security on a bail bond that
"·ould frre Russel l after his n ea r l y
endless months behind bars.
He has b een accuscd-abso!ukly
\1·rongly. according lo \\•itnesses and hi s
attomcy--0f the brutal 1nurder or a
92-year~ld man in ntarch. 1972 al Lhe
invalid's OOme in Leola. Okla. in a
$200 robbery.
'.\lrs. Karen Russell and friend s claim
they "·ere all 1ogl.'lhcr at the Long
lieach amusement center that night but
Oklahoma authorit ies. cit ing Russell 's
record as an cr·concvict y.·ho served
four years tor burglary in his youth.
issued :i 11·arrant for his arrest and
(~c RUSSELL, Page A21
Quentin Lockup
l litlts Sliut DO\\'D
SACRA;\Jt:i\'.TO !API -One of S:in
Quentin Prison's maslmum . SC'cur,•\'
locku p units, crit ic-izcd by la11 mn kt!r~ oS
unclean and unsafe. is be1n~ close:'((. tJ,c
slnte Drpartment of Correclions reports.
The department'~ nc"slcttcr sa id J.(0
of the 230 prisons ln Sa n Quentitl·~ B
section hove bt>en transferrL>d to other
prisons. ~lost ore In TIC\.\ ly e~pnndrd
maximum·S<'curlty units. said dtp.'\rt· ..
ment 51:iokcsm11n Phlli;-t Guthrie.
The rema ining 90 pril'Oners ha\'C ~en
kept in 8 section \\·hlch is being convtrl·
cd Into a prolerl ivC' custody uni\ for in·
IT\lfr-rw11!f ct:irm thCTT !~have 1>cen
thi:cntcntd, Guthrie sald.
-Outdoor physical e d u c a 11 o n
facilit ies.
-Administration bu ilding.
The priorily ranking is the central
part of a HJ.year rn:ister plan that
11.•ill be submilled 10 the board of
governors of the California Communi1y
Colleges.
, the plan is updat('(! each ye<ir as
projects are cumµle tt'd or changes arc
made in future planning.
om!
JUDGE ORDERS BAIL
Longtime Prisoner Rus&ell
Orange Count:r' s
Consu1ner Prices
Slioot Up Again
By Tbt A.ssocialed Presi;
Consumer prices climbed J.4 percent
in Los Angeles and Orange counties
in September, the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statisti cs reported today.
Inflation has pushed prices up ID per·
cent in the first nine months or this
year. They are J2.4 percent above the
level or septembc'r-;~;;;.
Suzanna SadO\\·sky . regionnl chief or
the bureau°.s Los An;;eles orficr. sai d
housing acrountcd for niorc than hal f
the over-all rise in September . ThcSC'
increased 2.~ percent to 13 6 percent
above a year earllC'r.
fllost of the rise 11·as nccoun!{'(I for
by morlgage interest rates. niaintenance:
and repairs.
Rente rs paid an ave r:igc nf 1.3 percent
n1ore bct"•een July and September.
Residential telephone bills \\'ere up
an average of t. 7 percent, and OOuschold
furni shings rose 2.7 percent.
Food prices incrca$ed 1.5 percent and
"·ere 12.2 percent more than in Sep-
tember !9i3. Leading lhl' increase ~·a5
a five percent boosl 1n such items ;is
ISet PHICES, Page A2)
-
Orange ,,...! C:oast
~-lt'eatber
i\1gtrt and 111orn111g !011' clouds
bcoo1111ng 1nosl\y sunny 111 the
<1l1 ernoon \\'ednrsday Sli,c:hlly
11·arrnl'r "ith hi~hs Hl the up1>cr
GOs At the lw.achcs to 1he n1td·iOs
in land. Lows ionlg hl Si-62.
l~S!l lO·: TOii \ Y
Tlic L'11tlc rs ccrctar11 n( lhf /t:.
1t•r1or say~ Ins rlt•1xi1 rn1 cu1 l'.t·
pccf.t son1r n101nr nil .~IJJll.~ u>11e11
rl rllllny bt•g111~ uff~hore 1.1 lltr
11ror ful 11 re .'ice SIOl'JI pogt t\1.
E.tmt lom!W.-ll
t:.M. l~vcl "1 C•~le·~·~ "' (UIU1htd II I (11111<1 l l
c,,,_.1 ... rd IJ
°""~ Helltl\ .ll l lfllfri•I flt•• A6
lill .. tllhlll\t<'ll AIJ
l'L"•"~ "' t H.L.l(~!'.j!"tf' Al
HMKocit 11
Ull•o•.,H•MI ... 11
e,... ~•Mtrt lU
Mtvit• 4 11
Nlflll<l•l "v"lll• 41
1"•11"'1! to"" Al Ofl"" Ce~~IV All
lv!v!1 l'o'1er '' Sltflrtl lllt ll
St«• M.lrlctll "''' ttl•~"•ft AIS J JW.tlln. _AU WMIMt Al
>
•
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• .4j? ~LY PILOT __ SB ______ ,_"'-"'-'""-'0-'-"'-''-'"'-'-""'-''-''-"-'
At:Suddleback
Trustees Eying
Building Cuts·
Should S:.1ddl1'.'but'~ Comrnunlt)' College
i::n 10 11!.S.'! t"lCp1·nsivc ronstructiou to
(lit the cost ui luturc bllild!ng!s Oil
111 .. Jl.lission VltJo can1po ... ?
Supt. Hobert !,on1bard\ th.ink.., so and
rr1narks b.v eollt>~t· I rustf'Cs ~l o n d a y
!HA.ht u111icntc !ht')' do. i\lO
L-01nbiirdi :s.'lld th(' 11rl·S<'nt policy of
!he l:xiard i~ 10 usl' C\a~s I 1.iln~truclion
on nev.' build ings, !!Uch 11s the library
and SCM.'ll\'t'·n1:ithcn1a1ics laclllties.
Class I is the hlgtH:st quality :i,iid
mosl ex.pensive l)'pe of conslrocuon.
<.:18.ss S Is lhe lov.·cst, he s~ud.
"The primary consider11tlon this board
Twin Sessions
For Forster
?t1arco rorslPr J un1or 11 i g h
School, Capistr;1no l'nilicd School
Dilitricl's only i11tcrn1ediate school.
\\'ill start its double spssions earlier
when daylight savin~ time ends
()ct. 27.
Di s tr ict I rustees voted
unanitnousty i\londay to sta rt the
n'IOming sess ions at 7:30 o'clock
and tlosc at II :~\' o'clcx:k. The
afternoon session 'viii begin a t
12:09 o'clock and end.at 4 : 38
o'clock. Tbe starting tllne is one hall
hour earlier for e a c h . Bus
schedules will be changed to ac-
commodate the earlier s t a r t i n g
tim~. The chang~ are effective
Oct, 28.
Frot11 Page Al
PRICES ...
eggs, margarine, salad oil, sugar and
coffee.
Meats, paultry and fish. went up 2.6
pcrUnt but .still were 6.8 percent be.low
a year earlier. 'nle price ol fruits and
vegetablC!'was 2.3 percent lower, down
for the third straight month but 21
percent higher than In September 1973.
TransportaUon costs increased 0.6 per·
cent and were 8.7 percent higher lhan
u year ago.
On the national level, rising prices
for fc.od. clottting and mortgage rates
pushed the cost of living up another
t.! percent in Septemb<.'r. malting the
last J! n1onlhs the worst inflationary
surge in n1orc than 25 years, the govern-
ment reported today.
.I Prices in Scpte1nber nationally were
rC'pGrted 12.1 perccn~ higher than a year
ea rlier. Ttliii was the worst 12·monlh.
increase si nce 19~7.
However, the purchasing powe.r of the
average w o r k e r nationally Increased
s!iglltly for the first time in t hr e e
months. Real spendab le earnihgs -that
is weekly pay ad justed for inflation
and taxes -rose one-tenth of a percent
in September but was still at the lowest
Je,el sinre December 1970.
Price increases nationally y,·cre spread
across almost the entire C('{lnomy last
mon ih. Food led the way, posting its
biggest rise since Februnry.
The Ford adn1inist ration has predicted
that consun1er prices y,·ill continue in-
creasing at the rate of about I percent
a nlonth through the end of the ye..ir,
and that there \\'Ould be no significant
easing of inflation until some time next
year.
Consun1cr pri ces have al ready risen
9.7 percent nationally this year. In
1973, prices rose 8.8 percent, the worst
in any year since the end of World
War II.
ORANGE COAST SI
DAILY PILOT
TrwOr...., Cu't 0.11, P1101. WllllwNUt k(-
1111-,,_, He...,·Prn1, l1P~ll•I'""' &y !hf Or~ c;:oe\C fluflllfl/llfl<l (o"lg•nf ~r-ttffl•!""'l •re
-·-"""l>Clfy lft•.,..Qft ffldly, le< (Dita Mow. -•""'1 kKll, "w"t·~on Be«ll'"--
,.,,. woo~" lr••n• ~•Odle~l Yf ll"' •M ~ &o¥111$e\ll~ ~... " \llOlll!t ~·
ro.Ut>" •• D1.11)1•1llf'd !>•h"""'' -S.-.0Y\. TIW' f'O'l!.:•~I Pulll!\fl •"O O'l"I " .i XI() v.e\t &If ~Ir..-!, c.o..r. Mt\<•.(•"'"'""'<>:~
Robert N Weed
P•~\'~"I 1 rlll P~&hY'ltf
, Jac k R. Curlef
V1(f Pr .. ,..,., •IMI C..,..r..i ""'°~
Tho m cJ~ Keevi l
Thomas A. MurDf'Jlne
M.INQ•"' EISl!Ot
Olarles H Loos Richard P. Nall
,M .. ,, ... , """"''""I fdlia.,
Saddltbftck VilleyOHiCt
:Hto1 L• "'' 110..a 1lj.a" Dlftll ,_,_ • .,
Olher OfficH
~'· -y i)O Wf'\I e... !>!"!'r1
N.-. B>fl'I'" JJU ,,.•-rtllou'-""'~ HwM~Oll lk•t" 1/1111111~" lltOul'•••lf
UIUMBlft ll.11 ... ~!"e~'MI
Ttlephone 1114) M?..ut1
Cl•ssilitd Adverllsfng '42·M.71
s.oo•cN<~ v.u,, ,.,..,, Qtric.1
511·6310 J-~ Clt'"ll!"IC 49S.0630
Qlol"'ltl'tf. 1'ff Oll"'Jll COIM ...... hlllnt :.-~.. Iii• ..... , )lto'-'"""".ttl~
• •11 .... llPr tr lll'Ytf'U~l'lh .... , ... l!Ut • .......... "° -'l""~t \llfC•ll -"II\~ ot --· ..... t,lt" -llOt .. Id It 0.-Ut ... ,.. .1....r--~1"-"" ,...., Q.llO ....... ... ....... .... 00 _.,.,J ,.,,11,...,
f~\\.OllM!rt"lf
has lo make is are we going to
have a ~fcrccdes Benz or a Chevrolet,"
l.o1nbardi said,
"Do v,.e b<l''f to hove Class I" I
kno"· campu~s !hat have Clnss 3 nnd
Clas.~ 5 building!). You don't have to
:;J>Cnd hundrL'ds of dollars per square
fool for buildings," Lombardi said.
"I'd like to see us get away from
these ('()Ilcrele monsters," C'Ommented
Trustee Robtrt Bartholomew cl Tustin.
He was refetTing to the $3.2 million
library building in \ll'hlch the board wa.s
meeting.
Truatee DoMa Berry of Ml.!!lon Viejo
.said she was concerned that lower grade
construction might not blend with the
tv.·o new .buildlngs already constructed.
"I'd like to see Jess concrete," said
Trustee Norrisa Brandt of lrvlne.
Noting that bi~ fo1· thf proposed music
arts building can1e in 79 percent over
urchitccts' estin1ates. Trustee La r ry
Taylor or Laguna Beach said, "Either
\\'c cul the size or the materials."
. Trustees agreed later in the discussion
to meet Nov. 7 to find ways of changing
the music arts building lo bring the
cosU back ln line with origin al estimates.
Lombardi said one way of doing that
would be to lower class construction
on a part of the building.
"\Ve can build buildings for less money
than l've seen proposed here," lAmbardi
said.
* * * Capo Gym OK'd
For Saddleback
Basketball Drill
Saddleback College's basketball team
\11iH be allowed to practice in th e 45-year·
old gym at the old Capistrano Union
High School in San Juan Capistrano.
Amending a policy which said the
old building could not be used for any
school purpose. I r u s t e e s of the
capistrano Unified School District voted
unanimously Monday to allow Saddleback
to practice there.
The building dates back to the 1920s
when the school was built. Because it
is deemed technically unsafe according
to the state's Field Act, the use of
the building is limited.
"We are allowed to use all of our
pre-Field act buildings until June 30
of 1975," said Joe Wimer, director of
administrative services. "But :ast spring
the board decided that because we were
using the building so little anyway, they
\.\'OU\d forbid its use by district children."
The building was renovated five years
ago, but · because the district uses it
to store old textbooks the fire marshal
has limited its use to 49 people.
"To have more people in there we'd
have to put in a sprinkler system and
a fire wall between the locker room
and the main building and add more
exils and we didn·t think it was worth
the expense,'.' Wimer said.
The board decided to allow Saddle.back
to use the buildirig becatUC trustees
consider basketbaU an "extra-curricular
activity... The district does allow free
use of the building to non.school groups.
\Yimer said the noor sags.
Tile college will be charged $10 per
day rental fo r utilities and maintenance
services. The college will be allowed
l.o use the building until June 15 which
I~"~ dli}•s prior ·iv ;:,c date set by
1he Field Act for non·school use of
old slructures.
\Vimer said the old gym probably
won't be torn doY.'II when it is no longer
runctlonal. but would con tinue to be
used by non-school groups for rccrcalion.
Capo District's
Rolls Going Up
With Ranch Plan
Another t ,000 students 'viii be added
to the rolls of the Capist rano Unified
School District Y.'hen San Clemente's
HC'Cves Ranch Is developed .
Oe\·c\oper Bill Lusk told the Bonrd
of Trustees ~fonday that ful l C<lnstrucllon
or the ranch's 1,000 acres will take
approximately 15 years.
The Reeve$ Ranch Hes on the north
~!de or San Clemente and stretches fron1
the ocean to the cast ~idc er the San
[)iego Freeway nnd back Into the hills.
It is tucked between two otOer ranches
being master p!unned for devclopment-
lhe Forster l{anch to the north and
the Vi~bcek Ranch to the south.
Total units in the project ~·in be
3.023. Two-thou.sand units w i 11 be
clU!tcrt'd between tile ocean and the
freeway \\'ith anot~r 1,000 in the hills
and va\lt)'S eas1 of lbe freeway.
"tifosl of our buyers will be in the
-t:i to 65 age bracket," ~id' Lusk. "\Ve
\\Ill ea rmark 1.SSO un ill lo adults only.
Lusk added that he has not yet applied
for his Coastal Zone permit or completed
the review pro<:ess lhrough lhc San
Clemente Plannlr1Q: ComnUssion.
lie prtOlcttd it 'A'ould be two to three
ycats before ~ can begin construction.
The new Shorecl.iffs Junio r JUgh.
SchOOI wUJ be Included In the Reeve.s
Ranch project The architectural firm
of Neptune and Thomas was appointed
lo design tht Initial bulldlngs lo be
constructed on the site. The district
hOptoB to go to bid in early spring.
Otlly ... Mf '"" l"IMtt LIFE DIFFERENT NOW
Former.Ftrmboy Peters
lr·vine Poet
Shatters
Ste.reotypes
UC lrvittc poet Robert Peters
is the latest speaker iii toriters
ltc1ure series started at Saddle~
back College th is fall. Peters
wilt sptak at 10 a:n1. \Vednes·
day i11 room 313 of the Math·
Science Building. The session is
public. Anne Cooper of the
Daily Pilot Staff is a stu.de-nt of
Peters and has written the fol ·
lowing article about him.
By ANNE COOPER
Of Ille Ollly ,lltf Stiff
Robert Peters, poet and professor of
English at UC Irvine, looks more like
a lumberjack than a poet.
Folk.lore bas It that male poets are
young, anemic persons, g i v e n to
rhapsodizing over spring and the blush
fln a maiden's cheek. Robert Peters
belles the stereotype. He is 50, extremely
hearty, and his poems are bombshells,
not pleasant verse.
The lumberjack p h y s I q u e was
developed on the fa rm in Eagle River,
\V is .. where Peters grew up, and his
farm imagery, his spare style and bis
relatively late start as a. poet 1iave
led some of his admirers to compare
him to the New England poet, Robert
Frost.
Sen. Carpenter Target
Environ1nent Coalition W an·ts Him Out
87 DOUOW FRITZSCHE
Of IM CMl)J "IW ll•tf
The Environmental Coalition of Orange
County and the People's Lobby hove
asked Stale Sen. Denni~ Carpenter's
ren10val from office in a lawsuit filed
In Orange County Superior Court todQY.
The suJt. naming Carpenter and five
unknown persons, alleges that t b e
senator did not rePort funds received
from a group of his political backers
as personal income.
Carpenter, the suit claims, did not
comply with lht Moscone Govemmental
Coonfiit.1 of Utterest and Governmental
Disclosure Act by falling to report the
incame.
Flied two weeks before the general
election in wh.ich Carpenter o p po s e s
Democrat FraNc Ba r b a r o , Carpenter
termed the aotkin "partisan politics"
on the part of the groups involved and
pred icted tkat It would never be tried.
"What 11 the.Ir interest as groups that
a r e purpOrtedly environmental pro-
eonents in coo~rning themselves with
a 'partiian election?" Carpelirer responef-
cd .
The alleged fallure to make financial
disclosures, Carpenter said, was picked
up from his opponent's c.a mp a ii n
statements.
The suit he said. is likely to be
dropped after the el ection.
Barbaro said he did supply the groups
with information on which the suit was
based but denied be prompted the action.
Dale Secord, of t h e environmental
coalition, also denied direct ties with
the Barbaro campaign.
The secood group in the complaint,
the People's Lobby, was the autbor and
proponent cl Propos!Uon 9 on the June
ballot, which was approved by voters
and will go Into effect in January.
The .proposition replaces the Moscone
conflict of interest law and strengthens
financial disclosure requirements.
The suit, filed at 9:45 a.m., asks
Carpenter's removal from office, that
Carpenter be fined the maximum the
law alJowrthree times the unreported
Income-and pay all attorney a.'ld court
costs.
Carpenter, however, maintair.ed that
he has more than complied wilh the
Moscone act.
In a press rtlease distributed recen~l,Y,
Nuclear Station
Back iii Business
Carpenter described his finan cial ar·
rangements ln more detail thnn required,
he said.
The sult chargoa that Carpenter did
not report income fro1n his Golden State
Improvement Committee baclters. No
specific amount wa s mentioned.
Carpenter. however, said, '"fhere Is
nothing to be ashamed of or Illegal
here. I am so )>roud of the way our
finances arc handled that I made It
the Bubject oI a feature release."
f'rom Page Al
RUSSELL RELEASED . ••
he was taken Into custody in Orange
County during tht summer of lhat year.
He was questioned, submilted to a
Polygraph exam.inatloo and sublequently
cleared or any connection with t h e
homicide 1,000 miles away and Orange
County Superior c:oiut Judge William
Murray refused tO allow his extradition
to Ok\ahO~
His mistake came three weeks later
when he went to visit his brother Robert
in suburban Bell Gardens, w h e r e
evidence Indicates li'utborilies were hav-
ing him tailed.
"We \.\'HS jtul driving dO\.\'n Eastern .
Avenue when we tumcd into a Tat.'<!
Bell· to get a Coke." Robert R.JsscU
recalled today In an emotional court~
room corridor interview. "They was
deJinitely follo.,.,'ing us. TI1cy told us they
,.,.anted James Rus.1eU ."
"He said that old warrant was no
good," the younger brother continued,
"but lhey said that was beside the
point and he would have to go with
them ."
Russell, a warehouseman, afler be
arrived in Orange County follcwing his
Okalahoma prison release has been held
for 744 days since, without the usual
recourses available to an Imprisoned
but unconvicted suspect, under state and
federal law arid the U.S. consUtutlon.
His attorney, Roger Agajanian, of San-
ta Ana, was pleased but perplexed today
and said the parttal victory in the James
Ray Russell case haa been a long Ume
coming. '
"My argument has been all along
that he was Illegally contained al thi s
time," Agajani8Jl decAN!d as M r s .
Russell hugged the hulk.Ing lawyer's arm
and unbashfully wept on his shoulder.
He bad asked Judge Choate to re\tase
Rlmtll on hla own recognizance pending
the Nov. 8 pretrial hearing at which
witnesses from Oklahoma are expected
to testify regarding the pathetic killing
he claims he ls totally IMOCent oC com·
mitting.
Judge Choate &aid he might consider
reducing the defendant's $5,000 bail and
allovdng him to remain free on hls
own recognizance pending dlsposlUoit or
the long, drawn oot case.
· Judge Choate pointed out a f t e r
repeatedly rejecting a.siting that attorney
Agajanian suggest the cash bail that
he could oot free Russell on his own
reccgnlzance because cf the fact that
in his early youth he did serve a prison
term for burglary, a felony charge. ·•t convinced myself nothing was going
·10-happen !Oday," S3fd'Mrs. Russell.
The a.ell Gardens waitress has been
living ·with her in-Jaws. She said she
has ~n praying since OcL 8, 1972. the
rtay her husband "'as ~rrested, and has
been su pported by her father. R.ev. l..A?cil
Jones, a missionary Baptist minister and
his Oock.
"1 think they done more praying than
anybody," she said.
Earlier, she expressed her grie£ and
pessimism while awaiting the pretrial
hearing.
"We do love each other. We want
lo stay together. I've lost him. I've
lost my son, I've lost just a b o u t
everything. I know he is innocent. I
was with him that nighl ''
Stude11t Works
Co on Display
At Saddleback
Ceramics, dra·wings and designs by
swnmer art students are on di.splay
In the new Saddleback Co mmun I t y
College library. ·
Nine students wbo took beglnnlng and
advanced art courses during summer
school contributed to the show, said
ari instructor Thomas Morgan.
t.forgan and instructor Thomas Gaines
~'ere among summer art Instructors at
the Mission Viejo campus.
"Funny how things work out.'' Peters The San Onofre Nuclear Generating
No mailer y,•hat the outcome, courts
in Napa County in northern California
took away her little boy and his stepson
by a prior maniage, Nolan Tracy now
four, in ?.larch of 1973 on the basis
that it was an unfit home if his ste~
father stCIOd accused of murder con·
Morgan 's drawing and design students
cootributing to the exhibit are Beverly
Oak ley, Terry Thomas. Dawn Sturtevant,
Greg Thomas and Lloyd Emshoff.
says. "I was worlung as a claims ad-Station was cranked up to full power
juster when I was drafted at ia to earlier today after a minor defect in
fight in the second \\'Orld war. After a relay f.fonday caused a shutdown as
the war the Gl bill made it possible the reactor was being started. up at
for me to go 'to university. I got my the end of a federal inspection.
bachelor's, master's, and PhD degrees Onofre Plant Superintendent Hans Ot·
in six years. I chose to study English toson said the relay malfunctioned and
victed or not. '
Los Angeles County Deputy District
Attorney Don Johnson , prosecutor, Is
contacting Oklahoma authorities for
details of ttleir investigation to date and
Ceramics students under G a I n e s ' s
direction who contributed works a r e
Mik e Bayless. Helen Kinner, Va 1 er y
Smolt and Larry Harding.
rather than history because I thought caused an automatic shutdoy,11 of the
there \\'OuJd be fewer term papers." reactor.
Peters wrote his first poems after The naw developed as crews began
The exhibit will remain on display
at the second story entran~ to ttle
Ubrary through Nov. 8.
the death of a five-year-old son in 1965. to start the reactor up after three days Dancer Won't
lie put the poems away for over a of nonoperatlon which allowed Inspectors '"' Ch ' R b
year, but on reading them over later from the U.S. Ato.mic Energy Com· anty 0 her
decided that they expressed well his mission to wind up a routine insp~:~:on Jr•mp Canyo1•
personal anguish and might be com-of the fa cility. " " T
forting to others who had suffered the "Everything is working just fine now, 0 Pay It Back
loss of a loved one. The poems were and we bad the relay fixed in a few TWIN FALLS, Idaho CAP) -Twin
published in 1967 as a book, entitled hours," Ott080n said. Falls Qlunty c.ommissionen don't want SAN DIEGO (AP) -The fonner
"Songs for a Son." Of the book Peters another Eve! Knievel-type jump attempt treasurer of the San Diego Baseball
says. ''The poems were my screams S over the Snake Rlvtr canyon, oot even Council must repay $1 ,169 to the boys'
of rage and dispair, but I hoped thal Resister entencecl if it's an 18-year-old fonner go-go danc. group at the rate of $50 monthly, an
the art involved in. creating the poems er. irate judge says.
would make them meaningful to others." SAN DIEGO <UPI) -Simon Brafman, Heidi Scherzinger ol Cinnaminson, Ronald Nonnan Dillree, 41, was at-
The death of bis son was a turning 28, Monday became ~he first draft N.J ., has said two financial backers, who lowed probation in order to earn money.
point in Peters' life. "I had always _ .. tesister to be sentenced here since Presl· contend the Knievel attempt Sept, 8 was He ~·as convicted Aug. 30 on three
wanted to be either a ~Titer or an de,_r!t Ford's offer to conditional amn~sty a "ripoff," offered her tbe opportunity counts of grand theft .
actor," says Peters. "but if 1 hadn 't last'-mon\u for onut deserters and to jump the canyon. ..It is low and despicable to rob a
been forced to re-evaluate my life In resisters. U.S. District Court Judge Commlssiooer William Wiseman , asked charity," Superior Court Judge I.mis r-.1.
order to cope y,•ith the shock or Richard's \Villiam Enright placed Brafman on on e how the oommW:ion would react to an· Welsh said Mooday.
death, I migbl never have freed myself year's probation and ordered him to other jump, said, "Why don't you let a The defendant was accused of writing
10 do creative work ." spend at least ·IO hours It' week working sleeping dog lie?" He declined further checks to his wife on the council's bank
Since publication of "Songs for a Son," with emotionally disturbed children. comment. account.
Peters has published eight other books -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;m;;;;;;m;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iil-
of poetr; on varlrAs subjects, has two I
more forthcoming and is working on
several collections of poetry, as well
ns a couple of novels.
Asked how he organizes his time,
Peters says, "J don 't know that l do
really. I love teaching, and I try to
think ahead to make each class special.
\Vhen 1 have time, I work on revlslng
,1·ork or I write letters. I have a tremen-
dous correspGndence.
··As far as writing per se. that Is
almost a matter of body chemistry.
Sornctimes I don 't y,•rite at oil for a
period or time. but then when I star!
I \\'Ork in tense ly and produce a great
deal."
In the summer (>( lasl year Petel'S
wa!l traveling in New York Slate,
on his \ray to a writing retreat, when
he became losL near Albnny. and saw
11 sign saying "Shaker Museum -3
miles." On the spur of the moment
he decided to visit the muio;eum, since
he was curious about the Shakers' com·
munut liv ing and simple lifestyle.
1-lis thrL>e-hour visit was the start or
n year-long ftisclnation with the Shakers,
p1rtlcularly with Mother Ann Lee,
founder of the religious sect. To dale
Peters has writte.n 300 poems on the
subject. tht. first hundred to be publllhed
as.....a book, ''.:f'he Gift To Be Slmple",
soon to be relea!;Cd.
In the Ann Lee poems Peters continues
lo use the stunning lmagt.ry whleh hes
characterized his earlier poetry. Peters
says ~ ftels much of the imagtry
conies from the start childhood on a
\\'lsconsin farm. The famtly lived In
ll m11ll house his falhtr built o( Jogs
ond tarpaper. They ::ite food they raised
lbemselves and butchered their animals
for meat. For diversion there was the
lnke ne-arby and the wood. The only
'""o· books In lht house wtre "Robinson
011~" and ·:Tom Swift." And young
Pcttts found "CruSO!t" boring. '
L
NOW, HEAR TIDS
,
According to the Pre sident's Council on
Environmental Quality, It is becoming increasingly
difficult for anyone.Ip escape noise.
40 ,000 .000 Americans risk hearing impairment
and other physical and mental effects.· 44,000.000
other Am ericans have the utility of their dwellings
actversely affected by noise from aircraft or traffic.
21 ,000,000 Americans are affected by
construction-related noise.
Now what does this have to do with carpet?
Carpeting will drastically improve acoustics in any
·room by quieting your home .environment, making
radios, television. and the family sound better. .
Remember, at Atdens, even our LOUD carpeting'
is quieter.
AIJlEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placenffa AYt.
COSTAMHA
646·4&as
HOUllS: Moe. lln n..., t lo 5!30-RI. t lot-SAT. t :JO lo 5
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Irvine Today's Final
N.Y. Stocks
VQL. 67, NO. 295, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNT:'f., CALIFpRNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 2\, 1974 TEN CENTS
Carpenter's Ou·ster Sought by 2 Eco-groups
By DOUGLAS FRITZSCHE
Of lllt Otll~ Pllol S .. lf
The Environmental Coalition of Orange
County and the People's Lobby have
asked State Sen. D ·e n n i s Carpenter's
removal from office in a' lawsuit filed
in Orange County Superior Court today.
The suit, naming Carpenter and five
unknown personll. alleges that t h e
senator did ilOl report funds received
from a group of his polilical backers
as personal income.
Carpenter, the suit claims, di~ not
, comply with the Moscone Governmental
Confiict of Interest and Governmental
Disclosure Act by failing to report the
income;
Filed two v.·eeks before the general
election in ·which Carpenter opposes
Democrat Frank B a r b a r o , Carpenter
termed the action "partisan politics"
on the part of the gro ups involved and
predicted that i~ would never be tried.
"\Vhat~is their Interest as groups that
a r e purportedly environmental prcr
ponei1ts in concerning themselves y,ith
a partisan election?" Carpenter respond-
ed.
The alleged failure to make financial
disclosures, Carpenter said, was picked
up from his opponent 's ca n1 pa i g n
statements.
The suit he said. is likely to be
dropped after the ,election.
Barbaro said he did supply the groups
\\'Ith information on which the suit was
based bUt denied he pron1pted the action.
Dale Secord, or t he environ1nen1al
coali tion, also denied direct ties· \\•ith
the Barbaro campaign.
The second group in the con1pl~nt.
the Peoplj!'S Lobby. y,·as the author and
proponent of Proposition 9 on the June
ballot , y,•hich y,•as approvci,J by voters
and Y.i ll go into .effect in Jani@r.v.
The ri'oposition replaces thl' i\1osconc
conflic of interest la1o1' and strengthens
financial disclosure rcqulren1ents.
The suit. filed at 9:~5 a,m .. asks
Carpenter"s ren1oval from office, that
Carpcn!er be fi ned the maxi~uin \hr
ln11' a1101\'S-three tinies !he unreported
incon1e-and pay all altomey and court
costs.
Carpenter. however. maintair.ed thnl
, he has more than con1p\ied with the
J\1oscone act.
In a press release dislributcd recently,
Cnrpenter described his ri~ancial :.Ir·
rangements in more det<ii l than required.
hl' said .
The suit charges that Carpenter did
not report income fron1 his Golden Stat e
ln1prove1nent Comn1ittee ha ckers. No
specific amount was 1nentioned .
Carpenter, ho111e vcr. said. "There is
nothing to be ashamed of or i!leg!ll
here. I a1n so proud of th~ \.\'<IY our
finances are handled !hat 1 nlade it
the subjeet of a ren 1ure rrlea~e."
!See CARPE~TER. Page A%J
er a s-ree . ~' o m ,.
Irvine Now
'Largest'
In County
Orange Coast communities continued
to lead the upward push of Orange
County's population last year. It in·
creased by more than 62,IXIO to 1.64
million.
According to the latest county Progress
Report, which was handed to the board
of supervisors toda y, the county's poputa-
t.:on will top l.7 million before 1974
is out.
The report. a streamlined compilation
of facts and figures about county
business, people and government. was
put together b y the County
Admini strative Office.
Statistics about people and their habits
take up most ot the 75 pages of the
report.
According to the report, the county's
unincorporated territory -
predominantly in the south county -
experienced a surge of 14,400 people
in 1973. Huntington Beach was the sec-
ond·highest gainer with 6,447 new resi·
dents.
Other top-ranked coastal communites
and their gains included:
-Irvine with 3,758
-Newport Beach \\:ith 2.842
-San Juan Capistrano with 2.784
-1'~ountain Valley V.'ith 2,232
In terms of population alone , Anaheim
is still the C<lunty's la rgest city v1ith
187,300 ,people as of last year. It is
followed by Santa Ana, Huntington Beach
and Garden Grove.
But in terms of land area, the city
of Irvine is the largest in the county
with 40 square miles of area.
The report notes, however. that recent
annexations by Anaheim ha ve moved
tl?at city to within only one square mile
of matctling Irvine's current size.
Reaching back into history. the report
notes that the city of Santa Ana , \\•hich
had only about two square miles when
it was incorporated in 1886, hr.s gro1o1·n
to take in more than Xl .
Figures oullining mi gration to and
from Orange County were g a t h e r e d
primarily from the state Department
of Motor Vehicles, which has been con1-
piling data on the movements of license
holders.
Those statistics show the c o u n t y
recorded a net gain of 33.572 \ice nse-
holders in in 1973 -33,000 of whom
came from Los Angeles County.
' .
The migration out\vard from the coun-
(See PROGRESS, Page A!)
Orange Coast
\Veather
Nigllt and morning low clouds
becoming mostly sunny in the
afternoon \Vednesday. Slightly
warmer with highs jn the· upper
OOs at the beaches to the mid-70s
inland. Lows tonight 57-&2.
INS IDE TODi\ V
The Unde1'secretary of tltt In·
terior says hi& departn1e11t e.t·
pa els somt ma;or oit ·spill$ when
drilling beoi11s offshore in the
11ear futu1·e. See storv~ page A4.
lrm1 somllK• .. 1n1trmlull!ll ...
L.M ••• ,. " Anll l..1""'' ..
(1U1tr11!1 .. /.l'~vlq '" c1111111t11 Sl·I M11l1111 'u"d' " CtMI« .. t11tie1111 Hews ..
Creuwt•• .. Ot'lllO'.f Counlf ...
0.1t1! Nollt*I ... s,1v11 ''"'' ..
lidll1f'l4l'I ll'ttt .. ... , .. Al .. lt
Enltrlllflf!lfllt '" ll«• M1r•1tt ....
Fl"I"«' ... Tll1¥hll" ...
Hy 01rd"1r .. Tlltllt" "' Hero~-.. Wt1!Mr ..
Misttaotcla MislaoJJ
Paramedics aid Jo seph B. Green of Costa Mesa fol-
lowing collision Monday afternoon in Irvine be-
tween his motorcycle and car driven by Vernon F.
Lunch of Ontario. Green, 317·C University Drive,
wa s treated ~t Tu stin Co1nmunity Hospital and re·
leased. Accident took place abou t 3:25 p.1n. near
corner of MacArthur Boulevard and r.1ichelson
Drive.
Irvine Council
Eyes Park Bonds
J\nd Bike Trails
A proposed county bike trail financing
process and the first sale of park bonds
approved in June by Irvine voters will
be considered Ly the city council tonight.
The meeting will be held at city hall.
4201 Campus Drive, at 6:30 p.m.
Despite a ti ght bond sale markel.
Community Services Director Paul
Brady is ad vising the council to approve
the sale of bonds as soon as possi61e
to cut down the effect of inflation on
the $16 million for construction of coin·
munity parks .
But while 'infla tion is cutting t h c
amount of facilities the bonds \viii buy.
b proposed county plan could save pa rt
of the $2 million set aside for bike
trails.
Kenneth Sampson. director of t. h e
11arbors. Beaches atld Parks Depart-
ment, in a lciter to Irvine desc ribed
a proposal for county financing of the
major bikeways in the C<lunty.
Instead of the half and half split
. {See COUNCIL, ·rage A2)
Miu·ce1· Traded
For Bobby Bo11ds
NE\V YORK (AP) -The New York
Yankees announced today the trade of
outfielder Bobby ~turcer to the S11n
Francisco Giants for outfielder Bobby
Bonds.
Both nrc 27, and both \1·ere considered
to have off seasons in 1974 .
Bonds and \\lillie ?i1ays arc the ~nly
plnycrs In baseball hilltory tu steal 30
bnses and hit 30 hon1c runs In I.he
same season.
Murcf'r hit 140 r:irecr ho1ners for
t~ Yankees, 17th on the club's all-time
list.
El 'Toro &i.1·l, 13, Dies
After Falliri g· at Scliool
Rv JAN \\'ORTlf
01 °th1 01Jtt Piiot Sl1tf
Like the other se\·enth graders at
Los Alisos intermediate School in El
Toro. Carrie Lee Coltiugh<im \1'as just
beginning to get used to the big ne\v
school.
Monday she fel! bn a sidewalk at !hf'
school. Less than an hour later, she
died at Saddleback Con1mu•1ity 1-!ospitnl
-and officials still don't kno1v exactl~
\l'h\'.
She. is the daught~r of Richn rd und
Phyllis Cottinghan1 of 2:'212 Arcadian
Ave.. in the Aegean Hills section of
l\lission Viejo. Carrie v;as less than
a month shy of her l:l!I, tirthday.
She y,•as under n1crlication for a thyroid
disorder. but h('r p;Jrtnls s<iy it did
not limit her activities.
Sookesmen for the Orange Co u n l y
Coroner's office said today the cause
or death is still under investigation .
A deputy C<lroner said it i~ believed
dea th \\'8S due lo natural causes, not
to a bead injury sush1ined in the fall,
The accident occurred at about 7:4(1
a.n1 . l\1onday, 10 minutes before scho:il
started. Schoo! officials said the girl
apparently \\1as running across u planter
v.•hcn she tripped and fell.
Finding her unconscious. school starr
members applied mouth . to . mou1'1
resuscitation until p:i.~amcdics took O\'er.
The girl's mother ru.<1hed to the scene
and went lo the huspital l\ith h er
daughter. But Carrie apparently never
regained consciousness.
Rosary for Carrie wlll be r<!dted nt·
7:30 p.m. \Vcdnesdny at Sa d d I e b ack
Chapel, 220 E. f\1 ain, TUstin.
F'unoral mass v.111 bent 10 a.m. Thur~·
day at St. Kilian's Qithollc Church in
~1\ssion Viejo.
Besidt<s her parents. C.:irrie it' survived
by two brothers: \V;::de, lS, and Ttobert ,
IW.
'
DIES AFTER FALL
Carrie Lee C.ottingham ---
Hurn Pennils Ended
SAGRA~tENTO (AP) -The slate De·
partment or Const.'rvatil.lll ri.1ond~y sus-
pended all burning pern1its In 16 ;..10rth-
em canrornia counties because. of ha1Jtr·
dou~ ·wind and hent cor:iitions .
The counlie~ arc Alan1rdn Col1rs;;i .
Con1ra C'cstn, Ct-I Norte. H11mb:ildt.
Lake, Marin. ri.1endocioo. Nap·1, S:in
Mateo. Santa Clara. &:lnt ri Cruz. Solano,
SOJ"ioma, Trinity and Yolo. .
Ex-cou11tian
Released
By ARTllUR R. VINSEL
01 I~ 01111 Piiot Slillf
LOS ANGELES-The two-year a nd
two-day ordeal of James Ray Russell
came to a temporary end in only JO
1ninutes today as the Los Angeles County
Superior Court judge approved his
freedom on low bail.
Russell. 27. formerly of Laguna Hills.
has boen held for 7~4 days 1o1•ithout
bail. without arraignment and \\'ithout
trial on a fugitive v.·arrant charging
him with an Oklahoma murder that
occurred on a Saturday night in 1972
v.·hiie Russell v.·as allegedly out on a
lark in Long Beach.
.. Oh my God," blurted his blonde wife
Karen. 23, v.•ho insists she was with
hi1n !hat fateful night at the Long Beach
Nu-Pike Amusement Park.
'"/ can have him home today ... I'm
going to have him home today ... oh my
God." she cried.
The slender blonde \\'ife 1o1•ho has been
\l'ithout her man for more than two
·years cried unashamedly in the co rridor
outside the courtroom. Her tears glit·
tercd in the glare of television ca mera
lights and n1ascara ran down her cheeks
in rivers.
"What arc your plans for tonight?"
asked one reporter.
''Oh , ·rm going lo squeeze everything
I can into one night. I just Y.'ish it
all could have happened sooner." Husz~!!·:.: ;;~:::::"':!:oi:i:~::-• .:;:.:! Sa::il:':!...Z.
Dav id, of Haskell County· Okla,_ was
present in the courtroom but C<l11!d mt
hear deliberations o~·er his grandson's
(ale be.cause of a hear ing problem.
He O\\'ns property \11ith enough equity
lo under111rite the $5 .000 bail finally set
by Superior Court Judge nayn1ond i\1.
Choate.
" Thc defendant's brother Rob ert
Russell. 25, an accountant, his \\Ii re
Kare n. a \Vaitress at Ho\11ard Johnson's
restaurant in Downey and other relatives
\'O\l'ed they "'nuld scrape together $500
(See RUSSELL, Page AZ)
JUDGE ORDERS BAIL
Longtime Prisoner Russell
Orange Count)·'s
Consunier Prices
Slioot Vp Again
By The Asso<'iated Press
Consumer prices climbed 1.4 percent
in U:is Angeles and Oraage counties
in 5eptember. the U.S. Bureau of Labor
Statistics reported today.
Inflation has pushed prices up 10 per·
cent in the first nine 1nonths of this
year. They are 12.4 percent above the
le v.el of September 1973.
Suzanna SadO\l"sk y. regional chief of
the bureau's Los An~eles office, said
housing accounted for more than half
the over-all rise in September. These
increased 2.4 percent to JJ.6 percent
above a year earlier.
J\1ost of the rise \l'as accounted for
by niortgagc inte rest rates. 1naintenance
and repairs.
Renters paid an average of 1.J percent
n1ore bet1veen Ju'ly and Scprembcr.
Resid ential telephone bills 111ere. up
an average of J.7 percent. and household
!See PRICES, Page A2)
Newport Takes No Actio11
•
011 Ne'v Coast City Pla11
By GARY f;J{Al\'VILLE
Newport Beach has 1aken a "1rnit
and sec" nllitudc to11·ard 1hc possibi!i1y
of a 1ll'11· city rising on !he constal
!ands hl•1 11·een Corona dcl l\l ar and
I.iiauna l3c<1ch.
Fir.!'t n1en!ion of the PO!'Sihilit~ of
Or::ingc C-Oun1y ·s 27th cit.v being form1'fl
on lhl! prized 3.5-mile stretch ca me 10
d;1~·-~ :lgo
Jt·vine Co rnp..·u1y prci;lr.lc11t Hay \\'ntson
unvriled 1>n'li1n1 nary dc\'('lopnicnt plnns
to1·c.ring 10.00:J con1 1>any-011·ned co;istal
rir.res.
Included in the rrelin1inary 111:ins l\ere
rt1sidrnt1al dcvcloprncnr to house :i n
1·st in111tcd 5~.000 persons nnd tl\'O coa stal
resort~.
Lnst 1o1·eek. !he Nc11•1)()r! Bench· City
Coun<'il <locided to 111\·11i1 rrfinemrnt of
1hc plans nnd :'I subSf'qucnt cost bt-nefit
~!udy before tuking a position on the
pr.-.no~it.
llo11·rl'rr. on the filr 1rlth the l.oca l
A~('nr~· F'orn1ation Con1mis.~ion ( LAF.Cl
ln S:lnl:i Ann is the city's proposed
sphere of influence map.
It sl101\'S al1nost lhc entire 10.000 acres
discu~sed b~· \\'atson as a lo"gical ex-·
tension of Nc1rport Beach's sphere or
influrncr.
The co1n1nission 11;is scheduled to
dct•1d(' enrlicr thi~ y1·a r if. in fact, the
J.5·r~1ilf' i;trrtch of pr<'ciot1s i; p h c. r e
coastli ne is a logical extension of the
cit~-·s sphr rc .
110 .... ·r\·l'r. according to LA F C ad·
1ninis!r.'.ltl\·e assistant John Bell. a hear·
111r. on tht' extension 11·as delayed until
!ht' com1>any prrsrntcd its plan.
Partially 1n conflict 11•1th Ne .,.,, port
Brach's pending sphere n1np is a pro-
f'lllS..."<i Sflhrrc of h1fluenC'c map filed
111th Li\fC' by Lagnnn Rench.
Irvin,. has not ~·f't filed a proposed
sphere n1n11 that shows lht> oo.asu1! lands
n.cr a log1c11! t"<ten~1on of i1S boundnrie".
Con~cquf'ntly. lhr compan.v is likely
to have !he options of de\ t'lopin11 th l"
land under l!.~ pre~ent rounty control.
tht• three nl'ighborin~ cl!Jrs or thr ne\1·
city that \\'ntson su~.c:est ed.
Nc\\·µorl 13each ~1ayor nonald i\lrlnni~
st'lf?S mention of a ne1o1• rily :l!' a ''te~t
balloon .. hoiitt~ flloft hy 1h" co1npany
"l think lh<' lr\'inc Comp.'lny \\'a '
($<-t NE\~' ClTY, r11 ge i\%)
•
------
BIDS FOR FREEDOM
Jo1m1i. Earl R1y
Rci y's Laivye ,.
.Opens Battle
F 01· Freedom
i tEMPlllS, Tenn. IAP\ -As James
Earl Ray looked on Yo'ithcul emotion,
his attorney opened the battle today
to win Ray's freedom with a declaration
that Ray was bounded and badgered
into pleading guilty to slaying Dr. ?.1artin
4tther King Jr.
Bernard Fensterwald of Washington.
O.C. t.oJd a federal court hearing that
Ray and one of his fonner attorneys.
Percy Foreman of Houston . Tex .. locked
•in a "fierce stru ggle" over whether
Ray should plead guilty to the assassina·
lion.
Finally. Fensterwald said , Ray's
TeSlstance to the plea yielded and two
·days later, on March IO. 1969, he ad·
milted to firing the rine that killed
JG'ng on April 4, 1968.
· Fenslerwald's statement opened an
~videntiary hearing beJo_re U.S. District .
·Court Judge Robert M. McRae Jr. on
Whether Ray is entitled to withdraw
' the plea and stand trial for murdering
King .
Ray, wearing a dark suit and white
shirt buttoned lo the top but with no
tie, was escorted to lhe courtroom by
!wo U.S.· marshals who sat on either
Side of him behind Ray 's trio of al·
torneys. About 20 spectato rs. plus a
large contingent or newsmen, were on
hand.
r.ay. 46 . gained the right to the hearing
!his summer when the U.S. Supreme
-.Court declinc-d to interfere v.'ilh a U.S.
6th Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that
_hill claimll of a coerced.._ guilty plea
. required judicial review. ,.
.Nttclear Station
Back i11 Business
'fhc San Onofre Nuclear Generating
Station \\'as cranked up to full power
earlier today after a minor defect in
a relay 7itonday caused a shutdown as
Jhe reac1or was being started up at
the end of a federal inspection.
Onofre Plant Superintendent Hans Ot-
loson said the relay malfunctioned and
caused an autornalic shutdo1111l of the
rcal'tur.
The flaw developed as crey,·s began
lo start the reactor up after three days
; of oonoperation v.·hich allO\\'ed inspectors
from the U.S. Atomic Energy Com·
: mission to \\lnd up a routine insp: :'.ion
• of the facility.
• "Everything is \\·orking just fin e 11ow,
; and ,,.e had the relay fixed in a few
: hours," ottoson said.
ORANGE COAST
DAILY PILOT
-.
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(A.o~I Puttlo\l'tonQ Ct>""'•"• 5'tc>•r•IPf!Cl•l-¥t
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ll'ol'Cl"I P.,llU•ni"'J bll"' " .i D'.I """'I a., Slfttt. Co•I• ~w. C.l•IO•"•-.,.llt
Rober! N. Weed
P1t1,0tlll •"" PuD!o .... •
Jac k R. Curley
V•tt p,.,)><9'ftl "'Ml Gelleft l ,,...,....,.
Thomas Ke evl l
Thomas A. Murphine Moon•o•"O EdolO'
Charles H LOOS Richard P. Nall A1•l1!1n1,,,,.nt91~E11>tor1
Olflce$
C°'lt W.-10 JJO W•\ll'••~I~
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Teitpt'lone (7141 642 ... 321
Classlfled AdverUslng 642-S.71
1"t00ltl>«.I Vt ll9y Nt•Oftltot
5111310
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tocto'••Qfll. 10u O••nOf' (llMKI l'\illjlV.I"'
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TutUJ.ay, OUQbtP 21, l Q14
Sadd"leback
Outlines
Priorities
By F"Rt-:-n.E;RJCK SCJIOEf!fi!:llL
01 lllt 0•11• "Jiit i11ft
Completion or a ca n1pus /'Oad, ltr;>rliV·
l'd parking facilities and eon~tructlon or
u multi·million dollar fine> arts building
are the top prlorlt1e:s of Saddleback
Community College trustees.
1\let>tlng 1\1onday night 1n the Jan1es
B. Utt Library. the first pe>rnument
stuclure on lbe 1\1i~ion Viejo campus.
trustees listed major conStruction plans
for the next 10 years.
The cost of placing 4,000 feet of road
around the campus is estimated a t
'569,000. No figure was provided for
expansion of purkin~ fa cilities. 1 The tme arts building, includ ing a
400-seat auditorium. originally was lo
cost $3.3 million. but blds received by
!he ~college came in at $5.4 million ...
--r,9-pert"tnt -above tpe aretrilccts' esti·
1nate.
Trustees ""ill 1neet ~londay night to
discuss ways of financing the structure
and u·ilJ hold a second n1ceting Ndv.
7 to look at ·ways of cutting the cost
of the new building.
Supt. Robert Lombardi explained that
the slate, which has provided money
for community college construction. u·ill
finance about half of the original $3.3
million estimate. The rest must be raised
by the district.
Lombardi said trustees have a choice
of three ways to raise the funds -
a bond measure that requi res tv.·o-:hird
voter approval, a ta;s override that re·
quires simple majority approval or use
of a specia l state law that pennits
community college districts .to increase
taxes !or construction u·ithout seeking
voter approval.
Other projects, in the order of their
priority ranking, include:
-Temporary gymnasium and track
facility.
-Permament gym n as i um and
physical education building.
-Swimming pool.
-Technology building.
-Acquisition of a site for a second
campus.
-Student center.
-Business science building.
-Health science building.
-Phase 11 of road construction.
-Outdoor physical e d u c a t i o n
facilities. • ....
-Administration building.
The priority ranking is the central
part of a IQ.year master plan that
v.·ill be submitted to the board o !
governors of lhe California Community
Colleges.
The plan is updated ea ch year as
projects are compl~ed or changes are
made in future planning.
Fron• Page Al
COUNCIL" .•
of costs between tbe county and citiell
now used, Sampson said, the new plan
"-ould mean 100 percent county financing
of the major trails which make up
a "freeway system of bicycle routes.
providing safe access to the bicyclis t
to all parls of lhe county."
Four such routes would cross Jr\·ine
under the proposed OOWlly plan.
Sampson said the county is \\'illing
• •• to let cities plan the routes through
their jurisdictions.
The cost splitting means of financing
the trail system. he said , ha s resulted
Ln a fragn1ented assortment of bike
routes.
Public \Vorks direc tor Brent r.-1uchow
has asked the counci l to authorize the
transportation commission to work with
I.he county on the proposed trail syste m.
Regardrng the pa('k bond s a I e •
Administrative Services Director James
Harrington said the bonds should be
issued soon despite high interest rates
,,·hich "'ill increase the bond repayment
cost.
The sooner the land for the park.~
is purchasl"d . he said, the less the city
"·ill lol">C 10 innation.
Capo Gym OK'd
For Sa<ldl eback
Basketball Drill
Sadd.leback College '5 basketball team
u•ill be allou·ecl to pract~ce In the 45-year·
old gym at lhe old CaplS\rano Union
11igh School In San Juan Capistrano.
Alnending a policy which sald the
old build ing could not be used for any
school puf?OSe, t r u s t e t s of the
Capistrano Unified School D1~tr\c\ voted
unanlmously Monday to allow S.addlebllck
to practice then~.
The building dates back lo 1hc l~
Y:hen the school was built. Becuiise ii
Is deemed ta:hniCally unsafe uccordihg
1-0 the slal~'5 F'ield Act. the Uje of
tht bu.J.ldlng Is limited .
.. \Ve are allowed 10 use all o.f our
pre-f'ield act buildings until Jun~ 30
of 1975.'' said J~ \\'\mer. dlrtctor of
administrative service&. '.'but :-:st spring
the board decided that because Yo'e v.·e.re
using the building so little anyway . they
.... ·ould forbid 11..!1 use by dlslrict chlldrtn."
1'ht building was reoovatcd nve: years
ago, but because the dlslrlct use>s It
to store old textbook s the: fire marshal
has limited Its use to 49 people .
•
•
•
0111Y l"Htt Sltft P'llolol
LIFE DIFFERENT NOW
Former farmboy Peters
lr·vine l?_oet
Shatters
Stereotypes
UC l rvhie poet Robert Pe ters
is lhe latest spealc.er itt writers
lecture series started at Saddle·
back Cal/ege this fall. Peters
will speak nt 10 a.n1. \V ednes-
day iii room 313 of tlie /IJal/1-
Science Building. The session is
public. Anne Coopt:r of the
Dail1J Pilot Staff is a studnit of
Peters' at1d has writtell the fol--
lowi11g article about l11ni.
By ANNE COOPER
01 "'' o.u,. l"llof $l1tf
Robert Peters. poet and professor of
English al UC Irvine, looks more like
a lumberjack than a poet.
Folklore has it that male poets are
young, anemic persons, g iv.en to
rhapsodlzlng over spring and the blush
on a •maiden's cheek. Robert Peters
belles the stereotype. He ill 50. extremely
hearty, and his poems are bombshells,
not pleasant verse.
The lumberjack p h y s i q u e was
developed on the farm in Eagle River,
Wis., where Peters grew up, and his
farm imagery, his spare 'style and his
relatively late start as a poet have
led some of his admirers lo oompare
him to the New England poet, Robert
Frost.
"Funny how things work out ," Peters
says. "I was working as a claims ad-
juster when I was drafted at 18 to
fight in the second world war. After
the war the GI bill made it possible
for me to go to university. I got my
bachelor'!!, master's, and PhD degrees
in six years. t chose to study English
rather than history because I thought
there \l"Ould be fewe r term papers."
, Peters wrote his first poems afte r
the death of a fivC<-year;0Id son in 1965.
He put the poems aWay for _ over a
year, but on reading them over later
decided that they expressed well his
personal anguish and might be com·
forting to others who had suffered the
loss of a loved one. The poems were
published in 1967 as a book, entitled
''Songs for a Son." Of the book Peters
says, "The poems were my screams
of rage and dispai r. but 1 hoped that
the art involved in creating the poems
\vou1d make them meaningful to others.•·
The death of his son u'as a turning
poin~
1
in . Pe.ters ' .. ~ife. "I h_ad always
...... ,..... .... uc '""'"""' "' wl"ut:r or an
actor:· says Peters, "but if I hadn 't
been forced to re-evaluate my life In
order to cope "'i1 h the shock of Richard 's
death. I might never have freed myself
to do creative \\'Ork."
Since publication of "Songs for a Son,"
Peters has published eight other books
of poet ry on vari~s subjects, bas two
more forlhcoming and is working on
several collections of poetry, as well
as a couple of novels.
Asked how he organ.ires his time,
Peters says, "I don 't know that I do
really. I love teaching, and 1 try to
think ahead lo make each class special.
\Vhen I have time. I work on revising
\\'Ork or I write letters. I have a lremen·
dous correspondence.
"As far as \\'riling per se, that Is
almost a matter of body chemistry.
Sometimes I don't write at all for a
period of lime. but lben when 1 sta rt
I work intensely and prnduce a great
deal."
Jn the summer of last year Peters
v.·ns traveling in New York State,
on his way to a writing retreat, when
be became lost near Albany , and saw
a sign saying "Shaker Museum -3
miles." On the spur of the moment
he decided to visit the mW!eum. slnce
he was curioU!I about the Shakers' com-
munal living and simple lifestyle.
His three-hour visit was the start of
R year-long fascination with the Shakers,
p11rticularly with Mother AM Le e ,
founder of the reJigious sect. To date
Peters has written 300 poems on the
subjC(t. the first hundred to be published
as a book, ''The Gift To Be Simple",
soon lo be released.
In the Ann Lee poems Peten continue:!!
to use tht stunning Imagery which has
characterized his earlier poetry. Peters
says he feels much of the lmagery
comes rrom the stark childhood on a
WISCOn!'in farm. The family lived In
a sm311 house his father built of logs
and larpaper. They :itc (ood they raised
themselve!! and butchered lhrlr animals
for meat. For diversion U~tte was the
take nenrby and the.. wood. The only
two hooks in the house we.re 1'Roblnson
Cru~" and "Tom Swift." Md young
Peters found "Crusoe" boring.
\ Fro• ,._,,e Al
PROGRESS ...
ty wu abwbed primarily by other
states, Loi A01eles County and the ~
ties ol san Diego, San Btmardino and
Rivenlde. 1be ame areu contributed
the greatest nwnber ol new counUam
durln& 1m.
Other notable statistics CQOtained in
the progreS"S report JBe.lude :
-The l<"'aet that La Palma 111 the mo.c;t
crowded city in the county wit'· nearly
9.000 people per square mile. followed
close ly by La Habra, Cypress, Santa Ana,
\Vestmlnster, Tustin and Garden Grove.
e11ch with more than 6,000 per square
mile.
-Irvine has I.he lov.'est density in
the county with only 657 people per
square !Jllle, followed by San J u a n
Capistrano with 764.
-San Juan Capistrano is the county's
fastest growing city. showing an increase
of 38.9 percent of the population during
1973.
-Jo July of 1973, there were 811,400
"'omen and 765,700 men in the county,
of which 541 ,700 were under 18 years
of age, 926,900 were between 18 and
64 and 108,500 were over 65.
'
DIES AT HOAG HOSPITAL
N~wport's J1ck B1rnett
From Page A I
RUS SELL ...
today as security on .a ball bond that
would free Russell after his n c a r I y
endlas moolha behind ban. •
Re has b e e n accuaed-absotuttly
v.·rongly, accordi ng to witnesses and his
attorney-of the brutal murder of a
92-year-old man In March, 1972 al the
invalid's home jn Leota, Okla. in a
$-'00 robbery.
ti1rs. Karen Russell and fri ends claim
they were all together at the Long
Beach amusement center that night bul
Oklahoma authoriti es, ci ting Russell'.!
record as an ex-concvlct who served
tour year! for burglary In his youth,
issued a warrant for his arrest and
he was taken into custody in Orange
County durin;; the summer of that year.
He was questioned. submitted to a
polygraph examination and subsequently
cleared of any connection with t h e
homicide 1,000 miles away and Orange
. County Superior Court Judge WJlllam
MurTay refused to allow his extradition
to Oklahoma .
-The median age in the county J k B
was 26.r..t.st-y .. r...and. oo-tha-average.-a.c arnett
\\'Olnt'n V.'Cre about a year and a half ,... '
His mistake came three weeks later
v.·hen be went to visit his brother Robert
in suburban Bell Gardens, w h e r e ·
evidence indicates authorities were hav-
ing him tailed.
-~·•we-was-just-drtving-dawn-Eastcm
Avenue \Vhen we turned inlo a Taco
Bell to get a Coke," Robert R:.issell
rt:'called today in an emotional court·
room corridor interview. ·'They wa!
definitely following us. They lold us they
wanted James Russell."
older than men. '
-The biggest single age group was
the 1~14 bracket with 163.600.
-In tenns of natura l population in-
crease (blrtlts versus de~ths). Seal
Beach. Laguna Beach and N e \V po rt
Beach experienced a net loss \\'hile the
City of Irvine was the county's biggest
net gainer with a natural jump of 16.7
percent.
-Irvine also had the lowest death
rate at 2.6 Per J,000 people. Seal Beach
"·ith 19.2 per J.000 had the highest.
-San Clemente had the highest bii'th
rate last year with 22.8 per 1,000 people.
Seal Beach had the lowest at 6.1 .
-Total ?J,ildlng permit.! issued in
the cowity dropped lo 2.8,140 in 1973
from a peak of 35.600 a year before.
A total of 30.400 new homes were added
in !he county last year bringing the
county total to 582,800.
-Taxable sales in the county rose
lo $4.7 blllion last year. up by nearly
20 pe rcent over the year before.
-Total value of residential and non-
residential buildlngs given pennils in
1973 was estimated at just over $1
billion.
-There v.·ere just over Lt million
vehicles in the county last year. More
than 913,900 were cars, 129,900 were
trodes and 56,300 were motorcycles.
-Orange County Airport erperieoced
632.600 takeolfs and landings la.st year.
When approved by supervisors, the
progress report will be made available
at a cost of $5 per ·copy to anyone
requesting it from the <:.ounty Admini·
srative Office.
From Page Al
NEW CITY ...
merely testing the political climate and
expanding its options," Mcinnis said .
He urged the council not to take
a positi on until more is known of the
company's development plans.
Mcinnis was ba cked by councilman
Paul Ryckofr who said a cost benefit
study should be undertaken before the
city decides if the coast area is really
a logical extension or its boundaries.
Jl.fclnnis pointed cut that the sphere
of influence map "on ly shows what we
consider to be a logical extension of
the city's sphere of innuence."
''That's not the same as saying ii
is a logical extension or our cily boun·
daries," he added.
And, he indicated It won't be until
a measurement of projected costs or
services and revenu es can be taken
that the city can take a "reali.stic "
positlon .
'ltfr. Neivport,'
Succu1nbs at 65
Jack Barnett, known as "Mr. Newport
Beach" during his 19-year management
of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com·
merce. died ltlonday night at 11 o a g
Hospital of congestive heart failure and
complicating illnesses.
~1r. Barnett, 65, u·as first admitted
to Hoag Hospital Aug. 15 following a
heart attack. He :was released Aug.
31 but returned to Hoag Sept. 22, where
he remalnecl"unW hls-death Monday.--
According to friends , Mr. Barnett in·
tended to retire when he moved to
Newport in 1955, but was talked into
-managing the almost-defunct. Chamber
of Commerce.
Under his management, the chamber
grew to 1,400 members and initiated
new activites .,.such as the Character
Boat Parade , m pet project of Mr .
Barnett's.
From Page Al
PRICES ... ;
furnishings rose 2.7 ~t.
Food prices: increased 1.5 percent and
were 12.2 percent more than in Sep-
tember 1973. Leading the incre.ase was
a five percent boost in such items as
eggs, margarine, salad oil, sugar and
coffee.
?.feats, poultry and fish went up 2.6
percent but still were 6.8 percent below
a year earlier. 'Ibe price of fruits and
vegetables was 2.3 percent lower, do.,,,,,
for the third straight month but 21
percent higher than In September 1973.
Transportation rosts increased 0.6 per-
cent and were 8.7 percent higher than
a year ago.
On the national level , rising prices
for fc.od, clothing and mortgage rates
pushed the cost-of livi ng up another
1.2 percent In September, making the
last 12 months the wo rst inflationary
surge in more than 25 years, the govern·
ment reported today.
Prices in September nationally were
reported 12.1 percent higher than a year
earlier. This was the worst 12·month
increase since 1947.
However, the purchasing power of the
average worker nationally increased
slightly for the Cirst lime in t h r e e
months. Real spendable earnings -that
is weekly pay adjusted for inflation
and truces -rose one-tenth or a oerce:nt
in September bu t was still at the lowest
level since Deeember 1970.
Price increases nationally were spread
across almost the entire economy last
month. Food Jed the way , po!ti ng it s
biggest rise since February.
"He said that old warrant wa::i. no
good ," the younger brother continUed,
"but they said that was' beside the
point and he would have to go with
them ,"
Russell. a warehouseman. after he
arrived in Orange County folio¥.·ing his
Okalahoma prison release has been held
for 744 days since, without the usual
recourses available to an imprisoned
but unconvict.ed suspect, under state and
federal law and the U.S. con.!llilulion.
His-attorney; Roger Agajaniai'I, of San-.
ta Ana. was pleased but perplexed today
and said the partial victory in the Jame!
Ray Russell Case has been a long time
comi ng .
''My argument has been all along
thht he was illegally contained al this
time," Agajania n decared as Mrs .
Russell hugged the hulking lawyer's arm
and unbashfully wept on his shoulder.
He had asked Judge Choate to release
Russell on his own recognizance pending
the Nov. 8 pretrial hearing at which
witnesses from Oklahoma are expected
to testify regarding the pathetic killing
he claims he is totally innocent ol com-
mitting.
No matter what the outcome, courts
in Napa County in northern California
took away her little boy and his stepson
by a prior mrutiage, Nolan Tracy now
four, in March of 1973 on the basis
!hat it was an unfit home if his step-
father stood accused ol murder, con·
vi cted or not.
Frona Page Al
C_.\RPENTER •••
\Vhen he first leveled the charges
or improper income reporting, Barbaro
said he got the information largely from
the Carpenter news release.
Carpenter said that Barbaro :l!ld the
groups filing the sui t are "using tbe
courts to get campaign coverage.
"I want to know if they are going
to sue Don Bright and Jerry Brown
too."
Bright, chainnan of the coastal com-
miss ion. has been Involved in a recent
flap over his alleged attem pts to tap
land developers for contributions to lhe
Brown campaign.
Carpenter said he has used expense
money paid legislators to pay for such
necPS.~itil'!S of holding office as a personal
assistant and an apartment in Sacramen-
IO.
The groups filing the suit say that
those expenses were paid by the com-
mittee of Carpenter's backers and were
income hut were not reported.
NOW, HEAR TIDS
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According to the Pre si dent's Co uncil on
Enviro nmental Qu ality, it is becom ing increasingly
difficult ·for anyo ne to esca pe noise.
40.000.000 Americans risk hearing impairment
and other physical and mental effects. 44 .000.000
other Americans have the utility of their dwellings
adversely affected by noise fro m ai rcraft or tra ffic.
2 1.000 .0 00 A mericans a r e a f fec t e d by
oonstruction-related noise.
Now wh at does this have to do with carpet?
carpeting will drastically improve acoustics in any
·room by quieting your home environment, making
radios, television. and the family sound better.
Remember, ai Alden s. even our LOUD ca rpeting
is quieter.
•
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia Ave.
COSTA MESA
646·4838
HOUtlS: I\'""· -'Tllors.. t lo S:JO-Flll. t lot-SAT. 9:30 lo 5
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Huntington Beaeh
Fountain ·Valley
Totlay's Final
.N.Y. Stocks
VOL. 67, NO. 295, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES OR-ANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1974 TEN CENTS
Coal .Miner~s Son to Wed Happy~s Aunt
LLAY, Wales 1AP) - A \Vefsh coal
miner's young son who says.he is engag-
ed to Happy Rockefel,Jer 's aged
millionaire aunt Rachel Fitter expressed
fear today that the publicity about their
May-and-December romance w o u I d
"blow the whole thing."
"\Vhen she sees the \Vay the story
~as blown up here, anything rould hap.
pen," ,said 29-year-old Michael Wilson
after London papers gave splash play
to his announcement l\1onday that he
and f\.tiss Fitter would be ntarried around
Christmas.
Wilson told newsmen they met last
January while he was working as a
butler at the Breakers Hotel in Palm
Beach, Fla. He said· they got engaged
in ~fay and_ his parents visited Miss
Fille_r in the United' States. .
"It's been made to look like some
sort of fairy tale -a fantasy -and
it's-not a bit ilke• that,'' he said. "I'm
a realist and so is Miss Fitler.
. ,
"Y.'e have a genuine deep affection
for · each other, but the papers have ·
made me look like a go!ddiggcr. She's
a very nice private person, but ho\V
do ·you think she'll feel seei ng me all
over the front pages? ·
"She could easily get the wrong im·
pression from what she sees in thC
papers. How do you explain something
like that? She might i::all it. off now.
I don't know." •
~1iss Filler lives in Philadelphia, and
sources there said she is 77.
She was not imn1cdiately available
for cornn1ent , but a spokesn1an for her
niece's husband. Vice Pr cs id en t -
designate Nelson A. Rockefeller. said :
"I heard that such a story was con1ing
from \Vales. I don't knO\\' anything aboul
it. I think it may be correct. but l
just don't know."
l\1iss Pitier "·as. quoted in a British
nc\vspaper as saying. "Although I've
ter a s-
MEA.OOWLARK GOLF COURSE ;ro B~COlo\E PER,lolANENT PAR;r OF L~flDSCAPE
Huntington Beach City Council Agrees to Buy Facility in Order to Retain Open Space
Golf Course Buy Okayed
llunti11,gton to Purchase MeadouJlllrh Property
·By KATHY CLANCY
01 lllt Dilly Piiot Siii!
The S3.2 million purchase of
?vleadowlark Golf Course was approved
by the Huntington Beach City Council
Monday night.
City Manager David Rov.'lands pointed
out the 96.5-acre facility, in c I u d ing
clubhouse. restauranl, golf course and
a eucalyptus grove will be financed
without taking any funds fro1n the city's
operating budget.
.
"It will be enUrely self su~porting,"
he explained.
The cily plans to make a down pay·
ment on the property with $700.000 in
city revenue sharing funds. and $600,()(X}
from county revenue sharing.
The remainder of the debt \\'ill be
paid from the .$150,000 a year the <.·ity
expects from .course operations.
1\1ayor Al Coen and Councilman Don
Shipley l\'ere absent rluring the vote.
"The golf course ·will pay for itself,"
Hu11ti11gto11 211d Largest
Gainer i11 People Surge
Ora nge Coast communities continued
to lead the up~·ard push of Orange
County's papulalion last year. It in-
creased by more than 62,000 to 1.64
million. ·
According to the latest county Progress
Report, which was handed to the boa rd
of supervisors today. the county's papula·
tion will top 1.7 million before 1974
is oul.
The report. a streamlined compilation
of facts and figures about county
business. people and government. \.1tas
put together by the Co unt y
llfayor's Son
ll urt in Foll
A cut lip and a frightened a.year.
old boy took ltuntipgton B e a c h
M.ayor Al Coen a\Yay from the
city council meeting Aitonday nigl1t.
But Coen, said today hi s son,
l\.fark, 3. was doing fine after fall·
ing from a bed at home ).1onday,
and requiring four ·stitches for a
cut lip.
The n1ayor 1va!I called from the
nieeting by a Hun tington Be:lch
policeman who told him his son
had bt.>Cn injured.
Coen said his·~1ife probnhly v.•As
more shaken by the incident than
lhe younp:stcr. The bOy \Vl'l! treatetl
it l~ountaln Valley Co1nm1n1ity •tos·
pita\. •
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Administrative Office. .
Statistics about people and their habits
take up nlost of the 75 pages of the
report.
Accord ing to the report. the county's
unincorporated territory -
predominantly in the south county -
experienced a surge or 14.400 people
in 1973. Huntington Beach \vas. the sec-
ond-highest gainer \vilh 6.447 new resi -
dents.
Other top-ranked coastal communitcs
and their gains incl uded:
-Irvine 1vith 3.758
-Nc\vport Beach with 2,342
-San Juan Capistrano \l'ilh 2.764
-Fountain Valley y.•ith 2.232
Jn terms of population alone, Anaheim
is stffl the county's largest city with
187,300 people as of last year. It is
followed by Santa.Ana. Huntington Beach
and Garden Grove.
But in terms of land ·are<'I. the cir\'
of lrvine is the largest in the county
\vith 40 square miles of area.
The re part notes, ho\vever. that recent
annexations by Anaheim have moved
tllat city to v.•ithin only one square mile
of matching Irvine's current si't.e.
ReaChing back into history. the report
notes· that the city of &lnt:l AM, \vhlch
had· only about tv.•o squore miles ~·hen
il was lncorporaled in 1886, li\.S gro\vn
to take in more ihRn 27 .
Figures outlining migration to and
from Orange County wt:re g a t h e r e d
primarily from the state Department
of Motor Vehicles, \Vhich has been com·
piling data on the n10vemcnts or license
holCfers.
!See PROG RES.~, Page A!) •
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said Councilman Henry DU.kc. \V ho
pointed ou.t that the fal'ility, at \Varner
Avenue and Graha1n Street. provides
attractive open space as "·ell as a public
recreational facility.
The city's action will keep the area
from being developed into a h:>using
tract and ensure ilS continued use by
the public.
In related action, tile council approved
a 34.-year lease agreement ,.,,ilh Golf
of Southern California to operate the
course and related fnc i!ities for $12.500
a month.
The cou1:cil also p;=~secl a f orm a I
ai;ircemenl \Vith ihc ccunty for th c
~.000 in revenue sharing. At lhe sug-
gestion of Councilnian Jerry ~1atney.
council members agreed to draft a
resolution commending lhc county Board
or Supervisors for their support in the
pro.iect.
Citv officials have said form a I
takeOver of the property may not take
place until early next year.
The current ,\feado,vlark O\\·ners \Vill
finance the purchase at an interest rate
of seven percent a year.
Under tenns of the purchase. the
current owners '''ill maintain minerAI
rights 500 feet belo\v the ground. and
the city has agreed to al!o'v the1n one
drill site in the area or the golf course
maintenance yard .
The primary n1vners of lhc property
no\\: are ~·Ir. and i\'frs. GQmcr Sims
or Huntington Beach and Cecil B. Holl-
ings\\'orth of Palm Desert.
C<iuncil n1Pmbcrs ti lond'1'.t/ also com·
mended Ro,\•lands and Duke for their
efforts in con1pleting the 1\lcado\l'lark
agreements.
ADJ! ANCES PACE
DAY 'S TRADING
NE\V YORK (UPI \ -Prices a(lain
turned mil'l'.ed todnv in fairly a ct iv e
trading on the New York Stock Ex·
cha nge. will\.. so1nc blue chips hurting
:iverages.
The Dow Jones industrial average.
up and down from the 'ltar1 . I o s t
6.96 points to 662.86. The \\•idely .,jlfl'tthed
index of 30 selected blue-chil> stock&
gained more than 14 points Monday.
Advances held a comfortable lttld over
declines. about 7 to 6, among the 1,767
issue.s trnded .
Prices were higher In fairly acllve
trading on lhe American Stock Ex·
cha nge. •
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Ex-countia11
Released
.From Jail
By Aff:THUR R. VINSEL
Of th• D111y Pilot sun
LOS ANGELES-The t\l·o-year a nd
tv.·o-day ordeal or James Ray Russell
came to a temporary end in only 10
minutes today as the Los Angeles County
Superior Court judge approved h is
freedom on low bail.
Ru ssell, 27. formerly of Laguna Hills.
has been held for i44 days \\'ilhout
ba!l, \l'ithout arraignment and \vithout
trial on a fugitive warrant charging
hin1 \l'ith an Oklahon1a murder that
occurred on a Saturday night in 1972
whil'! Russell was allegedly 01,1t on a
lark in Long Beach.
''Oh my God," blurted his blonde wife
Karen, 23, v.'ho insists she was '''Ith
him that fateful night at the Long Beath
Nu-Pike Amusement Park.
"I can have him hoine tociay ... l'm
going to have him home today ... oh n1y
God," she cried.
The slender blonrlc "'ife '''ho has been
\\'ithout he r man for more than \\l'O
years cried unashamedly in the corridor
outside the courtroon1. Her tears glit·
tcred in the glare of tele\·ision camera
lights and n1ascara ran rlown her cheeks
in rivers.
"\Vhat arc your plans for tonight?"
asked one reporter.
"Oh, I'm going to squeeze everything
I can into one night. I just wish it
all could have happened sooner.''
Russell's grandfather. aged San1uel E.
David. of Haskell Counlv· Okla.. \\'<JS
present in the courtroom ·but eo11:rt nut
hear deliberations over his granrlson's
fate because of a hearing problem.
I-le owns property 1vith enough cquit.v
to unrlerwrite the $5.000 bail finall v set
b.v Superior Court Judge Raymond i\I.
Choate.
The defendant's brother Robert
Russell. 25. an accountant, his \\' i f e
Karen. a "'aitress at Ho\l'ard Johnson's
restaurant in Do\l·ney and other relatives
vo~·ed they would scrape together ~500
today as security on a bail bond that
would free Russell after his n ea r I y
endless months behind bars.
He has b e c n accused-ahsolutetv
\vrongly, according to witnesses and his
attorney-of the brutal murder of o
92-year-<ild man in A'farch. 1972 at the
(See JtUSSELL, Page A2J
}Jolice Officers
Suing to Jou1
Association
J_,a\11·crs for the Fount3in Valley Police
Officers Association \1-ill go 10 court
Nov. 2i in a bid to en~ure 1nembcrshl11
in rhc 40-officer group for h\·o cap1ains
and a lieutenant
Orange County Su\)l.'rior Court .Jurli(~'
illark \V. Soden \1·i!J pc a'1kcd .1t the
hearing to rule !hat. Capts. C . \\'.
Alichaclis and L.D. Ro\vland ;ind 1.t.
J . Jl. Beddo~· must be allo11·ed IQ Join
the organization.
The cily "·as nAmed H1' dcfl'ndan1
1\1onrlsiy in a lawsuit \lhieh ctlallenges
the city mtin 11p.er's n11ing that only Foun·
lain VRllcy polit.'C at lhc rank of scr~cilnt
and below can IX' n1cfi1)'1C'rs of t h c
or.ianliatlnn for negotiatin.11, pur~es.
The. .action not1.-s that the (' 11 )'
rt"COgnitcs the FVPOA JIS the police
office r!!' bargaining agen1. But the city
unfairly claS§ts all tiho re the rank or
scrgtant as nianagen1e111 pci:sonnel . the
sull slates.
I ·'
never been married. 1'1'e had plent.v
of offers. No\\' that rn1 settled I feel
like giving It a try."
On the age gap. she s:l!d ·· ~llchael
doesn't seem to think it 11ill ::iffect
our relationship."
\\'ilson said he did n't \l'ant to t;.ilk
about the difference in their ages.
"I don't think the gap in our a~1:s
is at _,.all in1portant . C'Specially when
you really like a person." he said .
,
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01ily Piiot St•ll Phoi. MOVED TO TEARS
Prisoner Russell's Wife
He reported "a little opposition" fronl
illiss 1-'itlcr's legal and financial advisers.
··They probab'y thought r \Vas after
her money," he said. "I 1nust soy ii
l'rossed n1y n11nd one!' in a \l'h:lc. but
that isn'l \l'hy I an1 rnarrying her,"
He added thut :\1iss Fitlcr gave hi1n
the money lo buy her engagement ring.
"It \\'as onl v a small diamond. and
the ring 0111.v -cost about 50 po ll 'n d s
1 $1 \Sl." he said.
om!
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JUDGE ORDERS BAIL
Longtime Prisoner Russell
~~~~~~~~~~~~-~~~~
1.4 Perce11t Ju111p
Consunier Prices Soa1·
In Orctn ge, LA Counties
Hy The Associal!'d Press
Consumer prices climbed 1.4 percent
in Los Ang eles and Orange counties
in September. lhe U.S. Bureau of Labor
Stali!:tics reported today.
In flation has pushed prices up 10 per·
cent in the first nine months of this
year. They :ire 12.4 percent above the
level or September 1973.
Su't.anna Sadowsky. regional chicl of
the bureau's Los Angeles office, said
housing accounted for 1~ore than half
the over-all rise in Sept~mbcr. These
increased 2.4 percent to 13.6 percent
above a year earlier.
Most of the rise "·as accounted for
by mor1g<1ge interest rates. maintenance
and repairs.
Renters paid an nvcr;ige of l.3 percent
n1ore beh'>'cen July and Scprcniber.
Residenti31 telephone bills "'ere UJl
an average of 1.7 pPrcent. and household
furnish ings rose 2.i percent.
Pood prices increased LS percent and
\\'ere 12.2 percent n1orc than in Sep-
tember 1973. Leading the increase \Vas
a five percent bonst in such items as
eggs. 1nargarinc. salad oil, sugar ::ind
coffee .
~!cats. poultr~· ;ind fi sh 11·cnt u11 2.6
pe1Tent bul s!ill 1rerc i;_s percent bclO\\'
:'l Yl'ar e;i rtier. The price of fruit s and
ITgf'trihl('S was 2.3 percent lo1ver. d0\\'11
for the third st rai p-h! n1onth but 21
percent higher than 111 Septe1nber 197:1.
Trans[>Orta1ion costs increased 0.6 !X'r·
1.:ent and 1vcrc 3.7 percent higher than
.'l .11-'l'l r ago.
On the nal 10nal Ji;•\'t'l. risi11A pri<'f'S
~I Ul'CCl' 1'radcd .
For Bohbv Bond~
NE\\' YOHi'\ 1,\l'1 -Th1.• :\c\\ York
·vankcc~ announcl'cl 1uc::1y th<.f trade of
outfielder Bobby :\lurcer 10 1ht• ~.'ln
F'r:inc1sco Giants for outf1elclcr Dobby
Uontls
Roth prr 21. Tinc! hc.lh 11 1•ri:. t'<>nsitlcrccl
10 hove off season~ 1n J!)7~.
lkttlds ~u1d \\ 11 11(' ~la\'s 111'1! lhe 1u1lv pl:iyl'r~ in b11sehnll h11'liory I•• s1,·a l :lo
bases <ind hit 3tl ho111" ru ns in the
Sl'.llll(' S('aSOn
i\IUl'C('f tut 110 c:"<ff1'\'f honll'rS for
the Ytutkecs, l'illt on tl.e club's all-time
list.
for fc.od . clothing and mortgage rates
pushed the cost of living up another
i.2 percent in September. making the
last 12 monlhs the v.·orst Inflationary
surge in more than 25 years, the govern-
ment reported today.
Prices in St·ptember n:.itionally \\·ere
reported 12.1 percent higher than a year
earli('r. This was the \\'Orst l2-month
increase since 1947.
HO\Vl'l'er. !hl' purchasing power of the
average 11' or k er na tionall.v lncreased
slightly for th l' firsr limP in th r l' c
months. Real spcndabh• earnings -th::it
is \l·eekly pa~· adjusted tor inna1 ion
and taxes -rose one-tenth of a percent
in September bu1 ~·11s still at the !o"·est
level since Dccen1bcr 19i0
Pritc incrcaSt•s nat 1r.n:i!l.1 11rrt spread
across aln10st the p111:r• cconomv l:i~t
month. Food led lhl' "31', posting J!s
biggt!st rise sinre ~·('l)ruary.
The Ford adn11nistr:i 11on has prL'<fich:d
that consum,er prices "'ill eon1111uc in·
creasing at !he rate of about I percent
a n1onth through the "nd of !he year.
and !hat there 11·ould be no significant
casing of infla11or1 until so111c time next
year.
1Scc PRICES. Page A2l
Or~g~ J.
7
~~oast
Wcatl1c-r
i\1gbl and 111or"1ng l<h1· cloud~
bceo1n111g n1ostl.v sunny in tht'
afternoon l\t"llnl•sd;1y Sl tl.(htly
\1·arn11'r \11th tugh:. in 1he up~r
r.os :i1 rhe lii.'aChl's 10 lht n11d-iOs
u1land l,o"s tonight 5i·62 .
l:\S?Ot: 1'01! \ Y
The l'ud1•r.~flTrtr11·11 fJt Iii<' (11.
rt•r11//' .~U!IS /11~ tlf'jl(/l'lllJ('IJ/ t'J'•
111:1.i~ so111e 111nior nil s111i/1; u·/1rn
dt1//i1'f1 hr!1u1.~ 1Jff~l1ore ir1 1/ie
11eu1· f11t1o·r . S<'t! s1v1·i1 /lflf)e .\4.
E•m• ll~mbfCW 61 l ,M 6·~~ /l.1 (•' .... ,,1. AJ
fl" • t:I 61·1 c,m llJ
C·~ ~·d 111
OC"l ll 'IM•t•t •*-
111·-·'' PJ"ll .l.j •·1 -1~"'~"1 •n "l~,,,, /l.I
"V Otrtl"" A. HOrolCO~I I)
.,
l"l•Jm•t•I~" All /l.~~ Ll•ll!tn 61
Mt\" ti All
MufVll Furoo• ••
f "'"mot Nowl A• 0.~lllt (&viii\' AU
S•l•I• Pt<1t• •t
~Nth A!~·ll
llM'l M••-•" A.• t Telo1'lJ,lft l\1J
'""'~,.,, •u Wt•t~t• 4l
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1·!12_ DAILY PILOT'----"H'-'/F------'"'=' .. ::':.:·..:0.:.<lc. ... "-'-'-22",-'J-'7_<
Bright
'
Remains
Chairnwn
8\' JOHN Vo\l.TER1.A
• 0 1 IM 0111¥ '!IOI i!l!I
Allhouah charges C"ontu1uc to fly about
asserted conrlicl 01 uilt'rl'st on the 5outh
Coast Regional Zone Con r11ation Corn·
mission . tha puncl's 1nernbers r" n
t.hrough :1 day ·.~ bu51ncss as usual ~Ion·
cby.
And Chairma n Donald Bright. a Cl'ntrul
figure in the conflict allegatio.n1, mai~
taint>d his f\nn grip on the rhiunnanshtp
and offered no rommr11t on the issue.
Bright rooct<k'<i last \lt'ck that he
had gathered more lh,1n a dozen
representatives of major developers
aloog the coastal strip and !!O\lght-~na
tions and 111aillng lists in a fund raiser
for Democratic gubernatorial candidate
Edmund G. Bro\.\"n Jr.
rlut since his denial of 'any conflict
and his demands for an A t t o r n e Y
Cenerars probe. Bright htis re1nained
_mwn_ a®utJJN now-c<iQ.~rlcd n.·cgJIJon.
ll was lo have taken place ThurSday
near Cosla 1\lcsa.
tie had made a. tentath·e agrttment
to di scuss the issue to some degree
befo re. television nev.•s camC'ras during
!11onday's lunch 6rl'ak of the commission
meeting in Long Beach.
But before. the eommission adjourned.
he left the room and later appeared
once more lo quickly reconvene. the
session.
Television nev.·smcn had to settle for
the only member of the co1nmissioo
willing to be interviewed on the matter.
Orange County Supervisor R a I P h
Diedrich said that no movement has
come about on the oommission to strip
Bright of his chairmanship.
Dledrich. one <Jl several Orange Coun-
ty Democrats listed as official hosts of
the contro11erSial reception, said that he
had expected that the event "A-"OUld hove
lured Brown supporters from l h e
academic v.·orld.
"Dr. Bright's credibility is very strong
in the area of academia," said Diedrich.
Diedrich conceded that the entire fund-
raising incident probably cast a pall
on the integrity of Uie commissloo, bul
he emphasized that he believes Bright
is still capable of functioning as a good
ch.airman of the powerful commission.
"I h appen to know that the
chainnanship of the commission is not
for sale.'' he said.. tn the a r ena "'h ere th e two
gubernatorial candidates are squari~g
off, the debate continues about conflict
and the roastal commission. .
Soon after il "'as known that Bright
sought hinds for Brown . the candidate
who v;ould have benefilled denied any
knov.•\edgr of the projecl and i~ a
scathing statement demanded that Bright
resign. .
Then. during a debate this p ~ s l
,,·cekend in Stockton v,·it h llepubhcan
candidate llouston Flournoy , 8 r o w n
chargro that North Coast ltegio!'13l Com-
mission Chainnan John l\layf1eld \\'as
raising money for the ytepublican eff?rt
and getting it frorn timber . co_mpan1es
doing busin~s with the CQmm1ss1on.
Later. Brov.'T'I adinittcd that solid proof
·was lacking.
Flournoy then seized the of re n s iv e
~tonday at a rally in Auburn and hit
hard at Brov.'t'I.
"'this was a clumsy maneuver on
!he part of Bro,1·n to draw attention
away from the lu~h<.oo in Orange CoWl-
ty put on by Or. Bright." sald f"loum?Y· l~e described the "'N.'kend accusations
by Brov.11 as •·more of his flailing.
arm v.· a v i n g . delibe rate misrepresen-
talioos ...
7 Die in 'Cop ter
VI LLAMER~tOSA, t-.texico (AP) -A
helicopter belong ing to l\lex ico's govern-
ment oil complln)' crashed in southern
1\1exico l\Ionday, and all seven aboard
v.·ere killed. The victims ,,·ere employes
of Pemex, the governn1ent oil company.
The crash occurred on a flight bel\.\'t.>en
the Pemex City field and the recent big
new oi! find in Chiapas slate.
ORANGE COASl HIF
DAILY PILOT
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Robert N Weed
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Thomas Keevil
Thomas A. Murphine
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Char1es H. Loo~ Richard P. Nall
Terry Co'<'llle
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D1Jly PUol Siii! PIMll9
OPPOSES TRANSIT TAX
Asumblyman Burke
Burke Urges
'No' Vote
011 Tra,11sit
Assemblyman Roix'rt Burke (R-Hun·
linglon Beach) is urging a "no'' vote
on the Orange County mass transit ballot
measure in a report malled to 10tn
District constiluent.s. (Related storil!S,
Page A3)
Proposition A on the Nov. 5 ballot
would inettase the county sales tax
by one cent. Rtvenues would be used
by Orange County 'I'ransit District to
expand bus service. implement a dial-a·
ride program, build a rapid transit
network and otherwise '"improve public
transportation.'' :
Burke said he "recognizes the need
to diversify transportation," but he op--
poses Proposition A for five reasons.
First, he believes Orange County fac es
transportation prOOlems today because
"we put all our eggs in one basket"-the
freeway system.
Voting in a lf>.year plan for linancing
!he proposed mas.s transit system would
be "heading for the same trap," the
assemblyman says.
Second. Burke s3:ys the p~ mass
transportation proposal does not offer
the people assurance of "reliability."
Citing the recent strikes in Los Angeles
and San Francisco, tbe assemblyman
goes on to say, "rt would be folly .
to invest several billion dolla rs without
the a~an'oe. that it would not be
used as a means to gain unreasonable
demands by those employed to operate
the. system.''
In addition. Burke believes the poten-
tial demand for mass transit has not
been substantiated, nor the f i n a n c i a 1
feasibility proven.
11e also reminds voters of "·hat he
feels is an adverse report on Propos\lion
A by the CalTrans consultants.
Burke is up for reelection in the
i Oth Assembly District. llis opponent.
Democrat Dennis l\1angers, s u p p o r t s
passage of Proposition A.
From Page Al
PROGRESS ...
Those statistics show the county
recorded a net gain of 33,572 license·
holders in in 1973 -33,000 of "·horn
came from Los Angeles County.
The migration outward fron1 the coun·
Iv was absorbed prin1arily by other
States. Los Angeles County and the coun·
ti es of San Diego, San Bernardino and
Ri verside. The sar.te :treas contribut.ed
the greatesL nu1nbcr oi new countians
during 1973.
Other notable statistics contained in
the progress report include:
-The fact that La Palma is the mos~
cro11·ded city in the county v.•it' nearly
9.000 people per square mile, fo!lo\\'cd
closely by La Habra, Cypress. Santa Ana,
\\1est minster. Tustin and Garden Grove,
each "'ith more than 6,000 per squa re
mile.
-Irvine has the lo"·est density in
the county "'ilh only 657 people per
squa re mile. fol101\·~ by San J u a n
Capistrano v.·Hh 7&t.
-San Juan Cnpistraoo 1s the co1~t~•s
fastest growing city. showing an increase
of 38.9 percent of the population during
1973.
-In July of 1973. there "'ere 811.400
v.·on1cn and i65.700 men in the coun1y.
of \\'hich Mi.700 "'ere under 18 ycars
of age, 926,900 1\."ere belv.·cen 18 and
64 and 108.500 v.·ere over 65.
7 Appointed
To Animal
Care Panel
Seven persons were appointed Atonday
to ltuntington Beach's new An imal Care
and Control Commi ssion.
A new city ordinance, creating the
commission, was approved by the cliy
council last month.
The first tas)t expected to be turned
over ~ the commission is the creation
or a new animal control ordinance.
Animal co ntrol hns been a con·
troversial issue the past half year since
lhe council adopted stricte r cont r o 1
measures and a mandatory eat license.
Formation of this commission was
one compromise \li'orked out between
the eily and pet oymers.~ The city specified t the com·
mission inc I u de repre talives of
various pct organizations. as well as
breeders and Persons who don't ov.n
aninials.
Appointed A-1onday v;ere: Dr. A-1 a~
G r a eh-I. 1629 1-M er-c ier-Lane, a
veterinarian: Patricia Guiver, 8 4 2 2
J\.1uns\e r Drive, of the Animal Assistance
League.
Annelle Morrow, 10062 Spar Circle,
of · the California Coalition of Animal
Ov.ners; Bja'mc Ursin, 20412 Anchor Cir·
cle. who doesn 'I own a pet.
Bill Walke r. 410 Fifth SL, a pet ov.11er
,~·ho d~ 't belong to an organiiation:
Bill \Villiams. 7021 ErneSt. a stable
owner. and Robe.rt Baker, 17112 Erwin
Lane, a dog breeder and pet shop owner.
Tbe agency also will serve as an
appeal board on pet fines and oversee
animal control in the city.
From Page Al
RUSSELL ...
invalid's home in Leota , Okla. in a
$200 robbery.
J\.trs. Karen Russell and friends claim
they were all togelher at th~ Long
Beach amu sement center· that night but
Oklahoma authorities, citing Russell's
record as an ex-0>ncvict who served
four years fo r burglary in his youth,
issued a warrant for his arrest and
he was taken into custody in Orange
County during the summer of lhat year.
He was questioned, submitted to a
polygraph examination and subsequenlly
cleared of any connection with t h e
homicide J,000 miles away and Orange
County Superior Court. Judge William
t.1urray refused to allow his extradition
to Oklahoma.
His mistake came three weeks later
"'hen he went to visit his brother Robert
in suburban Bell Gardem, w h e r e
evidence indicales authorities were hav·
ing him tailed.
"We was just driving down Eastern
Avenue when we turned into a Taco
BelJ to get a Coke," Robert l\Jsse\1
recalled today in an emotional court-
room corridor interview. "They was
definitely following us. They told us they
wanted James Russell."
"He said that old "·arrant was no
good ," the younger brother co~tinued ,
"but they said that was beside the
point and he would have to go with
them."
Russell. a warehouseman after he
arrived in Orange County following his
Oklahoma prison release. has been held
for 744 days since. without the usual
recourses available to an imprisoned
but une-0nvicted suspect, under state and
federal law and the U.S. constitution.
His attorney, Roger Agajanian. of San-
ta Ana. was pleased but perplexed today
and said the partial victory ln the James
Ray Russell case has been a long time
comi ng.
"~1 y argun1ent has been all along:
that he v;•as illegally contained al this
tin1e, '' Agajani an de.cared as l\1 r s.
Russell hugged the hulki ng lawyer's arm
and unbashfully "'ept on his shoulder.
Fron• Page Al
PRICES ...
Consumer prices have already risen
9.7 percent nationally th.is year. In
1973, prices rose 8.8 percent, the worst
in any year since the end of World
\\rar 11.
The Labor Departn1ent said I a s t
month's l.2 percent increase, following
~ rise of 1.3 percent in August, pushed
the government 's con~umer price index
10 1:.1.9. That meant it cost $151.00
to buy a variety of goods and services
that cost $100 in the 1967 base period.
Caps11le Cou11cil Action
Ilcre: in capsule form arc the major actioos taken ~tonday night by the
Huntington Beach Clly Council.
1\fEA00\\1..ARK : Ap proved a $.1.2 million purchase agreement ror the 9S.
acre l\leado\.\·lark C'r01( Course.
TAX OVF.RRIO E: Unanimou5ly endorMd 1ht Hunti ngton Beach Union
JHgh &hool Distrtct·s 13.kenl t.:ix O\'erride "'hlch v.·ill help nnanc1 a new
high. school .
A~l f'llAL COf\i'TROL: App0lnltd seven persons to the new Anlm1l Care
and Control Commission.
CITY ltAl.L: t.>l~usM'<l whf:thtr to fin ish the fifth noor of city ball now
or cornp\ete it a port ion at a lime as needed .
REACH: Agrct'd to keep asking ror 11tate help ln financing the clty'1 tosl
of beach operations.
t, "
Harbor View Teacher 011e
Of Four Ho11or Finalists
llarbour View School teacher Layne
Ncug,art is one of four finalists · the
Oranse County Department of Education
has nominated for 1974 Ca Ii for n i a
Teacher of the Year.
Trustees of the Ocean View School
District have approved a commendation
of Neug art to · be_ fonvarded witlr his
nomination to state Superintendent o{
Education Wilson Riles.
Neugart's n0tnination for the honors
began with Harbour View principal Bill
Lescher. Neugarl's contribution to local
education, the principal said, ls exten·
sive.
Neugart founded the Gold Key Club,
an incentive program for academically
oriented student s. At one time or
another, Lescher said, Neugart h a s
coached all sports at Harbour View.
The teacher also originated the seventh
and eighth grade Oights to Sacramento
to witness state government in action.
The social science fairs which are
now districtwide were Neugart's idea.,
too, and he recently completed a
handbook on major sports for the seventh
and eighth gr3des in the Ocean Vie.w
School District.
"Linda Baker, a Star View Schoo 1
1eacher, was another Ocean View
nominee at the county lev el.
!5()lttlil<t1itl llit
By Mil.d Quake
INGLEWOOD (UPI) -A mild
earthquake jolted a small part of
Sou them California today, awaken·
ing many residents and prompting
telephone calls to police but ap-
parently causing no damage.
The seismological laboratory at
Caltech in Pasadena said the tre-
mor at 5:13 a.m. had a prcliminarY
intensity of 2.8 on the open end
Richter scale.
A laboratory spokesman said the
quake appeared to be centered in
the Inglev.·ood area. It was also
· felt in Santa ~lonica.
NOMINATED FOR AWARD
Oce1n View's Neugart
lluntington Elks
Set Veterans' Feed
All veterans and their v.·ives are invited
to a diMer tonight sponsored by the
Huntington Beach Elks Lodge.
Tbe buffet di.me-a-dip diMer will be
from 6 to 7:30 p.m., with free beverages.
Door pr il.CS will be given.
Tdhesruen l\'l;tke War
PORT MORESBY, New Guinea (UPI)
-Hundreds of warring tribesmen arm-
ed with bows and arro\.\'S, spears and
axes fought a weeklond battle for dis-
puted lands in the Chlmbu Valley of thb
South Pacific Island, police said today.
Police said the fighting ended but
could break out again.
NOW, HEAR THIS
Cra,te Derby
E1ilists 70
Young Racers
Nearly 70 young racers, eight through
15 years old, entered the third aMual
Orange Crate , Derby sponsored by the
Fountain Valley Jaycees Saturd ay.
Entries were divided into orange crate
and soap box classes and also diVided
into age groups. The three lop wi1111en
in each group received trophies.
Winners in the orange crate classes
were : Nine and lG-year~lds. first, Chris
Harvey of ·sunland ; second, Brett Nat·
tress of Huntington Beach; third , Renee
GuJlo of Fountain Valley.
Eleven and 12--year~lds, first, Scott
Jessup of Westminster; second. Doug
Moonier of La Mirada ; third, M I k e
Pickovich of Westminster.
Thirteen through 1~year-old!, f I rs t ,
Tim Pocock. of Costa Mesa; second .
Don Obert of Huntington Beach ; third
Joyce" Harvey of Sunland.
Winners of the soap box elass, for
eight through IS year olds, v.·c.re first .
Shelly Brower of Newberry Park: se-
cond, Diana Brower of Fullerton; third,
George Rosa of San Dimas.
J uni()r League
~
[,ectures Open
1'he Nc"1>0rt Jtarbor Ju n I o r
League·s "Community • 7 4 , '' a
special five-week series or lectures
open lo the public as well as
league members, begins tonight at
UC lrvlne.
The initial program in the series
deals \vith the history of Orange
Coµnty. It starts at 7:30 p.m. ln
UCI's Science Lecture H a 11 .
Admission is free.
The series, designed to brtng
Orange Countians up to date on
issues affecting them, is 'Scheduled
for five succ~sive Tuesdays at
UCL The. Oct . 29 program will
deal with consunter affairs.
The series is sponsored by the
Junior League as a public service.
According to the President's Council on
Environmental Quality, it is becoming increasingly
difficult for anyone to escape noise.
•
40,000,000 Americans ri sk hearing impairment
and other physical and mental effects. 44 ,000 .000
other Americans have the utility of their dwellings
adverse ly affected by noise from aircraft or traffic.
21 ,000,000 Americans are affected by
construction-related noise.
Now what does this have to do with carpet?
Carpeting will drastically improve acoustics in any
·room by quieting your home environment, making
radios, television, and the family sound better.
Remember. at Aldens. even our LOUD carpeting
is quieter.
Al,DEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia AYe.
COSTA MESA
646-4838
HOUU: M ... -Tllon.. 9 to 5:30-FRI. 9to9-SAT" 9:301o 5
•
ij
I
·l
!
11
I
r
H OAl LY PILOT. A.3
• County· RTD Cost: Twice as Much
* * -tr First Link
In Transit
'By 1985'
The fitst major Unk of a proposed <t
mass rapid transit corridor system !or
Orange County could be completed by
1985 if voters approve a ooe<ent sales
tax increase Nov. !>.
Martin Bouman, chief or the Orange
County Transit District consulting team,
Monday outlined refinements . to the
district's master plan s bow Ing con-
struction schedules and some technology.
But. he said, all of the $4.5 billion
system depends on veter approval of
tile sales tax measure, which~could~raise
almost half of the total cost over the
next 15 years.
Bouman said the district would begin
by steadily increasing its fixed route
and Dial-a-Ride bus fleets to a total
of l,SOO by 1983 -a full, saturation
level or buses to feed into the corridor
system.
Work on the 116-mile network of mass
transit corridors -half rapid rail tines
and half express busways -could begin
in 1983, Bouman said.
The first rapid rail link to be built
WOllld start at a proposed d i s t r i c t
maintenance yard somewhere in the
Irvine El Toro area.
It would be extended into ~nta Ana,
run a few miles under FoUrth Street
and link up to the old Pacific-Electric
line running to Loe: Angeles.
During the same 1983-35 period. work
would commence on the first IO-mile
ann of the central line -a link running
through the Central county, ending in
the Orange area.
Bouman said a rapid rail line down
Beach BouJevard would be next · in line
for completion in 1987.
'[he la~ rapid rail Ji~. running from
the El Toro terminal southward along
the Santa Ana Freeway to San Clemente,
would be completed by 1989.
Meanwhile, work will have begun on
the but~n freeway system in the county.
Bouman said the first priority has
been given to a high-ridership I in e
starting at the end of the as-yet unbuilt
Corona del A1ar Freeway and linking
up with the Orange Freeway into Los
AnReles County. That will be built in
198.1.
By 1985, the busway along t h e
Riverside-Artesia Freeway will be com-
plett.
Two other potential rail Cir busway
lines have not been scheduled for the
first surge of construction. ' ,
One or these runs from the Orange
Freeway bus:way down Imperial Highway
to the county line. The other runs along
the San Diego Freeway from the Beach
Boulevard line to the county line.
Bouman said the basic corridor system
plus the extensive feeder bus system
can probably relieve about eight percent
of the estimated IO million daily person-
trips tha t \\ill be generated in 1990.
Bouman said the 750,000 daily ridership
is a purposely low estimate and the
system he has planned could carry up
to 23 percent or all person-trip s
generated.
"The figure is low because it is an
average for the whole county," he said.
"Some Unes will have a Jot and others
a few riders.
"The future is not as clear as we
could hope for as regards auto use
disincentives such as higher gas taxes.
pollution problems and vehicle costs,"
he said.
"H the county grows faster than \\'e
predict (2.5 million by 1990) so much
the better for this system."
Margaret Mead
Tells of Future
A-plant Danger
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Anthropolo-
gist Margaret Mead says nuclear power
plants using the new breeder reactors'
scheduled to begin operation in the late
1980s will be att0mpanted by grave ri sks
to the public.
"These are risks so extraordinary that
every citizen in the nation should have
a voice in deciding whether this is
the road to energy independence we
-or anyone-should talle," she said.
Writing in the November issue of Red-
book magazine, Mead indicated her main
concern with the next generation reac-
tors still in the development stage is
their production of large amounts of
plutoniwn, a highly poisonous material
used in atorhic \\'eapons.
"What we have in prospoct, then,
if the propoeed program ever reaches
the commercial stage, Is transport. over
public highways Md eventual permanenl
sl.orage not or pounds but of tons of
lethal plutonium that must be guarded
every inMant -for thousands of cen·
turies to oome ," she said.
Mead said there is the ris k t h a t
transported plulonlum might be seized
by hijackers and u5td as a ·'threat.
Another dan~er. she said. 13 th at
plutonium might be slolen for t h e
purpose of making an atomic bomb.
a proces.o; scienllsls sa.y can be cnrried
out in n basement workshop.
Ttwre also is the risk. she said, lhal
a rractor accident co uld release large
a1nour1ts of radioactive substances Into
the enviroruncnt. -· -
I
So11ae Goblita
"A1ack,'' a 14-month-old English bulldog is all ready for Halloween,
even though he do~sn't really need a mask to look scary. His owner,
Ed Johnson of Salinas, leave s the 150-pound dog in his car while
shopping. Needless to say, Johnson never bothers to lock his auto.
IGng's Slaye1· Ray Opens
New Attempt for Freedom
MEMPHIS, Tenn. {AP) -As James
Earl Ray looked on without emotion,
his. attomey opened the battle today
to win Ray's freedom with a declaration
that Ray was hounded and badgered
into pleading guilty to slaying Dr. A1artin
Luther King Jr.
Bernard Fensterwald of \Vashington,
D.C. told a federal court hearing that
Ray and one of his fonner attorneys,
Percy Foreman of Houston, Tex., locked
in a "fierce struggle" over whether
Ray should plead guilty to the assassina-
tion.
Finally, Fensterwald said, Ray 's
resistance to the plea yielded and two
days later, on ' March 10. 19611, he ad·
mltted to firing the rifle that killed
King on April 4, 1968.
Fensterwald's statement opened an
evidenliary hearing before U.S. District
Court Judge Robert M. McRae Jr. on
whether Ray is entitled to withdraw
the plea and stand trial for murdering
King.
Ray, wearing a dark suit and White
shirt buttoned to the top but with no
tie, was escorted to the courtroom by
two U.S. marshals who sat on 'eilher
side of him behind Ray's trio of at-
torneys. About 20 spectators. pl us a
large contingent of newsmen, were on
hand.
Ray, 46, gained the right to the hearing
this summer when the U.S. Supreme
Court declined to interfere with a U.S.
BIDS FOR FREEDOM
James Earl Ray
6lh Circuit Court of Appeals ruling that
his claims of a coerced guilty plea
required judicial review.
El Toro Girl, 13, Dies
After Falling at .School
DIES AFTER FALL
C•rrle Lee Cottingham
'llappy' Recovering
, NE\\r YORK {UPI) -h1argaretti
"Happy " Rockefeller , n:<:overing from
breast cancer surgery, 5pent another
contertoble night a t Sloan-Kettering
l\1emorinl Hospital, her p hy sic 13 n s
rcport('d today. A late morn ing medical
bulletin said the 48-year.old wife of vice
11 res i d e n I ·d es I gn a I e Nel!IOn A.
Rockefeller "Is e xp e r i c n c I n g only
mlnl.m11m dlscon1fort."
,\ ..
By JAN \\"ORTH
Of l1'le Dilly PllOI Sltff
Llke the other se\'€nth graders at
Los Alisos intermediate School in El
Toro, Carrie Lee Cottingham was just
beginnin g to get used to the big new
·school.
1.1onday she fell on a sidewalk at the
school. Less than an hour later. she
died at Saddleback Co1nmunity Hospital
-and offi cia ls still don 't know exactly
\\'hy.
She ls the daughter of Richard and
Phy\lis Cottingham of 25212 Arcadian
Ave., th the Aegean Hills section of
Mission Viejo. Carrie was less than
a month shy of her 13th birthday.
She v.·as under medication for a thyroid
disorder. but her parents say it did
not limit her activities.
Spokesmen for the Orange County
Coroner's. office said today the cause
of death . is still under investigalion.
A deputy roron er said il is believed
death v.1as due to natural causes, not
to a head injury sustained in the fall .
The accident occurred at about 7:40
a.m. Monday, 10 minutes before 9Choo\
started. School officials said the girl
npparently wa!I running acro!Ss a plnnter
"'hen she tripped nnd fell.
Finding hc:r unconscious. school staff
members applied mouth -to. mouth
resuscitation Wllil paran,edics took over.
The girl's mother M:hed lo the sc<!ne
and Vi'ent to the hospital with b e r
daughter. But -C11 rrie apparently never
rtgained coosciouSOQSS ..
Rosary ror Ql.rrle \Vilt be recited ::it
7:30 p.m. Wednesday at Sad d I c b n c k
Chapel, 220 E. i\1ain, 1\t$tln.
1~·uncral rna ss "'ill be at 10 a.m. Thurs-
day at SI. Kilia n's Catholic Church Jn
,\li~sion Viejo.
Besides her parents , Carrie is survived
hy t1\'0 brothers: \Vade. 15, and Robert ,
18.
• ' f
Lobby Files Inflated Prices
To Oust Spark Increase
Carpenter
By DOUGLAS FRITZSCHE
01 1119 D1Uy ,Ha l l"H
The En vironmental Coalition of Orange
County and lhe People's Lobby have
asked State Sen. Denn i s carpenter's
removal from offi ce in a lawsuit riled
in Orange County Superior Court today.
.The suit, naming Carpenter and five
wlknown perSons, alleges that the
senator did not report funds received
from a group of his political backers
as personal income.
Carpenter, the suit claims, did not
comply with the Afoscone Governmental
Conflict of Interest and Governmental
Disclosure Act by failing to report the
income.
Filed t\\'O weeks before the general
election in which Ca rpent er o p po s e s
1Democrat Frank Barb a r o, Carpenter
tenned the action "partisan politics''
on the part of the groups involved and
-predicted that it would neyer be tried.
"What is their interest as groups that
are purportedly environmental pro-
)Xlneills in concerning themselves with
a· partisan election?" Carpenter respond-
ed.
The alleged failure to make financial
disclosures, Carpenter said. was picked
up from his opponent 's campaign
statements. •
The suit he said, is likely to be
dropped after the electi on.
Barbaro said he did supply the groups
with information on which the suit was
based but <lenied he prompted the action.
Dale Secord, of the environmental
coalition, also denied direct ties with
the Barbaro campaign.
The second group in the complaint.
the People's Lobby, was the author and
proponent of Proposition 9 on the June
ballot, which was approved by voters
and will go into effect in January.
The proposition replaces the l\.1oscone
conflict of interest law and strengthens
financial disclosure requirements.
The suit, filed at 9:45 a.m., asks
Carpenter's removal from office, that
Carpenter be fined the maximum the
law allows-three limes the unreported
income-and pay all attorney a.'ld court
costs.
Carpenter, however, malntair.ed that
he has more than complied with the
Mosco ne aCt.
In a press release distributed recently,
Carpenter described his financial ar-
rangements in more detail than required,
he said.
The suit charges that Carpenter did
oot report income from bis GCllden Slate
Improvement Committee backers. No
specific amount \1:as mentioned.
Carpenter, h<lwever, said, "There is
nothing to be ashamed of or illegal
here. r am so proud of the way our
finances are bandied that I made it
the subject of a feature release."
\Vhen he first leveled the charges
of improper income reporting, Barbaro
said he got the information largely from
the Carpenter news-release.
Carpenter said that Barbaro and the
groups filing the suit are "using the
J courts to get campaign coverage.
"I want to know if they are going
to sue Don Bright and Jerry Brown
too."
By '!,''tt.':1~~Y ~~~l~1~:8£R .
It will cost at least $4.52 billion
Iv.ice the original estin1ate -to build
and run the mass rapid transit systern
en\isioned by Orange County Transit
officials.
That figure \\'as unveiled Alondav at
an OC'TD direclors nlcetin g as ·part
to the district's master plan.
,;\tartin Bouman, a top official of Jhc
ronst.Vting team of Alan 1\1. Voo rhecs
VTN Associates. said the lat est cost
figures more realistically reflQCt 1 he
changing economy.
"Whi!n v.·e v.·ere "·orki'ng on phase
ooe of this repo rt last year, \1·e were
using uninflated 1973 dollars on a com·
parison basis,"-Bouman-said:-The fi gure
used until Monday "·as bctv.·een $2 billiQn
and $2.5 billion between now and 1990.
'The figure you have before you 1norC'
realistically shows the cost based on
1974 dollars innated. at a rate of 8.5
percent per year for th~ next 15 years,"
he added.
District General Manager G.J. "Pelc"
Fielding explained after the me<"ting
that no infiation fi gures were used in·
itially because the n1oncy figure \\'as
only 1neant to serve ·as a basis for
con1parison.
''\\o'c had several-possible plans and
each had a money estimate attached
in tminflated 1973 dollars for ron1·
parison," he said . "Now that v.·e've refin·
ed it down to a single plan, v.·c have
also revised our cost figures."
Acrording to Bouman, the sa::1e in-
flationary factors v.·erc applied to the
re\·enues the district is hoping to collect
by 1990.
Assuming voters approve a one-cent
sales tax increase for transit on Nov.
5, the dist rict can c:x pect lo r a i s e
upwards or $1.8 bil lion from that sourci::
alone over the next 15 years.
Bouman said the district is rounting
on getting ltalf of its $2'3 billion -in
capital cost in the form of federal
grants,
"\Ile could get a maximum of 80
percent but we felt we had to be con·
servative in our eslimate because of
the competition that is corning· up for
·those funds," Bouman told directors.
Bouman and F'ielding scoffed a I
newspaper reports that the d i s t r i c t
should be counting on only about 30
percent federal help.
Bouman also gave the first indication
that the district may have to double
its fares to 50 cents per ride once
1hc first rapid rail line socs into servi<.'t
in 19&5. He said the district would ex-
1x·rience a nC't 70 percent gain i n
r<'rcnu<'s from that source.
The district v.·ould also continue 10
C'fl!lect propt>rty \:ix. money based oo
its rate of 4.5 cents per SI OO of ass'essed
value.
Altogether, Bouman said. the district
can collect $-1.74 billion ove r the next
15 years, leaving a b~1lance of $2 19
niill ion for l'Ontingencies -assuming
passage of the Nov. 5 proposition.
If \'Oters fail lo approve the tax hike.
Bouman said the entire plan as it· now
stands would he either destroy~ or.
at best. pushed. back many years.
In its-place, the . county would-g•C'M-t--
a slo\V but steady increase in bus service
and no rapid rail lines in the immediate
future.
If a si milar measure in l.-05 Angeles
fails to pass "'hilc \'Oters here go for
lhe tax, Fielding said nlore einphasis
\1·il\ be placed on an express bus on
freeway syste m initially, leaving t~
inter·county rail lines until late r.
Bouma n· urged the board to remain
fl exible in its planning.
"The board should bra prepared to
move faster or slo"·er depending upon
how things work out." he said. "You
have a good plan that has been studied
in great detail."
Board members spoke in tum, each
voicing solidarity behind the plan and
scoffing at agencies such as Southen1
California Association or Governments
that have criticized OCI'D plaMing.
"This board is unique in that they
have come up with a pl8n like this
in less than lhree years," said Director
Al flollinden. ';SCAG is frightened to
death that something t'OU!d be done
this fast . They may soon be out of
·a job in planning.''
Director Richard Lynn of Newport
Beach favored the plan bat questioned
the figure Of 50 percent funding of
capital coots by the federal gO\'emment.
Bouman said the figure is an educated
guess and was kept conservative
;'~ause we don 't want to count on
being there "'ith our hand out expecting
to get all we ask for."
In tenns or on-going costs. Bouman
said the most "'iii be spent between
1985 and 1990, when more than $700
million will be expended on parts of
the system. During the same period.
InQre than $1 billion in revenues could be collected , he said . .i.·
Dean Claims Haldeman
Tried to Sl1ut Him Up
\VASHINGTON (UP!) -John W. Dean
Ill testified today that H.R. Haldeman
tried to stop him from going to federal
prosecutors in the waning days of the
Watergate cover-up by saying th.at
"once the toothoaste is out of the tube,
it's going to be very hard to get it
back in."
Dean, fonnerly President Ni x o n ' s
counsel and now the Watergate pro-
secution's star witness, testified du ring
his fifth day on th e stand about e\lents
in the White House in late March and
April. 1973, v.·hen the cover-up began
to unra vel.
•
. ' .. ,.
ctrief trial prosecutor James F. Neal
completed direct questioning of Dean
today, opening the way for Haldeman's
lawyer, Jolm J. Wilson, to cross-examine
this afternoon.
Haldeman. Nixon's fonner chief of
staff, and four fonner Nixon associates
are on trial in the cover-up.
William S. Frates, lawyer for former
White House aide John D. Ehr!ichman,
told U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica
that Dean's credibility ·'is the crucial
lhing in this case. as far as' my client
is C(lncerned.''
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\
CITY OF ORANGE
41 f SOUTH f\~AIN ST
{Just Nor1t'I ol Fas.h10n Sa )
(714} &3g..414Z:
'
•
A4 DAILY PILOT TueSday, October 22, 197•
Offshore Oil Spills 'EXpected' 49Killed
In African
It's Politics
As Usual ...
RICKVTICKV POUTIX: You may
have noted tn the news that a couple of
environmentalist organizations have
announced plans to lay a la"A'suit on
SI.ate Senator Dennis-Carpenter, the
Republican from Ne\11port Beach.
The gist of this legal maneuvering
is thal the En'W nmental Coalition or
Orange Co~nty and th"e so-call erl
People's Lobby al ege that Carpenter
didn'l report corr cll y on how he used
some of his mon . Carpenter vows
he did report COTTCl'lly.
So there you have it. A difference of
opinion.
Now. you normally might :-,e
suspi cious or the motives or the
Coalition e nvironmentalists and the
Lobb y's p eo ple because th e
threatened lawsuit con1es so close to
election time.
YOUR SUSPICIONS might be fur-
ttier enha nced by the ract that Car-
penter's oppone nt. f'rank Barbaro,
has lev.eled the very same a llegation
against the arorcmcntioned incum-
bent Carpenter .
Thus you might tend to believe that
this lawsuit is a politically IJlOtivated
one; calculated to grab some ink in
the regional press and discredit the
lneum bent.
You re ally shouldn 't have these
suspicions. s in ce ,the Coalition's en-
vironmentalists arc honorable. the
Lobby's people arc honorable a nd l\·Ir.
Barbaro is honorable.
.l'fhcy arc all honor able people. They
j ust happen to have lousy legal
t\ming
TllEV llAVf; COi\IE on with a
lawsuit just befo re an election and
long-time political obser ve rs know
damn y,·ell that most lawsuits fil ed
JUSl before e'!ection aren't worth the
paper they were typed on.
It's an old, old political ploy. 'i'our
candidate is running behind. Your
time is running out. So you think up all
the vicious. m a licious . spiteful and
outrageous char ges you can against
your opponent
Then you y,•rite al l these doy,·n in a
htws uit and have it filed in court. Af-
ter advance press conferences. of
course.
WASlflNGTON' (AP) -The Interior Department says it cannot
spell out the full Impact of oil spills that it predicts wlll occur when oil
companies dc\'!lop the 10 mfilion orrshor~ acres the department wants to
IC'ase.
But Interior Undersecretary JoM C. Whitaker says t.hedepartmen·
t 's draft environmental impact statement is only doine its job in poinllng_
out unanswered quest ions. .
Tiit: DF.PARTl\1F.NT SAID IT could not yet supply individual Im·
pact statt:ments for specific coastal areas orf which drflllng could occur.
1'hese '''ould have t o a"·a it separate envi ronmental Im pact studies still to
bl· prepared ror the areas.
The deportment issued a 1,300-page study fl1onday admitting its
propos[.!I '''OU Id lead . inevitably, to major and minor oil s pills.
Hut the study team could not oissess the full impact of such spills, or
the othe r cnvironn1ental and social impacts expected from s uch m assive
011 leasing
Since 1954 , a department spokesman said. t he federal government
has leased some 12 million offshore acres.
The sale of another 10 million acres in 1975 as ordered by former
President Richard l't1. Nixon would a lmost double the leased acreage in a
single year.
Offering a tc ntali\'C schedule fo r 197:5, the impact statement sug-
gested some 3 million acres in the Gulr of' fl1exico off South Texas might
'Pat. There 's someone
at the door!·
Judge Blocking
Nixon Attempt
To Get Tapes
\VASl llNGTON !AP) A federal
judge has :1t least tempora rily
blocked the \Vhite !louse from ~car
rying out an agreement to gi,·c former
President Ri t'ha rd f\1. Nixon custody of his \Vhite House pa1:iers a nd tapes.
At the sam e ti .Tic U.S. District
Judge Charles n. llichP y indicated hf'
y,•ill tackle lht! c cnturi c~-old question
of just \\'ho oy,•ns presidential papt"rs
-the Preside nt or the government .
MAGDALENA DE KINO, A1exico
!UP I ) -If l'tl c xicans vo ted
Hepubli can . President 1' .. o rd 's
political worries would be over.
Venturing souttl of the border A1on-
day for a five-hour exercise in "taco
diplomacyr· li'ord recl'!i ved a
welcome that verged o n pa n-
de monium from the residents of two
northern fl1exican towns.
It contrasted sharply with the luke-
warm reception that has dogged Ford
NEWS ANALYSIS
in recent weeks as he criss-crossed
the country drumming up \'Oles for
embattled Republican candidates in
the Nov. 5 e lection.
IN LINCOLN, NEB., and Louisvil-
le. Ky .. last wcek-,-the croy,·ds stayed
a\\'UY in droves.
In Noga les a nd 1t1agdalena De Kino.
hO\\'e\'er. t he whole towns turned out
v.'ilh a reck less enthusiasm tha t
clearly e nclla nted the Ya nkee vis itor.
Youn,e f\Iex ica n g irl s waved
American flags under a brilliant
desert sun a nd th~ew flO'A'Cr petals in
Ford's path. The square face of the
man from G r a nd Rapids. 1t1ich ..
stared from thousands of posters hung
across the narroy,· streets.
In a moment of glee. f ord s trode
do"'" a cobblestone street in shirt-
slee ves. \\':iving a pink carnation and
grinning from car to ear as a sea of
Latin faces strained to get close.
be leased first, followed by 2or·3 million lfCres In the central Gulf, 1.5 mil·
lion acres orf southem Callromi,.a, and 2.5 million acrrs-tn Ala5k;J'a Coote
Inlet.
TllAT ALREADY MAKES t OR 10 million acres, all in ureas where
llOme petroltum activity a lready has taken place.
But the propoiial also calls for a n undetermined o:imount or leasing
in two "rrontler" areas -the Gulf of Alaska and the Mld~e AUanttc
coast -which could be sub6tltuted for some or the other offerings.
The statement said the department m ight have toorrer up to 20 mil-
lion acres, In order to sell leases on 10 million. ,
The resulting exploration ar'id development might1 send a n ad·
ditional 500 to 1,000 drilling platforms offshore, served by thousands or
n1iles of pipelines, onshore ter minals and pos sibly refineries.
petrochemical plunls and industrial complexes.
"It I!! our conclusion based on past performance that'sooner or late,.
a ma1or spill will occur wherever there is signlflcant development or ofr.
sho re exploration and production in potential areas,'' the· tatementsaid. . '
''WE ARE CERT A.IN THAT thou5ands of minor 1pilJ5 will occur.·•
'l"he statement notea a l'ew 01· the obvious impacts tnal could result,
such as the death of oil-soaked sea bir& and the temporary analysis.
"Sure there are unanswered questions in a programmatie
statement a nd that's the purpose of it -to Oush out those unanswered
questions,'' Whitaker said in an interview Monday.
/
WHEN IN MEXICO •..
Ford Dons Sombtero
ol the frontier a nd then 1n the United
States, but a wind-up ney,·s conference
al the s mall Arizona resort of Tubae
showed that little of substance was ac-
complis hed in the talks. / The public reception y,•as a di(ferent
storv. Schools y,•ere let out a nd
businesses closed in the ty,•o Sonora
towns. insuring a maximum citizen
turnout along the parade route .
Ford and Echeverria took advan-
tage of the crowds, walking for more
than a mile, at limes virtually inun-
rhtt.r.d bv the socrtators.
CHARLESTON , W.Va. IAP) -A
Ka nawha County school was bombed
early this morning, less than a da'f af·
ter the White House said it was
s eeking a ''constructive com-
promise" to preve nt more violence in
the county's school book protest.
A stick o r dynamite y,•as thrown
through a window a l fl1idway Elemen·
tary on Campbells Creek. southeastol
Cha rleston, police said. Damage was
"very light," confined mostly to fur-
niture and windows in one classroom.
and c lasses were to be held as usual
today, a spokesm an for the sheriff's
department sald.
The same SChool was one of two
damaged by bombings earlier this
month. A fire bomb lhroy,•n through a
\vindow at fl1idway caused minor
damage Oct. 9 and an explosive was
placed against the door of West
Branch Elementary in the Cabin
Creek area.
All of the bom bing attacks occurred
during the night a nd early morning
before the schools were occupied.
The re was some li ght picketing
early tod ay a t county school bu~
garages. deputies said.
fll onday, a group of the ministers
and parents carried their protest over
school t extbook selection to Washin g-
ton and the Wh.lte House. Roger
Sem erad, s pecial assist a nt to
Preside nt Ford for education a.nd
labor, said he told them the Wh ite
House would do "whate,·er we can to
help forestall additional violence in
Charleston.··
Race Clash
LOU RENCO MARQUES, Moza m-
bique (AP) -At least49 person8 were
reported kil led ~1onday In racial
violence rollowlng a closh between
demobilized Portuguese troops and
black soldiers of the new ,::overnment.
Authorities at the central hospital
confirmed the de<tth toll Tuesday and
put the number of injured at about
160.
The dead ineluded 33 whites, IS
A(ricl\Qj and one othe r iierson wtlose
(..__IN_SH_O_R_T~J
rac.e cou.ld not be determined, accor·
ding to hospital officials. Additional
casualties were ex pecte d to be
brou~ht to the hosoital later.
Casi rt• 'fnlk
NE\V YORK CUl)l l -Cuban
Premier Fidel Castro says be ""'ould
be willing to begin talks on resuming
U.S.-Cuban diplomatic relations i(the
United States first i grees to lift the
economic cmbari?:o:
In an interview taped with CBS
teJe,·is ion to be broadcast toni ght
lOp.m . IPOT J, Castro decla red :
"I y,•ould say that number one is the
lifting of the econom ic blockade.
When the et;onom ic bloc)l:ad~ is en-
ded, .,..,e shall be in a condition to
speak unde r conditions of equality:
the United Slates and ourselves.''
Bomb Th real
PORTLAND" -Ore. CUPI) -The
Bonneville Pov.·er Administration has
asked Oregon state police to ride
aboard BPA helicopters keeping sur-
veillance over an area threatened
with more tra nsmission tower born·
bings in an extortion plot.
An extortionist signing his naffle J.
Hawker has claimed rcsponsibiliLy
for 11 damaged or downed towers
since Oct. 4 and has threatened to
knock out · electrical-power-to-Por•
tland unless the Sl million is paid by
the federal agency.
Reagarr R111111i11g?
WASHINGTON !UPI> -California
Gov. Ronald Reagan says he might
run as a third party presidential can-
didate in 1976 if t he ·two major parties
fail to represent ·'the will of the
American people."
Reagan also said President Ford
could be c hallenged ror the 1976'
Republican presidential nomination
"if things have g rown worse instead
of better" for his ad10inistration. SinCI' all the \'icious. mali cious,
nef:irious and oulragenu!'> charges in
your laws uit are nO\\' part or an of-
nclal court record, there is a certain
lmmunity gainrd for quoting these
outrages out in public -without get-
ting slapped yourse lr 'vith a libel or
slande r suit.
Richey said that although he ,,·as
orderinl? the \\lhite !louse to hold onto
the tapes and doc uments of Nixon's
presidency, the for1nf'r president can
have access to them "'for lhc sole pur-
pose of preparing to testify in tht•
\Va tergatc criminal trial.''
"If' ()~I.\' TllEY could register 1---------.,.---------=---------------------------
Grand Opening, Phase II.
so AF'rER VOU'VF: riled this
h1\\'sui1 . \\'hich m ;1\' be made up of al -
lt·gation s as phony ·as a SJ bill, you C'a n
go around quotin~ the charges jus t
like they v.·cre facts.
It doesn ·1 rt•allv cosl too much to fil e
one of these r'olitically-molivalcd
hn\'suits . \'ou have to pay a lawyt r to ,
''-rite it up and some i;ecretarial fees
and court filing charges.
Later whe n 1L ~els lo the expensive
p:irt 11bout l?Oin g to court. you can just
quietly drop the \\'hole thing.
It 's gett1nf? close to election time
no"' <ind there arc ;1 number of can-
(hdates y,·ho fear they are running
beh ind. So you n1:i y see Jots or these
l:t\\SUit in the days just :.ihcad.
Tfl() BAD TllAT the t;nv1ronmen-
tal Coali t ion and Pcoplc"s Lobby got
all mixed uo rind fi lecl their la\11suit
right at this tlnlt' or yc>ar
·rht• 1irllin g rnakcs it look like they
art' in i(';iguc \vith !\Ir , Barbaro in a
pohlH':JI lay,·suil. And you kno\v they
wouldn't do:-. thing like that..
F11r I ht•V ;1 l"l' ;J 11 honor;1blc ITICn.
If Nixon 's health prohibits him from
coming to Washington lo stud y the
tapes ;.i nd document s. Richey snid in
l'tfonday's order. enpics may be made
and sent lo him in California .
Nixon's la \\'~ers have as ked that al l
of the materials b<' sl'nl 1o a federal
repository at Laguna !'\'iguel unclcl'
Nixon's custOd y as ca11£·d for in an
agreement r e vea led hy Preside nt
Ford the same day he announced ht•
\Vas pardoning Nixon.
In the meantime Nixon's la\vyers.
in papers fi led Thursday, had askerl
for a temporary r<'stra1n1ng order
banning the \\'hitc llousc fr o1n
rrlcasing any more of the Nixon
materials except for those already un -
der subpoena or \\'hir h might be s ub-
poenaed for c rin1in::il proscculions
;1lreacly under y,·ay
This would ha vt' banned the \\'hitc
I louse fron1 i:iving Nixon m;1teria ls to
any oft he federal gran<I juries still in -
vestigating \Vatergatc rn ntlcrs, and
one of the s pecial proscrulors s ug-
gested in court l\·fond ay tha t the Nixon
1notions might he a piny in thr offing
to frustra le proscr ut ions
GOP,'' Ford must ha\·e thought.
Ostensibly, the trip "'as a get-
aquainted session between Ford and
Luis Eche verria. the popular and in-
c reas ing ly ind ependent fl.1exica n
president.
'rhe ty,·o leaders met·ty,•ice behind
closed doors, first on the l'tf exican side
Considine's Son
Faces Drug Rap
NF.W ''ORK IUPIJ -Barry Con -
:-idine. son of ne ws paper columnist
Bob Considine. was charged A1onday
V.'ith conspiring Y.'ith ty,·oothers in the
rl ic::t rih11tinn and ~a le of cocaine.
Considin<'. 32. of New York. was ad-
ded to an indictment filed last July
against Kerr~· Are n Kotlmar. the son
of the lat<-' Dorothy Kilgal\en and
Ri chard Kollmur. a nd J on athan
Cohen. 21. also from fl1anhattan .
Kollm:ir :i nd Cohen \\"ere released
in personal bonds of SI0,000 each at
their arraignment last Aug ust. No
date has been :;ct for Considinc"s nr-
raignmenl.
• rn Rockies Snow Warning
Temperatu.res Dip lnto20s Along Eastern Seaboard
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II•""°",, .. , .ol 1''8f; "',"'ho -' II It •••
The Sea Terrace Apartments for adults:
· sun, fun, sea and sand.
Laguna Niguel'!! Sea Terr ace Aparl·
ment1-1 create a ney,· kind of apartment
\i\'ing for adults. From patio or balcony
you look out upon an ocean view, or a
park·like settinir. White sandy beaches
and cruising 1'ailboats invite you to enjoy
:t i1wim, sail, or evening stroll in the sunset.
And 1vitli you r marina-styled apartment come alt
the plea~ures of Laguna Niguel's 8,000 acre
\\'Orld -great () recreation, convenient !!hopping,
friendly l people. It's the choice way to live.
Put c1 lift in your li lf' toddy c:ome to
•Laguna Niguel
The Choic:e C ommunity
Jtancho Rernal'do and Village Park ,othe1' fin e New
Towns by Avco Community Developers.. Inc. (7t•) 4{13-0501
L I . Marina.styled t It 2
uxury nter1ors bedroom, have t 4 2
balh11. All-electric
goum)t>\. kitchen and built.-ins. 1 bedroom Crom $230.
2 bedrooms rrom$250. Some furnished at$30 mnre
n month.
•
Tennis
A fut gam• ofsinglesor
double.is a
rrtat. •'llY t.o stay
fn shape. A
court is now
undtr construc-
tion and due !or
completion in
Cktobcr.
• • --·-
Come home to the
jO)'S of recN!ation at your own Rec.
Center. There's a
111arkling swim-
ming pool and
Jacur;r;i, hia/hcni:
saunas, billiard and S.,
gaflle rooms, and a.
flirty kit.ch en nnri
fire11idc loung'I!.
Directions: From
.Loi An~let, take the San Diep/
Santa Ana Free-
way eout.h to
Crown Valley
Parkway exit..
Ri(ht (approx.6
ml.) tQ Paelfte
Coutlli1h.,.y. ~ft l mile t.o
Nlg\1tl Rd. ~ft on Ni~I Rd. to The
Sea'l'trnce
Apartments.
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VOL. 67, NO. 295, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1974
ter
'Mt·. Newpo1•t'
·Jack· Barnett
Succumbs at 65
DIES AT HOAG HOSPITAL
Newport's Jack Barnett
.iVet.vport Beacli
Recycle Effort,
'Over 1vliel1nin!_!/
Tn just three daYs, east side Ne,vport
Beach residents left nearly 45 tons ot
ne .... rspaper standing on their sidewalks for
recycling pickups.
That's the same amount as gathered
in six days last month, v.·hen recycling
efforts began In the city, according to
Val ~turley. head of Citizens for Recycl-
ing Usable Discards fCRUD).
"It's just overwhelming that we've
picked up in one week the same amount
that was picked up in tv.·o weeks last
time." ?iirs. ~lurley commented.
She sa'id they iniliall y feared residents'
response v:ould wane sine"' the recycling
pickups were only once a month. Today.
however, she says she feels confident
the program will be even more suc-
cessful than anticipated.
The 45 Ions ~·ere pi ckPd up from
r esidents living on the cast side of
the bay, with the best response coming
from Eastbluff residents.
Jake Mynderse, general services dire<:·
tor for Newport, said the success could
be attributed to the rapid spreading
of the recycling information, plus urgings
by strong homeo\vner associations. such
as the one in Eastbluff.
Mrs. ~lur\ey spent lime C<>ntacting
homeowner groups to explain the pro-
gram and ask for help jn encouraging
recylcing efforts. 1'-1ynderse said.
Jack Barnett. known as "A1r. Newport
Beach" during his 19-year manaceinent
of the Newport Harbor Chamber of Com-
merce, died late Monday night at Hoag
Memorial Hospital from congestive heart
failure and complicating illnesses.
Today and continuing through ti.1 r .
Barnete's memorial services· flags in
Newpor t \\'iii be flown at half mast
at the request or the mayor and the
city council.
~fr. Barnett. 65, was first admitted
to Hoag Hospital Aug. 15 following a
heart attack. He \\'as released Aug.
31, but returned Sept. 22, where he
remained U.Jltil his death.
Re is survived by his wife, Lois :
a da ughter, Betsy Barnett of Pacific
Palisades: a son, Robert Barnett of
NorU!__Ho\lywood_, and a brother. Lloyd
Barnett of Irvine.
f<.1emoria l services v.·ill be held at
Pacific View Memorial Park in Newport
Beach, but the time and date have
not yet bc€n set.
"Newport Beach lost one of it's finest
cit iz ens." commented Assemblyman
Robert Badham (R·Ne"·port Beach). a
long-time friend of ~1r. Barnett and
one of those who spoke at a testimonial
dinner given the chamber official when
he retired in July.
,,.. State Senator Dennis Carpenter {R·
Newport Beach) called Mr. Barnett's
death a "tragic loss lo the City of
Newport Beach."
··1 knew Jack since 1958 and he cer·
tainly left his mark in the city. That's
all a man can ask for," Sen. Carpenter
said.
~'Ir. Barnett reportedly intended to
retire when · he moved to Newport in
1955, but was talked into managing the
then almost defunct chamber of com·
merce.
Under hls management, the chamber
grew to 1,400 me mbers and initiated
new activities such as the Character
Boat Parade, a pet project of Mr .
Barnett's.
This summer a perpetual trophy in
his name "'as awarded to the best
decorated boat, a tradition that will
be continued.
Doris Lindsey, ~fr. Barnett'!' secretary
al the chamber for the past five years.
said today, "Everybody loved Jack. the
v.·an \Vho really built the chamber fro1n
almost nothing lo what it is today."
Mrs. Lindsey said the new chan1ber
building planned for the site at Jamboree
Road and Santa Barbara Drive will
be referred to as "lhe house that Jack
built," because of his efforts.
The Newport resident was born in
South Dakota and moved to Pasadena
"'ith his family at the age of 10. After
graduating from Pasadena High a n d
Pasadena Junior College. he s tud \ e d
finance at UC Berkeley. lie played foot·
ball and \vas a wrestler in college .
~tr. Barnett joined the Pa sad en a
brolreraf!'.e firm E. A. Pierce in J11nc.
1929, "Just in time to see the bo!lom
drop out of the market." he liked to
joke "'ith friends.
Late, he \\·ent into lhc children's
clothing manufacturing business \\'ilh his
fatber-in·la\v before moving to Newport
Beach.
a s-
Consumer
Priees Up
1.4, Percent
By The Associated Press
Consumer prices climbed 1.4 percent
in Los Angeles and Orange cciunties
in September. the U.S. 8-ureau -Or Labor
Statistics reported today.
rnnalion has pushed prices up 10 per·
cent' In the first nine months of this
year. They are 12.4 percent above the
leveJ•of September 1973.
Suzanna Sado"'sky, regional chief of
the bureau's Los Angeles office, said
housing accounted for 1!lore than half
lbe over-all rise in September. These
increased 2.4 percent to 13.6 percent
above a year earlier.
Most of the ri se was accounted for
by mortgage interest rates, maintenance
and repairs.
Renters pa id an avera~e o( 1.3 percent
n1ore between July and September.
Residential telephone bills were up
an average of 1.7 percent. and household
furnishings rose 2.7 percent.
Food prices increased 1.5 percent and
were 12.2 percent more than in Sep.
lember 1973. Leading the increase was
a five percent boost in such items as
eggs, margarine, salad oil, sugar and
coffee.
~feats. poultry and fish went up 2.6
per.cent but still were 6.8 percent bclo1I'
\...year earlier. The price of fruits and
v"!getables was 2.3 perce{lt lower. down
for the third straight month but 21
percent higher than In September 1973.
Transportation costs increased 0.6 per-
cent and were 8.7 percent higher than
a year ago.
On the national level, rising prices
for fvod, clothing and mortgage rates
pushed the cost of living up another
1.2 percent in September. maki ng the
last 12 months the worst inflationary
surge in more than 25 years, the govern·
ment reported today.
Prices in September nationally \\'ere
reported 12.1 percent higher than a year
earl ier. This was the worst 12-month
increase since 1947.
However, the purchasing power of the
average worker nationallv increased
slightly for the first time ·in three
months. Rea l spendable earnings -that
is weekly pay adjusted !or inflation
and laxes -rose one-tenth of a percent
in September but was still at the lov.•est
!See PRICES, Page A2 )
Southlllnd Hit
By Mild Quake
INGLEWOOO (UPI ) - A mild
earthquake jolted a small part of
Southern California today, a\vaken-
ing many residents and prom pting
telephone calls to police but ap-
parently causing no damage.
The seismological laboratory at
Caltech in Pasadena said !he tre-
mor at 5:13 a.m. had a prelintinary
intensity of 2.8 on ~he open end
Richte r scale.
A laboratory spokesman said ttrc
quake appeared to he cen tered in
the lnglcv.·ood Rrea. It v.•as also
felt in Santa f<.lonica .
I
011ly Pllol $11H Plloll
MOVED TO TEARS
Prisoner Russell's Wife
Tri1stees Set
To Con:fir111
Sale of ·La11d
By ALAN OTRKIN
01 , ... 0111, '11•1 $11H
Newport-Mesa Unified School District
trustees are expected tonight to confinn
the sale or 4.7 acres next to Costa
~Iesa's Tanager Park to a 1 a nd
developer.
The price agreed on by the school
dfistrict staff and the Buccola Compafly
or Ne"•port Beach is $.140.0flll -$67,000
~ more tha n the $273,000 the city of Costa
f<.lesa paid earlier this year for five
acres at the site.
1,'he park is at the end of Tanager
Drive near the Costa ~1csa Golf and
Country Club.
Robert Gray of the Buccola Company
said that the compariy plans to bu ild
2~ or 2.'i single famil y hon1es on 1he
land . They woukl be lar:::e homrs,
with 2.{l()(I or 3.000 square feet of land.
he said, and 1\·ould me simil:ir .10 i~
homes the company constructed lo
the east .
Some observers had speculated that
8 u cc o l a might seek zoning for
to1vnhou!:es because there already arc
mulli-resfdential developn1enls in t he
neighborhood but Gray said. "\\'e 'eel
si ngle-family homes are most in dem:.111(!-
in Co!l.a tl-·lesa. There is so little land
left in the city."
Tanager Park was the su bject of a
big push by .ciri1.ens l\•:o years ago
~See TRUSTEES, Page A2)
Guu111au Threaten~
Coa~t J\lau in Laguna
A Nev.•port Beach man exiti ng a public
rest room in a Laguna Bea..:h park today
v.·as accosted by a ntan wllo Jumped
rrom the bushes. \1•a\'ed a revolver at
him and accused him of being a homo-
sexual. ~
After threate ning ··rm gonn~ kill you."
the protagonist allowed the Ne11110rt man
lo flee . The in cident look place at aOOu!
2:30 a.m. at lfeisler Park . Laguna police
reported .
ree
Ex-countia11
Released
F1·01n Jail
By ARTHUR R. VINSEi.
LOS ANGELES-The t"'•o-year and
two-day ordeal of James Ray Russell
came to a temporary end in only 10
minutes today as the Lo6 Angeles County
Superi or Court judge approved h i s
freedom on lo"' bail.
~usse\I , 'l'l, formerly of Laguna Hills.
has been held for 'i"'* days without
bail. v.·ithout arraignment and "'ilhout
trial on a fugitive "'arrant charging
him "'ith an Oklahoma n1urder that
occurred on a Saturday night in 1972
\l'hile Russell \\'as allegedly out on a
lark in Lon g Beach.
"Oh my Uod," blurted his blonde "'"He
Karen, Zs. who insists she was with
him that fateful night at the Long Beach
Nu-Pike Amusement Park.
··1 can have him horne today ... l'm
going to have him homt! today ... oh my
God," she cried.
The slender blonde wife v.·ho has been
without her man for more lhan two
years cried unashaniedly in the corridor
outside the courtroom. 1-ler tears glit-
tered in the glare of television camera
lights and 1nascara ran down her cheeks
in rivers.
"What arc your plans for tonight?"
asked one reporter.
"Oh, I'm going to squeeze everything
I can into one night. I just wish it
all could have happened sooner."
Russell's grandfather. aged Samuel E.
David, of 11askell County· Okla .. w11s
present in the courtroom but could not
hear deliberations over his grandson's
fate because of a hearing problem ..
He o"'nS property "'ilh enough equity
to underwrite the $5.000 bail finall y set
by · Superior Court Judge Raymond ~1.
Choate.
The defendant's brother Rob c r L
Russell. 25. an accountant. his w if c
Karen. a \raitress at Ho\Vard Johnson's
restaurant Jn Downey and other relatives
vo\\'ed they \1·ould scrape together S500
today as security on a bail bond that
\\•ould free Russel! after his n ea r I y
endless months behind bars.
He has bee n accused-absolutely
1~·rongly, accordi ng to "'ilnesses and his
attomey--0f the brutal tnurder of a
92-ycar-old man in ~larch, 1972 at the
invalid 's home in Leota. Okla. in a
~20ll rnhn.w-'!,.
l\lrs. Karen Russt'll and friends claim
they v.·erc all togeth er at the Long
Beach amuse1nent center !hat night but
Oklahoma authorilics, citing Russell's
record as an ex-convict who ~er\'ed
four vears for hU~J?l1lr\' in his youth.
issued a 1varrant for 0 his arrest and
he 11·as taken into custody in Orange
County durin; !he sun11ner of that l'ear.
He was c1uestioned , submitt ed to a
pol ygrnph cxaminnfion and subsequl'nlly
cll'ared of any connection \\'ilh th c
hon1icide 1.000 n1iles a1vay and Orange
County Superior Court Judge \V itlian1
~furray refused to allov.· hi s extradition
to Oklahoma .
His mist ake came three \\'eek~ later
· \rhen he 11·ent to 1•isil his brother Robl'rt
in suburban Bell Gflrdcns. 11· h c r c
cridencc indicates authont1es \\'ere ha1·.
1ng him ta iled .
!Sec RUSSELL, Page A2J
\Vlthin the next few weeks. NC\\1port
residents will receive in the mail. along
"'ilh the city's annual report, f Calendar
for 197$ listing recyling dn tes for both
the east and west sides of the cily.
Besides his involvement with th c
chamber. ~Ir. Barnell "·as active In
several other community organi1.ations.
1-Ie was past president of !he Ne"Wix>rt
1-larbor Khvanis Club. a Jounding board
member of Nev,rporl Center.
Air. Barnett also liked to~ v.·ork \\'ilh ....,.
his hands, friends recalled. He com-
pletely built . doing the carpentry. wiring
and plumbing , two houses in Newport
Beach.
Will Roman~e Be Ro~ky~
Junior League
r,ectures 01Jen
The Newpart Harbor Ju o i o r
Lea,R.ue's "Com munity '7 4 . ' ' a
special five-week series of lectures
open to the pllblic as well as
league members, begins tonJght at
UC lrvlne.
The. lnltlal program In the series
deals \\'llh the hi story of Oran~e
County. It starts at 7:30 p.m. ln
UCl's Science l..ecture 11 a 11 .
Admis!ion Is fttc.
The s~les. designed to bring
Orange Qluntlans uµ to date on
ls!iues affecting lhetn. Is scheduled
ror nve successive Tuesdays at
UCI. 1'hc Oct. 29 program Will
dtal \vlth consun1tr affaln.
The series is spon!Ored by the
Junior League a1 a puhlle·servlee.
...
Mt1rccr Traded
For Bobby Bo11d s
NEW YORK (AP l -Thci New York
Yankees announced todn;.-the trade of
outfielder Bobby Murctr to the San
Fraoclsco Glan1s for outnelder Dobby
Bonds.
Doth are 27 , and both \\·ere con~ldtrtd
to have off r;ea30ns In 19i4.
Bonds and \\olllle ti.lays are the! only
play~rs In ba5ebRll hi~tory to steal 30
bases and hil 3o bo1ne runs 1n the
same season.
~lurcer bi! I~ cnrcir ho1ner~ for
the Yankte11 J7lh on Ure club's all-lime
11.sL
-Rockefeller's ,4u11.L-i11.-la 111 Falls for JI i11er' s Son
LLAY. \Vales (APl -A \\'elsh coal
miner's young son who says he is engag-
ed to llappy Ro cke fe ller's aged
millionaire aunt Rachel F'i tlcr e.'<pressed
fear today that the publicity abou~ their
~fay-and-December romance w o u Id
"blow the v.·hote thing."
"\\'hen she sees the "'ay the story
has blown up here. anything could hap-
pen." S<1Jd 29-year-old 1'1.lchael \Vil.son
after LondOn papers gev e splash play
to his announcement ~1onday th at he
nnd Miss Filler would be married around
Olr1stmas.
\\'llson told newsmen they met last
January while he "'as working ns a
butler at thl' Breakers tJotcl in Palm
Beach. Fin. He sald they got enga~ed
ln f<.tny and hi!! paren1s visited ~Hu
l'.iller In the United States. 1 "IL's boot made to look like so111e
sort of fairy tale -a fan tasy -nnd
ifs not o bit ilke that.'' he said. ··r ri1
11 realist and so JS f<.li ss Fil ler.
"\Ve have a genuine dttp affe ction
for each other, but the papers have
made me 10()4( like a go\ddigger. She's
A very nice private person, but· hOI\'
do you lhlnk she'll feel seei ng me all
over the front paw.-~?
"She could easlly grt the v.·rong 1m·
prcsslon Crom what she Jets In !he
papttt. How do you txphlin srnnething
like 1hu1! She might call It off no"''·
I don't kM1v."
l\U51 Filler ll\'cs In Pb.1ladelph1a. and
sources there said she· ts Tl.
She-v.as ~ im~i.ately availuble
lor Q)mm~, but II ~Wr'Lln for her
nlN'e"1 hu!lband. Vlco Pr c i Iden t •
dl'8i~le ~Ison ~· Rodcefe.llcr. sa1rl •
''l ho11r<t_ tl\dt 'ui:ll a stoey W"' auning
frotn \\'ales. I tlon 'I kno1v nnvthing nbout
it. I th ink it n1ay be correct. but I
just don't knov.• ...
i\Tiss Filler 1111~ <tliotcd In a Bri1i~h
ne\1'SIWPt·r as ~1~1ng, "Al!houRh !'vr
never been n1arrird. f\·<' had plrnty
of offers. i\ow that l'rn sculed I feel
Hk r gi\·ing II ll Ir\'"
On the age gap ~hr s:u(I ":ilirharl
doe~A'\ sl"Cm to think 11 \rill affect
our relalioni.h1p."
\\'1lson s.1\d he dl<ln't "';int lo tfllk
about lhl' d1ffC'rl'nct' 1n their a.i.::e~.
"I clon"t think 1ht• gap Jn our · ru:rs
is at flll import11nt. r~p<.-claH~· \1hen
you re.'.ll ly l!kl.' a person." he said
lie reported "<I l!Ulr oppo111tion'· fron1
r-.11ss l~itler's legal and finnncin1 ndvlser!I.
''They prob:•b'y tlmuJ{ht 1 "as Aftt>r
her ll'IOllf!)'.0
' he said. ··1 n1us1 say 1l
(Set AUNT, l)tJ::ll Atl
Today's Flnlfl
N.Y. Stocks
N TEN CENTS
om!
JUDGE ORDERS BAIL
Longtime Prisoner Ru1sell
JJ7cill Causes
Controversy
111 Newpo1·t
By GARY GRANVILLE
Of 1119 01lly Pllel Sl1tf
Ort engineering drav.·ings it appeared
as a heavy blue line labeled ""•all.''
But iiow that it's a reality, the eight-
foot stone "'all topped by 3 O -i n c h
pilasters is being ctilled by some '11he
great \\·all " or, more unkindly, "!he
great monstrosity ...
Ch.lef critic of the v.·a!l that runs
along Bayside DDrive "'C"St of the Shark
Island Yacht Club is r\ev.·porl Beach
City Councilman Paul Ryckoff.
RyckOff says the dra\\·ings used to
obtain planning co1nmission and city
council approval to construct the "'all
"did not reveal its full impact."
The drav.·ings v.·ere included in lhe
Irvine Company 's plans for its CO\·e
de\'elopment. a 5 8 · u n i t condominium
complex fronting on the bay across from
Balboa Island.
Ryckof( says the \\'all •·closes off the
,;ew to the b:1y" and its size "is in·
compatible v.·ith the area . .,
He also argues that portions of the
slum p stooe wall extend too close to
the future sidewalk in the area for
any sort of landscaping to be effective.
The city councilman is not thl' \Yall's
(&c \VALL, Page Atl
Crash Victim's
Last Rites Held
Ser1·ices "·ere held tl-londay fur Robt-rt
J. DeRohertis Of NC"l>Ort Beach, \\'ho
\\'as kil!cd Frid ay in a Long Hench plane
crash.
DeB.obcrtis. 38. ov.·ne r of Orcon plum·
bing and kit chen contracting firm in
5.'lilta Ana. is survived by_, his v.if<'.
Boonie: t11·0 sons. Doug and l\1:irk : two
daughters, ~tichcll<' and \\'end)'; parents.
~tr. and :i1rs. Bauista DeRobcrts or
Sacramento. and a brother, Ronald of
Sacramento.
The services \Yerc held al Pacific
\"iew Chapel ;ind \Vl.'re follo\\·e<I by buria l
at Pacific \'ie11 ~lcffiQnal Park
Ora:~~< :oast
Weal her
:\iglrt and 1nor11ing lo1v clouds
beL'C1tning 1nostly sunny \n the
;1f1ernoon \\'ed ncsday Slightly
11·arn1cr \11th highs in 1he upper
60s :n the be;1ehcs to lhc niltl-70s
1nlund. l.o\1·s tonight 57-ti2.
l:\S ~ !II·: '1'011 \ V
1'l1r 1 i11dcr~rcrrror'i of 1/1c Jn·
1rr111r saµs los 11t•r11irrnitt11! ex·
pcc1~ .<rimt' 111nJnr oil .~n11/s rclif'11
(!ril/11u1 bt{Jllts ofJ~h111(' i11 file
near fittv n•. Sre <tory page 1\·I.
r;,,,.. •-Mel .,
L M. l t•ll At
c1~1t·-i· "-'
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t!lli1'1ril! """ II Enlfrlal11m,n1 I.I\
Fiii•~ Af ' M~ 01•t11., Al "',..l(_ IU
'""'"''"''"' •II "'"" I.•~'"' '' 'l'v,., All
Mwlu.i ,HIWI• ••
f\11•11'11•1 NtWI •I Orin-. teun" An
$,l•lf , .. ,.. "' 5•orll A1•11
$tnc• M•,..,I ......
l ttfv,. .. n All
l Mt!tn AU
W11 1ht1 Al
}'ro1n Page Al
ijl$SELL ...
"We was just driving down Eastern
A venue \•<'hen v.·c turned Into a Taco
Bell to set a Coke," H.obcrt l\JS~ll
rtealled tod•y In an emotional court·
room corridor !Jiterview. '<.1!t'! was
definitely roJJov.1ng us. 111cy told us the1
11·an teod Jamt:s Russl'll. ··
"He said lh3t old warrant was no
s:ood." the youngt;>r brother continued,
"but they said 1ba1 v.:is beside the
po int <1nd hl' v.·n11trt have to go with
tht•m."
RusSt'JI. a v;arehOuseman afl<'r he
arrived In Orange County following his
Oklahorna prison release-. has been held
for 7>1i days shice, y,·it.hout the usual
recourses available to au imprisoned
but uncon1•icted suspect. under state and
federal law and the U.S. constitution.
fli s attorney, Roger Agajanlan. of San.
ta Ana, \.\•as pleased but perplexed today
and said the partial victory in the James
Rny Russell case has been a Jong lime
conling.
"My argument has been all along
that he was illegally contained al this
lime," Agajanian decared as ~I r s . ~ -Russell huggtd·t~e-hulking lawyer-'s arn1
and unbash!ully wept on his shoulder,
He had asked Judge Choate to release
Russell on his own recognizance pending
the Nov . 8 pretrial hearing at v.·hich
witnesses from Oklahoma are expected
to testlry regarding the pathetic killing
he claims be is totally innocent of com-
mitting.
No matter what the outC(lme, courts
in Napa County in northern caUfornia
took away her little boy and his stepson
by a prior marriage, Nolan Tracy oow
four, in March of 1973 on the basis
that it was an unfit home if his step-
father stood accused of murder, con-
victed or not.
Los Angeles County Deputy Distri ct
Attorney Don Johnson, prosecutor. is
contacting Oklahoma authorities fo r
details of their Investigation to date and
Judge Choate said he might consider
reducing the defendant's $5.000 bail and
allowlng him to ren1ain free on his
011.•n recognizance pending disposition of
the long, drawn out case.
Judge Choate pointed out a rt e r
repeatedly rejecting asking that attorney
Agajanian suggest the cash bail ,that
he could not free Russell oo his own
recognizance• because of the fact that
in his early yooth he did serve a prison
.tenn for burglary, a felony charge.
"I convinced myself nothing was going
to happen today," said Mrs. Russcll .
The Bell Gardens waitress has been
living with her in-laws. She said .she
has been praylng since Oct. 8. 1972. the
day her husband was arrested. and has
been supported by her father, Rev. Lecil
Jones, a nijs.sionary Baptist minister and
his flock.
•·1 thlnk they done more praying than
anybody," she snid.
Earlier. she expressed her grief and
pe~imism while awaiting the pretrial
hearing.
"We do love each other. We want
to stay together. I've lost him, l've
lost my son, I've lost just about
everything. I . lcnow he is innocent. I
was with him that night."
ADVANCES PACE
DAY'S TRADI NG
NE\V YORK IUPJ ) -Prices again
turned mixed todav in fairly a c t i v c
trading on the Ne;1-· York Stock Ex-
change. wi!h some blue chips hurling
averages.
The Dow Jones industrial average,
up and !jo\\'Jl from the start. 1 o s !
6.96 points to 662 .86. The V.'idely 1va!ched
index or 30 selected blue-chip stock s
gained more than 14 points Monday.
Advances held a comfort able lead over
decline.<;, about 7 to 6, among the 1,767
issues traded.
Prices \~·ere higher in fairly active
trading on the American S t o c k Ex·
change.
ORANGE COAST H
DAILY PILOT
.. -
TM Or~ (~11 D.lllt Pilol, !Wl!ll"'l!lcll hCOfll•
DI-lf>t PffWl·PfH\, IS pt;Pll"""' DY tllt Or..,_
(M11 Publ!!ol>fn<J Com:i•nv. S..PM•le..i•ll-••e
pt;])ll-Mon<1•1 1nrouqn '°•id.ly, tor ""!•
Mo!W. llle,.00<1 Se .. 11, HuntinQ'I"" ilfKll/F-·
1t1n VallfY, lr w1nt, S•cJel•tWt -Vallt• '"" ~9Vt141 S.Kn1Sou1" Co•ll A ~flqle •e(llo<wl
fdll+on » P<lbl•~O )a!urCllYI end r....o..n T""
P<in<ipal 11t;l>ll1111nq Pl•~t I• 11 lXI W.~! &.y
Str~. C.0111 Me». C.l!ilo•n1 1 WU.,
Robert N. Weed
'"•"Otnl '"° Publ•Wt
J ac k R. Curley
Vl(I Prt,.!ll!n\ afl(I ~"""' ...... ~!
Thomas Keevlr
EO•IO•
Thomas A. Murph fne
.•
Newport Beach Office
Ull ,,.~,.11<1•! eou•tv1•d
M.o o•onq A(l(lrtn P 0 fJ.o• llU, 91l<IJ
Other Of tic~
(0\llMt•I l~~\ltl-f•Sltfl1
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~l•IMc ~ V•Utr. JS?01 I.•"'' RO«! 115.t• o .. oo ,, .......
Ttltphone (114) 642-4321
Classified Advertising 642·S671
C.OW'IOfll. "''· O••• CN\I Puflll.i'l•<IQ '°"'""''· f,fo '""'' uoo.... 1u11vr1t111111
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DtllY '''I!' Sllff Pllo ..
, OPPOSES TRANSIT TAX
Assemblyman Burke
Burke Urges
'No' Vote
Ori Transit
Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·Hun-
tington Beach) is urging a "no'' vote
on the Orange County mass transit ballot
measure fn a report. mailed to 10th
District constituents. (Related stories,
Page A3)
Proposition A on the Nov. 5 ballot
would increase the county sales tax
by one cent. Revenues would be used
by Orange County Transit District to
expand bus service. implement a dial·a·
ride program, build a rapid transit
netv.·ork and otherwise "improve public
!ransportatlon. ''
Burke said he "recognizes the need
lo diversify transportation," but he op-
poses Propos.ition A for five reasons.
First, he believes Orange County faces
transportation problems today because
"we put all our eggs in one liasket"-the
freeway· system.
Voting in a 15-year plan for financing
the proposed mass transit system would
be "heading for the same trap," the
assemblyman says.
Second, Burke says the proposed mass
transportation proposal does not offer
the people assurance of "reliability."
Citing the recent strikes in Los Angeles
and San Francisco, the assemblyman
goes on to say, "It would be folly
to invest several billion dollars without
the assurance that it would not be
used as a means to gain unreasonable
demands by those employed to operate
the system."
In addition, Burke believes the poten·
tial demand for mass transit has not
been substantiated, nor the fin an c i a 1
feasibility proven.
He also reminds voters of what he
feels is an adverse report on Proposition
A by the CaITrans consultants.
Burke is up for reelection in the
70th Assembly District. His opponent, ..
Democrat Dennis Mangers, s u p p o r l s
passage of Proposition A.
Volcanp Erupting
GUATE1\1ALA ClTY, Guatemala (i\P)
-The Fuego volcano spewed tO":<J of
lava, buming rocks, hot ash and cinders
over a wide area of v•estem Guatemala
today for 'the 10th straight day.
Bright
Remains
Chairman
By JOH N VAi.TERZA
ot ""' o~u~ Pihl! , ....
AlthOUgh charge:t con tinue to fly about
asserted conflict ol interest on the South
Coast Regi onal Zone Conservation Com-
mission. the panel's members r a n
througb a day's business as usual Mon-
day.
And Chairman Dona1d Bright, a central
figure ~in the conflict allegation i, main·
tained his firm grip on the chairmanship
and offered no comment on the issue.
Bright conceded last week that he
had galhered more than a dozen
representatives of major developers
along the coastal strip and sought dona·
lions and malling lists in a fund raiser
for Democratic gubernatorial candidate
Edmund G. Brown Jr.
But since his denial or any conflict
and his dems:nds for an A t t o r n e y
General's probe, Bright has remalned
mum about the n1w:-canceled reception.
It was to haVe taken place Thursday
near C.Osta Mesa.
He had made a tentative agreement
lo discuss the issue to some degree
before televlsion news cameras during
1\1onday's lunch break of the commission
meeting in Long Beach.
But before the commissiort adjourned,
he left the room and later appeared
once more to quickly reconvene the
session.
Television newsmen had to settle. for
the only member of the commission
willing to be interviewed on the matter.
Orange County Supervisor R a I p h
Diedrich said that no movement ha!
come about on the corr1misslon to strip
. Bright of his chairmanship.
Diedrich, one of several Orange Coun-
ty Democrats listed as official hosts of
the controversial reception. said that he
had exptcted that the event would have
lured Brown supporters from the
acadc1nic \lo'Orld.
"Dr. Bright's credibility is very strong
in the area of academia ," said Diedrich.
Diedrich conceded that the enl!re fund-
raising incident probably cast a pall
on the in tegrity or the commission, but
he emphasized that he believes Bright
is still capable of functioning as a good
chairman cl the powerful commissioo.
"I happen to know that the
chairmanship of the commission is not
for sale," he said.
In the a r ena where the two
gubernatorial candidates are squaring
off. the debate continues about conflict
and the roastal commission.
Soon after it was known that Bright
sought funds for Brown . the candidate
who would have benefitted denied any
knowledge of the pruject and in a
scathing statement demanded that Bright
resign.
Then, during a debate this p a s t
v•eek.end in Stockton with Republican
candidate Houstoo Flournoy, B r o w n
charged that North Coast Regional Com-
mission Chairman John Mayfield was
raising money for the Republican effort
and getting it from timber companies
i:ii:iing business with the commission.
Later, Brown admitted that solid proof
was lacking.
Flournoy then seized the o f f e n s i v e
Monday at a rally in Auburn and hit
hard at Brown.
"This was a clumsy maneuver on
the part of Brown to draw attention
a"·ay from the luncheon in Orange Cowt·
ty put on by Dr. Bright," said Flournoy.
He described the weekend accusations
by Brown as •·more of his flailing,
ann waving , deliberate rnisrepresen·
tat.ions."
Hm1ti11gton 2nd Largest
Gainer in People Surge
Orange Coast communities continued
to lead the upward push of Orange
County·s population last year. lt in-
creased by more than 62,000 to 1.64
mill ion.
According to the ln!est county Progress
Report. 11.·hich wa s handed to the board
of super1·isors today, the count y's popula-
tion \l'ilt top 1.7 million before 1974
is out.
Tht' report . a s!reamHned compilation
or facts <1nd figures about county
bus1nei::s. prople and governtnent. wa~
put t oge ther by. the Coun ty
Administ rat ive Office.
Fro111 Page Al
PRICES ...
level since December 1970.
Price increases nationally "·ere spread
across almost the entire economy last
n1onth. food Jed the way, posting ils
biggest rise since February.
The Ford administration has predict ed
that consumer prices will continue in·
rreasi n~ H\ the rate of about I percent
11 n1onth lh rough the end of the year.
11nd lhal !h11re \\'OUld be no significant
easing of Inflation unt il some tlmc next
yea r.
Consun1rr prices have already risen
~ 7 percent nationally this yenr. In
19i3. pnCC'S rose 8.8 percent. the worst
in any yea r since the end of World
W:1r II.
The Labor Department Mid I as t
month·s 1.2 pt":rctnt increase. followln~
a rise or t.3 percent in August, pushed
lhc government's C01t11umer price Index
to 151.9. That mfant It COJSl $151.90
'to buy n variety of goOds and services
that Cost SlOO In the 1967 base period.
Statistics about people and their habits
lalce up most of the 75 pages of the
re!XJrt.
According to lhe report, the county's
unin c orpor ated teTritory -
predominantly in the south county -
experienced a surge of 14.400 people I
in 1973. Huntington Beach \vas the sec·
ond·highest gainer with 6,447 ne11.• resi· I
dents.
01hcr top--ranked coastal communites
;i nd their gains included :
-Irvine with 3.753
-Ne11.-port Beach with 2.842
-San Juan Capistrano with 2,784
-Fountain Valley with 2,232
In terms of population alone, Anaheim
is still the county·s· largest city with
187,300 people as of last year. lt is
fol1011.·ed by Santa Ana, Huntington Beach
and Garden Grove.
But in tenns of land area. the city
of Irvine is the largest in lhe county
11.·ith 40 square miles of area.
The report notes. however, that recent
annexations by Anaheim have moved
that city to within only one square mile
of matching Irvine 's current stze.
Reaching back into history. the report
notes th at the city of Santa Ana. which
h1:1d only about two square miles when
it v.·as incorporated in 18861 h:-.s grown
to take in mor than 27.
f igures outlining migration to an d
fl"om Ornnge Count)' were g a t h e r: e d
primarily from the state Department
of Motor Vehicles, v.'htch has been com·
plllng dnta on the movements of license
holder~.
Those ..statli;tics show the . c o u n t y
recorded a net gain of 33.572 Ueense-
holders In In l973 -3.1.000 of whom
came from Los Angeles County.
• . .
CONDO MINIUM SITE
' tl&llY Pllol Sltll Pr.tie
CONTROVERSY ERUPTS OVER WALL AT IRVINE COMPANY'S COVE DEVELOPMENT
Newport Councilman Ryckoff, Environmentalists Critici1e Structure Off Bayside Drive
From Page Al
AUNT ...
crossed my mind once in a while, but
that isn't why I am marrying her."
He added that Miss Fitler gave him
the money to buy her engagement ring.
"It was only a smali diamond, and
the ring only cost about 50 pounds·
($11~;," he said.
Miss Filler, who lives in an exclusive
suburban area, refused to meet with
newsnen or talk about the situation
by telephone today.
The Fitler .family has roots in
Philadelphia that are publicly r~corded
for almost a century. Rachel Filer's
grandfater. Edwin H. Filler, w«IS mayor
of Philadelphia from 1887 to 1891.
The firru of Edwin H. FiOer & Co.,
later known as the Philadelphia Cordage
Works, manufactUred rope. It was in-
strumenta1 in building the f a m i I y ' s
fortune.
When William Wonderly Filler, the
son of the former mayor, died March
31. 1931 , he left his wife. his son, and
his ·daughter, Rachel, and an estate
later inventoried at $8,113,222.
When Rachel's nephew, W i 11 i am
Wonderly Fitler III, was married in
1954, the best man was Dr. James
S. Murphy. His wife, Happy , who was
a bridesmaid that day. later married
vice-presidential des i gnat e Nelson
Rockefeller.
A neighbor who lives acr06s from
the stately Filler home said she saw
\Vil.son ov~r the summer.
Plaza Thief Gets
$350-Artifact
A thief with a penchant for the finer
things of life stole a $3SO serigraph
from the open front of a South Coast
Plaza art dealer's store around noon
~Ionday.
Ann McFarland, manager of Muirhead
Galleries, told police the stolen item
was part of a display set out daily to
attract customers.
The thief. police said, lifted the AUiche
t:;ant ~lif!le!1~'! serigraph from the dis·
play wan and walked off.
The piece v.11s described as a 23 inch
diameter multi·colored rtisc mounted on
a gold metaJ frame measuring 30 by 30
inches.
It Started
' With a Kiss
PORTLAND, Ore. (UPI) -A
Salem, Ore. insurance man is be-
ing sued over a kiss and its al·
Jeged aftennalh.
Linda K. Pennoyer, Las Cruces,
N.M., filed suit in U.S. District
Court here against Raymond C.
Largent. ~!em, a partner in an
insurance firm.
The complaint charges that on
Aug. 10, 1973 Largent ki:.-sed and
embraced her in bis office "against
her will" and when she "withdrew"
from his anns she fell and hlt her
head. Miss Pennoyer seeks $100,000
and medical expenses.
Fro1n Page Al
'fRUSTEES ...
who argued that the original 2.5 acres
of parkland at the site, south of Adams
Avenue and east of Estancia Drive,
·was not a large enough play area for
neighborhood children.
Citizens urged the city to purchas~
at least a portion of !he 9.7 ncres that
the sCbool district was declaring surplus.
The campaign resulted in the purchase
by the city last July of five acres
of the surplus land, giving Tanager Parle
a total of 7.5 acres
Costa Mesa's Director of Leis u r ~
Services Keith Van Holt said the school
district's sale of the remaining 4.7 acres
came as no surprise to the city. The
city had at no time intended to buy
all of the surplus land from the school
district. he said.
"It was felt that buying another 10
acres at the site was unnecessar y
tiec&use \Ve already had 2.5 acres."
he recalled. Also withing 600 yards
of it there will be 260 acre_, or park
when Fairview Park is deve1opea.
The city bought the site and three
other surplus . , properties from the
school district as part of a $3.9 million
parks and open space bond Issue.
Fro1n Poge Al
WALL •..
lone critic.
S'°!> Polluting Our Newport (SPON),
a citizens group, recently wrote Newport
Beach Mayor Don "1clnnis to object
to the wall.
"This wall has been misrepresented
to you and to us,,,,. SPON secretary
Shirley Knutsen wrote.
She faulted the project's environmental
impact report for referring to a
"panoramic vlew" eventually available
through the cove.
~\lrs. Knutsen wrole that the promlsed
'.'panoramic view" will be more of a
"slit."
However, there's another side to the
wall controversy.
Its primary purpose is to serve as
a retaining wall lo hold ftll dirt that
will make it possibl~ for st r u c t u re s
farthest from the bay to be elevated
for view purposes , according to the
· Jrvine Company.
And. when the project is completed,
only four feet of the wall will protrude
from abo\·e street-side slopes that v.·ill
be landscaped.
In the center of the project there
v.ill be a view or the bay throu&h
the entryway to the c:omplex. -
1'1onday, workers at tbe site were
busy sloping dirt hauled in by dump
ti:ucks that Irvine Company planners
believe will soften public reaction to
the wall.
"What people are reactin·g to is a
buge naked wall standing by itself,"
said company planner Larry Moore.
"However, when completed It won't
appeal' anything like it does now ," Moore
added.
But Ryckoff isn't buying "the finished
version."
"I think the project should be stop-
ped," he said. "l don't think it can
be stopped. But it's time to I et
developers know they should work more
closely with people In an area."
Ryckoff voted against approval of the
project when it was before the council
ttnd :iays the ·wall· :5})Cak3 ¥.'Cll far his
no vote.
Both Moore· and Ryckoff will ha\'e
their say Oct. 29 when the city counciJ
will again discuss the Cove development
and, presumably, the wall.
NOW, HEAR »TIDS
Acco rding to the President's Council on
Environmental Qualit y, it is becoming increasingly
difficult for anyo ne to escape noise.
40,000.000 Americans risk hearing impairment
and other physical and mental effects. 44,000 .000
other Americans have the utility of their dwellings
adversely affected by noise from aircraft or traffic.
2 1.00 0 ,00 0 Americans are affected by
construction-related noise.
Now what does this have to do with carpet?
Carpeting will drastically improve~ acoustics in any
·room by quieting your home envirol)ment, maki ng
radios. television , and the family sound better.
Remem ber, at Aldens, even our LOUD carpeting
is quieter.
·ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia AYt.
COST A MISA
646°4838
llOURS: Moo. tin tl.n., 9 to 5'10 • • Fii. 9 to 9 -SAT. 9:30 to 5
•
'· ;
(
T11esday's
Closing Price
~-· ... \
Tueeday, October 2'2, 1974 * DAILY PILOT .19 •
NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE
Year'• Hi1h·Low1 Appear ETery S•turday
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'Punt, Pass, Kick Winner
Costa Mesa f'ord dea ler 'l'heodorc. Robins. Jr.. Clefl) presents !vlarlin.
l\f cKcever , Jr .. sun or retired LA Ran1s star. firs t place trophy for r ecent
winning the Punt, Pass, Kick competition. Lc>0king on is Rum's defe n s ive end
. Jack Youngblood. J\lore than 3tl you ngsters \Vere g iven awards by nobins for the
Ford sponsored event.
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Picking an Executor
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Don't Rely on Friend to Settle Estate
By SY LV IA PORTt.:R
When we recently asked a
friend how the w idow of h is
lifelong partner \vas faring,
he r emarked bitterly lhal
h e rarely saw either her or
her children these days.
•le had b een a ppo inted
executor of h is bel oved par-
tner's e s tate: h e h ad do ne
t he hcst job h e knew how :
d espite t his, they h ad Jost
all faith in h im a nd the
relation s hip had
d e t e riorat ed into s quab-
b ling. The n h e quoted the
final stan za of a n Edgar A.
Guest s hort poem :
Nowwhenl die I 'llneverask
A f~nd to carry $uch a task:
l'UfPQre him alt such
anguish sore
And leave a hired e:iecutm.
It's rotte n poetry but an
excellent warning , for if you
piek an executo r for your
.. esta te o n the bas is or friend-
s hip and loyalty r ather than '
abilitv, you're. asking for
troub le. The t ime to learr.
b o w lo select lhe rig ht
Sales Up
At Bertea
Bertea Corp. of Irvine
a chieved a record level or
sales a nd earnings in the
f irst three qua rte r s of 1974,
Richa rd Bertea, c h airman
of the board. h a s announ·
ced.
Net incom e for the nine'
• mon1H·s -en<Wd St:pl. JO in·
erea!lied to S l .210,773, e qual
lo 77 eents p e r s bare. com-
pared \.\'ith SI ,000,398. or ri:1
cents a s h tirc i n the cor·
res1>onding 1>criod o r 1973.
There \ve re 1,564 .1!.IG
a\·e r:ige number of s hares
outstanding lhis year com·
p ared y.·ith aver:1gc s h a r es
in 1973, adjus ted ·ror t h e 5
percent stock dividend paid
Junc28.
exeeulor i s n o -.1.', "'hen
y ou're healthy and can·
r each an approp r i:Jlc
d ecision.
S irnpl y s t a l e d . an
e xecutor IS I he p e rson you
Money's
Worth
n .'.lme in your \viii to handle
the job of set tling your
estate. Your executor m ay
be your wife or hus band, a
friend or a professional
executor, s u c h as a lawyer.
a b ank or trus t company.
You may select an i n -
dividual execu tor or have
several co-executors to
s hare the respon s ibilities -
one a mem her of your
f:imily o r a dear rrie nd. and
the olht!r a p rofession a l to
furnish bus iness and other
adv ice.
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1'o fil(• estate tax returns :..,~~,J;3 J,; 1~~:_J~: cie" Er 1 40 1 •l 11 '• A•~ .111 J •1 • -"' =~r.;; ~ g 1l1··: ~ =~,! ~ 1" i'f.,.,_ "" ~!'t ~O::, -~ 1~ ~~ t: t:: E~, 1 ii .~ 'I .. •~ ..
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0 t CWI ; "''"'8311 .. u 4?\ •• \, ColliMF-s • l'•I it ·-"'·"°~ ,,, ,"," ....... -KitW'•Ahll l ., ,.,-~ '• HC6Ppt ..... noo ....... Sl;-U/111<;11. II IOlo-•• Uldl ....... ICI I .. 1<•-'• AmTl.Twt .10.Jt 11.t .•. ~ \ l kA IS'IQI•'• t •! •I """"9l1 .6locll I I -to:;o;-0¥ .. It ...-.... u...By8L046 •tOIOt ,, T>o 1>:1 v 11ul :1 I I bL"'U('S\!'. AmW•tt .M '3 1G I • 1'1 Col "".JO to 132 '/Ol'o' • f'e'PIJ.I 1·'° s 1 1 k••w•C• .!oO • l S' • '• Hort1wJt 1 . .0 • '' 1•~\-v. S<ui pf ..oc I f'llo •.• u.. -l.«I 1 ,. 1•1>t .. ·-. AWi\'PI ,,., . 1100 ll • 1 ColonSt 1.10 I ll II + I flJtf'O.ll' 1.93 S SO llV> • kai~Ctt)I J~, .1 Jl•, • '' r.mttp¢ 1.•I . . I JS -1 5bdO.I> 1.10 . ; ~· r~ \'O Un Hut!Nr . 101 1-. t'"l'a ~ind di ~trihult• t!H' r t•m ;iin· :~~.li'.:; } 1~11, ·;,; ~:l.~~w:i'..~ s!~ ~:''-~-! 1~1 ~ •I'<-v, ~;~~:~::·j ~ l~~:.·,, =:••,:~ ~ l!; !i;tt7t~ ~ .. ~; ~ l~• v. l::R:'~~ 't. :! ~;:.::~:
Cll'r o l'lheeslatc'sassc·t..;al'-"""'ttk .93 6 79 11•1, eoiv.~1 "'• ••• 1•~• "' 111M1 J 1 •v.-\o K•CPL11.101 ltl n 1. .....,1111.JO J 1w :n .. ..., SNQr\I .:tlll J s J.\lt-1, VSFklrli.• 1 "2M<•I d. h f h AMF In 1.14 s l:JO 101'>-... ColC.' Ill S\t •. l01 Sil,,. ', Corp , J1 1"".:. ... CPl." •VI .. •SOO ·~\+ N..,.. lllCI "" . . 11 \~ .... 5'Nl"PDw .n s 9 ll'o-"" .... _ l.tOd . • JS u ('Or 1ngtol e l c r1nso l l' AmlJOC .ICI 1 ,.. II -l<o Col P!(lo;rtt .•• 1\• F Qr .SJ,.,. I ... C5ol11Slld ' '1l I I HW!.ll11plJ . 2• ... 1 .... 5Nr!GO .•ll ?II 1S -~USG;p,,.o,. 10 I~-~.
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0 ~ • '. • •L ColwM I 1111 2 JS Jt'I-'• Sii I olCI 4 I 2t -.. N, 1\J , I ••I o "' ._._ · • ~ l'" • -~• o · -~, '"·-k•o.-> >>• -,.,, 0, '.•'>> ">>•• N M · •+ '-lllpl'CS .. I'' t i .-............. .,-~ ... S 11 )V. •• T . r II """"'" 1 u JV. ... ......... -JV -inPU 1.s I 0 16 • '• -l I.Gd • " 11*!>• "" SECO) ... 12 .. , ,. -11'. UI ·~ ~ J 26' ,__. \ .. o g et receipt$ rom :i AmrepCotp 3 1 · 1"'", l'O Com~v 110 1a .! l•'•• 11 00e.. ,,. •s .. 11._ •.. l(~•Y 111111.,.,, • 1 Jt. . NwPlct .e:i • 10 ""'"' ,,. ~.Ml t .a 4:itr-""' ~ .11 , 110 10 .... _ '"
henef iciar ies and fi lethem""'•tar1.10 ' 1• 11.,., ... ~E:!.:~.~ 1 ~v. "''~,' .·.• '1 ,1 1:1~:t'.: i!loltyp11 .••· 7 ll . NW!.11 J • .aa • n M14tl'4 ~..., • s 71'1 ..• vsl'litv.toa 6 11 ••-~· A..t.,pl1.6S •. lO •S -v. "' 1(11J1&80 ,1t _,•.IJI J .. , '• ,.,,..Col,..O' 31 2J:V.t l'o si-tl .II J 11 114 ••• us,_" .tS l JI 0...• l'a with lhe court: """'''pl ... '. ' 1 1v. ~ "' CwEdt)l I .~.. I 1:;:; i . Sw;: •• 11 I • IO 1(1u!8pf I\> . •? 10'.. •• ~ .lOQ • 679 Ill"• "' Sllor4IOll 1A 1 IJO ..,.,,,,_ .......... 2.«1 s ''' --ll<lo Amil..! l.ICI s IJ JS + "'' cwe ra I,,,... • r -'• lfl • ) l•\ ""'<• ·'° ) 11 111>-. Ntl:Si pl 1 . .0 .. ~ l)V.• .. :ifdT l.Clllll 1 J ....... UST • , ,, IJ1't ... And tosubmitt.othe rourt~!~n.,.,.•,> ,w,, ,•,•,,•, ~· ~a0~~·2 1~ !::-·;,,,; .9'!!.~ :~ ~t;. 1• ,,...~~·.,,• • •,;'!' ~~ Nuco<Ql .2' J s u 51\tMtrG .» • 2• '"'' 11o UNT:t'1·111 1 ... 11 .. = ... --...... .., .. -. "· ._ -_.. tCI I •9 •' • NVF Co Si 1 12 10"• ... Shellr"lll' 1..0 .. I 11Yt " .,.. > ~ s,i IS.M \<o afina l account1ngof:illA1K11ttc1 .111s1•1uv.1 c.....;ip1i.n .. •7tt -,.. lrKt .. 1 1u;,1.:. et..,ln.S04 • ""-l'O ---00--Sl\ellrPl..lS 1 11v. • ...,Unit"I '·· +.
receipts anrl dis burscmcn-Z:f~~·~1~ : 4! 'i11o '.. ~ =,~,'11~ '1~ 1~'111: ~ Nnt1 1::= ii :J 4r .... 7 ~ ~:::i :; 1! 1 ~ 1:r:· .~~ g:;~~ ·.: ~ ~ :~--~ =..:-A:~,§ : ~ '~ ~:. :!:~::~ '1~ , .~ ~*.,.,. ·::
l s Anwl Co ,; ' 238 1t>Jo-\o ~~i't~ · • 1~ 1~~.!. ;j; ,T!. 1,·!'!! • iJi'i ~~"'-1"" !l:~nmll I."' ~ 1 1n'f•-,','" Cl:od Petri l 11,. It'/>• '"" 519"r1Co .ICla 1 )t o1~ .. v. l::~:" ~ J ~ 1;~.!. .,.. · 11,pKlleC SOS $1 111'1 • \lo ..,, > l ., ,.. ,. .. 1 ic.llCotlf,14 I 611 '>-• l)::udPlpl 4 .. 11 •1'11•1\'lt SiQ1'1910llDl.1 J I .,,, <,> ·-··•·• > I '' >!•••"
h Ap(o Oil .•I ' ~o IO'h-,.. ConnM\ 1·-I 1 I -,.. .IO ) I lllV•. "• l(y Ufl, " • It 1•'• J.14 ,. ll'4> 'I-I ~Co 1 • ,. ,. lo ...... ~ .... O nly sfl er all t ese st eps """"° Corp .. ,, '"" CoN..;c ... • u u • ~• .w 1 101 1 • • • ic. .. McG 1 1• ln 10 • :~ l)::~Pfllll · 1 11,. :-1 somPr< . !Gd s 1 2"".:. .,. u..;....o.i ·'° • 111 u 111-\:.
h be I led • . th I, p L Corp 4 111 •'• Con ECI .tlocl l IU 1' > -~, (Qr 1.10 t I 11\lo • Kt f'I-I l 1 11<0 ~ 1:: ·• ~ u ... 0 ... 5irl'lll&Go M • 32 ll-l-Upp\n ... II U6 Mli • ...
ave end~o~p e dlf:\ c mr""9~ .~~~·ii ~~:=t . ~;i(\.!..~ ·~:~ ~~ i...:.:.:k:=c~1:~:1;:1i:::::Qi;'(d\".~·;u!?;t..:~~=r1~:~1::.:-:@"f:'r1!:':~ •. ~':~:,...,,· ••• ·.~ executor 1s c arge rom •. ,,,,','.·.! 1, ,, ,.~:: ,~ CGr>E 1>1 •.•s .. "°° :n . ~ • 11 is~ ... k""""" "' , -''"-11o ,. ,,. •• ~ Er ~~ '' '" • ·--
his or her e xecutors hip. ~c11e•D JS • n 11:;:->: f.:}~00,14!s s 10~ ~!r:-,~ El« 1·'° 111so1 Jl\'0-1• 11:ir"Sdi"C :;o s '30 n~ •• ~• g: ~·= ,•.·,.•:,:'.so,., :;:,/) -.~· ~~ ·i • .!,,;: ""• ~ •,1 . .: ·1·1 11; ~ti.,.!.'Z; Attll( Entp .. S J~o • '·· ' Rtod l.olO I 1'9 1'~ ··· k l M Al<I 6 1'V•-~~ Ol<JM:j.E 11•~ .,0 l :10 I IS ~y + .,_, 1f1
Don't m:ike the mis take ~1·,"K ,·." •, l\ ,','·. •'· ~i~'8'i.~~ ~ 1~; l~~ ::: -'...,·"" •,s ~'1 ",,,. • \lo 11:111qr<1" .32 • '1 11"'-' c..Nc; 1.«1 1 11 11•.1o ~ ','h si.ij c:.,:,.. » 1 ,"",,,_ .... ~~ ~ !: ~l~-·;. "' PS 3' "" ,._,_ p > o 01 lllt l'o • .. k«IVQ .Jl)fo S 4 S'o Olin Q:r 1.10 S 11' 1.,.._ '-Sllf!irlQI .2' 1.S Mt > >O ....
of thinking y our esl ;it e is too !~~,,~~ ~ :l ,:,.: ~ c;;;;p·p.,~1~ . ,10 i,..., ~1.... 1:,i:'~1~ ' tf ,:'"'-"' ic~~;:: 1~ 1~ ~;;_ ... g::r:i: .J : ~ 1:,.:-:: t:= :l! i! 31~ 1::-; ~ lNlftpt ~'-v--
s malJtO "'ct l'raOt\VritinRa Atlel'tl'IU(),o 61 , ..... ConP pl•'• .. IJ20JI •1 J.ltd .u ·• 3' ""'···~; ~ .1J 1''tltl1Jl•-1'• ~l .1•• I 1~~,Yt ~IW.2111114J"li-I ....,IM .JO • V r~ •·•
\VIII Or Otlming an rxecutor. = 1~ 1:: J~": ~ ~;.::~'!:: 1~ n.,.,_·~; 112.1~ 1~ 1~: ::~.:_ :% ;:=~•;·.~ ! 1~ ll''", ~ Oi-t~Lu ~,; ~ 1! '~~:-:! t:"'~ ~ : i ::~.-1"' ~·'.!11; 3: 3,~-.. , ·--''' '' ''" ,L C<lft11 Ailrln10 Ill Sit+ Vo,.._.._•.-•>''' ,._ .. ,, 0 -0 ,., •• ,,..,,In JO J ti l"-vou DON 'T ,,,,v ·· tu L'.,.·(·•t.•»0 ,·n lh" S7 a-.OOO ·an"e .... .,,,. ' . ... ,, ~ ,. __ ' -••• , ''" .. ,,_,....., -y-n.... .,. 1.111·. .... ..... 5ol• 8.11. '° ' ,. I -"• • ,,.
i:. i:..~"' "" "" ' ,_, "'"""Ill 4"'• 110 .. .,.,, 'It ,_n....,, ·"" ,... "''""' PuDU t.lil S ISi. 11~>-"• -L l -OOiEI 1.20 S .. ,ll~+ "i.\-,. eorPcti t 4oM 41'1•"" Vt!ll .. 1.040 •. 31 U -111
s hon around for ··b::irgain· are b ecomin g eomn1on· ~.°', ,·.!! ·,; ",, •,•,.-_ •. ~&c,'°gf1~.~ ,1: 1;~: ~~ r-.Aet0••.,'• '• ",, ,•,~-·;.,· L<KGi\1.si. • • 111~ .•. C>.CdJ.l l.2t t 11 ,....,_..., Soou.•.Old s u ao -1\fo vttco °""' 10 Jtt 11~1
>' "'""' -""It .. "" Li""""!.tr'lt J 3' lt't • 11 a..ie\C.. .10 l I 11'+ •. SOS CN .30 ' I ) + V. VF Corl> .It 6 U """'' \It s ." Although JetfaJ fees are 1>lace in this nation '"·ilh M 1n111111 .n11 12 1.,,, \t eo...10 1 . .0' 1" 10', • vo ee11111111 1'I 1(o . u nrB<r .n • 2t1 10•,, ·~ ........ ~.10 • , """"-'~JC.Ell.•, 11s nv.."' ~ 1 ... 1 • •• J~•"' "' MA l 1 I'S 1'Yt \Uo CnUCp Ql1"1 .. 1 JJ•• ,,_ TE l.IO I I'll 11""• ·~UM! "1r J 1t 2l • ....,,._. Vklo<CC SO• 10 ..... ge n era lly left 10 the pens ions. life ins ura n cc,AWt>ii'r .• , ... ,11~!11o cn111cp?.?O • •)J0'1>•1~c.TEp12.,., 4lt -·ll'•u ;.ot!:10.J 1 ,1::.~=;::1; ~~::-tt~.1'~ ;1:.,..:-:v•E1«1:111111 ..,.._· ...
h h " AsC>rG1«1s141 11'11 ... ClllllPl,Clld' ••• , •.•• GTIFlpll.lO •. J\0" • 1, U!i•S~.n ·,. ..... °"'8'11H l.M s 1m J)i. Sdooolpll.IO II 11YI • \lo V•E.l'Jl •.04 . l'/O Ul'J +1 ... discretion or the court, in o me o w ncr s 1p . so As~ ,;40 s • ,...,.: ,,. g:,::1~~~ 1 ~ ,l ;;-"" G11,. 1.100 • '° 1J\'o ""Lta•!oplJ•M .. s ,.~. ~ °"""pt '"" •. , u •1 S--111<.JD 6 ., u _.,... •"'•"'••"•~ ·• J.JO"' ~!.,,-. ~ mosl slates the executo r 's· widespr e;id) and a lyp1cal· Al!*WW .40 J t1 1~-~ " · • • · •• 0 inc: • 11 4'" • ""' ~alwy .tdll ' • u ..... -... ci.t."d1"' . .a 1 , tl~-'"' 5oaP$ 1.• s ,0 •YI • .... ·"' -· ... ~
medium.size U.S. bank is !l;o.,:·~ ! ll 11::= ~ ~:",~0'!,,,·~ •. l ;:t, ~,·,;.,·;~ Gtf<ul!IP'-'.st 1: ~ ~~ ... : ~ ~~: :: ~ ~~ :~= ~ .,_., •-=" ,._,,, ,, ,, t?'-!~ 1, .. •., •, ,!!! 1,•,.'"' ... ...=1·~ 'j •1;: '!""~1\'0
commission is fixed by II di. hld l A11ce1p1i;:.: 15' ~, •. ,,,,·,,,,.,,,.··,,", P.r..10Qt11on.,.-1..,,~rMPtc .•• "'o •.• ~1:i '•2111 1t7 .... ~i.10t'52n1--'¥:11S1Cot1>M4 J '"'-"' s tate law and is based on the u su a Y e ig e o ser ve Au11;c111 111o il 1o111 aw.-·"-c:;," e>.ia 1 l60 lJ'-, "" """P' 1.IO •• 110 .. .,.. + 1v. Leh v .. 11K1 • 10 (• • .• ,,_ ll9 1.60 1 '° n11o-\If SoNAn 1.65 1 lJ it . . . \l\lkftM ~s ~2•"-• · •
amount o f the estate that as executor on this s iie of AAcn QI >u .. 110 "' • '"" eo..-1 ' • n 1.., + •• """P' i.n · · •ID •• • 1 lth v11 ci1 .. 2 • • '~ P.:Plt't11 .1s 10 u it ... SHETel 2.M 1 u nv. • 'h ,.A .It , » ,..., .. '·'
t h , Atlk pl 1.IO •. 141 Ml -Vt CoaloUn .lW ' OS 1'1>-\'I Pll I I JS ID • Vo ~·.~01, 1~ .0. ',,• •,:•,-.•. • Ptcl"wt' 1..0 I \02 1•'11.-'4 = ffl .,. O>I !re_• ~ .... l .2Q . , 4 " • 1,,. passes throug h his h ands. e8s tatke. s.A3ys . e ,.A m e n can ::::" ~~ io 1~ '':lit •l'."' ~':' !·~, , '•'• 1!~; ~: ~1;~ ~~ ~ 1f:v. • ~ , te;.;.-: in :.0 , 6 u·~, ,., ~ ~:~ ~1: .~ 11~ ;f~-iih 5o Rtll tli 1 1,. ;r;, 1;; WKA• 1.JC11 , ,, S14• ..
l·lowever, if t h e r e are two an er.s ssoc1a io n . ATD '"' ·"° J 2• 414 : . : c;::pj1,.;-'.'.o s • '"' • •/• 9f~ &u.,, •. u. •, ,!, 1"".: ~.· uv Fo C..p . • s 1v, • "• ,,_ n... .ICI 4 1 1_ ... ~•pf .» .. 10 S\11 • v. 1 s ,. 11.,. • l'O
executors. the com missions ='1.=1t;; 3;~: i.: =;ii~; 1{ ,?:,: ::: o:o;. 1..rM1) 11o l"'• \'O t::i1~i1.~·• ~111::~-~ =pt~:: :~ i::.·~,=.~.J ·; J ~t!: -~~1~ ~ fl~~1~
may double. and ir there are, ALSO. IF YOU do not A"'° C.O..D ' ~ 1 .. -.... 1.tC1 4 ss n .. • v. Gitt Hill .n • ' 10\i ••· u>11u Fvr"' i " 211i • '• ~m 811 .Ji J 1, :i-i.. "" .......... 40g , 1, ,~. 111 _ _... .111 11 1 11,,._ ...
"""' Cp WIS .. ' "·" ... eor-· Cp . '° ,,, .. . Gillen. I.SO , l10 H"I>• "' l.FE CorPll • 21 ]'4• ~ l'WrllGI lftC s J.t )~ 5':llM.lf'r .Jiii I 10 s.-r,\ ......., L .CMd ' .. 1--... m o r e than two, tt.e commis· have a will or if you fail to Aw; QI 1.0 .. 1 n•-"' eorne. 1.11 .. 11 nJ l't .. -v. GiflOI 1r.cor s " 1 -v. LOF 2.:ro. •• 11 "~"• v. PM,,,,. AW a ,•,-~ :,:: -Sw'?; 1..,·• .,. .,1 .. -e FODCK •. 1 i..,_" . ·1 Th r . t . ...,..,Pr .l0116Ql0\(i+l'>er .... 1e11 .•01 '31'1 •V.Gleav!.J:lt\11 J l••···lOFl>I •""·· 1!1:W.1IYt ,,.._.1e 2't 111 -...... ·y;~.IO• •• ··-s ions may tnp e. e unc · n a m e a n execu or 1n your Avis 111e. .40 s s-i 111o • "' Cau$ln i.•sn 1 ,. J"1t-,,., G101M1 Mil" • s1 '~ • .... Utob• 1.1cN1 ' 21 •V• • "" ~" • .a , 20 .,.. • .,.. *""" ·* , • ~ . . . Wl"ftCm t 1 s2 ,,-.. ""
'
. fth I ·11th col ·11 po1·nl""""'1"'·10J '1 s\'o-vt,.._ .. 1.-1 .1• .. , 1 1•1o, .. G1oDeu....to 4 •14'h •1•u1>l.Oft.1on •• 11 J'i •\\p.,CllO "'' • ,_v.*""'Hu11 • "1 -v,w.cmpt • ··' •·· 1ons o eexecuorare: WI. e u r \V I ap A-Pr•·""""''•-Voc;;;e..~.»• sio>:. • .,.,GolcM'ilF<IS JJ t '.'•-l'>UoLpt.t.tll •. 1 '""-"-P.t.H"'·°'1 "n""···Sclll"'ryHplJ ., )ll:itr+\.waCmp11 •0 .• J11"'•'•
To s ubmit i •ou r will to the an ''adminis trator''to h~n-M« ou&G ,!..S ~ u •1o .. "' CPC 1nt12 1 1' 1•v. •.. ~k 1.u • u "° -v. LllJlil i.1v iv. 1 11 tt'I>-~• PMco '"' 1 ,,. 11 -1-So 11_ •16 1 ..,. 21v.-1 ~ :: ,! ~ J~: :;:
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validity 1. ·or a n executor and an ad-= 1,..·~ t; :: J: • .:: g~«I{•:~ ~ 1; 1:;:: ~ c;o...1c1111 1.10 ~ u ,,.,. .. .,. ti::ll ~~ -~ '~: !!''•: !'; ~.U::V. it ~ 4~~-· .. t::'"rf ':: :1 Jl k~: 1~ :::
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-• ' sam e ->ut your exerutor a.iieorp ... s • •v.-'" erwu•"• ,',','·.~,. .' ... ,,, ',',',',-.w .. :o':::::.::. -•. ~ , ,, ,,c,, ;', 1 itbtl11 Wli •. 10u • .,. .. ,.,..Pl 1.111 • ., ""'-...., sie""""' .21 n .. i1 v.. 11r , •1s.i l,rol' .. ,ly o•··ot·<I l>y lhe h · I ""1"-1-• 9'UV.-v. ....... ~.,.. , unncv-1 ._ ••1~-···•••o.-.. ----> "'"''"''"'''"'-.... •""'-' 1 ~11 '4 " ~ ·· ·may a\·c n1ur1 greater~1:ii• """"''"'asep.so 3 ,, 1•,,.,,,c;r.,,w ... »•1 l -1/o Utbl1n'PIA .. 1 S'-••. ppt:;ia.• .. 710;1 !o1oOl'N11.10 1su~~ .~ .. ~,?~. de~ea.sed ; latitude 'if you g ranl such = 1~ 1_J ~ "f:• 14 c.1111~11 . .o • 111 •'• 1. ~~,"~ : ~ iv.+ ft l«l!?oHd l " JI'>-'" PaP&.L"' • .• '"° 1s •1 SIOtlOll 1.31o n,., """•.,, ·'° 4 11 s1,., ..
·ro scl' t hat <All asse:tsor flexibil1ty in y our\.\ill. ~.E'',l ·,· ,,' ,",~-. i~. ~~~9~.: ~ 'r:·.'.: Gl .111.P .•"' 1 s :!;::! ~1:~1!.1~ ':.~; ::~~=!:~:·';tg :; .:.: S:~11::i ·• !: 1iv.-.~ IM(L'.i: j '~ l~· ·~
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... , ,_, .• ... ... ~~.H,,~w ...... ' ,' , .. ,... ',: (,! ... ~~.· •• ·.·!'!' •• ,!~ 4,·,~~-· ,", Lones 111a 1 ' 1~8 10 ' '" -Ill! 1.IWI 1 llV1 . '" si ...... , ·'° ' I ,.... . .. ..... . JO .. -• a nd<ippraiscd : in y our will without t a lkin" e.11011 .ICld .. u ,,...,, '" ..... H • ..,, -,. .... LentS1G 1v, 1 1~ 111,,~; """"'°'1 1q >01 "fl• •<to ~' 1 t 1 IH•-11o ~'1.i: ; 1~ '~i:~.1;: "' &.lr!I CR .10 1' 110 ll~•• ,., Cvtk>ol I f<I l lt "'• titwe\I Un l lUto JO><••l Utflolll11 ... • -\, .. l'l!t\loll QI I 1 .. Sl#lll\I lMIO 4 41 ,,.,__\lo ldl To collec t till n1unc~· due it over \\'ilh him first . Ir he e.nr1 ,__ 1 .. >"•-\r c7P"" t •O 1 11 7• ,, ;. G4Wpt s.11c .. •• n i •• '• u Lp1io: 1.10 .. 1100 11 -1 Ptopt Dr .10 • 1 ,..., •.. SWl:r.;c: __ Jt 10 ... 'I-I 1 ,.G ... 1'
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•'-\ ""• .. ~ •• •->-0 1 » •01 .._,. Ppl' '"' •• llll Cl -I 'l'o 1>ay any d ebts O'>''Cd by die, or his own bus iness <*r-.. _~!~ ·.~ ,, ... ,,J,: ,.•. ~~~~~.·.~ '• "•• ,•,:·.·, ;~ ... t'fllnd., .• ;,· ·.·. -,, •,•,•-, ~.---. .. · 1 ., ··· Pe<n:iloE! .1J 11 1JJ ,..,._,...., 1::i,:: .10 11 111 2µ, • '"' Pt Pep 1 , 11 JO'--' .,_.,_,.., -,.._ • ,_,,..._.. ..,. • oller • LIL QIE •.JS .. rt00 .0 •Ji., p,,, lllC l,ll) 6 lol 11""-.. .11 • •U I~ o V. .l!Gq , l3t I 'll _ , , 1 he deceased after a llO\ving rairs preve n t him from ser-· S.>tlef L .11 19 lolS J1v. + 1 0,,,1 1n .fOQ 1 l6l 1\ • 1 • c.r........, .60 • ~1 11¥11 • "• lonl!0t11 ·'° JO 1 •7'1> • 1• A!I •r.c "' t . 1 1111t· ... 1si-n. 1.111 ' J.t u~-YI a-. 1.~ s ?llJ 1,, ... • , • Brtul<CQ .321• i 41/o+\~Dtl<tllllllt)l1 .. 111] ti """"di .Hid• 9 1 ... -l, l.«a!C0tpl ll 7V••'•Pf!tfrPl1.2011 l\11 ''lsi-Wlt\.'16 ltllVt ... mCoNAl1;1t<I l ''t---Cr editOrS a set. limited time ving, the court will appoint BNr•• .:u • 11 1•'-•''~ e>.111 r..nr11 u m 1,,.,_ .,, Go.iMt11?.m J 104 JV.-•,\ i..-.-t.04 ' 791 J•Vo -i. Pe{reSlr .93 u n• uv.-"" 5'1111
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ol Cl'l.lrt9f on '"" Ne.. V6111 stock &en (lJ 1.JS 11J U('•. ~ O!MY' .11 • 3'1 ·~ ... It Fe·"' I )QI t •.<t-"' lllflOISf ... s rlOClll ' -"" Pl'lilljlMD •• M UICI '1'4' I ~ Oil It s '2 " .. .. 11i¥M :.0 " llltO 61""-· v~ E•<lll119f. 6eftCppt ,., • 11G JJ'l)-1 OWtt~' .16 IS 16 Jl'll!-.... ltPrt.IGI 4 1 U -V• -M---PNlipllfl .20 51 SJ J -°"' SUn()llpl ]\lo .. 11 l't'6• "" Net1n0ritrc~l•oeclll"OftM•!M INDEXES 11enc p11.l0 •c•vt>-"• ~Pfl .1111 JI 1"' mblnl.102J •U140.,.-3.\io MKMF . .OJ 1 1"--1'1PNt 111111pt\ 13 1•'As.n..m 1 s JlltYo--\.'o 11Col wl\, . .OIJ0'6 •·•
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1 oi911e1 Eo111 »·• .... 011 11.4 ...,,, '""'" 1K1,t00 •1,... "" 8rGr\lp 1.M1 s ,. 11 • .. °'"' oo-, s • -"' ...,.¥ ·'° 1 ' ,..,_ 111 ,,__"' ,,. 1 "' 11 ... "" "60. tJO 1 ,... 11tt ••• Pl-fOENIX , Ariz. IAP) -llallcrart • Roy•I In IOI ' "• ()II 1! I 1---------------·1W\jflqf>le E•c 1/0,400 ••• 'll &II 51\f"p .fl) s 25 Sot. lt Q,,E'i .IO ~ t• Sill-.... uton .l1 5 )I) 1,.,',', •••.• ~¥ ·-• )I lil'll-"' PS.E&G 1.11 6 ,., 1)1/o ... H I r • wt1111111. cro J -'• 0t1 11.1 u"°" Ni c;., 1•t,JOO ?l-.. •~-6'F.,,., ,JO ., SJ ,f,-VJ 1,10 6 it »,..,-.,,, ·,.. 1 • •sa ~, NlloQ>i 1.•10 • • Js ""' .... 1'$EGlll ,,..., • , , u .... -111 · o m es, nc,, on('c one o the nation ·s
to Pw11klnEI .i1 ,,,_._ '" on 10.~ Gr! l'flt•n u1a 1•1.t00 ~ J,. 81"~""" .n 1 3» ••• . . . oo.. 1.10 11 w •t-1-" •1,'1.!', .,~,", '•"• ",~·. •, ",, ,,,. •~1" 1.111 • . .o 11"' • "" 1'$EGlll' s.os •• 11JO 4JVp • YI lar•esl home bll>.I"·-. loot $?.S tlN¥CCIS<.loO S"9-•o Oii 104 """"El« 110)00 ll'\ .,.arv.ll W ,olQ J J1 •1,, Vo OPI" lftCll .. I 1"' ,,, 0 •• .... <I Ol"" ,_ Wolll•l.1H •IS 11 -Vo P$E:(;pli.7' •• >S0 4) •Ill> ., U\;o .;, ,,
12 1111111111 . .on 1•.-""' .,°", "••.•J 1t111••r1' c•an Snlvs ~._,~i..,co iu.m 10 " ·1, eT 111q 1.1°" 1 ~ J-..-~ 0r-1..0 1 1s )tllf--" ..... MltwE .J1ot s 1• ,,,.__"" PSEr..ii" uo .. l111 • • 1 mllllo n, or $3. 71 ""'r s ha re. in the fiscal lJ ...... Pll .... t ''•-"I ...... ..-1•,000 1i''7 ,, &lltYrlftEllt 3'I 3' -'9 Orelwl.«11116• 41111 -1"' _ ... , .. _ .. ', ~.'•'•,'~'It. _.,051.loO ••I 10't--l>t P\ISINIJllo I lJ Jl\lt ,.. f''-14 GAC (Orp ,,,_ "" OH 10.I \'ul11Htf• l)::(dnll '"·· IO'i "'"""'Co .IO 3 .. I~ ... °'"pf 1.10 .. II .. -WI JO ... ~ ·" • 12 ""'-.... ~QI Jl'J 111'1 40 -1 y('arendcd last April JO. l!=~1e11'° ~::-:-·~ g:: 't·~ '"'''''''. Gm""°'°'' u1.iu.. Ji~, ... ~..!~ . .l; .~ l : .... =~.! :: .1~ ~~11 ;1'h 11.c :a,: .. ·~~: ~ ~1~ '~ ,; ~-·\; ~:.,·.:= i' f, g:= ~ The Phoenix -based company'5
0 AtlCo l"lji l~~ \.·. Oti t.t s:;t,"; 1.l'(I , I ..... ' .. °""""' IO 6 ,, '"' . .. ' Ele<l11 1J ' ' ,.. Ill P" x l ' II ,.,, I .. P\ltll•O~r )I 1• jl(O-'"' r· I I '( ,. h d k 11 Ai. ..... 10t1 .. 2!! •.t ''""'' s.~ 1u J.1.0.rio &ICI'"" 1.ton , 1~ l'~-"' °""' Pw 1 40 6 161 1119_,,., 1 1""' .n • xi. , , •• Mt:.A •r.c .ao > >t 1"-. '• P\»blo• ,.JOii 4 JO ... . . inane a s1 ua ton l' nn gc n1ar ·cd\y 1'C..fll:rC .S1 , •• "'..., t,\ fe11.i , • .-q0 J,l.il ... "1---------------1Bu1ov•W 10 I ll ti. ..• Ot.llleQll.IO •. llO 901~. 'I, IA l.toll .. ! t•\lt+ •• Ml:CtOJl.111 ,, .... \.j fV.r!A C .10 . 10 ,.. early this year '10 8T Ml I IQd ~. Ou '·' 'I""" tw'll .... \l.100. !IWl'*erll "° • ,I ! -.... Oul.t ... 1.111 . 11)0 ,, .... l\'t 1, 5VOl 1 • ••i ,.,,._ '. *°""" I JO 11 t}q ''" ll>t ...... SP 1 • • I 10-.... '• .----::-----:-------1""'==~-=~-=:._ ______ ·~·~·':H.::"'::1 8unlljll I'• I Ii • "' l'.lulo«llll l,ICI . ll~.. , , .... 1 U lll1 lt'-' '• I.It~ CD JlJOllG ~ -f\.!1'1W' 1 IO 1 401 ...... ,_
a..11""'1'° ,., 11 .,... o....Pll'•••. 1 ''"'''" ,,.. .. '° •1179 11 .. Mt:OllnO • .a l >1 '"" • "'"•CP • • 11 1\lo . '• 'DartProrits A"'•rlrati .'t.111t1l>ftls eunHo 1.ro , 111 1i·~-.. ""'9t'..i ... u "' "'"'-.. .... 1.11 , • ,, *Gr&! 1"' • •1 u,,.-•• P\.n.•QI ''" , n
or-t1o•tH111 ss . • •"' • ~ c.10 ., ti.1 1tt •IOll C.P~,. i i i W.G<Hi .)l)s n '"'"'l'Vll .... 11 .. 11' 1~.-·. t.<)S ANGEl.F.S (t\f•1 -Record lo .. I A II &$.li..iin tul+O•vi t>(ENO!a .••• """.SOU •~,.,,, l..ou~4010•;1 1~"'-' ~n,.1141) '6'•'•J.IGH1p11 10 10" ·P\l'l)l.i•t'1•'I01••••'~ 11 .d l d h I ''•(JN C' rf" ,tlnr1,• .. tTr•'11d 1.,..i,,•011 ..... 1r•0Mt+11~n.i..~01o..i c-Ol.PnQI''•· 6sit~-··~ 10>.1•s "' 1•, M1:ln1vreM l'11:io1't.o+1•• -oo-\Ir ·quar cr an n1ne·mnn1 sa c s
, 11:11 iw•a 1A,, "''. !c 1 11-11 ..... ni ' 1 no ' 11~ ' lMlni!L 1.11 • '"' u \, • 1 '"1' :11o s si 11• '• ""'~ • 1 11" "' o...o.i ·'° 1 1" u • • • and Jlr o rits have been re 1>1\rt d b o rt NI W YOllot llJPU -r,,. '' Mh"I' N•lll MAlflkff fRl!NO Of1 K<U ...... (tlf'd 0,.•11\'r>d\ l1U ,,,.,!....... _a.,,.'! •• •,•, 11·~· ') DuoaLN pl 1 1111 l l • ..... • ..... ~: 1t '~:. '• Mel.Mn n s J) 17'•. 1• C:....<,()l M u •I 11-.. 'r-c y a ••J 1r•• e... '"'"""'"'Ml )lot• ,.,..~., ...... 1 ...... ,,,,,,,,,, •. -,,..,., ... , ,~ ..... 1.,._,.. .... _,.,_ 1"' 10 '• Ot1ocLoo.C11 s11 ' 1o11 1'""-i. °'""" l.l •• ~.i. •• fnd11s lr1·cs In• l•r•elv because of
' -........ -·-W i Wd ' " J -... ~--. L.n,,. ,,·,, lll·· 'k F,•,M•w, ,•, ,·,•, ,•,'• ""'-I IO ·~ 1, '". '• ---·-• ... • ,., ' IEIC"""91 ~,. Adv...cn 111 " .......... p1,,,11oc' !<il•n ... .,..i ..... p. .. , •• • -.. v-' 0" d 'I r I ,. I Slln Cl9w Ott Ol;<tln;. .,, S79 ,,~,n1••drt'ltl !hlp .. ld lhl•-•lth"I Cotl••f'+ ..... q ~ I ir...· '• lft '°I 1• H~-"' ., .. , 1D ..., ... f • "_,...IOI) 1/J .... 'T 1 ll'ro\'e a(•S Q PUS ICS, gass Tl!O .. ,q.m ·.~ ...... , .. U .... -1(,~ US ;It! (ltY•\ltllldomlU-a ftlpt>!(9fll •n\l«-C..PV\11 S21t 11 -\lo IC:-JI'+• ~ 1fk) ll.M •'-l'l-.d.1116116 J'••'• , .•• d _,.,
Stor"I l)r1l'IQ ii(. ,., 1e11,. 1111 "" e,o•o '" 1t11 ,. r ll<'• t""' ,,.. 1111t·l r.;·• c~.....,.. 11r-• l1 t \111 E:11t11t • 1.04 , r1 1•v. • .,. -[•111~ " ,•, ,.1. • 1 """""" 1 • .iu l Jl '''• ··~ ~ ... ,, ,, ,, -~. c1111 a1n r~ :1 n con!'umc r p, vvuclS, a
s.111,. •11110 •·· ,.,, •• !E:e•.•7~1-· 21 J~l-·1~ "'~· .... ·.-• •> 101• .~.=.,',,,,,,",~··.,',•, 1.1 c • t:o<P ~. ,.,_.,.. • ...,,.! 1• •·~· .. ,~kc•.m ·.onforthc f1·rms.·1id. "'-'"" 0t1 ·~Mo n" '• I.Mill MA•11:at '"'"o ,..C:,t~.~~~1':.,~"'1::·~1~~~~\!\';';:;;~;:·1 ll'L-.601J '" 3Jv.1 1"" ~Ai: ,., 1,. "'... ... ~sro:. * n ,,,._ i. lllt0Nnp1 1 11\o.,1. ,,., " ~ .. 5Ntl I">.* .,.. ... T...w.r Mlll6il ,, 1 .,, .,..,_ 1 ... 1 -" "Wld (-..1 "1 1110 .. H t• 1 •· E.tG.F Jl)I • 1911 ,,~ t&HG"' 1!:f ,'° n '"" • l ~ • 1 • J~· 14 lltc!ln "' 1<-1 11·~. J Tht• ~pokes m an rcporl.cd the a.. ... _...,,... Jl,Q l"> '• "'*"-" J\I ll c ... .O.\ol•"41l<1 (tMVlill""' 11•-.. '• ~•dJ ,v• ll I'• ...... cSlrlll• •--.. ~O l'r 1 II .. '•
t lSICID 10'• '• °"1•,..~ 2t\ 1/t w;•r::ho '"" JI'"~ 111 " "°"' ~' >1 O..Pec UCI I U j'• ~ I llo 1'111116 1114-1"" Ml CO 1 : '° 1 1~, '• ""'"• 1·'° 7• /'1 •l'• """'°11111 21 • tt '"' • " di\"Crsln e d f irm 's lh\rd-<(U:lMCr · " ff·:·m ~.. · -... ,"',,, ,•,,1 """11•11H 0' ~· ,,,. ... , '"'11'_.....1_"" ,~ •• ·.•.~ ~ .,1
1 ,,i-~~ ,,.,.-'·."~ ,,' .~,, ~, "°" 1 ~ , l :f';:: :~ :=::~-; ·: : .. ) Jg : :: ~.,,_._,~ ,' -,,, n,,"' • :: earnin ~~ amounted to Sl7.S millio n. or • ..... · n.11tai°"'1 '"' 1 .. 1~'' 17 "'Ol'I" ~"'ft'"V' _._, ,_ •u T SOii '" )I' • ,,_...'°" °' ~1 1IO IGl'I .. ~ .... ....,. ..,,. 11•• '• 111n1,m.n.ar1 L0\11111 1111"'' •n•o "'' '<It• 1)1'"'· ~ JO 1• 168 "~• • '• Lt~d J k ' 10 1., 111• • • -11\"A J" Ill • " '°' •-' • 7fi ccnls a !'h arp
1
--··-
'J\ f0 DAILY PILOT
.Vermeil
-Worried
·About Cal
LO S AN GELES <A P > -'l"h e
California Golden Bears have won
four slraight games and are 2-0 in the
Pacirlc·8 Conference, but are they as
~ood us their record u·ould indicate?
Coach Dick Verml'il of UCLA, who
takes his Llruins . to Uerkeley Satur·
day, is convinced that quality football
is back at C:1I.
··They 'r e not iust some sle(·per
te:.1m that beat a lot of patsies." Vt•r.
meil told the Southern Cu\ifornia
Jo ... ootball Writers' Association tw1on
du)'. '"fhcy 'rc playing av.•(ully &ood
football, especially on offense.
"They have as skilled athletes in.
the ri ght positions as anybody. Chuck
"1uncie might be as good ta running
back as there is in the country. Pro
~couts v. ill tell you that. And Steve
Bartkov.·ski is throwing the ball cx-
trem€'Jy "'ell. The wide receivers are
catching it ."
Thal C<J I has talented runneri;,
·-throwers nnd cttlchers isn't new. Cul
scored points last s('a son, hut (·ouldn't
~lop other tc11ms from seoring more in
<i 3-9 yca1·. . . In 1974, Cul is 5·1 ;ind, V1.:rn1e1I s~ud ,
''The defense is so much IX'ttcr than it
has been in the past. 1'hey bend a lot
but they don·t break ...
C;il has bc.'.llc n San .Jose Stale, Ar·
my, Illinois, Oregon and Oregon
State, uftcr losing to ~1orida.
UCL A, now l ·O·l in the l'ar-8 ;i.nd 3·
1·2 ovtrull, didn't even bend late in
Saturday night's 17-13 victory over
\Vashincton State. s topping the
Cougars fou r times one y;1 rd, or less,
from a touchdown.
'fhat goal-line stand, Vermc1I said,
ins.pired the team, and •·1 really
believe ,ve 're goi ng to grow from that
experience. I hope so, because we're
,&oing to have to play our best game
yet to beat Cal."
The Bears are roached hy ,,.like
\\'hit c, like Vcrmeil a former Stanford
assistant. and Vermeil calls him "the
closest frie nd I have in the world ."
Verrneil said the UCLA offense
must gain cons istency.' while the
defense "has played well enough for
us to win ."
Linebacker Fulton Kuykendall suf-
fered a sprained ankle and is "very
, doublful " against Cal. said Vermeil.
"Now u.•e're perfect four-for-four,"
he sai"d ruefully of injuries that have
stricken the four most outstanding
players on defense -Kuykendall. in-
side linebacker Frank ~lanumaleuna
a nd line men Cliff FTazier and ex-
Costa !"'lcsa lli'gh and Orange Coast
College star Pa t Su•ectland.
l\lanumall'una was sidelinC'd for the
s('ason by a pinched ncr\'e in his neck:
but Ver meil said he is hopeful
Sv.·ectland and t'razicr will be well
enough to play aJ!a.inst Cal.
··It 's like taking l\Ierlin Olsen, f'red
Dryer .. Jat•k Ill'ynolds and Is iah
Robertson out of your lineup." said
Vermeil , former Los Angeles Rams
assistant coach. ··1t 1nakcs a hl'ckuv<J
diff('renCl'.''
Vcrmeil said Salurday night's goal-
linc stand late in the game \Vill al\\·ays
amazl' him.
··rt 's the f 1rs t t init' 1 ·ve ever seen a
team h:t\e only six inches lo go on
first dou n und not make it. I ·m on the
Jx>nch, as a rea list. talking to the of-
fense. try in~ to fLl:Ure ho\\' to get a
lout·hrln" TI in the quickest way pos·
. siblc, ''\'ermeilsaid.
Brandt Wins
Pickeroo
Oon;ild Brandt of lrv1nt· did some
ran<:y sclet·ting to '°"'in the \\eekl y
Daily Pilot PiJ:!skin Jlickcroo football
i:uessing contest .
Brandt missed only thrC'e J?ames on
the card-one college and l\\'O hi gh
school. Nifty as that \1'3 S, it \\'as only
good enough to tie '°"'ith fi,,e other con-
testants.
f.lo\\'e \·cr, 1i ving up to cha mpionship
form . Brandt came throuf;lh in the tie-
hreakcr to come within four points of
lhl' cxatt lotal points scored by all the
lt·a ms in the pickcrooconlcsl.
That ~:l\C hin1 first prize -a por·
lable lll;1ck a nd u·hit<' tcle\·ision !!Cl
fro m co ·i;po n sorin~ AB C Color
·rcll'\ l~lOn sturl'S Of lluntington
Bruch
,\nd as one of th(' 11ri;'k ly 1\·inncrs il
n1akc -. him c l11)1Ule for lhC end of
... ra:-.on r11nnff for a l'A'nilh color T\',
E.1t'h 11t't'kly 111n111•r 11ill compete for
!ht· gr;1nd pri1.c.
Sc<'nn c1 pl:11'1• in the <'ur rC'nl contest
11 t•nt lu J.u111 ~ fio3~1 . ,Jr. or San
('lt1mt•nlL' 1\hilc S;1 ntn Ana 's 1\l arlos
H ~·al~ "us 1h1r1I. 1'hcy l':JCh '''in rac1ios
fn°r tht·ir tffort!'>
. . ...
Ul'IT .........
GREEN BAY 'S TED HENDRICKS BLOCKS A PUNT BY CHICAGO'S BOB PARSONS.
Broek Tops Ballotinlf ~
Surprise Gain
Dodgers' Garvey Gains Helps Bears
Major Loop !1ll-stars
NE\11 YORK (AP) -Slevc Garvey,
the Los Angeles Dodger s firs t
basem1:1n , has been named lo the Ai;-
sociated Press ' 1974 major league All -
star baseball team, announced 1\ton-
dav
Gar\'ey \\'US a landslide victor over
Dick Allen of the Chicago White Sox,
273-76. Garvev balled .312, smashin~
21 homers a nd dri ving in l 11 runs.
Lou Brock, the St. Louis t:ardinals '
base-stealing king. \\'as also a
runa ... :ay ehoitc along with Cincin-
nati's Johnny Bench and ~1innesot:1'::;
Rod Carew
Brock. who broke J\'Jaury \Vills ' all·
ti1n e rl·cord wilh 118 steals this
sc<Json, headed a g roup of outfi eldel's
that 'included Reggie J ackson of the
World Champion Oakland A's and
J eff. Burroughs of the Texas Itangers.
Jackson had 218 votes <Jnd Burroughs
accumulated 194.
Bench, the Jleds' fine catcher who
slugged 33 home runs and knocked in
129 runs in 1974, wa s the biggest vote-
getter with 384. He left hi s 11 earcst
competitors in the dust. Pittsburgh's
!\fanny Sanguillcn was scconrl with
merelv 10 voles.
CarC\\', ~tinnesota 's st<ir second
IJ<J sem:.1n \\'ho had a major leaguc-
leading batt ing avera~e of .3fi4, had
the sec·ond hi~he st \'Ole total y.•ith 306.
II.is closl'J<I compelilor in voting by
sports \\'ri tcrs a nd broadcasters
;1 round the n;1t1on \\·as Joe l\torgan of
t·intinnati \\'ilh 63.
·rhc rest of 1he tearn include~ short·
stup Da\·c Concepcion of Cincinnati
and thirrl baseman ~like Schmidt of
the Philadelphia Phillies. l\fike Cuel-
lar of the American Leagul' East
rha1npion Baltimorl' · Orioles was
s('lt·ell'd :is the left-handed pitcher
and Ft•rguson Jenkins of Texas \\.'as
named :is the right-hander on the
presli!!iou s lean1 .
Cuellar was an easy \'ictor in his
category \vith 255 votes to the distant
46 of Detroit's J ohn lliller. Jenkins
ha<I a tougher battle. though, with Jim
\\'inner. Jenkins polled 159 votes to
Jluntcr's 117. Nolan Rya n, the Ca lifor-
nia r\nge\s' strikeout .'.ICC, had 53 \'Otes
10 rin1 sh third <1mong ri ght-ha nded
p1tthcrs.
cher~
Brot·k ·~ nut.;tu nd1n~ season nl .;o in-
cluded a .:!Ofi J,nttin~ a\'er.'.lge. 19"1 hits
~1 nrl 105 run,, scored.
The \·oterf:, \\'ho m ade their selec-
tions before the playoffs and \Vorld
Series. rho:'e .I nc:kson and Burroughs
amoni; a f1 C'ld of outstanding out-
fielders that included Ralph Garr, the
National League's batting champion.
A third baseman in his first fi ve
years of professional baseball. Gar-
vey was switched to £irst base in 1973 .
fie showed remarkable ability at
first, particularly when it came to dig-
ging balls out or the dirt as many
\Vorld Series fans observed recently.
G:tr\'CY began the 1973 season as a
pinch hitter. Instead of looking at it as
punishmenl. h~ made the most or the
opportunity. collecting 10 hits in his
first 24 plate appearances.
Grid Rankings
Tll'r AUoci1itG Prtt~ 101110u>l .. loolbflllt1ms,will>
li••l·1>lltl Y<>!H In P1ren11>elft, w.icn 'Kord ..,., to\11
po+nh.
1. Ofllc5t ~.o 1,1% TI.~KJ\'171.1 181
1. OU1. !II S-0·0 1,091 U. FICW•dl S·l·O 18'
l . Mlcl>. Ill 6·0-0 •13 IJ. TtlUf •·1.0 111
I . Altll. CU 6·0-0 UI If. Ari1on.1St, 1-1·0 llS
S ""burn CU t-0.(I 699 IS. M1Hylanll 1·1·0 f l
6. use 1.1.0 611 1t. A•i1on1 s.1.0 •
J, ,...,,. o.. .... ,.,..., S1'1 11. N, tlro. St. 6·1·0 's
t , Tt•ltA&M J-1.Q )(II It. Tul-S·OO ..
t . '*Or•tka •·1.0 JS5 It, M••n,,,O, S.0·1 JS
1\0. ~nn 5.l~lt •. S J.O . J_l:I l'CI. tlhfornl•. .S:.l_:!I ,_ .11
°'""'' •tct l•lno ~o1t•. '"l"" llllh1b!!llt1Hy: lll~lol'.
llhno+t, 1t1n•••, Ml1mi !Fl1 I, Mls.,u lppj Sl1lt. '""'111 c. ......... °"""" ..... 5111•, Pitt, Pl.o•-. 5111 Oil'OCI !11•1•,
I Tt,..lt UClA. W!lconsln, -,"'-,.14 Un<ted f>tess ln1••N11or>AI bO.lfll Cl! <N<l•"'
lopl'CI rt\IJOI colltqe root1>11t • •hl'IQs w!tllwon·lotl •1Korct..
end ... ,, jlll(f' !..°' .. !..!." ..P!"""'""·~· 1:-0iii0Sr.l)s1 (6·01 lSO II, ~IOf<Cll U·ll
1 Mltlll;&n (6'01 N IJ. Mo!rr.,nll !1·11
), it.111>1rt\I 16·01 711o 1J M;...,, IF l1) (l·U
I . Aull"'n (~I 136 !I, A"l""I CS·O
1, !l ••I use 11.11 l•t !}_ ,, .. , Te<fl !•·l·H
!Hfl NO O .. ,..,. (i.p1.-1 •. M!em! CS.Q.11
I l•••I A&M !S·U U1 II. AfllOM 51. C4·1l
I . ~1111 Slilt n .n " 11. CTitl Okllllo .... St;
t NtOrlik• U·)I 16 U lt)MIHhslP11151. ' .,., Cf!e)S.nOle90St. 10. l•••• 1•·11. -'
Nolf. e, t9••e""t'nl •II"'"" A,.....lca11-r0otuu
tNChf\, "'"" on p.roba!IOfl by u. NCAA •re lnel'91bte '°'IOI! l'CI ll'ld 11ot100,..1 cl'l•m11~1pcon\lcle•lllon by t,,.
UPI 111>1td ot co1c,,.,. Tiiow "•"" twrr1n1Jr on O<""-tlon l•f : O~l.llom•, SMU, tl!+lornl1, C..1 S11te
CLong 8t1c11 I Mid ~th-ttt•n Loul~-.
Top Packers
CHICAGO (AP) -•·Jt was slrictl!'
designed to be a short-yardage play."
said Ca rl Garrett, "but Randy
Jackson and Perry \\'illiams threw
supeT blocks and I could have gone all
the v.·ay if I hadn 't tripped."
The play -one of many key plays
111 the Chicago Bears' stirring 10-9
National Football League victory
O\'Cr the Green Bay Packers -came
111 thc closing minutes v.·hen the Bears
\\'ere ha nging on lo their threadbare
advantage 1\fonday night. .
Garrett not only got the t\VO yards
for a clutch first down but rambled 18
, vards to gel the Bears out of a serious
hole. Bob Parsons then punted out on
the Green Bay four -yard line and still
the Bears didn't clinch the triumph
until Garry Lyle intercepted a J erry
Tagge pass in the closing seconds.
Another key play -the game was
full of them -came in the fourth
quarter with the Bears leadin g 10-6.
Tagge spotted Barry Smith alone in
the e nd zone and fired. Cr aig
Cleamons appeared to come out of
now here at the last second to bat the
ball out or Smith's hands.
"Clea mo ns made it look tough
because of national television," said
coach Abe Gibron. "He should have
been there all the time."
Clea mons credited Smith with
making "a good move. I got there at
the last second. Sure, we used six
backs on d e fen se a! times but
remember, v.·e were quick enough to
come back and support on the run."
The strategy of using six defensi\'e
backs was pu:r::r:lin& since it forces a
team to run rather than throw and
Green Bay is known more for its run-
ning than its passing.
"You can think whatever you wan-
t " said Gibron. "The six defensive
backs forced them to run. We figured
we could stop their running. They had
never seen s ix defensive backs before
a nd it 's tough to throw against them."
StOllE IT QUalTEllS
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INOl\llOUaL LEAOERS
AUSHIN G--G•ttn BIJ, 8•oc,ln~ton !~·]1, Line •·'HI, Gooll....,, f.11, O.ltlOO, G¥rttt ll-101, Wlllllmi;
lCMI. •
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USC to Throw More Against Beavers
1.(tSAN<iELf:StAP I {'o;u.:hJohn
1\l r ..:a) Of lhe l'fl1\'('r~lty of Southern
t'.1h forn1.1 \ n\1 ~ h•~ Tm1an.-. "'ill t h~O\I'
tht• 111!1\l.1.lll m"1't' a.i,:u1nsl l)rl'~on
St.ii<' S:1turd:1 ,1
llov.·ev\.'r , th(• {'o:irh. noting l':-.1
ll:idcn·!'i pas.~inl? produrt•rl only 11
"'ards a,e:ain ~t llrriion S;1l11r1lay. nd ~ed · "I don't knov.• if v.1•'\l fl:'I'\~ btt·
ttr .' ·
The lack of o pit s!li ng alla{'k "Is th l'
bl11:~est my81ery nr my llfc," P.lr K:iy
1aid. ··1 know we !lhould tw a ,e:ood p<.1:,·
sing te11 m. but uc'rl' JU!it not."
1\lthoui.:h !la den, "'ho broke !'irhool
passing rerord!i lni;t y1•nr a!i a junior.
-:;ild tht• JJn'l nl cd r1n(Z rin~cr on his
pas~1n g h:1nft isn:t to blan1e. "lcKny
... au1. "I think 11 1s The ball sailed on
l11n1 at Orl',RQn "
!laden has C'om plcted only 20 or 5'1
J)a:"ISl'~ -Ji perc{' nt -In fi, e i,ta mcs.
"!!e's 1usl pre:i;sin~." r.t rK;iy s:iid.
"lie'~ a1minu the ball like 4 baseball
~1ltrhcr . I've !old hin1 to throw It -the
hl•ck-\Yil h aiminJ:'. It. I know \\.'hat a
~real p:issrr Pal is. Anrl he docs
everythJog else well lpr us.
"lladen·s been unlucky 10 ~ome
rC'~pccts. I r ould ha\·c built up hi~
statistics "·hen· u·e got \vay uhcud of
lo\ln and \V as hington St.atr by
keeping him In there :ind letting him
pass. but I u•on't do that.
"Uut I knO\V what he can do . I S!,~·
him stand in there a~ainst a fic1·ce
(Jhio State rush In l~e last Rose Bo"·I
nnu complr tc 21 of 39. And he had
several dropped ..
"I have great conf1dcncc In Pat
I laden."
Before USC's firsl game, McKay
• •
!taid 11aden's pas5 ing WO'llhl dominate
the olf<'nse llowcvcr , 1-l;iden has
a\'er;i gcd only about 10 passes a
gem<' .
lladrn has a problem, but Anthony
Oa\'IS hos returned to the form of his
sensational !ophomorc season.
"1-le's runninjiil awfull y good now -
real strong.'' flt cK ay said of hl:i; senior
tuilb11rk who hna rushed for~ yards,
carrying the ball in recent games with
the frequency rcmlnlacent of 0. J .
Slm1>5on 's c.ureer at USC.
..
•
50-50 Chance
Of LA Getting
'80 Olyinpics?
VIENNA IAPI -"\Ve moy be the
underdog:s. liul I reckon we hove a 50-
50 chance of landing the Oly mpics."
said Tom Bradley, the strapping
mayor of Los Angeles.
The lanky, 6-root-4 mayor, a former
quarter-mll~r and basketball playl'.r
at UCLA, was in Vienna lo lead his
city's ·bid against ,,toscow ror tht'
right to host the sports extravaganza
in 1980.
"\Ve lik(' to think v.·e are lhl' best
equipped s ports city in !he world ...
Bradley said prior to today's presc~
tation to the international QlympJ.t.
Committee. T\1osrow '"as to follow
with its presentution. .
Lake J>Jacid, N . Y ., the only city bid-
ding for the 198U \\'inter Ol ympics.
<1lso was scheduled to appear before
the IOC. Decisions on sites for both
the Summe r and \Vinll'r (;:1mcs '°"'t·rt·
cxpl.'ctcd from th e IOC \Vcdncsday.
"\Ve have nol made any personal
approaehes to membt>rs of the IOC.
We have done everything in accor-
dance \\.'ith IOC rcgulalions. and I
kno'v \\IC shall get a fair hearin~:·.
said-.l~radley . "I have no idea evl'n
y.·hether the Pan-AmC'rican \'Ole on
the IOC will go in our favor."
Douglas Noby, an American mem -
ber of the IOC, said : "I fear the odds
are against Los Angeles. J v.•ill do
everything J can to help them lo \Vin .··
Roby is the only' United States
member of the IOC at present. Julian
K. Roosevelt . treasurer of the U.S.
Olym pic Committee. was e.lected to
membership l\tonday but u·1ll not be
able to vote unti l next year.
\Vhile the potential hosts polished
their presentations Monday , the JOC
unanimously adopted a revised and
simplified rule J!OVcrning 1:1thleles'
eli gibility for the Oly mpics.
The internation<il federations will
be given a free hand to decide whether
th€ir own athletes are amateurs or
not. But 'there is no relaxation in the
old rules forbidding an athlete to
make any financial ga in from sports,
or to compete as an amateur in one
sport if he is a professional in another.
Athletes are no longer restricted in
the amount of time they may spend
training. \\.'ilh financial compensation
for loss of earnings:
They also m ay carry advertising on
Sports i11 Brief
tht.>ir (•lothh1g in ce'1tain lnstan«~.
provided the payment goes to tht'1r
national a!;SOl'iations. •
Lord Killanin. president of the IOC .
in opening the session, claimed lhts
will help give all l'OUntrics an equ:il
chance to prepare thl·il· athlcti:s for
('Ompetition.
"All l·ountries do not have equal op·
po rtunities," Killanin said. "It 1s
easier for some 'counlries, Jheth('r
lhrou~h government 111· pl'iv:itc sour· ·
res. to finance development of sport .
,·'This enables thC'1r (•om1>etitors to
receive high competition cxperit•ncc
and-lraininH~ But.-.Ltwru. are..other
countrie s whi r h !'o r social and
cronomit reasnns do not have these
fa cilities.··
l\1eanwhilC', financing the '80 \Vin tl•r
Olympics eould be rnnre ()£ a l'hal-
lcn~c for L<1ke Pl;i<·id than trying tu
land tht•n1 .
\Vhcn this rl'sorl \'1lla ~e in the
Ad.irondatk l\Iountains or New York
State staged the Olympic Games in
1932. tht· year Sonja llcnie gaincJ
rigure skating £amt•. it cost S2 million
to build the facilities. If Lake Placid is
successful in its bid to be host in 1~.
it plans to seek more than S2S million
from the federal and state govern·
ment.
The request comes at a time u·hcn
the economy is falt('ring and
Pres ide nt Ford is l·a lling on
Americans to curb spending.
Lake Plaeid will seek up to $10 mil-
lion in stale funds to imprO\'C state
facilittcs and Sl6.2 1nillion in federal
fund s.
These Fi gures, Lake Placid officials
caution in a booklet outlining their
plans, "do not p.urport to reflect pos-
sible escalation of costs bct\vecn now
and 1980."
The funds would help bui ld such
things as a 90-meler s ki jump.
refrigeration or a 400-mcter speed-
skating track, an 8,000-seat hockey
and figure-skating f_ieldhou se. an
Olympic Village to house and feed
1,600 athl etes a nd officials a nd press.
administration and communication
facilities.
The are a alreadv has Alpine and
Nordic skiing faciiities, a 400.mcter
speedskating track. a 2.(l(JO.seat ice
arena and the only bobsled run ·1n
North America.
Laver to Face Conno~;
Cerritos Coach Dies
N~W YORK -The much-heralded
tennis match between Jimmy Con-
nors and Rod Laver has been set for
next J anuary. it was reported today.
The match v.•ill be $100,000 wlnner-
lBke-all v.•ith site and other details ex-
pected to be announced at a \Ved-
nesday news conference.
Connors, 22, won the \Vimbledon.
Australian and United States titles
this year. Afterwards, he asked that a
match be arranged "'ith the 36-year-
old Laver, the only player in history to
have twice won the Grand Slam of
tennis -s'°"·eepin g the three titles won
bv Connors as well as the French rtown.
Both Connors and Laver are lert -
handers a nd have never played each
other.
llarrl• Dies
ARCADIA -Wayne "Tank" Har-
ris, an assistant football coach at Cer-
ritos College for the past nine years,
died from an apparent heart attack
Sunday in Arcadia at the home of hi s
parents.
Jl arri s , 41, v.•as a native of,
Loveland, Colo. 'fhe Falcons line
coach was a bachelor and before
moving lo Cerritos, had roached al El
Rancho and llcllflower high schools
<Jnd Ba ylor Uni vcr:.it y. .
John11011 Wins
LOS ANGELES -l\1arqucs John·
son, the promisin g sophomore ex pec-
ted to s tart iil forward for the UCLA
basketba ll team, has been
hospitalized with an undertermined II ·
lncss, a UCLA spok esman said Mo.n-
day.
Dr. Gerald t~inerman, the team or·
thopcdic surgeon, said Johnson had a
mild elevation or liver cniymcs, in·
die alive or hepatitl!'i.
· lfowever one test of for hepatitis
given Sunduy proved negative, and
Johnson said he thoug ht his ailment
was a re action to a nu vaccination
tr:iven the team last week. Johnson
said he was sick for l\\'Odays ofter the
team was \'UC<'in;ited for the nu 3 yeor
~go.
Al•IOH Slgt1•
LOS ANGEL.ES -\Voiltcr Al ston,
them.an \\'ho turned a seeming lack of
outward forcefulnes11 Into one or his
greatest a!l!U!ls, hus signed his 22nd
one-year contrucL to manage the
Dodgera.
The Dodgers announced the-signing
Monday as Alston, 82, a one-time far·
mer and ichoollcacher, drove from
Los Angeles to his winter home in
rural Darrtown, Ohio.
Onlv four manaeers have won more
pennants than Alston. who won his
seventh this year before his ·Dodgers
Jost the World Series to Oakland.
And only two men. Connie 1\1ack
and John McGraw. have managed the
same team for u longer period than
Alston. Mack piloted the Philadelphia
At hl etics for 50 year"\ and "tcGraw led
the New York Giants ror 31.
Irish on TV
NEW YORK -ABC-TV announced
1\1onday the Notre Dame-Miami, Fla.,
game would b~ one of three college
football games lo be regionall y
televised Saturday.
The game at South Bend, Ind., will
be seen in 36 states. including the
West Coast, the Midwest, the . East
and Florida.
The network will televise the
Tulane-Geor gia 1'ech game to
Louisiana. Alabama, !\.1ississippi and
GeorRia . The B r iPham
Young-Arizona game wlll be
available for viewing in the Rocky
i\lountain area.,
King Resllng
LOS ANGELES -Tennis star Uillie
Jean 'King. s tricken with chest pains
\\'hile watching a golf tournament in'
San Diego Sunda y, h1ts been told by
doctors that she probably ha s a touch
of lheflu.
3Nadadores
All-America
Shirl ey Babashorr, Peggy Tosdal
.ind Valerie Lee of the 1\1ission Viejo
Nadadorcs swimming.team, were
nami'd to the All·J\mcrican team ut
the AAU aquutic awards hunquct 1n
\Vashlngton D.C. over the weekend.
Coach Mark Schubert wi.s on hand
lO accept the av.•ard. ulong with the
tt•am trophy for u•inning the national
1\AU long course \\'Omen's swimming
championship at Concord earlier thi~
year.
Uabashofr \va11 named to the 1\ll·
American team In the 200 and 500.
ya rd freestyle ; tht: 200 and 400.mcter
freestyle: and the 400 and 800-yard
and freestyle relay teams,
'l'osd&I gained recognition In the
100.yard butterfly and the 400-yard
medley relay.
~e was named in the 200-yard and
200·meter butterfly events.
I
•
' •
Today's Fllfal
VOL. 67, NO. 295, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 19H c TEN CENTS
Trustee·s Set to Confirm Tanager Land Sale
' .
By ALAN OIRKlN
01 111e oau, Plltt s""
Newport-~tesa Unified School District
trustees are expected tonight to confirm
!he sale of 4.7 acres next to Costa
1'1esa's Tanager Park to a I and
developer.
The price agreed on by the school
dlistrict staff and the Buccola Company
of Newport Beach is $340,000 -$67.000
more than the $273,000 the city of Costa
l\fesa paid earlier this year for five
acres at the site.
The park is at the end of T3nagcr
Drive near the Costa Mesa Golf and
Country Club.
Robert Gray of the Buccola Company
said that the company plans to build
24 or 25 single family homes on the
land. They \•:ould be larbe homes,
with 2.000 or 3,000 squate •feet of land,
he said, and woUld me simil:tr lo 1 ~6
homes the company constructed lo
the east.
Some observers had speculated lhat
Bucco I a n1lghl seek zoning for
IO\l'tlhouses becau~ there already are
multi-residential developrnents in I he
nei~hborhood but Gray said, "\\'e ·eel
si ngle-family homes are n1ost tn demand
in Costa l\1esa. There is so linle land
left in the city."
Tanager Park ·was the subjcet of a
big push by citizens l\\'O years ago
"''ho argued that the original 2.5 acres
of parkland at the site, soulh of Adam.:>
Avenue and east or Estancin Dri\·e.
11 as not a large enough play area for
neighborhood children.
Citizens urged the city ~o purch:\s'e
at ll'asf a porUOll' of the 9.7 11cr~·s that
the school district was declaring surplus.
The campaigTI re~ul!C'd in the purchase
by 1he city las! July of five acres
or rhe surplus land. gh•ing Tan<igcr Park
a Iota\ of 7.$ acres
Costa J\1esa's Director oi L c is u re
Services Keith Van Holt said the school
er a s-
Will Ro111an~e Be Ro~ky?
Rockcf cller' s Aunt-in-la itl Falls for ill in er' s Son
LLAY, Wales (AP) -A Welsh coal
miner's young son \Vho says he is engag·
ed to llappy Ro cke f e ll e r 's aged
millionaire aunt Rachel Fitter expressed
fear today that the publicity about their
May·and·December romance w o u I d
'.'blow the whole thing."
"When she sees the way the story
has blown up here, anything couJd hap-
pen." said 29--year-old 1\1ichael Wilson
after London papers gave splash play
to his announcement 1\1ooday that he
and 1\tiss Filler \vould be married around
Chri stmas.
\Vilson told newsmen they met last
January while he was \vorking as a
butler at the Breakers Hotel in Palm
Beach, Fla , .He said they got engaged
in May and his parents visited J\tiss
filler in the United Stales.
"It's been made to look like some
so rt of £airy ta le -a fantasy -and
it's not a bit ilke that." he said. "I'm
a realist and so is ri.liss Filler.
··we ha ve a genuine . deep affection
for each other. but the papers have
made n1e look like a golddigger. She's
a very ni ce private person. but how
do you think she'll feel seeing me al!
over the front pages? -
'"She could e::isily get the \Vrong im-
pression fron1 what she sees in the
papers. How do you explain something
like that? She might call it of! now.
I don"t know."
jSee AUNT. Page A21
. .\i·1nored Express Consume1· Prices Soar
Employes Probed
In lluge Robbery In Orange, LA Counties
CHICAGO {UPI) -Police paraded
employes through lie detector tesls today
to try to solve a weekend burglary
at the Armored ~xprcss Corp. which
may have netted the thi eves nearly
$4 million . the bi ggt>st cash haul in
the nation 's history.
Authorities said fi ve persons, the ··ones
with the greatest acceSJ to lhe vault."
were tested ri.londoy. another 20 ~·ere
undergoing tesls today and C h i c a g o
police Sgt. John Castans said, "It ap·
pears it could be an inside job." 1
One in\•estigator said the loss totaled
$3.8 million from the corporation's 1!.--by·
20 foot vault.: Company official1 refU$Cd
to speculate.
"\Ve don't kno\v hov.· large it is."
said Russell Hardt, a senior vi<:e presi-
dent of the Armored ~fidwest dispatch
center on the city's near North Side.
"\Ve have started aud ilinR and we have
to go back and trace it all out," he
said or weekend cash pickups.
Hardl sa id auditors \\"ere expected to
complete their rount later today.
Should they confi rm the $3.6 million
report, the robbery \~culd rank among
the biggest in the \\·orld, surpass ing
the $1.5 million holdup or a postal truck
in Plymouth, Mass. in 1962, and the
$1.2 million taken from a Brinks armored
truck in Boston in 1950.
England's ··Great Train Robbery " of
1963 \Vhen an eslimail'!d ~7 million \\'as
taken is still the larges t all·tilne caper.
The FBI and lllinoi$ Bureau o I
Investigation joined more than J5
Chicago investigators Into t'ie cast? rob-
bery wh~re plastic bags fill ed with gaso-
line and hooked to time fuses were dls-
rovered.
Castans disccunted earlier reports rob-
bers set oU t\\·o explosions in the area
to di vert police from the h(!lst.
Authorities said Iha robbery might
have gone unnoticed had not lack of
air in the vault snuffed the fire.
The lirehombs went off ~londay morn·
(See llEIST, Page A~)
ADJ' ANCES PACE
DAY'S TRADING
NEW YORK (UPI ) -Prices again
turned mixed loday In fa irly a c l Ive
trading on the New York Stock Ex-
change, ~ilh some blue chips hurting
averages.
The Do\v Jones industrial average.
up and dov.'11 from the ~tan. 1o 1 l
6.98 points to 662.116. The widely watchtd
lodex of 30 selected blue-chip stocks
gained more than 14 poinl.! flfondBy.
Advances held a comfortob\e lt:ad over
declines, nbout 7 to 6, among the 1,787
issues traded.
By The Associated Press
Consumer prices cli mbed 1.4 ocrcent
in Los Angeles and Orange ctiun!ies
in September, the U.S. Bureau or Labor
Statistics reported today.
Inflation has pushed prices up 10 per-
cent in the first nine month s of thi s
year. They are 12.4 percent above the
level of September 1973.
Suzanna Sadowsky. regional chief of
the bureau,.s Los Angeles orfice. said
housing accounted for nrore lhan half
the over-all rise in September. These
increased 2.4 percent lo 13.6 percent
above a year earlier.
Aiost of the rise "''as account ed for
by mortgage interest rates, mainten:ince
and repa irs.
Renters paid an average of I.~ percent
Mis11tfltcla ltlisl1np
n1ore between July and September.
Residential telephone bills were up
an average of L 7 percent. and household
furnishings rose 2.7 percent.
food prices increased J.5 percent and
\\'ere 12.2 percent more than in Scp-
~ember 1973. Leading the increase was
z five percent boost in such items as
eggs. margarine. salad oil. sugar and
coffee.
J\Ieats. poultry and fish \Vent up 2.G
percent but still ~·ere 6.8 percent belo\v
a year earlier. -'I1lc price or fruits and
vegetables ~as 2.3 percent lower. do1\·n
for the third straight monM:i'=1>tw. 21
percent higher than In September 1973.
Transporlation costs increased 0.6 \>Cf·
cent ;:ind were 8.7 percent higher than
a year ago.
I
Ollty Piiot l tllf P""lo
MOVED TO TEARS
Pri!.Oner Ru5sell 's Wife ·----·---
I>Iaza Th.ief Get1;
$350 Artifact
t\ thief \Vith a ,penchant fo r the finer
things of Ide stole a i350 serigraph
fron1 the open front of a South Coast
Plaza art dealer's store around noon
f\londay.
Ann ~-IcFarland. manager of ~luirhead
Galleries. told police the stolen item
was part of a display sel out daily to
attract customers.
The lhief. police said. !ifted the Affiche
Avant Lalettre serigraph from the dis-
pllly w;;!: ;:;:;! ~ • .-.:!:.:;! :.~'..
The piece was described as a 23 inch
diameter multi-colored rlisc mounled on
a gold metal fra1ne measuring 30 by 30
inches.
Prices were higher in fairly nctlvc
trading on the Amcrl<:nn S I o ck Ex·
change.
Paramedics aia Joseph B. Green of Costa 1'11esa fol·
lowing collision ?tfondny afternoon In Irvine be·
tween his motorcyclo and car driven by Vernon F.
Lunch of Ontario. Green, Sl 7·C University Drivo.
was treated at Tustin ('01n1nunlty Mospital and re-
leased. Accident. took place about 3:25 p.m. noar
co rner of J.l acArlhur Boulevard ·and l\t icheJson
Drive. .. _.,..._,., '---.,.
• •
dis!rirt's sale of the rema1n1ng 4.7 acres
cun1e as no su rpriSC to the city. Tht:
city hnd at no tin1e intended to buy
all of the surplus land fron1 the school
di.s1rict. he said .
'"It was felt that buying another 10
acres al !he s.ite v.·as unne cessa r y
because "''e already had 2.5 acres."
he recalled. Also "·ithin~ fiOO yards
of it there will be 26(1 acres or p.:1rk
\\•hen Fairvie"'' Park is deve lo!>P.d.
The city bought the site ·and three
ree
Ex-countia11
Released
F1·01n Jail
By i\RTllUR R. VINSEL
01 the Diiiy Pllftl Still
LOS ANGELES-The t\1•0-year and
t11•CH.tay ordeal of James Ray Russell
cam e to a tempo rary end in only 10
minutes loday as the Los Angeles County
Superior Court judge approved h i s
freedom on low bail.
Russe ll. 27. formerly of Laguna Hills.
has been held for i".J.t days without
bail. without arraignment and v.•ithout
!rial on a fugitive warrant charging
hi m with an Oklahoma murder thal
occurred on a Saturdny night in ;972
"'hile Husse!I \\"as allegedly out on a
lark in Long Beach.
'"Oh m y God,'• blurted his blonde v.•ife
Karen. ~-who insists she was \vil h
him that fateful night al the Lopg Beach
Nu·Pike Amuse ment Park.
··1 can have him horne today ... rn1
going to have him horne today ... oh n1y
God ." she cried.
The slender blonde 1\•ife who has been
11·ithout her n1an for more than t1ro
years cried una shan1cdlv in the corrid or
outside the courtroom .· Her tears gl it-
tered in !he glilre of television camera
lights and mascara ran dov.·n her cheeks
1n rivers.
··\Vhat arc your plans for tonight?"
asked one reporter.
•·oh. rm goi ng to squeeze eve rything
f can into one night. I just v.·ish it
all could have h.-ippcncd sooner."
Russell 's grandfa ther. aged Samuel E.
David. or ll nskell County· Okla.. \v~s
present in the rourtroo1n but co11!d not
hear deliberations over his grandson 's
fa!e because of a hearing problem.
He ov.·ns propcrLv with enough equity
lo underwrite the $!>.000 boil finall v set
by Superior Court Judge Ray1nond ~I.
Choate.
The dcfendant"s hrorhcr Robe rt
Hussrll. 25. an aceounlanl. his w i re
Karen. a waitress at Ho\vard Johnson's
rcs1t1u1·anl In Downey and other relatives
l"O\red they "'ould sc rape together S500
today as security on a bail bond that
,,·ould free Ru ssell aft er his n ea r I y ·
endless monlhs behind bars.
He has b c e n accused-absolutely
wrongly, acct>rding lo "'it nesscs and his
attorney-of the brutal n1urder or a
92-year·old rnan in ~larrh , 1972 at the
invalid's home in Leota. Okla. in a
S200 robbery .
~!rs. Karen Russell and friends clain1
they \\'ere all together at the Lon~
Beach 111nuse1ncnt center !hat night but
Oklnlron1a auihorilies. ciling nusscll·s
record as an ex·CQnvicl who serred
fnur years For bu;·~lnry In his youth.
issued a \1arra111 for his arrPst 11nd
!See RUSSE LL, Pngc A2l
n1csa11 Sues Over
F'ueJ Supp ly Cut
A Costa ~lc~a ~er1·1cc ~t:ition oper:\lor
"ho clauns the Ti."<aco oi l ~roup acted
Illegally \\h<>n H rut his fuel supplies
Inst su1n1nrr sued th e i; as o 1 i n c
distributor!' ~londny' for ~I nullion.
Harold E. Rankin. \\ho opcralcs a
gas i;\alion at :'\r\\porl 11,nd \ irtoria .
clahns in hi s .On1nitr County Superior
Court t1ctlon lhal ht' lust S250.000 becauS<'
of tuel-tulling nrti; by Trxaco l~at \\CT'
in violation of lh<'ir oonlrflrl.
Rankin ~i(lnt'd his :IJ.!l"'c111en1 \.\Ith 1hc
drhmd~nts in Dcccmb1.•r, 1!169, Ile Iden·
t\fif's tJ)Cm as 1"f'xa<!tl. Jnr , 3922 C111npus
Ori\·e, Ne\11>0ft Beach.
•
other sur plus . . properties from tht
school distri ct as part of a $3.9 n1il\ion
parks and open space bond issue.
School District business manager Ru y·
1nond Schnierer rxplained tha t the land
1*camc surplus when the cily of Costa
~tcsa acquired the properly for Fa1rvu:w
Park. The Tanager sile would ha\·e
.been used for a school if lhc Yair\·1e11•
property had been dc1'cloped res1den·
tially.
(SeC' Tlil:STEES, Page ,\!I
om!
JUDGE ORDERS BAIL
Longtime Pr150ner RusMll
Frat Brothers
Think It's Joke
.4s ;lf euiber Slni1t
OA KVALE. \\'. Va. ~UPll -\Vhen
the gun fired and ~lichacl Bishop fell.
his Bluefield State College fraternity
buddies thought il was a gag.
F'rank Hallis \\·as one of th~m.
··\\'hen I hea rd the shot I stood ."
Hal\is !iaid. ··Then I \\'as hi!. loo, and
I started running."
As Hallis ran . Bishop. 2~, started to
get up and another shot rang out. lie
fell dead.
·'At first."' said an o I her fraternity
mcn1ber ... ire !houghl it u·as a joke."
Ed1rin C. ":\cd" Taylor Jr .. a former
n1 embcr of !he fraternity. was charged
\1·ith one count or murder and one of
malicious l\'Ounding in the bizarre Sun·
d<iy incident at Pige<:ln Creek near here.
He 1\·as freed on SI0,000 bail.
An autopsy shov.ed that Bishop. Qf
Lindsidc. \r. Va .. died fro1n a bulle~
through the bra in fired at close range.
Hallis. or Blurfield. 1\·as hospitalized
"ith a neck "·ound.
Police said the tv.o \\ere umong 15
fraternity members out for a \\'eckend
SCa\·cnger hunt and •·infonnal inilietion
ceremonies."
Or~g:a.7_:oast
Weatl1er
.'\1glrt and moP'1n~ !011 ~·lourl:
bcCQ1ning n1ostly sunny 111 the
1111crnoon \\edncsduy Sligh tly
11::irmer \lllh highs 111 the upj.Jt'r
llOs at the beaches 10 !he tnld-70$
111land . LOl\S totught 5i·til
l ~Sllllc T Oii \ V
Tile Undersecrl'fary of 1l1r I n·
ter1or says Iii.( rle1)(11 n>1l'••t 1·.c-
tiec1 ~ sonir lllUJor nt/ ~q11/I.~ 1rli 1•11
lfr1/l111p bcytll$ of/~ltorf "' lll r
l!C(lr j u.l ure . SCf' $fOf!J /kl~C ,lol.
""'"• , .... bl<_ ,, l.~. •••« .. , Ca~+tr>ltil AJ
Cl•Hi"tf 11.1
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EM•t~ 11111<11 •u
Efif9ri11 Plf't At
•nttrllhlmtfll All
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•
l"!~m!HI"" AIJ
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ltMk M•r-.,1 ..... 1$~11!911 AU
1"-l'tWt Alf W11111tr Al
l12_DAILY PILOT c .
• ~,_ . ...
TONIGllT
NE\\rPORT-:itESA SCJIOOI. BOARD -
7:30 p.m,
0CC Ll:X .. IUHE -"lle.hlnd lhe lle:ld·
lines," Dr. (ltll·111'. Urown. OCC f'orurn,
7:30 p.rn.
"CO~t,\IUNITY '74" -1..t<:lurc .'§tries
sf)Onsored by Newport J{nrbor Junior
League. "ll istory of Orun~c County,"
&·ie11ce Lrcture Hull. 7<10 p.111.
··TJI~ REAL INSPECTOR HOU:'OD"-
Soulh Coosl He1>t·rtorf Tih'atl'r, through
Sun . 3 p.n1
UCI LBCTURr.; -"r\cw DirL'Ctions for
F'ree-Lance Wr11er~." Room 101 Phy,l<'nl
"\\'o mC'ri's f'o n.rm.'' Room 140 Social
Sdcr.ce Lab, 7 p.m.
\\'EDr-JESOAY, OCTOBER !3
COAST CO~l~1UN ITY COLLEGE
BOARO -Hcgular meeting, 1 3 7 O
Adams. 8 p.m.
··GQDSPEU.'' -Orange Coast Collc~c
pn!~n~tion, Auditorium, Oct. 2.1·26, 8
' p.m. Free.
BACK TO SCHOOL NIGlIT -Estnnc1a
Tligh School. Ice Cre.nm Social, 6:30
-10 p.m.
"ALCOllOLIS~I. AN A D DI CT I V E
lllSEASE" -Dr. Robert Schmitz lec-
turer, Raleigh •hlls Jlospital. 1507 E.
·16!h Street, Newport Bench, 6: 15 p.m.
Information: 645--~707.
UCI LECTURES -"\\lorld of Plants,"
Room 550 Physical Science Bldg. 7 p.m.
"Effective Tax: Plan," Roont 1 178
llumanities •1all. 7 p.1n.
From Page A l
AUNT ...
Miss FiUer lives in Philadelphia, and
sources there said she is 77.
She was not immediately available
for comment, but a spckesman for her
niece's husband, Vice President·
designate Nelson A. Rockefeller, said:
·•1 heard that such a story was coming
from Wales. I doo't know anything about
it. I think it may be correct, but I
just don 't know."
Mis.! F1tler was quoted in a British
newspaper as 53ylng, "Although I've
never been married, I've had plenty
ot offers. Now that I'm sctUed I feel
like giving it a try."
On the age gap, she said "l\tichael
doesn't seem to think it will affect
our relationship.·•
Wilson said he didn't want to talk
about the difference In their ages.
"I don 't think the gap in our ages
is: at all important, especially \\'hen
you really like a pe rson," he said.
He reportOO "a little opposition " from
rillss filler's lega l and financial advisers.
•·They probab~y thought I was after
her money," he said. "I must say it
cro!\sed my mind once in a \Vl':ilc, but
that isn't why I am marrying her."
lie added that r-.tiss Filler gave him
the money to buy her t'ngagement ring.
"It \\·as only a small diamond, and
the ring only cost about 50 pound s
($1 15)." he said.
. /i.li ss Filler, who lives in an exclusive
suburban area. refused to meet "'ilh
ne~'smen or talk aboul the situation
by telephone today.
Murcer Traded
For Bobby Bonds
NE\V YORK (AP) -The r\cv.• York
Yankees announced today lhe trade of
outrieldcr Bobby /i.turcer lo the San
F'rancisco Giants for outfielder Bobby Booi!>. .
Bo! h arc 27. and both \\'ere considered
to have ofr seasons 1n 1974. Bonds and \\1illic Mays are the only
players in baseba ll history Lo steal 30
bases and hit 30 home runs in the
sa rn c season. ~lurc('r hit 140 career homers for
the Yankees. 17th on ll1e club's all-lime
list.
ORANGE COAST c.
DAILY PILOT
TIW Of-Col;!! 0.11• P!lol. '°'Ill-Cl! It Com-bo....:! IM NtW\·Prn,, !1 publtll!fd b' h Or·11119t
eo.11 Puon.,,lrio Como•"• Se91r1lt td•t•-•FY
llUbl•.....,. ,_..,..., •• t1'1rouo11 F"o.r. !or ""'1..1
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U<JUN Bl.te1'1f!oou11'1 Ca11l I l!"Olf t'9J .... I
eO•licln 1\ 11Ubl•l"'!'<I .,.1u•d••• -S-1n. T""
.. 1..:1"1 1><1bl!V1tno p11n1 11 11 JOO W.1! IWT
$tl'NI. ~II Mt,., C1l 1!<1fn11 '1•~.
Robert N. Weed
J>•~·Ot~I I ncl PubhYW"•
Jack R. Cu rley
V•(e PrPI'"'"' • ..., C'Ant<1I "°'""'1"'
Thomas Keev l1
l;dlll>f
Thomas A. Murphine
...,...,,,1no EdHor
cnarles H. Loo!. Richard P. Natl
A~11II 1nl ,,,.. ll•Q1"0 flt!IOI\
Costa M•sa Office
])C Wi'I! fllw St•f•I
Mlll!f19.t.ad'911 PO flo•1Mll,t:'tl•
Olhtr Offlctt Hill•-' floo;..,;1'1 JlJJ N•"'P0'1 flottli••IFI lQllN .. 1<11. I IN Git_.,,. Mr"t
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••
1 .
Irvine Now
'Largest'
In County
Orange Coast communities continued
to lead the upward pu~h or Orange
County's population last yrnr. It in·
creased by n1orc lhan 62,000 to 1.IH
1nll!ion.
Acrordlng to the J:ncst county Progress
Report, which \'.'llS handfd to the board
of supervisors today, the county's popula-
tion ...,.ill top 1.1 mLUion before l97t
1s out.
The report a &treamhned compilation
of facts and figures about county
business, people and government, y,·as
put together b y the County
Administrative Office.
Statistics about people and lheir habits
take up most of the 75 pages or the
report.
According to the report. the county 's
unincorporated territory -
predominantly in the south county -
cxpfrien~ -a surge of It400 people
in 1973. Huntington Beach y,·as the sec-
ond-highest gainer \\'ith 6,447 new resi·
dt'nts.
Other top·ranked coastal communites
and their gains Included:
-Irvine with 3.758
-Newport Beach with 2,842
-San Juan Capistrano v.·ith 2,784
-Fountain Valley with 2,232
ln terms of population alone, Anaheim
is still the county's largest city with
187,300 people as of last year. It is
followed.by Santa Ana, Huntington Beach
and Garden Grove.
But in terms of land area, the cily
or Irvine is the largest in the county
\\'ifh 40 square miles of area.
The report notes , however. that recent
annexations by Anaheim have moved
that city to within only one square mile
or matching Irv ine's current size.
Reaching back into history, the re.port
notes that the city of Santa Ana , which
had only about two square miles when
it was incorporated in 1886, h; s gro"·n
to take in more than 27.
figures outlining migration to an d
from Orange County were gathered
primarily from the state Department
of ~1otor Vehicles, which has been com-
piling data on the movements of license
holders.
Those statistics show the county
recorded a net gain of 33,572 license-
holders in in 1973 -33,000 of whom
came from Los Angeles County.
The migration outward from the coun-
ly was absorbed primarily by other
states. Los Angeles County and the coun·
lies of San Diego. San Bernardino and
Riverside. The same areas contributed
the greatest number ui new ~untians
during 1973. ..
Other notable st al iS1ics containOO ln
the progress report in<'lude :
-The fact that La Palma Is the most
cro\\·ded city in the county \YitL nearly
9.000 people per square mile, follo wed
closely by La •labra, Cypress, Santa Ana,
\Vestminster , Tustin and Garden Grove,
each with more than 6,000 per square
mile.
-Irvine has the lov.·est density in
the county with only 657 people per
square mile. followed by San J u an
Capistrano with 7&1,
-San Juan Capistrano is the county's
fastest growing city. showing an increase
of 38.9 percent of the population during
1973.
-rn July of 19T.J, there were 811.400
v.·omen and 'lSS,700 men in the county,
or which 541,700 were under 18 years
of age, 926,900 were between 18 and
64 and 108,500 were over 65.
-"'~~::.n age in the county
"·as 26.6 last year and, on the a .. ·erage,
'"omen "·ere about a year and a half
older than men.
-The biggest single age group Y.1as
the J0-14 bracket 'll>'ith 163 ,600.
-In terms of natural population in·
crease (births versus de2ths). Seal
Beach. Laguna Beach and N c \Y port
Beach experienced a net Joss while the
Cily of Irvine was the county's biggest
net gainer with a natural jump of 16.7
percent.
-Irvine also had the lowest death
rate al 2.6 per 1,000 people. Seal Beach
...,·ith 19.2 per l.OCKI had the highest.
-San Cleinente bad the high est birth
rate last year ...,·ith 22.8 per 1.000 people .
Seal &ach had the lov.·est at 6.t.
-Total building permits issued in
the coLmty dropped to 28.J~O In 1973
fmtn a peak of la.600 a year before.
A total of 30AOO ne1\' homes \\'ere added
ln th e rounty last year bringing the
countv total to 582.800.
-Ta:i::ible salt's in the county rose
to St7 billion la!it year, up by nearly
20 percent ovrr the year befori~.
OPPOSES TRANSIT TAX
Assemblyma'! Burk•
•
Burke Urges
'No' Vote
On Transit
Assemblyman Robert Burke (R·}lun·
lington Beach) is urging a "no" vote
on the Orange County mass transit ballot
measure in a report malled to 70th
District constituents. (Related stori!!S,
Page A3)
Proposition A on the Nov. 5 ballot
would increase the coLmty sales tax
by one cent. Revenues would be used
by Orange County Transit District lo
expand bus service, implement a dial-a·
riqe program. build a rapid t r a n s i t
network and otherwise "improve public
transportation."
Burke said he "recognizes the need
to diversify transportation," but he o~
poses Proposition A for five reasons.
First, he believes Orange County faces
transportation problems today because
"we put all our eggs in one basket"-the
freeway system.
Voling in a 15-year plan for financing
lhe proposed mass transit system would
be "heading for !he same trap," the
assemblyman says.
Second, Burke says the proposed rr.ass
transportation proposal does not offer
the people assurance of "reliability."
Citing the recent strikes in Los Angeles
and San Francisco. the assemblyman
goes on to say, ''It v.•ould be folly
to invest several billion dollars y,•ithout
the assurance that it would not be
used as a means to gain unreasonable
demands by those employed to operate
the system."
In addilion. Burke believes the poten·
tia\ demand for mass transit has not
been substantiated, nor the fin an c i a J
feasibility proven.
•le also reminds voters of what he
feels is an adverse report on Proposition
A by the CalTrans consultants.
Burke is up for reelection in the
70\h Assembly District. His opponent.
Democrat Dennis l\.tanger:s, s u p p o r t s
passage of Proposition A.
From Page Al
~
IIEIST ...
ing, but the fire. burned itself out because
of 1he lack of air in the \'auld said Lt.
Ed\vard Neville of the police bomb and
arson squad.
"Only tv.·o of the 13 bags ignited,"
~cvillc said. ,
.. They just couldn't bum \)'.ithout ait.'!
said another investigator, "If they had,
the robbery might not have b e e n
discovered. Investi gators 'vould think the
1noney \\'as destroyed In the fire ."
The loss was discovered after a
smoke detector alarm sounded a n d
firemen arrived at the scene. They found
the vault filled with smoke.
Several left-over bags containing
money were scorched , but no money
was destroyed, police said.
Armored E:q>ress Is a division o f
Purolator Security Inc.
''olcauo Erupting
GUATEMALA CITY, Guatemala (AP)
-The Fuego volcano spewed leis of
la\•a, burn ing rocks, hot ash and cinders
O\'er a wide area of western Guatemala
today for I~ IOlh straight day.
Handler Dies·
Rattler Rites Cult Me1nber
EAST LYNN, W. Va . (UPll -A 28-ycar-old religious cull snake
handler died i1\ this \Vaync County community o! an untreated
snakebite -the sa1ne way his fa thcr-ln·law died two ~onlhs ago.
Lonnie Richardson, 28, died at hl11 home Monday, w1tboul med·
lcal attention. less than 24 hours after he was bitten .on the upper
right arm by a ratllesnake during a Sunday nlghrreliglous service
attended by about 50 persons.
RicharCt and !us father-in-law Tallmade Adkins, were members
of a cult nleeting at .tho Jesus Church. The groYp bases it.s snake
handling prilt-lice on a verse in the 16th chapter .of !\1~rk :
"And th ese ~lgns !!hall rollow them that beheve: 1n 1.ly name
!:hall they cast out devils, they shall· speak with new tongues, they
shall !Ake up serpents, and If they rlrlnk any deadly thing, ll shall
not hurt them."
Authorities plan ned to fUe no charges since the state has no
law agai~st the ~nakehandllng practice.
P,....Pqe Al
' '!fir. N~wport'
RUSSELL ...
be was taken into custody ,In Orange
County during the summtt of that year. Jack Barnett I
J(e WIS questioned, submitted to I
poly111ph uamlnatlon and sub$equently
cleared ot any connection with t he
homicide 1,000 miles away and Orange
County Superior Courl Judge WllJiam
Murray rtfueed to allow his extradition
to Oklahoma.
Succumbs at 65
His mistake came three weeks later
v.•hen he went to visit his brother Robert
in suburban Bell Garden.s, w he r e
evidence indicates authorities were hav-
ing him taUed .
"We was just driving down Eastern
A venue when we turned into a Taco
Bell to get a Coke," Robert J\;issell
recalled today in an emotional court-
room corridor interview. "1bey was
definitely following us. They told us they
...,,anted James Russell."
''He said that old warrant was no
good," the younger brother continued,
·'but they said that was beside the
point and he wOuid have to go with
them."
..
Russell, a warehouseman after he
arrived In Orange County following his
Oklahon\8 prison release. has-+been held--
for 744 days siriee, without the usual
recourses available to an imprisoned
but unconvi cted suspect, under state and
federal law and the U.S. constitution.
His attorney, Roger Agajanian, of San-
la Ana, was pleased but perplexed today
and said the partial victory in the James
Ray Russell case has been a Jong lime
coming.
"tfty argument has been all along
that he was illegally contained al this
limf." Agajanian decared as ~tr s.
Russell bugged the hulking lawyer's arm
and unbashfully wept on his lhoulder.
He had asked Judge Choate to release
Russell on his owtr recognizance pending
the Nov. 8 pretrial hearing at which
v.•itnesses from Oklahoma are expected
to tesliry regarding the pa~hetic killing
he claims he is totally innocent of com-
mitting.
No ma~er what the outcome, courts
in Napa County In northern California
took away her little boy and his stepson
by a prior marriage, Nolan Tracy now
four, in March of 1973 on the basis
tha'-it was an unfit home if his ste~
father Stood accused of murder, con-
victed or not.
Los Angeles County Deputy District
Attorney Don Johnson , prosecutor, is
contacting Oklahoma authorities f o r
details of their investigation to date and
Judge Choate said he might consider
reducing the defendant's $5,000 bail and
allowing him to remain free ·on his
own recognizance pending dispcsition of
the long, drawn out case.
Judge Choate pointed ou~ after
repeatedly rejecting asking that attorney
Agajanian suggest the cash bail that
he could not free Russell on his own
recognizance because of the fact that
in his ea rly youth he did serve a prison
ter1n for burglary, a felony charge.
"I convinced myself nothing was going
to happen today," said Mrs. Russell.
The Bell Gardens waitress bas been
living with her in·laws. She said she
has been praying since Oct. 8, 1972, the
day her husband was arrested, and bas
been supported by her father , Rev. Lecil
Jones, a missionary Baptist minister and
his flock.
"I think they done more praying than
anybody," she said.
Earlier, she expressed her grief and
pessimism while av.·aiting the pretrial
hearing.
"\Ve do love each other. We want
to stay together. I've lost him, I've
lost my son, I've lost just ab o u I
C'vcrything. I know he Is innocent. I
\1'3S with him that night."
DIES AT HOAG HOSPITAL
Newport's Jack Barnett
From Page Al
TRUSTEES .•.
Asked about the difference in the price
the city paid foc five acres in July
and the :salt or 4.7 acres to Buceola.
Schnierer said, "It's just a sign of
the times. Land is becoming more aod
more at a premium in Costa f\tesa."
Dr. Al Painter, a philosophy teacher
at Orange Coast College and one of
the leaders of the citizen drive to get
the city to purchase five ·acres from
!the school district earlier, said develo-
pment of the rest of the property into
single-family homes '' w o u Id be a
reasonable use.''
"We had been fearful that more high-
density developments wou1d be put In,"
he added.
Dr. Painter confirmed that s Q me
homeov.ners in the area had been hoping
to see a tennis facility constructed on
the site or on the five acres that ttle
city now owns.
" It seems 1• it v.·ou!d be a good
place to have tennis courts. next to
the golf club," he added . "Maybe we'll
still be abe to persuade the clty to
, come to some arrangement to put in
tennis courts."
Southland Hit
By Mild Quake
INGLEWOOD (UPI ) -A mild
earthquake jolted a small pa.rt of
Southern California today, awaken-
ing many residen ts and prompting
telephone calls: to police but ap-
parently causing no damage.
'nl6 seismological laboratory at
Caltech in Pasadena said the tre-
mor at 5:13 a.m. had a preliminary
intensi ty of 2.8 on the open end
Richter scale,
A laboratory spokesman said the
quake appeared lo be centered in
the Inglewood area. 1t was also
felt in Santa Mon ica.
NOW, HEAR TIDS
Jack Barnett, known as "l\1r. Newport
Beach" during his 19-year management
or the Newport Harbor Chamber or Com-
merce, died late Monday night at Hoag
Alemorial Hospital f1·on1 congestive heart
failure and complicating illnesses.
Today and continuing through r-.t r ,
Barnete's memorial services· f!.1gs in
Nev.·port will be flown at half mast
at tbe request or the mayor and the
city council .
Mr. Barnett, 65, was rlrst ad.milled
to Hoag Hospital Aug. IS following a
heart attack. He was released Aug.
31, but returned Sepl 22, where he
remained Lmtil his death.
He is survived by his wife, Lois;
a daughter, Betsy Bamett of Pacific
Palisades;-a son, .Robert Barnett or
North Hollywood, and a brother, Lloyd
Barnett of Irvine.
A-temorial services will be held al
Pacific View Memorial Park in Newport
Beach, but the lime and date have
not yet been set.
"Newport Beach lost one of it's finest
c i t i z eris," commented Assernblyman
Robert Badham (R-Newport Beach). a
long-time friend or l\1r. Barnett and
one or those who spoke at a testimonial
dinner given the chamber official when
be retired in July.
"State Senator Dennis Carpenter (R-
Nev.·port Beach) called Mr. Barnett's
death a "tragic loss to the City of
Newport Beach."
"I knew Jack since 1958 and he cer-
tainly left his mark in the city. That's
all a man can ask for," Senator carpen-
ter said.
f\.1r. Barnett reportedly intended to
retire when he moved to Newport in
1955, but was talked into managing the
then almost defunct chamber of com·
merce.
Under his management, the chamber
grew to l,400 members and initiated
new activities such as the Cha racter
Boat Parade, a pet project of Mr .
Barnett's.
This summer a perpetual trophy In
his name was awarded to the best
decorated boat, a tradition that will
be continU,ed.
Doris Lindsey, Air. Bamett'11 secretary
at the chamber for the past five years.
said today, ''Everybody loved Jack. the
man "'ho really built the chamber fron1
almost nothing to \i.'hat it is today."
l\.trs. Lindsey ~id the new chamb<!r
building planned for the site at Jamboree:
Raad and Santa Barbara Drive 'Yt'ill
be referred to as "the house that Jack
built ," becal!M! Of his efforts.
The Newport. resident was born Jn
South Dakota and moved to Pasadena
with his family at the age of IO. After
graduating from Pasadena High a n d
Pasadena Junior College, he s • u d i ed
finance at UC Berkeley. He playl'd foot.
ball and was a wrestler in college.
f\.1r. Barnett }(lined the P a s a d c n a
brokerage firm E. A. Pierce in June.
1929, "Just in ti.me to see the bottom
drop out of the market," he liked to
joke with friends.
Late. he went Into the children's
clothing manufacturing business with his
father-in-law before moving to Newport
Beach.
Besides his involveme.Jlt with t b e
chamber, t.1r. Barnett was active in
several other community o~ganization:s.
He was past president of the Newport
Harbor JGy,·anis ,Club. a founding board
member of NewpMt center.
Jo.tr. Barnett also liked to v.·ork with
his hands, friends recalled. He com·
plelely built, doing the carpentry, wiring
and plumbing, two houses In Newport
Beach.
According to the Presi dent's Council on
Environmental Qual ity, it is becom ing in creasingl y
difficult for anyone to escape noise.
...
40,000 .000 Americans risk hearing impairmen t
and other physical and mental effects. 44 .000.000
other Ame ricans have the utility of their dwellings
adversely affected by noise from aircraft or traff ic .
2 1 .000.000 Amer i can s are affe c ted b y
constru ction-related noise .
Now what does th is have to do with carpet ?
carpeting will drastically improve acou stics in any
·room by quieting your home environment. making
radios, television, and the family sound better.
Remember, at Aldens, even our LOUD carpeting
is quieter.
ALDEN'S
CARPETS • DRAPES
1663 Placentia AYe.
COSTAMISA
646·4838
HOURS: M ... -'ilon., tt, l :JO -RI. ttot-SAT., 9:JOlo 5
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